The Role of the Pediatrician in Substance Abuse Counseling

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-252
Author(s):  

The past two decades have been marked by both an increasing recognition of the pediatrician's responsibilities toward the adolescent and the emergence of substance abuse as a critical concern for those who care for children and youth. The use and abuse of psychoactive substances have become common even among young adolescents, and the pediatrician must be prepared to address this issue as part of routine health care. In addition, the counsel of the pediatrician regarding substance abuse is often sought by families, schools, and community agencies. Familiarity with the extent and nature of adolescent drug use, as well as the health consequences of such use, has become a necessary part of the body of pediatric knowledge. The pediatrician must possess the skills necessary to determine which young patients are at risk from substance abuse and be able to offer appropriate counseling to the adolescent and his or her family so as to minimize the risk of future illness and dysfunction. The pattern of substance abuse among teenagers has undergone rapid change during the past 15 years. During the late 1960s the abuse of psychoactive drugs, previously a predominantly adult phenomenon, became widespread among adolescents. Opiates, amphetamines, barbiturates, hallucinogens, and inhalants were all used and abused by large numbers of teenagers.1 The use of tobacco in this age group represents a significant health threat, and during the past decade the use of cocaine and other intoxicants, in particular alcohol and marijuana, has increased dramatically among adolescents. These drugs now cause major concern to those who provide health care for teenagers.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 1010-1013 ◽  
Author(s):  

The past three decades have been marked by an increasing recognition of the responsibility of pediatricians to their patients and their patients' families regarding the diagnosis and management of abuse of tobacco, alcohol, and other substances of abuse including prescription drugs. Because of the harmful consequences, substance abuse is an obvious concern for all those who care for infants, children, adolescents, and young adults. When it occurs during pregnancy, it has been associated with an increased incidence of prematurity; congenital defects, including brain damage; and even death. The pediatrician must be prepared to address this commonplace issue as a part of routine health care, starting with the prenatal visit and continuing as a part of all anticipatory guidance. Familiarity with the extent and nature of drug use, as well as the health and social consequences, has become a necessary part of the body of pediatric knowledge.1-9 The pediatrician should possess or develop the skills necessary to determine which young patients are at risk for substance abuse and chemical dependence and should also be able to offer appropriate prevention or treatment counseling to the child, adolescent, and his or her family, or make a referral to a source where such counseling can be obtained. PERVASIVENESS OF DRUG USE The pattern of substance abuse among teenagers has undergone significant change during the past 25 years. Prior to the late 1960s, the abuse of psychoactive drugs and alcohol was predominantly an adult phenomenon. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, substance abuse became widespread among adolescents and, more recently, preadolescents.


mSphere ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary-Claire Roghmann ◽  
Alison D. Lydecker ◽  
Lauren Hittle ◽  
Robert T. DeBoy ◽  
Rebecca G. Nowak ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The nose, throat, and skin over the subclavian and femoral veins are the body sites which harbor the bacteria which most commonly cause health care-associated infection. We assessed the effect of nursing home residence on the microbiota of these body sites in older adults. We found that the microbiota composition of the different body sites was similar between nursing home and community participants, but we identified differences in relative abundance levels. We found remarkable similarities in the bacterial communities of different body sites in older adults who lived in nursing homes compared to those in the community among people who had not been on antibiotics for the past 3 months. We also found that the femoral skin microbiota had evidence of stool contamination in the nursing home residents, providing a rationale for improved skin hygiene. Taken together, it appears that the health care environment does not alter the microbiota to the extent that antibiotics do. Our objective for this study was to characterize the microbial communities of the anterior nares (nose), posterior pharynx (throat), and skin of the femoral and subclavian areas in older adults from nursing homes and the community. Older adults (≥65 years) without antibiotic use for the past 3 months were recruited from nursing homes (NH; n = 16) and from the community (CB; n = 51). Specimens were taken from nose, throat, and skin sites for culture and bacterial profiling using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. We found that pathogenic Gram-negative rod (GNR) colonization on the femoral skin was higher in NH participants than CB participants; otherwise, there were no differences in GNR colonization at other body sites or in Staphylococcus aureus colonization at any body site. Bacterial community profiling demonstrated that the operational taxonomic unit compositions of the different body sites were similar between NH and CB participants, but the analysis identified differences in relative abundance levels. Streptococcus spp. were more abundant and Prevotella spp. were less abundant in the throats of NH participants than in throats of CB participants. Proteus, Escherichia coli, and Enterococcus were more abundant in NH participants on the femoral skin. We found a pattern of decreased abundance of specific Proteobacteria in NH participants at the anterior nares and at both skin sites. We concluded that bacterial communities were largely similar in diversity and composition within body sites between older adults without recent antibiotic use from NH compared to those from the community. Our findings support the rationale for improved hygiene in NH residents to reduce the transmission risk of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, such as Enterococcus spp. or Enterobacteriaceae. IMPORTANCE The nose, throat, and skin over the subclavian and femoral veins are the body sites which harbor the bacteria which most commonly cause health care-associated infection. We assessed the effect of nursing home residence on the microbiota of these body sites in older adults. We found that the microbiota composition of the different body sites was similar between nursing home and community participants, but we identified differences in relative abundance levels. We found remarkable similarities in the bacterial communities of different body sites in older adults who lived in nursing homes compared to those in the community among people who had not been on antibiotics for the past 3 months. We also found that the femoral skin microbiota had evidence of stool contamination in the nursing home residents, providing a rationale for improved skin hygiene. Taken together, it appears that the health care environment does not alter the microbiota to the extent that antibiotics do.


Author(s):  
Prakash Kanade ◽  
Fortune David ◽  
Sunay Kanade

With the recent changes in this world due to the pandemic of COVID-19 came the need to change in technology with medical environments. There were few robotic surgeries done in medical field, but the pandemic has put the Doctors and health care workers at risk. So there came a need for rapid change in medical environment to replace man with robots with the help of AI. In this paper a AGV also called as Automatic Guided Vehicle is designed for the benefit of health community. It can also be called as Automated Cart. The chances of health care worker getting affected from the patient in this COVID-19 is more due to the behavior of the novel Corona Virus Spread. Hence this Automated cart is designed in this paper which moves near the patient’s beds delivering medicines whenever needed in time and also collects waste from patients’ bed and returns to the necessary point. It is a line follower automated cart robot it makes use of certain sensors like infrared sensors and ultrasonic sensors. These sensors are used for route mapping and obstacle detection. This robot at the time of giving medicine to the patients’ bed and collecting waste, it also checks the body temperature and pulse rate of the patient and sends information to the doctor via internet. The adaptability of this robot with the patients depends on the preprogram done. A microcontroller is made use for this purpose. This automated cart can be designed and implemented with low cost and the risk of Doctors, health care workers is reduced.


1978 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 616-616
Author(s):  
Howard W. Stoudt

People are getting bigger. Overall increases in body size can be documented for various worldwide populations for which adequate anthropometric data are available. In Western Europe and North America the increase in adult stature over the past century has commonly approximated one centimeter per decade, though with some variability between different groups. Other body dimensions, as well as weight, have also been increasing in both men and women and in different ethnic groups. The most likely explanations for such increases in body size are improved nutrition and better health care during growth years. Since such factors tend to be associated with higher socio-economic status, it is these groups who have demonstrated the most marked increases in body size in recent years. Many upper socio-economic groups have already attained most or all of their maximum body size potential, and will experience little further increase. On the other hand, those presently less favored groups who can still benefit from improved nutrition and health care will continue to show increases in body size until they also have reached their maximum potential.


2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-79
Author(s):  
Sassy Ross

A grandmother’s lost leg. A mother’s scarred sacrum. A daughter transformed into stone. In these five poems, history dwells in the body, the past deep in the bone. Confronting themes of poverty, intimate partner violence, and childhood sexual trauma, the poems speak to the varying ways the poet and women in her family have insisted on survival. These poems bear shifts in landscape and language, namely, from St. Lucia to the United States, from Antillean Creole to American English. Part of a manuscript in progress, the poems seek to probe inherited and lived-through pain so as to move the spirit ever more deeply toward healing, wholeness, and promise.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 182-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick D McGorry ◽  
Cristina Mei

Early intervention is a fundamental principle in health care and the past two decades have seen it belatedly introduced into the field of mental health. This began in psychotic disorders, arguably the least promising place to start. The steady accumulation of scientific evidence for early intervention has eventually overwhelmed the sceptics, transformed thinking in psychotic disorders and created an international wave of service reform. This paradigm shift has paved the way to a more substantial one: early intervention across the full diagnostic spectrum. 75% of mental illnesses emerge before the age of 25 years, and young people bear the major burden for those disorders that threaten the many decades of productive adult life. The paradox is that young people aged between 12 and 25 years have had by far the worst levels of access to mental health care across the whole lifespan. Health services are poorly designed, grossly under-resourced and typically unfriendly to, and untrusted by, young people. Furthermore, until recently there has been a quite striking lack of interest in this transitional age group from clinicians and researchers alike, who had unthinkingly accepted the paediatric–adult split of mainstream medicine without questioning its utility and validity for our field and our young patients. Over the past decade, however, a major shift in momentum has occurred to take early intervention in youth mental health more seriously. Here we discuss the recent advances and evidence supporting an innovative integrated model of youth mental health care and look to the future.


Author(s):  
Mona Sommer ◽  
Stian Biong ◽  
Marit Borg ◽  
Bengt Karlsson ◽  
Trude Klevan ◽  
...  

Recovery, a prominent concern in mental health care worldwide, has been variously defined, requiring further clarification of the term as processual. Few studies have comprehensively addressed the nature of recovery processes. This study aims to explore the nature and characteristics of experiences of recovery as processual. The method used is a form of qualitative meta-synthesis that integrates the findings from 28 qualitative studies published during the past 15 years by one research group. Three meta-themes were developed: (a) recovery processes as step-wise, cyclical, and continuous, (b) recovery as everyday experiences, and (c) recovery as relational. These themes describe how recovery is intertwined with the way life in general unfolds in terms of human relationships, learning, coping, and ordinary everyday living. This meta-synthesis consolidates an understanding of recovery as fundamental processes of living in terms of being, doing, and accessing. These processes are contextualized in relation to mental health and/or substance abuse problems and highlight the need for support to facilitate the person’s access to necessary personal, social, and material resources to live an ordinary life in recovery.


1996 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 49-51
Author(s):  
Scott J. Edgett

During the past decade, the health services sector has experienced a period of rapid change that has resulted in the creation of a large number of new services. This article advocates the use of a service development matrix as a planning aid for senior managers seeking to attract additional revenue through the development of new services. By strategically selecting and developing new services, rather than simply imitating other health care providers, marketers will be better able to focus limited corporate resources on new service initiatives that generate positive returns.


HPHR Journal ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Don Berwick

Massachusetts faces serious issues: A school system that is good, but leaves some kids and communities behind; a transportation system in disrepair; and a substance abuse epidemic. These problems require investment. Unfortunately, these investments are hindered by the skyrocketing cost of health care – now 42% of our state budget, and up 59% in the past decade.1 Without bold reform, health care in Massachusetts, like health care in the nation, will continue to erode possibilities in the public and private sector alike.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irene Elgen ◽  
Torhild Heggestad ◽  
Rune Tronstad ◽  
Gottfried Greve

Background: During the last decades, there is a major shift in the panorama of diseases in children and adolescents. More children are referred to the specialized health care services due to less specific symptoms and more complex health challenges. These children are particularly difficult to care for in a “single-disease” oriented system. Our objective was to develop an alternative and more holistic approach better tailored to the complex needs of these children.Method: The target patient population is children between 6 and 13 years with three or more referrals including both the pediatric department and the mental health services. Furthermore, to be included in the project, the child's actual complaints needed to be clinically considered as an unclear or compound condition in need of an alternative approach. This paper describes the process of developing an intervention where a complementary professional team meets the patient and his/her family altogether for 2.5 h. The consultation focus on clarifying the complex symptomatology and on problem solving. The bio-psycho-social model is applied, emphasizing the patient's story as told on the whiteboard. In the dynamic processes of development, piloting, evaluating, and adjusting the components, feed-back from the patients, their families, professional team members, and external team coaches is important.The professional teams include pediatricians, psychologists and physiotherapists. Achieving the transformation from a logistic oriented team where members act separately toward a real complementary team, seems to be a success factor.Discussion: Composing multi-disciplinary and complementary teams was an essential part of the re-designed intervention. Team interaction transforming the professionals from working as a logistic team to act as a complementary team, was one of the important requirements in the process. When re-designing the specialist health service, it is mandatory to anchor all changes among employees as well as the hospital leadership. In addition, it is important to include patient experiences in the process of improvement. Evaluation of long-term outcomes is needed to investigate possible benefits from the new intervention.Trial Registration: Transitioning Young Patients' Health Care Trajectories, NCT04652154. Registered December 3rd, 2020–Retrospectively registered, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04652154?term=NCT04652154&draw=2&rank=1.


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