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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth A Poindexter ◽  
Amanda Rodriguez ◽  
Timothy Switaj

ABSTRACT Virtual health and secure messaging gained newfound relevance in medicine during the coronavirus disease (COVID)-19 pandemic. For a military trainee health care clinic located on Joint Base San Antonio, the McWethy Troop Medical Clinic (TMC), implementation of virtual health and secure messaging services meant decreased risk of COVID-19 exposure for trainees and clinical staff. Through ongoing utilization, these services also made impacts to reduce loss of instruction time and improve access to care for the McWethy TMC trainee population. In defining the challenges, successes, and future implications for virtual health and secure messaging at the McWethy TMC, key lessons emerge for other military trainee clinics. The key concepts explored in this article are virtual health and secure messaging.


Author(s):  
Jaqueline Aparecida dos Santos Sokem ◽  
Elaine Aparecida Mye Takamatu Watanabe ◽  
Adriano Menis Ferreira ◽  
Lillian Dias Castilho Siqueira ◽  
Manuela de Mendonça Figueirêdo Coelho ◽  
...  

Objective: to assess the level of knowledge of the nursing staff of the medical clinic of a university hospital about pressure injuries. Method: descriptive-exploratory study, approved by the Research Ethics Committee. Data were collected through a validated questionnaire. Fifty individuals participated, 35 nursing technicians and 15 nurses. Results: nursing technicians had an average of 83.5% and nurses had an average of 89.9%. A regression model was carried out to verify variables that influence the level of knowledge, and it was identified that having more than 5 years in the profession increases 1.61 times the chance that the professional has adequate knowledge. Conclusion: a weakness in knowledge about pressure injuries was identified. In view of the costs involved in the treatment and complications arising from these injuries, health institutions must implement educational actions about this condition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 424-424
Author(s):  
Audrey Harkness ◽  
Gail Ironson ◽  
Cho-Hee Shrader ◽  
Dustin Duncan ◽  
Steven Safren ◽  
...  

Abstract The study is one of the first to examine both the prevalence of life instability among older adults with HIV (OAWH) in a community clinic and its relationship to their mental health. OAWH (N=623) from a community medical clinic completed an interviewer-administered assessment (English/Spanish) which included an additive Life Instability Index (LII) composed of indicators at the individual (e.g. education, housing instability, employment status) and community (e.g. poverty, transportation) levels. Participants were a mean age of 60 years (SD = 5.90) with the majority identifying as Black-non-Hispanic (65.9%), cisgender male (60.8%), and heterosexual (80.6%). Participants reported an average of 6.08 destabilizing factors (SD = 1.44). In multiple linear regression analyses LII was significantly related to increased substance use among participants (b= 0.08, p < 0.01), but not with anxiety or depression. An LII is an innovative approach to assess the relationship between OAWH’s mental health and social determinants of health.


Author(s):  
L.V. Sotnikova

Medicine in modern Russia is as profitable business as any other. Of course, we are talking about private medicine. Therefore, medical organizations need to be able to plan their income and expenses, as well as be able to manage them. Many Russian private medical organizations adopt foreign experience, transferring to the “medical soil” the idea of “effective management”, which consists in the ability to increase revenues, reduce costs, and generate such a volume of profit that suits the shareholders. According to the market law of capital flow, shareholders who own shares of companies in one industry sell these shares (at the time when this can be done with the maximum possible profit) and acquire shares of companies in another industry that are more attractive for investors. It is possible to sell shares “from hand to hand” — from the previous owner to a new one, but the transaction in this case is carried out at a negotiated price that will not meet the criteria of the so-called fair price. A completely different matter is the sale of shares on an exchange, an observable (transparent) market. The transaction is reflected in the accounting and reporting, the only question is whether the profit from the transaction is reflected on the balance sheet of the medical organization in respect of the shares of which the transaction is being made.


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