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Individuals with mental illness often face barriers to voting. One of the primary barriers is not being registered to vote. This paper describes voter support activities (VSAs) provided to hospitalized adults on the acute inpatient psychiatric units at Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute. During the six weeks preceding the 2020 general election, adult inpatients were offered six VSAs and an optional survey examining previous voting behaviors and barriers encountered to voting. VSAs included checking voter registration status and polling location, completing a paper or electronic voter registration application, and requesting a mail-in ballot. Of 189 patients approached, 119 individuals participated in the survey and 60 individuals utilized at least one VSA. This project demonstrates that VSAs are a welcome and feasible resource for psychiatrically hospitalized adults. Psychiatric providers can serve an important role in promoting access to voting-related activities for their patients.
Assuntos
Equidade em Saúde , Transtornos Mentais , Adulto , Humanos , Pacientes Internados , Política , Transtornos Mentais/terapia , PennsylvaniaRESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Professional identity formation (PIF) is a sociocultural process through which medical students adopt the professional role of physician. This process is often unscripted and influenced by informal curricular elements. PIF is as important as the acquisition of knowledge and clinical skill in the continuum of medical education. METHODS: Using the ancient art of mask making, we created a process of reflective expression to explicitly examine and formally promote PIF. Students created individual masks to express elements of self in the context of their medical education experiences. Coupled with a narrative reflection describing the mask and the process of mask making, students were challenged to examine and give shape to their evolving sense of professional identity. Using a retrospective pre/post design, we used the mask-making process to examine identity across 4 years of medical school in a cohort of graduating students. RESULTS: The masks and accompanying narratives showed themes of moving from anxiety and uncertainty at matriculation to a more calm and focused state at the time of graduation. Other themes included the ability to organize complex material and the accumulation of a broad fund of knowledge. Students found the mask-making experience to be introspective and enjoyable. DISCUSSION: Mask making is both a product (mask) and process (creation). As such, mask making is an innovative strategy to examine PIF within individuals and across time. Organization, focus, and self-understanding were common themes of professional growth.
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Patients who are admitted to the hospital frequently (>3 admissions in a 6-month period) are a large driver of health care costs. Recently, research has focused on these groups of super-utilizing patients to try to find ways to meet their care needs in the outpatient setting. However, most research so far has focused on the urban underserved population who do not have a usual source of care. The goal of this study is to identify a group of patients from a suburban academic family medicine practice who have been admitted to the hospital frequently over a 6-month period and interview them to identify patient-perceived barriers to care in the outpatient setting. Nine of the 176 patients identified as frequently hospitalized were interviewed. Interpretive phenomenology analysis was used to identify perceived barriers and facilitators to care. Although some identified barriers were similar to those noted in groups of the urban underserved, including chronic disease and polypharmacy, other barriers were uniquely identified in the nonurban population, including transportation and support at home. Transportation issues, lack of support at home, and poor interdisciplinary communication were found to increase risk for readmission. Conversely, good interdisciplinary communication and ample support from family, including support services at home, were viewed as facilitators to outpatient care.