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1.
Mil Med ; 189(Suppl 3): 665-670, 2024 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39160834

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Between June 2021 and December 2022, the Practice-Based Implementation (PBI) Network conducted a pilot to study the optimization of behavioral health technicians (BHTs) within military behavioral health (BH) care system specialty BH clinics. Behavioral health technicians are paraprofessionals found in all branches of the military, and with training across a variety of clinic functions. Behavioral health technicians support BH specialty providers in many clinic functions (i.e., administrative, case management, clinical, and outreach). The primary aim of the BHT optimization pilot was to increase BHTs' involvement in clinical care. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Four military BH outpatient clinics participated in the BHT optimization pilot. Participants from the 4 clinics included 12 BHTs, 3 providers, 3 internal facilitators, and 3 dual-role providers/internal facilitators. The pilot asked each clinic to assess their BHT utilization needs, and then barriers and facilitators to BHT optimization were addressed by creating site-specific BHT optimization plans. RESULTS: The degree to which clinic optimization of BHTs impacts provider workload, clinic capability or capacity, and patient access to evidence-based care could not be determined during the BHT optimization pilot. However, individualized clinic BHT optimization plans and strategies appeared to be feasible and acceptable methods for military health system BH clinics to optimize BHTs' clinical skills. Lessons learned from this pilot included that: (1) clinics should consider establishing and maintaining action plans with specific, actionable goals for use of BHTs, and (2) BHT supervision, training, and clinic processes supporting optimization should be prioritized despite time constraints. CONCLUSION: Overall, individualized clinic BHT optimization plans and strategies appear to be feasible and acceptable methods for military health system BH clinics to optimize BHTs' clinical skills.


Asunto(s)
Pilotos , Humanos , Proyectos Piloto
2.
Health Soc Care Community ; 30(6): e5885-e5896, 2022 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36121172

RESUMEN

Anxiety during pregnancy is highly prevalent in low- and middle-income countries. The relative importance of different sources and types of perceived support in the Pakistani context is unknown. We explored social support during pregnancy and the role of social isolation in Pakistani women's experiences of antenatal anxiety. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 19 pregnant women with symptoms of anxiety and 10 female healthcare providers at a public urban hospital. We used inductive and deductive thematic coding to analyse the data. Many pregnant women reported feelings of physical and social isolation, even when living in joint families with larger social networks. Often fearing censure by their in-laws and peers for sharing or seeking help with pregnancy-related anxieties, women reported relying on husbands or natal family members. Normative expectations around pregnancy such as male gender preference, perceived immutability of wives' domestic responsibilities and expectations of accompanied travel by women may serve as sources of disconnectedness in the antenatal period. Providers viewed social isolation and deficits in social support during pregnancy as contributing to worse anxiety symptoms, reduced access to care and poorer health behaviours. One limitation is that the hospital setting for this study may have resulted in underreporting of abuse or neglect and limited inclusion of pregnant women who do not utilise facility-based antenatal care. In conclusion, husbands and natal families were key in reducing social isolation in pregnancy and mitigating anxiety, while in-laws did not always confer support. Targeted strategies should enhance existing support and strengthen in-law family relationships in pregnancy.


Asunto(s)
Mujeres Embarazadas , Atención Prenatal , Femenino , Embarazo , Masculino , Humanos , Pakistán , Ansiedad , Aislamiento Social
3.
PLoS One ; 16(2): e0244671, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33544747

RESUMEN

This study explores pregnant women's and healthcare providers' perspectives on the role of patient-provider communication in experiences of antenatal anxiety within a low-resource setting. In 2017-18, we consecutively sampled pregnant women (n = 19) with at least mild anxiety and purposively sampled antenatal care providers (n = 10) from a public hospital in Punjab Province, Pakistan. We then conducted in-depth interviews and thematically coded them with a combination of inductive and deductive coding methodologies. We found that patients expressed a desire for warm, empathetic communication from providers who demonstrate respect, attentiveness, and a shared lived experience. Providers revealed an awareness that their heavy caseloads, high stress levels, and discourteous tones adversely influenced communication with pregnant women and may exacerbate their anxieties, but also reported that compassionately addressing women's concerns, providing financial problem-solving and/or assistance, and moderating conflicting healthcare desires between patients and their families could alleviate anxiety in pregnant women. Patients reported feelings of anxiety stemming from a belief that they received lower quality communication from antenatal providers at public hospitals than patients received from antenatal providers at private hospitals, an experience that they partially attributed to their low socioeconomic status. Meanwhile, some providers disclosed potentially stigmatizing views of women from particular sociocultural backgrounds or low socioeconomic status, including perceptions that appeared to shape communication with these patients in antenatal care encounters. Our findings provide preliminary evidence that communication between pregnant women and antenatal providers that is warm, normalizes patient fears, and integrates patients' interpersonal and financial considerations can mitigate pregnant women's experiences of anxiety and reduce barriers to accessing antenatal care in Pakistan's public healthcare facilities.


Asunto(s)
Ansiedad/psicología , Comunicación , Relaciones Médico-Paciente , Mujeres Embarazadas/psicología , Atención Prenatal , Adolescente , Adulto , Actitud del Personal de Salud , Femenino , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Hospitales Públicos , Humanos , Pakistán , Embarazo , Adulto Joven
4.
Soc Sci Med ; 269: 113563, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33309442

RESUMEN

In Ukraine, women constitute a third of all new HIV infections, and injection drug use accounts for nearly half of HIV infections among women. Women who use drugs (WWUD) often have diminished access to drug use treatment, HIV care, and other health and social services or underutilize women-specific services such as maternal health services. While interpersonal and contextual factors diminish access to and utilization of services among WWUD, rules, processes, and bureaucratic structures also systematically exclude women from accessing services and resources. Institutions, bureaucratic processes, and instruments of legibility such as documents regulate who can and cannot access services and raise questions about "deservingness." In this paper, we use the lens of bureaucracy to explore paperwork as a form of structural violence through its production of "legible" citizens, often through reinforcement of gender stereotypes and moral narratives of deservingness. Between December 2017 and October 2018, we interviewed 41 medical and social service providers and 37 WWUD in two Ukrainian cities. Our analysis revealed that requirements for internal passports and residency permits-the primary state apparatus through which rights to services are granted in Ukraine-compelled participants to continually render themselves visible to the state in order to receive services, despite financial, logistical and other challenges that undermined women's ability to obtain documents. These requirements exposed them to new forms of stigma and exclusion, such as reduced opportunities for employment and losing custody of children. Nongovernmental organizations, due to funding cuts, curtailed direct services such as support groups but became liaisons between clients and the state. They enforced new narratives of deservingness, such as the ability to define "good" behavior or reward social relationships with agency staff. Ukraine's current reforms to social safety net institutions present an opportunity to interrogate underlying assumptions about spheres of responsibility for the country's most marginalized and stigmatized groups.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por VIH , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas , Abuso de Sustancias por Vía Intravenosa , Niño , Femenino , Humanos , Estigma Social , Ucrania
5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32650551

RESUMEN

Common mental disorders are highly prevalent among pregnant women in low- and middle-income countries, yet prenatal anxiety remains poorly understood, particularly in the sociocultural context of South Asia. Our study explored sources, mitigators, and coping strategies for anxiety among symptomatic pregnant women in Pakistan, particularly in relation to autonomy in decision-making and social support. We interviewed 19 pregnant married women aged 18-37 years recruited from 2017-2018 at a public hospital in Rawalpindi who screened positive for anxiety. Thematic analysis was based on both inductive emergent codes and deductive a priori constructs of pregnancy-related empowerment. Gender norms emerged as an important dimension of Pakistani women's social environment in both constraining pregnancy-related agency and contributing to prenatal anxiety. Women's avenues of self-advocacy were largely limited to indirect means such as appeals to the husband for intercession or return to her natal home. The levels of autonomy during pregnancy depended on the area of decision-making, and peer/family support was a critical protective factor and enabling resource for maternal mental health. Women's disempowerment is a key contextual factor in the sociocultural experience of prenatal maternal anxiety in South Asia, and further examination of the intersections between empowerment and perinatal mental illness might help inform the development of more context-specific preventive approaches.


Asunto(s)
Adaptación Psicológica , Trastornos de Ansiedad , Ansiedad , Empoderamiento , Autonomía Personal , Mujeres Embarazadas , Adolescente , Adulto , Toma de Decisiones , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Pakistán , Embarazo , Mujeres Embarazadas/psicología , Investigación Cualitativa , Adulto Joven
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