RESUMEN
As health care continues to change and evolve in a digital society, there is an escalating need for physicians who are skilled and enabled to deliver care using digital health technologies, while remaining able to successfully broker the triadic relationship among patients, computers and themselves. The focus needs to remain firmly on how technology can be leveraged and used to support good medical practice and quality health care, particularly around resolution of longstanding challenges in health care delivery, including equitable access in rural and remote areas, closing the gap on health outcomes and experiences for First Nations peoples and better support in aged care and those living with chronic disease and disability. We propose a set of requisite digital health competencies and recommend that the acquisition and evaluation of these competencies become embedded in physician training curricula and continuing professional development programmes.
Asunto(s)
Médicos , Humanos , Anciano , Atención a la Salud , CurriculumRESUMEN
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Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial/ética , Bioética , Ciencia de los Datos/ética , Legislación como Asunto/normas , Aprendizaje Automático/ética , Inteligencia Artificial/tendencias , Beneficencia , Confidencialidad/ética , Congresos como Asunto , Ciencia de los Datos/tendencias , Equidad en Salud/ética , Consentimiento Informado/ética , Aprendizaje Automático/tendencias , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Autonomía Personal , Justicia Social , Responsabilidad SocialRESUMEN
Paediatricians may be asked to provide expert opinion in paediatric cases that come under legal consideration. This article provides suggestions to assist paediatricians in this role and emphasises their duty to the court when giving expert opinion.
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Testimonio de Experto/legislación & jurisprudencia , Pediatría/legislación & jurisprudencia , AustraliaRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Children with rare diseases experience challenges at home and school and frequently require multi-disciplinary healthcare. We aimed to determine health service utilization by Australian children with rare diseases and barriers to accessing healthcare. METHODS: Parents completed an online survey on health professional and emergency department (ED) presentations, hospitalization, and barriers to accessing services. Potential barriers to service access included residential location (city, regional, remote) and child health-related functioning, determined using a validated, parent-completed measure-of-function tool. RESULTS: Parents of 462 children with over 240 rare diseases completed the survey. Compared with the general population, these children were more likely to be hospitalized [odds ratio (OR) = 17.25, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 15.50-19.20] and present to the ED (OR = 4.15, 95% CI = 3.68-4.68) or a family physician (OR = 4.14, 95% CI = 3.72-4.60). Child functional impairment was nil/mild (31%), moderate (48%) or severe (22%). Compared to children with nil/mild impairment, those with severe impairment were more likely to be hospitalized (OR = 13.39, 95% CI = 7.65-23.44) and present to the ED (OR = 11.16, 95% CI = 6.46-19.27). Most children (75%) lived in major cities, but children from regional (OR = 2.78, 95% CI = 1.72-4.55) and remote areas (OR = 9.09, 95% CI = 3.03-25.00) experienced significantly more barriers to healthcare access than children from major cities. Barriers included distance to travel, out-of-pocket costs, and lack of specialist medical and other health services. CONCLUSIONS: Children with rare diseases, especially those with severe functional impairment have an enormous impact on health services, and better integrated multidisciplinary services with patient-centered care are needed. Access must be improved for children living in rural and remote settings.