6 results
Search Results
2. Health Care for Our Nation's Veterans: A Policy Paper From the American College of Physicians.
- Author
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Crowley, Ryan, Atiq, Omar, Hilden, David, Cooney, Thomas G., Beachy, Micah, Brislen, Heather, Curry, William, Dhingra, Menaka, Engel, Lee, Henry, Tracey L., Hollon, Matthew, Mathew, Suja, Shoushtari, Christiana, Southworth, Molly, Tan, Michael, and Health and Public Policy Committee of the American College of Physicians*
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INTEGRATED health care delivery , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH facilities , *MEDICAL personnel , *TRAINING of medical residents , *HEALTH policy , *HEALTH services accessibility , *PRIVATE sector , *MEDICAL care research , *HOLISTIC medicine , *PRIMARY health care , *MENTAL health services administration , *HEALTH care teams , *POLICY sciences , *MEDICAL education , *TELEMEDICINE , *MEDICAL societies - Abstract
The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is the United States' largest integrated health care delivery system, serving over 9 million enrollees at nearly 1300 health care facilities. In addition to providing health care to the nation's military veterans, the VHA has a research and development program, trains thousands of medical residents and other health care professionals, and conducts emergency preparedness and response activities. The VHA has been celebrated for delivering high-quality care to veterans, early adoption of electronic medical records, and high patient satisfaction. However, the system faces challenges, including implementation of an expanded community care program, modernization of its electronic medical records system, and providing care to a population with complex needs. The position paper offers policy recommendations on VHA funding, the community care program, medical and health care professions training, and research and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons guidelines development: health equity update to standard operating procedure.
- Author
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Kumar, Sunjay S., Collings, Amelia T., Collins, Courtney, Colvin, Jennifer, Sylla, Patricia, and Slater, Bethany J.
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MEDICAL protocols , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL societies , *OPERATIVE surgery , *ENDOSCOPIC gastrointestinal surgery , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PUBLISHING , *HEALTH equity , *EVIDENCE-based medicine - Abstract
Introduction: The SAGES Guidelines Committee creates evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. Due to existing health disparities, recommendations made in these guidelines may have different impacts on different populations. The updates to our standard operating procedure described herein will allow us to produce well-designed guidelines that take these disparities into account and potentially reduce health inequities. Methods: This paper outlines updates to the SAGES Guidelines Committee Standard Operating Procedure in order to incorporate issues of heath equity into our guideline development process with the goal of minimizing downstream health disparities. Results: SAGES has developed an evidence-based, standardized approach to consider issues of health equity throughout the guideline development process to allow physicians to better counsel patients and make research recommendations to better address disparities. Conclusion: Societies that promote guidelines within their organization must make an intentional effort to prevent the widening of health disparities as a result of their recommendations. The updates to the Guidelines Committee Standard Operating Procedure will hopefully lead to increased attention to these disparities and provide specific recommendations to reduce them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Nursing in deathworlds: Necropolitics of the life, dying and death of an unhoused person in the United States healthcare industrial complex.
- Author
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Jenkins, Danisha, Chechel, Laura, and Jenkins, Brian
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PALLIATIVE care nursing , *HEALTH care industry , *TERMINAL care , *HEALTH services accessibility , *TERMINALLY ill , *PRACTICAL politics , *EXTRACORPOREAL membrane oxygenation , *MEDICAL care , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *CRITICAL care medicine , *HOMELESS persons , *DEATH - Abstract
This paper begins with the lived accounts of emergency and critical care medical interventions in which an unhoused person is brought to the emergency department in cardiac arrest. The case is a dramatised representation of the extent to which biopolitical forces via reduction to bare life through biopolitical and necropolitical operations are prominent influences in nursing and medical care. This paper draws on the scholarship of Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, and Achille Mbembe to offer a theoretical analysis of the power dynamics that influence the health care and death care of patients who are caught in the auspices of a neoliberal capitalist healthcare apparatus. This paper offers analysis of the overt displays of biopower over those individuals cast aside as generally unworthy of access to healthcare in a postcolonial capitalist system, in addition to the ways in which humans are reduced to 'bare life' in their dying days. We analyse this case study through Agamben's description of thanatopolitics, a 'regime of death', and the technologies that accompany the dying process, particularly in that of the homo sacer. Additionally, this paper illustrates the ways in which necropolitics and biopower are integral to understanding how the most advanced and expensive medical interventions make visible the political values of the healthcare system and how nurses and healthcare functions in these deathworlds. The purpose of this paper is to develop a greater understanding of biopolitical and necropolitical operations in acute and critical care environments, and to offer guidance to nurses in these spaces as they work to uphold ethical duties in a system that increasingly dehumanises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dementia care navigation: A systematic review on different service types and their prevalence.
- Author
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Giebel, Clarissa, Reilly, Siobhan, Gabbay, Mark, Dickinson, Julie, Tetlow, Hilary, Hogan, Hayley, Griffiths, Alys, and Cooper, Claudia
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TREATMENT of dementia , *ONLINE information services , *SOCIAL support , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PATIENT-centered care , *MEDICAL care , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DISEASE prevalence , *RESEARCH funding , *MEDLINE - Abstract
Background: Dementia Care Navigators (DCNs) are professionals without clinical training, who provide individualised emotional and practical support to people living with dementia, working alongside clinical services. Navigator services have been implemented but the service offered vary without a consistent overview provided. The aim of this narrative systematic review was to describe and compare existing service formats, and to synthesise evidence regarding their implementation and impacts. Methods: The review was registered on PROSPERO [CRD42021292518]. Three electronic databases were searched and included studies reported on a DCN service, defined as a service in which non‐clinically trained workers provide personalised advice and support to people with dementia and/or carers in the community. Two independent reviewers screened abstracts and titles and read through full papers for inclusion. Risk of bias was assessed using the Standard Quality Assessment QualSyst. Results: We included 14 papers reporting on six studies. All services were US‐based and only varied by integration and training provided. Studies reported different degrees of impact on service utilisation and on symptoms and mental well‐being of people with dementia and their carers, with too little evidence to draw substantial/meaningful conclusions and studies employing different outcome measures. One study evidenced greater impacts on people with more advanced dementia compared to earlier stages. Conclusions: DCN services have the potential to effectively provide non‐clinical support to people with dementia and carers from the point of diagnosis. Further research from countries other than the USA, focusing on the impact on social care and social support service access and utilisation, and utilising similar established outcome measures are required. Key points: Evidence on the impact of Dementia Care Navigators (DCNs) is limited but shows promising benefits for people living with dementia and their carers.More research needs to be conducted in countries other than the US, where all evidence was reported, and with similar outcome measures to allow comparison.DCNs are a highly useful professional group without medical training, who can navigate people living with dementia and their carers to support and provide support themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Seeking care across the US-Mexico border: The experiences of Latinx and Indigenous Mexican caregivers of children with asthma or respiratory distress.
- Author
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Ortiz, Gabriela, Rodriguez, Sophia, Pozar, María, Moran, Ashley, and Cheney, Ann
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HISPANIC Americans , *HEALTH services accessibility , *QUALITATIVE research , *FOCUS groups , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *MEDICAL care , *INTERVIEWING , *RESPIRATORY diseases , *ASTHMA in children , *DECISION making , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TOXINS , *ENVIRONMENTAL justice , *ENVIRONMENTAL exposure , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *CAREGIVER attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
Many Latinx and Indigenous Mexican populations in the United States Southwest live in unincorporated communities in the US-Mexico borderlands called colonias. These environmental justice communities often lack basic infrastructure, including healthcare services, prompting many to seek services across the border. However, due to geopolitical factors more vulnerable caregivers are limited to utilize healthcare services in the US. This paper reports the experiences and healthcare decision-making of caregivers living in colonias in the US-Mexico border region who care for children with respiratory health conditions. This study was carried out from September to December 2020. Focus groups and interviews were conducted with Latinx and Indigenous Mexican caregivers of children with asthma or respiratory distress. Qualitative interviews elicited caregivers' perspectives on the environmental factors affecting children's chronic health conditions and use of healthcare services. The analysis employed the concept of structure vulnerability to theorize geography as a structural determinant of health for caregivers faced with making healthcare decisions for their suffering from respiratory health conditions. A survey was administered to collect basic sociodemographic information. A total of 36 caregivers participated in the study. Structural factors including unincorporated community status and government inaction intersected with social determinants of health to prompt caregivers to cross the US-Mexico border to access healthcare services in Mexico for their children. Yet, more vulnerable caregivers (i.e., those without documentation status in the US) and their children, accessing healthcare services in the US was not an option limiting caregivers' ability to meet their children's healthcare needs. In such cases, geography acts as a structural determinant of health. This study shows the importance of geography in health. Rural unincorporated colonias located in the borderlands are precariously located and lack basic critical infrastructure including healthcare access. Within such places, historically and socially marginalized populations become invisible, are subject to the health effects of environmental hazards, and are limited depending on their positionality and thus vulnerability to healthcare services. • Municipal unincorporation contributes to health disparities among Latinx families in US-Mexico borderlands. • Latinx children in colonias are disproportionately exposed to environmental toxins. • Geography acts as a structural determinant of health for Latinx families in colonias. • A binational approach to health services should be prioritized for families in the borderlands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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