8 resultados para Tura, Montserrat -- Intervius
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
Le vieillissement de la population et ses conséquences psychologiques occupent une place grandissante dans les systèmes de santé. Les efforts de maintien à domicile des personnes âgées, même à des âges très avancés, s'accompagnent d'une présence plus importante des problèmes physiques et psychiatriques nécessitant des soins et un accompagnement continu par une pluralité de professionnels. A Lausanne, l'Equipe mobile (EM) de psychiatrie de l'âge avancé a été créée en 2004. Son maintien et son développement ont permis d'offrir un outil de prise en charge psychiatrique hautement spécialisé, avec une logique de proximité, à la communauté des personnes âgées et de ses soignants. L'extension du programme EM de psychiatrie de l'âge avancé dans les régions Nord et Ouest du canton de Vaud à Yverdon et Prangins respectivement, est née d'une volonté commune d'harmonisation au niveau cantonal des pratiques psychiatriques en psychiatrie de l'âge avancé. Cet article retrace la mise en place de ces deux équipes mobiles en psychiatrie de l'âge avancé, ses objectifs et sa spécificité conceptuelle. A l'aide d'un système de collecte des données, déjà utilisé par l'EM lausannoise, cet article donne les premiers résultats chiffrés en termes de problématiques rencontrées par les usagers, les types d'intervention, les diagnostics plus fréquemment relevés et les indices de satisfaction des partenaires. Cette expérience pionnière à Yverdon et Prangins pour le développement des soins psychiatriques de proximité aux personnes âgées se veut une première étape pratique dans le recensement des besoins des personnes âgées de ces régions. Elle veut aussi favoriser la mise en place d'autres projets comme les centres de la mémoire ou encore les programmes de soutien aux aidants naturels.
Resumo:
Human biomonitoring (HBM) is an effective tool for assessing actual exposure to chemicals that takes into account all routes of intake. Although hair analysis is considered to be an optimal biomarker for assessing mercury exposure, the lack of harmonization as regards sampling and analytical procedures has often limited the comparison of data at national and international level. The European-funded projects COPHES and DEMOCOPHES developed and tested a harmonized European approach to Human Biomonitoring in response to the European Environment and Health Action Plan. Herein we describe the quality assurance program (QAP) for assessing mercury levels in hair samples from more than 1800 mother-child pairs recruited in 17 European countries. To ensure the comparability of the results, standard operating procedures (SOPs) for sampling and for mercury analysis were drafted and distributed to participating laboratories. Training sessions were organized for field workers and four external quality-assessment exercises (ICI/EQUAS), followed by the corresponding web conferences, were organized between March 2011 and February 2012. ICI/EQUAS used native hair samples at two mercury concentration ranges (0.20-0.71 and 0.80-1.63) per exercise. The results revealed relative standard deviations of 7.87-13.55% and 4.04-11.31% for the low and high mercury concentration ranges, respectively. A total of 16 out of 18 participating laboratories the QAP requirements and were allowed to analyze samples from the DEMOCOPHES pilot study. Web conferences after each ICI/EQUAS revealed this to be a new and effective tool for improving analytical performance and increasing capacity building. The procedure developed and tested in COPHES/DEMOCOPHES would be optimal for application on a global scale as regards implementation of the Minamata Convention on Mercury.
Resumo:
Persistent schizophrenias and delusional disorders are classified as primary psychiatric pathologies amongst the elderly. It is crucial to distinguish them from secondary psychotic disorders associated with physical illnesses, such as acute confusion and psychotic symptoms caused by dementia or other somatic pathologies. Employing the concept of a primary psychiatric disorder occurring in an elderly patient is not simple, and each term used to define the concept refers back to an array of various criteria in clinical, psychological, biological, neurological, and cognitive fields. What about very late-onset schizophrenia, occurring after the age of 60 years, for instance? Is this a primary psychiatric illness occurring very late or a secondary pathology caused by brain disease, particularly a degenerative one? Studies reveal controversial results and it is still being debated as to whether the disease has neurodevelopmental or neurodegenerative causes. Due to the variable symptoms and psychiatric, somatic, and cognitive comorbidities associated with psychosis in elderly patients, patient healthcare must not be limited to prescribing an antipsychotic. Once it has been determined whether the psychosis is secondary or primary (old-agerelated schizophrenia, late-onset or very late-onset schizophrenia, or late-onset delusional disorder), an aetiological or symptomatic treatment must follow, including a psychotherapeutic approach, close surveillance of the drug treatment and its potential side-effects, rehabilitation steps through community-based care, and psychoeducational support for the family and other professionals in charge of the patient. Our article's aim has been restricted to summarising our understanding regarding late-onset schizophrenias and delusional disorders amongst the elderly.