150 resultados para Bienestar social--Aspectos económicos--Investigaciones--Colombia
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En la cub.: Respuestas sencillas a las preguntas más frecuentes. Publicado en la página web de la Consejería de Salud y Bienestar Social: www.juntadeandalucia.es/salud (Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales / Ciudadanía / Nuestro Compromiso por la Calidad / Guías de información para pacientes)
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Publicado en la web de la Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales: Consejería de Salud y Bienestar Social / Profesionales / Nuestro Compromiso por la Calidad / Planificación Anticipada de las Decisiones. Guía de Apoyo para profesionales / Planificación Anticipada de las Decisiones. Guía de Apoyo para profesionales )
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Este documento forma parte del proyecto Fomento de las TIC para mejorar el aprendizaje a través de simulación en centros de salud (SIMBASE). Implementation Handbook for Simulation and ICT-Based Learning in Training nad Healthcare Centres (Versión en inglés disponible en http://www.simbase.co/results/)
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Este documento forma parte del proyecto Fomento de las TIC para mejorar el aprendizaje a través de simulación en centros de salud (SIMBASE). Roadmap for the implementation and dissemination of simulation-based learning for health and education directors and public officer holders (Versión en inglés disponible en http://www.simbase.co/results/)
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Boletín semanal para profesionales sanitarios de la Secretaría General de Salud Pública, Inclusión y Calidad de Vida de la Consejería de Salud y Bienestar Social
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Este documento forma parte del proyecto Fomento de las TIC para mejorar el aprendizaje a través de simulación en centros de salud (SIMBASE). Management model for simulation based-training oriented towards impact evaluation Versión en inglés disponible en http://www.simbase.co/results/)
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Publicado en la página web de la Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales: www.juntadeandalucia.es/salud (Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales/ Profesionales / Nuestro Compromiso por la Calidad / Procesos Asistenciales Integrados)
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Publicado en la página web de la Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales: www.juntadeandalucia.es/salud (Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales/ Profesionales / Nuestro Compromiso por la Calidad / Procesos Asistenciales Integrados)
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Publicado en la plataforma de la Red Sabia (Red de Salud y Buen Trato a la Infancia y la Adolescencia. http://www.redsabia.org/) de la Consejería de Igualdad, Salud y Políticas Sociales
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Le acompañan 5 unidades didácticas: 1. "Lo que el humo se lleva": aborda el tabaco y sus componentes, los efectos del tabaco y la salud, en la estética y en el rendimiento físico-deportivo, el coste económico del tabaquismo y capacidad adictiva de la sustancia. 2. "Rompiendo mitos": ayuda a desmontar algunas falsas creencias que pueden contribuir a que los adolescentes se inicien en el consumo. 3. El tabaco y la publicidad. "¿Y a ti que te parece?": sensibiliza sobre la presión de la industria tabaquera y los medios que utiliza para captar a jóvenes. 4. "Queremos un aire limpio": aborda el riesgo de ser fumador pasivo y el derecho a respirar aire no contaminado por el humo de tabaco, la normativa sobre consumo y venta de tabaco, a la vez que anima a los jóvenes a no fumar en un futuro próximo. 5. "¿Fumar?. No gracias" ayuda al alumnado a ser consciente de la presión de grupo y cómo hacerle frente. Cada unidad didáctica está formada por varias sesiones, cada una de ellas pensada para un curso determinado de la E.S.O
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Documento relacionado: Al lado, itinerario de atención compartida : Demencias, Alzheimer (http://hdl.handle.net/10668/487). Publicado en la página web de la Consejería de Salud y Bienestar Social: Consejería de Salud y Bienestar Social / Profesionales / Salud Pública / 'Al Lado' con... / 'Al Lado' con las personas afectadas por Alzheimer.
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This guide helps people residing in Andalucía to fill in their Advance Health Care Directives, also known as a Living Will. This document allows you to make known in advance and in writing your wishes and preferences about the health care that you wish to receive when you are unable to communicate because of illness. This guide gives simple and rapid information about how to fill in the document and how to express your wishes. It also contains additional information on Advance Health Care Directives and information onthe Andalusian Registry of Advance Health Care Directives.
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BACKGROUND Complicated pyelonephritis (cPN), a common cause of hospital admission, is still a poorly-understood entity given the difficulty involved in its correct definition. The aim of this study was to analyze the main epidemiological, clinical, and microbiological characteristics of cPN and its prognosis in a large cohort of patients with cPN. METHODS We conducted a prospective, observational study including 1325 consecutive patients older than 14 years diagnosed with cPN and admitted to a tertiary university hospital between 1997-2013. After analyzing the main demographic, clinical and microbiological data, covariates found to be associated with attributable mortality in univariate analysis were included in a multivariate logistic regression model. RESULTS Of the 1325 patients, 689 (52%) were men and 636 (48%) women; median age 63 years, interquartile range [IQR] (46.5-73). Nine hundred and forty patients (70.9%) had functional or structural abnormalities in the urinary tract, 215 (16.2%) were immunocompromised, 152 (11.5%) had undergone a previous urinary tract instrumentation, and 196 (14.8%) had a long-term bladder catheter, nephrostomy tube or ureteral catheter. Urine culture was positive in 813 (67.7%) of the 1251 patients in whom it was done, and in the 1032 patients who had a blood culture, 366 (34%) had bacteraemia. Escherichia coli was the causative agent in 615 episodes (67%), Klebsiella spp in 73 (7.9%) and Proteus ssp in 61 (6.6%). Fourteen point one percent of GNB isolates were ESBL producers. In total, 343 patients (25.9%) developed severe sepsis and 165 (12.5%) septic shock. Crude mortality was 6.5% and attributable mortality was 4.1%. Multivariate analysis showed that an age >75 years (OR 2.77; 95% CI, 1.35-5.68), immunosuppression (OR 3.14; 95% CI, 1.47-6.70), and septic shock (OR 58.49; 95% CI, 26.6-128.5) were independently associated with attributable mortality. CONCLUSIONS cPN generates a high morbidity and mortality and likely a great consumption of healthcare resources. This study highlights the factors directly associated with mortality, though further studies are needed in the near future aimed at identifying subgroups of low-risk patients susceptible to outpatient management.
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Gut microbiota has recently been proposed as a crucial environmental factor in the development of metabolic diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes, mainly due to its contribution in the modulation of several processes including host energy metabolism, gut epithelial permeability, gut peptide hormone secretion, and host inflammatory state. Since the symbiotic interaction between the gut microbiota and the host is essentially reflected in specific metabolic signatures, much expectation is placed on the application of metabolomic approaches to unveil the key mechanisms linking the gut microbiota composition and activity with disease development. The present review aims to summarize the gut microbial-host co-metabolites identified so far by targeted and untargeted metabolomic studies in humans, in association with impaired glucose homeostasis and/or obesity. An alteration of the co-metabolism of bile acids, branched fatty acids, choline, vitamins (i.e., niacin), purines, and phenolic compounds has been associated so far with the obese or diabese phenotype, in respect to healthy controls. Furthermore, anti-diabetic treatments such as metformin and sulfonylurea have been observed to modulate the gut microbiota or at least their metabolic profiles, thereby potentially affecting insulin resistance through indirect mechanisms still unknown. Despite the scarcity of the metabolomic studies currently available on the microbial-host crosstalk, the data-driven results largely confirmed findings independently obtained from in vitro and animal model studies, putting forward the mechanisms underlying the implication of a dysfunctional gut microbiota in the development of metabolic disorders.