Innovations by and for Patients, and Their Place in the Future Health Care System

2016 ◽  
pp. 341-357 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leid Zejnilović ◽  
Pedro Oliveira ◽  
Helena Canhão
Pflege ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-171
Author(s):  
Margaret Cotroneo ◽  
Michael Zimmer ◽  
Angelika Zegelin-Abt

Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit einer der wichtigsten gegenwärtigen Entwicklungen im Gesundheitswesen: der familienorientierten primären Gesundheitsversorgung. Im Folgenden werden die Hintergründe dieser Entwicklung und ihre Implikationen für die zukünftige Praxis, Ausbildung und Forschung in den Vereinigten Staaten und in Deutschland beschrieben und verglichen. Dieser Artikel ist das Ergebnis eines andauernden Dialogs zwischen der ersten Autorin, gegenwärtig Fulbright-Professorin an der Universität Witten/Herdecke, und dem zweiten und der dritten Autorin. Wir sind überzeugt, daß eine solche Kontextualisierung jüngster Entwicklungen in der Gesundheitsversorgung dazu beitragen kann, zu klären, worin die Unterschiede wie auch die potentiellen und tatsächlichen Gemeinsamkeiten zwischen verschiedenen Ländern bestehen.


2018 ◽  
Vol 190 (15) ◽  
pp. E476-E476
Author(s):  
Donald J. Willison ◽  
Braden G. O’Neill ◽  
Michelle Greiver ◽  
Frank Sullivan

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (02) ◽  
pp. 57-63
Author(s):  
Dler Ali Khursheed ◽  
Aras Maruf Rauf ◽  
Fadil Abdullah Kareem ◽  
Arass Jalal Noori ◽  
Mohammed Abdalla Mahmood ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives This article aimed to find out Iraqi people’s opinions on possible dental health care changes and their knowledge, attitude, and expectation toward infection controls in dental settings during and after the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Materials and Methods Different questions were presented regarding possible health care system changes, to gather people’s opinions concerning patients, dentists, and dental clinic tests for contagious viral infections, their history of vaccination, and their readiness to get vaccinated, and finally, how they would feel about visiting their local dental clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic if they faced dental problems. Results Generally, 69% of the respondents believed that the health care system will change in Iraq. A higher percentage of health care workers than nonhealth workers had been vaccinated against hepatitis virus and approximately equal numbers indicated their readiness to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and other contagious viral diseases. Additionally, a higher percentage of health care workers than Non health care workers expressed fear of contracting the infection from dental clinics and the relation was significant. More than two-thirds of respondents stated their inability to visit a dentist because all the dental clinics are closed, and they cannot find a trusted dental clinic. Likewise, the majority preferred to wait until after the outbreak or when the government provides strict control measures and guidelines for dental clinics. Conclusion There was a common belief that the health care system will change after COVID-19 in Iraq. All agreed that dental clinics and the population should be protected against microbial cross-transmission through appropriate infection control measures and vaccination. Future health care changes should include public health education and dental health care personnel training.


2010 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 1047-1068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruth Schofield ◽  
Rebecca Ganann ◽  
Sandy Brooks ◽  
Jennifer McGugan ◽  
Kim Dalla Bona ◽  
...  

As health care is shifting from hospital to community, community health nurses (CHNs) are directly affected. This descriptive qualitative study sought to understand priority issues currently facing CHNs, explore development of a national vision for community health nursing, and develop recommendations to shape the future of the profession moving toward the year 2020. Focus groups and key informant interviews were conducted across Canada. Five key themes were identified: community health nursing in crisis now, a flawed health care system, responding to the public, vision for the future, and CHNs as solution makers. Key recommendations include developing a common definition and vision of community health nursing, collaborating on an aggressive plan to shift to a primary health care system, developing a comprehensive social marketing strategy, refocusing basic baccalaureate education, enhancing the capacity of community health researchers and knowledge in community health nursing, and establishing a community health nursing center of excellence.


Author(s):  
Gunnar Almgren

The basic premise of this chapter is that we have at our disposal a wealth of evidence-based knowledge of critical health care delivery strategies that would, if implemented on a large scale, yield both a social right to health care for all citizens and favorable population health care outcomes at lower cost. This chapter provides a synthesis of this knowledge, and then identifies a limited set of very specific health care system delivery reforms that meet three evaluative criteria: equity, sustainability, and political feasibility. Equity refers to the extent to which any particular health care system delivery reform achieves a fair balance between the competing interests of different segments of the patient population and society at large. Sustainability refers to the extent to which a health care system delivery reform initiative yields favorable impacts on population health while realizing large reductions in immediate and future health care costs. Finally, political feasibility refers to the likelihood of a given health care system delivery reform in view of the competing interests of different stakeholder groups affected. This chapter offers a principled and empirically justified blueprint for the most promising health care system delivery reforms towards the fulfillment of these three ends.


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