keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38729061/what-would-it-really-take-to-solve-the-overdose-epidemic-in-the-united-states
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bianca D Rivera, Samuel R Friedman
The high overdose mortality rates in the United States poses several questions: Why have they been increasing exponentially since 1979? Why are they so high? And how can they be greatly reduced? Building on past research, the causes of the increase seem to be deeply rooted in US social and economic structures and processes, rather than due only to opioid prescription patterns or the advent of synthetic opioids. Given this, we consider what changes might be needed to reverse the exponentially-increasing overdose mortality...
May 9, 2024: International Journal on Drug Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728976/indigenous-peoples-health-culturally-grounded-evidence-from-the-baka-southeastern-cameroon
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandrine Gallois, Appolinaire Ambassa, Fernando Ramírez Rozzi
Indigenous Peoples are exposed to the impacts of the climatic, ecological and socioeconomic changes, yet there is a need for a better understanding of their health and higher involvement of Indigenous Peoples in health promotion design and implementation. Our study brings empirical data on the healthcare system of the Baka, forager-horticulturalists from Cameroon. Using a mixed methods approach, we explored the health issues they encounter, the emic determinants of health and healthcare system, and the different threats towards their healthcare system...
May 3, 2024: Social Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728676/national-overview-of-nonprofit-hospitals-community-benefit-programs-to-address-housing
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Annalise Celano, Pauline Keselman, Timothy Barley, Ryan Schnautz, Benjamin Piller, Dylan Nunn, Maliek Scott, Cory Cronin, Berkeley Franz
BACKGROUND: Housing is a critical social determinant of health that can be addressed through hospital-supported community benefit programming. OBJECTIVES: To explore the prevalence of hospital-based programs that address housing-related needs, categorize the specific actions taken to address housing, and determine organizational and community-level factors associated with investing in housing. RESEARCH DESIGN: This retrospective, cross-sectional study examined a nationally representative dataset of administrative documents from nonprofit hospitals that addressed social determinants of health in their federally mandated community benefit implementation plans...
June 1, 2024: Medical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728420/do-not-risk-homicide-abortion-after-10-weeks-gestation
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Braddock
When an abortion is performed, someone dies. Are we killing a human person? Widespread disagreement exists. However, it is not necessary to establish personhood in order to establish the wrongness of abortion: a substantial chance of personhood is enough. We defend The Do Not Risk Homicide Argument: abortions are wrong after 10 weeks gestation because they substantially and unjustifiably risk homicide, the unjust killing of a human person. Why 10 weeks? Because the cumulative evidence establishes a substantial chance (a more than one in five chance) that preborn human beings are persons after 10 weeks (if not before then)...
May 10, 2024: Journal of Medicine and Philosophy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728372/risk-compensation-after-covid-19-vaccination-evidence-from-vaccine-rollout-by-exact-birth-date-in-south-korea
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jisoo Hwang, Seung-Sik Hwang, Hyuncheol Bryant Kim, Jungmin Lee, Junseok Lee
We utilize the phased rollout of COVID-19 vaccines by exact birth date in South Korea as a natural experiment for testing risk compensation. People may resume face-to-face social activities following vaccination because they perceive lower risk of infection. Applying a regression discontinuity design based on birth date cutoffs for vaccine eligibility, we find no evidence of risk-compensating behaviors, as measured by large, high-frequency data from credit card and airline companies as well as survey data. We find some evidence of self-selection into vaccine take-up based on perception toward vaccine effectiveness and side effects, but the treatment effects do not differ between compliers and never-takers...
May 10, 2024: Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728279/reports-on-sexual-violence-published-in-an-online-chinese-newspaper-a-new-frame-research
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yang Liu, Zhongzheng Fang
The leading role of the media is very important in the new media era to build the reporting system and framework of sexual violence crimes, guide people's awareness and public opinion, and improve society's vigilance on sexual crimes. This study took People's Daily Online, a representative online media in China, as a research object to analyse the reporting of sexual crimes over the past 15 years. We conducted relevant searches for specific keywords set in the Python crawler and used IBM SPSS Statistics 19 software to analyse the frequency of relevant content...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728239/professional-regulation-in-the-digital-era-a-qualitative-case-study-of-three-professions-in-ontario-canada
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathleen Leslie, Sophia Myles, Abeer A Alraja, Patrick Chiu, Catharine J Schiller, Sioban Nelson, Tracey L Adams
Technology is transforming service delivery and practice in many regulated professions, altering required skills, scopes of practice, and the organization of professional work. Professional regulators face considerable pressure to facilitate technology-enabled work while adapting to digital changes in their practices and procedures. However, our understanding of how regulators are responding to technology-driven risks and the impact of technology on regulatory policy is limited. To examine the impact of technology and digitalization on regulation, we conducted an exploratory case study of the regulatory bodies for nursing, law, and social work in Ontario, Canada...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728217/applications-of-quantitative-microbial-risk-assessment-to-respiratory-pathogens-and-implications-for-uptake-in-policy-a-state-of-the-science-review
#28
REVIEW
Lizhan Tang, William J Rhoads, Antonia Eichelberg, Kerry A Hamilton, Timothy R Julian
BACKGROUND: Respiratory tract infections are major contributors to the global disease burden. Quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) holds potential as a rapidly deployable framework to understand respiratory pathogen transmission and inform policy on infection control. OBJECTIVES: The goal of this paper was to evaluate, motivate, and inform further development of the use of QMRA as a rapid tool to understand the transmission of respiratory pathogens and improve the evidence base for infection control policies...
May 2024: Environmental Health Perspectives
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38728022/projected-life-expectancy-for-adolescents-with-hiv-in-the-us
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne M Neilan, Ogochukwu L Ufio, Isaac Ravi Brenner, Clare F Flanagan, Fatma M Shebl, Emily P Hyle, Kenneth A Freedberg, Andrea L Ciaranello, Kunjal Patel
IMPORTANCE: Life expectancy is a key measure of overall population health. Life expectancy estimates for youth with HIV in the US are needed in the current HIV care and treatment context to guide health policies and resource allocation. OBJECTIVE: To compare life expectancy between 18-year-old youth with perinatally acquired HIV (PHIV), youth with nonperinatally acquired HIV (NPHIV), and youth without HIV. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Using a US-focused adolescent-specific Monte Carlo state-transition HIV model, we simulated individuals from age 18 years until death...
May 3, 2024: JAMA health forum
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38727503/identifying-features-of-a-system-of-practice-to-inform-a-contemporary-competency-framework-for-paramedics-in-canada
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alan M Batt, Meghan Lysko, Jennifer L Bolster, Pierre Poirier, Derek Cassista, Michael Austin, Cheryl Cameron, Elizabeth A Donnelly, Becky Donelon, Noël Dunn, William Johnston, Chelsea Lanos, Tyne M Lunn, Paige Mason, Sean Teed, Charlene Vacon, Walter Tavares
INTRODUCTION: Paramedic practice is highly variable, occurs in diverse contexts, and involves the assessment and management of a range of presentations of varying acuity across the lifespan. As a result, attempts to define paramedic practice have been challenging and incomplete. This has led to inaccurate or under-representations of practice that can ultimately affect education, assessment, and the delivery of care. In this study, we outline our efforts to better identify, explore, and represent professional practice when developing a national competency framework for paramedics in Canada...
May 5, 2024: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38727502/perceptions-of-tobacco-price-policy-among-students-from-sapienza-university-of-rome-can-this-policy-mitigate-smoking-addiction-and-its-health-impacts
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martina Antinozzi, Susanna Caminada, Mariano Amendola, Vittoria Cammalleri, Barbara Dorelli, Monica Giffi, Felice Giordano, Alessandra Marani, Roberta Noemi Pocino, Davide Renzi, Alessandro Sindoni, Maria Sofia Cattaruzza
Tobacco use is one of the main risk factors for non-communicable diseases. Avoiding youth initiation and treating addiction are fundamental public health issues to ensure better health. Among tobacco control policies, increasing tobacco price is the single most effective intervention. It reduces tobacco consumption, especially among youths, while representing a government financing source. This study aimed to assess the agreement with the proposal of a one-euro increase in tobacco price earmarked to health issues among students at Sapienza University...
May 4, 2024: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38727432/perceived-loneliness-social-isolation-and-social-support-resources-of-frail-older-people-ageing-in-place-alone-in-italy
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Gabriella Melchiorre, Marco Socci, Giovanni Lamura, Sabrina Quattrini
This paper presents some findings from the IN-AGE ("Inclusive ageing in place") study, which the authors carried out in 2019 in Italy. It explores the available social support resources for frail older people with functional limitations ageing in place alone, and possible links between their social isolation and perceived loneliness. The authors conducted qualitative/semi-structured interviews involving 120 participants aged 65 years and over, and used a mixed-methods analysis (quantitative/qualitative). The main results show the family as the main help resource for daily activities, but also for intimate confidences against social isolation, especially when said relatives live close...
April 23, 2024: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38727074/from-online-brains-to-online-lives-understanding-the-individualized-impacts-of-internet-use-across-psychological-cognitive-and-social-dimensions
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph Firth, John Torous, José Francisco López-Gil, Jake Linardon, Alyssa Milton, Jeffrey Lambert, Lee Smith, Ivan Jarić, Hannah Fabian, Davy Vancampfort, Henry Onyeaka, Felipe B Schuch, Josh A Firth
In response to the mass adoption and extensive usage of Internet-enabled devices across the world, a major review published in this journal in 2019 examined the impact of Internet on human cognition, discussing the concepts and ideas behind the "online brain". Since then, the online world has become further entwined with the fabric of society, and the extent to which we use such technologies has continued to grow. Furthermore, the research evidence on the ways in which Internet usage affects the human mind has advanced considerably...
June 2024: World Psychiatry: Official Journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38727072/absolute-and-relative-outcomes-of-psychotherapies-for-eight-mental-disorders-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pim Cuijpers, Clara Miguel, Marketa Ciharova, Mathias Harrer, Djordje Basic, Ioana A Cristea, Nino de Ponti, Ellen Driessen, Jessica Hamblen, Sadie E Larsen, Minoo Matbouriahi, Davide Papola, Darin Pauley, Constantin Y Plessen, Rory A Pfund, Kim Setkowski, Paula P Schnurr, Wouter van Ballegooijen, Yingying Wang, Heleen Riper, Annemieke van Straten, Marit Sijbrandij, Toshi A Furukawa, Eirini Karyotaki
Psychotherapies are first-line treatments for most mental disorders, but their absolute outcomes (i.e., response and remission rates) are not well studied, despite the relevance of such information for health care users, providers and policy makers. We aimed to examine absolute and relative outcomes of psychotherapies across eight mental disorders: major depressive disorder (MDD), social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), specific phobia, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and borderline personality disorder (BPD)...
June 2024: World Psychiatry: Official Journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38726620/connecting-unstably-housed-veterans-living-in-rural-areas-to-health-care-perspectives-from-health-care-navigators
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kalea Jones, Meagan Cusack, Gala True, Taylor E Harris, Jill S Roncarati, Christel Antonellis, Tatiana Brecht, Ann Elizabeth Montgomery
OBJECTIVE: To understand existing care practices and policies, and potential enhancements, to improve the effectiveness of the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) Health Care Navigators (HCN) in linking Veterans experiencing housing instability in rural areas with health care services. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING: We used primary data collected during semistructured interviews with HCNs (n = 21) serving rural areas across the United States during Spring 2022...
May 10, 2024: Health Services Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38726616/child-contact-partner-conflict-and-psychological-distress-among-incarcerated-fathers-testing-the-mediating-role-of-perceived-social-support
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Magda Javakhishvili, Joshua J Turner, Brian J Higginbotham, Kay Bradford
The mechanism(s) through which child contact can lead to more positive mental health and romantic relationship outcomes among incarcerated fathers are not sufficiently studied. The present study tests whether the associations between frequency of child contact and later psychological distress and conflict in romantic relationships are mediated by perceived social support. Self-reported longitudinal data from a sample of incarcerated men who participated in a fatherhood education program ( n  = 2,096) were analyzed using structural equation modeling...
May 10, 2024: International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38726584/financial-inclusion-for-people-with-disability-a-scoping-review
#37
REVIEW
Louise Puli, Natasha Layton, Diane Bell, Abu Zafar Shahriar
BACKGROUND: Financial exclusion is a human rights issue affecting health equity. Evidence demonstrates that financial exclusion is exacerbated for people with disability and those in low- to middle-income countries (LMIC). Barriers to financial access include limited demand for services, banking inadequacies in catering to people with disability, and insufficiently accessible information technologies (ICT) and infrastructure. OBJECTIVES: This scoping review sought to identify barriers to and facilitators of financial inclusion for people with disability in LMIC...
December 31, 2024: Global Health Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38726561/translating-government-policy-into-practice-how-new-uk-medical-schools-enact-widening-participation
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Cleland, Jordan Buxton, Elizabeth Hughes, Fiona Patterson
INTRODUCTION: Increasing the diversity of medical students, or widening participation (WP), is critical for social justice and healthcare delivery, and many governments are setting policies to encourage WP. However, establishing policy is only the first step in an educational change process: we also need to know "how" policy is enacted or how medical schools interpret and put into practice WP policy. Addressing this gap, the aim of this study was to examine policy enactment in six new UK medical schools with an explicit WP mandate...
May 10, 2024: Medical Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38726466/enhancing-healthcare-access-for-an-older-population-the-age-friendly-emergency-department
#39
REVIEW
Sangil Lee, Rachel M Skains, Phillip D Magidson, Nadine Qadoura, Shan W Liu, Lauren T Southerland
Healthcare systems face significant challenges in meeting the unique needs of older adults, particularly in the acute setting. Age-friendly healthcare is a comprehensive approach using the 4Ms framework-what matters, medications, mentation, and mobility-to ensure that healthcare settings are responsive to the needs of older patients. The Age-Friendly Emergency Department (AFED) is a crucial component of a holistic age-friendly health system. Our objective is to provide an overview of the AFED model, its core principles, and the benefits to older adults and healthcare clinicians...
June 2024: Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38726234/cross-border-mobility-in-the-meuse-rhine-euroregion-impact-of-covid-19-border-restrictions-on-everyday-activities-and-visiting-social-network-members
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Céline J A van Bilsen, Stephanie Brinkhues, Christian J P A Hoebe, Christina Stabourlos, Chrissy P B Moonen, Stefaan Demarest, Daniëlle A T Hanssen, Inge H M van Loo, Paul H M Savelkoul, Dirk Philippsen, Brigitte A M van der Zanden, Nicole H T M Dukers-Muijrers
INTRODUCTION: Cross-border mobility (CBM) to visit social network members or for everyday activities is an important part of daily life for citizens in border regions, including the Meuse-Rhine Euroregion (EMR: neighboring regions from the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany). We assessed changes in CBM during the COVID-19 pandemic and how participants experienced border restrictions. METHODS: Impact of COVID-19 on the EMR' is a longitudinal study using comparative cross-border data collection...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
keyword
keyword
79629
2
3
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.