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1.
Front Public Health ; 12: 1414032, 2024.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39114520

RÉSUMÉ

Purpose: Humanistic caring in clinical practice is important for quality care and patient satisfaction. This study aimed to assess patient satisfaction with humanistic care for emergency patients in China and its associated factors. Methods: From October 2023 to December 2023, a multi-center cross-sectional survey was conducted across 28 provinces and 87 hospitals in China, using a sampling method for inpatients in emergency department. Patient satisfaction with humanistic care was evaluated by a self-developed questionnaire with 32 items across 6 dimensions. Stepwise multiple linear regression was used to explore associated factors. Results: A total of 3,003 valid questionnaires were successfully collected, with an effective rate of 86.05%. The emergency patients' total mean humanistic caring satisfaction score was 4.67 ± 0.66. Age, medical insurance type, specialized emergency department visited, waiting times, whether had accompanied person, hospital level, and hospital type are correlated factors (P < 0.05) regarding humanistic caring satisfaction. The correlation analysis showed perceived value, and its three dimensions were moderately correlated with humanistic caring satisfaction. The multiple linear regression showed waiting time (ß = -0.219, P < 0.05), whether had accompanied person (ß = -0.192, P < 0.05), hospital level (ß = -0.137, P < 0.05), functional value (ß = 0.197, P < 0.05), and emotional value (ß = 0.418, P < 0.05) were strong predictors. Conclusion: Hospitals at all levels should improve patients' perceived value, shorten waiting times, and provide caregivers with improved humanistic care in the emergency department.


Sujet(s)
Service hospitalier d'urgences , Humanisme , Satisfaction des patients , Humains , Études transversales , Chine , Femelle , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Satisfaction des patients/statistiques et données numériques , Adulte , Enquêtes et questionnaires , Service hospitalier d'urgences/statistiques et données numériques , Sujet âgé , Hôpitaux , Adolescent , Jeune adulte
2.
JMIR Ment Health ; 11: e56569, 2024 Jul 02.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38958218

RÉSUMÉ

Unlabelled: Large language model (LLM)-powered services are gaining popularity in various applications due to their exceptional performance in many tasks, such as sentiment analysis and answering questions. Recently, research has been exploring their potential use in digital health contexts, particularly in the mental health domain. However, implementing LLM-enhanced conversational artificial intelligence (CAI) presents significant ethical, technical, and clinical challenges. In this viewpoint paper, we discuss 2 challenges that affect the use of LLM-enhanced CAI for individuals with mental health issues, focusing on the use case of patients with depression: the tendency to humanize LLM-enhanced CAI and their lack of contextualized robustness. Our approach is interdisciplinary, relying on considerations from philosophy, psychology, and computer science. We argue that the humanization of LLM-enhanced CAI hinges on the reflection of what it means to simulate "human-like" features with LLMs and what role these systems should play in interactions with humans. Further, ensuring the contextualization of the robustness of LLMs requires considering the specificities of language production in individuals with depression, as well as its evolution over time. Finally, we provide a series of recommendations to foster the responsible design and deployment of LLM-enhanced CAI for the therapeutic support of individuals with depression.


Sujet(s)
Intelligence artificielle , Dépression , Humains , Dépression/psychologie , Dépression/thérapie , Langage , Communication , Humanisme
3.
Ann Fam Med ; 22(4): 352-354, 2024.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39038970

RÉSUMÉ

Modern measures of physician value are couched in terms of productivity, volume, finance, outcomes, cure rates, and acquisition of an increasingly vast knowledge base. This inherently feeds burnout and imposter syndrome as physicians experience an inability to measure up to unrealistic standards set externally and perceived internally. Ancient and modern wisdom suggests that where populations fail to flourish, at root is a failure to grasp a vision or true purpose. Traditional philosophical conceptions of a physician's purpose center around compassion, empathy, and humanism, which are a key to thwarting burnout and recovering professional satisfaction. New compassion-based metrics are urgently needed and will positively impact physician well-being and improve population health.


Sujet(s)
Épuisement professionnel , Empathie , Médecins , Humains , Épuisement professionnel/psychologie , Médecins/psychologie , Satisfaction professionnelle , Relations médecin-patient , Humanisme
5.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(3): 295-296, 2024 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836480

RÉSUMÉ

The following article uses storytelling, poetry, and findings from a humanbecoming inquiry on waiting to describe the arduous universal humanuniverse living experience of waiting.


Sujet(s)
Humanisme , Humains , Narration , Poésie comme sujet
6.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(3): 215-218, 2024 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836479

RÉSUMÉ

In this column, the author describes a heuristic framework for teaching-learning nursing made of the humanbecoming paradigm, living the art of humanbecoming, and the humanbecoming teaching-learning model. A story helps to clarify the heuristic framework.


Sujet(s)
Heuristique , Apprentissage , Enseignement , Humains , Enseignement infirmier/méthodes , Humanisme , Théorie des soins infirmiers
7.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(3): 199-203, 2024 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836482

RÉSUMÉ

The author of this paper discusses the phenomenon of feeling betrayed theoretically and conceptually. Through the use of the humanbecoming concept inventing model, the author illuminates the now-truth of feeling betrayed as agonizing anguish arising with the shattered trust of communion-aloneness. At the level of science, feeling betrayed was declared as imaging the powering of connecting-separating as an ingenuous proclamation with the scholar's chosen artform.


Sujet(s)
Humanisme , Humains , Théorie des soins infirmiers
8.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(3): 291-294, 2024 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836488

RÉSUMÉ

The purpose of this paper is to discuss heuristics, guided by Parse's (2021a) community model, to understand how health policies emerge from the unique values and beliefs of community constituents. Within this paper, there is a discussion about heuristics, health policy, Parse's humanbecoming paradigm, and policy implications reflected upon with the change concepts of the humanbecoming community model.


Sujet(s)
Politique de santé , Heuristique , Humains , Politique de santé/tendances , Humanisme
9.
Cuad Bioet ; 35(113): 71-88, 2024.
Article de Espagnol | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38734924

RÉSUMÉ

This study presents the most representative notions of the transhumanism concept in light of its temporal development, starting from the first time that there is a record of a similar conception, with the aim of drawing a common thread between all of them and elucidating the relationship that these may have. For this, the works of Dante, Julian Huxley, FM-2030, Max More, Nick Bostrom and Raymond Kurzweil will be reviewed. From this analysis it will be extracted that all these different conceptions of transhumanism are united by their search for transcendence in the human being and the longing for a future state of divinity; Likewise, they differ in the way these common elements are understood. Such common and divergent notions allow a deeper understanding of what transhumanism is and promote a new perspective to understand these cutting-edge ideas.


Sujet(s)
Humanisme , Humains , Humanisme/histoire , Histoire du 20ème siècle , Histoire du 19ème siècle , Histoire du 18ème siècle
10.
Altern Ther Health Med ; 30(5): 44-52, 2024 May.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38819185

RÉSUMÉ

Context: The World Health Organization (WHO) seeks to support member states in providing Traditional, Complementary, and Integrative Medicine (TCIM) services within Primary Health Care (PHC). Health professionals' offer of and referral to complementary therapies and humanizing practices can encounter some difficulties due to both conventional medical knowledge and institutional organizations. An integrative care model of complementary therapies and humanizing practices may be a strategy to overcome such difficulties. Objective: The study aimed to identify an integrative care model of complementary therapies and humanizing practices and to determine their influence on PHC. Design: The research team performed: (1) a qualitative meta-synthesis based on data from two systematic reviews that included more than 15000 professionals from 18 countries, and (2) qualitative research conducted with 24 participants, professionals from the South and Southeast regions of São Paulo, SP, Brazil. Setting: The study occurred at the Paulista School of Medicine at the Federal University of Sao Paulo (UNIFESP) in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Results: The analysis of the integrative care model resulted in two syntheses: (1) that PHC is offering complementary therapies and humanizing practices that have had a positive and subjective influence on PHC and (2) complementary therapies and humanizing practices improve PHC's service quality and resolvability and reduce medicalization. Conclusions: The work process in PHC may pose difficulties for the provision of integrative and holistic care yet promoting a model to integrate complementary therapies and humanizing practices with conventional medicine in health services may improve PHC and the perceptions of health professionals, managers, and patients about the positive and subjective effects of these practices.


Sujet(s)
Thérapies complémentaires , Médecine intégrative , Soins de santé primaires , Humains , Recherche qualitative , Brésil , Humanisme
11.
Int J Med Educ ; 15: 48-58, 2024 May 14.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38748556

RÉSUMÉ

Objectives: To explore the content, ways, and methods of family education in cultivating students' humanistic literacy. Methods: We used a cross-sectional study and collected questionnaire data from 616 eight-year clinical medical students of Central South University by a convenience sampling survey. To determine the influence of parents' educational attainment on children's humanistic literacy, the students were mainly divided into two groups including parents' education attainment was college or above (Group B) and parents' education attainment below college (Group A). Non-parametric tests are used to test the differences between the two groups in humanistic spirit, interpersonal communication, humanistic knowledge and ability, and development planning. Results: Group B had better social morality and a sense of social responsibility than group A (P=0.024, P=0.001). Compared to group A, students in group B could better integrate into the new environment, communicate with students from different institutes, and take an active part in activities (P=0.001). In a nutshell, students in group B had more excellent humanistic knowledge and ability and could consult medical literature and write in Chinese or English more proficiently than group A (P=0.0001, P=0.0001). Conclusions: We found that the eight-year medical students whose parents' highest education attainment is college or above almost mastered a higher level of humanistic literacy. It demonstrated family humanistic literacy education is irreplaceable. We recommend systematic efforts to build a reasonable and effective family humanistic literacy education platform and form an educational synergy with school education to make the cultivation of humanistic literacy among students more efficient.


Sujet(s)
Niveau d'instruction , Humanisme , Parents , Étudiant médecine , Humains , Étudiant médecine/psychologie , Études transversales , Parents/psychologie , Parents/enseignement et éducation , Femelle , Mâle , Enquêtes et questionnaires , Adulte , Lettrisme , Jeune adulte , Enseignement médical premier cycle/méthodes
13.
Fam Med Community Health ; 12(Suppl 3)2024 Apr 12.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38609087

RÉSUMÉ

Storylines of Family Medicine is a 12-part series of thematically linked essays with accompanying illustrations that explore the many dimensions of family medicine, as interpreted by individual family physicians and medical educators in the USA and elsewhere around the world. In 'V: ways of thinking-honing the therapeutic self', authors present the following sections: 'Reflective practice in action', 'The doctor as drug-Balint groups', 'Cultivating compassion', 'Towards a humanistic approach to doctoring', 'Intimacy in family medicine', 'The many faces of suffering', 'Transcending suffering' and 'The power of listening to stories.' May readers feel a deeper sense of their own therapeutic agency by reflecting on these essays.


Sujet(s)
Médecine de famille , Médecins de famille , Humains , , Émotions , Humanisme
14.
Nurs Open ; 11(3): e2123, 2024 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38429899

RÉSUMÉ

AIM: This study aims to investigate the current status and determinants of humanistic care practice abilities among standardized training nurses in China during the post-COVID-19 era, as well as to propose management strategies. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study. METHODS: Deliberately chosen were 517 standardized training nursing students from a provincial-level training facility in western China. RESULTS: The respondents had a mean ± SD age of 21.23 ± 1.34 years, and 92.0% of them voluntarily opted for the nursing profession. Almost all (99.8%) respondents had at least a college degree. The standardized training nurses scored an average of (130.31 ± 14.18) on humanistic care ability, which was significantly related to some sociodemographic variables. The average scores for the five dimensions of nursing communication ability, psychological adjustment ability, moral and legal application ability, nursing aesthetic ability, and care practice ability were 30.78, 17.61, 32.23, 18 and 31.67, respectively. All these dimensions showed positive correlations with the overall score of humanistic care practice ability.


Sujet(s)
COVID-19 , Infirmières et infirmiers , Humains , Jeune adulte , Adulte , Études transversales , Humanisme , Chine
15.
J Nephrol ; 37(1): 1-2, 2024 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38436889
16.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(2): 166-167, 2024 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38491878

RÉSUMÉ

This introduction reminds nurses to use a nursing perspective in their work with other clinicians and researchers. In this introduction, the humanbecoming perspective is used to help nurses see a group of persons with specific challenges or threatening circumstances as a case study of an important phenomenon, so as to remain as humane as possible in their practice, teaching, and research.


Sujet(s)
Humanisme , Humains
17.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(2): 173-180, 2024 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38491880

RÉSUMÉ

It is important to explore the ways that the working lives of persons provides meaning in personal, professional, and organizational ways. In this paper, the author utilized the processes of Parse's (2021a) humanbecoming hermeneutic sciencing (discoursing with penetrating engaging, interpreting with quiescent beholding, and understanding with inspiring envisaging) and the leading-following model to further understanding of the meaning of "working" through Stephen Schwarz's Broadway show, Working, the Musical (Browning & Schwartz, 1982/2002). Although not a formal sciencing project, this interpretive reflection provided a way to "see" how work is "lived out" uniquely.


Sujet(s)
Musique , Humains , Humanisme , Herméneutique , Théorie des soins infirmiers
18.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(2): 103-104, 2024 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38491884

RÉSUMÉ

The author explores humanbecoming hermeneutic sciencing and provides exemplars of paradoxes that are used by scholars in this mode of inquiry.


Sujet(s)
Humanisme , Humains , Herméneutique
19.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(2): 134-141, 2024 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38491886

RÉSUMÉ

In this paper, the scholar explored the universal humanuniverse living experience of feeling sad with the humanbecoming concept inventing model. The now-truth of feeling sad is penetrating discomfort arising with contemplating joy-sorrow of affiliations amid envisioning new possibilities. The theoretical statement as the ingenuous proclamation of feeling sad is imaging the connecting-separating of transforming with the scholar's chosen artform, Melancholy by Albert Gyorgy. The scholar aimed to advance nursing knowledge of the universal humanuniverse living experience of feeling sad.


Sujet(s)
Émotions , Chagrin , Humains , Dépression , Modèles théoriques , Humanisme
20.
J Cancer Educ ; 39(3): 349-351, 2024 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38369649

RÉSUMÉ

One of the most frequent, although widely understandable, reactions of people diagnosed with an incurable tumor is represented by incredulity, anger, and the denial of the impossibility of a definitive cure. Often, a picture of intense anxiety quickly takes over, overlapping the ever-growing collective hysteria of modern society, the result of a complex cultural mechanism in which technocracy often prevails over thought, introspection, and, in a broader sense, humanism. In this health drama, all actors often complain of formal inaccuracies while paying little attention to substantive ones. We argue that a more human emphatic patient-family-doctor relationship training to consider the undeniable progress of medicine and the fragility of all of us.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs , Relations médecin-patient , Humains , Tumeurs/psychologie , Humanisme
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