scholarly journals Student learning about UK health services in a cross-border curriculum partnership; the London-Cyprus experience

MedEdPublish ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shehla Baig ◽  
Stella A. Nicolaou ◽  
Denise Lawrence ◽  
Janette Myers ◽  
Mursheda Begum
2009 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. S136
Author(s):  
S. Arora ◽  
M. Menchine ◽  
D. Espitia ◽  
A. Vishwanath ◽  
C.J. Coyne

2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Solange Aikes ◽  
Maria Lucia Frizon Rizzoto

Objetivo: compreender a dinâmica de acesso do transfronteiriço aos serviços de saúde. Método: pesquisa exploratória, descritiva e de campo em quatro cidades gêmeas do Paraná (Foz do Iguaçu, Guaíra, Santo Antônio do Sudoeste e Barracão). Os dados foram obtidos por meio de entrevista semiestruturada aplicada aos gestores de saúde e submetidos à análise temática de conteúdo proposta por Bardin. Resultados: quatro categorias temáticas discutidas criticamente com a literatura, observou-se no estudo que a) há um maior acolhimento nos municípios menores, sobretudo na atenção básica; b) o financiamento como principal entrave para o acesso do transfronteiriço; c) a decisão discricionária do profissional de saúde no momento do atendimento face à ausência de diretrizes institucionalizadas que perdurem. Considerações finais: verificou-se que o acesso ao serviço de saúde do transfronteiriço é instável e confuso, mas  a disseminação do pensamento integrador e de solidariedade entre os povos, a partir do nível local, poderá contribuir para ampliar a noção de cidadania e de acolhimento ao transfronteiriço.


Author(s):  
Dimitrios G. Katehakis ◽  
George Pangalos ◽  
Andriana Prentza

Preserving patient safety, patient rights, and safeguarding trust are crucial components for the provision of high-quality medical treatments across borders. This chapter focuses on required technological improvements to address quality challenges through the adoption of generic building blocks (BBs) towards enabling seamless care between European healthcare systems. The authors present important considerations that are relevant to incremental, cross-sectorial advancements for the enhancement of the technology used for the implementation of the directive on the application of patients' rights in cross-border healthcare. These include cross-domain technical BBs to support non-repudiation, capability lookup, dynamic service location, and electronic identification. The authors use cross-border electronic prescription and patient summary, as a case to discuss the use of related international interoperability standards, together with recommendations for future work relevant to the introduction of better quality, trustworthy, cross-border, electronic health services in Europe.


Author(s):  
Howard s. Adelman ◽  
Linda Taylor

This chapter clarifies why efforts to address problems related to trauma in schools need to go well beyond just enhancing availability and access to individual, clinically-oriented mental health services. From this perspective, we emphasize that trauma and all other student learning, behavior, and emotional problems can and should be approached within the context of a comprehensive system of intervention within schools and school districts. Specifically highlighted are the nature and scope of a unifying and comprehensive systemic approach and the mechanisms needed to develop and sustain it.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 1011-1020
Author(s):  
Marco Liverani ◽  
Por Ir ◽  
Bart Jacobs ◽  
Augustine Asante ◽  
Stephen Jan ◽  
...  

Abstract In low- and middle-income countries, patients may travel abroad to seek better health services or treatments that are not available at home, especially in regions where great disparities exist between the standard of care in neighbouring countries. While awareness of South–South medical travels has increased, only a few studies investigated this phenomenon in depth from the perspective of sending countries. This article aims to contribute to these studies by reporting findings from a qualitative study of medical travels from Cambodia and associated costs. Data collection primarily involved interviews with Cambodian patients returning from Thailand and Vietnam, conducted in 2017 in the capital Phnom Penh and two provinces, and interviews with key informants in the local health sector. The research findings show that medical travels from Cambodia are driven and shaped by an interplay of socio-economic, cultural and health system factors at different levels, from the effects of regional trade liberalization to perceptions about the quality of care and the pressure of relatives and other advisers in local communities. Furthermore, there is a diversity of medical travels from Cambodia, ranging from first class travels to international hospitals in Bangkok and cross-border ‘medical tourism’ to perilous overland journeys of poor patients, who regularly resort to borrowing or liquidating assets to cover costs. The implications of the research findings for health sector development and equitable access to care for Cambodians deserve particular attention. To some extent, the increase in medical travels can stimulate improvements in the quality of local health services. However, concerns remain that these developments will mainly affect high-cost private services, widening disparities in access to care between population groups.


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