A sociosemiotic exploration of medical legislation reform in China (1990–2021)

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Junfeng Zhao ◽  
Jingjing Wu ◽  
Yi Yang

Abstract The medical service system is an important guarantee for human rights to survival, health and development of every social member, and thus it is significant to explore, interpret and explain the diachronic construction for its legislative reform. In a corpus approach, the study firstly collects the medical-related statutes from 1990 to 2021 in China to build the P.R.C. Medical Legislation Corpus (PRCMLC), and analyzes the keywords and their collocation in the exploratory, explosive and expanding phase of the medical legislative reform. Secondly, from the perspectives of sociosemiotics, the PRCMLC data is combined with the concrete medical laws and regulations for further discussion of the MSS, MIS, DSS and PHS in legislative system. Thirdly, the study explores the core legislative ideas and the relationships among the subsystems in the diachronic analysis, which provide a general overview of the legislative objects, target, participants and mechanisms in the medical reform of China.

2021 ◽  
Vol 257 ◽  
pp. 03034
Author(s):  
Xingyu Yang ◽  
Tianlong Shan ◽  
Peiyuan Sun

Medical service system is a complex system composed of different interest related factors. The core of hierarchical medical mode is to deal with different levels and types of medical institutions to ensure the coordinated operation. In view of the reform of medical and health system, combined with the current situation of China’s medical system, this paper constructs the SWOT-CLPV model of hierarchical medical in China, sorts out the advantages, disadvantages, opportunities and threats of the hierarchical medical mode in China, further explores its inhibition, problem, leverage effect and vulnerability, and studies the development strategy of hierarchical medical.


1995 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 280-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judd E. Hollander ◽  
Robert Delagi ◽  
Joseph Sciammarella ◽  
Peter Viccellio ◽  
Joe Ortiz ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
pp. 102490791989276
Author(s):  
Caner Turan ◽  
Eylem Ulas Saz ◽  
Murat Anil ◽  
Alkan Bal ◽  
Gamze Gokalp ◽  
...  

Background and Objectives: The emergency medical service system is designed to ensure rapid identification and transport of patients from the field to emergency departments. This study aims to examine pediatric patients’ clinical characteristics and reasons for ambulance use in Turkey. Life-saving interventions and non-life-saving interventions performed during transport and patients’ outcomes following transport were also investigated. Methods: This is a prospective-multicentric study conducted at four metropolitan cities and nine tertiary pediatric emergency departments. This survey-based study evaluated all children brought by ambulance to emergency departments. Patient demographics, clinical features, triage levels, procedures performed in the ambulance or emergency department, and final outcomes were sought. Results: A total of 2094 patients were transported during the study period. Only a minority of ambulances were physician staffed (16.5%), and 72% of the patients were delivered to pediatric emergency departments without notification calls. Although notification calls were more likely given for particularly critically ill children, for non-urgent conditions transfer calls were less common (60.8% vs 23.5%, respectively; p < 0.001). A majority of transports were performed for trauma patients (20.5%), neurological issues (20%), and toxicological emergencies (13.8%). While parents prefer using the ambulances for medical emergencies, physicians prefer it for mainly traumatic and toxicological emergencies. In total, 65% of the patients received at least one intervention, and 18 patients needed immediate life-saving interventions (intubation, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, etc.) but they did not receive it. Mortality occurred in nine patients. If the health care providers were paramedics, they were more likely avoided by performing any intervention in critically ill children ( p < 0.001). A majority of the procedures performed in children were older than 12 months ( p < 0.001). Conclusion: This study presents comprehensive epidemiological and outcome data for pediatric patients transported by the national emergency medical service system in Turkey. Non-urgent calls were more likely made by parents, physicians avoided making NCs, and paramedics also avoided performing any intervention when they were transporting children.


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