scholarly journals Adaptation and Validation of a Chinese Version of Patient Health Engagement Scale for Patients with Chronic Disease

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaying Zhang ◽  
Guendalina Graffigna ◽  
Andrea Bonanomi ◽  
Kai-chow Choi ◽  
Serena Barello ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaying Zhang ◽  
Guendalina Graffigna ◽  
Andrea Bonanomi ◽  
Kai-chow Choi ◽  
Serena Barello ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (8) ◽  
pp. 923-925
Author(s):  
Karl Z. Nadolsky ◽  
Daniel L. Hurley ◽  
W. Timothy Garvey

The pandemic of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has triggered an international crisis resulting in excess morbidity and mortality with adverse societal, economic, and geopolitical consequences. Like other disease states, there are patient characteristics that impact clinical risk and determine the spectrum of severity. Obesity, or adiposity-based chronic disease, has emerged as an important risk factor for morbidity and mortality due to COVID-19. It is imperative to further stratify risk in patients with obesity to determine optimal mitigation and perhaps therapeutic preparedness strategies. We suspect that insulin resistance is an important pathophysiologic cause of poor outcomes in patients with obesity and COVID-19 independent of body mass index. This explains the association of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), hypertension (HTN), and cardiovascular disease with poor outcomes since insulin resistance is the main driver of both dysglycemia-based chronic disease and cardiometabolic-based chronic disease towards end-stage disease manifestations. Staging the severity of adiposity-related disease in a “complication-centric” manner (HTN, dyslipidemia, metabolic syndrome, T2DM, obstructive sleep apnea, etc.) among different ethnic groups in patients with COVID-19 should help predict the adverse risk of adiposity on patient health in a pragmatic and actionable manner during this pandemic.


Author(s):  
Margaritha M. Kune ◽  
Erwin Panggabean

Asthma is a disease that is Often found in society, especially in the elderly. Asthma is a long-term chronic disease, if left to be fatal and can cause death. Limited access and costs, to patient health information, it is difficult, to know how much influence the disease. So to find out it needs to be built a simple application that can help and Facilitate the community. The purpose of this application is to identify asama disease in older people with 15 symptoms. For the development of expert systems, Several stages are needed items, namely: Analysis and Design of the data collection. This expert system application complies with asthma used by experts and users.


2020 ◽  
Vol Volume 14 ◽  
pp. 2027-2034
Author(s):  
Feijie Wang ◽  
Lijie Huang ◽  
Hongmei Zhang ◽  
Hongxia Jiang ◽  
Xiaoxia Chang ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sue Randall ◽  
Lis Neubeck

The choice of language health professionals use to discuss self-management of chronic disease is important and influences patients’ self-management. The words compliance, adherence and concordance are used to discuss patients’ agreement with prescribed treatment plans, but have different tone and meanings. Models of care linked to the words compliance and adherence are underpinned by interactions between patients and healthcare providers that merely reinforce instructions about treatments. The ‘patient-professional partnership’ is introduced as a model by Bodenheimer et al. (2002, p. 2469) whereby true partnership working should be an opportunity to pool the expertise of both parties to arrive at mutually agreed goals in concordance. The impact these words might have on partnership working is important in defining the patient–health professional relationship, and for the patients’ healthcare outcomes and the potential effect on healthcare utilisation.


OTO Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 2473974X2110590
Author(s):  
Hailey M. Juszczak ◽  
Richard M. Rosenfeld

Lifestyle medicine is a relatively new specialty that focuses on behavior change to prevent, treat, and reverse chronic disease and promote wellness. It is relevant to any medical or surgical field that deals with noninfectious chronic disease and to any individual or community pursuing health and wellness. Lifestyle medicine offers evidence-based interventions and tools to foster wellness and resiliency in ourselves and our patients. This commentary gives a brief background of lifestyle medicine and how embracing the discipline could benefit the American Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery and the field of otolaryngology overall. Specifically, we describe opportunities to improve patient health, promote personal wellness, combat burnout, and foster unity among otolaryngology subspeciality societies.


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