Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 5 de 5
Filtrar
Mais filtros










Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Curr Opin Anaesthesiol ; 35(2): 201-207, 2022 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35165234

RESUMO

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Intersectionality, or the overlapping nature of social categorizations, such as race, class, and gender, creates interdependent systems of discrimination, disadvantage, and health disparities. The present review examines common shortcomings to diversity management, and proposes targeted improvement frameworks for anesthesiology departments that would offer competitive advantage in training, hiring, and retention, and improved care delivery aimed toward reducing health disparities. RECENT FINDINGS: Studies highlight that physicians equipped to care for diverse populations enhance patient-doctor interactions and reduce health disparities. Moreover, untrained providers and staff who engage in disrespectful behaviors like microaggressions can lead to staff turnover and millions of dollars in lost revenue. Underrepresented minorities continue to have lower faculty academic rank in anesthesiology, fewer partnership opportunities in private practice, and disparate research funding. Diversity-based education and training often overlooks intersectionality and reductively illustrates diverse groups as internally homogenous. Even these developing diversity efforts have become politicized and are perceived as uninteresting, irrelevant to medical practice, or unable to create organizational change. SUMMARY: The synergy of intersectionality mounts considerable challenges that impact patients, colleagues, and communities of practice. Examining intersectionality in education and workplace policy affords tremendous opportunity for improving quality of care for marginalized populations, reducing healthcare costs, and normalizing culture that is inclusive, equitable, and empowering.


Assuntos
Anestesiologia , Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , Enquadramento Interseccional
2.
Curr Opin Anaesthesiol ; 34(2): 149-153, 2021 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33606396

RESUMO

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The ICU is a complex ecosystem in which intensive care physicians, advanced practice providers (APPs), pharmacists, and respiratory therapists work in concert to take care of critically ill patients. The SARS COV2 pandemic highlighted weaknesses in the American healthcare system. This article explores the ability of American healthcare to adapt to this challenge. RECENT FINDINGS: With the COVID-19 pandemic, intensivists, and ventilators have been identified as the most critical components leading to shortages in ICU capacity. Anesthesiologists play a unique role in being able to provide 'flex capacity' with critical care staffing, space, and equipment (post-anesthesia care units, operating rooms, and ventilators). With the advent of APPs, intensive care physician staffing ratios may potentially be increased to cover patients safely in a physician-led team model. Tele-medicine expands this further and can allow hospital coordination for optimizing ICU bed use. SUMMARY: Although intensivists have been able to take care of the increased ICU caseload during the COVID-19 pandemic through recruiting other specialties, the question of what is the appropriate staffing model for the future is yet to be elucidated. Creating stronger multidisciplinary care teams that have the capacity to flex up critical care capacity may be the most prudent longer-term solution.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Médicos , Cuidados Críticos , Humanos , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2 , Estados Unidos , Recursos Humanos
3.
PLoS One ; 10(3): e0115628, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25742622

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Significant disparities in the incidence of polio existed during its eradication campaign in India. In 2006, Muslims, who comprise 16% of the population in affected states, comprised 70% of paralytic polio cases. This disparity was initially blamed on the Muslims and a rumor that the vaccination program was a plot to sterilize their children. Using the framework of structural violence, this paper describes how the socio-political and historical context of Muslim populations in India shaped the polio disparity. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A qualitative study utilizing methods of rapid ethnography was conducted from May-August 2009 in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India. Field methods included participant observation of vaccination teams, historical document research, and 107 interviews with both Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) stakeholders and families with vaccine-eligible children. Almost all respondents agreed that Aligarh was a highly segregated city, mostly due to riots after Partition and during the 1990s. Since the formation of segregated neighborhoods, most respondents described that "Muslim areas" had been underdeveloped compared to "Hindu areas," facilitating the physical transmission of poliovirus. Distrust of the government and resistance to vaccination were linked to this disparate development and fears of sterilization influenced by the "Family Planning Program" from 1976-1977. CONCLUSIONS: Ethnic violence and social marginalization since the Partition and during the rise of Hindu nationalism led to distrust of the government, the formation of segregated slums, and has made Muslims victims of structural violence. This led to the creation of disease-spreading physical environments, lowered vaccine efficacy, and disproportionately higher levels of resistance to vaccination. The causes of the polio disparity found in this study elucidate the nature of possible other health disparities affecting minorities in India. LIMITATIONS: This study is limited by the manual coding of the transcribed data, size, and some dialectal difficulties in translation.


Assuntos
Programas de Imunização , Islamismo , Poliomielite/epidemiologia , Poliomielite/prevenção & controle , Vacina Antipólio Oral , Poliovirus/imunologia , Erradicação de Doenças , Disparidades nos Níveis de Saúde , Humanos , Incidência , Índia/epidemiologia , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Vacinação
4.
Case Rep Neurol Med ; 2013: 516325, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23781357

RESUMO

Neurological manifestations of mononucleosis are extremely rare, occurring in about 1% of all cases. However, when they occur, appropriate treatment must be undertaken to ensure appropriate symptomatic management and reduce morbidity. We present the case of a 25-year-old graduate student with weeklong complaints of fever, sore throat, fatigue, nausea, and "dizziness." She later developed increased sleep requirements, ataxia, vertigo, and nystagmus with a positive EBV IgM titer confirming acute infectious mononucleosis. The patient was clinically diagnosed with EBV-associated cerebellitis and encephalitis, displaying neurological and psychiatric impairment commonly seen in postconcussion syndrome. MRI showed no acute changes. She was started on valacyclovir and a prednisone taper, recovering by the end of twelve weeks. Though corticosteroids and acyclovir are not recommended therapy in patients presenting with EBV-associated ataxia, clinicians may want to keep a low threshold to start these medications in case more serious neurological sequelae develop.

5.
PLoS One ; 7(9): e46274, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23050003

RESUMO

Shifting polio eradication strategies may have generated fear and "resistance" to the eradication program in Aligarh, India during the summer of 2009. Participant observation and formal interviews with 107 people from May to August 2009 indicated that the intensified frequency of vaccination was correlated with patients' doubt in the efficacy of the vaccine. This doubt was exacerbated in a few cases as families were uninformed of the use of monovalent mOPV1, while P3 cases continued to occur. Many families had also come to believe that their children had been adversely affected by OPV after being told the vaccine carried no risk. Though polio is now largely eradicated in India, with only a single case in 2011, greater transparency about changes with vaccination policy may need to be considered to build trust with the public in future eradication programs.


Assuntos
Fadiga , Medo/psicologia , Poliomielite/imunologia , Poliomielite/prevenção & controle , Humanos , Índia , Vacina Antipólio Oral , Vacinação/psicologia
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...