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2. National Medical Commission Act 2019: White paper on accelerated implementation of family medicine training programs towards strengthening of primary healthcare in India.
- Author
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Kumar, Raman
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FAMILY medicine , *PRIMARY care , *GOVERNMENT policy , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Family medicine is the internationally recognized nomenclature for the academic discipline, knowledge domain, and medical specialty of primary care doctors, working in the community setting. Family medicine is defined as a specialty of medicine which is concerned with providing comprehensive care to individuals and families by integrating biomedical, behavioral, and social sciences in the community setting. The distinction of family medicine lies in the tradition of medical generalism, promoting whole person care, in a life cycle mode; providing optimal preventive, promotive, and curative healthcare services in a wide spectrum of setting from home to hospital. In 2016, 92nd report of the department‑related parliamentary standing committee on health and family welfare on the “Functioning of the Medical Council of India” has emphasized the need for postgraduate in family medicine. The committee report has noted that “the medical education system is designed in a way that the concept of family physicians has been ignored. The committee recommends that the Government of India in coordination with State Governments should establish robust PG Programs in Family Medicine and facilitate introduction of Family Medicine discipline in all medical colleges. This will not only minimize the need for frequent referrals to specialist and decrease the load on tertiary care but also provide continuous healthcare for the individuals and families. The successive National Health Policies of Government of India–NHP 2002 and 2017 have emphasized the need of family medicine training in India. The recently enacted National Medical Commission Act 2019 has mandated NMC to promote training in family medicine at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Therefore, in the background of the stated policies of the Government of India the concept of family doctors, which was earlier neglected should be institutionalized within the mainstream medical education system of India. It is now time to accelerate and upgrade family medicine training and thereby strengthen the concept of comprehensive primary care in India. This white paper presents the review of family medicine training in India and proposes a way forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
- Full Text
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3. Basic Critical Care for Management of COVID-19 Patients: Position Paper of the Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine, Part II.
- Author
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Juneja, Deven, Savio, Raymond D., Srinivasan, Shrikanth, Ramasubban, Suresh, Pandit, Rahul A., Reddy, Pavan K., Singh, Manoj, Gopal, Palepu BN, Chaudhry, Dhruva, Dixit, Subhal B., and Samavedam, Srinivas
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ADULT respiratory distress syndrome treatment , *ANTIBIOTICS , *STEROID drugs , *INTENSIVE care units , *BIOMARKERS , *COVID-19 , *CRITICALLY ill , *PATIENTS , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL protocols , *MEDICAL care use , *SEPSIS , *CRITICAL care medicine , *DISEASE management - Abstract
In a resource-limited country like India, rationing of scarce critical care resources might be required to ensure appropriate delivery of care to the critically ill patients suffering from COVID-19 infection. Most of these patients require critical care support because of respiratory failure or presence of multiorgan dysfunction syndrome. As there is no pharmacological therapy available, respiratory support in the form of supplemental oxygen, noninvasive ventilation, and invasive mechanical ventilation remains mainstay of care in intensive care units. As there is still dearth of direct evidence, most of the data are extrapolated from the experience gained from the management of general critical care patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. Framework for development of urgent care services towards strengthening primary healthcare in India – Joint position paper by the Academy of Family Physician of India and the Academic College of Emergency Experts.
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Roy, Pritam, Kumar, Raman, Aggarwal, Praveen, Vhora, Rajeshwari, Gupta, Manish, Boobna, Vandana, Gupta, Ramkumar, and Kumar, Sukrit
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OUTPATIENT medical care , *MEDICAL students , *PHYSICIANS , *GENERAL practitioners , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Urgent care practice (UCP) is a novel concept for India. Urgent care primarily deals with injuries or illnesses requiring immediate care. Medical emergency and urgency can happen anywhere unannounced. Research has shown that 90% of the morbidities can be resolved within the community by primary care physicians lead teams. Given the changing professional demands, non-specialists tend to refer away far too many cases to specialists, undermining generalist medical care, particularly in Indian settings. The spillover of the patient load from the primary care setting to the tertiary care centers is enormous leading to resource mismatch. Family physicians and other primary care providers are best positioned to develop practices and provide good quality urgent care to society. Family physicians, general practitioners, and medical officers are already functioning as the frontline care providers for any emergency or medical urgency arising within communities. Urgent care is essentially ambulatory care or outpatient care outside of a traditional hospital emergency room. "UCP aims to provide timely support, which is easily accessible with a focus on good clinical outcomes, e.g. survival, recovery, lack of adverse events, and complications. Core interventions of urgent care are centered on the 4Rs - Rescue, Resuscitate, Relate, and Refer. At present, there are no available, established training model for future faculty, residents, and medical students on "UCP" in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Empty stocks and loose paper: Governing access to medicines through informality in Northern India.
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Dahdah, Marine Al, Kumar, Aalok, and Quet, Mathieu
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HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL care , *INFORMAL sector , *ETHNOLOGY , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
Based upon research in the state of Bihar, India, this article argues that informal access to medicines in Northern India is a core element of the government of healthcare. Informal providers such as unlicensed village doctors and unlicensed drug sellers play a major role in access to medicines in Bihar, in the particular context of the dismantling of public procurement services. Building on recent works in the socio-anthropology of pharmaceuticals, the article shows the importance of taking into account the political economy of drugs in India, in order to understand local problems of access more fully. If informal providers occupy such an important position in the government of healthcare in India, this is partly due to the shaping of healthcare as access to drugs on health markets. Elaborating the argument from interviews with health professionals and patients, the article first shows the situation of public healthcare and public procurement in Bihar; then it presents the role of informal medicine providers; lastly, it shows how patients deal with the fact that they live in a ‘pharmaceutical world’ where access to health equates with access to medicines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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6. The 2017 International Joint Working Group White Paper by INDUSEM, the Emergency Medicine Association and the Academic College of Emergency Experts on Establishing Standardized Regulations, Operational Mechanisms, and Accreditation Pathways for Education and Care Provided by the Prehospital Emergency Medical Service Systems in India
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Sikka, Veronica, Gautam, V., Galwankar, Sagar, Guleria, Randeep, Stawicki, Stanislaw P., Paladino, Lorenzo, Chauhan, Vivek, Menon, Geetha, Shah, Vijay, Srivastava, R. P., Rana, B. K., Batra, Bipin, Kalra, O. P., Aggarwal, P., Bhoi, Sanjeev, and Krishnan, S. Vimal
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EDUCATIONAL standards , *HOSPITALS , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
The government of India has done remarkable work on commissioning a government funded prehospital emergency ambulance service in India. This has both public health implications and an economic impact on the nation. With the establishment of these services, there is an acute need for standardization of education and quality assurance regarding prehospital care provided. The International Joint Working Group has been actively involved in designing guidelines and establishing a comprehensive framework for ensuring high-quality education and clinical standards of care for prehospital services in India. This paper provides an independent expert opinion and a proposed framework for general operations and administration of a standardized, national prehospital emergency medical systems program. Program implementation, operational details, and regulations will require close collaboration between key stakeholders, including local, regional, and national governmental agencies of India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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7. Effect of digitization of medical case files on doctor patient relationship in an Out Patient Department setting of Northern India: A comparative study.
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Gandhi P., Aravind, Goel, Kapil, Gupta, Madhu, and Singh, Amarjeet
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STATISTICS ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,CROSS-sectional method ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,PATIENT satisfaction ,MEDICAL care ,PRIMARY health care ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MEDICAL records ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ELECTRONIC health records ,DATA analysis software ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals - Abstract
Background: Digitization of health records and health delivery processes in health care settings may have an impact on the Patient-Physician communication, wait times, that affect the overall patient satisfaction with the health care services. Aim & Objective: We ascertained the effect of digitization of medical case files on the doctor patient relationship (DPR) domain of patient satisfaction at an urban primary health center in India. Settings and Design: Comparative, cross-sectional study in primary health centres. Methods and Material: The patient satisfaction was compared between the patients attending the Public Health Dispensary (PHD) that uses digitized medical case file system and a Civil Dispensary (CD) which follows the conventional paper based medical records, using a Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire (PSQ). Statistical analysis used: Univariate analysis was done by chi-square test and adjusted analysis was done by multiple linear regression. Results: Patient satisfaction in DPR was found to be similar between the digitized medical case files based and conventional OPD (p=0.453). Significantly higher overall patient satisfaction was reported in the conventional paper based OPD than the digitized OPD (p<0.001). Conclusions: Patient satisfaction towards the doctor-patient relationship (DPR) was similar between paper based OPD and the digitized medical case files based OPD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Exploring the Role of Medical Social Workers in Teaching and Non-Teaching Hospitals: A Study on the Potential Establishment of a Department of Medical Social Work.
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H. S., Yatheesh Bharadwaj, Koujalgi, Sateesh R., and Kori, Ashok
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MEDICAL social work ,MEDICAL personnel ,HOSPITAL administration ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Medical social work plays a pivotal role in ensuring comprehensive and quality healthcare delivery, particularly in hospital settings. This paper delineates the multifaceted responsibilities undertaken by medical social workers, encompassing ethical treatment, transparency in hospital management, and advocacy for the welfare of vulnerable patients. It examines the historical evolution of medical social work in India, tracing its roots to the pioneering efforts of institutions like the Dorabji Tata Graduate School of Social Work. Furthermore, it elucidates the guidelines set forth by the Medical Council of India, emphasizing the critical need for medical social workers in both rural and urban healthcare facilities. In exploring the possibility of establishing dedicated departments for medical social work, this paper proposes a complementary framework to the existing department of community medicine. By delineating the roles and responsibilities of medical social workers in rural and urban health training centers, it underscores their significance in addressing community health determinants and facilitating access to essential services. It also highlights the potential for medical social workers to contribute as multidisciplinary team members across various hospital departments, thereby amplifying their impact on patient care and rehabilitation processes. In conclusion, the paper underscores the imperative of recognizing and strengthening the role of medical social workers in healthcare delivery systems. By fostering greater awareness, professional development, and institutional support, we can harness the full potential of medical social work to promote health equity and social justice for all individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Exploring the need and potential of ambulatory pharmacy practice for empowering patient and care delivery in India.
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Choudhary, Ravindra P. and Siddalingegowda, Srikanth M.
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PUBLIC health infrastructure ,PHARMACOLOGY ,MEDICAL care use ,PATIENT compliance ,PATIENT education ,HEALTH literacy ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SELF-efficacy ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL errors ,MEDICAL care ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,DISEASE management ,CLINICAL governance ,SYSTEMS development ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,ANTIMICROBIAL stewardship ,PATIENT care ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICATION reconciliation ,PATIENT-centered care ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,QUALITY of life ,COMMUNICATION ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,ADVERSE health care events ,DRUGS ,LITERACY ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH promotion ,QUALITY assurance ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,MEDICAL care costs ,LABOR supply ,HOSPITAL pharmacies ,PREVENTIVE health services - Abstract
In recent years, rapidly changing disease profile patterns, shortage & uneven utilization of healthcare professionals contributed massive burden on the Indian healthcare system, which resulted in varying, fragmented, inconsistent healthcare delivery to the patients and poor patient management. Patients often face and experience many challenges like lack of accessibility, poor patient-healthcare provider relationships, and inadequate quality of care, resulting in unnecessary economic burden in managing their health conditions. Thus Indian healthcare reform is essential in enhancing its capacity to fulfill patients' health needs that can be addressed by focusing on key sustainable strategies and initiatives meant for enhancing coordination of care, expanding services accessibility, redeveloping healthcare infrastructure, implementing workforce innovation and strong governance with the incorporation of core principles such as patient-centeredness, integrated care and collaborative care approaches. The clinical and ambulatory pharmacy practice are fragment of the healthcare delivery which delivers pharmaceutical care and fulfils the needs of patients across healthcare settings. This paper focuses on the present & future perspectives of ambulatory pharmacy practice in India and the factors to be considered for implementing it in patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Kerala's progress towards universal health coverage: the road travelled and beyond.
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Adithyan, G.S., Ranjan, Alok, Muraleedharan, V. R., and Sundararaman, T.
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HEALTH services accessibility ,ENDOWMENTS ,SECONDARY analysis ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,INSURANCE ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PUBLIC sector ,HOSPITAL care ,MEDICAL care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PRIVATE sector ,HEALTH care reform ,UNIVERSAL healthcare ,HEALTH equity ,PRACTICAL politics ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: Kerala has initiated many Universal Health Coverage (UHC) reforms in the last decade. The Aardram Mission launched in 2017 stands out owing to its scope, objectives, and commitments for strengthening Primary Health Care (PHC) in the State. The current study proposes to explore access and financial protection through the lens of equity in Kerala especially in the context of major UHC reforms carried out during the last decade. This paper will also highlight the key lessons from Kerala's approach towards UHC and health systems strengthening through a political economy approach. Methods: Data from the Kerala state sample of 75th Round (2017-18) National Sample Survey is used for this study. Comparison is also drawn from the 71st Round Sample Survey, 2014, to measure the state's progress in terms of access and financial protection. Logistic regression was used for the calculation. The findings were further explored through a political economy approach. Results: The share of public facilities for outpatient care is 47.5%, which is a significant increase from 34.0% (in 2014) in the state. The share of public sector for out-patient care has increased for the lower socio-economic population in the state. The share of public sector for in-patient care has also increased to 37.3% in 2017-18 from 33.9% in 2014, but not to the extent as the increase shown in outpatient care. The average out-of-pocket-expenditure during hospitalization has increased more in private facilities as compared to public for both outpatient care and hospitalization. Conclusions: Overall increase in the share of public facilities for both outpatient care and hospitalization is indicative of the enhanced trust among the people at large of the public healthcare delivery system in Kerala, post the launch of UHC reforms in the State. The insurance linked UHC reforms would be insufficient for the State to progress further towards UHC. Kerala with a long and successful history in 'public provisioning' should focus more on strengthening PHC through Aardram Mission in its journey towards pursuit of UHC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Abusive behaviors: long-term forced quarantine and intimate partner violence during Covid-19 outbreak.
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Hosain, Md Sajjad and Jakia, Umma
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INTIMATE partner violence -- Law & legislation ,DISMISSAL of employees ,HEALTH policy ,MIDDLE-income countries ,INTERVIEWING ,UNCERTAINTY ,MEDICAL care ,INTIMATE partner violence ,RISK assessment ,CRIME victims ,EXPERIENCE ,SPOUSES ,INCOME ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL security ,PUBLIC housing ,LOW-income countries ,CASE studies ,FINANCIAL stress ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,STAY-at-home orders ,DEVELOPING countries ,COVID-19 pandemic ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
Purpose: As Covid-19 became a pandemic, numerous people were forced to stay at home, leading to increased intimate partner violence (IPV) in many countries, particularly in developing and least-developed ones. This paper aims to highlight the IPV based on 15 different cases formed from the practical evidence of five developing countries. Design/methodology/approach: The authors interviewed 15 women from five countries who were the victims of IPV during the early periods of Covid-19 outbreak. Due to geographical remoteness, the authors conducted informal telephone interviews to collect the participants' personal experiences. The conversations were recorded with participants' permission; afterwards, the authors summarized participants' experiences into 15 different cases without revealing their original identities (instead, disguised names were used). Findings: It was revealed that the women were the primary victims of such violence, particularly from their intimate partners (husbands). In most cases, such IPV, as reported by the interviewees, originated or increased after the pandemic when they were forced to stay at home, losing their partners' jobs or income sources. Originality/value: The authors summarized the causes of IPV and put forward a few action recommendations based on the interviewees' practical experience and existing literature. This paper will open a new window for research investigations on IPV during emergencies such as Covid-19 outbreak. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. A Comprehensive Survey on Data Utility and Privacy: Taking Indian Healthcare System as a Potential Case Study.
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Churi, Prathamesh, Pawar, Ambika, and Moreno-Guerrero, Antonio-José
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MEDICAL care ,REFORMATION ,SOCIAL impact ,LEGISLATIVE bills ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Background: According to the renowned and Oscar award-winning American actor and film director Marlon Brando, "privacy is not something that I am merely entitled to, it is an absolute prerequisite." Privacy threats and data breaches occur daily, and countries are mitigating the consequences caused by privacy and data breaches. The Indian healthcare industry is one of the largest and rapidly developing industry. Overall, healthcare management is changing from disease-centric into patient-centric systems. Healthcare data analysis also plays a crucial role in healthcare management, and the privacy of patient records must receive equal attention. Purpose: This paper mainly presents the utility and privacy factors of the Indian healthcare data and discusses the utility aspect and privacy problems concerning Indian healthcare systems. It defines policies that reform Indian healthcare systems. The case study of the NITI Aayog report is presented to explain how reformation occurs in Indian healthcare systems. Findings: It is found that there have been numerous research studies conducted on Indian healthcare data across all dimensions; however, privacy problems in healthcare, specifically in India, are caused by prevalent complacency, culture, politics, budget limitations, large population, and existing infrastructures. This paper reviews the Indian healthcare system and the applications that drive it. Additionally, the paper also maps that how privacy issues are happening in every healthcare sector in India. Originality/Value: To understand these factors and gain insights, understanding Indian healthcare systems first is crucial. To the best of our knowledge, we found no recent papers that thoroughly reviewed the Indian healthcare system and its privacy issues. The paper is original in terms of its overview of the healthcare system and privacy issues. Social Implications: Privacy has been the most ignored part of the Indian healthcare system. With India being a country with a population of 130 billion, much healthcare data are generated every day. The chances of data breaches and other privacy violations on such sensitive data cannot be avoided as they cause severe concerns for individuals. This paper segregates the healthcare system's advances and lists the privacy that needs to be addressed first. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. Assessing environmental performance of service supply chain using fuzzy TOPSIS method.
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Parashar, Sudhanshu, Bhattacharya, Sujoy, Titiyal, Rohit, and Guha Roy, Diya
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MEDICAL care ,ECOLOGY ,DECISION making - Abstract
This paper aims to apply a multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) framework to evaluate the environmental performance of the medical service supply chain using a case study in India. An application of MCDM method, the fuzzy TOPSIS (Technique for order of preference by similarity to ideal solution) model, is used for Medical Support Service Provide firms (MSSPF) environmental performance evaluation. We require multiple and conflicting criteria to fix real-life decision-making challenges, which in turn led to the inception of (MCDM). However, MCDM is contracted with various contradictory requirements in which the knowledge of decision-makers is generally vague and thereby more challenging. In this situation, inclusions of fuzzy set theory in MCDM Methods would be good to solve the MCDM problem. In this study, the authors used a fuzzy TOPSIS MCDM model to solve the evaluation framework. Data were collected from the experts from the MSSPF about the more perfect criteria to assess environmental performance using a questionnaire. Case assesses the environmental performance, based on defined criteria, of three MSSPF by the experts. Fuzzy TOPSIS Method ranks three MSSPF according to environmental performance in the following order: Firm B, Firm A and Firm C. The result suggested that 'Firm B' performed superior environmental performance followed by 'Firm A' and 'Firm C'. This evaluation framework will help MSSPF to identify potential areas of further improvement in Environmental performance, and thereby creates strategies to overcome and formulate new innovations. Notably, this is one of the few studies to have used this method to gauge the environmental performance of the medical service supply chain in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Decoding the perception of prescribers towards generic medicine: A bibliometric study.
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Prasad T, Aditya and Panesar, Ashwani
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SUPPLY & demand ,MEDICAL care ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,BIBLIOTHERAPY ,CHAIN stores ,SUSTAINABLE development ,NANOMEDICINE - Abstract
2008 can be considered a watershed year for generic medicine in India, as it saw the launch of the Jan Aushadi scheme, to provide cost-effective quality medicines to its populace, through special stores called Jan Aushadi stores. With more than 8800 stores, the scheme is touted as one of the world's largest pharmaceutical retail chains. Since then, many generic medicine start-ups have also launched operations in the country- Zeno Health, One India Pharmacy, Generic Aadhaar and StayHappi Generics. These supply side developments will however have to be complemented with commensurate demand side responses for it make a sustainable impact towards the push for affordable and accessible healthcare for all (Sustainable Development Goal 3). Many studies have established that, on the demand side, owing to the lack of requisite medical knowledge on part of the patients, there exists a strong agency relationship, where patients rely heavily on their physicians (prescribers) to make decisions on choice of treatments. Though promotion of generic medicines requires a coordinated effort from many stakeholders, analysis reveals that the prescribers, and hence their perception of generics, plays a pivotal role in their adoption. This study undertakes a bibliometric analysis of the top 100 most-cited research papers published between 2012 and 2022 on the perception of prescribers towards generic medicine from SCOPUS database. Suitable keywords have been incorporated to reach the relevant publications and VOSviewer (version 1.6.10) has been used for analysis. The findings of the study recommend further research on interventions aimed at improving prescriber's perception towards generic medicines to enhance their adoption and promote cost effective healthcare delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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15. Language As A Barrier In Health Care Communication-A Comparative Study On Rural And Urban hospitals.
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Taye, Rituraj, Paswan, Archana, Singh, Desh Deepak, Kapil, Mansi, Sharma, Shruti, Choudhary, Vanika, Prasad, Jagdish, and Pareek, Govind
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RURAL hospitals ,URBAN hospitals ,COMMUNICATION barriers ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL communication ,MEDICAL terminology - Abstract
Communication is the key tool to success. When it comes to healthcare communication, there is a vast gap between medical professionals and patients especially people with a lesser education and people belonging to rural areas. Communication is very much essential in providing quality medical care and content to patients. The effect of the languages and the scientific terms used by medical professionals becomes difficult for the common audience to understand; hence, the understanding gap also increases. This study demonstrates how language becomes a hurdle in healthcare communication depending on the location or locality of the hospital. The main objective of this research paper is to find how language becomes a barrier in health communication depending on the location of the hospital and the communication challenges experienced by rural and urban audiences in hospitals. It will also focus on how infographic designs can help the audience in reducing the communication gap in understanding healthcare information. We have collected 300 samples from 20 different hospitals from both Rural & Urban areas of Jaipur-I City, Rajasthan India. The paper also highlights some of the challenges posed by the language barrier and recommends a few suggestions. This research finding indicates that the language barrier in health communication can be minimized with the use of infographic designs for communication with the audience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Experiences and perspectives of student nurses toward volunteerism during health emergencies: A systematic review.
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Prashar, Pradeepti, Sharma, Dinesh, Mohinder, Bandana, and Kumari, Santosh
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ONLINE information services ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,SOCIAL support ,RAPID response teams ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,MEDICAL care ,FAMILIES ,EPIDEMICS ,NURSING students ,STUDENT attitudes ,MEDLINE ,VOLUNTEER service ,HEALTH self-care - Abstract
The paper discusses how volunteerism, especially among nursing students, helps solve health crises. The study emphasizes community preparedness and volunteers' unique role in supporting healthcare professionals during crises. Volunteers seek out opportunities to help, unlike emergency responders. Nursing students, a major employment source, are shown to be capable of first aid and emotional support. The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the unprecedented need for volunteers. Research shows that nursing students worldwide are willing to help in health emergencies. Professional ethics, humanity, and learning motivate. Self-care issues, system support issues, and psychological impacts are obstacles. The study uses a mixed-methods technique and the PRISMA framework to examine nursing students' health crisis volunteering experiences, goals, and perceptions. The data show volunteer nursing students' pleasures and problems. Although volunteering is rewarding, worries about self-care, family well-being, and psychological effects arise. Emotional stress, burnout, compassion fatigue, anxiety, sleep difficulties, guilt, and a lack of support affect nursing students' mental health. Witnessing and experiencing health emergencies can cause emotional stress, highlighting the need for personalized solutions. The report recommends cash incentives, extensive training, and explicit protocols to increase student volunteering. Nursing students can safely volunteer in high-stress situations by recognizing and addressing the mental health risks and providing support and tools. The article recommends a holistic approach to volunteerism that recognizes its benefits and promotes the mental health and well-being of motivated nursing students. Nursing students helping in health emergencies need sufficient training, psychological support, and self-care to protect their mental health, according to the study. Providing support, shifting schedules, and understanding the emotional toll of employment are vital. Nursing schools should include emergency response training to prepare students for pandemic leadership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) Based Framework for Smart Healthcare Tourism Sector.
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Jangra, Priyanka and Gupta, Monish
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MEDICAL tourism ,TOURISM ,INTERNET of things ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL care ,TOURISTS - Abstract
Corona virus disease, COVID-19, has emerged as a pandemic covering the entire world, almost every country is effected by COVID-19. Numbers of infected people across the world are increasing at an exponential rate. Such large number of patients put extra ordinary demand of health care facilities. Although every country is putting tremendous efforts in frontline to fight with this pandemic but shortage of medical facilities, especially for densely populated countries like India, it becomes a serious challenge. The fear of pandemic has arrested everyone in homes due to which various sectors are affected badly. Pandemic situations are badly deteriorating the hospitality and tourism business. Smart healthcare tourism is the new prominence application of IoT based healthcare tourism. This paper presents an IoT based health monitoring framework, which may be helpful for medical tourists as well as the hotel management to monitor the health of guests and staff. The framework will detect and check the various vital signs of body and then report to the admin about health status of persons. The paper focuses on use of Internet of Things technology involving wearable sensors for monitoring the health status, detecting the disease and providing online health services for medical tourism sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
18. Access to Affordable Health: A Care Delivery Model of GNRC Hospitals in North-Eastern India.
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BORAH, NOMAL CHANDRA, BORAH, PRIYANKA, BORAH, SATABDEE, BORAH, MADHURJYA, and SARKAR, PURABI
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HEALTH services accessibility ,HUMAN services programs ,SELF-efficacy ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL care ,PRIMARY health care ,TELEMEDICINE ,MEDICAL research ,PUBLIC health ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,MEDICAL care costs ,TRANSPORTATION of patients - Abstract
Introduction: The healthcare delivery system of Assam faces several challenges to provide affordable, accessible and quality care services. GNRC (Guwahati Neurological Research Center) is the first super-speciality hospital to address many of these gaps by delivering integrated affordable healthcare services to the populations of Assam and other parts of North-eastern India. Description & Discussion: This paper describes the implementation of a care delivery model which provides integrated care delivery services through linking hospitals to primary healthcare services, including preventive, promotive, and curative care, along with delivering easily accessible and affordable care to the people of Assam and other parts of North-eastern India. Conclusion: The proposed model is the first innovative approach from Northeastern India, Assam, to deliver affordable, accessible and patient-centric hospital led community-based preventive, promotive, and primary, secondary, and tertiary hospital-based care. It is anticipated that GNRC's "Affordable Health Mission" will help redesign and integrate the way primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare is delivered to the population of Assam in helping patients manage their own health and reduce the numbers that needs to be admitted to secondary care and tertiary care by improving patients' independence and well-being as well as dramatically reducing the cost to the overall health system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. Syndemic effect of COVID-19 outbreak on HIV care delivery around the globe: A systematic review using narrative synthesis.
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Chakrabarti, Rohini, Agasty, Debdutta, Majumdar, Agniva, Talukdar, Rounik, Bhatta, Mihir, Biswas, Subrata, and Dutta, Shanta
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HEALTH services accessibility ,SYNDEMICS ,HIV-positive persons ,MEDICAL care ,HIV infections ,SOCIAL change ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,WORLD health ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,QUALITY assurance ,COUNSELING ,PUBLIC health ,COVID-19 pandemic ,AIDS - Abstract
Background: The burden of the COVID-19 pandemic on healthcare systems worldwide has been compromising the progress made in the fight against HIV. This paper aims to determine how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted HIV comprehensive care service delivery globally as well as to consolidate the evidence and recommendations that may be useful in averting future crisis. Methods: This review adheres to PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, DOAJ, Science Direct and other sources like Google Scholar and citations from included studies were searched methodically to locate studies evaluating the effects of COVID on services for HIV care. The NIH and JBI quality assessment tools were used for the quality assessment of individual studies. Results: In the present review 31 eligible studies were included and the impact on HIV care cascade were summarised under six themes: Lab services, Treatment and allied services, Counselling services, Outreach services, Psycho-social impact and Implementation of sustainable strategies. The studies also presented many innovative alternatives which were lucidly highlighted in the present article. Conclusion: Current evidence depicts multiple factors are responsible for the interruption of HIV care service delivery during the pandemic, especially in low resources settings. The prospective, alternative solutions that have been used to circumvent the threat have also been addressed in this review, in addition to the negative aspects that have been observed. Transition with new innovative, sustainable care paradigms may prove to be the building blocks in removing HIV-AIDS as a public health threat. Registration: Open Science Framework (DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/74GHM). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. Knowledge creation practices at organizational boundaries: the role of ICT in sickle-cell care for tribal communities.
- Author
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Tripathi, Vinayak Ram, Popli, Manish, Ghulyani, Swati, Desai, Shrey, and Gaur, Ajai
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care use ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,COMMUNITIES ,GENETIC disorders - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to examine the role of information and communication technology (ICT) in the knowledge creation practices adopted by a health care organization. The organization is delivering care to patients of a genetic disorder, called the sickle cell, in tribal communities. The paper identifies how ICT intermediates knowledge creation practices across the organizational boundaries wherein tribal patients, front-line counselors and expert physicians interact, which then produces context-specific, evidence-based medicine (EBM). Design/methodology/approach: The knowledge-in-practice approach is adopted to conduct an ethnographic study of sickle cell care practices in a non-profit health care organization in Western India. The analysis focuses on ICT-mediated interactional practices among the physicians, front-line counselors, tribal patients and their families, for more than a year-long observation. These are supplemented with informal and formal interviews, archival records and vignettes based on several episodes to explicate the key knowledge creation practices. Findings: Technology-mediated informative interactions at organizational boundaries can bridge socio-linguistic and interpretive barriers between actors, while also providing a generative structure that leads to the creation of longitudinal clinical evidence about a rare genetic disorder. Three specific ICT-entwined knowledge creation practices emerge, namely, knowing the community, increasing interactional engagement and constructing gradients of socio-clinical history. These practices generate organization-wide knowledge about the social and clinical dimensions of the genetic disorder. The findings are presented through vignettes and a novel conceptual framework. Research limitations/implications: This study identifies various useful knowledge creation practices in health care delivery for resource-constrained emerging economy contexts. Further, the study suggests that the involvement of local front-line actors and ICT can become important resources in the delivery of health care in these settings. Originality/value: A novel framework is developed which demonstrates knowledge creation at organizational boundaries wherein the actors use ICT-based practices for effective delivery of health care. The proposed framework may be used by health care organizations in similar contexts providing care to marginalized communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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21. Novice therapist, the client and therapy: Integrating the triad.
- Author
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Bhandari, Anahita and Sriram, Sujata
- Subjects
WORK experience (Employment) ,PROFESSIONS ,COUNSELING ,CLIENT relations ,AGE distribution ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,ENTRY level employees ,SEX distribution ,MEDICAL referrals ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,SUPERVISION of employees ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
Therapy process research focuses on understanding how therapy is conducted by professionals in the field. It is a nascent field of psychotherapy enquiry in India. This paper explores how novice therapists in India perceive their clients, and how this influences the process of therapy. In depth interviews were conducted with ten novice therapists, with less than six years of practice experience, from Mumbai, India. The data was thematically analysed. The data revealed that therapists' perceptions of their clients were defined by socio‐demographic features of age and gender, along with presenting complaints and personal attributes. Participants had defined beliefs about good clients as contrasted with difficult ones. Distinct preferences for particular client types were identified. The antecedents to these beliefs were attributed to the therapist's worldview, their training and the supervision received. These views, and the conceptualisation of the client, influenced the choice of client, the process of therapy and how they proceeded with sessions, and their methods of referral. The data from the study has implications for therapist training, supervision and further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Special Issue: Proceedings of the 19th International Conference of Telemedicine Society of India--Telemedicon 2023.
- Author
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Ganapathy, Krishnan
- Subjects
TELEMEDICINE ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,MEDICAL care ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,DIGITAL health - Abstract
This article discusses the Proceedings of the 19th International Conference of the Telemedicine Society of India (TSI) and the International Society for Telemedicine and eHealth (ISfTeH). The conference focused on emerging technologies connecting the Indian healthcare system and included presentations on topics such as tele-ICU management, telemedicine consultations in remote areas, and future trends in healthcare. The conference attracted delegates from various disciplines and included sessions, workshops, and exhibitions. The article highlights the acceptance of virtual remote healthcare in India and expresses gratitude to the editors of Telehealth and Medicine Today for reviewing conference papers. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Local migrant organizations in the periphery: providing healthcare in India.
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Rahman, Md Mizanur and Ranjan, Rakesh
- Subjects
COMMUNITY organization ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,COMMUNITY development ,CHARITIES ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Local migrant organization is an emerging phenomenon in many emigrant countries, where such an organization is formed and run by current or former migrants and engages in a range of philanthropic activities for community development. Research on migrant organizations tends to focus either on immigrant organizations located in the host countries or on transnational migrant organizations engaged in diaspora philanthropy with origin country. Contrary to mainstream research on migrant organizations, this paper looks at the local migrant organizations and their engagements in emigrant countries through a case study in India. Drawing on selected local migrant organizations that cater to healthcare needs in India, this paper investigates how they evolve and mobilize resources, what sort of healthcare activities they are carrying out, and how such collective efforts are contributing to the healthcare needs for the underserved community. This study reports that local migrant organizations tend to be small and resource-poor, but they reach out to the Indian periphery and serve the underprivileged sections of the society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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24. Simulation based Healthcare Education- Barriers in Initiation.
- Author
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Rishipathak, Parag, Bhandari, Monesh, and Hinduja, Anand
- Subjects
MEDICAL errors ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL simulation ,SIMULATION methods in education ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Introduction: This paper summarizes a structured expert panel session on the subject of barriers in initiating Simulation based andragogy in Healthcare Education in India. The expert panel consisted of members of academia in Medicine, Nursing, paramedical and representatives from the healthcare simulation technology industry. The global burden of unsafe medical care is significant and remains a cause of concern. Studies have shown that majority of medical errors do not result from individual negligence. Majority of the medical errors have been found to be preventable. Simulation Based Medical Education is the way forward in achieving greater patient safety and improving patient outcomes. Hence there is an urgent need to incorporate Simulation into the healthcare education system in our country. Objective: To discuss the current scenario of healthcare education, the role of Simulation and experience sharing on the barriers in its large scale initiation. Result: The key barriers that emerged during the discussion in utilization of Simulation based medical education were capital investment, psychological resistance, difficulty in integrating curriculum and lack of trained man power. Conclusion: This paper attempts to offer pragmatic solutions to the existing barriers and help mitigate medical errors and improve patient safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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25. Bridging the Gaps in Health Service Delivery for Truck Drivers of India Through Mobile Medical Units.
- Author
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Chanda, Subrata, Randhawa, Sonali, Bambrah, Hardeep Singh, Fernandes, Thomson, Dogra, Vishal, and Hegde, Shailendra
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,AUTOMOBILE driving ,COMMUNITY health services ,OCCUPATIONAL health services ,PRIMARY health care ,MOBILE hospitals ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Truck drivers in India suffer from many lifestyle-related health problems. Providing primary health care services to truck drivers is essential to improve their overall health and well-being. This paper reports the findings of a community-based mobile medical unit program providing nonemergency and basic primary care services to truck drivers along the major highways of India. Piramal Swasthya Management and Research Institute launched this community-based mobile medical unit program, in partnership with Shriram Transport Finance Corporation Limited (STFCL). Materials and Methods: The paper describes the program model, its coverage, the sociodemographic profile, and common health morbidities of the truck drivers availing the program services. 2-year routine program data (April 2017 to March 2019) were accessed and analyzed. Results: A total of 1,167,210 number of unique truck drivers availed the program services during the reference period, of which 61,331 had complete data. The majority of truck drivers were male (99.1%) and just a few women (0.88%) and transgender (0.003%). The mean age was 45.5 years ± 10.91 and nearly half (49%) were in the productive age group (31-45 years). Noncommunicable and other chronic diseases (34.74%), musculoskeletal problems (24.17%), communicable diseases (14.52%), oral cavity-related problems (1.23%), and other minor ailments (17.77%) were the major consultation categories. Conclusion: Truck drivers in India have significant health morbidities. Providing primary health care services to truck drivers through mobile medical units is a step toward achieving universal health coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
26. Fragility and challenges of health systems in pandemic: lessons from India's second wave of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
- Author
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Malik, Manzoor Ahmad
- Subjects
RISK assessment ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,HEALTH facility administration ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH insurance ,EMERGENCY medical services ,REINFECTION ,EPIDEMICS ,PUBLIC health ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
The unprecedented healthcare demand due to sudden outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has almost collapsed the health care systems especially in the developing world. Given the disastrous outbreak of COVID-19 second wave in India, the health system of country was virtually at the brink of collapse. Therefore, to identify the factors that resulted into breakdown and the challenges, Indian healthcare system faced during the second wave of COVID-19 pandemic, this paper analysed the health system challenges in India and the way forward in accordance with the six building blocks of world health organization (WHO). Applying integrated review approach, we found that the factors such as poor infrastructure, inadequate financing, lack of transparency and poor healthcare management resulted into the overstretching of healthcare system in India. Although health system in India faced these challenges from the very beginning, but early lessons from first wave should have been capitalized to avert the much deeper crisis in the second wave of the pandemic. To sum-up given the likely future challenges of pandemic, while healthcare should be prioritized with adequate financing, strong capacitybuilding measures and integration of public and private sectors in India. Likewise fiscal stimulus, risk assessment, data availability and building of human resources chain are other key factors to be strengthened for mitigating the future healthcare crisis in country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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27. From uncertainty to solution: A narrative review on challenges of mental health professionals in India before, during and after the pandemic.
- Author
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Sathiyaseelan, Anuradha, Patangia, Bishal, Jacob, Layah Liz, and Venkatesh, Rajasree
- Subjects
PUBLIC health infrastructure ,COMMUNITY health services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,MEDICAL care ,UNCERTAINTY ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,LONELINESS ,INTERNET ,ANXIETY ,STAY-at-home orders ,TELEMEDICINE ,DOMESTIC violence ,MENTAL health personnel ,COUNSELING ,SOCIAL support ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL stigma ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
The current study presents a comprehensive narrative review examining the challenges faced by mental health professionals in India during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to COVID-19, India's mental health infrastructure was already under strain, characterized by a substantial treatment gap, scarcity of professionals, and a concentration of services in urban areas. The pandemic exacerbated these challenges, necessitating a swift transition to tele-counselling and online interventions, despite inherent limitations and ethical dilemmas. Increased cases of domestic violence, loneliness, and mood disorders during lockdowns highlighted the urgent need for effective mental health support. The paper discusses pre-existing issues such as stigma, lack of training institutes, and misconceptions about mental health in rural areas. It also explores innovative solutions, including the integration of spiritual and community leaders into mental health initiatives, to address the unique cultural context of India. The study underscores the urgent need for policy reforms, enhanced training, and collaborative approaches to bridge the treatment gap and ensure accessible mental health care in both urban and rural settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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28. "Caring for the Uncared for": A Novel Initiative of Madras Medical College.
- Author
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Ethirajan, Theranirajan, Senthilkumar, Priya, Gnanasambandam, Usha, Jacob, Susan, Natarajan, Gopalakrishnan, and Rajendran, Karthick
- Subjects
EVALUATION of medical care ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,REHABILITATION centers ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITAL health promotion programs ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,HUMANITY ,MEDICAL schools ,MENTAL illness ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Every society has persons with illness who do not have any family support. Taking care of such uncared-for patients requires a well-structured system providing medical, psychological, emotional, and rehabilitory support. The first ever rehabilitation ward among government hospitals in Tamil Nadu was created at Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital (RGGGH), Chennai with the motto of "Caring for the uncared for." This paper highlights the organizational structure, functionality, profile of patients admitted, challenges faced, and the outcome of patients admitted in the rehabilitation ward. Methods: A retrospective study was done on the "untended" patients, who were admitted in the rehabilitation ward at Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital (RGGGH), Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India from December 2020 to June 2022. Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics and outcome of the patients were analyzed. Results: A total of 201 adults with physical disabilities or mixed physical and psychiatric disabilities were admitted for intensive rehabilitation. Common medical illnesses included orthopedic disorders in 80 (39.8%), followed by neurological illness in 43 (21.4%) patients. The median length of stay was 50 (24.5-103.5) days with longest stay of 447 days. Of those patients who recovered, 54 patients (26.9%) reunited with family and returned home and 125 (62.2%) patients were sent to old age homes/asylums. Conclusion: A dedicated ward for untended patients is the first of its kind in the state of Tamil Nadu, India. Such a venture has proved to be of benefit, considering the positive outcome in a significant proportion of the beneficiaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
29. Living with Diabetes in times of COVID-19 pandemic: A Qualitative Study from West Jaintia Hills, Meghalaya, India.
- Author
-
Muksor, Alacrity and Parmar, Daksha
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL care ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,TRIBES - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic lockdown introduced to break the chain of disease transmission brought numerous challenges to people living with Type 2 diabetes. The present paper attempts to explore and understand the challenges faced by people living with diabetes and the variation in experiences based on their socioeconomic context. This qualitative study was conducted during the pandemic’s first and second waves in rural areas of West Jaintia Hills District, predominantly inhabited by the Pnar tribe. In-depth interviews with 90 Pnar men and women living with diabetes were undertaken. Findings from the present study reveal the perception that COVID-19 is not severe, limited knowledge about complications of diabetes, and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, multiply to increase the vulnerability of the tribal populations living in the hilly and difficult terrain of the district. Therefore, addressing the burden of chronic illnesses in rural tribal areas in times of emerging infectious pandemics by providing comprehensive care and services at public health facilities is the need of the hour. The COVID-19 pandemic lockdown introduced to break the chain of disease transmission brought numerous challenges to people living with Type 2 diabetes. The present paper attempts to explore and understand the challenges faced by people living with diabetes and the variation in experiences based on their socioeconomic context. This qualitative study was conducted during the pandemic’s first and second waves in rural areas of West Jaintia Hills District, predominantly inhabited by the Pnar tribe. In-depth interviews with 90 Pnar men and women living with diabetes were undertaken. Findings from the present study reveal the perception that COVID-19 is not severe, limited knowledge about complications of diabetes, and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, multiply to increase the vulnerability of the tribal populations living in the hilly and difficult terrain of the district. Therefore, addressing the burden of chronic illnesses in rural tribal areas in times of emerging infectious pandemics by providing comprehensive care and services at public health facilities is the need of the hour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
30. Vaccinating a billion people against COVID-19: India's quest for systems leadership in exceptional times.
- Author
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Gulati, Kamal and Busari, Jamiu
- Subjects
SAFETY ,COVID-19 ,IMMUNIZATION ,STRATEGIC planning ,VACCINES ,COVID-19 vaccines ,LEADERSHIP ,SERIAL publications ,PRACTICAL politics ,PUBLIC administration ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL protocols ,LABOR supply ,GREY literature ,WORLD Wide Web ,RECORDING & registration - Abstract
Purpose: In January 2021, India launched the world's most extensive vaccination campaign against COVID-19. It is estimated that India would need to vaccinate over a billion people to achieve herd immunity. Even though the Indian Government focuses on improving and delivering its vaccination programme, significant challenges still exist. This paper aims to discuss current challenges to scale up India's vaccination campaign and addresses strategies for achieving this. Design/methodology/approach: The paper is based on a review of secondary sources, including journal articles from scholarly and grey literature and information available in the public domain. The search focused explicitly on the COVID-19 scenario, vaccination programme, public health management and systems leadership in the Indian health care system. Findings: The analysis revealed that various factors have disrupted India's vaccination campaign, including shortage of vaccine doses, mandatory prior online registration, lack of infrastructure, safety concerns for older people, untrained workforce and absence of a solid public health framework. Furthermore, India appears to have struggled to reduce tensions and instill trust in its ability to effectively manage the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccination programme due to a lack of cooperation between union government, state governments and other stakeholders, namely, policymakers, hospitals, industry and community. Originality/value: The findings indicate that scaling up India's anti-COVID vaccination programme would require system-level leadership strategies that work within the country's limited resources. Deeper reforms in vaccine development, storage, delivery, training and regulatory frameworks are also needed to extend the world's largest anti-COVID-19 vaccination campaign. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Utilization of Lean & Six Sigma quality initiatives in Indian healthcare sector.
- Author
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Suman, Gaurav and Prajapati, Deo Raj
- Subjects
SIX Sigma ,SOCIAL impact ,MEDICAL care ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the utilization of Lean & Six Sigma quality initiatives in healthcare sector in India. Methodology: The survey questionnaires were sent to 454 hospitals through registered postal in all the states of India. The survey questionnaire was designed to assess different quality initiatives; currently implemented in Indian hospitals, factors align with organization's objectives, reasons for not implementing Lean & Six Sigma and contribution of Lean & Six Sigma projects in healthcare improvement projects etc. A separate section in the questionnaire provides the feedback on implementation of Lean & Six Sigma in various hospitals. The relationships between Lean & Six Sigma and healthcare performance have also been established in this paper. Findings: It is found that 15 Nos. of hospitals have implemented the Lean tools while 14 Nos. have implemented the Six Sigma tools out of 109 collected responses. This shows the utilization of Lean & Six Sigma in Indian healthcare sector. The 'Lack of knowledge' and 'Availability of resources' are the major reasons for not implementing Lean & Six Sigma. It is also observed that 22% running projects were related to Lean & Six Sigma out of various improvement projects running in various hospitals. Originality: There is lack of evidences of similar studies that determines the utilization of Lean & Six Sigma in Indian healthcare sector at the national level. This paper will provide important breakthrough to academicians and healthcare practitioners, who are involved in Lean & Six Sigma research. Social implications: The present study will create awareness among healthcare practitioners across India for utilization of quality tools that will provide direct benefits to the society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. An Optimized Framework for Surgical Team Selection.
- Author
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Petwal, Hemant and Rani, Rinkle
- Subjects
SPECIALTY hospitals ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC hospitals ,MULTICASTING (Computer networks) ,ORTHOPEDIC surgery ,HOSPITAL patients ,TEAMS - Abstract
In the healthcare system, a surgical teamis a unit of experienced personnel who provide medical care to surgical patients during surgery. Selecting a surgical team is challenging for a multispecialty hospital as the performance of its members affects the efficiency and reliability of the hospital's patient care. The effectiveness of a surgical team depends not only on its individual members but also on the coordination among them. In this paper, we addressed the challenges of surgical team selection faced by a multispecialty hospital and proposed a decision-making framework for selecting the optimal list of surgical teams for a given patient. The proposed framework focused on improving the existing surgical history management system by arranging surgery-bound patients into optimal subgroups based on similar characteristics and selecting an optimal list of surgical teams for a new surgical patient based on the patient's subgroups. For this end, two population-based meta-heuristic algorithms for clustering of mixed datasets and multi-objective optimizationwere proposed. The proposed algorithmswere tested using different datasets and benchmark functions. Furthermore, the proposed framework was validated through a case study of a real postoperative surgical dataset obtained from the orthopedic surgery department of a multispecialty hospital in India. The results revealed that the proposed framework was efficient in arranging patients in optimal groups aswell as selecting optimal surgical teams for a given patient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Framework for development of Information Technology Infrastructure for Health (ITIH) care in India - a critical study.
- Author
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Choudhury, Nitai Ray
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL record access control - Abstract
Health care in India is undertaken by huge numbers of providers - Government, Corporate and Private. Most of the providers do not maintain the medical records systematically and properly following international standards and guidelines. Paper-based health records and unavailability of right information at right time prevents better health care. Here comes the importance of health informatics. Developmental origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD), has proven the importance of records of individual in predicting/explaining the diseases. Dept. of Information Technology, Govt. of India, has taken initiative to develop Information Technology Infrastructure for Healthcare (ITIH) in India. ITIH provides the modalities and procedures to be undertaken for better health care of vast population of India. The framework is a guideline document and comprehensive roadmap that prescribes IT standards and guidelines for each stakeholder across diverse healthcare settings in India with the goal of building an Integrated Healthcare Information Network. The paper highlights the formation of expert group and terms of reference, defining the standards and guidelines, identified the nodal agencies, R&D organizations and healthcare applications. The importance of tele-medicine are also discussed. The paper has discussed the main challenges, namely, funding, computer literacy, infrastructure and coordination, retro conversion of manual system of records to electronic system, standards and guidelines, interoperability, privacy, information overload. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
34. Strengthening primary health care through e-referral system.
- Author
-
Bashar, Md, Bhattacharya, Sudip, Tripathi, Shailesh, Sharma, Neha, and Singh, Amarjeet
- Subjects
MEDICAL personnel ,PRIMARY care ,SKEWNESS (Probability theory) ,MEDICAL care ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence - Abstract
Referral is a dynamic process, in which a health worker at one level of the health system, having insufficient resources (drugs, equipment, skills) to manage a clinical condition, seeks the help of a better or differently resourced facility at the same or higher level to assist in. Health care systems of every country are designed in such a way to encourage patients to first attempt to get care at the primary level and then to approach a higher level of care according to the need. This protocol minimizes the costs for the caretaker/patients. However, in most of the countries, patients often bypass primary care facilities and directly go to the higher center thereby, increasing the burden on higher level facilities, the picture is not very different in India also. Health care system in India is plugged by: overpopulation, lack of expert clinicians, skewed distribution of physicians, lack of motivation among existing health care personnel and an ineffective referral mechanism. Due to failure of conventional paper-based referral systems in our country, we can introduce an e-referral system in the era of internet. It is evident from our experiences, that this artificial intelligence enabled e-referral system has many advantages over the traditional paper-based referral system. It will aid health workers for timely management of cases. Most importantly, it will streamline the existing unorganized referral process. Although, for effective e-Referral system, there should be a collaborative platform where easy search and discovery for health care providers is possible and help in decision making. e- Referral should be incorporated in our health system to strengthen it by bridging the access gap may be through Public Private Partnership model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Mitti and Beej: The Metaphors and Meaning Making of Infertility and Assisted Reproductive Technologies.
- Author
-
Patel, Rashmi
- Subjects
REPRODUCTIVE technology ,INFERTILITY ,METAPHOR ,FERTILITY clinics ,FERTILIZATION in vitro ,MEDICAL care ,ACADEMIC dissertations ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations - Abstract
Copyright of Collegium Antropologicum is the property of Croatian Anthropological Society and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Communication partner training for healthcare workers engaging with people with aphasia: Enacting Sustainable Development Goal 17 in Austria, Egypt, Greece, India and Serbia.
- Author
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Isaksen, Jytte, Beeke, Suzanne, Pais, Analisa, Efstratiadou, Evangelia-Antonia, Pauranik, Apoorva, Revkin, Susannah K., Vandana, V. P., Valencia, Fabián, Vuksanović, Jasmina, and Jagoe, Caroline
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL ethics ,MEDICAL care ,WORLD health ,APHASIA ,DOCUMENTATION ,HUMAN services programs ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,HEALTH care teams ,INTERNATIONAL agencies ,SUSTAINABLE development ,HEALTH equity ,COMMUNICATION education ,GOAL (Psychology) ,CULTURAL awareness ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
This commentary describes how a grassroot-led partnership initiated by members of the organisations World Federation of NeuroRehabilitation and Collaboration of Aphasia Trialists is addressing the marginalisation of people with aphasia, through education and knowledge exchange related to communication partner training of health professionals. A partnership between academics and healthcare professionals across Austria, Denmark, Egypt, Ireland, Greece, India, Serbia and the United Kingdom was established in 2020. Through bimonthly online sessions in 2021–2022 a Danish communication partner training program was introduced while six teams adapted and translated the training and its materials to their local contexts. A collaborative partnership enabled multiple translations of an existing communication partner training program for healthcare professionals working with people with aphasia to support a sustainable delivery model that is linguistic and culturally sensitive. This commentary paper focusses on Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 17 and also addresses SDG 10. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Search for an Ingenious Healthcare Model in India.
- Author
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Ghatak, Sunetra
- Subjects
MEDICAL care - Abstract
The provision of adequate and equitable basic health services is becoming increasingly difficult due to rapid population growth and lack of available resources. Over the last few years there have been many initiatives to improve the efficiency, effectiveness and equity in provision of healthcare services in the country. Public Private Partnership (PPP) is one such initiative. This paper aims to draw attention if this PPP model is able to connect the demand for healthcare of the Indian population. The paper analyses the availability of healthcare establishments and if the financial mechanism is able to minimise out of pocket expenditure of the people. Finding suggests that current numbers of establishments are not enough and unevenly distributed across states and sector. The establishments are highly correlated in urban. Public-private cooperation depends on state's income but on entirely based on population. We need more health establishments and disperse of facilities across states as well as sector to make the PPP model an ingenious one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
38. Formal and informal governance networks: Diabetes care in Australia and India.
- Author
-
Ugyel, Lhawang
- Subjects
NETWORK governance ,MEDICAL care ,TREATMENT of diabetes ,PUBLIC administration ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
The concept of networks has gained interest in public administration and management. They address concerns such as the coordination of multiple actors within the policy process. Networks take both formal and informal forms. As the integration of formal and informal networks in public service delivery is gaining traction, this paper uses the example of diabetes care in Australia and India to provide an analytical framework to examine one of the ways such integration of networks take place. Diabetes, a chronic long‐term disease, poses to be a global problem with a high rate of diagnosis with implications for public health expenditure. A multi‐disciplinary team, which comprises both formal and informal categories, is required to manage diabetes. This paper highlights the integration of networks in diabetes care in different institutional and cultural settings. For such form of integration of networks to work, collaboration among the various actors is important. Lessons learnt from diabetes care will be relevant for other long‐term chronic conditions to help reduce the human resource and financial burden. The analytical framework developed based on the example of diabetes care will provide useful lessons for examining the mechanics and dynamics of the integration between formal and informal networks in the field of public administration and management. The concept of networks is gaining prominence as a useful model. This paper supports the existing literature on the need for both formal and informal networks using the example of diabetes care. It develops an analytical framework to examine the interactions of formal and informal networks, which will be relevant for similar studies related to other long‐term chronic conditions and for public administration and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Challenge of Additionality: The Impact of Central Grants for Primary Healthcare on State-Level Spending on Primary Healthcare in India.
- Author
-
Bowser, Diana M., Jha, Rajesh, Bhawalkar, Manjiri, and Berman, Peter
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: In planning for universal health coverage, many countries have been examining their fiscal decentralization policies with the goal of increasing efficiency and equity via "additionalities." The concept of "additionality," when the government of a lower administrative level increases the funding allocated to a particular issue when extra funds are present, is often used in these contexts. Although the definition of "additionality" can be used more broadly, for the purposes of this paper we focus narrowly on the additional allocation of primary healthcare expenditures. This paper explores this idea by examining the impact of central level primary healthcare expenditure, on individual state level contributions to primary healthcare expenditure within 16 Indian states between 2005 and 2013. Methods: In examining 5 main variables, we compared differences between government expenditures, contributions, and revenues for Empowered Action Group (EAG) states, and non-EAG states. EAG states are normally larger states that have weaker public health infrastructure and hence qualify for additional funding. Finally, using a model that captured the quantity of central level primary healthcare expenditure distributions to these states, we measured its impact on each state's own contributions to primary healthcare spending. Results: Our results show that, at the state level, growth in per capita central level primary healthcare expenditure has increased by 110% from 2005-2013, while state's own contributions to primary healthcare expenditure per capita increased by 32%. Further analyses show that a 1% change disbursement from the central level leads to a -0.132%, although not significant, change by states in their own expenditure. The effect for wealthier states is -0.151% and significant and for poorer states the effect is smaller at -0.096% and not significant. Conclusion: This analysis suggests that increases in central level primary healthcare expenditure to states have an inverse relationship with primary healthcare expenditures by the state level. Furthermore, this effect is more pronounced in wealthier Indian states. This finding has policy implications on India's decision to increase block grants to states in place of targeted program expenditures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Perpetuating health inequities in India: global ethics in policy and practice.
- Author
-
Prasad, Vandana and Sengupta, Amit
- Subjects
HEALTH equity ,MEDICAL ethics ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,PRIVATIZATION ,PUBLIC-private sector cooperation - Abstract
Decisions that influence health and access to health care are necessarily a matter of ethics. This paper attempts to examine current budgetary allocations and policy shifts in India from the perspective of global ethical values. It also describes how global economic processes may increase health inequity nationally and argues that they should, therefore, be subject to global health ethics. Public health in India is in a state of crisis from a disinvestment in public health care services and persistent neglect, simultaneous to the global push to enhance privatization. National health policies have remained oblivious to the unacceptably high inequity in access to health care on the one hand, and the cautionary analysis of the experience with currently chosen solutions through public-private- partnership and insurance models, which further marginalize the poorest. Global institutions such as the World Trade Organisation (WTO) also influence national policies to benefit global business interests but often with detrimental effect upon equitable access to health and health care. The paper argues that the application of ethics must become more visible in the determination of national policies that are led by the dominant global paradigms of economic development to ensure that equitable access to health is prioritized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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41. Intermediaries and transnational regimes of skill: nursing skills and competencies in the context of international migration.
- Author
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Walton-Roberts, Margaret
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EMIGRATION & immigration ,LABOR mobility ,MEDICAL care ,MARKET share ,NURSING ,BROKERS - Abstract
Market-based migrant intermediaries play an important role in skilled migration. Skilled workers, especially in regulated professions such as nursing, face increasingly complex testing and credential assessment systems. 'Regimes of skill' control and filter membership to these professions by reproducing already existing power imbalances in the global regulation of skilled labour. This paper examines these processes in the case of Indian trained nurses who use educational brokers to enrol in Canadian post-graduate programmes with the intention of practising in the Canadian health care system. The study elaborates on the 'regime of skill' in nursing, revealing its maintenance through interactional and transnational connections between intermediaries, educators and regulators in terms of codifying and translating skills and competencies between jurisdictions with different cultural and professional histories and norms of nursing. Findings reveal that intermediaries operate transnationally in a symbiotic manner with more powerful actors in order to exploit regimes of skill and expand their market share. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Health care for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities in India.
- Author
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Mishra, Amitav and Narayan, Jayanthi
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- *
NATIONAL health services , *HEALTH services accessibility , *NONPROFIT organizations , *HEALTH insurance reimbursement , *PERSONNEL management , *HEALTH policy , *MEDICAL care , *CHILD health services , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities , *WOMEN'S health services ,MEDICAL care for people with disabilities - Abstract
Legislations for persons with disabilities emerged in the 1990s in India, providing them with rights and entitlements. Aligned with the UNCRPD, the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act (2016) supports improved programmes and services. There are no exclusive policies for those with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Different government departments and non‐government organisations provide services including centrally sponsored programmes to persons with disabilities and enable them to exercise their rights. For example, rehabilitation and provision of aids and appliances lie with the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, right to education is with the Ministry of Education, and, early intervention and health services and related supports are with the Ministry of Health. In India, non‐government organisations also play a vital role in health care services. In this paper, we discuss the existing health care systems including medical services in India for persons with disabilities with a specific focus on persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The discussion include how the system was evolved and what is in place today, the coverage, strengths, and limitations in the system. We have tried to provide a comprehensive description of existing policies, and practices of health care as well as the cultural influences with regard to health care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Processes of assistive technology service delivery in Bangladesh, India and Nepal: a critical reflection.
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Karki, Jiban, Rushton, Simon, Bhattarai, Sunita, Norman, Gift, Rakhshanda, Shagoofa, and De Witte, Prof Luc
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- *
ASSISTIVE technology centers , *POLICY sciences , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *MEDICAL care , *INTERVIEWING , *CONTENT analysis , *THEMATIC analysis , *HUMAN rights , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH , *PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
This paper critically reviews and reflects on the processes for providing Assistive Technology (AT) services to Persons with Disabilities (PWD) in Bangladesh, India and Nepal. The aim is to investigate the AT service delivery systems in these countries and suggest improvements where weaknesses are identified. We carried out a descriptive qualitative exploratory study in Bangladesh, India and Nepal by conducting key informant interviews with policymakers (5), AT service providers (22) and mobility and hearing related AT service users (21). We used a directed content analysis approach guided by a seven-point AT service delivery process model to thematically analyse the existing processes for AT service delivery, from first contact through to follow-up and maintenance. AT service delivery processes are sub-optimal in all three countries, and improvements are needed. No common AT service delivery process was found, although there are common features. In general, it is easier for PWDs in India and Nepal to access AT than for those in Bangladesh, but all three countries are failing to live up to their commitments to uphold the human rights of PWDs. Although good elements of AT service delivery processes can be identified, the systems in all three countries are fragmented and generally weak. A more holistic approach of looking at the process of AT service delivery, from first contact right through to follow-up and device maintenance, with a single door service delivery system, free of cost at the point of service is recommended in these countries. Although we found significant weaknesses in AT delivery in all three countries, there are some good AT service delivery practices and opportunities for these countries to learn from one another. A systematic and stepwise approach to assessing current AT service delivery processes in the three countries – examining the delivery system as a whole, from initiation to repair and management – can help identify opportunities to improve the process for (prospective) AT users. A more coherent single door system of AT service delivery will increase the quality and efficiency of the fragmented AT service delivery practices in Bangladesh, India and Nepal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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44. An Empirical Study on Measuring the Perception for Selected Health Care Services Provided by Primary Health Care Centers (PHCs) in the Selected Villages of Vadodara District.
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Shah, Bhumit A. and Shukla, Parag
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MEDICAL care ,PRIMARY health care ,HEALTH care reform ,MEDICAL centers ,CHI-squared test - Abstract
India is currently in a good position to design a particularly Indian set of health reforms to help the health system meet the growing demands of its consumers and personnel. There are several managerial obstacles to ensuring availability, access, affordability, and equity in delivering health services to fulfil community requirements efficiently and effectively for Healthy India's Sustainable Development. In this paper, an attempt has been made to analyse the opinions of users who avail of services offered by Primary Health Centres (PHCs) in selected villages of Vadodara District. The data were analysed using descriptive statistics and the hypothesis is assessed by using Chi Square test as well as Friedman Rank Test was applied to know the preferences and measure perception of users considering the selected criteria of services offered by the PHCs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
45. Viewpoints from the national consultation on addressing acute malnutrition on mainstreaming community-based program for management of acute malnutrition in India.
- Author
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Kumar, Praveen, Sinha, Rajesh, Arora, Srishti, Sarwal, Rakesh, Sultana, Farida, Daniel, Abner, Sriswan, Raja, Kokane, Arun, Kiran, Asha, Goel, Anil, Suman, R, Jaiswal, Anil, Prabhu, Sanjay, Seth, Anju, Laxmaiya, Avula, Rawat, Ashok, Modi, Bivash, Thakur, Rinky, and Wagt, Arjan
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PREVENTION of malnutrition ,MALNUTRITION treatment ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL screening ,MEDICAL care ,NATIONAL health services ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,DIET therapy ,MEDICAL referrals ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,WASTING syndrome ,CHILDREN - Abstract
High burden of acute malnutrition among children less than 5 years is a major public health problem in India. A "Two-days National Consultation on Addressing Acute Malnutrition" was organized to gather experiences and evidence from 13 states of India on prevention and management of acute malnutrition among children and documenting viewpoints from experts and government counterparts on the same. The consultation centered around five key themes of addressing acute malnutrition: 1) capacity building, 2) strengthening screening, 3) nutritional care of wasting, 4) tracking progress, and 5) scale-up. The paper highlights the experiences and key recommendations around the above key themes. It emerged that there is a need to further accelerate the efforts toward strengthening existing platforms and services to address acute malnutrition among children. Regular trainings of the frontline workers, increased convergence, regular monitoring, and continued service delivery during the pandemic should be undertaken for better outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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46. Speech–language pathologists' perceived competence in serving people with Parkinson's in India: A cross‐sectional survey study.
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Niharika, M.K., Annitha, G., Thrylokya, Ravichandran, and Patel, Ravi
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PILOT projects ,STATISTICS ,RESEARCH ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SELF-perception ,WORK ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL care ,COGNITION ,DEGLUTITION disorders ,PROFESSIONAL competence ,PARKINSON'S disease ,COMMUNICATION ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL referrals ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,JUDGMENT sampling ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Background: Speech–language pathologists are often involved in the assessment and management of communication, cognition and swallowing deficits in people with Parkinson's. However, speech–language pathologists' self‐perceived competency levels in serving people with Parkinson's remain elusive, especially in the Indian context where there is an increasing disability burden due to Parkinson's disease. Additionally, the challenges faced by speech–language pathologists in India to provide efficient services to this population are unidentified. Aims: To determine speech–language pathologists' self‐perceived competence and challenges faced when providing services to people with Parkinson's in India. Methods & Procedures: A survey questionnaire was sent to speech–language pathologists through emails and social media asking them questions to evaluate self‐perceived competency in serving people with Parkinson's and to identify the challenges to their service delivery. A total of 69 speech–language pathologists responded to the survey. Outcomes & Results: The majority of respondents reported to be competent in dealing with various domains of assessment and management of people with Parkinson's. Although competent, they reportedly faced a few challenges during their service delivery. Conclusions & Implications: This study provides an insight into the speech–language pathologists' self‐perceived competency in serving people with Parkinson's in India, and also identifies the challenges related to interprofessional service delivery. The findings of the study have educational and clinical implications. What this paper adds: The study delineates speech–language pathologists' self‐perceived competency in working with people with Parkinson's in India, a nation that is seeing a constant rise in the incidence of Parkinson's disease.The study the unique challenges within India to speech–language pathologists' service delivery for people with Parkinson's, thus having educational and clinical implications in Parkinson's disease care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. CHSI costing study–Challenges and solutions for cost data collection in private hospitals in India.
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Singh, Maninder Pal, Popli, Riya, Brar, Sehr, Rajsekar, Kavitha, Sachin, Oshima, Naik, Jyotsna, Kumar, Sanjay, Sinha, Setu, Singh, Varsha, Patel, Prakash, Verma, Ramesh, Hazra, Avijit, Misra, Raghunath, Mehrotra, Divya, Biswal, Sashi Bhusan, Panigrahy, Ankita, Gaur, Kusum Lata, Pankaj, Jai Prakash, Sharma, Dharmesh Kumar, and Madhavi, Kondeti
- Subjects
ACQUISITION of data ,TIME management ,DATA entry ,PUBLIC hospitals ,HOSPITALS ,COST accounting ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Introduction: Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Aarogya Yojana (AB PM-JAY) has enabled the Government of India to become a strategic purchaser of health care services from private providers. To generate base cost evidence for evidence-based policymaking the Costing of Health Services in India (CHSI) study was commissioned in 2018 for the price setting of health benefit packages. This paper reports the findings of a process evaluation of the cost data collection in the private hospitals. Methods: The process evaluation of health system costing in private hospitals was an exploratory survey with mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative). We used three approaches–an online survey using a semi-structured questionnaire, in-depth interviews, and a review of monitoring data. The process of data collection was assessed in terms of time taken for different aspects, resources used, level and nature of difficulty encountered, challenges and solutions. Results: The mean time taken for data collection in a private hospital was 9.31 (± 1.0) person months including time for obtaining permissions, actual data collection and entry, and addressing queries for data completeness and quality. The longest time was taken to collect data on human resources (30%), while it took the least time for collecting information on building and space (5%). On a scale of 1 (lowest) to 10 (highest) difficulty levels, the data on human resources was the most difficult to collect. This included data on salaries (8), time allocation (5.5) and leaves (5). Discussion: Cost data from private hospitals is crucial for mixed health systems. Developing formal mechanisms of cost accounting data and data sharing as pre-requisites for empanelment under a national insurance scheme can significantly ease the process of cost data collection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Cost of hospital services in India: a multi-site study to inform provider payment rates and Health Technology Assessment.
- Author
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Chauhan, Akashdeep Singh, Guinness, Lorna, Bahuguna, Pankaj, Singh, Maninder Pal, Aggarwal, Vipul, Rajsekhar, Kavitha, Tripathi, Surbhi, and Prinja, Shankar
- Subjects
RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL care ,HOSPITALS ,COST benefit analysis ,QUALITY assurance ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
The 'Cost of Health Services in India (CHSI)' is the first large scale multi-site facility costing study to incorporate evidence from a national sample of both private and public sectors at different levels of the health system in India. This paper provides an overview of the extent of heterogeneity in costs caused by various supply-side factors.A total of 38 public (11 tertiary care and 27 secondary care) and 16 private hospitals were sampled from 11 states of India. From the sampled facilities, a total of 327 specialties were included, with 48, 79 and 200 specialties covered in tertiary, private and district hospitals respectively. A mixed methodology consisting of both bottom-up and top-down costing was used for data collection. Unit costs per service output were calculated at the cost centre level (outpatient, inpatient, operating theatre, and ICU) and compared across provider type and geographical location.The unadjusted cost per admission was highest for tertiary facilities (₹ 5690, 75 USD) followed by private facilities (₹ 4839, 64 USD) and district hospitals (₹ 3447, 45 USD). Differences in unit costs were found across types of providers, resulting from both variations in capacity utilisation, length of stay and the scale of activity. In addition, significant differences in costs were found associated with geographical location (city classification).The reliance on cost information from single sites or small samples ignores the issue of heterogeneity driven by both demand and supply-side factors. The CHSI cost data set provides a unique insight into cost variability across different types of providers in India. The present analysis shows that both geographical location and the scale of activity are important determinants for deriving the cost of a health service and should be accounted for in healthcare decision making from budgeting to economic evaluation and price-setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. District decision-making for health in low-income settings: a systematic literature review.
- Author
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Wickremasinghe, Deepthi, Hashmi, Iram Ejaz, Schellenberg, Joanna, and Avan, Bilal Iqbal
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PUBLIC health ,HEALTH planning ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,POOR people ,HUMAN services ,DECISION making ,DEVELOPING countries ,EXECUTIVES ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care use ,POVERTY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Health management information systems (HMIS) produce large amounts of data about health service provision and population health, and provide opportunities for data-based decision-making in decentralized health systems. Yet the data are little-used locally. A well-defined approach to district-level decision-making using health data would help better meet the needs of the local population. In this second of four papers on district decision-making for health in low-income settings, our aim was to explore ways in which district administrators and health managers in low- and lower-middle-income countries use health data to make decisions, to describe the decision-making tools they used and identify challenges encountered when using these tools. A systematic literature review, following PRISMA guidelines, was undertaken. Experts were consulted about key sources of information. A search strategy was developed for 14 online databases of peer reviewed and grey literature. The resources were screened independently by two reviewers using pre-defined inclusion criteria. The 14 papers included were assessed for the quality of reported evidence and a descriptive evidence synthesis of the review findings was undertaken. We found 12 examples of tools to assist district-level decision-making, all of which included two key stages-identification of priorities, and development of an action plan to address them. Of those tools with more steps, four included steps to review or monitor the action plan agreed, suggesting the use of HMIS data. In eight papers HMIS data were used for prioritization. Challenges to decision-making processes fell into three main categories: the availability and quality of health and health facility data; human dynamics and financial constraints. Our findings suggest that evidence is available about a limited range of processes that include the use of data for decision-making at district level. Standardization and pre-testing in diverse settings would increase the potential that these tools could be used more widely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Aspects of medical tourism in India: A review.
- Author
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Nagar, Rekha, Singh, Yudhvir, Gobinath, Ravindran, and Manoharan, Geetha
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MEDICAL tourism ,TRAVEL hygiene ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Health tourism refers to people seeking medical care in a country other than their own. The key goal of medical tourism is to provide 'cost-effective' private medical services for patients who need surgical and other types of specialized treatment in cooperation with the tourism industry.Several international and domestic tourists prefer Maharashtra, Kerala, Karnataka, Goa and Gujarat for medical services and tourism. The nature and importance of medical tourism in India are discussed in this paper. It also demonstrates the difficulties that health travelers in India face. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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