8 results on '"Monistrol O"'
Search Results
2. Impact of a hand hygiene educational programme on hospital-acquired infections in medical wards
- Author
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Monistrol, O., Calbo, E., Riera, M., Nicolás, C., Font, R., Freixas, N., and Garau, J.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Humanization of care in acute psychiatric hospitalization units: A scoping review
- Author
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Sanz-Osorio, MT, Sastre-Rus, M, Monistrol, O, Criado, MP, Valles, V, and Escobar-Bravo, MA
- Subjects
humanization care ,scoping review ,hospitals psychiatric - Abstract
Accessible Summary What is known on the subject? Humanizing the world of health is a complex process that includes all the dimensions of the person. When a person has from a mental illness, the humanization of care becomes more important, as the disorder itself prevents the person to participate in their health process, even when showing self-harm or aggressive behaviours. These situations jointly with other factors related with professionals (insufficient ratio, inadequate treatment or lack of training) may cause the patient admitted to the acute psychiatric hospitalization unit to require the use of restrictive measures (involuntary admissions, mechanical restraints or forced administration of medication). What the paper adds to existing knowledge? We identify the relevance of the perception the patient and family have regarding the care received, as well as the relevance of factors related to the professionals, among which the attitude, the staff ratio, the nursing time of direct dedication, and the therapeutic environment and safety of the patient and the professionals. All patients must be treated with dignity, respect, regardless of the aggressive manifestations caused by their pathology. What are the implications for practice? A greater understanding of the care offered to admitted people affected by a mental disorder, their families and professionals who care for them in acute mental health units, giving greater importance to "caring" and not exclusively to "curing." Introduction Humanization in Mental Health refers to give the same relevance to the clinical needs and to the social, emotional and psychological needs. Aim To identify the published knowledge on current care models related to the humanization of care in acute psychiatric units. Method Scoping review based on the methodological model of Arksey and O'Malley, and PRISMA methodology. Database searches (Pubmed, Cinahl, Virtual Library, Cuiden, Academic Google and PsycInfo) with the terms: "Humanization," "Hospitals Psychiatric," "Emergency Psychiatric," "Psychiatric Service" and "Psychiatric intensive care units." Results Twenty-two articles met the inclusion criteria. Four thematic units were identified: aspects related to (i) patient perceptions; (ii) Government policies and hospitality organizational culture; (iii) external factors such as the environment, family or associations; and (iv) safety and security. Discussion Only one of the articles mentions the concept analysed, although all of them contribute with key aspects of healthcare humanization, such as the empowerment of the patient, the care model, the staff ratio, the therapeutic relationship, the nursing time of direct dedication to the patient, the therapeutic environment, safety and patient and staff perception of feeling safe. Implications for Practice The present study can help to improve the care offered in acute mental health units.
- Published
- 2022
4. Foodborne Nosocomial Outbreak of SHV1 and CTX-M-15-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae: Epidemiology and Control
- Author
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Calbo, E., primary, Freixas, N., additional, Xercavins, M., additional, Riera, M., additional, Nicolas, C., additional, Monistrol, O., additional, Sole, M. d. m., additional, Sala, M. R., additional, Vila, J., additional, and Garau, J., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Prevalence of anxiety and depression and their associated risk factors throughout pregnancy and postpartum: a prospective cross-sectional descriptive multicentred study.
- Author
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Jimènez-Barragan M, Falguera-Puig G, Curto-Garcia JJ, Monistrol O, Coll-Navarro E, Tarragó-Grima M, Ezquerro-Rodriguez O, Ruiz AC, Codina-Capella L, Urquizu X, and Pino Gutierrez AD
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Prevalence, Young Adult, Postpartum Period psychology, Spain epidemiology, Adolescent, Depression, Postpartum epidemiology, Depression, Postpartum diagnosis, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Prenatal Care, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Anxiety epidemiology, Depression epidemiology, Depression diagnosis, Depression psychology
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the prevalence of anxiety and depression and their associated risk factors throughout the pregnancy and postpartum process using a new screening for the early detection of mental health problems., Design: A prospective cross-sectional descriptive multicentred study. Participants were consecutively enrolled at ≥ 12 weeks' gestation and followed at three different time points: at 12-14 weeks of pregnancy, at 29-30 weeks of pregnancy, and 4-6 weeks postpartum. All women completed a mental screening at week 12-14 of pregnancy consisting of two questions from the Generalised Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-2) and the two Whooley questions. If this screening was positive, the woman completed the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS)., Setting: Seven primary care centres coordinated by a Gynaecology and Obstetrics Department in the city of Terrassa (Barcelona) in northern Spain., Participants: Pregnant women (N = 335, age 18-45 years), in their first trimester of pregnancy, and receiving prenatal care in the public health system between July 2018 and July 2020., Findings: The most relevant factors associated with positive screening for antenatal depression or anxiety during pregnancy, that appear after the first trimester of pregnancy, are systematically repeated throughout the pregnancy, and are maintained in the postpartum period were: a history of previous depression, previous anxiety, abuse, and marital problems. In weeks 12-14 early risk factors for positive depression and anxiety screening and positive EPDS were: age, smoking, educational level, employment status, previous psychological/psychiatric history and treatment, suicide in the family environment, voluntary termination of pregnancy and current planned pregnancy, living with a partner and partner's income. In weeks 29-30 risk factors were: being a skilled worker, a history of previous depression or anxiety, and marital problems. In weeks 4-6 postpartum, risk factors were: age, a history of previous depression or anxiety or psychological/psychiatric treatment, type of treatment, having been mistreated, and marital problems., Conclusions: Early screening for anxiety and depression in pregnancy may enable the creation of more effective healthcare pathways, by acting long before mental health problems in pregnant women worsen or by preventing their onset. Assessment of anxiety and depression symptoms before and after childbirth and emotional support needs to be incorporated into routine practice., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
6. Humanised care in acute psychiatric hospitalisation units: Definition, values and strategic initiatives from the perspective of persons with mental health problems, primary carers and professionals.
- Author
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Sanz-Osorio MT, González-Diez L, Sánchez-Rueda G, Vallès V, Escobar-Bravo MA, and Monistrol O
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- Male, Female, Humans, Caregivers, Social Stigma, Hospitalization, Mental Health, Mental Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Humanised care refers to the holistic approach to the person, considering their bio-psycho-social and behavioural dimensions. It becomes more complex when the person has mental health problems that may affect his or her will, cognition and relationship to the world. The literature on the humanisation of mental health is scarce and only offers the view of professionals., Aim: To analyse the concept, values and strategic initiatives of humanised care in acute psychiatric units from the perspective of persons with mental health problems, carers and professionals., Method: Qualitative grounded-theory approach. Data were collected through focus groups and in-depth interviews among persons with mental health problems, carers and professionals., Results: Thirteen focus groups and three in-depth staff interviews were performed, with a total of 61 participants. Humanised care is defined as quality care of an individualised, ethical and safe nature, empowering persons/carers to involve them in their health process, helping them resist the stigma of mental illness through a therapeutic relationship, bond and communication. Formal training, teamwork and effective communication are required. Six values and strategic initiatives were identified., Discussion: Each value and strategic initiatives acquires full meaning when connected with the rest. Without this interconnection, humanised care would be impossible., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Humanization of care in acute psychiatric hospitalization units: A scoping review.
- Author
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Sanz-Osorio MT, Sastre-Rus M, Monistrol O, Pérez Criado M, Vallès V, and Escobar-Bravo MA
- Subjects
- Humans, Mental Health, Hospitalization, Psychotic Disorders
- Abstract
WHAT IS KNOWN ON THE SUBJECT?: Humanizing the world of health is a complex process that includes all the dimensions of the person. When a person has from a mental illness, the humanization of care becomes more important, as the disorder itself prevents the person to participate in their health process, even when showing self-harm or aggressive behaviours. These situations jointly with other factors related with professionals (insufficient ratio, inadequate treatment or lack of training) may cause the patient admitted to the acute psychiatric hospitalization unit to require the use of restrictive measures (involuntary admissions, mechanical restraints or forced administration of medication). WHAT THE PAPER ADDS TO EXISTING KNOWLEDGE?: We identify the relevance of the perception the patient and family have regarding the care received, as well as the relevance of factors related to the professionals, among which the attitude, the staff ratio, the nursing time of direct dedication, and the therapeutic environment and safety of the patient and the professionals. All patients must be treated with dignity, respect, regardless of the aggressive manifestations caused by their pathology. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE?: A greater understanding of the care offered to admitted people affected by a mental disorder, their families and professionals who care for them in acute mental health units, giving greater importance to "caring" and not exclusively to "curing.", Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Humanization in Mental Health refers to give the same relevance to the clinical needs and to the social, emotional and psychological needs., Aim: To identify the published knowledge on current care models related to the humanization of care in acute psychiatric units., Method: Scoping review based on the methodological model of Arksey and O'Malley, and PRISMA methodology. Database searches (Pubmed, Cinahl, Virtual Library, Cuiden, Academic Google and PsycInfo) with the terms: "Humanization," "Hospitals Psychiatric," "Emergency Psychiatric," "Psychiatric Service" and "Psychiatric intensive care units.", Results: Twenty-two articles met the inclusion criteria. Four thematic units were identified: aspects related to (i) patient perceptions; (ii) Government policies and hospitality organizational culture; (iii) external factors such as the environment, family or associations; and (iv) safety and security., Discussion: Only one of the articles mentions the concept analysed, although all of them contribute with key aspects of healthcare humanization, such as the empowerment of the patient, the care model, the staff ratio, the therapeutic relationship, the nursing time of direct dedication to the patient, the therapeutic environment, safety and patient and staff perception of feeling safe., Implications for Practice: The present study can help to improve the care offered in acute mental health units., (© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Hand contamination during routine care in medical wards: the role of hand hygiene compliance.
- Author
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Monistrol O, López ML, Riera M, Font R, Nicolás C, Escobar MA, Freixas N, Garau J, and Calbo E
- Subjects
- Adult, Bacteria classification, Colony Count, Microbial, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Bacteria isolation & purification, Guideline Adherence, Hand microbiology, Hand Hygiene methods
- Abstract
The hands of healthcare workers (HCWs) are the most common vehicle for the transmission of micro-organisms from patient to patient and within the healthcare environment. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of a multimodal campaign on the type and amount of resident and transient flora and the presence of potential risk factors for hand contamination during routine care. A before-after (PRE and POST periods) interventional study was carried out in medical wards of a tertiary care hospital. Eighty-nine samples were analysed. Samples were cultured immediately before patient contact using a glove-juice method. Data collected included socio-demographic and risk factors for hand contamination. Flora was measured as log10 c.f.u. ml(-1) and evaluated by comparing median values in the PRE and POST periods. Transient flora was isolated from the hands of 67.4 and 46.1 % of HCWs in the PRE and POST periods, respectively (P<0.001). Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas spp. and meticillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus were the predominant contaminants. Resident flora was isolated from 92.1 % of HCWs in the PRE period and from 70.8 % in the POST period (P<0.001). The meticillin-resistant coagulase-negative staphylococci log10 c.f.u. count ml(-1) decreased from 1.96 ± 1.2 to 0.89 ± 1.2 (mean ± s d; P<0.001), and the global flora count decreased from 2.77 ± 1.1 to 1.56 ± 1.4 (P<0.001). In the POST period, the wearing of fewer rings (P<0.001), shorter fingernail length (P = 0.008), a shorter time since recent hand hygiene (HH) (P = 0.007) and an increased use of alcohol-based hand rub instead of soap (P<0.001) were documented. The HH multimodal strategy reduced the number of risk factors and the level of HCW hand contamination.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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