935 resultados para Future care
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AIM: The morbidity associated with osteoporosis and fractures in children and adolescents with spina bifida highlights the importance of osteoporosis prevention and treatment in these patients. The aim of this study was to examine the occurrence and pattern of bone fractures in paediatric patients with spina bifida. METHOD: We reviewed the data of all paediatric patients with spina bifida who were treated in our centre between 1999 and 2008. RESULTS: One hundred and thirteen patients were included in the study (63 females, 50 males; mean age 10y 8mo, SD 4y 10mo, range 6mo-18y). The motor levels were thoracic in six, upper lumbar in 22, lower lumbar in 42, and sacral in 43 patients. Of the 113 patients, 58 (51.3%) had shunted hydrocephalus. Thirty-six (31.8%) were non-ambulatory (wheelchair-dependent [unable to self-propel wheelchair] n=3, wheelchair-independent [able to self-propel wheelchair] n=33), 13 were partial ambulators, 61 were full ambulators, and three were below the age of walking. Forty-five fractures were reported in 25 patients. The distal femur was the most common fracture site. Statistical analyses showed that patients with higher levels of involvement and in wheelchairs had a significantly increased risk of having a [corrected] fracture (p<0.001). Spontaneous fractures were the principal mechanism of injury, and an association was identified between fracture mechanism, type of ambulation, and lesion level: the fractures of patients with higher levels of motor functioning and those in wheelchairs were mainly pathological (p=0.01). We identified an association between risk of a second fracture, higher motor level lesion, and non-ambulation. There was an increased risk of having a second fracture after a previous spontaneous fracture (p=0.004). INTERPRETATION: Data in this study indicate a high prevalence of fractures in patients with spina bifida.
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RESUMO - Introdução: A criação das Unidades Locais de Saúde (ULS) em Portugal reconheceu a necessidade de reorganização do sistema para responder a novas exigências, apostando no caminho da integração vertical e da prestação de cuidados globais. A primeira ULS foi criada em Portugal em 1999, actualmente existem sete. Objectivo: Analisar a influência do modelo organizacional dos prestadores no número e tipo de internamentos por causas sensíveis a cuidados de ambulatório (ICSCA). Metodologia: Foram determinados os ICSCA segundo a metodologia do Canadian Institute for Health Information e respectivas taxas padronizadas nos distritos das unidades seleccionadas, entre 2006 e 2010. Utilizou-se o método da diferença das diferenças para a comparação dos períodos pré e pós-ULS, utilizando como caso controle um distrito em que os prestadores estão organizados no modelo clássico, Hospitais+ACES. Resultados: Foram incluídos no estudo 4.446 ICSCA (6,27% do total de internamentos). Existiram em média 296,4 internamentos anuais por distrito, sendo a taxa média 252,7 int.100.000 hab. Após a criação da ULS 1 evitaram-se, em média, mais 36% internamentos (93,3 int. 100.000 hab.). Na ULS 2, pelo contrário, houve um acréscimo de 7% na taxa de internamento (17,6 int. 100.000 hab.). Discussão e conclusão: Não foi encontrado um padrão na variação nas taxas de ICSCA após a criação das ULS. Será necessário alargar o estudo a um maior número de prestadores. A compreensão das razões destes resultados implica o estudo dos indicadores socioeconómicos, epidemiológicos e geográficos das populações, bem como as características dos prestadores (Hospitais e CSP).
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RESUMO: Schizophrenia’s burden defines experience of family members and is associated with high level of distress. Courtesy stigma, a distress concept, worsens caregivers’ burden of care and impacts on schizophrenia. Expressed emotion (EE), another family variable, impacts on schizophrenia. However, relationship between EE, burden of care and stigma has been little explored in western literature but not in sub-Saharan Africa particularly Nigeria. This study explored the impact of burden of care and courtesy stigma on EE among caregivers of persons with schizophrenia in urban and semi-urban settings in Nigeria. Fifty caregivers each from semi-urban and urban areas completed a socio-demographic schedule, family questionnaire, burden interview schedule and perceived devaluation and discrimination scale. The caregivers had a mean age of 42 (± 15.6) years. Majority were females (57%), married (49%), from Yoruba ethnic group (68%), monogamous family (73%) and Christians (82%). A higher proportion of the whole sample (53%) had tertiary education. Three out of ten were sole caregivers. Seventy three (73%) lived with the person they cared for. The average number of hours spent per week by a caregiver with a person with schizophrenia was 35 hours. The urban sample had significantly higher proportion of carers with high global expressed emotion (72.7%) than the semi-urban sample (27.3%). The odds of a caregiver in an urban setting exhibiting high expressed emotion are 4.202 times higher than the odds of caregiver in a semi-urban setting. Additionally, there was significance difference between the urban and semi-urban caregivers in discrimination dimension. High levels of subjective and objective burden were associated with high levels of critical comments. In conclusion, this study is the first demonstration of urban-semi-urban difference in expressed emotion in an African country and its findings provide further support to hypothesized relationship between components of EE and burden of care.
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RESUMO - Introdução: A formação de um gestor neste século é um verdadeiro desafio, pois apesar das instituições de ensino superior formarem profissionais com capacidade para actuar na área da Gestão da Saúde, é difícil afirmar que tal formação seja suficiente para produzir os grandes gestores exigidos actualmente para orientarem Instituições de Saúde modernas. Assim, muitos são os estudos que têm mostrado que os gestores de saúde mais eficazes se assemelham num requisito crucial: a Inteligência Emocional (IE). Objectivos: Perceber a importância do ensino das competências emocionais nos Cursos de Mestrado em Gestão da Saúde; analisar de forma descritiva/analítica e crítica o módulo opcional de Emoção, Liderança e Coaching na Gestão da Saúde leccionado no Mestrado em Gestão da Saúde na Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública; e por fim construir uma proposta de Unidade Curricular de Inteligência Emocional. Metodologia: Realizou-se uma revisão da literatura que permitiu desenvolver e adquirir conhecimentos, conceitos e teorias na área da IE. De seguida, procedeu-se a uma análise descritiva/analítica e crítica do módulo opcional de Emoção, Liderança e Coaching na Gestão em Saúde leccionado no Mestrado em Gestão da Saúde na Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública, com base na revisão de literatura anteriormente efectuada; e por fim tentou-se construir uma proposta de Unidade Curricular de Inteligência Emocional a ser leccionada a futuros gestores de saúde. Conclusões: Este trabalho tem como principal intuito por um lado, mostrar através da vária literatura consultada que a Inteligência Emocional é uma competência essencial a ser desenvolvida pelos gestores em saúde de hoje em dia, pois as competências que a englobam fazem toda a diferença na organização, tornando os funcionários mais motivados, seguros e comprometidos com o que fazem; por outro lado foi um trabalho que permitiu reunir dados e ampliar as ideias sobre Inteligência Emocional. Da análise efectuada do módulo leccionado no Mestrado em Gestão de Saúde na Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública, o que se pode concluir é que a carga horária assim como o peso do módulo que é opcional, é pouco significativo (tendo uma percentagem apenas de 3,33% dos ECTS (Sistema Europeu de créditos curriculares que significa European Credit Transfer System) e de acordo com os dados disponibilizados pela colega Mestre Joana Areias no IV Curso de Mestrado em Gestão da Saúde, apenas 36,6% dos alunos frequentaram este módulo, o que revela que ainda nem todos os futuros gestores de saúde estão dispertos para a importância do desenvolvimento da Inteligência Emocional como competência essencial nas suas práticas.
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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ABSTRACT - The problem of how to support “intentions to make behavioural changes” (IBC) and “behaviour changes” (BC) in smoking cessation when there is a scarcity of resources is a pressing issue in public health terms. The present research focuses on the use of information and communications technologies and their role in smoking cessation. It is developed in Portugal after the ratification of WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (on 8 November 2005). The prevalence of smokers over fifteen years of age within the population stood at 20.9% (30.9% for men and 11.8% for women). While the strategy of helping people to quit smoking has been emphasised at National Health Service (NHS) level, the uptake of cessation assistance has exceeded the capacity of the service. This induced the search of new theoretical and practical venues to offer alternative options to people willing to stop smoking. Among these, the National Health Plan (NHP) of Portugal (2004-2010), identifies the use of information technologies in smoking cessation. eHealth and the importance of health literacy as a means of empowering people to make behavioural changes is recurrently considered an option worth investigating. The overall objective of this research is to understand, in the Portuguese context, the use of the Internet to help people to stop smoking. Research questions consider factors that may contribute to “intentions to make behavioural changes” (IBC) and “behavioural changes” (BC) while using a Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP). Also consideration is given to the trade-off on the use of the Web as a tool for smoking cessation: can it reach a vast number of people for a small cost (efficiency) demonstrating to work in the domain of smoking cessation (efficacy)”? In addition to the introduction, there is a second chapter in which the use of tobacco is discussed as a public health menace. The health gains achieved by stopping smoking and the means of quitting are also examined, as is the use of the Internet in smoking cessation. Then, several research issues are introduced. These include background theory and the theoretical framework for the Sense of Coherence. The research model is also discussed. A presentation of the methods, materials and of the Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP) follows. In chapter four the results of the use of the Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP) are presented. This study is divided into two sections. The first describes results related to quality control in relation to the Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP) and gives an overview of its users. Of these, 3,150 answered initial eligibility questions. In the end, 1,463 met all eligibility requirements, completed intake, decided on a day to quit smoking (Dday) and declared their “intentions to make behavioural changes” (IBC) while a second targeted group of 650 did not decide on a Dday. With two quit attempts made before joining the platform, most of the participants had experienced past failures while wanting to stop. The smoking rate averaged 21 cigarettes per day. With a mean age of 35, of the participants 55% were males. Among several other considerations, gender and the Sense of Coherence (SOC) influenced the success of participants in their IBC and endeavour to set quit dates. The results of comparing males and females showed that, for current smokers, establishing a Dday was related to gender differences, not favouring males (OR=0.76, p<0.005). Belonging to higher Socio-economic strata (SES) was associated with the intention to consider IBC (when compared to lower SES condition) (OR=1.57, p<0.001) and higher number of school years (OR=0.70, p<0.005) favoured the decision to smoking cessation. Those who demonstrated higher confidence in their likelihood of success in stopping in the shortest time had a higher rate of setting a Dday (OR=0.51, p<0.001). There were differences between groups in IBC reflecting the high and low levels of the SOC score (OR=1.43, p=0.006), as those who considered setting a Dday had higher levels of SOC. After adjusting for all variables, stages of readiness to change and SOC were kept in the model. This is the first Arm of this research where the focus is a discussion of the system’s implications for the participants’ “intentions to make behavioural changes” (IBC). Moreover, a second section of this study (second Arm) offers input collected from 77 in-depth interviews with the Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP) users. Here, “Behaviour Change” (BC) and the usability of the platform are explored a year after IBC was declared. A percentage of 32.9% of self-reported, 12-month quitters in continuous abstinence from smoking from Dday to the 12-month follow- up point of the use of the Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP) has been assessed. Comparing the Sense of Coherence (SOC) scores of participants by their respective means, according to the two groups, there was a significant difference in these scores of non smokers (BC) (M=144,66, SD=22,52) and Sense of Coherence (SOC) of smokers (noBC) (M=131,51, SD=21,43) p=0.014. This WATIP strategy and its contents benefit from the strengthening of the smoker’s sense of coherence (SOC), so that the person’s progress towards a life without tobacco may be experienced as comprehensible, manageable and meaningful. In this sample the sense of coherence (SOC) effect is moderate although it is associated with the day to quit smoking (Dday). Some of the limitations of this research have to do with self-selection bias, sample size (power) and self-reporting (no biochemical validation). The enrolment of participants was therefore not representative of the smoking population. It is not possible to verify the Web-Assisted Tobacco Intervention Probe (WATIP) evaluation of external validity; consequently, the results obtained cannot be applied generalized. No participation bias is provided. Another limitation of this study is the associated limitations of interviews. Interviewees’ perception that fabricating answers could benefit them more than telling the simple truth in response to questions is a risk that is not evaluated (with no external validation like measuring participants’ carbon monoxide levels). What emerges in this analysis is the relevance of the process that leads to the establishment of the quit day (Dday) to stop using tobacco. In addition, technological issues, when tailoring is the focus, are key elements for scrutiny. The high number of dropouts of users of the web platform mandates future research that should concentrate on the matters of the user-centred design of portals. The focus on gains in health through patient-centred care needs more research, so that technology usability be considered within the context of best practices in smoking cessation.
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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RESUMO: Os doentes que vão à consulta com sintomas físicos para os quais o médico não encontra uma causa orgânica, são frequentes na Medicina Geral e Familiar, embora não sejam específicos, e são o objecto de estudo do presente trabalho. Não deixar uma doença por diagnosticar (erro de tipo II) sem contudo rotular pessoas saudáveis como doentes (erro de tipo I) é um dos mais difíceis problemas da prática clínica diária e para o qual não existe uma orientação infalível e não é previsível que alguma vez venha a existir. Mas se o diagnóstico de doença ou não-doença é difícil, o tratamento dos que não tem doença, embora com sofrimento, também não é mais fácil, sobretudo, se estivermos conscientes do sofrimento que determina a medicalização e a iatrogenia. O presente trabalho está estruturado em 3 partes. Na primeira parte descrevemos a nossa visão integrada do que apreendemos da leitura da literatura publicada e à qual tivemos acesso. À semelhança do que se verifica na maioria das áreas da Medicina esta é também uma em que o conhecimento cresce a ritmo exponencial. No entanto, à falta de conceitos precisos e de definições consensuais sucede um conhecimento, por vezes, pouco consistente, tanto mais que estamos na fronteira entre a cultura leiga e a cultura erudita médica em que os significados devem, a todo o momento, ser validados. Fizemos uma revisão sobre as definições do que está em questão, sobre o que se sabe sobre a frequência dos sintomas físicos na população, quantos recorrem aos serviços de saúde e o que lhes é feito. Passámos por uma revisão da fisiologia destes sintomas e algumas explicações fisiopatológicas para terminarmos sobre o que os doentes pensam sobre os seus sintomas e os cuidados que recebem e o que os profissionais pensam sobre estes doentes. Esta parte termina com uma revisão das propostas de abordagem para este tipo de doentes. Na segunda parte, descrevemos os estudos empíricos focados no problema dos pacientes com sintomas físicos mas sem evidência de doença orgânica. Começa por uma apresentação dos aspectos processuais e metodológicos dos estudos realizados, mais especificamente, de dois estudos quantitativos e um qualitativo. No primeiro estudo pretendeu-se avaliar quais são os sintomas físicos e a sua frequência na população em geral e a frequência de pacientes que procuram (ou não) os serviços de saúde tendo como motivo este tipo de sintomas. O objectivo deste estudo é contribuir para a demonstração que este tipo de sintomas faz parte da vida do dia-a-dia e que, na maioria das vezes, só por si não significa doença, sem contudo negar que representa sofrimento, por vezes até maior do que quando há patologia orgânica. Se no primeiro estudo era demonstrar que os sintomas físicos são frequentes na população, no segundo estudo o objectivo é demonstrar que pacientes com este tipo de sintomas são igualmente frequentes e que o tipo de sintomas apresentados na consulta não difere dos referidos pela população em geral. Pretendia-se ainda saber o que é feito ou proposto pelo médico a estes doentes e se estes doentes traziam ou não, junto com os sintomas, ideias explicativas para os mesmos. Finalmente e não menos importante, é avaliar o grau de fidedignidade do diagnóstico de sintoma somatoforme, chamando assim ao sintoma físico que foi “levado” à consulta e que o médico diagnosticou como não tendo causa orgânica. O terceiro estudo parte do conhecimento adquirido que a Medicina tem muitas respostas para este problema, mas poucas que se possam considerar satisfatórias se usadas isoladamente. Que a maioria das soluções é procurada entre a cultura médica e num paradigma reducionista de separação mente-corpo. Contudo, se o sintoma é “construído” pelo doente, se o principal problema não está no sintoma mas na forma como o paciente o vê, então pareceu-nos lógico que a solução também tem que passar por integrarmos no plano de abordagem o que o doente entende ser melhor para si. Nesta sequência, entrevistaram-se alguns doentes cujo diagnóstico de sintomas somatoformes estava demonstrado pelo teste do tempo. Por isso, entrevistaram-se doentes que já tinham ido à consulta de MGF há mais de 6 meses por sintomas somatoformes e, na data da entrevista, o diagnóstico se mantinha inalterado, independentemente da sua evolução. As entrevistas visaram conhecer as ideias dos doentes sobre o que as motivou a procurarem a consulta, o que pensavam da forma como foram cuidados e que ideias tinham sobre o que os profissionais de saúde devem fazer para os ajudar a restabelecer o equilíbrio com o seu ambiente evitando a medicalização, a iatrogenia e a evolução para a cronicidade. Na terceira parte, discutem-se e integram-se os resultados encontrados no conhecimento previamente existente. Tenta-se teorizar, fazer doutrina sobre o tema e contribuir para abordagens terapêuticas mais personalizadas, abrangentes, variadas e multimodais, baseadas sempre no método clínico centrado no paciente, ou de modo menos correcto mas enfático, baseadas no método centrado na relação. Apresentam-se algumas hipóteses de trabalhos futuros sobre o tema e, sobretudo, esperamos ter contribuído para o reconhecimento da necessidade de a comunicação médico-doente ser uma aprendizagem transversal a todos os profissionais de saúde e ao longo da vida, com a ideia que é sempre possível fazer melhor, caso contrário tenderemos, inexoravelmente, a fazer cada vez pior.-----------ABSTRACT: Patients who go to consultation with physical symptoms, for which the doctor does not find an organic cause, are the subject of the present study. They are common in family medicine, although not specific. Do not let an undiagnosed disease (type II error), but without labeling healthy people as patients with disease (type I error) is one of the most difficult problems in clinical practice and for which doesn’t exist an infallible guide and it is unlikely that any since coming into existence. But, if the diagnosis of disease or non-disease is difficult, the treatment of those who do not have the disease, though suffering, it is not easy, especially if we are aware of the suffering that medicalization and iatrogenic determines. This work is structured in three parts. In the first part we describe our integrated view of what we grasp from reading the published literature and to which we had access. Similar to that found in most areas of medicine, this is also one in which knowledge grows exponentially. However, the absence of precise concepts and consensual definitions determines an inconsistent knowledge, especially because we're on the border between secular culture and medical culture where, at all times, the meaning must be validated. We did a review on the definitions of what is at issue, what is known about the frequency of physical symptoms in the population, how many use the services of health and what they receive as care. We went through a review of the physiology of these symptoms and some pathophysiological explanations, to finish on what patients think about their symptoms and how they perceived the care they received and, finally, what professionals think about these patients. This part ends with a review of the approaches proposed for such patients. In the second part, we describe the empirical studies focused on the problem of patients with physical symptoms but no evidence of organic disease. Begins with a presentation of the procedural and methodological aspects of studies, more specifically, two quantitative and one qualitative. The first study sought to assess which are the physical symptoms, their incidence in the general population and the frequency they seek (or not) health services on behalf of those symptoms. The aim behind this study was to contribute to the demonstration that this type of symptoms is part of life's day-to-day and that, in most cases, does not represent disease by itself, without denying that they represent suffering, sometimes even greater than when there are organic disease. The first study endeavor to demonstrate that the physical symptoms are common in the population. The second study aspires to demonstrate that patients with such symptoms are also common and that the type of symptoms presented in the consultation does not differ from those in the general population. The aim was also to know what is done or proposed by the physician for these patients and if these patients brought or not, along with the symptoms, explanatory ideas for them. Finally and not least, it would try to assess the degree of reliability of diagnosis of somatoform symptoms, thus drawing the physical symptom that patient presents in the consultation and that the doctor diagnosed as having no organic cause. The third study starts from the acquired knowledge that medicine has many answers to this problem, but few can be considered satisfactory if used in isolation. The most solutions are sought in the medical culture and based on a reductionist paradigm of mind-body. However, if the symptom is "built" by the patient, if the main problem is not the symptom but the way the patient sees it, then it seemed logical to us that the solution must integrate the approaches that patients believes are best for them. Subsequently, a few patients, whose diagnosis of somatoform symptoms was demonstrated by the test of time, were interviewed. Therefore, patients who were interviewed had gone to the consultation of family medicine more than 6 months before for somatoform symptoms and. at the moment of the interview, the diagnosis remained unchanged, regardless of their evolution. The interviews aimed to ascertain the patients' ideas about what motivated them to seek consultation, what they thought about the care they got and which ideas they have about what health professionals should do to help these patients to re-establish equilibrium with its environment avoiding medicalization, iatrogenic effects and the evolution to chronicity. In the third section, we discuss and integrate the results found in previously existing knowledge. Attempts to theorize on the subject and contribute to more personalized treatment, comprehensive, varied and multi-modal approaches, always based on patient-centered clinical method, with emphasis on the relationship. We presents some hypotheses for future work on the subject and,above all, defend the recognition of the importance of lifelong learning communication skills for all health professionals, with the idea that we can always do better, otherwise we tend inexorably to do worse.
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This paper examines the incentive to adopt a new technology given by some popular reimbursement systems, namely cost reimbursement and DRG reimbursement. Adoption is based on a cost-benefit criterion. We find that retrospective payment systems require a large enough patient benefit to yield adoption, while under DRG, adoption may arise in the absence of patients benefits when the differential reimbursement for the old vs. new technology is large enough. Also, cost reimbursement leads to higher adoption under some conditions on the differential reimbursement levels and patient benefits. In policy terms, cost reimbursement system may be more effective than a DRG payment system. This gives a new dimension to the discussion of prospective vs. retrospective payment systems of the last decades centered on the debate of quality vs. cost containment.