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1.
Aust J Prim Health ; 20(2): 158-61, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23469827

ABSTRACT

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a common cause of hospital readmissions worldwide. Outcomes for COPD patients improve if care is more integrated. COPD patients and their health care providers at a district hospital and community health service were interviewed about their perceptions of integration of care. Patients were confused about provider roles, had little understanding of their disease, had difficulty accessing services and did not have COPD action plans. Health care providers espoused integration of COPD care. Care was reasonably well integrated in the hospital. Integration of care was compromised in the community because COPD patients went to the emergency department when symptoms became unmanageable, while only attending their GPs for routine booked appointments. Integration could be improved if health care providers spent more time with patients, promoting understanding of the disease, supporting self-management and liaising with other providers. Patients would benefit from an action plan and additional support. Potentially preventable COPD admissions will continue without action to improve integration of community services and patients' understanding of their condition.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Health , Case Management , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated/methods , Patient Satisfaction , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/therapy , Chronic Disease , Community Health Services , Health Services Accessibility , Hospitals, District , Humans , Interviews as Topic/methods , Physician's Role
2.
Science ; 200(4344): 937-41, 1978 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-347581

ABSTRACT

Early clinical trials, observational or randomized, hasten the prompt evaluation of new operations. Early clinical surveillance facilitates the design and implementation of randomized clinical trials when they are necessary. Of equal or greater importance, long-term surveillance of operations allows continuing evaluation when their use becomes widespread. Standards, coordination, review, and funding of the evaluation of new operations we believe should be centralized in a single national agency, for which an Institute of Health Care Assessment might be created. Implementation and regulation of the evaluation we believe should remain at the local or regional level with existing mechanisms and agencies being used, such as institutional human research committees and local health systems agencies.


Subject(s)
General Surgery/methods , Angina Pectoris/surgery , Clinical Trials as Topic , Coronary Artery Bypass , Coronary Disease/surgery , General Surgery/standards , Hip Joint/surgery , Humans , Hypertension, Portal/surgery , Jejunum/surgery , Obesity/therapy , Portacaval Shunt, Surgical
3.
Science ; 157(3788): 574-6, 1967 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6028924

ABSTRACT

Subjects who were administered thiopental showed a loss of memory for events discussed while they were under sedation. We tested the subjects for recognition memory of pictures and recall of associated pairs of letters and words, and found that the subsequent memory loss was correlated with the concentration of thiopental in the venous blood at the time the material was learned. Retention did not appear to be state-dependent because the subject, while under sedation, could recall material learned prior to sedation, and because recall was not facilitated by reinstatement of the sedation.


Subject(s)
Learning/drug effects , Memory/drug effects , Thiopental/pharmacology , Female , Humans , Hypnosis , Male
4.
Biophys Chem ; 109(2): 305-24, 2004 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15110948

ABSTRACT

Oxidized Fe protein from Azotobacter vinelandii (Av2(0)) was reduced by dithionite (DT) in the absence and presence of nucleotides, over the temperature range 10-40 degrees C, over the pH range 7-8, and in various buffers--inorganic phosphate, TES, HEPES, and Tris. The reduction of each species of Fe protein--Av2(0), Av2(0)(MgATP)2, and Av2(0)(MgADP)2--was resolved into at least three exponential phases, with relative amplitudes of each phase varying over the range of experimental conditions, suggesting a dynamic population shift of kinetically distinct species. The rapid phase of Av2(0) reduction predominated at low temperature and pH, and in Tris buffer; rapid Av2(0)(MgATP)2 reduction was favored at high temperature and pH, and in phosphate buffer; and Av2(0)(MgADP)2 reduction was favored under more physiologically relevant conditions of 20 degrees C, pH 7.5, and in phosphate buffer. The rates of reduction of Fe protein species did not change with buffer, but temperature and pH do have an effect on the rates. With the appropriate constants, an empirically derived equation estimates the rate of Fe protein reduction at any temperature and pH within the limits 10-40 degrees C and pH 7-8, for a given species of Fe protein, and a given phase of the reaction. At 23.0 degrees C and pH 7.4, the rate of the dominant phase of Av2(0) reduction is 1.9 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1). Under the same conditions, the rates of the two dominant phases of Av2(0)(MgATP)2 reduction are 1.2 x 10(6) and 1.5 x10 (5) M(-1) s(-1); and the rate of the dominant phase of Av2(0)(MgADP)2 reduction is 3.5 x 10(6) in M(-1) s(-1). Thermodynamic activation parameters for each phase of reduction were calculated. No breaks in the Arrhenius plots for any Fe protein species were observed.


Subject(s)
Adenine Nucleotides/chemistry , Azotobacter vinelandii/enzymology , Dithionite/chemistry , Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Adenosine Diphosphate/chemistry , Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Algorithms , Buffers , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Kinetics , Oxidation-Reduction , Temperature , Thermodynamics
5.
Arch Dermatol Res ; 285(4): 193-6, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8342962

ABSTRACT

Infection with herpes simplex virus (HSV) is the most common precipitating factor in the development of erythema multiforme (EM). It is not known why only a few of the many individuals who experience recurrent HSV infection also develop herpes-associated EM (HAEM), although a difference in the HSV-specific immune response has been postulated. The purpose of this study was to compare the HSV-specific immune response of individuals with HSV infection alone with that of individuals with HAEM. There were 21 patients in each of the two groups. Four parameters of the HSV-specific immune response were examined: (1) anti-HSV IgG titers were measured by ELISA; (2) antibody neutralization was assessed using a plaque assay; and (3) antibody-dependent complement-mediated cytotoxicity, and (4) antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity were investigated using a previously described in vitro HSV-specific cytotoxicity assay. No statistically significant differences were detected between the two patient groups. Thus, a difference in these HSV-specific immune mechanisms does not explain the development of HAEM in some individuals with recurrent HSV infection.


Subject(s)
Erythema Multiforme/immunology , Herpes Labialis/immunology , Herpes Simplex/immunology , Immunoglobulin G/blood , Antibody Formation , Antibody Specificity , Complement System Proteins/immunology , Cytotoxicity Tests, Immunologic , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Erythema Multiforme/complications , Herpes Simplex/complications , Humans , Recurrence
6.
Surg Clin North Am ; 62(4): 657-68, 1982 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7112356

ABSTRACT

The authors suggest that new surgical procedures be carried out initially in selected institutions and that complex procedures for which it has been or can be demonstrated that mortality is inversely related to the volume of experience also be regionalized. Regionalization in the latter instance can have a small overall impact on surgical practice but a large impact on the adverse consequences of high risk operations that are performed only occasionally.


Subject(s)
General Surgery , Regional Medical Programs , Surgical Procedures, Operative/mortality , Female , Humans , Male , Surgery Department, Hospital , United States
7.
J Health Serv Res Policy ; 2(1): 56-9, 1997 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10180656

ABSTRACT

Fifty years ago, when medicine had relatively few effective treatments to offer, its value was unquestioned. Twenty-five years ago clinicians had become concerned that treatment could sometimes do harm and McKeown published epidemiological evidence claiming that medicine did little good. This state of affairs was used by Illich to bolster his crusade against technology in general. Today it is clear that medicine now makes a large contribution to health. But doubts still exist and alternative pathways to health are continually exhorted. Large-scale efforts at behavioural modification, encouraging the adoption of healthier lifestyles, have been largely unsuccessful. Social activists now argue that funds should be diverted from medical care to social programmes that, they claim, might contribute more to health. While it is true that health is strongly associated with socio-economic status (income, education and occupation), there is little sense of how best to reallocate scarce resources so as to improve the health impact of social and economic programmes. Social reform is not a substitute for medical care. Rather, our social environment is a second, important but quite separate, determinant of health and well-being.


Subject(s)
Holistic Health , Medical Laboratory Science , Environmental Health , Health Promotion , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Preventive Medicine , Social Class , United Kingdom
8.
Inquiry ; 25(1): 51-8, 1988.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2966126

ABSTRACT

"Efficacy"-medical care that is achievable under optimal conditions-is generally considered to be the appropriate standard for quality assurance. In this paper I argue that what is needed is a broadened definition of efficacy that includes the appropriateness of an intervention as well as the level of technical skill used in its provision. To establish efficacy, so defined, I suggest that well-designed nonexperimental, as well as experimental, studies be undertaken that employ registries and data banks, as well as formal clinical trials, and that decision analysis be used to synthesize the results. This will require a significant effort and investment in outcome studies of medical and surgical technologies. With growing recognition by the public that quality can be highly variable-aided by the Health Care Financing Administration's publication of hospital mortality and morbidity data-the medical care system will ignore outcome studies and quality assurance at its own peril.


Subject(s)
Efficiency , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Humans , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Regional Health Planning , United States
9.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 13(5): 10-1, 1983 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6580284

ABSTRACT

KIE: The authors argue that, while the President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research made significant contributions to medical practice, the creation of another commission may reduce or supplant the responsibilities of all federal health agencies to monitor the ethical aspects of their activities. Should the sporadic record of the federal government in this area necessitate the creation of another national body, they propose the creation of a private Institute for Health Care Evaluation, an idea that is also being studied by the nonfederal Institute of Medicine.^ieng


Subject(s)
Advisory Committees , Bioethical Issues , Ethics, Medical , Federal Government , Politics , Ethical Review , Genetic Counseling , Genetic Engineering , Health Policy , Humans , Informed Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Resource Allocation , United States
10.
BMJ ; 313(7072): 1582-4, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8990992

ABSTRACT

Freedom and responsibility, how much of each and how they are balanced, have profound implications for our personal lives and for our work. The health of a population and its achievement in the workplace are enhanced when individuals have some freedom and some responsibility, but not too much of either, and when civil associations of individuals rather than individuals acting alone are the essential social units. The consistent association of social contacts with health and productivity provides strong support for the premise that intimate relationships are the focus around which people's lives revolve. Membership of a "social network" may be merely conforming to a reigning social norm, and this could mean having to pay an important price in the loss of creativity associated with individualism. But social conformity should not prevent individuals from going their own way, and it should be possible to combine the luxury of individuality with an active life in civic affairs. Less than complete freedom may fall short of existential utopia, but it may be best for our health and wellbeing.


Subject(s)
Freedom , Health , Social Responsibility , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Social Behavior , Social Support , Socialization
11.
J Allied Health ; 15(4): 329-37, 1986 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3793611

ABSTRACT

Several recent articles have addressed the role of allied health professionals in health promotion and disease prevention (HP/DP). The consensus is that allied health professionals are on the threshold of making major contributions to the HP/DP initiative. The focus of these contributions usually centers on the role of allied health professionals in clinical settings and the traditional medical-model emphasis on direct patient contact. In addition, there is discussion of the programmatic changes that will be required to meet the challenge of integrating health promotion concepts, knowledge, and skills into current professional curricula. The purpose of this paper is to examine critically the rationale behind providing HP/DP education for allied health professionals and to discuss the implications of such education for professional preparation programs.


Subject(s)
Allied Health Personnel/education , Curriculum , Health Promotion/education , Primary Prevention/education , Humans , Programmed Instructions as Topic , Role , United States
12.
J Hypertens Suppl ; 7(6): S330-1, 1989 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2632734

ABSTRACT

Hypertension is associated with abnormal lipoprotein metabolism, which may be exacerbated by some groups of antihypertensive drugs and represents an additional powerful coronary heart disease risk factor. Of our Hypertension Clinic population, 75% had a total fasting serum cholesterol greater than 5.2 mmol/l. Dietary advice and adjustment of antihypertensive therapy has achieved significant reductions in total cholesterol, serum triglycerides and body weight (14%, 18% and 4.3%, respectively) in a cohort of 65 patients reassessed over a period of 3-21 months. The reduction in cholesterol is likely to represent at least a 28% reduction in the risk of a major coronary heart disease event, even before taking account of any improvement in other coronary heart disease risk factors.


Subject(s)
Hypertension/epidemiology , Cholesterol/blood , Cholesterol, HDL/blood , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Hypertension/blood , Hypertension/prevention & control , London/epidemiology , Risk Factors , Triglycerides/blood
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