medical care system
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2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-117
Author(s):  
Dmitrii A. Svirskii ◽  
Eduard E. Antipin ◽  
Konstantin V. Paromov ◽  
Eduard V. Nedashkovsky

In the modern world, the number of people using various psychotropic drugs increases every day. The situation that has been described in recent decades associated with the use of narcotic and not criminalized substances in international literature as the OPIOID + (plus) crisis. According to statistics, over the past few years, officially registered deaths from drug overdose have exceeded 70,000 in the United States. Leading causes were synthetic opioids, psychostimulants, and cocaine. This includes prescription opioids, opiates, benzodiazepines, and antidepressants. All aforementioned drugs are used in combination with each other, with alcohol or psychotropic marijuana. For humans, biological, social, and psychological factors are cause the initiation of psychoactive drugs. Due to the lack of a well-functioning medical care system for patients with chronic pain, doctors of all specialties treat pain. In this article, we consider the current situation with mind-altering drugs and apply the role of the anesthesiologist in reducing the growth rate of the opioid pandemic.


Author(s):  
You Yeon Choi ◽  
Seung Yeol Yoo ◽  
Mihyun Yang ◽  
Ki Moon Seong

Radiation emergency medicine (REM) systems are operated around the world to provide specialized care for injured individuals who require immediate medical attention in accidents. This manuscript describes the current status of REM safety regulation in Korea and summarizes an assessment of the effects of this regulation. Responding to the requests of people for stronger safety regulations related to radiation exposure, a unique REM safety regulation for nuclear licensees, which is enforceable by laws, has been established and implemented. It is not found in other countries. It can provide a good example in practice for sustainable REM management including document reviews on medical response procedures and inspections of equipment and facilities. REM preparedness of nuclear or radiologic facilities has been improved with systematic implementation of processes contained in the regulation. In particular, the medical care system of licensees has become firmly coordinated in the REM network at the national level, which has enhanced their abilities by providing adequate medical personnel and facilities. This legal regulation service has contributed to preparing the actual medical emergency response for unexpected accidents and should ultimately secure the occupational safety for workers in radiation facilities.


Author(s):  
Bharat Kwatra ◽  
Barshana Bhattacharya ◽  
Tanvi Khokhawat ◽  
Aaron Raphael Jes ◽  
Monish Bhati ◽  
...  

The globe has recently been fighting a battle with black fungus, also known as Mucormycosis, and with no immediate treatments available, the disease's devastation is spreading at an alarming rate. A large number of researchers are still looking for a promising new drug that could aid the medical care system in this fight. A docking-based screening employing quantum mechanical scoring of a library is shown, built from approved drugs and compounds that Ellagic acid, Hesperetin, Capsaicin, Concanavalin, Cinnamic acid, Quercetin, Citronellal, Limonene, Progoitrin, Sinigrin, Allicin, Curcumin, Indole, Resveratrol, Strigol, D-limonene, Benzoic acid, Panaxydol, Kaempferol and Berberine with Protein with PDB id 6VCT could display antifungal activity against Mucormycosis. Clearly, these compounds should be further evaluated in experimental assays and clinical trials to confirm their actual activity against the disease. We hope that these findings may contribute to the rational drug design against Mucormycosis.


2021 ◽  
pp. 159101992110358
Author(s):  
Michihiro Tanaka

The Japan healthcare system is considered as one of the world's finest. However, medical facilities across Japan are struggling to cope with the recent surge in novel coronavirus infections, leaving the medical care system in many areas on the brink of collapse. Physician burnout was already a growing problem, and the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has only made it worse. The personal impact of coronavirus disease 2019 in Japan is reported.


Children ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 919
Author(s):  
Akihiro Maeta ◽  
Yuri Takaoka ◽  
Atsuko Nakano ◽  
Yukiko Hiraguchi ◽  
Masaaki Hamada ◽  
...  

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic’s impact on food allergy treatment such as home-based oral immunotherapy (OIT) is not known. This cross-sectional, questionnaire-based anonymized survey screened 2500 parents of children with allergic diseases and was conducted in the pediatric outpatient clinics of 24 hospitals. Basic clinical data of the children were collected along with the degree of allergy control, parental anxiety about emergency visits, and the risk of COVID-19 in the first state of emergency. A total of 2439 (97.6%) questionnaires were collected, and 1315 parents who were instructed to initiate home-based OIT for their children were enrolled (OIT group). Subjective OIT progress compared to before the COVID-19 pandemic was ascertained as “Full”, “Middle”, “Low”, “Little”, and “Stop” in 264 (20.1%), 408 (31.0%), 384 (29.2%), 203 (15.4%), and 56 (4.3%) participants, respectively. Anxiety about emergency visits and the risk of COVID-19 were negatively associated with the subjective OIT progress. In Japan, approximately half of the children continued smoothly the home-based OIT during the COVID-19 pandemic. Parents with high levels of anxiety about the disruption of the medical care system due to COVID-19 and the risk of COVID-19 did not experience a smooth continuation of home-based OIT.


Healthcare ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1362
Author(s):  
Gaofeng Yin ◽  
Hanning Song ◽  
Jian Wang ◽  
Stephen Nicholas ◽  
Elizabeth Maitland

The COVID-19 run on medical resources crashed Wuhan’s medical care system, a medical disaster duplicated in many countries facing the COVID-19 pandemic. In a novel approach to understanding the run on Wuhan’s medical resources, we draw from bank run theory to analyze the causes and consequences of the COVID-19 run on Wuhan’s medical resources and recommend policy changes and government actions to attenuate runs on medical resources in the future. Like bank runs, the cause of the COVID-19 medical resource run was rooted in China’s local medical resource context and a sudden realignment of expectations, reflecting shortages and misallocations of hospital resources (inadequate liquidity and portfolio composition); high level hospitals siphoning-off patients from lower level health providers (bank moral hazard and adverse selection problem); patients selecting high-level hospitals over lower-level health care (depositor moral hazard problem); inadequate government oversight and uncontrolled risky hospital behavior (inadequate bank regulatory control); biased medical insurance schemes (inadequate depositor insurance); and failure to provide medical resource reserves (failure as lender of last resort). From Wuhan’s COVID-19 run on medical resources, we recommend that control and reform by government enlarge medical resource supply, improve the capacity of primary medical care, ensure timely virus information, formulate principles for the allocation of medical resources that suit a country’s national conditions, optimize the medical insurance schemes and public health fund allocations and enhance the emergency support of medical resources.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
B Magrupov ◽  
V Ubaydullayeva ◽  
T VervekinaRepublican

This article is dedicated to the work of the pathological department of the RRCEM and the formation of the pathological service in the emergency medical care system is shown. The analysis of the work was carried out, including autopsy, biopsy studies and the results of the scientific activity of the department.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Catherine Abaasa ◽  
Celestino Obua ◽  
Edith K. Wakida ◽  
Godfrey Zari Rukundo

Abstract Individuals with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias often require substantial support from other people. Much of the care-giving is from family members who eventually experience physical, emotional and financial stress, depression and fatigue. In Uganda, families are a cornerstone in providing care to individuals with dementia. However, little is known about the psychosocial supports available to the care-givers in their care-giving role. We assessed the psychosocial supports available to care-givers of individuals with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias in southwestern Uganda. We conducted 34 in-depth interviews at three referral hospitals at which care-givers identified by the treating clinicians were approached for informed consent. The interviews were conducted until thematic saturation was reached, and the interviews were translated and transcribed. Thematic content analysis was used to analyse the data. Care-giver supports were structured into two major themes: medical supports utilised and supports beyond the medical care system. Medical supports highlighted information provided by medical professionals. Supports beyond the medical care system included emotional and instrumental supports provided by religious leaders, the local communities and family members. Care-givers for individuals with dementia in southwestern Uganda receive educational support from medical practitioners, and unstructured emotional and instrumental supports from the family and community.


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