2,819 results
Search Results
152. Introducing Mother Baby Connections: a model of intensive perinatal mental health outpatient programming.
- Author
-
Geller, Pamela A., Posmontier, Bobbie, Horowitz, June Andrews, Bonacquisti, Alexa, and Chiarello, Lisa A.
- Subjects
ATTACHMENT behavior ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,MENTAL depression ,EMOTIONS ,HEALTH care teams ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,INTENSIVE care units ,MATHEMATICAL models ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MENTAL health ,MOTHER-infant relationship ,PREGNANCY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH evaluation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,WOUNDS & injuries ,RULES ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,DISCHARGE planning ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,SEVERITY of illness index - Abstract
Perinatal mental health problems, experienced by 15-20% of women, are a significant public health issue associated with adverse effects among childbearing women; yet only 20-25% receive adequate treatment. There has been a recent proliferation of intensive perinatal day treatment programs in the United States. To meet this need in the greater Philadelphia area, we introduce Mother Baby Connections (MBC), an innovative interdisciplinary, attachment-focused, intensive, outpatient perinatal mental health program recently launched at Drexel University. The purpose of this paper is to (1) present an overview of MBC, its theoretical framework for services, and its evidence-based components, highlighting the unique factors that differentiate this program from traditional outpatient treatment, and (2) present clinical outcome data utilizing scores from reliable and valid scales, including enrollment to discharge outcomes from 20 months of MBC operation. In sum, outcomes for 20 predominantly minority women with complete measures showed significant improvements in maternal depression symptom severity, maternal functioning, birth trauma symptoms, perceived stress, parenting stress, and emotional regulation. Effect sizes were medium to large (i.e., 0.42-2.00). We conclude that MBC is a viable model for tailored intensive outpatient treatment to foster maternal mental health and functioning during the perinatal period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. Multi-Institutional Arrangements in Health Care: Review, Analysis, and a Proposal for Future Research.
- Author
-
Fottler, Myron D., Schermerhorn, Jr., John R., Wong, John, and Money, William H.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,HEALTH care industry ,HEALTH services administration ,STOCK ownership ,MANAGEMENT ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,PUBLIC health ,HOSPITAL administration ,LITERATURE reviews ,VOLUNTARY hospitals - Abstract
Multi-institutional arrangements in the health care industry have grown rapidly over the past 10 years. This paper provides a literature review and a research proposal concerning the managerial aspects of this phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. A Preliminary Theory of Interorganizational Network Effectiveness: A Comparative Study of Four Community Mental Health Systems.
- Author
-
Provan, Keith G. and Milward, H. Brinton
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL relations ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL networks ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHIATRY ,PERFORMANCE standards ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PUBLIC health ,ORGANIZATIONAL sociology - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a comparative study of interorganizational networks, or systems, of mental health delivery in four U.S. cities, leading to a preliminary theory of network effectiveness. Extensive data were collected from surveys, interviews, documents, and observations. Network effectiveness was assessed by collecting and aggregating data on outcomes from samples of clients, their families, and their case managers at each site. Results of analyses of both quantitative and qualitative data collected at the individual, organizational, and network levels of analysis showed that network effectiveness could be explained by various structural and contextual factors, specifically, network integration, external control, system stability, and environmental resource munificence. Based on the findings, we develop testable propositions to guide theory development and future research on network effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Exploring the Process, Models, and Outcomes of Hospital-Public Health Partnerships.
- Author
-
Varda, Danielle M., Retrum, Jessica H., and Champman, Carrie
- Subjects
MEDICAL partnership ,HOSPITALS ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH care reform ,PATIENT Protection & Affordable Care Act ,PUBLIC health administration - Abstract
Health care reform has resulted in changes throughout the health system, including the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requirement that hospitals conduct community health needs assessments, taking into greater consideration the public health of their respective communities. This has led to growing strategies to develop partnerships between hospitals and public health (PH) as a way to meet these needs. Meantime, there is a need for data on Hospital-PH partnerships, due to the growing emphasis that these types of partnerships get implemented in practice. In this paper we analyze a secondary data set to explore how hospitals and public health have engaged in partnerships prior to the ACA. We asked "How amenable have hospitals and public health agencies been to forming partnerships?" We found that while Hospitals traditionally have fewer partners, contribute fewer resources, and report fewer outcomes, they tend to report high perceptions of value and more frequent, complex partnerships. The impact of these results are important to efforts to build an evidenced-based foundation by which hospital and public health personnel can develop skills to manage these complex relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
156. Analyzing changes to U.S. municipal heat response plans during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Jin, Andrew Shida and Sanders, Kelly T.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HEAT adaptation ,COMMUNITY life ,LOCAL government ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Extreme heat events are the deadliest weather-related event in the United States. Cities throughout the United States have worked to develop heat adaptation strategies to limit the impact of extreme heat on vulnerable populations. However, the COVID-19 pandemic presented unprecedented challenges to local governments. This paper provides a preliminary review of strategies and interventions used to manage compound COVID-19-extreme heat events in the 25 most populous cities of the United States. Heat adaptation strategies employed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic were not adequate to meet during the co-occurring compound hazard of COVID-19-EHE. Long-term climate-adaptation strategies will require leveraging physical, financial, and community resources across multiple city departments to meet the needs of compound hazards, such as COVID-19 and extreme heat. • Cities faced compound crises of COVID-19 and extreme heat in 2020. • 2020 heat response plans analyzed for 25 largest US cities. • Public health and financial limitations significantly reduced cooling access. • Record breaking temperatures left many vulnerable to heat illness and death. • Adaptation and mitigation strategies are needed to manage compound heat events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. The Changing Role of Government in Financing Health Care: An International Perspective.
- Author
-
Stabile, Mark and Thomson, Sarah
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care costs ,MEDICAL care cost shifting ,MEDICAL economics ,MEDICAL care financing -- Law & legislation ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
This paper explores the changing role of government involvement in health care financing policy outside the United States. It provides a review of the economics literature in this area to elucidate the implications of recent policy changes on efficiency, costs, and quality. Our review reveals that there has been some convergence in policies adopted across countries to improve financing incentives and encourage efficient use of health services. In the case of risk pooling, all countries with competing pools experience similar difficulties with selection and are adopting more sophisticated forms of risk adjustment. In the case of hospital competition, the key drivers of success appear to be what is competed on and measurable, rather than whether the system is public or private. In the case of both the success of performance-related pay for providers and issues resulting from wait times, evidence differs within and across jurisdictions. However, the evidence does suggest that some governments have effectively reduced wait times when they have chosen explicitly to focus on achieving this goal. Many countries are exploring new ways of generating revenues for health care to enable them to cope with significant cost growth, but there is little evidence to suggest that collection mechanisms alone are effective in managing the cost or quality of care. (JEL H51, I11, I18) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. A life course perspective on polycystic ovary syndrome.
- Author
-
Sanchez, Ninive
- Subjects
POLYCYSTIC ovary syndrome ,OVARIAN tumors ,OVARIAN cysts ,HYPERANDROGENISM ,PUBLIC health ,DISEASES in women - Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a major public health problem in the US. Worldwide, the public is largely unaware of the condition and health care providers do not seem to fully understand it. Research on PCOS has primarily focused on its etiology and clinical characteristics and less on the psychosocial aspects of human development associated with PCOS. This paper posits that a life course perspective provides a framework for further understanding the psychosocial experiences of women with PCOS and the contexts in which they live. The paper discusses how life course principles of human development, constraints on agency, interdependence of lives, time and place, and timing of events and experiences are relevant to the management of PCOS and prevention of its complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
159. A spatial-temporal analysis of low birth weight prevalence in Georgia, USA.
- Author
-
Tian, Jie, Tu, Wei, Tedders, Stuart, and Chen, Dongmei
- Subjects
SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) ,LOW birth weight ,PUBLIC health ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Low birth weight (LBW), defined as a live birth weighing <2,500 g, is a significant public health problem in the United States, especially a few states including Georgia. Although much work has been done to study the epidemiology of LBW in various regions, the spatial-temporal patterns of LBW prevalence in Georgia remain unclear to a large degree. This paper investigates the temporal trend of LBW rates over a time span of 11 years and the spatial clusters of LBW prevalence in the state of Georgia at the county level. Comparison is also made between race and gender groups, and between county groups of different socioeconomic statuses to uncover disparities. Results showed a steady and prevalent increase of LBW rate in the state over the study period. Three counties and two county clusters with significantly higher LBW rates than the state rate were detected for 1999-2001, while one more county and two more county clusters of high LBW rates were detected for 2007-2009. More urbanized counties were found to have a relatively lower LBW rate when compared with the less urbanized ones as groups. The findings from this paper are expected to provide valuable insights to better understanding the etiology of LBW and more effective allocating prenatal health care resources in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. The transformation of continuing medical education (CME) in the United States.
- Author
-
Balmer, Jann Torrance
- Subjects
GENETIC transformation ,CONTINUING medical education ,MEDICAL errors ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
This article describes five major themes that inform and highlight the transformation of continuing medical education in the USA. Over the past decade, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) and other national entities have voiced concern over the cost of health care, prevalence of medical errors, fragmentation of care, commercial influence, and competence of health professionals. The recommendations from these entities, as well as the work of other regulatory, professional, academic, and government organizations, have fostered discussion and development of strategies to address these challenges. The five themes in this paper reflect the changing expectations of multiple stakeholders engaged in health care. Each theme is grounded in educational, politico-economic priorities for health care in the USA. The themes include (1) a shift in expectation from simple attendance or a time-based metric (credit) to a measurement that infers competence in performance for successful continuing professional development (CPD); (2) an increased focus on interprofessional education to augment profession-specific continuing education; (3) the integration of CPD with quality improvement; (4) the expansion of CPD to address population and public health issues; and (5) identification and standardization of continuing education (CE) professional competencies. The CE profession plays an essential role in the transformation of the US CPD system for health professionals. Coordination of the five themes described in this paper will foster an improved, effective, and efficient health system that truly meets the needs of patients [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
161. Recessions, Older Workers, and Longevity.
- Author
-
Nesvisky, Matt
- Subjects
RECESSIONS ,DEPRESSIONS (Economics) ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The article discusses research on the impact of recessions on the health of older workers in the U.S. It references a study by Courtney Coile and colleagues published in "National Bureau of Economic Research." The study found that recession may cause financial challenges to medical care due to recession-related work opportunity loss.
- Published
- 2013
162. Trends in pancreatic adenocarcinoma incidence and mortality in the United States in the last four decades; a SEER-based study.
- Author
-
Saad, Anas M., Turk, Tarek, Al-Husseini, Muneer J., and Abdel-Rahman, Omar
- Subjects
PANCREATIC cancer diagnosis ,ADENOCARCINOMA ,CANCER-related mortality ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,DISEASE incidence ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Pancreatic cancer is the fourth-leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States. The silent nature of the disease and its poor prognosis, the need for further research, along with the need to assess the outcomes of current approaches necessitate an ongoing evaluation of the epidemiology and mortality-trends of this malignancy. Continuous monitoring of disease-patterns, on population-levels, may help scientists assess the quality of healthcare delivery, boost their understanding of diseases' characteristics and risk factors, and detect gaps whereby further research is needed. None of the previous reports shed light on pancreatic adenocarcinomas (PAC), the most common type of Pancreatic Cancer, as the primary outcome. In this study we aim to investigate PAC's incidence and mortality trends over the last four decades in the United States.Methods: We used SEER 9 database to study PAC cases during 1974-2014. Incidence and mortality rates were calculated by sex, age, race, state and stage of PAC. Annual percent change (APC) was calculated using joinpoint regression software.Results: We reviewed 67,878 PAC cases; most of these cases were in the head of pancreas. Overall PAC incidence rates increased 1.03% (95% CI, 0.86-1.21, p <.001) per year over the study period. Rates of adenocarcinoma of the head of pancreas increased 0.87% (95% CI, 0.68-1.07, p <.001), and rates of adenocarcinoma of the body and tail of pancreas increased 3.42% (95% CI, 3.06-3.79, p <.001) per year during 1973-2014. PAC incidence-based mortality increased 2.22% (95% CI, 1.93-2.51, p <.001) per year. However, during 2012-2014 there was a statistically significant decrease in PAC incidence-based mortality; APC, -24.70% (95% CI, -31.78 - -16.88, p <.001).Conclusion: PAC's incidence and mortality rates have been increasing for decades. However, the last few years have shown a promising decrease in mortality. We believe that further advances in healthcare delivery and research can lead to a further mortality decrease. Future studies can use this paper as a baseline to keep monitoring the outcomes of PAC's therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
163. Do Patient-Centered Medical Homes Improve Health Behaviors, Outcomes, and Experiences of Low-Income Patients? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
-
Berk-Clark, Carissa, Doucette, Emily, Rottnek, Fred, Manard, William, Prada, Mayra Aragon, Hughes, Rachel, Lawrence, Tyler, and Schneider, F. David
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,META-analysis ,PRIMARY care ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH facilities ,CHRONIC disease treatment ,CHRONIC diseases ,STATISTICS on medically uninsured persons ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH status indicators ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MEDICAL care research ,MENTAL health ,PATIENT compliance ,PATIENT satisfaction ,POVERTY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PATIENT-centered care ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objectives: To examine: (1) what elements of patient-centered medical homes (PCMHs) are typically provided to low-income populations, (2) whether PCMHs improve health behaviors, experiences, and outcomes for low-income groups.Data Sources/study Setting: Existing literature on PCMH utilization among health care organizations serving low-income populations.Study Design: Systematic review and meta-analysis.Data Collection/extraction Methods: We obtained papers through existing systematic and literature reviews and via PubMed, Web of Science, and the TRIP databases, which examined PCMHs serving low-income populations. A total of 434 studies were reviewed. Thirty-three articles met eligibility criteria.Principal Findings: Patient-centered medical home interventions usually were composed of five of the six recommended components. Overall positive effect of PCMH interventions was d = 0.247 (range -0.965 to 1.42). PCMH patients had better clinical outcomes (d = 0.395), higher adherence (0.392), and lower utilization of emergency rooms (d = -0.248), but there were apparent limitations in study quality.Conclusions: Evidence shows that the PCMH model can increase health outcomes among low-income populations. However, limitations to quality include no assessment for confounding variables. Implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
164. Linking Time-Use Data to Explore Health Outcomes: Choosing to Vaccinate Against Influenza.
- Author
-
Berry, Kevin, Anderson, Julia E., Bayham, Jude, and Fenichel, Eli P.
- Subjects
INFLUENZA vaccines ,PUBLIC opinion on vaccination ,PUBLIC service advertising ,TIME management surveys ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
To inform public health and medical decision makers concerning vaccination interventions, a methodology for merging and analyzing detailed activity data and health outcomes is presented. The objective is to investigate relationships between individual’s activity choices and their decision to receive an influenza vaccination. Data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) are used to predict vaccination rates in the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) data between 2003 and 2013 by using combined socioeconomic and demographic characteristics. The correlations between the extensive (do or not do) and intensive (how much) decisions to perform activities and influenza vaccination are further explored. Significant positive and negative correlations were found between several activities and vaccination. For some activities, the sign of the correlation flips when considering either the intensive or the extensive decision. This flip occurs with highly studied activities, like smoking. Correlations between activities and vaccination can provide an additional metric for targeting those least likely to vaccinate. The methodology outlined in this paper can be replicated to explore correlation among actions and other health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
165. Creating a Centralized Infrastructure to Facilitate Medical Education Research.
- Author
-
Seehusen, Dean A., Mainous III, Arch G., Chessman, Alexander W., and Mainous, Arch G 3rd
- Subjects
PRIMARY care ,FAMILY medicine ,PUBLIC health ,VOLUNTEER service ,ACCREDITATION ,MEDICAL education standards ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL research ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,STANDARDS - Abstract
Purpose: Building research capacity and increasing scholarly productivity are identified needs of the specialty of family medicine. The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has increased the scholarly requirements for residency programs, placing even more pressure on faculty to be productive in the scholarly realm. The Council of Academic Family Medicine Educational Research Alliance (CERA) was created by volunteer members of the specialty with shared interests in overcoming barriers and increasing scholarly production.Methods: CERA has developed the infrastructure and expertise to regularly conduct omnibus surveys of key family medicine educational leaders. Proposals are centrally collected and competitively chosen. The omnibus survey process includes collaboration with experienced mentors, centralized institutional review board clearance, pilot testing, and centralized data collection. The survey results are disseminated back to research teams for presentation and publication of the findings.Results: To date, over 115 research teams have had their projects included in CERA omnibus surveys. Projects have been led by research teams from across the country and with a wide variety of research experience. This collaborative work has resulted in more than 75 scientific presentations and over 55 peer-reviewed papers in the medical literature. The raw data are now available online and serve as a repository for future secondary analysis and as an educational resource.Conclusions: The CERA infrastructure has allowed a large number of research teams to conduct meaningful scholarship at a fraction of the typical cost in terms of time and energy. CERA has expanded family medicine research by removing barriers for teams with limited experience or resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
166. An overview of the impact of rare disease characteristics on research methodology.
- Author
-
Whicher, Danielle, Philbin, Sarah, and Aronson, Naomi
- Subjects
RARE diseases ,RESEARCH methodology ,DISEASE prevalence ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH promotion ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Background: About 30 million individuals in the United States are living with a rare disease, which by definition have a prevalence of 200,000 or fewer cases in the United States ([National Organization for Rare Disorders], [About NORD], [2016]). Disease heterogeneity and geographic dispersion add to the difficulty of completing robust studies in small populations. Improving the ability to conduct research on rare diseases would have a significant impact on population health. The purpose of this paper is to raise awareness of methodological approaches that can address the challenges to conducting robust research on rare diseases.Approach: We conducted a landscape review of available methodological and analytic approaches to address the challenges of rare disease research. Our objectives were to: 1. identify algorithms for matching study design to rare disease attributes and the methodological approaches applicable to these algorithms; 2. draw inferences on how research communities and infrastructure can contribute to the efficiency of research on rare diseases; and 3. to describe methodological approaches in the rare disease portfolio of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), a funder promoting both rare disease research and research infrastructure.Results: We identified three algorithms for matching study design to rare disease or intervention characteristics (Gagne, et.al, BMJ 349:g6802, 2014); (Gupta, et.al, J Clin Epidemiol 64:1085-1094, 2011); (Cornu, et. al, Orphet J Rare Dis 8:48,2012) and summarized the applicable methodological and analytic approaches. From this literature we were also able to draw inferences on how an effective research infrastructure can set an agenda, prioritize studies, accelerate accrual, catalyze patient engagement and terminate poorly performing studies. Of the 24 rare disease projects in the PCORI portfolio, 11 are randomized controlled trials (RCTs) using standard designs. Thirteen are observational studies using case-control, prospective cohort, or natural history designs. PCORI has supported the development of 9 Patient-Powered Research Networks (PPRNs) focused on rare diseases.Conclusion: Matching research design to attributes of rare diseases and interventions can facilitate the completion of RCTs that are adequately powered. An effective research infrastructure can improve efficiency and avoid waste in rare disease research. Our review of the PCORI research portfolio demonstrates that it is feasible to conduct RCTs in rare disease. However, most of these studies are using standard RCT designs. This suggests that use of a broader array of methodological approaches to RCTs --such as adaptive trials, cross-over trials, and early escape designs can improve the productivity of robust research in rare diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. Defensive Investments and the Demand for Air Quality: Evidence from the NOx Budget Program.
- Author
-
Deschênes, Olivier, Greenstone, Michael, and Shapiro, Joseph S.
- Subjects
EMISSIONS trading ,AIR quality ,AIR pollution ,NITROGEN oxides emission control ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The demand for air quality depends on health impacts and defensive investments, but little research assesses the empirical importance of defenses. A rich quasi-experiment suggests that the Nitrogen Oxides (NO
x ) Budget Program (NBP), a cap-and-trade market, decreased NOx emissions, ambient ozone concentrations, pharmaceutical expenditures, and mortality rates. The annual reductions in pharmaceutical purchases, a key defensive investment, and mortality are valued at about $800 million and $1.3 billion, respectively, suggesting that defenses are over one-third of willingness-to-pay for reductions in NOx emissions. Further, estimates indicate that the NBP's benefits easily exceed its costs and that NOx reductions have substantial benefits. (JEL I12, Q51, Q53, Q58) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. Blood Diseases in the Backyard: Mexican "indígenas" as a Population of Cognition in the Mid-1960s.
- Author
-
Suárez-Díaz, Edna
- Subjects
BLOOD diseases ,RACISM ,PUBLIC health ,INDIGENOUS peoples of Mexico - Abstract
This paper aims to widen the history of blood disease research beyond sickle cell anemia, situating it at the intersection of US racial politics and public health, and international malaria eradication campaigns in the Third World. It focuses on studies of G6PD deficiencies in the Mixtecos of the Mexican Pacific coast, and the Lacandones of the Mayan region in Chiapas. Two medical geneticists, Rubén Lisker and James E. Bowman, developed research projects that engaged these populations, looking for answers to evolutionary, biomedical, and genetics questions. Their practices and the context of knowledge production about these indigenous groups--how they were made objects of inquiry and intervention (Populations of Cognition)--are in full view in both cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
169. A bibliometric analysis of HIV nursing research between 1999 and 2022.
- Author
-
Hao, Jiaqi, Zhang, Qian, Du, Xiaoyu, Wang, Fan, Liu, Jing, and Chen, Jia
- Subjects
HIV infection risk factors ,HIV infection transmission ,HIV prevention ,RISK assessment ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MENTAL health ,HIV-positive persons ,NURSING ,CITATION analysis ,HIV infections ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,WORLD health ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons ,NURSING research ,PUBLISHING ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL support ,PUBLIC health ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Aim: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) nursing has become more prominent with the increase in chronic HIV infections. This study examined articles related to HIV nursing to determine how the profession has developed and its future direction. Design: A bibliometric analysis was conducted. Methods: HIV nursing‐related articles published in the Web of Science core collection between 1999 and 2022 were searched. VOSviewer was used to identify the contributions of countries, institutions and authors in HIV‐related care. Collaborative maps, hot topics and keywords trends were analysed using VOSviewer and CiteSpace. Results: A total of 1513 publications were extracted. An increase in articles published between 1999 and 2012 was observed. After 2012, the increase in the number of publications was relatively stable. Since 2016, a downward trend in the number of publications has occurred. The USA, South Africa and the UK were the leading contributors to publications related to HIV nursing. The focus of the HIV nursing research has gradually shifted from "HIV infection", "risk factors", and "transmission routes" to "social support", "depression", and "public health". The result shows that increased collaboration among countries/regions can improve the development of HIV nursing and effectively reduce the global HIV infection rate. The mental health of patients has become a research centre in the field of HIV nursing. This study provides direction in clinical practice and future research areas in this field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. Infectious Disease Mortality in Deployed Soldiers during the Spanish American War.
- Author
-
Shanks, G. D.
- Subjects
COMMUNICABLE diseases ,FEAR ,WAR ,DEPLOYMENT (Military strategy) ,HEMORRHAGIC fever ,PUBLIC health ,MILITARY personnel ,TYPHOID fever - Published
- 2024
171. Confronting Barriers to Equitable Care: A Qualitative Analysis of Factors That Inform People with Mobility Disabilities' Decisions to Self-Advocate in the Context of Healthcare.
- Author
-
VanPuymbrouck, Laura and Magasi, Susan
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,PATIENT selection ,QUALITATIVE research ,SELF-efficacy ,DATA analysis ,INTERVIEWING ,LEGISLATION ,PRIMARY health care ,HUMAN research subjects ,MEDICAL care ,DECISION making ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,REFLEXIVITY ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,ACQUISITION of data ,HEALTH equity ,SELF advocacy ,PUBLIC health ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,DISCRIMINATION against people with disabilities ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,PHYSICAL mobility - Abstract
Background. One in 5 people in the United States live with disability; however, the public health needs of this community have been largely overlooked. Although U.S. law mandates the availability of accessible medical exam equipment, people with mobility disabilities (PWMD) frequently encounter barriers that require self-advocacy to receive basic primary care. Objective. The purpose of this study was to qualitatively explore the impact of healthcare access barriers—specifically, the experiences of the need to self-advocate and factors that inform decisions to make accommodation requests—for PWMD. Methods. Qualitative semistructured interviews were performed across two phases of data collection with each of the 6 participants. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used to highlight the essence of participants' experiences in making decisions to request healthcare accommodation. Results. Participants included a purposive sample of self-advocates with physical disabilities (3 men and 3 women). While individual approaches to self-advocacy varied, participants identified a process of "recognizing the normalization of disability discrimination and disability stigma" which necessitates the development of "agency in self-advocacy." This process has a lasting impact on people that includes a shared embodied experience of disability, as well as a sense of empowerment based on their collective and individual identities. Conclusions. Findings have implications for supporting individual disability consumer advocacy efforts as well as the need to address the normalization of disability discrimination within healthcare systems levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
172. Cannabis donation as a harm reduction strategy: a case study.
- Author
-
Duhart Clarke, Sarah E., Victor, Grant, Lynch, Pamela, Suen, Leslie W., and Ray, Bradley
- Subjects
HARM reduction ,LAYOFFS ,COST analysis ,STATE laws - Abstract
Background: The United States (US) continues to experience unprecedented rates of overdose mortality and there is increased need to identify effective harm reduction practices. Research from Canada describes cannabis donation through harm reduction agencies as an adjunctive strategy to mitigate the negative consequences of more harmful drugs. This case study describes the operational logistics, feasibility, and potential benefits of a cannabis donation program that was operated through a harm reduction program in rural Michigan. Case presentation: We applied a community driven research approach to gather information from harm reduction program staff about the implementation and evolution of cannabis donation efforts in Michigan. We also examined 20-months (September 2021 through May 2023) of administrative data from a cannabis company to compare the sale and donation of cannabis products. Ten cannabis-experienced harm reduction clients received cannabis donations, with clinical staff determining client interest and appropriateness, and providing weekly pick-up or delivery. To expand product availability and sustainability, we examined administrative data from a commercialcannabis company that volunteered to provide donations. This administrative data suggests that while flower products constitute most of the adult and medical sales, edible, oil, and topical products predominated donations. Further, cost analysis suggests that donations represent only 1% of total gross sales and account for much less than the expected yearly donation amount. Conclusions: Research suggests there is potential to reduce alcohol and drug use related harms of more dangerous substances through substitution with cannabis. This case study is the first to document cannabis donation as a harm reduction practice in the US and suggests potential for sustainability dependent on state laws. Findings from this case study provide a starting point for inquiry into cannabis donation as a harm reduction strategy in the US; future research is needed to fully understand the individual-level outcomes, public health impacts, necessary legal regulations, and best practices for cannabis donation programs through harm reduction organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
173. Missed Healthcare Visits During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Longitudinal Study.
- Author
-
Hernandez, Jethel, Batio, Stephanie, Lovett, Rebecca Mullen, Wolf, Michael S., and Bailey, Stacy C.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY health services ,HEALTH literacy ,MEDICAL care research ,RESEARCH funding ,JOB absenteeism ,T-test (Statistics) ,PRIMARY health care ,EMERGENCY room visits ,INTERVIEWING ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,ANXIETY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ODDS ratio ,MEDICAL appointments ,TELEPHONES ,STATISTICS ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PATIENT participation ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,MENTAL depression ,MEDICAL care costs ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Introduction: Missed visits have been estimated to cost the U.S. healthcare system $50 billion annually and have been linked to healthcare inefficiency, higher rates of emergency department visits, and worse outcomes. COVID-19 disrupted existing outpatient healthcare utilization patterns. In our study, we sought to examine the frequency of missed outpatient visits over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic and to examine patient-level characteristics associated with non-attendance. Methods: This study utilized data from a longitudinal cohort study (the Chicago COVID-19 Comorbidities (C3) study). C3 participants were enrollees in 1 of 4 active, "parent" studies; they were rapidly enrolled in C3 at the onset of the pandemic. Multiple waves of telephone-based interviews were conducted to collect experiences with the pandemic, as well as socio-demographic and health characteristics, health literacy, patient activation, and depressive and anxiety symptoms. For the current analysis, data from waves 3 to 8 (05/01/20-05/19/22) were analyzed. Participants included 845 English or Spanish-speaking adults with 1 or more chronic conditions. Results: The percentage of participants reporting missed visits due to COVID-19 across study waves ranged from 3.1 to 22.4%. Overall, there was a decline in missed visits over time. No participant sociodemographic or health characteristic was consistently associated with missed visits across the study waves. In bivariate and multivariate analysis, only patient-reported anxiety was significantly associated with missed visits across all study waves. Conclusion: Findings reveal that anxiety was consistently associated with missed visits during the COVID-19 pandemic, but not sociodemographic or health characteristics. Results can inform future public health initiatives to reduce absenteeism by considering patients' emotional state during times of uncertainty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
174. Turning dread into capital: South Africa's AIDS diplomacy.
- Author
-
Fourie, Pieter
- Subjects
AIDS ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: In much of the world, President George W. Bush was not admired for his foreign policy and diplomacy. It is therefore ironic that Bush's single most uncontested foreign policy triumph was an instance of what has now become known as "health diplomacy". In 2003 Bush launched the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, a five-year $15 billion initiative to fight HIV/AIDS, mostly in Africa. The president's pragmatic health diplomacy may well save his foreign policy legacy. This article argues that a middle power such as South Africa should consider a similar instrumental AIDS diplomatic strategy, to rehabilitate its public health as well as foreign policy images. Discussion: This article reflects on the emergence and contemporary practice of health diplomacy. In particular, it explores the potential of niche areas within health diplomacy to become constructive focal points of emerging middle powers' foreign policies. Middle powers often apply niche diplomacy to maximise their foreign policy impact, particularly by pursuing a multilateral agenda. The literature on middle powers indicates that such foreign policy ambitions and concomitant diplomacy mostly act to affirm the global status quo. Instead, this paper argues that there may well be niches within health diplomacy in particular that can be used to actually challenge the existing global order. Emerging middle powers in particular can use niche areas within health diplomacy in a critical theoretical manner, so that foreign policy and diplomacy become a project of emancipation and transformation, rather than an affirmation of the world as it is. Summary: The article first describes the emergence and contemporary practice of health diplomacy; this is followed by a discussion of niche diplomacy, in particular as it applies to the foreign policy agendas of emerging middle powers. It then reviews South African foreign policy and diplomacy, before situating these policies within the context of emerging mechanisms of south-south multilateralism. The article concludes by synthesizing these elements and advocating for a South African AIDS diplomacy, emphasizing its potential to galvanize a global project of emancipation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
175. HEALTH EQUITY, HEALTHY PEOPLE 2020, AND COERCIVE LEGAL MECHANISMS AS NECESSARY FOR THE ACHIEVEMENT OF BOTH.
- Author
-
Parento, Emily Whelan
- Subjects
HEALTH equity ,HEALTHY People 2020 (Campaign : U.S.) ,POPULATION health ,EQUALITY ,PUBLIC health ,LAW - Abstract
Principles of health equity require that all people have equal opportunity to develop and maintain their health, yet in the face of widespread and presumptively inequitable health disparities, the law has done little. This paper argues that health equity demands the use of coercive legal mechanisms in certain circumstances given the existence of current disparities and the evidence of effectiveness of direct regulation as compared to its alternatives. Moreover, the paper argues that Healthy People 2020, which is the nation's "master blueprint for health" and explicitly seeks to achieve health equity, has not fully incorporated the principles of health equity in the formulation of its objectives and indicators because it fails to recognize the varying distributive effects of policies that could achieve population health targets. To truly incorporate the principles of health equity, Healthy People 2020 should advocate for those demonstrably effective coercive legal mechanisms that would both achieve its population health objectives and reduce health disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
176. Individual-level space-time analyses of emergency department data using generalized additive modeling.
- Author
-
Vieira, Verónica M., Weinberg, Janice M., and Webster, Thomas F.
- Subjects
MEDICAL emergencies ,EMERGENCY medical services ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH & welfare funds - Abstract
Background: Although daily emergency department (ED) data is a source of information that often includes residence, its potential for space-time analyses at the individual level has not been fully explored. We propose that ED data collected for surveillance purposes can also be used to inform spatial and temporal patterns of disease using generalized additive models (GAMs). This paper describes the methods for adapting GAMs so they can be applied to ED data. Methods: GAMs are an effective approach for modeling spatial and temporal distributions of point-wise data, producing smoothed surfaces of continuous risk while adjusting for confounders. In addition to disease mapping, the method allows for global and pointwise hypothesis testing and selection of statistically optimum degree of smoothing using standard statistical software. We applied a two-dimensional GAM for location to ED data of overlapping calendar time using a locally-weighted regression smoother. To illustrate our methods, we investigated the association between participants' address and the risk of gastrointestinal illness in Cape Cod, Massachusetts over time. Results: The GAM space-time analyses simultaneously smooth in units of distance and time by using the optimum degree of smoothing to create data frames of overlapping time periods and then spatially analyzing each data frame. When resulting maps are viewed in series, each data frame contributes a movie frame, allowing us to visualize changes in magnitude, geographic size, and location of elevated risk smoothed over space and time. In our example data, we observed an underlying geographic pattern of gastrointestinal illness with risks consistently higher in the eastern part of our study area over time and intermittent variations of increased risk during brief periods. Conclusions: Spatial-temporal analysis of emergency department data with GAMs can be used to map underlying disease risk at the individual-level and view changes in geographic patterns of disease over time while accounting for multiple confounders. Despite the advantages of GAMs, analyses should be considered exploratory in nature. It is possible that even with a conservative cutoff for statistical significance, results of hypothesis testing may be due to chance. This paper illustrates that GAMs can be adapted to measure geographic trends in public health over time using ED data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. Considerations and Challenges for Planning a Public Health Approach to Asthma.
- Author
-
Davis, Adam and Herman, Elizabeth
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,ASTHMA ,CHRONIC diseases ,HEALTH planning ,DECISION making ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
ddressing asthma from a public health perspective is a relatively new concept for which the literature provides little guidance. A public health approach seeks to decrease the burden of asthma and improve health outcomes at the population level, such as communities, cities, or states, by reaching large numbers of individuals with effective interventions and at reasonable cost. Projects designed to achieve a measureable impact at the population level are fundamentally different from projects or interventions designed to improve outcomes among individuals. This paper uses the experience of the Controlling Asthma in American Cities Project and a review of the relevant literature to explore some of the unique questions and considerations that are implicit when planning large-scale asthma projects intended to improve population outcomes. The paper is intended to inform decision making by local and state government agencies, managed care organizations, health systems, community coalitions, and funders. Analysis of asthma and other chronic disease projects aiming to achieve population-level impact is an area for continued public health research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
178. A meta-analysis of children's object-to-mouth frequency data for estimating non-dietary ingestion exposure.
- Author
-
Jianping Xue, Zartarian, Valerie, Tulve, Nicolle, Moya, Jacqueline, Freeman, Natalie, Auyeung, Willa, and Beamer, Paloma
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S health ,INGESTION ,PUBLIC health ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
To improve estimates of non-dietary ingestion in probabilistic exposure modeling, a meta-analysis of children's object-to-mouth frequency was conducted using data from seven available studies representing 438 participants and ∼1500 h of behavior observation. The analysis represents the first comprehensive effort to fit object-to-mouth frequency variability and uncertainty distributions by indoor/outdoor location and by age groups recommended by the US Environmental Protection Agency for assessing childhood exposures. Weibull distributions best fit the observed data from studies with no statistical differences, and are presented by study, age group, and location. As age increases, both indoor and outdoor object-to-mouth frequencies decrease. Object-to-mouth frequency is significantly greater indoors (2–32 contacts/h) than outdoors (average 1–9 contacts/h). This paper compares results to a similar hand-to-mouth frequency meta-analysis. Children who tend to mouth hands indoors also tend to mouth hands outdoors; children who tend to mouth objects indoors tend to mouth objects outdoors. However, children who tend to mouth objects do not necessarily have a tendency to mouth hands. Unlike for hand-to-mouth frequency, a statistical difference was found among the various studies for object-to-mouth frequency. This could be due to different definitions for object mouthing across the studies considered. The analysis highlights the need for additional object-to-mouth data (indoors and especially outdoors) for various age groups using standardized collection and analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
179. PROFITS AND PLAGIARISM: THE CASE OF MEDICAL GHOSTWRITING.
- Author
-
ANEKWE, TOBENNA D.
- Subjects
GHOSTWRITING ,MEDICAL literature ,PLAGIARISM ,MEDICAL research ethics ,MEDICAL ethics ,ETHICS - Abstract
This paper focuses on medical ghostwriting in the United States. I argue that medical ghostwriting often involves plagiarism and, in those cases, can be treated as an act of research misconduct by both the federal government and research institutions. I also propose several anti-ghostwriting measures, including: 1) journals should implement guarantor policies so that researchers may be better held accountable for their work; 2) research institutions and the federal government should explicitly prohibit medical ghostwriting and outline appropriate penalties; and 3) a publicly available database should be created to record researchers' ethics violations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
180. From project aid to sustainable HIV services: a case study from Zambia.
- Author
-
Torpey, Kwasi, Mwenda, Lona, Thompson, Catherine, Wamuwi, Edgar, and Damme, Wim van
- Subjects
AIDS prevention ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care ,PHYSICAL fitness centers - Abstract
Introduction: Sustainable service delivery is a major challenge in the HIV response that is often not adequately addressed in project implementation. Sustainable strategies must be built into project design and implementation to enable HIV efforts to continue long after donor-supported projects are completed. Case description: This paper presents the experiences in operational sustainability of Family Health International's Zambia Prevention, Care and Treatment Partnership in Zambia, which is supported by the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief through United States Agency for International Development (October 2004 to September 2009). The partnership worked with Zambia's Ministry of Health to scale up HIV clinical services in five of the country's nine provinces, reaching 35 districts and 219 facilities. It provided technical and financial support from within the ministry's systems and structures. By completion of the project, 10 of the 35 districts had graduated beyond receiving ongoing technical support. Discussion and evaluation: By working within the ministry's policies, structures and systems, the partnership was able to increase the ministry's capacity to add a comprehensive HIV service delivery component to its health services. Ministry structures were improved through renovations of health facilities, training of healthcare workers, procurement of essential equipment, and establishment of a quality assurance plan to ensure continued quality of care. The quality assurance tools were implemented by both the ministry and project staff as the foundation for technical graduation. Facilities that met all the quality criteria for more than six months were graduated from project technical support, as were districts where most supported facilities met the criteria. The district health offices then provided ongoing supervision of services. This predetermined "graduation" exit strategy, with buy in of the provincial and district health offices, set the stage for continued delivery of high-quality HIV services. Conclusions: Achieving operational sustainability in a resource-limited setting is feasible. Developing and institutionalizing a quality assurance/quality improvement system is the basis on which facilities and districts can move beyond project support and, therefore, sustain services. Quality assurance/quality improvement tools should be based on national standards, and project implementation should use and improve existing health system structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
181. Public Health Law and the Prevention and Control of Obesity.
- Author
-
DIETZ, WILLIAM H., BENKEN, DONALD E., and HUNTER, ALICIA S.
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,PREVENTION of obesity ,CALORIC content of foods ,PHYSICAL fitness ,LEGISLATIVE bodies ,NUTRITION counseling ,NUTRITION ,MEDICAL laws - Abstract
Context: Obesity constitutes a major public health challenge in the United States. Obesogenic environments have increased owing to the consumption of calorie-dense foods of low nutritional value and the reduction of daily physical activity (e.g., increased portion sizes of meals eaten in and out of the home and fewer physical activity requirements in schools). Policymakers and public health practitioners need to know the best practices and have the competencies to use laws and legal authorities to reverse the obesity epidemic. For instance, statutes and regulations at the federal, state, and local levels of government have been implemented to improve nutritional choices and access to healthy foods, encourage physical activity, and educate consumers about adopting healthy lifestyles. Methods: In an effort to understand the application of laws and legal authorities for obesity prevention and control, in June 2008 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention convened the National Summit on Legal Preparedness for Obesity Prevention and Control. An outcome of this summit will be the publication of the proceeding's white papers written by eight law and subject-matter experts with substantive contributions from summit participants, which will identify actionable options that sectors and organizations at various jurisdictional levels can consider adopting. Findings: Law has played a critical role in the control of chronic diseases and the behaviors that lead to them. The use of a systematic legal framework—the use of legislation, regulation, and policy to address the multiple factors that contribute to obesogenic environments—can assist in the development, implementation, and evaluation of a variety of legal approaches for obesity prevention and control. Conclusions: Although public health–focused legal interventions are in an early stage and the direct and indirect impact they may have on the obesity epidemic is not yet understood, efforts such as the summit and white papers should help determine potentially viable legal interventions and assess their impact on population-level change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
182. Pandemic Economics: The 1918 Influenza and Its Modern-Day Implicatio.
- Author
-
Garrett, Thomas A.
- Subjects
INFLUENZA pandemic, 1918-1919 ,DEATH rate ,EPIDEMICS ,PUBLIC health ,ETIOLOGY of diseases - Abstract
Many predictions of the economic and social costs of a modern-day pandemic are based on the effects of the influenza pandemic of 1918. Despite killing 675,000 people in the United States and 40 million worldwide, the influenza of 1918 has been nearly forgotten. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the influenza pandemic of 1918 in the United States, its economic effects, and its implications for a modern-day pandemic. The paper provides a brief historical background as well as detailed influenza mortality statistics for cities and states, including those in the Eighth Federal Reserve District, that account for differences in race, income, and place of residence. Information is obtained from two sources: (i) newspaper articles published during the pandemic and (ii) a survey of economic research on the subject. (JEL I1, N0, R0) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
183. Proposal of a framework for evaluating military surveillance systems for early detection of outbreaks on duty areas.
- Author
-
Meynard, Jean-Baptiste, Chaudet, Herve, Green, Andrew D, Jefferson, Henry L, Texier, Gaetan, Webber, Daniel, Dupuy, Bruce, and Boutin, Jean-Paul
- Subjects
INFECTION ,MILITARY surveillance ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: In recent years a wide variety of epidemiological surveillance systems have been developed to provide early identification of outbreaks of infectious disease. Each system has had its own strengths and weaknesses. In 2002 a Working Group of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) produced a framework for evaluation, which proved suitable for many public health surveillance systems. However this did not easily adapt to the military setting, where by necessity a variety of different parameters are assessed, different constraints placed on the systems, and different objectives required. This paper describes a proposed framework for evaluation of military syndromic surveillance systems designed to detect outbreaks of disease on operational deployments. Methods: The new framework described in this paper was developed from the cumulative experience of British and French military syndromic surveillance systems. The methods included a general assessment framework (CDC), followed by more specific methods of conducting evaluation. These included Knowledge/Attitude/Practice surveys (KAP surveys), technical audits, ergonomic studies, simulations and multi-national exercises. A variety of military constraints required integration into the evaluation. Examples of these include the variability of geographical conditions in the field, deployment to areas without prior knowledge of naturally-occurring disease patterns, the differences in field sanitation between locations and over the length of deployment, the mobility of military forces, turnover of personnel, continuity of surveillance across different locations, integration with surveillance systems from other nations working alongside each other, compatibility with non-medical information systems, and security. Results: A framework for evaluation has been developed that can be used for military surveillance systems in a staged manner consisting of initial, intermediate and final evaluations. For each stage of the process parameters for assessment have been defined and methods identified. Conclusion: The combined experiences of French and British syndromic surveillance systems developed for use in deployed military forces has allowed the development of a specific evaluation framework. The tool is suitable for use by all nations who wish to evaluate syndromic surveillance in their own military forces. It could also be useful for civilian mobile systems or for national security surveillance systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
184. Reproductive Health Policies in President Bush's Second Term: Old Battles and New Fronts in the United States and Internationally.
- Author
-
McFarlane, Deborah R.
- Subjects
UNITED States politics & government ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH policy ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,BIRTH control ,WOMEN'S health services ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The current Bush Administration has made dramatic changes in US domestic and international reproductive health policies. This paper discusses the issues involved in some of these changes, and it considers likely developments in this area during the remainder of George W Bush's second term. The first section of the paper defines the term reproductive health and presents a framework for classifying reproductive health policies. The second section examines changes that the Administration has made in domestic family planning policies. The third section looks at analogous changes in American assistance for reproductive health internationally. The final section considers the implications of these trends for future policy and women's health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
185. Healthc are transparency: opportunity or mirage.
- Author
-
Jaffe, Russell, Nash, Robert A., Ash, Richard, Schwartz, Norman, Corish, Robert, Born, Tammy, and Lazarus, Harold
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH services administration ,HEALTH care reform ,PUBLIC health ,PUBLIC health administration ,HEALTH policy ,NURSING services - Abstract
Purpose – Healthcare is an ever-growing segment of the American economy. Transparency facilitates better decision-making and better outcomes measures. The purpose of this paper is to present the human and economic results of increasing transparency. Design/methodology/approach – The ASIMP Working Group on Healthcare Transparency represents a diverse yet conscilient group of practitioners, researchers, regulators, economists, and academics. Given the need for re-envisioning healthcare to include more accountability, evidence of efficacy and transparency, this integrative medicine (ASIMP) working group is suitable to address the above purpose. Findings – Substantial opportunity exists to reduce morbidity and mortality, suffering and excess death, unnecessary costs and risks. Greater transparency facilitates the transition to safer, more effective, more humane healthcare. Research limitations/implications – This paper starts from a need to improve clinical outcomes and value for resources devoted. Best efforts of a national working group are presented. The implications of the report, when tested, will determine the enduring value of this work. Practical implications – Consumers and business, administrators and practitioners can improve care at lower cost by increasing transparency. This will accelerate the diffusion of effective approaches that are not yet in widespread use despite replication of efficacy. Originality/value – This is the first time an integrative approach has been compared with conventional healthcare models, particularly with regard to the role of transparency in heaithcare management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
186. Building communities to promote physical activity: A multi-scale geographical analysis.
- Author
-
Vojnovic, Igor
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,PHYSICAL fitness ,NATIONAL health services ,HUMAN services ,CITIES & towns ,SOCIAL groups - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to make explicit the linkages between specific characteristics in the urban built environment, moderate physical activity (in particular walking and cycling), and public health. The review will take place at three different scales — the region, the city and the city-block. At all three scales, the main interest is placed on accessibility, with the recognition that if distances are short enough and there is high connectivity within neighbourhoods, people might be encouraged to walk or cycle. The paper will draw on urban built environment characteristics from a number of Michigan municipalities, including Detroit, Ann Arbor, Birmingham, East Lansing and Okemos. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
187. The importance of human resources management in health care: a global context.
- Author
-
Kabene, Stefane M., Orchard, Carole, Howard, John M., Soriano, Mark A., and Leduc, Raymond
- Subjects
PERSONNEL management ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,DUAL economy ,MEDICAL care research ,RESOURCE management - Abstract
Background: This paper addresses the health care system from a global perspective and the importance of human resources management (HRM) in improving overall patient health outcomes and delivery of health care services. Methods: We explored the published literature and collected data through secondary sources. Results: Various key success factors emerge that clearly affect health care practices and human resources management. This paper will reveal how human resources management is essential to any health care system and how it can improve health care models. Challenges in the health care systems in Canada, the United States of America and various developing countries are examined, with suggestions for ways to overcome these problems through the proper implementation of human resources management practices. Comparing and contrasting selected countries allowed a deeper understanding of the practical and crucial role of human resources management in health care. Conclusion: Proper management of human resources is critical in providing a high quality of health care. A refocus on human resources management in health care and more research are needed to develop new policies. Effective human resources management strategies are greatly needed to achieve better outcomes from and access to health care around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
188. Substance abuse treatment, what do we know?
- Author
-
Machado, Matilde
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The literature on treating substance abuse has dealt basically with four important questions: (a) Is treatment effective? (b) Are all programs equally effective? (c) Why do programs differ in their effectiveness? (d) Which treatments are more cost-effective? This paper reviews the substance abuse treatment literature around these four questions and discusses methodological issues that hinder the interpretation and generalization of results to date. The answer to the first question is a sounding “yes,” treatment is effective but not all programs are equally effective. Researchers have moved beyond the “black box” literature that concentrated on patient and program characteristics as explanations for differences in effectiveness and search for the “active” ingredients of treatment. These include, for example, the treatment philosophy of the program’s director and staff attitudes towards patients. Cost-effectiveness studies are less common, and their conclusions are mixed. In general, it is probably safe to say that for the majority of patients, outpatient or shorter programs are more cost-effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
189. Community Responses to National Healthcare Firms.
- Author
-
Wholey, Douglas R., Christianson, Jon B., Draper, Debra A., Lesser, Cara S., and Burns, Lawton R.
- Subjects
HEALTH maintenance organizations ,PUBLIC health ,MARKETS ,MEDICAL care ,MANAGED care programs - Abstract
Over the last 25 years, national Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) and hospital firms attempted to enter local markets, either by acquiring formerly independent, locally based HMOs and hospitals or by directly entering local markets. While national HMOs have been relatively successful, national hospital firms have had much less success. This paper explores the reasons for this difference. It reviews changes in presence of national HMO and hospital firms in markets, discusses common conceptual lenses through which national entry into local markets typically has been viewed, and shows how social network theory can be used to develop a better understanding of why the entry experience of national HMO and hospital firms varies across markets. The paper concludes with a research agenda that addresses issues raised by social network theory and its application to national firm entry into local markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
190. Consumer-Driven Health Care—Beyond Rhetoric with Research and Experience.
- Author
-
Gauthier, Anne K. and Clancy, Carolyn M.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,CONSUMERS ,MANAGED care programs ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL economics ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Introduces a series of papers on consumer-driven health care in the U.S. Emergence of consumer-driven health plans; State of the health care industry; Consumer response to the plan; Advantages over other managed care plans.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
191. Evaluation of reporting timeliness of public health surveillance systems for infectious diseases.
- Author
-
Jajosky, Ruth Ann and Groseclose, Samuel L.
- Subjects
PUBLIC health surveillance ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Timeliness is a key performance measure of public health surveillance systems. Timeliness can vary by disease, intended use of the data, and public health system level. Studies were reviewed to describe methods used to evaluate timeliness and the reporting timeliness of National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) data was evaluated to determine if this system could support timely notification and state response to multistate outbreaks. Methods: Published papers that quantitatively measured timeliness of infectious disease surveillance systems operating in the U.S. were reviewed. Median reporting timeliness lags were computed for selected nationally notifiable infectious diseases based on a state-assigned week number and various date types. The percentage of cases reported within the estimated incubation periods for each disease was also computed. Results: Few studies have published quantitative measures of reporting timeliness; these studies do not evaluate timeliness in a standard manner. When timeliness of NNDSS data was evaluated, the median national reporting delay, based on date of disease onset, ranged from 12 days for meningococcal disease to 40 days for pertussis. Diseases with the longer incubation periods tended to have a higher percentage of cases reported within its incubation period. For acute hepatitis A virus infection, which had the longest incubation period of the diseases studied, more than 60% of cases were reported within one incubation period for each date type reported. For cryptosporidiosis, Escherichia coli O157:H7 infection, meningococcal disease, salmonellosis, and shigellosis, less than 40% of cases were reported within one incubation period for each reported date type. Conclusion: Published evaluations of infectious disease surveillance reporting timeliness are few in number and are not comparable. A more standardized approach for evaluating and describing surveillance system timeliness should be considered; a recommended methodology is presented. Our analysis of NNDSS reporting timeliness indicated that among the conditions evaluated (except for acute hepatitis A infection), the long reporting lag and the variability across states limits the usefulness of NNDSS data and aberration detection analysis of those data for identification of and timely response to multistate outbreaks. Further evaluation of the factors that contribute to NNDSS reporting timeliness is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
192. A Scoping Review of Barriers and Facilitators to Pap Testing in Women with Disabilities and Serious Mental Illnesses: Thirty Years after the Americans with Disabilities Act.
- Author
-
Lee, Michele Sky, Peart, Jillian R., Armin, Julie S., and Williamson, Heather J.
- Subjects
- *
PAP test , *AMERICANS with Disabilities Act of 1990 , *DISABILITY laws , *MEDICAL personnel , *MENTAL illness , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
Background: Thirty years after the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was passed, promising equal access to health services for people with disabilities and serious mental illness, research on Pap testing continues to uncover health disparities among women with disabilities and women with serious mental illnesses, including those that identify as an ethnic/racial minority. Aim: The purpose of this paper is to describe and present the literature on the barriers and facilitators women with disabilities and women with serious mental illnesses face with receiving a Pap test using the social ecological model. We also examined the degree to which racial/ethnic minority women were included in these articles. Method: A scoping review was conducted where the research team searched United States academic literature from 1990 through February 2020 in PubMed, Medline, and CINAHL using general subject headings for disability, mental illness, and Pap testing. Results: Thirty-two articles met inclusion criteria. More barriers than facilitators were mentioned in articles. Barriers and facilitators are organized into three groups according to social ecological model and include individual (e.g., socioeconomic status, anxiety, education), interpersonal (e.g., family, living environment), and organizational factors (health care provider training, health care system). Participant's race/ethnicity were often reported but minoritized populations were often not the focus of articles. Conclusions: More articles discussed the difficulties that women with disabilities and women with serious mental illnesses face with receiving a Pap test than facilitators to Pap testing. Additional research should focus on the intersectionality race/ethnicity and women with disabilities and women with serious mental illnesses in relation to Pap testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
193. Legislation, Policy, and Tobacco Use Among Youth: Implications for Health Care Providers.
- Author
-
Stevens, Kathleen R., Barron, A. Marie, Ledbetter, Carol A., Foarde, Katie M., and Menard, Shirley W.
- Subjects
YOUTH ,TOBACCO industry ,PUBLIC health ,TOBACCO use - Abstract
ABSTRACT: This paper addresses implications of recent tobacco legislation, policy, and tobacco use among youth in the context of health care policy and services. Tobacco use prevalence and definitions and diagnoses of nicotine addiction and dependence are described. Assessment of smoking prevalence in Texas provides a case study of the problem and potential solutions for tobacco use among youth. The case study highlights specific implications to be considered when providing health care focused on prevention and risk reduction for youth. The paper concludes with implications and critical Internet resources for health care providers engaging in youth tobacco control. (J Sch Health. 2001;71 (3):89-95) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
194. Is Universal Coverage the American Way?
- Author
-
Collins, Martha C.
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Focuses on the viability of universal coverage for caring for uninsured Americans in the United States. Reason for the formation of the Physicians' Work Group on Universal Coverage; Three basic concepts advocated by the group; Possible reasons for opposition to universal coverage; Health insurance preferences of Americans. INSETS: ACP-ASIM white paper: `No Health Insurance: It's Enough to ...;Why the controversy?;The Oregon Health Plan.
- Published
- 2000
195. The effect of pregnancy intention on child development.
- Author
-
Joyce, Theodore J., Kaestner, Robert, Joyce, T J, Kaestner, R, and Korenman, S
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S health ,UNWANTED pregnancy ,PRENATAL care ,SMOKING ,INFANT mortality ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
In this paper, we use data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth to investigate the empirical link between unintended pregnancy and child health and development. An important contribution of our study is the use of information on siblings to control for unmeasured factors that may confound estimates of the effect of pregnancy intentions on infant and child outcomes. Results from our study indicate that unwanted pregnancy is associated with prenatal and postpartum maternal behaviors that adversely affect infant and child health, but that unwanted pregnancy has little association with birth weight and child cognitive outcomes. Estimates of the association between unwanted pregnancy and maternal behaviors were greatly reduced after controls for unmeasured family background were included in the model. Our results also indicate that there are no significant differences in maternal behaviors or child outcomes between mistimed and wanted pregnancies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
196. The Development of Surveillance Systems.
- Author
-
Henderson DA
- Subjects
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. history, Disease Notification history, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Public Health methods, United States, Epidemiological Monitoring, Public Health history
- Abstract
Surveillance systems in public health practice have increased in number and sophistication with advances in data collection, analysis, and communication. When the Communicable Disease Center (now the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) was founded some 70 years ago, surveillance referred to the close observation of individuals with suspected smallpox, plague, or cholera. Alexander Langmuir, head of the Epidemiology Branch, redefined surveillance as the epidemiology-based critical factor in infectious disease control. I joined Langmuir as assistant chief in 1955 and was appointed chief of the Surveillance Section in 1961. In this paper, I describe Langmuir's redefinition of surveillance. Langmuir asserted that its proper use in public health meant the systematic reporting of infectious diseases, the analysis and epidemiologic interpretation of data, and both prompt and widespread dissemination of results. I outline the Communicable Disease Center's first surveillance systems for malaria, poliomyelitis, and influenza. I also discuss the role of surveillance in the global smallpox eradication program, emphasizing that the establishment of systematic reporting systems and prompt action based on results were critical factors of the program., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
197. Protection of the Public against Foods and Beverages That Are Unfit for Human Consumption.
- Subjects
FOOD safety ,FOOD poisoning ,FOODBORNE diseases ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,PUBLIC health ,TOTAL quality management ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
The article presents a position paper from the American Public Health Association relative to the protection of the public against foods and beverages that are unfit for human consumption in the U.S. The association advises the government regulatory agencies and the food industries to reduce the widespread occurrence of food borne diseases across the country. It also advocates adoption of measures which will reward the traditional sanitary inspections and quality control programs. In addition, the group endorses the concepts and sampling plans developed by the International Commission on Microbiological Specifications for Foods.
- Published
- 1980
198. Competing for space in an already crowded market: a mixed methods study of why an online community of practice (CoP) for alcohol harm reduction failed to generate interest amongst the group of public health professionals at which it was aimed.
- Author
-
Ponsford, Ruth, Ford, Jennifer, Korjonen, Helena, Hughes, Emma, Keswani, Asha, Pliakas, Triantafyllos, and Egan, Matt
- Subjects
PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of alcohol ,PUBLIC health ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,ALCOHOLIC intoxication ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of wine ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention ,COMMUNICATION ,COOPERATIVENESS ,INTERNET ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL research ,HARM reduction - Abstract
Background: Improving mechanisms for knowledge translation (KT) and connecting decision-makers to each other and the information and evidence they consider relevant to their work remains a priority for public health. Virtual communities of practices (CoPs) potentially offer an affordable and flexible means of encouraging connection and sharing of evidence, information and learning among the public health community in ways that transgress traditional geographical, professional, institutional and time boundaries. The suitability of online CoPs in public health, however, has rarely been tested. This paper explores the reasons why particular online CoP for alcohol harm reduction hosted by the UK Health Forum failed to generate sufficient interest from the group of public health professionals at which it was aimed.Methods: The study utilises online web-metrics demonstrating a lack of online activity on the CoP. One hundred and twenty seven responses to an online questionnaire were used to explore whether the lack of activity could be explained by the target audience's existing information and evidence practices and needs. Qualitative interviews with 10 members describe in more detail the factors that shape and inhibit use of the virtual CoP by those at which it was targeted.Results: Quantitative and qualitative data confirm that the target audience had an interest in the kind of information and evidence the CoP was set up to share and generate discussion about, but also that participants considered themselves to already have relatively good access to the information and evidence they needed to inform their work. Qualitative data revealed that the main barriers to using the CoP were a proliferation of information sources meaning that participants preferred to utilise trusted sources that were already established within their daily routines and a lack of time to engage with new online tools that required any significant commitment.Conclusions: Specialist online CoPs are competing for space in an already crowded market. A target audience that regards itself as busy and over-supplied is unlikely to commit to a new service without the assurance that the service will provide unique and valuable well-summarised information, which would reduce the need to spend time accessing competing resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
199. The future of preconception care in the United States: multigenerational impact on reproductive outcomes.
- Author
-
St. Fleur, Michelle, Damus, Karla, and Jack, Brian
- Subjects
PRECONCEPTION care ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH equity ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The future of preconception care will require an innovative multigenerational approach to health promotion for women and men to achieve optimal reproductive health outcomes. In this paper we provide a summary of historical trends in perinatal interventions in the United States that have effectively reduced adverse perinatal outcomes but have not improved disparities among ethnic/racial groups. We describe evidence pointing to an enhanced preconception care paradigm that spans the time periods before, during, and between pregnancies and across generations for all women and men. We describe how the weathering, Barker, and life course theories point to stress and non-chromosomal inheritance as key mediators in racial disparities. Finally, we provide evidence that indicates that humans exposed to toxic stress can be impacted in future generations and that these phenomena are potentially related to epigenetic inheritance, resulting in perinatal disparities. We believe that this expanded view will define preconception care as a critical area for research in the years ahead. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. The Global Tobacco Epidemic.
- Author
-
Wipfli, Heather and Samet, Jonathan M.
- Subjects
TOBACCO & health ,PREVENTION of tobacco use ,EPIDEMICS ,PUBLIC health ,HIGH-income countries - Abstract
This paper focuses on the first century of the global tobacco epidemic and its current status, reviewing the current and projected future of the global tobacco epidemic and the steps that are in progress to end it. In the United States and many countries of western Europe, tobacco consumption peaked during the 1960s and 1970s and declined as tobacco control programs were initiated, motivated by the evidence indicting smoking as a leading cause of disease. Despite this policy advancement and the subsequent reductions in tobacco consumption, the global tobacco epidemic continued to grow in the later years of the twentieth century, as the multinational companies sought new markets to replace those shrinking in high-income countries. In response, the World Health Organization developed between 2000 and 2004 its first public health treaty, the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which entered into force in 2005. An accompanying package of interventions has been implemented. New approaches to tobacco control, including plain packaging and single representation of brands, have been implemented by Australia and Uruguay, respectively, but have been challenged by the tobacco industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.