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1.
2.

Aim

To assess patients’ attitudes toward changing unhealthy lifestyle, confidence in the success, and desired involvement of their family physicians in facilitating this change.

Methods

We conducted a cross-sectional study in 15 family physicians’ practices on a consecutive sample of 472 patients (44.9% men, mean age  [± standard deviation] 49.3 ± 10.9 years) from October 2007 to May 2008. Patients were given a self-administered questionnaire on attitudes toward changing unhealthy diet, increasing physical activity, and reducing body weight. It also included questions on confidence in the success, planning lifestyle changes, and advice from family physicians.

Results

Nearly 20% of patients planned to change their eating habits, increase physical activity, and reach normal body weight. Approximately 30% of patients (more men than women) said that they wanted to receive advice on this issue from their family physicians. Younger patients and patients with higher education were more confident that they could improve their lifestyle. Patients who planned to change their lifestyle and were more confident in the success wanted to receive advice from their family physicians.

Conclusion

Family physicians should regularly ask the patients about the intention of changing their lifestyle and offer them help in carrying out this intention.Unhealthy lifestyle, including unhealthy diet and physical inactivity, is still a considerable health problem all over the world. Despite publicly available evidence about the health risks of unhealthy lifestyle, people still find it hard to improve their unhealthy diet and increase physical activity. Previous studies have shown that attitudes toward lifestyle change depended on previous health behavior, awareness of unhealthy lifestyle, demographic characteristics, personality traits, social support, family functioning, ongoing contact with health care providers, and an individual’s social ecology or network (1-4).As community-based health education approaches have had a limited effect on health risk factors reduction (3,5), the readiness-to-change approach, based on two-way communication, has become increasingly used with patients who lead an unhealthy lifestyle (3,6,7). Family physicians are in a unique position to adopt this approach, since almost every patient visits his/hers family physician at least once in five years (8). Previous studies showed that patients highly appreciated their family physicians’ advice on lifestyle changes (9,10). Moreover, patients who received such advice were also more willing to change their unhealthy habits (3,7,11). The reason for this is probably that behavioral changes are made according to the patient’s stage of the motivational circle at the moment of consultation (12), which can be determined only by individual approach.Although family physicians are convinced that it is their task to give advice on health promotion and disease prevention, in practice they are less likely to do so (13). The factors that prevent them from giving advice are time (14,15), cost, availability, practice capacity (14), lack of knowledge and guidelines, poor counseling skills (16), and personal attitudes (17). It also seems that physicians’ assessment varies considerably according to the risk factor in question. For example, information on diet and physical activity are often inferred from patients’ appearance rather than from clinical measurements (14). Also, health care professionals seldom give advice on recommended aspects of intervention that could facilitate behavioral change (18). As a large proportion of primary care patients are ready to lose weight, improve diet, and increase exercise (19), it is even more important that their family physicians provide timely advice.So far, several studies have addressed patients’ willingness to make lifestyle change (2-5,20) and the provision of professional advice (3,5,7,10,11). However, none of these studies have investigated the relation between these factors. So, the aim of our study was to assess the relation between patients’ attitudes toward changing unhealthy lifestyle, confidence in success, and the desired involvement of their family physicians in facilitating the change.  相似文献   

3.

Aim

To assess the quality of outpatient pediatric care provided by township and village doctors, prevalence of common childhood diseases, care-seeking behavior, and coverage of key interventions in Zhao County in China.

Methods

We conducted two cross-sectional surveys: 1) maternal, newborn, and child health household survey including1601 caregivers of children younger than two years; 2) health facility survey on case management of 348 sick children younger than five years by local health workers and assessment of the availability of drugs and supplies in health facility.

Results

Our household survey showed that the prevalence of fever, cough, and diarrhea was 16.8%, 9.2%, and 15.6% respectively. Caregivers of children with fever, cough, and diarrhea sought care primarily in village clinics and township hospitals. Only 41.2% of children with suspected pneumonia received antibiotics, and very few children with diarrhea received oral rehydration solutions (1.2%) and zinc (4.4%). Our facility survey indicated that very few sick children were fully assessed, and only 43.8% were correctly classified by health workers when compared with the gold standard. Use of antibiotics for sick children was high and not according to guidelines.

Conclusion

We showed poor quality of services for outpatient sick children in Zhao County. Since Integrated Management of Childhood Illness strategy has shown positive effects on child health in some areas of China, it is advisable to implement it in other areas as well.Globally the number of deaths of children younger than five years decreased from 9.6 million to 7.6 million between 2000 and 2010, despite increases in the number of live births (1-3). During the past 20 years China made great achievements concerning child survival. Between 1990 and 2006, under-five mortality rate decreased from 64.6 to 20.6 per 1000 live births, and Millennium Development Goal 4 (MDG4) was achieved nine years ahead of the target set for 2015 (4-6). In 2011, under-five mortality rate was further reduced to 15.6 per 1000 live births (7). While this progress is remarkable, there remains the challenge of urban-rural mortality rate differences. Under-five mortality rate in rural areas was 2.7 times higher than in urban areas, 19.1 and 7.1 per 1000 live births, respectively (7).Under-five mortality decrease was achieved by focusing on social development and sustained economic growth and investments in health system, including expansion of health intervention coverage (8-10). However, these were much lower in rural areas. In 2010, rural residents’ net income per capita was 5919 Yuan, which was less than one third of urban residents’ income (19 109 Yuan) (11), and the health expenditure per capita in urban areas was 3.5 times lower than in rural areas, 2316 Yuan vs 666 Yuan (7). In 2009, the number of health professionals per 1000 population was 6.03 in urban and 2.46 in rural areas, respectively (12). These factors reduce overall rural health care quality as well as the quality of pediatric care, which in rural China is often less than desirable (13-15).To improve child survival, in the mid-1990s the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nation’s Children Funds (UNICEF) jointly developed the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy (16,17). The IMCI strategy has reduced the number of deaths due to diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria, measles, and malnutrition, which was estimated to 70% of all global deaths of children younger than 5 years at that time (18). IMCI has already been introduced into more than 100 countries (WHO 2005). In China it was introduced in 1998 and since 2003 has been expanded to 46 counties in 11 provinces, considerably improving health workers’ skills (19,20). Although IMCI has been in force in China for more than 10 years, training coverage remains very low for township and village doctors (21).In 2010, the Ministry of Health of China launched a research project aiming to explore the use of appropriate medical techniques in rural areas, and IMCI was selected as a key component of the project. We carried out a household survey and a health facility survey in Zhao County, Hebei Province before IMCI implementation. The household survey aimed to assess the prevalence of common childhood diseases, care-seeking behaviors, and population coverage of key interventions, and the health facility survey aimed to assess the quality of outpatient pediatric care by township and village doctors.  相似文献   

4.

Aim

To investigate predictors of occupational burnout, such as emotion work, among health care workers and compare the frequencies of burnout and emotion work in nurses and physicians.

Method

A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 2007 and 2008 among 80 physicians and 76 nurses working in a variety of health care settings in Hungary. The survey contained sociodemographic questions and work- and health-related questions from, respectively, the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Human Services Survey and the Hungarian version of the Frankfurt Emotion Work Scale. To identify the dimensions of emotion work associated with burnout, linear regression analyses were carried out. To analyze differences in burnout and emotion work between nurses and physicians, independent t tests were used.

Results

Nurses reported significantly higher emotional dissonance and fewer regulation possibilities, such as interaction and emotion control, than physicians. However, no differences were found in the level or frequency of burnout. Nurses had fewer regulation requirements regarding sensitivity and sympathy. Linear regression analyses showed that emotional dissonance for emotional exhaustion (β = 0.401) and display of negative emotions for depersonalization (β = 0.332) were the strongest predictors of burnout.

Conclusion

The factors that should be taken into account when developing prevention and intervention programs differ for nurses and physicians. In nurses, the focus should be on stressors and emotional dissonance, while in physicians it should be on work requirements and display and regulation of negative emotions.During the last decade, the topic of emotion work has gained a much greater significance in organizational and health psychology. As defined by Zapf et al, emotion work occurs when employees are required by the employer to regulate their emotions in order to display appropriate emotions to the client (1). Emotion work determines the quality of social interaction between the caregiver and client. Action theory distinguishes 3 aspects of emotion work requirements: regulation requirements, regulation possibilities, and regulation problems. Regulation requirements (display of emotions) are related to properties of the hierarchical-sequential organization of action and constitute the complexity of decision. Regulation possibilities refer to the concept of control. Regulation problems, also known as emotional dissonance, are the discord between felt and expressed emotions and occur when stressors disturb the regulation of action (1,2). Current burnout research is greatly facilitated by theories explaining work stress (3-6). Using Karasek’s job demands control model, the research group of LeBlanc and DeJonge investigated emotional job demands (3-5). It was also found that health care workers are at high risk for emotional exhaustion resulting from interaction with clients (6,7).Burnout is a syndrome of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment occurring in people-oriented and service work (8). Emotional exhaustion refers to feelings of being depleted of one’s emotional resources. Depersonalization is a negative and cynical attitude and behavior toward clients. Reduced personal accomplishment is the self-perception of a decline in one’s own competence and self-efficacy. Burnout has most often been studied in caregiving professionals, such as clinicians, psychologists, social workers, and nurses (9-17). Indeed, several studies have directly measured the emotional aspects of job demands dealing either with emotion work (18-20) or burnout (21-24). However, few studies investigating the relationship between burnout and emotion work have been conducted in the nursing and health care profession, particularly in Hungary and Eastern Europe (25). The differences in burnout and emotion work between nurses and physicians have been studied in the Netherlands, Germany, and Spain (3-5,14,26). Some studies have suggested that physicians experience more burnout than nurses (14,16), while others have suggested the opposite (17).Recently, burnout has been conceptualized as a psychological syndrome that takes place in response to chronic interpersonal stressors on the job (6). According to Zapf, burnout makes individuals no longer able to adequately manage their emotions while interacting with clients (27). According to the model of emotion work by Grandey (28), antecedents of emotion regulation are the situational variables, eg, interaction between the caregiver and client.A relationship between burnout and emotion work has recently been found in the health care setting in Western European countries (3,4,29-31). Health care professionals, especially nurses, are at high risk of burnout because their job requires a high level of emotion work (18-20,32,33). Most studies have found a positive relationship between emotion work and burnout, suggesting that emotional dissonance may predict emotional exhaustion and depersonalization (25,34). Demerouti (35) argues that contribution of job demands and resources to explaining burnout may vary across occupations because these features differ across occupations. Burnout literature usually focuses on general variables that predict burnout and does not distinguish between predictors across health professions (6,8). Thus, we hypothesized that differences in emotion work can be detected between nurses and physicians, although the predictors of the syndrome do not vary.This study assesses the relationships between burnout and emotion work in a sample of Hungarian health care professionals and investigates how emotional job demands relate to the frequency of burnout.  相似文献   

5.

Aim

To examine the association of counties’ urbanization level and gross domestic product (GDP) per capita on the access to health care.

Methods

Counties were divided in two groups according to the urbanization level and GDP per capita in purchasing power standards. The number of physicians per 100 000 inhabitants, the number of physicians in hospitals in four basic specialties, physicians’ workload, average duration of working week, the average number of insurants per general practice (GP) team, and the number of inhabitants covered by one internal medicine outpatient clinic were compared between predominantly urban and predominantly rural counties, and between richer and poorer counties. Our study included only GP teams and outpatients’ clinics under the contract with the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance. Data on physicians were collected from the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance, the Croatian Institute for Public Health, and the Croatian Medical Chamber. Data on the contracts with the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance and health care services provided under these contracts were obtained from the database of the Institute, while population and gross domestic product data were obtained from the Database of the Croatian Institute for Statistics. World Health Organization Health for All Database was used for the international comparison of physician’s data.

Results

There was no significant difference in the total number of physicians per 100 000 inhabitants between predominantly urban and predominantly rural counties (206.9 ± 41.0 vs 175.4 ± 30.3; P = 0.067, t test) nor between richer and poorer counties (194.5 ± 49.8 vs 187.7 ± 25.3; P = 0.703, t test). However, there were significantly fewer GPs per 100 000 inhabitants in rural than urban counties (49.0 ± 5.5 vs 56.7 ± 4.6; P = 0.003, t test). GPs in rural counties had more insurants than those working in urban counties (1.749.8 ± 172.8 vs 1.540.7 ± 106.3; P = 0.004, t test). The working week of specialists in the four observed specialties in hospitals was longer than the recommended 48 hours a week.

Conclusion

The lack of physicians, especially in primary health care can lead to a reduced access to health care and increased workload of physicians, predominantly in rural counties, regardless of the counties’ GDP.Access to health care is achieved by even distribution of health care institutions and health workers across the country (1). Many countries encounter the problem of uneven regional distribution of physicians. In England and Wales, uneven distribution of general practitioners (GP) was found, with minimum changes over the twenty-year period of observation (2). In the USA, almost 20% of population that lives in rural regions is covered by only 9% of physicians, which presents a serious long-lasting problem (3-5). Many other countries have the same problem, such as France, Greece, Australia, Japan, and Chile (6-11). Uneven distribution is mostly a result of migration of physicians (11).In Croatia, the organization of the health care and planning the network of health care institutions are conducted on a county level (12). After completing their internship and passing the Medical State Exam physicians get the Certificate from the Ministry of Health and the practicing license from the Croatian Medical Chamber (1,13-15). This license allows them to work in the entire territory of the country (16). At the beginning of 2007, the Croatian Medical Chamber had 16 354 members (17), of whom 9534 worked in the system of mandatory health insurance, ie, they provided their services on the basis of the contract with the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance. This includes physicians who worked at all three health care levels, including health institutes, as well as private physicians who have contracts with the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance (18-20). Furthermore, 156 physicians work for the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance Administration and 154 physicians work for the Ministry of Defense. Of the remaining physicians, 2692 who do not have contracts with the Croatian Institute for Health Insurance provide their services at the free market and 3818 physicians work outside the health system (21,22).Croatia has fewer physicians per 100 000 inhabitants than Central and Eastern European, Nordic, most of the European Union countries, and former Soviet Union countries (23). In 2006 in Croatia, there were 276 physicians per 100 000 inhabitants, ie, 215 physicians per 100 000 inhabitants in the system of mandatory health insurance (21,22). However, several very rich countries, like the Netherlands and the USA, have fewer than 300 physicians per 100 000 inhabitants and UK and Japan have even fewer than 200 physicians per 100 000 inhabitants (23-25).Our study aimed to show the distribution of physicians across Croatian counties and if urbanization level and gross domestic product (GDP) of counties was associated with the access to health care.  相似文献   

6.
AimTo explore the association(s) between demographic factors, socioeconomic status (SES), social capital, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and mental health among residents of Tehran, Iran.MethodsThe pooled data (n = 31 519) were extracted from a population-based survey Urban Health Equity Assessment and Response Tool-2 (Urban HEART-2) conducted in Tehran in 2011. Mental health, social capital, and HRQoL were assessed using the 28-item General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28), social capital questionnaire, and Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12), respectively. The study used a multistage sampling method. Social capital, HRQoL, and SES were considered as latent variables. The association between these latent variables, demographic factors, and mental health was determined by structural-equation modeling (SEM).ResultsThe mean age and mental health score were 44.48 ± 15.87 years and 23.33 ± 11.10 (range, 0-84), respectively. The prevalence of mental disorders was 41.76% (95% confidence interval 41.21-42.30). The SEM model showed that age was directly associated with social capital (P = 0.016) and mental health (P = 0.001). Sex was indirectly related to mental health through social capital (P = 0.018). SES, HRQoL, and social capital were associated both directly and indirectly with mental health status.ConclusionThis study suggests that changes in social capital and SES can lead to positive changes in mental health status and that individual and contextual determinants influence HRQoL and mental health.Mental health is defined by World Health Organization (WHO) as “a state of well-being in which every individual realizes his/her own potential, can cope with the normal pressures of life, can work productively, and is able to make a contribution to his/her community” (1,2). Mental health and associated disorders have received increasing attention worldwide, largely due to their impact on socio-economic and overall health status of patients (3). Mental health problems remain a global concern, and account for a large fraction of diseases (4,5).The overall prevalence of mental disorders in Iran between 2000 and 2008 ranged from 12.5% to 38.9% and was similar in urban (20.9%) and rural areas (21.3%) (6). Anxiety and depression were more prevalent than somatization and social dysfunction (7). The provinces with the highest prevalence of mental problems were Chaharmahal with 38.3% and Golestan with 37.3% (8).Mental health is usually determined by a complex interaction of sociocultural, psychological, environmental, and demographic factors (9). The prevalence of mental health disorders is significantly associated with age, marital status, educational level, employment, and health-related to quality of life (HRQoL) (10). HRQoL incorporates physical and socio-emotional functioning and is used to measure individual''s perception of health status, welfare, and well-being in a society (11). A frequently used psychometrical tool for the assessment of HRQoL is Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12). Its two main components are physical component summary (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS), both of which are associated with mental health (12). Previous studies have confirmed a bidirectional association between physical health and depression (as one of the main dimensions of mental health) (13). However, it is not clear whether there is a causal relationship between them (13,14).The suggested mechanisms by which depression could lead to physical disability and decreased HRQoL are poor health behaviors, increased risk of physical disease, and characteristics of depression (eg, decreased pain threshold) (15). On the other hand, physical disability can lead to depression and deterioration of mental health due to restriction of social activities and loss of social capital (15). Ultimately, this bilateral association between depression and poor physical health can lead to increasing health risks (14).Mental disorders such as depression and anxiety are also influenced by socioeconomic status (SES) (16). SES is commonly conceptualized as an individual or group’s relative social standing or class (16,17). The main predictors of SES are education level, income, and occupation (15,17,18). The correlations between SES and mental health have been explained by various mechanisms. It has been found that negative impact of low SES on mental health (19) can be reduced by the mediating effect of social capital and physical health (4,18).Social capital has been defined as individual’s social networks and social interactions, shared norms, values, and understandings that facilitate collective action within or among groups. It can act as a protective factor, promoting mental health status by reducing socioeconomic inequalities (4,20) and play an important role in reducing the prevalence of mental disorders (4). Previous studies have found that social ties and support significantly improve mental health (9). Nonetheless, the association between social capital, mental health, quality of life, and SES is not consistently reported (21,22). This population-based study aims to explore the association between demographic factors, SES, social capital, HRQoL, and mental health among Tehran residents using structural-equation modeling (SEM).  相似文献   

7.
8.

Aim

To assess the frequency and forms of pulmonary tuberculosis at autopsy in a high-traffic hospital in the capital city of a country with a low tuberculosis incidence.

Methods

We performed a retrospective search of autopsy data from the period 2000 to 2009 at Sestre Milosrdnice University Hospital Center, Zagreb, Croatia. We also examined patients’ records and histological slides.

Results

Of 3479 autopsies, we identified 61 tuberculosis cases, corresponding to a frequency of 1.8%. Active tuberculosis was found in 33 cases (54%), 23 of which (70%) were male. Of the 33 active cases, 25 (76%) were clinically unrecognized and 19 (76%) of these were male.

Conclusion

Clinically undiagnosed tuberculosis accounted for a substantial proportion of active tuberculosis cases diagnosed at autopsy. Autopsy data may be an important complement to epidemiological data on tuberculosis frequency.Each year, there are nearly 9 million new tuberculosis cases globally and nearly 2 million tuberculosis-related deaths (1,2). Tuberculosis occurs throughout the world, but its incidence varies greatly (3). Preventing infection through contact between healthy individuals and patients is the best measure to fight tuberculosis. The new World Health Organization strategy to fight tuberculosis, Stop TB Strategy (2006-2015), deals with the human immunodeficiency virus epidemic that has increased the incidence of tuberculosis (4). The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control in 2008 created a strategy against tuberculosis called the “Framework Action Plan to Fight Tuberculosis in the European Union” (5). The long-term goal of the Stop TB Strategy and TB Framework Action Plan is to control and ultimately eliminate tuberculosis in the world based on four basic principles: ensure prompt and quality care for all; strengthen the capacity of health systems; develop new tools; and build partnerships and collaboration with countries and stakeholders (4,5).Croatia has a low incidence of tuberculosis, which has been steadily decreasing for the last five decades (6). The peak of the epidemic was at the turn of the 19th and 20th century, when more than 400 deaths per 100 000 people occurred as a direct result of tuberculosis (6). In the mid-20th century, the incidence of new tuberculosis cases was 20 000 per 100 000 people (6). In 2009, the incidence of new tuberculosis cases was 20 per 100 000 people (7) and in 2006 nearly all reported cases showed low levels of multidrug resistance (2,6,7). In accordance with international and European efforts, Croatia has its own guidelines for the fight against tuberculosis, with the following goals: to cure at least 85% of cases; to detect at least 70% of tuberculosis patients, and to decrease the incidence of the disease to 10 per 100 000 people (6-8).Although tuberculosis can affect any organ, 70%-80% of cases suffer from pulmonary tuberculosis (2). Generally, it is possible to detect tuberculosis infection 8-10 weeks after exposure based on a positive tuberculin skin test or an interferon-gamma release assay (9). The rest of the cases have latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI), which is an asymptomatic condition, and cannot transmit the disease (1,2). However, transmission becomes possible under certain conditions such as stress or immune suppression (6,10,11). It is believed that individuals with LTBI account for most infections in low-incidence countries like Croatia, and that this problem is compounded by migration and increasing numbers of homeless persons, alcoholics, and drug addicts (6,10,12).Statistics about tuberculosis prevalence may underestimate the number of infected people, since as many as half of the cases of pulmonary tuberculosis seen at autopsy were previously undiagnosed (12,13). In fact, few studies have examined the relationship between tuberculosis diagnoses at autopsy and reported tuberculosis prevalence in the population (14). This information may help assess whether clinically unrecognized tuberculosis poses a significant public health threat. The present study examined 3479 autopsies performed from 2000 through 2009, to assess the frequency and forms of pulmonary tuberculosis in a country with a low tuberculosis incidence. The results were compared with the number of tuberculosis patients in Croatia recorded in the Croatian Health Service Yearbook for the same period (7,8).  相似文献   

9.

Aim

To identify predictors of burnout syndrome, such as job satisfaction and manifestations of occupational stress, in mental health workers.

Method

The study included a snowball sample of 174 mental health workers in Croatia. The following measurement instruments were used: Maslach Burnout Inventory, Manifestations of Occupational Stress Survey, and Job Satisfaction Survey. We correlated dimensions of burnout syndrome with job satisfaction and manifestations of occupational stress dimensions. We also performed multiple regression analysis using three dimensions of burnout syndrome – emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal accomplishment.

Results

Stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that pay and rewards satisfaction (β = -0.37), work climate (β = -0.18), advancement opportunities (β = 0.17), the degree of psychological (β = 0.41), and physical manifestations of occupational stress (β = 0.29) were significant predictors of emotional exhaustion (R = 0.76; F = 30.02; P<0.001). The frequency of negative emotional and behavioral reactions toward patients and colleagues (β = 0.48), psychological (β = 0.27) and physical manifestations of occupational stress (β = 0.24), and pay and rewards satisfaction (β = 0.22) were significant predictors of depersonalization (R = 0.57; F = 13.01; P<0.001). Satisfaction with the work climate (β = -0.20) was a significant predictor of lower levels of personal accomplishment (R = 0.20; F = 5.06; P<0.005).

Conclusion

Mental health workers exhibited a moderate degree of burnout syndrome, but there were no significant differences regarding their occupation. Generally, both dimensions of job satisfaction and manifestations of occupational stress proved to be relevant predictors of burnout syndrome.Burnout syndrome is a subject of the interdisciplinary area of occupational stress research (1). It is defined as a sustained response to chronic work stress and includes emotional exhaustion, negative attitudes, and feelings toward the recipients of the service (depersonalization), and a feeling of low accomplishment and professional failure. Emotional exhaustion involves feelings of being emotionally overextended and exhausted by one’s work, resulting in a loss of energy and general weakness. Depersonalization refers to the development of impersonal and unfeeling attitudes toward patients and loss of idealism at work. The feeling of reduced personal accomplishment refers to a feeling of lack of competence and personal achievement (2).Burnout syndrome was most often studied among helping professionals (nurses, physicians, psychologists, and social workers), education, and human resources professionals (3,4). In mental health workers, sources of occupational stress are mostly related to the difficulties in the functioning of health care system (5,6), such as time pressure, chronic fatigue, uncertainties in patient care, demanding chronic patients, poor interpersonal relations at work, and role ambiguity (7-9). Moreover, working with patients is considered to be one of the most important factors leading to burnout syndrome (6,10).In the 1990, in Croatia, a number of studies was conducted on the occupational stress in the helping profession (1,11,12) and burnout syndrome (2,13-16), showing their negative effect on the workers’ health and economic losses induced by absence from work and decreased working productivity. Also, some recent studies have identified personal, interpersonal, and organization factors related to job satisfaction, occupational stress, and burnout syndrome in health care (17-21) and have confirmed a correlation between low job satisfaction and burnout syndrome (22,23).Low job satisfaction can lead to increased job mobility and more frequent absenteeism, which may reduce the efficiency of health care services (24). In the previous research (25), the relationship between job satisfaction and burnout syndrome was viewed from two perspectives – the perspective of causes and the perspective of consequences and their effect on attitudes, mental and physical health, productivity, absence from work, fluctuation, and other different forms of work behavior. Some of recent studies have shown that social workers (26-28) and nurses (29) express lower job satisfaction than other professions in mental health care.Low job satisfaction among mental health workers has also been confirmed by some studies conducted in United Kingdom (30) and Canada (31), while several studies have shown exactly the opposite, ie, that there is a high degree of job satisfaction among employees in these professions (6,20,21). Exposure to occupational stress leads to psychological and physical reactions, the intensity and form of manifestation of which depends on personality traits and environmental factors. The most widespread manifestations of occupational stress in helping professions include emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and dehumanized perception of the patient, absenteeism, damaged physical health, and reduced personal satisfaction. Studies have shown that, compared with general population and other professions, social workers suffer from relatively high level of anxiety and depression related to their profession (32,33).The aims of this study were to examine the relation between burnout syndrome and job satisfaction and to identify independent predictors, such as job satisfaction and manifestations of occupational stress, of burnout syndrome among mental health workers.  相似文献   

10.

Aim

To analyze the association of socioeconomic factors with self-perceived health in Serbia and examine whether this association can be partly explained by health behavior variables.

Methods

We used data from the 2007 Living Standards Measurement Study for Serbia. A representative sample of 13 831 persons aged ≥20 years was interviewed. The associations between demographic factors (age, sex, marital status, and type of settlement), socioeconomic factors (education, employment status, and household consumption tertiles), and health behavior variables (smoking, alcohol consumption) and self-perceived health were examined using logistic regression analyses.

Results

A stepwise gradient was found between education and self-perceived health for the total sample, men, and women. Compared to people with high education, people with low education had a 4.5 times higher chance of assessing their health as poor. Unemployed (odds ratio [OR], 1.64; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.29-2.10), inactive (OR, 2.82; 95% CI, 2.49-3.19), and the most deprived respondents (OR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.02-1.34) were more likely to report poor self-perceived health than employed persons and the most affluent group. After adjustment for demographic and health behavior variables, the magnitudes of all associations decreased but remained clearly and significantly graded.

Conclusions

This study revealed inequalities in self-perceived health by socioeconomic position, in particular educational and employment status. The reduction of such inequalities through wisely tailored interventions that benefit people’s health should be a target of a national health policy in Serbia.Socioeconomic inequalities in health between and within countries have received considerable attention in health research. There are many measures that are of potential importance to the study of inequalities in health, but self-perceived health has been a very good source of information on subjective health status, incorporating aspects of both physical and mental health (1). This measure, based on a single-item, has been recommended as a population health measure by the World Health Organization and European Union Commission (2,3). The shape of health inequalities typically follows an inverse gradient, ie, the lower the socioeconomic status, the higher the probability of reporting a poor self-perceived health (4,5). Individuals with lower educational attainment or income, unemployed individuals, and individuals employed in manual occupations, are more likely to have poor self-perceived health (6-8). However, despite this typical pattern, the magnitude of socioeconomic inequalities in health varies widely in different populations (9).A consistent association between socioeconomic determinants and health related variables has been found in many European countries (10-12). Carlson demonstrated that the so-called European health divide, documented for mortality, was also noticeable in self-perceived health (13). Mackenbach et al compared the magnitude of inequalities in self-assessed health among 22 countries in Europe and found that in almost all countries the rates of poorer self-assessments of health were substantially higher in groups of lower socioeconomic status, while the magnitude of the inequalities between groups of higher and lower socioeconomic status was much larger in some countries than in others (14). On average, people from Eastern European countries rated their health worse than those from Western European countries (13,14). Poor health status in Eastern Europe may be influenced by unhealthy lifestyles associated with lack of information about health and behavior (15). East-west difference in health status may be partly explained by differences in health behaviors (such as smoking and alcohol consumption) and psychosocial factors (16).Despite the growing literature on this issue in central and west Europe, few studies have examined the impact of socioeconomic inequalities in self-rated health in southeastern Europe. In Serbia, a country still in the process of transition, little is known about health inequalities (17,18). Several recently published studies have brought to light the significance of socioeconomic inequalities in Serbia: in the prevalence of chronic diseases (19), morbidity status (20), and smoking habits of the population (21).The aim of this study was to analyze the association of socioeconomic factors with self-perceived health in Serbia using the 2007 Living Standards Measurement Study data (LSMS). Additionally, we examined whether this association can be partly explained by health behavior variables.  相似文献   

11.

Aim

To analyze potential and actual drug-drug interactions reported to the Spontaneous Reporting Database of the Croatian Agency for Medicinal Products and Medical Devices (HALMED) and determine their incidence.

Methods

In this retrospective observational study performed from March 2005 to December 2008, we detected potential and actual drug-drug interactions using interaction programs and analyzed them.

Results

HALMED received 1209 reports involving at least two drugs. There were 468 (38.7%) reports on potential drug-drug interactions, 94 of which (7.8% of total reports) were actual drug-drug interactions. Among actual drug-drug interaction reports, the proportion of serious adverse drug reactions (53 out of 94) and the number of drugs (n = 4) was significantly higher (P < 0.001) than among the remaining reports (580 out of 1982; n = 2, respectively). Actual drug-drug interactions most frequently involved nervous system agents (34.0%), and interactions caused by antiplatelet, anticoagulant, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were in most cases serious. In only 12 out of 94 reports, actual drug-drug interactions were recognized by the reporter.

Conclusion

The study confirmed that the Spontaneous Reporting Database was a valuable resource for detecting actual drug-drug interactions. Also, it identified drugs leading to serious adverse drug reactions and deaths, thus indicating the areas which should be in the focus of health care education.Adverse drug reactions (ADR) are among the leading causes of mortality and morbidity responsible for causing additional complications (1,2) and longer hospital stays. Magnitude of ADRs and the burden they place on health care system are considerable (3-6) yet preventable public health problems (7) if we take into consideration that an important cause of ADRs are drug-drug interactions (8,9). Although there is a substantial body of literature on ADRs caused by drug-drug interactions, it is difficult to accurately estimate their incidence, mainly because of different study designs, populations, frequency measures, and classification systems (10-15).Many studies including different groups of patients found the percentage of potential drug-drug interactions resulting in ADRs to be from 0%-60% (10,11,16-25). System analysis of ADRs showed that drug-drug interactions represented 3%-5% of all in-hospital medication errors (3). The most endangered groups were elderly and polimedicated patients (22,26-28), and emergency department visits were a frequent result (29). Although the overall incidence of ADRs caused by drug-drug interactions is modest (11-13,15,29,30), they are severe and in most cases lead to hospitalization (31,32).Potential drug-drug interactions are defined on the basis of on retrospective chart reviews and actual drug-drug interactions are defined on the basis of clinical evidence, ie, they are confirmed by laboratory tests or symptoms (33). The frequency of potential interactions is higher than that of actual interactions, resulting in large discrepancies among study findings (24).A valuable resource for detecting drug-drug interactions is a spontaneous reporting database (15,34). It currently uses several methods to detect possible drug-drug interactions (15,29,35,36). However, drug-drug interactions in general are rarely reported and information about the ADRs due to drug-drug interactions is usually lacking.The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of actual and potential drug-drug interactions in the national Spontaneous Reporting Database of ADRs in Croatia. Additionally, we assessed the clinical significance and seriousness of drug-drug interactions and their probable mechanism of action.  相似文献   

12.

Aim

To assess awareness, knowledge, use, and attitudes toward evidence-based medicine (EBM) and The Cochrane Library (CL) among physicians from Zenica-Doboj Canton (ZDC), Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Methods

In this cross-sectional study, a self-administered anonymous questionnaire was sent by post to all state owned health institutions (2 hospitals and 11 Primary Health Care Institutions) in ZDC. The main outcome measures were physicians’ awareness of the Cochrane, awareness and use of CL, access to EBM databases, and access to internet at work. 358 of 559 physicians responded (63.69%).

Results

23.18% of respondents stated they had access to EBM databases, but only 3.91% named the actual EBM databases they used. The question on the highest level of evidence in EBM was correctly answered by 35.7% respondents, 34.64% heard about Cochrane and 32.68% heard about CL. They obtained information about CL mostly on the internet and from colleagues, whereas the information about EBM was obtained mainly during continuous medical education.

Conclusion

Although the attitudes toward EBM are positive, there is a low awareness of EBM among physicians in ZDC. Open access to the CL should be used more. Educational interventions in popularizing EBM and Cochrane are needed to raise awareness both among students and practicing physicians, and finally among lay audience.Evidence based medicine (EBM) is described as an integration of individual clinical expertise, the best available external clinical evidence from systematic research, and individual patients’ predicaments, rights, and preferences, in making clinical decisions about their care (1,2). However in many settings there are still barriers to its implementation (3-6).Awareness, knowledge, use, and attitudes toward EBM have been assessed worldwide (6,7). Attitudes toward EBM were mostly positive and participants welcomed the promotion of EBM (6-11). Barriers to practicing EBM differed between developing and developed countries. For example, respondents from Iran (8) reported that a major barrier was the lack of EBM training courses, while those from the Netherlands and Belgium reported limited time, attitudes, knowledge, and skills (5,12-14).Systematic reviews with or without meta-analysis produced by The Cochrane Library (CL) are considered as the “gold standard” in EBM (15-18). Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs) can raise the quality of health care, especially in developing countries with scarce resources. For example, CSRs have been shown to provide invaluable evidence in creating national reimbursement lists (19).A nation-wide study among physicians in Croatia concluded that there was low awareness about EBM and the CL (30%), and additional educational interventions were required (6). Unlike Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BH) has no organized Cochrane activity (20). Our study aimed to assess the awareness, knowledge, use, and attitudes toward EBM and the CL (as the only available EBM database in BH with unrestricted access) among physicians in Zenica-Doboj Canton (ZDC), to help in the implementation of educational activities that would improve the use of EBM and the CL.  相似文献   

13.
AimTo investigate the prevalence of burnout syndrome among health care workers in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.MethodsThis cross-sectional study was conducted in May and June 2021 using an online survey based on Copenhagen Burnout Inventory. The questionnaire underwent forward and backward translation, preliminary pilot testing, and was assessed for reliability and validity. Personal burnout, work-related burnout, and patient-related burnout were assessed. The survey was sent to the members of the Union of Physicians and Dentists in FBIH, who were asked to forward the link to their medical technicians and nurses.ResultsA total of 77% of participants experienced some form of burnout. As many as 32% experienced all three forms of burnout. Those actively involved in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic more often experienced burnout. In personal and work-related burnout domains, higher level of burnout was reported among female respondents. Higher work-related and patient-related burnout was reported by physicians compared with medical technicians/nurses. Higher level of patient-related burnout was reported in health care workers aged 30-39 and 50-59 years, among respondents working in primary care, and among physicians.ConclusionThe majority of health care workers showed moderate or high levels of personal and work-related burnout, with a lower level of patient-related burnout. There is a need for further research into the causes of burnout, as well as for the implementation of organizational interventions aimed to minimize workplace burnout.

Burnout syndrome (BOS) was added to the 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) by the World Health Organization as “a syndrome resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed” (1). BOS is a frequent public-health and workplace issue, with rising prevalence and incidence (2). This issue has particularly came into focus during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak. It can happen at any age, as well as during residency (3), and result in medical errors and poor patient care (4).BOS has a variety of causes and predictions, both environmental and personal, which are not all related to workload. Administration, intrinsic factors of work, contact with patients, financial stressors, interference of work and social life, organizational structure and atmosphere, and relationships with coworkers, are only some of them (5,6).Burnout among health care workers (HCWs) was frequent even before the COVID-19 pandemic, and it is a significant health concern for the global economy because of its effects on organizational and patient outcomes (7). BOS has also been linked to depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder in HCWs, as well as to lower satisfaction and care quality, and a higher suicide rate (8,9).The COVID-19 pandemic has put HCWs under a lot of stress (10). Burnout among HCWs is a significant problem since it affects not only HCWs themselves, but also their families, patients, and society. This is why it is necessary to create strategies for dealing with burnout (11). Burnout has been identified as one of the threats to the stability of health care professionals in the fight against COVID-19 (12-15).Acute stress is more likely to cause sleep disturbances, anxiety, fear, mood changes, as well as posttraumatic stress disorder. Chronic stress, on the other hand, is more likely to cause BOS, which is a condition closely connected to poor job ability (16,17).Job burnout can put the individual’s well-being and health at risk, but it can also result in medical errors and poor patient care (4). As a result, it is important to identify factors that lead to job-related burnout and stress among HCWs. This knowledge may be used to protect the workers while improving the quality of services provided to the patients (18).The aim of our study was to assess the prevalence of burnout syndrome among health care workers in Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH), one of the two entities within Bosnia and Herzegovina, during the COVID-19 pandemic, as this issue has not been addressed so far.  相似文献   

14.

Aim

To evaluate the primary health care information system from the general practitioner''s (GP) point of view.

Methods

Sixty-seven Croatian GPs were distributed a questionnaire about characteristics of the GP’s office, overall impression of the application, handling of daily routine information, more sophisticated information needs, and data security, and rated their satisfaction with each component from 1 to 5. We also compared two most frequently used applications – application with distantly installed software (DIS) and that with locally installed software (LIS, personal computer-based application).

Results

GPs were most satisfied with the daily procedures and the reminder component of the health information system (rating 4.1). The overall impression ranked second (3.5) and flexibility of applications followed closely (3.4). The most questionable aspect of applications was data security (3.0). LIS system received better overall rate than DIS (4.2 vs 3.2).

Conclusion

Applications received better ratings for daily routine use than for overall impression and ability to get specific information according the GPs’ needs. Poor ratings on the capability of the application, complaints about unreliable links, and doubts about data security point to a need for more user-friendly interfaces, more information on the capability of the application, and a valid certificate of assessment for every application.The application of information and communication technology (ICT) to health care has changed the current medical practice. The most prominent aspect of ICT is the electronic health record (EHR). Some authors confirmed that the EHR indeed led to higher performance ratings on certain quality measures (1,2), whereas others were suspicious about it (3,4). The EHR systems offer better management of clinical data and improvement of management and prevention of chronic diseases (5). Both physicians and patients generally have a positive attitude toward the EHR (6). However, both are concerned about issues like privacy, physician-patient relationship, cost, time, and training needs. Only 10.2% of physicians in ambulatory care declared interest in using information technology in their daily practice (7).Further potential applications of an ICT-based information system in general practice are electronic reminders and decision support. Several studies show positive effects of electronic reminders: a recall system can result in higher immunization rates against seasonal influenza of high-risk groups (8), computerized body mass index charts increase the likelihood that physicians would diagnose obesity and refer patients to treatment (9), and decision support in electronic prescribing leads to more responsible prescribing (10-13). However, the use of electronic reminders does not seem to improve the quality of care in diabetes and coronary artery disease (14).Implementation of ICT leads to decreased financial expenses (15,10). Negative implications of modern technology include increased duration of consultation, more stress for the physicians (16), and increased data entry at least at the beginning of ICT use (17). Computers in the examination room could affect the patient-centered practice, shorten the patient-physician interaction and interfere with it, particularly in the psychosocial and emotional aspects. Looking at the screen is particularly disruptive and often leads to poor eye contact with the patient (18). Still, the most recent studies have not found any negative influence of ICT on the physician-patient relationship, even with psychiatric patients (19,20). Finally, in spite of different attitudes toward an ICT-based health information system in clinical practice, EHR serves as a cohesive clinical basis and allows physicians to carry out research or analyze their professional activities more easily (1).The general challenge for developers of ICT applications in health care is to make them suitable for health professionals’ information needs. Users’ satisfaction or dissatisfaction with ICT applications is one of the most important issues to be considered. There is a number of ICT applications in health care worldwide, and Croatia is not an exception. Primary Health Care Information System (PHCIS) was one of the first e-Government activities in Croatia. It started in 2002 and was fully implemented in 2008. Designed to cover the primary health-care information needs, the PHCIS consists of the central EHR repository (the so-called first level), accessible by locally installed applications in GP’s offices, and the second level for authorized users only (21-23). Development of the PHCIS was initiated by the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare and the Croatian Health Insurance Institute. The tender was announced early in 2003 and its winner, an ICT enterprise, included public health experts and several GPs to serve as health professional consultants in the development. This group primarily worked on the core system or the first level. The second level involved a number of smaller ICT companies working on the local information needs, ie, information needs of GPs in their daily work with the patients. The users of second level ICT applications were obliged to communicate with the first-level users – to send and receive data. There were eight available ICT applications (status on October 12, 2011) enabling the end-users (GPs and nurses) to enter patients’ data and use it in their daily work, as well as to create reports for administrative, professional, and other purposes. Any GP’s office could choose one of the certified ICT applications from the list on the PHCIS web site (http://www.cezih.hr). Two basic approaches in the development of the second level ICT applications were distantly installed software (DIS) and locally installed software (LIS). DIS was web-based approach installed on distant servers connected to the first level of PHCIS, outside of the GP’s office, but the GP could access it by standard browser through the virtual private network. LIS was installed on computers in the GP’s office connected directly to the first level of PHCIS. Both applications were able to send some selected patients’ data to the first level of PHCIS.The aim of this study was to analyze the second (local) level of PHCIS from the users (GPs’) point of view and the specific aims included the following: 1) to find out specific functions of ICT applications that were thought to be appropriate or problematic and 2) to compare two conceptually different approaches to the development of the local applications.  相似文献   

15.
AimTo translate the Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) Measure into Croatian and validate the Croatian version of the questionnaire.MethodsA cross-sectional study was conducted in July 2011 in 8 general practices (GP) in Croatia. Following two stages of translation, back-translation, and pilot testing, the Croatian version of the CARE was tested on 568 consecutive patients.ResultsFace validity was high, the number of missing values was low (9%), and the internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha) was 0.77. A principal component analysis of 10 CARE Measure items extracted two components with eigenvalues >1. These two components explained 43.6% of the total instrument variance.ConclusionThe Croatian version of the CARE Measure had acceptable reliability and face validity, but its intended component structure was not reproduced and further research is needed to understand its dimensionality.Physician empathy is widely regarded as an essential component of primary health care consultations and is central to the physician-patient relationship (1,2). In the clinical context, it is usually defined as the physician’s ability to understand the patient''s situation, perspective, and feelings; to communicate that understanding to the patient, check its accuracy, and to act upon it in a helpful therapeutic way (3). Empathy has been linked to a number of benefits in health care encounters including patient satisfaction, patient enablement, and better health outcomes (3-5). It may have both immediate and long-term effects on the patient (6). Attempts to measure empathy from a neurobiological perspective, although promising, will not be applicable in health care consultation settings in the near future. Several psychometric tools have been developed to measure physician’s empathy, with the Jefferson Scale of Empathy being the most referenced one (7). However, none of these scales have been designed specifically for the primary care setting and the majority of them is administered by physicians rather than self-administered (8-10). This is the reason why we chose the Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) Measure, which is widely used for the patient-rated assessment of physician empathy in the primary health care setting and which requires only 5-10 minutes to complete (11,12). Like many other physician empathy scales, the CARE measures situational empathy and ignores dispositional empathy, which is understood as physician’s character trait. The CARE measure has been validated in English, German, and Chinese (4,11,12). The aim of this study was to translate the questionnaire into Croatian and validate the Croatian version, determining its face validity, reliability, and dimensionality.  相似文献   

16.
Physician labor market in Croatia   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  

Aim

To analyze the physician labor market in Croatia with respect to the internship and employment opportunities, Croatian needs for physicians and specialists, and trends in physician labor market in the European Union (EU) in the context of EU enlargement.

Methods

Data were collected from the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, the Croatian Employment Service, and the Croatian Institute for Public Health. We compared the number of physicians waiting for internship before and 14 months after the implementation of the State Program for Intern Employment Stimulation. Also, the number of employed specialists in internal medicine, general surgery, gynecology and obstetrics, and pediatrics was compared with estimated number of specialists that will have been needed by the end of 2007. Average age of hospital physicians in the four specialties was determined and the number of Croatian physicians compared with the number of physicians in EU countries.

Results

The number of unemployed physicians waiting for internship decreased from 335 in 2003 to 82 in 2004, while a total number of unemployed physicians decreased from 436 to 379 (χ2 = 338, P<0.001). In October 2004, 79.3% of unemployed physicians waited for internship <6 months; of them, 89.2% waited for internship <3 months. In February 2005, 365 unemployed physicians were registered at the Croatian Employment Service and that number has been decreasing in the last couple of years. The number of employed specialists was lower than the estimated number of specialists needed in the analyzed specialists, as defined by the prescribed standards. A shortage of 328 internists, 319 surgeons, 209 gynecologists, and 69 pediatricians in Croatian hospitals is expected in 2007.

Conclusion

The lack of employment incentive seems to be the main reason for the large number of unemployed physicians waiting for internship before the implementation of the Employment Stimulation Program. According to the number of physicians per 100 000 population, Croatia is below the EU average. Croatian labor market will not be able to meet the needs of the health system for physicians by the end of 2007.Physicians (medical doctors, MDs), as defined by law, are university-qualified health professionals with the medical school degree. After they graduate from medical school, physicians are registered in the Registry of Health Professionals of the Croatian Institute for Public Health and in the Croatian Medical Chamber (1,2). However, to become independent physicians with a license to practice, medical graduates first have to complete their internship, which they can do either in health care institutions or in private practice (1-4), and then pass the Medical Licensure Exam (MLE) (1,2). Health care institutions and health professionals in private practice are expected to determine the minimum number of intern positions they can provide and thus allow young physicians to complete the internship according to the specified program, as defined by the Rules and Regulations on Internship of Health Care Providers (1-4). After completing the internship and passing the MLE, physicians are granted a license to practice medicine by the Croatian Medical Chamber, which also keeps records of all issued medical licenses (2,5,6). Licensed physicians then enter the Croatian labor market and seek employment. They can either practice medicine in primary health care as general practitioners or continue their education through a specialist (or subspecialist) training. The availability of specializations is determined according to the National Plan for Specializations and Subspecializations issued annually by the Minister of Health on the basis of estimated needs of health care institutions, Croatian Institute for Public Health, and Croatian Medical Chamber.Before 2003, medical graduates had waited for intern position for several months on average, and the percentage of unemployed physicians who had not completed the internship had been 73.1% (5,7-10), although the minimum number of intern positions for physicians that health care institutions had to provide, as defined by the Rules and Regulations on Internship Criteria for Health Care Providers (Regulations on Criteria), had already exceeded the Croatian annual needs only in university and general hospitals (5,7-10).In September 2003, the State Program for Intern Employment Stimulation (Program) was introduced to stimulate financially health care institutions to employ interns and thus decrease the share of unemployed physicians who had not completed internship in the total number of unemployed physicians (11-13).The number of physicians per 100 000 population in the European transition and European Union (EU) countries varies from over 500 in Italy, to 400 in Byelorussia, Norway, Spain, and Georgia, to over 300 in Belgium, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, and Lithuania (14,15). Several extremely wealthy countries, such as the Netherlands and the USA, have <300 physicians per 100 000 population, whereas UK and Japan have <200 physicians per 100 000 population. In Croatia, there were 227 physicians per 100 000 population in 2002, which is below the EU average (14,15).For the UK to reach the German standard with respect to the number of health care professionals, another 100 000 physicians should be employed. In other words, the UK’s National Health Care System is worried by the lack of health professionals, which bears a negative impact on the accessibility and quality of health care (16-18). France, which had 334 physicians per 100 000 population in 2002 (a total of 200 800 physician), notes a 15-year-long decreasing trend in the number of physicians and such a trend is expected to continue. For that reason, the French Government decided to take an active role in managing the number of physicians on the labor market by implementing a series of short-term and long-term measures, one of them being the “import” of foreign-trained physicians (19). Also, physicians from “new” EU-member countries are interested in moving to “old” EU countries. For example, of 408 immigrant physicians interviewed for over 500 physician job openings in Norway, 20% came from Eastern Europe (20). A 2002 survey among Lithuanian physicians showed that 60.7% of MD interns wanted to emigrate to EU or other foreign countries; the reasons were better salary, professional opportunities, and quality of life (21).Besides the shortage in numbers of physicians, the age structure of health care professionals is another problem. Average age of physicians in New Zealand is 44 years, 43 for nurses and over 40 for support workers (22). In 1985, 55% of French physicians were aged <40 years, while by 2000, the number of physicians in this age group had decreased to only 23%. UK Census data for 2001 showed that only 19% of specialists were under the age of 40, whereas around 40% of those aged over 50 were likely to retire during the following 10-15 years (22,23).The present study had several aims. The first aim was to determine how long it takes for physicians to complete their internship after graduating from medical school and establish the effects of the Employment Stimulation Program until October 2004. The second aim was to compare the number of Croatian physicians with their numbers in EU countries, trends in supply and demand for physicians in EU countries, and possible impact of the EU expansion on physician labor market in new EU-member countries and Croatia. The third aim was to assess the needs for specialists in university and general hospitals and the potential of Croatian labor market to satisfy the needs of Croatian health care system for physicians from the pool of domestic-trained physicians and with respect to the expected number of medical graduates from four medical schools in Croatia by 2007 (8,14,15).  相似文献   

17.
18.

Aim

To collect cancer epidemiology data in South Eastern European countries as a basis for potential comparison of their performance in cancer care.

Methods

The South Eastern European Research Oncology Group (SEEROG) collected and analyzed epidemiological data on incidence and mortality that reflect cancer management in 8 countries – Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Poland, Slovakia, and Serbia and Montenegro in the last 20-40 years.

Results

The most common cancer type in men in all countries was lung cancer, followed by colorectal and prostate cancer, with the exception of the Czech Republic, where prostate cancer and colorectal cancer were more common. The most frequent cancer in women was breast cancer followed by colorectal cancer, with the exceptions of Romania and Central Serbia where cervical cancer was the second most common. Cancer mortality data from the last 20-40 years revealed two different patterns in men. In Romania and in Serbia and Montenegro, there was a trend toward an increase, while in the other countries mortality was declining, after increasing for a number of years. In women, a steady decline was observed over many years in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia, while in the other countries it remained unchanged.

Conclusions

There are striking variations in the risk of different cancers by geographic area. Most of the international variation is due to exposure to known or suspected risk factors which provides a clear challenge to prevention. There are some differences in incidence and mortality that cannot be explained by exposure to known risk factors or treatment availabilities.On a global scale, cancer has become a major public health problem and an increasingly important contributor to the burden of disease. Based on the most recent available international data, there were an estimated 12.7 million new cancer cases, 7.6 million deaths from cancer, and 28 million persons alive with cancer within five years from the initial diagnosis (1-3). The most common cancers in the world were lung (1.61 million cases), breast (1.38 million), and colorectal cancer (1.24 million) (3). Because of its poor prognosis, lung cancer was also the most common cause of death (1.38 million), followed by gastric (737 000 deaths), and liver cancer (695 000 deaths) (1-4).Priority setting for cancer control and cancer services in any region needs to be based on knowledge of the cancer burden and the local mix of predominant cancer types (5). According to estimates of global cancer burden made by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the incidence and mortality rates from many specific types of cancer and all cancers combined vary widely by geographic locality (6). Moreover, the IARC also estimated that over half of newly diagnosed cases and two-thirds of cancer deaths occur in low and medium-income countries (6). There are striking variations in the pattern of cancer by site from region to region (7). The large differences in incidence and mortality in different countries may reflect a combination of differences in prevalence of underlying risk factors, differences in host susceptibility, and/or variations in cancer detection, reporting, classification systems, treatment, and follow-up. Among European countries, wide differences in the quality of cancer care are observed, especially when comparison is made between “old” and “new” EU members or between developed and developing countries (8). Cancer survival is significantly lower in Eastern European countries, including the new Member States, than in the EU 15 (9-12). Transitional countries and middle income countries are frequently left forgotten “in between” and the cancer problem in these countries is among the worst and fastest growing (8).In this report, we provide an analysis, which we propose as a foundation for detailed evaluation of cancer care in selected Central, Southern and Eastern European countries, represented by members of the South Eastern European Research Oncology Group (SEEROG). Our epidemiological analysis indicates the scale of the problem of oncological care in individual countries and shows current trends in the incidence of particular cancers. Comparison of status of oncology between countries in Eastern, Southern, and Central European region has never been undertaken before and key barriers to deliver appropriate quality of care have not previously been identified.  相似文献   

19.
Malignant brain tumors are among the most aggressive human neoplasms. One of the most common and severe symptoms that patients with these malignancies experience is sleep disruption. Disrupted sleep is known to have significant systemic pro-tumor effects, both in patients with other types of cancer and those with malignant brain lesions. We therefore provide a review of the current knowledge on disrupted sleep in malignant diseases, with an emphasis on malignant brain tumors. More specifically, we review the known ways in which disrupted sleep enables further malignant progression. In the second part of the article, we also provide a theoretical framework of the reverse process. Namely, we argue that due to the several possible pathophysiological mechanisms, patients with malignant brain tumors are especially susceptible to their sleep being disrupted and compromised. Thus, we further argue that addressing the issue of disrupted sleep in patients with malignant brain tumors can, not just improve their quality of life, but also have at least some potential of actively suppressing the devastating disease, especially when other treatment modalities have been exhausted. Future research is therefore desperately needed.

The annual incidence of tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) is little over 22 per 100 000 in the general population (1). Around a third of these lesions are malignant. Among the malignant tumors, gliomas are by far the most common type, constituting over 80% of the number. Among gliomas, the most aggressive type (glioblastoma) is the most common one, making up over a half of all newly diagnosed gliomas (2,3). The five-year survival of patients with malignant CNS tumors is around 30%, with patients being diagnosed a glioblastoma having a five-year survival rate of less than 5%. All this goes to show how malignant CNS tumors are some of the most aggressive human malignancies today. It also shows how the vast accumulated knowledge on the disease origin and progression still has not translated into significant improvement of the overall survival of these patients. New treatment modalities are therefore desperately needed.Besides the devastating diagnosis of a malignant brain tumor, these patients often experience a wide variety of severe symptoms, which significantly diminish their quality of life (4). There has been an increasing awareness of the importance of supportive and palliative care in patients suffering from malignant brain tumors, especially those in whom other treatment modalities have been exhausted (5-7). One of the most commonly reported symptoms is sleep disturbance (4,8-12).Sleep is a recurrent, physiological phenomenon, which consists of many measurable factors (12) and is ubiquitous throughout the natural world (13-16). It is a highly active, easily reversible process, which is crucial not only for the physical and mental well-being of all living organisms, but also for the very concepts we as humans have of ourselves and the world around us (17). There are many theories regarding the possible function of sleep, ranging from the physiological explanations such as rest of individual cells (18) to behavioral explanations of why a biological system needs periodic inactivity (19). There is a growing understanding of how the modern lifestyle disrupts the natural circadian rhythm in humans, consequences of which are still not sufficiently explored (20).Sleep disruption has a well known detrimental role for an organism. Indeed, patients with disrupted sleep have been found to have a higher prevalence of several diseases, such as cardiovascular disorders (21), cognitive impairment (22), various metabolic disorders and obesity (23,24), and systemic and local inflammation (25,26). Furthermore, sleep can be impaired in many ways. The current classification of sleep disorders consists of several clinical entities such as insomnia, parasomnia, hyper-somnolence, sleep-related movement disorders, etc (27). However, this article refers to all of this broad pathology as “sleep disturbance,” primarily for clarity and simplicity sake. In addition, research on disrupted sleeping patterns in patients with malignant lesions usually also encompasses all of these entities into this broader term (28,29).  相似文献   

20.
AimsTo compare the severity of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and of particular PTSD clusters among help-seeking veterans before and during the COVID-19 lockdown. The second aim was to identify the main coping strategies used.MethodsMale war veterans (N = 176) receiving outpatient treatment at the Referral Center for PTSD were assessed at baseline (12-18 months before the pandemic declaration in March 2020) and during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown (March-June 2020). The Life Events Checklist for DSM-5, PTSD Checklist for DSM-5, and The Brief COPE were used.ResultsDirect exposure to the virus in our sample was low, and the majority of participants followed the preventive measures. The severity of the overall PTSD symptoms and of clusters of symptoms significantly decreased compared with the first assessment. At the second assessment, all participants still fulfilled the PTSD diagnosis criteria. During the lockdown, the participants used emotion-focused and problem-focused coping rather than dysfunctional coping.ConclusionThe severity of PTSD symptoms decreased during the lockdown. Further research is needed to study the trajectories of long-term psychopathology.

The COVID-19 pandemic has severely threatened the physical and mental health of individuals around the world. Stressors have included isolation, self-isolation or quarantine, restricted movement and physical contact, infection fears, loss of loved ones, lack of supplies, inadequate information (“infodemic”), financial loss, and social stigma (1-3). During emergencies, mental health requires special consideration due to increased rates of stress-related mental health problems and limited availability of mental health services (2-5).Depending on the emergency context, particular groups of people are at an increased risk of experiencing social and psychological problems (6), and ex-combatants have been repeatedly shown to be one of them (7).Exposure to a new traumatic or stressful life event might affect posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. A growing body of research shows that such exposure is a risk factor for worsening of the condition in various groups of PTSD patients (8,9). This mainly happens if the subsequent event is of the same type as the initial stressors, serving as a reminder and as an additional traumatic factor with a “wear and tear” effect on the exposed person (10-13).Regarding the coping strategies used among PTSD patients, combat veterans with PTSD report a more ineffective and dysfunctional coping style, with the avoidance coping style as a predictive factor of the overall PTSD symptom severity (14-16). PTSD patients try to avoid confrontation with trauma-reminders, intrusive memories, and trauma-related thoughts and emotions (17,18). Some authors emphasize the importance of differentiating between coping strategies with PTSD symptoms and coping strategies with actual traumatic or stressful events as they depend on various factors related to the specific traumatic exposure (19).Twenty-five years after the Homeland War in Croatia (1991–1995), veterans still suffer from numerous health problems and have been highly prevalent among the users of the health facilities for PTSD treatment (20-22). The same is true for PTSD patients treated in the Referral Center of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Croatia (RCPTSD) at the Clinical Hospital Center (CHC) Rijeka. A recent study revealed high rates of overall symptoms and severe posttraumatic symptoms (ie, complex PTSD) in this population years after the war ended (23).The COVID-19 pandemic lockdown in Croatia started on March 19, 2020. According to Oxford University, Croatia introduced the world''s strictest restrictions in relation to the number of the infected (24,25). On March 21, 2020, mental health experts from RCPTSD recommended self-help strategies for staying in good mental health and advice for front-liners on how to deliver psychological first aid (26,27). On the same day, the Croatian Psychiatric Association Expert Group released recommendations for the organization of psychiatric care, psychiatric interventions, and psychopharmacological treatment of mental conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic, and for de-escalation and appropriate communication techniques with aggressive patients (28-30). In RCPTSD, mental health service was restructured to be delivered via the internet or hotlines during the pandemic, with a possibility for urgent outpatient and inpatient treatment. On April 27, 2020, the lifting of restrictions began.To our knowledge, no study worldwide has examined the psycho-social correlates of the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown in veterans with PTSD. Therefore, we aimed to compare the severity of PTSD symptoms and of particular PTSD symptom clusters before and during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown. Second, we identified the main coping strategies that veterans used during the lockdown.  相似文献   

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