DYNAMICS OF PERINATAL LOSSES IN ALMATY

Vestnik ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 19-22
Author(s):  
Г.Ж. Бодыков ◽  
А.М. Курманова ◽  
С.М. Оспангалиева ◽  
Ж.Р. Жаналиева ◽  
Б.К. Аманжолова ◽  
...  

Динамика и уровень перинатальной смертности за последние десятилетие свидетельствовали о том, что в г. Алматы имеет устойчивую тенденцию к снижению до 8,8‰ к 2019 году. В структуре перинатальной смертности большая часть приходится на антенатальную (5,5-6,5‰); около трети - на раннюю неонатальную смертность (3,2 до 2,3‰). В структуре причин неонатальных потерь наблюдалось устойчивое снижение дыхательных и сердечно-сосудистых нарушений в 2,3-3,8 раза - с 5 до 1,3‰, врожденных аномалий с 4,4 до 0,9‰, неонатальные потери от инфекционных болезней остаются стабильными. Сохраняющие риски инфекционной патологии, особенно в беспрецедентной ситуации в период пандемии диктуют необходимость пересмотра подходов к оказанию перинатальной помощи населению и разработкой новой концепции перинатальной помощи с существенными изменениями в подходах инфекционного контроля, развития превентивной перинатологии с более эффективной антенатальной охраной здоровья плода. The dynamics and level of perinatal mortality over the past decade testified to the fact that in Almaty it has a steady downward trend to 8.8 ‰ by 2019. In the structure of perinatal mortality, most of it falls on antenatal (5.5-6.5 ‰); about a third - for early neonatal mortality (3.2 to 2.3 ‰). In the structure of the causes of neonatal losses, there was a steady decrease in respiratory and cardiovascular disorders by 2.3-3.8 times - from 5 to 1.3 ‰, congenital anomalies from 4.4 to 0.9 ‰, neonatal losses from infectious diseases remain stable. The persisting risks of infectious pathology, especially in an unprecedented situation during a pandemic, dictate the need to revise approaches to providing perinatal care to the population and develop a new concept of perinatal care with significant changes in approaches to infection control, thedevelopment of preventive perinatology with more effective antenatal fetal health care.

2002 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
pp. 407-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
David P. Calfee ◽  
Barry M. Farr

During the past several years, major changes have occurred in the way in which health care is provided and financed. One of the outcomes of these changes has been a greater emphasis on providing quality health care at a low cost. This has led many healthcare facilities to question the necessity of all expenditures and to reduce spending when at all possible. Many healthcare facilities have solicited the services of consulting groups to provide recommendations regarding cost-containment strategies appropriate for their particular institution.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Turkan Ahmet

The past few decades of ongoing war in Iraq has had a dramatic impact on the health of Iraq’s population. Wars are known to have negative effects on the social and physical environments of individuals, as well as limit their access to the available health care services. This paper explores the personal experiences of my family members, who were exposed to war, as well as includes information that has been reviewed form many academic sources. The data aided in providing recommendations and developing strategies, on both local and international levels, to improve the health status of the populations exposed to war.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rasha H. Bassyouni ◽  
Ahmed-Ashraf Wegdan ◽  
Naglaa A El-Sherbiny

To evaluate the role of educational intervention on health care workers' (HCWs) compliance to standard precautions and cleaning of frequently touched surfaces at critical care units, forty-nine HCWs at 2 intensive care units (ICUs) and one neonatology unit at Fayoum University hospital were evaluated for knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) towards standard precautions as well as obstacles affecting their compliance to standard precautions before and after a 32-hour purposed-designed infection control education program. A structured self-administrated questionnaire as well as observational checklists were used. Assessment of Environmental cleaning was investigated by observational checklist, ATP bioluminescence and aerobic bacteriological culture for 118 frequently touched surfaces. Pre-intervention assessment revealed that 78.6% of HCWs were with good knowledge, 82.8% with good attitude and 80.8% had good practice. Obstacles identified by HCWs were as follow: making patient-care very technical (65.3%), deficiency of hand washing facilities (59.2%), skin irritation resulting from hand hygiene products (51%), and unavailability of PPE (38.8%). High significant improvements of knowledge, attitude and practice were detected after one month of educational intervention (P= 0.000). During the pre-interventional period only 30.5% of surfaces were considered clean versus 97.45% post intervention (P< 0.05). The highest Median ATP bioluminescence values were obtained from telephone handset, light switches and Blood pressure cuffs. S. aureus was the most common isolated organism followed by Enterococcus spp and E.coli (52, 38 and 19 surfaces respectively). In conclusion, contentious training of HCWs on standard precautions should be considered a mandatory element in infection control programs


2001 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan H. Busch ◽  
Ernst R. Berndt ◽  
Richard G. Frank

Economists have long suggested that to be reliable, a preferred medical care price index should employ time-varying weights to measure outcomes-adjusted changes in the price of treating an episode of illness. In this article, we report on several years of research developing alternative indexes for the treatment of the acute phase of major depression, for the period 1991–1996. The introduction of new treatment technologies in the past two decades suggests well-known measurement issues may be prominent in constructing such a price index.We report on the results of four successively re


2021 ◽  
pp. 002203452110018
Author(s):  
J.T. Wright ◽  
M.C. Herzberg

Our ability to unravel the mysteries of human health and disease have changed dramatically over the past 2 decades. Decoding health and disease has been facilitated by the recent availability of high-throughput genomics and multi-omics analyses and the companion tools of advanced informatics and computational science. Understanding of the human genome and its influence on phenotype continues to advance through genotyping large populations and using “light phenotyping” approaches in combination with smaller subsets of the population being evaluated using “deep phenotyping” approaches. Using our capability to integrate and jointly analyze genomic data with other multi-omic data, the knowledge of genotype-phenotype relationships and associated genetic pathways and functions is being advanced. Understanding genotype-phenotype relationships that discriminate human health from disease is speculated to facilitate predictive, precision health care and change modes of health care delivery. The American Association for Dental Research Fall Focused Symposium assembled experts to discuss how studies of genotype-phenotype relationships are illuminating the pathophysiology of craniofacial diseases and developmental biology. Although the breadth of the topic did not allow all areas of dental, oral, and craniofacial research to be addressed (e.g., cancer), the importance and power of integrating genomic, phenomic, and other -omic data are illustrated using a variety of examples. The 8 Fall Focused talks presented different methodological approaches for ascertaining study populations and evaluating population variance and phenotyping approaches. These advances are reviewed in this summary.


1989 ◽  
Vol 15 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 184-188
Author(s):  
David Orentlicher

The interest of the eight major organizations of health care professionals was not in debating the philosophical, ethical, moral or religious issues surrounding abortion. The members of the organizations differ on how to balance the woman's privacy right against the state's interests in maternal and fetal health, and in particular about whether the state has a compelling interest in fetal health before viability. Given the diversity of views, the brief neither endorsed nor opposed the Supreme Court's holding in Roe v. Wade that the state's interest in fetal health becomes compelling at viability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 797-797
Author(s):  
Nicholas Reed

Abstract Hearing Loss (HL) is common among older adults and is associated with poor health care quality outcomes include 30-day readmissions, length of stay, poorer satisfaction, and increased medical expenditures. These associations may manifest in changes in help-seeking behaviour. In the 2015 Current Medicare Beneficiary Study (MCBS) (n=10848; weighted sample=46.3 million), participants reported whether they knowingly had avoided seeking care in the past year and self-reported HL was measured as degree of trouble (none, a little, or a lot) hearing when using a hearing aid if applicable. In a model adjusted for demographic, socioeconomic, and health factors, those with a little trouble (OR= 1.612; 95% CI= 1.334-1.947; P&lt;0.001) and a lot of trouble hearing (OR= 2.011; 95% CI= 1.443-2.801; P&lt;0.001) had 61.2% and 101.1% higher odds of avoiding health care over the past year relative to participants with no trouble hearing. Future work should examine whether hearing care modifies this association.


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