scholarly journals Categorization and Characterization of Activities Designed to Help Health-care Professionals Involved in Hepatitis Care Increase Their Awareness of the Disease: The Classification of Hepatitis Medical Care Coordinators

2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (13) ◽  
pp. 1825-1834 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naruyo Kanzaki ◽  
Shinji Iwane ◽  
Satoshi Oeda ◽  
Michiaki Okada ◽  
Hiromi Kimura ◽  
...  
1995 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria M. Talbott

Complaints of older widows regarding their husbands' health care are investigated in this study. Sixty-four older widows were interviewed several years after their husbands' deaths. The deaths occurred in the early 1980s. Forty-six percent reported problems in the health care their husbands had received. Widows whose husbands had not known in advance that they were going to die were more likely to complain about their husbands' medical care than widows whose husbands had known in advance. Complaints were also related to the frequency of several symptoms of grief. The widows' complaints about their husbands' care focus on quality of care, perceived insensitivity on the part of health care professionals, lack of control over the death, and the organization of services.


2021 ◽  
pp. 25-37
Author(s):  
Larisa Arkadievna Karaseva

The task of educating health care professionals is to create an educational and experimental base to support practice, education, management, research, and theory development in order to preserve and improve the health of the population. The article summarizes the principles of education that contribute to the professional growth of specialists, ensuring the safety and competence of medical care by improving nursing practice.


2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 458-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
James O. Burton ◽  
Stephen J. Corry ◽  
Gareth Lewis ◽  
William S. Priestman

AbstractBackgroundEvent planning for mass gatherings involves the utilization of methods that prospectively can predict medical resource use. However, there is growing recognition that historical data for a specific event can help to accurately forecast medical requirements. This study was designed to investigate the differences in medical usage rates between two popular mass-gathering sports events in the UK: rugby matches and horse races.MethodsA retrospective study of all attendee consultations with the on-site medical teams at the Leicester Tigers Rugby Football Club and the Leicester Racecourse from September 2008 through August 2009 was undertaken. Patient demographics, medical usage rates, level of care, as well as professional input and the effects of alcohol use were recorded.ResultsMedical usage rates were higher at the Leicester Racecourse (P < .01), although the demographics of the patients were similar and included 24% children and 16% staff. There was no difference in level of care required between the two venues with the majority of cases being minor, although a higher proportion of casualties at the Leicester Tigers event were seen by a health care professional compared with the Leicester Racecourse (P < .001). Alcohol was a contributing factor in only 5% of consultations.ConclusionsThese two major sporting venues had similar attendance requirements for medical treatment that are comparable to other mass-gathering sports events. High levels of staff and pediatric presentations may have an impact on human resource planning for events on a larger scale, and the separation of treatment areas may help to minimize the number of unnecessary or opportunistic reviews by the on-site health care professionals.BurtonJO, CorrySJ, LewisG, PriestmanWS. Differences in medical care usage between two mass-gathering sporting events. Prehosp Disaster Med.2012;27(4):1-5.


2018 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 359-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Michele Issel

The coexistence of institutionalized evidence-based practice guidelines, professional expertise of medical practitioners, and the patient centeredness approach form a triangle. Each component of this Medical Care Triangle has characteristics that create paradoxes for health care professionals and their patients. The value of a paradox lies in uncovering and utilizing the contradiction to better understand the underlying organizational phenomenon. Method: Following Poole and van de Ven’s (1989) suggested approaches to resolving paradoxes, each paradox of the Medical Care Triangle is defined and analyzed. Results: A total of 10 paradoxes related to practice guidelines, professional expertise, and patient centeredness are revealed. The resolution of each paradox yields insights specific to structuring health care organizations in ways that support the delivery of medical care. Implications: The results renew an emphasis on the centrality of practitioners’ work processes to health care organizations; this has potential benefits for organizations, clinicians/employees, and patients.


2006 ◽  
Vol 86 (9) ◽  
pp. 1203-1220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika E Finger ◽  
Alarcos Cieza ◽  
Juerg Stoll ◽  
Gerold Stucki ◽  
Erika O Huber

Abstract Background and Purpose. Disability or limitations in human functioning are universal experiences that concern all people. Physical therapists aim to improve functioning and prevent disability. With the approval of the new International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), we can now rely on a globally recognized framework and classification to be used in different health care situations by all health care professionals in multidisciplinary teams. The objective of this study was to identify ICF categories that describe the most relevant and common patient problems managed by physical therapists in acute, rehabilitation, and community health care situations taking into account 3 major groups of health conditions: musculoskeletal, neurological, and internal. Subjects. The subjects were physical therapists who were identified as possible participants by the heads of physical therapy departments who were members of the Swiss Association of Physical Therapy Department Heads or who were recruited from the membership of the Swiss Association of Physiotherapy. Methods. A consensus-building, 3-round, electronic-mail survey with 9 groups of physical therapists was conducted using the Delphi technique. Results. Two hundred sixty-three physical therapists participated in at least one round of the Delphi exercise. They had consensus levels of 80% or higher for categories in all ICF components (Body Functions, Body Structures, Activities and Participation, and Environmental Factors 1 and 2). Discussion and Conclusion. This study is a first step toward identifying a list of intervention categories relevant for physical therapy according to the ICF. The ICF, designed as a common language for multidisciplinary use, is also a very helpful framework for defining the core competence for the physical therapy profession.


Author(s):  
Hao WANG

LANGUAGE NOTE | Document text in Chinese; abstract also in English.即將到來的新世紀,使中國醫院經營面臨著許多新的問題和嚴峻挑戰。首先,醫學教育與知識經濟的發展很不適應。其次,醫院設備與社會需要很不適應。第三,醫院經營模式與市場運行很不適應。第四,醫療服務模式與人口結構變化很不適應。第五,醫務勞動補償模式與醫務勞動消耗很不適應。醫院經營面臨的上述問題是涉及國家與醫院兩個方面多層次的發展戰略與策略的問題,也是涉及全國各行各業和廣大人民切身利益的問題。解決問題的根本出路在於改革。首先,應真正解放思想和更新概念,擺正衛生事業在國民經濟和社會發展中的地位。第二,應改革醫學教育制度和內容,把醫學高科技教育作為學位教育和繼續教育的重點;同時搞好人事制度改革。第三,應積極地引進高新技術設備,努力提高醫院基本設施和診療儀器的現代化水平。第四,應盡快改革醫院經營體制,建立和完善新的經營模式與經營機制。為此,應着重搞好醫院布局和組織結構調整,以及醫療服務結構的調整;實行醫院的所有權與經營權分離,讓醫院法人組織和法定代表依法自主經營;按照市場經濟規律的要求,建立和完善醫院經營的動力機制、醫療技術機制、自我約束調控機制、法人領導機制。第五,應改革醫療衛生服務體制,建立適應人口結構和疾病譜變化的新的防治服務模式。為此,應擴大預防工作範圍和擴大保健人群範間,建立醫院、社區、家庭相結合的醫療衛生保健服務模式。At the threshold of a new millennium, China's hospitals face a series of problems in their management. This essay attempts to analyze these problems and explore appropriate solutions to them.First, the contemporary Chinese pattern of medical education is not suitable to the rapid growth of medical knowledge. Ever increasing new theories, methods, and technologies in diagnosis, therapeutics, and prognosis promote the quality of medical care tremendously. However, most health care professionals in China's hospitals are unable to follow up-to-date developments of medical information. Very few medical scientist s or physicians in China's medical care field are recognized as leading or authoritative in the world. The solution to this problem calls for an emphasis on and respect for the values of human resources in medicine, improvement of current medical education, and establishment of a mechanism for reeducating medical professionals.Second, the current pattern of hospital management is not suitable to the market. The manner of hospital management in China is the product of China's central-planning mode of economy. Each hospital belongs to a central or local government, or to a state-owned enterprise.It does not have power to make decisions about its own management. Neither does it care about cost-benefit balancing because hospital financing relics entirely on government revenue. However, new problems have occurred during Chin's transition to a free market economy from the centrally-planned economy since the 1980s. Though many enterprises have been allowed to manage themselves according to the circumstances of the market, hospitals have been emphasized as welfare providers that cannot be allowed to make money. The government continues to set strict low prices for medical services and, at the same time, does not provide sufficient financing to hospitals. As a result, hospitals have to make their ends meet by increasing unnecessary medication prescriptions and overusing high-technology diagnostic and therapeutic instruments. Overtreatment and waste in hospital care have generated universal complaints. Accordingly, serious reform must be made in the direction of appropriately adjusting the ownership of hospitals as well as changing the ways of hospital management so that they can adapt themselves to the need of the health care market.Finally, there are other serious problems involved in China's hospital management. These problems are multi-faceted. For instance, medical facilities and instruments have not been up-to--dated and cannot meet the needs of patients in medical care, the structure of hospital services does not suit the need of the ever-increasing numbers of senior citizens in China, etc. The only way to resolve these problems is reform. This requires ordinary Chinese citizens as well as Chinese leadership to free themselves from the restrictions of the previous centrally-planned economic theory and to seek a new health care model.DOWNLOAD HISTORY | This article has been downloaded 15 times in Digital Commons before migrating into this platform.


2016 ◽  
Vol 31 (8) ◽  
pp. 554-563
Author(s):  
Peter B Viehoff ◽  
Lianne Pelzer ◽  
Yvonne F Heerkens ◽  
Dorine C van Ravensberg ◽  
Martino Neumann

Purpose To capture the views of different health care providers involved in the treatment of patients with lymphoedema from various countries around the world on the functioning of lymphoedema patients and the factors influencing functioning of these patients using the international classification of functioning, disability and health (ICF). Method A worldwide e-mail survey with questions based on components of the ICF. Results In total, 142 health professionals from seven different health professions and 20 different countries answered the questions. The aspects of functioning that were named by the health professionals could be linked to 359 different ICF categories. Of these categories, 109 belonged to body functions (30.4%), 55 to body structures (15.3%), 121 to activities and participation (33.7%) and 74 to environmental factors (20.6%). Overall, the most mentioned items were health services, systems and policies, immunological system functions, looking after one’s health, products and technology for personal use in daily life and dressing. Conclusions The ICF provided a valuable reference for identifying concepts in statements from international health care professionals experienced in the treatment of lymphoedema patients. The results of this research will be used in the development of ICF core sets for lymphoedema.


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert Jack Rotfeld

Focuses on the dilemma for health care professionals of providing customer satisfaction without being significantly influenced by the advertising claims of pharmaceutical manufacturers and other commercial concerns. Notes that marketing could be a tool for encouraging patients to be more involved in their own health care, resulting in a possible doctor‐patient therapeutic alliance of joint decision making toward a goal of long‐term improved health. Also notes that there are limits to the benefits of seeing medicine as a business in the strictest sense of the word. Warns that, in health care, the customer does not always know best.


2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Darya Kurowecki ◽  
Justin Godbout

“We talk about people with mental illness, and people with diabetes, and smokers and the obese, and so on and so on. We’re talking about the same people – just with different labels.”– Health care professional [1, p. 6]Severe mental illness (SMI) most commonly refers to mental disorders with a psychotic component and significantly reduced functioning despite the presence of inherent differences in risk factors, etiologies, and treatments [1]. The most common disorders that fall under this term include schizophrenia and bipolar disorder [1]. Over a decade of research into the morbidity and mortality of individuals with SMI has consistently revealed mortality rates two to three times higher and a life expectancy of 25-30 years shorter compared to the general population [1-4]. Contrary to popular belief, the main causes of early death are not drug overdose or suicide, but rather, preventable illnesses such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and HIV/AIDS [1,3,5-7]. Incidence of other preventable conditions, such as obesity and respiratory disease, is also much higher among patients with SMI, and when present, is associated with a more severe course of mental illness and a reduced quality of life [3,8]. Such findings bring significant questions: what is the cause of this disparity in mortality/ morbidity? What can health care professionals do to help reduce this gap?A recent report by the Early Onset Illness and Mortality Working Group [1] outlines several factors that may contribute to poor physical health of people with SMI. Some factors, such as those related to the mental illness itself (e.g., cognitive impairment, a lack of communication skills, medication side-effects) and socioeconomic status (e.g., poverty, poor education) may be less amenable to modification, but should nevertheless be a target for action. Other contributing factors include behaviour and lifestyle (e.g., physical inactivity, obesity, tobacco smoking), and poor preventative medical care (e.g., disparity in quality of medical care), both of which are more easily modifiable with the assistance of medical care practitioners. Here we will summarize the factors responsible for poor physical health in SMI, specifically focusing on the mental illness itself, socioeconomic status, behaviour and lifestyle, health care system barriers, and insufficient preventative medical care. We will then propose future directions and ways in which medical students and current medical professionals can help reduce this gap.


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