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2.
J Surg Res ; 203(1): 22-7, 2016 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27338530

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The trauma pandemic is one of the leading causes of death worldwide but especially in rapidly developing economies. Perhaps, a common cause of trauma-related mortality in these settings comes from the rapid expansion of motor vehicle ownership without the corresponding expansion of national prehospital training in developed countries. The resulting road traffic injuries often never make it to the hospital in time for effective treatment, resulting in preventable disability and death. The current article examines the development of a medical first responder training program that has the potential to reduce this unnecessary morbidity and mortality. METHODS: An intensive training workshop has been differentiated into two progressive tiers: acute trauma training (ATT) and broad trauma training (BTT) protocols. These four-hour and two-day protocols, respectively, allow for the mass education of laypersons-such as police officials, fire brigade, and taxi and/or ambulance drivers-who are most likely to interact first with prehospital victims. Over 750 ATT participants and 168 BTT participants were trained across three Indian educational institutions at Jodhpur and Jaipur. Trainees were given didactic and hands-on education in a series of critical trauma topics, in addition to pretraining and post-training self-assessments to rate clinical confidence across curricular topics. Two-sample t-test statistical analyses were performed to compare pretraining and post-training confidence levels. RESULTS: Program development resulted in recruitment of a variety of career backgrounds for enrollment in both our ATT and BTT workshops. The workshops were run by local physicians from a wide spectrum of medical specialties and previously ATT-trained police officials. Statistically significant improvements in clinical confidence across all curricular topics for ATT and BTT protocols were identified (P < 0.0001). In addition, improvement in confidence after BTT training was similar in Jodhpur compared with Jaipur. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest a promising level of reliability and reproducibility across different geographic areas in rapidly developing settings. Program expansion can offer an exponential growth in the training rate of medical first responders, which can help curb the trauma-related mortality in rapidly developing economies. Future directions will include clinical competency assessments and further progressive differentiation into higher tiers of trauma expertise.


Assuntos
Países em Desenvolvimento , Serviços Médicos de Emergência/métodos , Socorristas/educação , Tratamento de Emergência/métodos , Ferimentos e Lesões/terapia , Competência Clínica , Currículo , Serviços Médicos de Emergência/organização & administração , Humanos , Índia , Desenvolvimento de Programas , Avaliação de Programas e Projetos de Saúde
3.
Drug Alcohol Depend ; 156: 170-175, 2015 Nov 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26455552

RESUMO

AIM: To analyze interrelationships in the consumption of opiates and cannabinoids in a legal regime and, specifically, whether consumers of opiates and cannabinoids treat them as substitutes for each other. METHOD: Econometric dynamic panel data models for opium consumption are estimated using the generalized method of moments (GMM). A unique dataset containing information about opiate (opium) consumption from the Punjab province of British India for the years 1907-1918 is analyzed (n=252) as a function of its own price, the prices of two forms of cannabis (the leaf (bhang), and the resin (charas, or hashish)), and wage income. Cross-price elasticities are examined to reveal substitution or complementarity between opium and cannabis. RESULTS: Opium is a substitute for charas (or hashish), with a cross price elasticity (߈3) of 0.14 (p<0.05), but not for bhang (cannabis leaves; cross price elasticity=0.00, p>0.10). Opium consumption (߈1=0.47 to 0.49, p<0.01) shows properties of habit persistence consistent with addiction. The consumption of opium is slightly responsive (inelastic) to changes in its own price (߈2=-0.34 to -0.35, p<0.05 to 0.01) and consumer wages (߈1=0.15, p<0.05). CONCLUSION: Opium and hashish, a form of cannabis, are substitutes. In addition, opium consumption displays properties of habit persistence and slight price and wage income responsiveness (inelasticity) consistent with an addictive substance.


Assuntos
Abuso de Maconha/economia , Abuso de Maconha/epidemiologia , Entorpecentes , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Opioides/economia , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Opioides/epidemiologia , Ópio , Algoritmos , Comércio , Humanos , Renda , Índia/epidemiologia , Abuso de Maconha/psicologia , Modelos Econométricos , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Opioides/psicologia , Fatores Socioeconômicos
4.
Influenza Other Respir Viruses ; 8(3): 267-73, 2014 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24612961

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: As an island and a former British colony, Sri Lanka is a case of special interest for the study of 1918-1919 influenza pandemic because of its potential for isolation from as well as integration into the world epidemiologic system. OBJECTIVES: To estimate population loss attributable to the influenza pandemic and weekly district-level excess mortality from the pandemic to analyze its spread across the island. METHODS: To measure population loss, we estimated a population growth model using a panel of 100 district-level observations on population for five consecutive censuses from 1891 to 1931, allowing for a one-time drop in population in 1918-1919. To estimate weekly excess mortality from the pandemic, we estimated a seasonally adjusted weekly time series of district-specific mortality estimates from vital registration records, ranked them, and plotted the ranks on weekly maps to create a picture of the geographic pattern of propagation across Sri Lanka. RESULTS: Total loss of population from the influenza pandemic was 307 000 or approximately 6·7% of the population. The pandemic peaked in two discrete (northern and southern) regions in early October of 1918 and in a third (central) region in early March 1919. CONCLUSIONS: The population loss estimate is significantly higher than earlier estimates of mortality from the pandemic in Sri Lanka, suggesting underreporting of influenza-attributable deaths and a role for influenza-related fertility declines. The spatial pattern of peak mortality indicates the presence of two distinct entry points and three distinct epidemiologic regions, defined by population density and ethnicity, in colonial Sri Lanka.


Assuntos
Influenza Humana/epidemiologia , Distribuição por Idade , História do Século XX , Humanos , Vírus da Influenza A Subtipo H1N1/fisiologia , Influenza Humana/história , Influenza Humana/mortalidade , Influenza Humana/virologia , Pandemias , Estações do Ano , Sri Lanka/epidemiologia
5.
Drug Alcohol Depend ; 90 Suppl 1: S69-84, 2007 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16982158

RESUMO

The aim of this paper is to demonstrate, using an example, the utility of historical data to illuminate important questions in the field of drug dependence research. The literature on the consumption of addictive substances often characterizes users as being one of two types: "addicts" and "casual users." An econometric characterization of the responses of opium consumers in the late-colonial Netherlands Indies to changes in the price of opium and other important variables is provided, which explicitly acknowledges the existence of different types of opium smokers, as modeled in the underlying theory. The results reveal systematic differences between the behavior of groups of high-intensity consumers and groups of low-intensity consumers. While the findings show that both groups showed similar total price elasticities, the high-intensity consumers were affected predominantly via changes in the number of users rather than in per capita consumption. In the course of the analysis, various analytic methods that are new to the field of drug dependence research are introduced.


Assuntos
Custos de Medicamentos/história , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Opioides/história , Ópio/história , História do Século XX , Humanos , Indonésia
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