937 resultados para Rural health.


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Introducción: El síndrome de agotamiento profesional o de burnout se define como una respuesta al estrés laboral crónico, afecta con frecuencia a los trabajadores del sector salud y ha sido descrito según la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) como un riesgo laboral. En su desarrollo intervienen distintos factores principalmente sociodemográficos y laborales. Objetivo: Determinar la prevalencia de síndrome de agotamiento profesional y su relación con las condiciones de trabajo del personal de salud de la zona rural del Cauca. Metodología: Se realizó un estudio de corte transversal en 4 hospitales rurales nivel I, con un muestreo probabilístico aleatorio simple, para un total de 212 trabajadores, de los cuales el 74.5% fueron asistenciales y el 25.5% administrativos, Se les aplicó el cuestionario Maslash Burnout Inventory (MBI) que consta de 22 ítems y mide los 3 aspectos del síndrome: cansancio emocional, despersonalización y falta de realización personal y el cuestionario nacional de condiciones de trabajo del instituto nacional de seguridad e higiene en el trabajo de España (INSHT). Se realizó un análisis de datos en STATA versión 12. Resultados: Se encontró una prevalencia general de síndrome de agotamiento profesional de 39.7% y según cada dimensión para cansancio emocional de 21.7%, para despersonalización de 15.1% y para realización personal de 13.7%. Se halló significancia estadística con relación a la edad y baja realización personal (p=0.037), con los factores de riesgo psicolaborales por sobrecarga y cansancio emocional (p=0.020), falta de autonomía y cansancio emocional (p=0.021) entre otros. En los factores de riesgo biomecánicos por falta de iluminación y cansancio emocional (p=0.000), falta de iluminación y despersonalización (p=0.017) y falta de iluminación y síndrome en general (p=0.000). Conclusión: La prevalencia de síndrome de agotamiento profesional en el personal de salud que trabaja en zona rural del Cauca fue de 39.7%, la dimensión más determinante fue cansancio emocional seguido de despersonalización y por ultimo realización personal. Se recomienda iniciar en la institución con un programa de vigilancia epidemiológica de prevención para el agotamiento laboral e intervenir en los factores biomecánicos y factores psicolaborales.

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Cysticercosis results from the ingestion Taenia solium eggs directly by faecal-oral route or contaminated food or water. Human tapeworm carriers who have become infected after ingesting pork meat contaminated with cysticerci release these eggs. Cysticercosis occurs after tapeworm eggs are ingested by an intermediate host (pig or human) and then hatch, migrate, and lodge in the host's tissues, where they develop onto larval cysticerci. When they lodged in the central nervous system of humans, results in the disease condition called Neurocysticercosis (NCC), with a heterogeneous manifestations depending of the locations of cysts, number, size and their stage of evolution (1). Consequently the prognostic ranges from asymptomatic to situations leading to death in 2% to 9.8%. of cases (7) In swine’s there are few studies, but recent works have proved that animals, for the same reasons, also have neurological abnormalities, expressed by seizures, stereotypic walk in circles, chewing motions with foamy salivation included tonic muscle contractions followed by a sudden diminution in all muscle tone leading to collapse (2). Conventional domestic wastewater treatment processes may not be totally effective in inactivating parasites eggs from Taenia solium, allowing some contamination of soils and agricultural products (11). In Portugal there are some evidence of aggregation of human cysticercosis cases in specific regions, bases in ecological design studies (6). There are few information about human tapeworm carriers and social and economic factors associated with them. Success in knowledge and consequently in lowering transmission is limited by the complex network of biological and social factors that maintain the spread. Effective control of mostly zoonosis require One Health approach, after a real knowledge and transparency in the information provided by the institutions responsible for both animal and human health, allowing sustained interventions targeted at the transmission cycle's crucial nodes. In general, the model used to control, reflects a rural reality, where pigs are raised freely, poor sanitation conditions and incipient sanitary inspection. In cysticercosis, pigs are obligate intermediate hosts and so considered as first targets for control and used as sentinels to monitor environmental T. solium contamination (3). Usually environmental contamination with Taenia spp. eggs is a key issue in most of studies with landscape factors influencing presence of Taenia spp. antigens in both pigs and humans (5). Soil-related factors as well as socio-economic and behavioural factors are associated with the emergence of significant clustering human cysticercosis (4,5). However scarce studies has been produced in urban environmental and in developed countries with the finality to characterize the spatial pattern. There are still few data available regarding its prevalence and spatial distribution; Transmission patterns are likely to exhibit correlations as housing conditions, water supply, basic sanitation, schooling and birthplace of the individual or relatives, more than pigs rearing free, soil conditions (9). As a matter of fact, tapeworm carriers from endemic zones can auto-infect or transmit infection to other people or arrive already suffering NCC (as a result of travelling to or being a citizen from an endemic cysticercosis country) to a free cysticercosis country. Transmission is fecal-oral; this includes transmission through person-to-person contact, through autoinfection, or through contaminated food This has been happening in different continents as North America (5.4–18% been autochthonous), Europe and Australia (7). Recently, case reports of NCC have also emerged from Muslim countries. (10). Actually, different papers relate an epidemic situation in Spain and Portugal (7, 8). However the kind of study done does not authorize such conclusion. There are no evidence that infections were acquired in Portugal and there are not characterized the mode of transmission. Papers with these kind of information will be allow to have economic consequences resulted from artificial trade barriers with serious consequences for pig producers and pig meat trade. We need transparency in information’s that allow provide the basis to support the development and targeting of future effective control programmes (and prove we need that). So, to have a real picture of the disease, it is necessary integrate data from human, animal and environmental factors surrounding human and pig cases to characterize the pattern of the transmission. The design needs to be able to capture unexpected, and not common outcomes (routine data). We need to think “One Health to get a genuine image of the situation.

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Developments in information technology will drive the change in records management; however, it should be the health information managers who drive the information management change. The role of health information management will be challenged to use information technology to broker a range of requests for information from a variety of users, including he alth consumers. The purposes of this paper are to conceptualise the role of health information management in the context of a technologically driven and managed health care environment, and to demonstrat e how this framework has been used to review and develop the undergraduate program in health information management at the Queensland University of Technology.

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