198 resultados para shared service
Resumo:
This article analyzes whether and to what extent the policy environment of civil servants has an impact on their level of Public Service Motivation (PSM). It hypothesizes that public employees working in different policy domains and stages of the policy cycle are diversely motivated by four PSM orientations (Compassion, Commitment to the public interest, Self-sacrifice and Attraction to politics). The empirical results are based on a survey of 6885 Swiss civil servants. They show that those in charge of Welfare State policies are inclined to have higher levels of 'Compassion', whereas those performing core state functions report lower levels. Furthermore, employees whose main tasks are related to policy formulation display high levels of the 'Attraction to politics' dimension of PSM. This study questions the generalization of previous findings on PSM that are based on heterogeneous survey populations.
Resumo:
Shared decision-making approach to uncertain clinical situations such as cancer screening seems more appropriate than ever. Shared decision making can be defined as an interactive process where physician and patient share all the stages of the decision making process. For patients who wish to be implicated in the management of their health conditions, physicians might express difficulty to do so. Use of patient decision aids appears to improve such process of shared decision making. L'incertitude quant à l'efficacité de certains dépistages de cancers et du traitement en cas de test positif rend l'application du partage de la décision particulièrement appropriée. Le concept du partage de la décision peut être défini comme un processus interactif où le médecin et le patient partagent les étapes du processus de décision. Face aux patients qui désirent être impliqués dans les décisions concernant leur santé, les médecins peinent parfois à le faire. Or, l'utilisation d'outils d'aide à la décision est un moyen efficace de favoriser ce partage de l'information et, si souhaité par le patient, de la décision.
Resumo:
INTRODUCTION: Intraosseous access is increasingly recognised as an effective alternative vascular access to peripheral venous access. We aimed to prospectively study the patients receiving prehospital intraosseous access with the EZ-IO(®), and to compare our results with those of the available literature. METHODS: Every patient who required an intraosseous access with the EZ-IO from January 1st, 2009 to December 31st, 2011 was included. The main data collected were: age, sex, indication for intraosseous access, localisation of insertion, success rate, drugs and fluids administered, and complications. All published studies concerning the EZ-IO device were systematically searched and reviewed for comparison. RESULTS: Fifty-eight patients representing 60 EZ-IO procedures were included. Mean age was 47 years (range 0.5-91), and the success rate was 90%. The main indications were cardiorespiratory arrest (74%), major trauma (12%), and shock (5%). The anterior tibia was the main route. The main drugs administered were adrenaline (epinephrine), atropine and amiodarone. No complications were reported. We identified 30 heterogeneous studies representing 1603 EZ-IO insertions. The patients' characteristics and success rate were similar to our study. Complications were reported in 13 cases (1.3%). CONCLUSION: The EZ-IO provides an effective way to achieve vascular access in the pre-hospital setting. Our results were similar to the cumulative results of all studies involving the use of the EZ-IO, and that can be used for comparison for further studies.
Resumo:
Résumé La psychiatrie de consultation-liaison (CL) connaît depuis une décennie un essor majeur en Europe sous l'impulsion des recherches multicentriques du groupe European Consultation Liaison Psychiatry - ECLVV (Huyse). En Suisse, la discipline reste à développer par manque de consultants spécialisés selon le rapport 2000 de l'Association des professeurs titulaires de chaires. Néanmoins une harmonisation progressive des standards européens de documentation et d'évaluation apparaît progressivement, notamment dans les travaux du Service de Psychiatrie de Liaison du Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois. Afin d'améliorer sa pratique de consultation-liaison qui restait jusqu'alors frustrante par un sentiment de débordement et d'absence de feed-back des interventions, le Centre Psychosocial Neuchâtelois de La Chaux-de-Fonds (CPS) a constitué une base de données informatisée de CL à des fins de recherche-action selon les recommandations du groupe ECLVV. Nous avons comparé les valeurs de prévalence de notre activité de CL dans le service de médecine interne de l'Hôpital de La Chaux-de-Fonds en 1994, année du début de l'informatisation des données du CPS, et en 1998, année des plus récents résultats exploitables. La taille de l'échantillon était de 78 cas pour 1994 et de 108 cas pour 1998. Les résultats de notre étude épidémiologique rétrospective et descriptive montraient une augmentation en volume des demandes de CL, une diversification et une complexification des cas. Cette charge croissante sur la psychiatrie de consultation-liaison s'observait également dans les données de la littérature. La réponse psychiatrique du CPS montrait une modestie de moyens et du pragmatisme dans le style des interventions. Ces dernières étaient essentiellement de nature de psychiatrie générale et d'urgence, focalisée sur les tentatives de suicides. Les tentamens, ici comme ailleurs, restent le noyau dur de toute pratique de psychiatrie à l'hôpital général. L'état de lieu de notre pratique de consultation-liaison issu de ce travail a permis de créer une base de données simplifée étendue à l'ensemble des demandes de consultation au CPS afin de réguler le flux de toutes ses interventions face aux demandes toujours croissantes. Dans ce sens, notre étude a montré la nécessité de formaliser les demandes de consultation psychiatrique à l'hôpital général afin d'optimaliser les réponses des consultants.
Resumo:
Research on Public Service Motivation (PSM) has increased enormously in the last 20 years. Besides the analysis of the antecedents of PSM and its impact on organizations and individuals, many open questions about the nature of PSM itself still remain. This article argues that the theoretical construct of PSM should be contextualized by integrating the political and administrative contexts of public servants when investigating their specific attitudes towards working in a public environment. It also challenges the efficacy of the classic four-dimensional structure of PSM when it is applied to a specific context. The findings of a confirmatory factor analysis from a dataset of 3754 employees of 279 Swiss municipalities support the appropriateness of contextualizing parts of the PSM construct. They also support the addition of an extra dimension called, according to previous research, Swiss democratic governance. With regard to our results, there is a need for further PSM research to set a definite measure of PSM, particularly in regard to the international diffusion of empirical research on PSM.Points for practitionersThis study shows that public service motivation is a relevant construct for practitioners and may be used to better assess whether public agents are motivated by values or not. Nevertheless, it stresses also that the measurement of PSM must be adapted to the institutional context as well. Public managers interested in understanding better the degree to which their employees are motivated by public values must be aware that the measurement of this PSM construct has to be contextualized. In other words, PSM is also a function of the institutional environment in which organizations operate.
Resumo:
In Switzerland there is a strong movement at a national policy level towards strengthening patient rights and patient involvement in health care decisions. Yet, there is no national programme promoting shared decision making. First decision support tools (prenatal diagnosis and screening) for the counselling process have been developed and implemented. Although Swiss doctors acknowledge that shared decision making is important, hierarchical structures and asymmetric physician-patient relationships are still prevailing. The last years have seen some promising activities regarding the training of medical students and the development of patient support programmes. Swiss direct democracy and the habit of consensual decision making and citizen involvement in general may provide a fertile ground for SDM development in the primary care setting.