12 results
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2. Disparities in the provision of medical care: an outcome in search of an explanation.
- Author
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Klonoff EA
- Subjects
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MEDICAL care , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICINE , *PHYSICIANS , *PSYCHOLOGISTS - Abstract
This purpose of this paper is to review the literature on racial/ethnic disparities in the utilization and quality of care and the proposed explanations for these differences. First, the literature on racial/ethnic disparities in medical treatment is reviewed briefly with the goal of providing a sense of the range of procedures and conditions on which these disparities occur. Then, the possible role of physician/provider, patient, and health care system factors in contributing to these disparities is reviewed. Finally, suggestions for new or expanded directions for research in each of these three areas are given. The goal of the paper is to identify factors that might be particularly amenable to the type of research done by health psychologists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Making doctors manage… but how? Recent developments in the Italian NHS.
- Author
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Lega, Federico and Sartirana, Marco
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PHYSICIANS , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICINE , *PROFESSIONALISM , *HOSPITALS , *NATIONAL health services , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Background: Involving doctors in management has been intended as one of the strategies to spread organizational principles in healthcare settings. However, professionals often resist taking on relevant managerial responsibility, and the question concerning by which means to engage doctors in management in a manner that best fit the challenges encountered by different health systems remains open to debate.Methods: This paper analyzes the different forms of medical management experienced over time in the Italian NHS, a relevant "lab" to study the evolution of the involvement of doctors in management, and provides a framework for disentangling different dimensions of medical management.Results: We show how new means to engage frontline professionals in management spread, without deliberate planning, as a consequence of the innovations in service provision that are introduced to respond to the changes in the healthcare sector.Conclusions: This trend is promising because such means of performing medical management appear to be more easily compatible with professional logics; therefore, this could facilitate the engagement of a large proportion of professionals rather than the currently limited number of doctors who are "forced" or willing to take formal management roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Racism in Medicine: Shifting the Power.
- Author
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Nwando Olayiwola, J. and Olayiwola, J Nwando
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RACISM in medicine , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL personnel , *SERVICES for patients , *PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Medicine has historically been a field where the provider of the service (physician, nurse) has a significant amount of power as compared with the recipient of the service (the patient). For the most part, this power is relatively consistent, and the power dynamic is rarely disrupted. In this essay, I share a personal experience in which a racist rant by a patient seemingly reverses the power dynamic. As the physician, I faced the realization that I may not have as much power as I believed, but fortunately I had some tools that allowed for my resilience. It is my hope that this paper will strengthen other family physicians and professional minorities that are victims of racism, discrimination, and prejudice for their race, sex, ability, sexual orientation, religion, and other axes of discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. From vagueness in medical thought to the foundations of fuzzy reasoning in medical diagnosis
- Author
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Seising, Rudolf
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MEDICINE , *DIAGNOSIS , *MEDICAL care , *PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Summary: Objective: This article delineates a relatively unknown path in the history of medical philosophy and medical diagnosis. It is concerned with the phenomenon of vagueness in the physician''s “style of thinking” and with the use of fuzzy sets, systems, and relations with a view to create a model of such reasoning when physicians make a diagnosis. It represents specific features of medical ways of thinking that were mentioned by the Polish physician and philosopher Ludwik Fleck in 1926. The paper links Lotfi Zadeh''s work on system theory before the age of fuzzy sets with system-theory concepts in medical philosophy that were introduced by the philosopher Mario Bunge, and with the fuzzy-theoretical analysis of the notions of health, illness, and disease by the Iranian-German physician and philosopher Kazem Sadegh-Zadeh. Material: Some proposals to apply fuzzy sets in medicine were based on a suggestion made by Zadeh: symptoms and diseases are fuzzy in nature and fuzzy sets are feasible to represent these entity classes of medical knowledge. Yet other attempts to use fuzzy sets in medicine were self-contained. The use of this approach contributed to medical decision-making and the development of computer-assisted diagnosis in medicine. Conclusion: With regard to medical philosophy, decision-making, and diagnosis; the framework of fuzzy sets, systems, and relations is very useful to deal with the absence of sharp boundaries of the sets of symptoms, diagnoses, and phenomena of diseases. The foundations of reasoning and computer assistance in medicine were the result of a rapid accumulation of data from medical research. This explosion of knowledge in medicine gave rise to the speculation that computers could be used for the medical diagnosis. Medicine became, to a certain extent, a quantitative science. In the second half of the 20th century medical knowledge started to be stored in computer systems. To assist physicians in medical decision-making and patient care, medical expert systems using the theory of fuzzy sets and relations (such as the Viennese “fuzzy version” of the Computer-Assisted Diagnostic System, Cadiag, which was developed at the end of the 1970s) were constructed. The development of fuzzy relations in medicine and their application in computer-assisted diagnosis show that this fuzzy approach is a framework to deal with the “fuzzy mode of thinking” in medicine. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Priorities and strategies for the implementation of integrated informatics and communications technology to improve evidence-based practice.
- Author
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Doebbeling, Bradley N., Chou, Ann F., and Tierney, William M.
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MEDICAL care , *INFORMATION processing , *MEDICINE , *MEDICAL centers , *COMMUNICATION & technology , *PHYSICIANS , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PATIENT-centered care , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SYSTEM analysis , *MEDICAL informatics , *HEALTH planning , *DIFFUSION of innovations - Abstract
The U.S. health care system is one of the world's most advanced systems. Yet, the health care system suffers from unexplained practice variations, major gaps between evidence and practice, and suboptimal quality. Although information processing, communication, and management are key to health care delivery and considerable evidence links information/communication technology (IT) to improvements in patient safety and quality of care, the health care system has a longstanding gap in its investment. In the Crossing the Quality Chasm and Building a Better Delivery System reports, The Institute of Medicine and National Academy of Engineering identified IT integration as critical to improving health care delivery systems. This paper reviews the state of IT use in the U.S. health care system, its role in facilitating evidence-based practices, and identifies key attributes of an ideal IT infrastructure and issues surrounding IT implementation. We also examine structural, financial, policy-related, cultural, and organizational barriers to IT implementation for evidence-based practice and strategies to overcome them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Models, strategies, and tools. Theory in implementing evidence-based findings into health care practice.
- Author
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Sales, Anne, Smith, Jeffrey, Curran, Geoffrey, and Kochevar, Laura
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MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL centers , *PHYSICIANS , *MEDICINE , *MENTAL health , *ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
This paper presents a case for careful consideration of theory in planning to implement evidence-based practices into clinical care. As described, theory should be tightly linked to strategic planning through careful choice or creation of an implementation framework. Strategies should be linked to specific interventions and/or intervention components to be implemented, and the choice of tools should match the interventions and overall strategy, linking back to the original theory and framework. The thesis advanced is that in most studies where there is an attempt to implement planned change in clinical processes, theory is used loosely. An example of linking theory to intervention design is presented from a Mental Health Quality Enhancement Research Initiative effort to increase appropriate use of antipsychotic medication among patients with schizophrenia in the Veterans Health Administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Evidence-Based Medicine and Women: Do the Principles and Practice of EBM Further Women's Health?
- Author
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Rogers, Wendy
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PHYSICIANS , *MEDICAL care , *PHYSICAL fitness , *HEALTH products , *MEDICINE , *WOMEN - Abstract
Clinicians and policy makers the world over are embracing evidence-based medicine (EBM). The promise of EBM is to use summaries of research evidence to determine which healthcare interventions are effective and which are not, so that patients may benefit from effective interventions and be protected from useless or harmful ones. EBM provides an ostensibly rational and objective means of deciding whether or not an intervention should be provided on the basis of its effectiveness, in theory leading to fair and effective healthcare for all. In this paper I closely examine these claims from the perspective of healthcare for women, using relevant examples. I argue that the current processes of evidence-based medicine contain a number of biases against women. These biases occur in the production of the research that informs evidence-based medicine, in the methods used to analyse and synthesise the evidence, and in the application of EBM through the use of guidelines. Finally, the biomedical model of health that underpins most of the medical research used by EBM ignores the social and political context which contributes so much to the ill-health of women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Occupational Adaptation to Computerized Medical Information Systems.
- Author
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Aydin, Carolyn E.
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COMPUTER systems , *INFORMATION technology , *MEDICAL care , *INFORMATION resources management , *MEDICINE , *PHYSICIANS - Abstract
This paper explores the effects of computerized medical information systems on the occupational communities of health care professionals in hospitals. Interviews were conducted with informants from the pharmacy and nursing departments at two hospitals currently using medical information systems for communicating physicians' medication orders from the nursing station to the pharmacy. Results showed changes in tasks for both pharmacy and nursing, resulting in increased interdependence between the two departments. This interdependence was accompanied by improved communication and cooperation, providing an opportunity to encourage better working relationships between departments. The use and maintenance of the common computerized data base became a superordinate goal for the two groups, with the computer system itself as the topic of communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
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10. Learning To Doctor: Reflections on Recent Accounts of the Medical School Years.
- Author
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Conrad, Peter
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MEDICAL schools , *EDUCATION , *MEDICINE , *MEDICAL ethics , *MEDICAL care , *PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Using recent first-hand accounts by Klass (1987), Konner (1987), LeBaron (1982), and Reilly (1987), this paper examines "insiders' "experiences of medical school. Medical education emphasizes disease, technical procedures, and technological medicine, with scant attention to "caring" aspects of doctoring. Students struggle to learn medicine and to maintain a humanistic or patient-oriented perspective, but the social environment of medical training militates against humanistic doctoring. Toward the end of medical school, students undergo a transformation by adopting the medical-clinical perspective and shifting their identification from patients to doctors. The doctors who maintain a humanistic orientation to medical care appear to be individuals who had developed this orientation before they arrived at medical school. Thus, to increase the number of humanistic physicians, the best strategy may be to alter medical school recruitment and selection policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Continuities in the Sociology of Medical Education: An Introduction.
- Author
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Colombotos, John
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MEDICAL education , *SOCIAL sciences , *MEDICAL care , *PHYSICIANS , *SOCIOLOGY , *MEDICINE - Abstract
The introduction to this special issue of the Journal expands the scope of research on "the sociology of medical education" to include studies of the institutions in which physicians are trained as well as studies of the socialization of the physician throughout the life cycle. Research since the 1960s is reviewed briefly and the papers in this issue are discussed. Studies of the macropolitics and micropolitics of academic medicine are called for as well as comparative analyses of the settings in which physicians are trained and research on the relative effects on physicians' attitudes and behavior of different sets of experiences, professional and nonprofessional, over the course of their life cycle-all in the context of massive changes in the organization of health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Electronic Health Records: Washington and the A.M.A. Weigh In.
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PHYSICIANS , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL informatics , *MEDICINE - Abstract
To the Editor: Re ''Our Pen-and-Paper Doctors'' (editorial, June 24): [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2008
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