scholarly journals 2019: The Year of Teledentistry in France?

Author(s):  
Nicolas Giraudeau ◽  
Olivier Roy ◽  
Eve Malthiery ◽  
Joao Pasdeloup ◽  
Jean Valcarcel ◽  
...  

In France, access to a dentist for elderly people, disabled people or inmates is limited. A person’s access to a dentist decreases by 25% when joining a nursing home. A national report mentioned that 85% of residents in nursing homes didn’t have access to a dentist in the past year and 42% in the last 5 years. There are fewer data on disabled people, but 48% of people with disabilities have, at least, one important issue related to oral health. Two examples of teledentistry, the e-DENT project from University Hospital of Montpellier and the TEL-E-DENT project from the public Hospital of Guéret, are presented to describe how teledentistry works in France, the current legal framework, remuneration of teledentistry and the pros and cons of teledentistry in France. 2019 will be crucial for the development of teledentistry as a number official decisions will be made that will influence the implementation of this kind of activity.

2018 ◽  
Vol 39 (9) ◽  
pp. 2109-2132 ◽  
Author(s):  
ELISABETH CARLSTEDT

ABSTRACTSwedish nursing homes’ use of Instagram has increased vastly in the past few years. Instagram is understood as a means to manage the image they wish to mediate to the public. This article examines what is displayed in the nursing homes’ Instagram accounts, and what kind of reality is thereby constructed. The data consist of 338 Instagram images from four nursing homes’ Instagram accounts. It is found that nursing home life is primarily depicted on Instagram as active, sociable and fun, with informal, friendly relations between staff and residents, and residents able to continue to live as before, if not better, and to interact with surrounding society. Frailty, boredom, loneliness and death were absent from the data, as were mundane care activities. The article concludes that the presentations in the Instagram accounts challenge the traditional idea of nursing homes as total institutions, and the decline and loss associated with living in such institutions; however, there is a risk that these idyllic presentations conceal the inherent problems of nursing home life.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 100
Author(s):  
Ghrissi Larbi

:it would seem that the University Hospital Centre of Oran suffers from an insufficiency in the control ¶existing human resources and of an inadequacy enters the needs and the profiles ¶existing on the one hand, and that it would not have a true policy of management of ¶human resources which would enable him to benefit best from the resources ¶human available to take up the challenges of management and the development of ¶services provided to the patients.¶


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.


1988 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 81-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gillis Samuelsson ◽  
Gerdt Sundström

Statistics on place of death, validated against longitudinal evidence on the entrance into nursing homes, show the “final” rate of institutionalization to have risen in the decades between 1938 and 1975 in Sweden. In a local study, 15 percent entered a nursing home between the ages of sixty-seven and eighty, which seems representative of national trends. The “final” rate is estimated to be between 22 percent and a maximum of about 40 percent. Currently, the socially and economically deprived dominate in Swedish nursing homes just as they did in the poor house of the past. Yet, rising rates may indicate raised welfare for the poorest in society. Issues concerning who is institutionalized and why appear more important than precise measurement of rates of institutionalization.


Author(s):  
Soyun Ahn

Disinformation spread through social media has been widely detected around the world in recent years. Researchers, the press, and the public alike have expressed strong concerns about disinformation influencing public discourse and elections, perceiving it as a direct threat to democracy. Democratic countries once reluctant to restrict freedom of speech are now actively examining countermeasures to disinformation. Such measures could be divided into four categories: Regulating platforms, criminalization of offenders, governmental monitoring, and relying on civil society. The existing literature so far has focused more on examining the pros and cons of individual policy directions rather than providing an overview of the entire dynamics when multiples measures are combined in practice. It is due to most countries still being at their infancy discussing and inventing a disinformation regulation suitable for their legal freedom of speech protection structure. South Korea is unique in that it has operated a system dealing with disinformation for over a decade now, and in that it has a system specifically dedicated to election protection combining three of the four measures introduced above. Through scrutinizing both the legal framework and execution practices of the multiple disinformation countermeasures in South Korea, this research expands the existing literature by offering insights on how combining measures could result in unforeseen discounts of freedom of speech.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Poupin ◽  
Diama N'Diaye ◽  
François Chaumier ◽  
Adrien Lemaignen ◽  
Louis Bernard ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Long-term residential care facilities and nursing homes are known to be particularly vulnerable to viral respiratory diseases and have expressed the need for collaboration to help manage outbreaks when they occur. Method: In April 2020, Tours University Hospital created a mobile multidisciplinary medicine team to help local nursing homes deal with outbreaks of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The team included a geriatrician, infectious diseases experts, and palliative care specialists. Results: Here, we provide initial feedback on the mobile support team’s first intervention. The nursing home staff’s main requests were collaborative working, consensus decision-making, and the dissemination of information on disease management.Conclusion: Three lessons emerged from this collaboration: (i) break the nursing home’s isolation, (ii) limit transmission through the use of appropriate hygiene measures, broad screening, and the isolation of sick residents and sick employees, and (iii) provide sufficient human resources.


BMJ Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. e034742 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Nouvenne ◽  
Caterina Caminiti ◽  
Francesca Diodati ◽  
Elisa Iezzi ◽  
Beatrice Prati ◽  
...  

IntroductionNursing home residents represent a particularly vulnerable population experiencing high risk of unplanned hospital admissions, but few interventions have proved effective in reducing this risk. The aim of this research will be to verify the effects of a hospital-based multidisciplinary mobile unit (MMU) team intervention delivering urgent care to nursing home residents directly at their bedside.Methods and analysisFour nursing homes based in the Parma province, in Northern Italy, will be involved in this prospective, pragmatic, multicentre, 18-month quasiexperimental study (sequential design with two cohorts). The residents of two nursing homes will receive the MMU team care intervention. In case of urgent care needs, the nursing home physician will contact the hospital physician responsible for the MMU team by phone. The case will be triaged as (a) manageable by phone advice, (b) requiring urgent assessment by the MMU team or (c) requiring immediate emergency department (ED) referral. MMU team is composed of one senior physician and one emergency-medicine resident chosen within the staff of Internal Medicine and Critical Subacute Care Unit of Parma University-Hospital, usually with different specialty background, and equipped with portable ultrasound, set of drugs and devices useful in urgency. The MMU visits patients in nursing homes, with the mission to stabilise clinical conditions and avoid hospital admission. Residents of the other two nursing homes will receive usual care, that is, ED referral in every case of urgency. Study endpoints include unplanned hospital admissions (primary), crude all-cause mortality, hospital mortality, length of stay and healthcare-related costs (secondary).Ethics and disseminationThe study protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee of Area Vasta Emilia Nord (Emilia-Romagna region). Informed consent will be collected from patients or legal representatives. The results will be actively disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and conference presentations, in compliance with the Italian law.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov Registry (NCT 04085679); Pre-results.


2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 58
Author(s):  
Andrés A. Agudelo Suárez ◽  
Felipe López Vergel ◽  
Santiago Alzate Urrea ◽  
Carolina López Orozco ◽  
Erica Espinosa Herrera ◽  
...  

ResumenObjetivo: Explorar las percepciones sobre salud bucal y género con relación a la población adulta mayor que consulta la red hospitalaria pública de Medellín desde la perspectiva de los prestadores de servicios de salud. Materiales y métodos: Estudio cualitativo con perspectiva etnográfica mediante 34 entrevistas semi-estructuradas en personal que presta servicios de salud en la Empresa Social del Estado -E.S.E- Metrosalud. Las entrevistas se transcribieron textualmente y se realizó análisis de contenido según categorías propias de los discursos de los participantes. Resultados: Se encontraron tres categorías principales: 1) Necesidades y problemas de salud general y bucal y sus determinantes; 2) Símbolos y significados de la población adulta mayor; 3) Perspectiva y roles de género y su relación con las prácticas sociales en salud bucal. En general, los prestadores perciben alta carga de enfermedad y barreras de acceso a los servicios de salud. Se percibieron diferencias de género relacionadas con los roles que asumen las personas, las prácticas de autocuidado, y los perfiles de utilización de los servicios de salud. Conclusiones: Los prestadores entrevistados perciben como la población adulta mayor que consulta a la red prestadora de servicios pública de Medellín se encuentra en situación de vulnerabilidad social que impacta en las condiciones de salud bucal. De igual manera, se perciben diferencias de género relacionadas. Se requieren políticas sociales que garanticen equidad para este grupo poblacional.AbstractObjective: To explore the perceptions about oral health and gender in relation to the elderly population assisted by the public hospital network of Medellin from the health personnel perspective. Materials and methods: A qualitative and ethnographic study was conducted through 34 semi-structured interviews in health personnel in the State Social Enterprise E.S.E Metrosalud. Interviews were transcribed and a content analysis was carried out according to categories from the participants’ discourses. Results: Three main categories were found: 1) Needs and problems of general and oral health and their determinants; 2) Symbols and significances of the elderly; 3) Perspectives and gender roles and its relationship with social practices on oral health. In general terms, participants perceived high disease burden and barriers of access to health services. In addition, gender differences were perceived related to the roles that people assume, self-care practices and health services utilization profiles. Conclusions: Interviewed providers perceived that the elderly population assisted by the public hospital network of Medellin is exposed to social vulnerability that affects oral health conditions. In addition, gender related differences were found. Social policies that ensure equity in this population group are required.


2022 ◽  
pp. 73-85
Author(s):  
Mounir Rabah-Rabbou ◽  
Abdelaziz Zitouni ◽  
Mustapha Zahir ◽  
Abdelghani Boudiaf

Developing the resilience of hospitals in this period of crisis is no longer a choice but rather has become a matter of course for survival. The use of this concept to understand how organizations can overcome the current crisis seems relevant insofar as the research will first identify the human and organizational constraints that are a source of vulnerability for public hospitals and then understand the main practices undertaken by the university hospital to deal with the COVID-19 crisis in terms of the HR function, and finally see to what extent these practices can contribute to the resilience of the public hospital.


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