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1.
Health Hum Rights ; 25(1): 51-65, 2023 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37266310

RESUMEN

Extended life expectancies and shifting dynamics in chronic disease have changed the landscape of public health interventions worldwide, with an increasing emphasis on chronic care. As a result, transition from pediatric to adult care for medically complex adolescents and young adults is a growing area of intervention. Transition medicine is a nascent field whose current emphasis is on middle- and high-income countries, and thus far its methods and discourse have reflected those origins. Through several case-based examples, this paper aims to highlight the possibilities of an analytic approach grounded in structural competency for transforming transition medicine through a human rights-based framework, with an emphasis on imagining a more global framework for transition medicine. Our cases highlight the disparities between patients navigating pediatric to adult-based care, illuminating social stigma, stratification between public and private insurances, engagement in risk-taking behaviors, family conflict, and challenges with transition readiness. To reimagine transition medicine so that it is based on human rights, we must prioritize structural solutions that embrace multisectoral integration and holistic mental health support rather than oppress and marginalize these critical systemic adaptations. We aim to reconfigure this scaffolding to center structures that integrate holistic well-being and imagine alternate realities to healing. Our work contributes to the literature bringing structural competency to new spaces of clinical practice, contextualizing new frontiers for the exploration of chronic diseases across diverse clinical contexts worldwide.


Asunto(s)
Transición a la Atención de Adultos , Adolescente , Adulto Joven , Humanos , Niño , Derechos Humanos , Renta
2.
Glob Public Health ; 18(1): 2193834, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36989128

RESUMEN

Colonial history has deeply influenced the structures that govern global health. Though many curricula promote equity, few focus on developing competency in understanding and dismantling colonialism, and the structural barriers to global health equity. To dismantle colonial structures and create equitable collaborations, learners must be able to recognise how colonialism permeates global health practice. We propose a praxis cycle in education that asks learners to actively engage with these concepts. The praxis cycle includes: Theory: Learners explore the principles of decoloniality to understand how attitudes and practices are shaped by biased social structures influenced by colonialism. Reflection: Learners reflect on their work in LMIC settings through a lens of decoloniality and positionality. Action: Learners work in LMIC settings where they apply and actively engage with these concepts and insights. During implementation of this curriculum, we encountered several challenges including the cognitive dissonance of the learner to changing mental models of global health practice, existing systemic barriers to changing one's practice and the development of accountability mechanisms for learners in this type of curriculum. Intentionally incorporating a praxis cycle helps learners recognise their role in disrupting the structural forces that promote inequities, and actively dismantle the forces upholding systemic oppression.


Asunto(s)
Salud Global , Aprendizaje , Humanos , Curriculum , Educación en Salud , Escolaridad
3.
Ann Glob Health ; 88(1): 99, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36380745

RESUMEN

The current movement to 'decolonize' global health aims to both dismantle colonial frameworks that perpetuate inequity and racism, as well as to rebuild and uplift structures and systems that celebrate indigeneity. However, it is critical to recognize that teaching decoloniality within global health education is more than just the acknowledgement that there are key paradigms missing from current global health education. It is imperative to have a methodology to hold ourselves and our learners accountable to progress in practices and ideals that promote equity-based praxis. In this paper, we propose the creation of a tool to assess learner levels and their progression over time in both recognizing the impacts of colonialism and acting to transform their own global health praxis towards equity and decoloniality. We developed a model to illustrate an increasing scope and impact of decolonial and global health equity praxis. We hypothesize through this model that the way in which learners engage with power dynamics and structural advocacy at each level is essential to describing learner stages. Based on extensive literature review, existing curricular frameworks, global partner discussion(s), feedback on our pilot curriculum, and adaptation of philosophical theory, these learner milestones were conceptualized. We discuss the inherent challenges in assessment of the complex mix of knowledge, attitude and skills described in these milestones with the understanding that any such assessment would always be formative, as we all continue learning how to do better. We hope these milestones can be utilized to promote critical transformational change in the field of global health. This requires deep self-reflection and examination of existing structures of oppression followed by intentional reparative actions to embody decoloniality in our praxis and advocacy and reimagine global health based on equity and local leadership.


Asunto(s)
Colonialismo , Salud Global , Humanos , Curriculum , Aprendizaje , Educación en Salud
4.
J Gen Intern Med ; 37(1): 217-221, 2022 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34561829

RESUMEN

The COVID-19 pandemic plunged hospital systems into resource-deprived conditions unprecedented since the 1918 flu pandemic. It brought forward concerns around ethical management of scarcity, racism and distributive justice, cross-disciplinary collaboration, provider wellness, and other difficult themes. We, a group of medical educators and global health educators and clinicians, use the education literature to argue that experience gained through global health activities has greatly contributed to the effectiveness of the COVID-19 pandemic response in North American institutions. Support for global health educational activities is a valuable component of medical training, as they build skills and perspectives that are critical to responding to a pandemic or other health system cataclysm. We frame our argument as consideration of three questions that required rapid, effective responses in our home institutions during the pandemic: How can our health system function with new limitations on essential resources? How do we work at high intensity and volume, on a new disease, within new and evolving systems, while still providing high-quality, patient-centered care? And, how do we help personnel manage an unprecedented level of morbidity and mortality, disproportionately affecting the poor and marginalized, including moral difficulties of perceived care rationing?


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Médicos , Salud Global , Humanos , América del Norte , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2
6.
BMJ Paediatr Open ; 5(1): e001059, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33959687

RESUMEN

Background: Ageing into adulthood is challenging at baseline, and doing so with a chronic disease can add increased stress and vulnerability. Worldwide, a substantial care gap exists as children transition from care in a paediatric to adult setting. There is no current consensus on safe and equitable healthcare transition (HCT) for patients with chronic disease in resource-denied settings. Much of the existing literature is specific to HIV care. The objective of this narrative review was to summarise current literature related to adolescent HCT not associated with HIV, in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) and other resource-denied settings, in order to inform equitable health policy strategies. Methods: A literature search was performed using defined search terms in PubMed and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature databases to identify all peer-reviewed studies published until January 2020, pertaining to paediatric to adult HCT for adolescents and young adults with chronic disease in resource-denied settings. Following deduplication, 1111 studies were screened and reviewed by two independent reviewers, of which 10 studies met the inclusion criteria. Resulting studies were included in thematic analysis and narrative synthesis. Results: Twelve subthemes emerged, leading to recommendations which support equitable and age-appropriate adolescent care. Recommendations include (1) improvement of community health education and resilience tools for puberty, reproductive health and mental health comorbidities; (2) strengthening of health systems to create individualised adolescent-responsive policy; (3) incorporation of social and financial resources in the healthcare setting; and (4) formalisation of institution-wide procedures to address community-identified barriers to successful transition. Conclusion: Limitations of existing evidence relate to the paucity of formal policy for paediatric to adult transition in LMICs for patients with childhood-onset conditions, in the absence of a diagnosis of HIV. With a rise in successful treatments for paediatric-onset chronic disease, adolescent health and transition programmes are needed to guide effective health policy and risk reduction for adolescents in resource-denied settings.


Asunto(s)
Transición a la Atención de Adultos , Adolescente , Adulto , Niño , Enfermedad Crónica , Atención a la Salud , Política de Salud , Humanos , Pobreza , Adulto Joven
7.
J Adolesc Health ; 67(3): 453-455, 2020 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32684437

RESUMEN

Young adults with chronic and complex diseases face systemic barriers, care fragmentation, and increased vulnerabilities. Novel coronavirus pandemic has proven to further complicate care coordination for young adult patients with medical and psychosocial complexities. The BRIDGES Young Adult Program at Boston Children's Hospital has 6 years of experience advocating for and empowering young adults with chronic medical conditions, and their families, through outpatient consults aimed to assist with subspecialty guidance and defragmentation of care during the time of transition from pediatric to adult care. Recently, the BRIDGES consult team developed a pandemic-responsive approach to facilitate individual emergency planning and empowerment of self-management for these high-risk patients. Through the use of a virtual platform, consults were conducted with a multidisciplinary team to support patients and families with system navigation, advance care planning, emergency preparedness, chronic care management, and coping during this time of crisis. BRIDGES aimed to equip patients and families with knowledge and resources, within a rapidly changing environment, to allow for optimal self-care and self-advocacy.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad Crónica/terapia , Infecciones por Coronavirus/epidemiología , Pandemias , Participación del Paciente/métodos , Neumonía Viral/epidemiología , Cuidado de Transición/organización & administración , COVID-19 , Enfermedad Crónica/epidemiología , Urgencias Médicas , Humanos , Navegación de Pacientes , Autocuidado/psicología , Adulto Joven
9.
Am J Trop Med Hyg ; 102(6): 1178-1180, 2020 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32314700

RESUMEN

The 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic highlights the experience of communities in the global South that have grappled with vulnerability and scarcity for decades. In the global North, many frontline workers are now being similarly forced to provide and ration care in unprecedented ways, with minimal guidance. We outline six reflections gained as Western practitioners working in resource-denied settings which inform our current experience with COVID-19. The reflections include the following: managing trauma, remaining flexible in dynamic situations, and embracing discomfort to think bigger about context-specific solutions to collectively build back our systems. Through this contextualized reflection on resilience, we hope to motivate strength and solidarity for providers, patients, and health systems, while proposing critical questions for our response moving forward.


Asunto(s)
Betacoronavirus/patogenicidad , Infecciones por Coronavirus/epidemiología , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/ética , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/economía , Pandemias , Neumonía Viral/epidemiología , Salud Pública/economía , COVID-19 , Toma de Decisiones Clínicas/ética , Infecciones por Coronavirus/diagnóstico , Infecciones por Coronavirus/economía , Infecciones por Coronavirus/terapia , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud/economía , Disparidades en Atención de Salud/ética , Humanos , Relaciones Interpersonales , América del Norte/epidemiología , Pandemias/economía , Neumonía Viral/diagnóstico , Neumonía Viral/economía , Neumonía Viral/terapia , Guías de Práctica Clínica como Asunto , Salud Pública/ética , SARS-CoV-2 , Incertidumbre
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