Home About us Contact | |||
Health Regions (health + regions)
Selected AbstractsImplementing a national treatment service for dependant smokers: initial challenges and solutionsADDICTION, Issue 2005Tim Coleman ABSTRACT Background Before 1999, few treatment services for nicotine-addicted smokers existed in England. When national treatment services were introduced, those responsible for setting them up liaised closely with primary care health services. Setting up an entirely new national service, treating a new category of patient (smokers motivated to stop) was an ambitious aim and this paper documents the problems encountered in the early stages of this process. Objectives To describe the principal challenges encountered and solutions employed by those setting up the services during the initial period of smoking cessation service implementation. Methods Qualitative, semistructured interviews with 50 smoking cessation staff in two former English health regions conducted in autumn 2001. Findings Two principal factors which slowed the initial development of smoking cessation services were: (i) the lack of a work-force with experience in smoking cessation methods and (ii) the fact that services were set up outside existing primary and secondary care health services in England. As few training courses in smoking cessation were available, many services provided their own in-house training for staff appointed as smoking cessation advisers. Consequently, senior service staff devoted a lot of effort to training new staff which meant that they had less time to spend on other important tasks which were necessary for service implementation. Smoking cessation services needed to develop relationships with primary care health services in order to generate referrals and find venues for the delivery of smoking cessation interventions. Liaising with primary care physicians was time-consuming, however, and some primary care physicians were opposed to the ideas that service staff had for the interface between primary care and smoking cessation services. As new smoking cessation services were not set up within existing primary or secondary health care services, service staff had to spend large amounts of time on this process of negotiation and overcoming scepticism from some primary health care physicians. Conclusions If smoking cessation services are set up in other countries, rapid implementation would be facilitated by ensuring that adequate numbers of health professionals trained in smoking cessation methods are available to staff services. Additionally, locating new smoking cessation services within existing health providers' services may speed up service implementation, but this option may not suit all health systems. [source] Near miss and minor occupational injury: Does it share a common causal pathway with major injury?AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, Issue 1 2009Hasanat Alamgir MBA Abstract Background An essential assumption of injury prevention programs is the common cause hypothesis that the causal pathways of near misses and minor injuries are similar to those of major injuries. Methods The rates of near miss, minor injury and major injury of all reported incidents and musculoskeletal incidents (MSIs) were calculated for three health regions using information from a surveillance database and productive hours from payroll data. The relative distribution of individual causes and activities involved in near miss, minor injury and major injury were then compared. Results For all reported incidents, there were significant differences in the relative distribution of causes for near miss, minor, and major injury. However, the relative distribution of causes and activities involved in minor and major MSIs were similar. The top causes and activities involved were the same across near miss, minor, and major injury. Conclusions Finding from this study support the use of near miss and minor injury data as potential outcome measures for injury prevention programs. Am. J. Ind. Med. 52:69,75, 2009. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Modeling the Mental Health Workforce in Washington State: Using State Licensing Data to Examine Provider Supply in Rural and Urban AreasTHE JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH, Issue 1 2006Laura-Mae Baldwin MD ABSTRACT:,Context: Ensuring an adequate mental health provider supply in rural and urban areas requires accessible methods of identifying provider types, practice locations, and practice productivity. Purpose: To identify mental health shortage areas using existing licensing and survey data. Methods: The 1998-1999 Washington State Department of Health files on credentialed health professionals linked with results of a licensure renewal survey, 1990 US Census data, and the results of the 1990-1992 National Comorbidity Survey were used to calculate supply and requirements for mental health services in 2 types of geographic units in Washington state,61 rural and urban core health service areas and 13 larger mental health regions. Both the number of 9 types of mental health professionals and their full-time equivalents (FTEs) per 100,000 population measured supply in the health service areas and mental health regions. Findings: Notable shortages of mental health providers existed throughout the state, especially in rural areas. Urban areas had 3 times the psychiatrist FTEs per 100,000 and more than 1.5 times the nonpsychiatrist mental health provider FTEs per 100,000 as rural areas. More than 80% of rural health service areas had at least 10% fewer psychiatrist FTEs and nonpsychiatrist mental health provider FTEs than the state ratio (10.4 FTEs per 100,000 and 306.5 FTEs per 100,000, respectively). Ten of the 13 mental health regions were more than 10% below the state ratio of psychiatrist FTEs per 100,000. Conclusions: States gathering a minimum database at licensure renewal can identify area-specific mental health care shortages for use in program planning. [source] Initial management of cerebrovascular disease by general practitionersBRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY (NOW INCLUDES EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY), Issue 4 2000R. G. J. Gibbs Background: The aim of this study was to determine the primary management of patients presenting with a new diagnosis of transient ischaemic attack (TIA) or stroke by general practitioners and to establish whether practice was uniform across the UK, and to determine whether initial management influenced the performance of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) across the health regions of the UK. Methods: Information on regional reporting of new cases of TIA and stroke between 1992 and 1996 was obtained from the General Practice Research Database, a database of six million patients from 450 practices. Analysis of data from the primary care database and routine data sources was undertaken. Main outcome measures were incidence of TIA and stroke, rates of referral for specialist opinion, prescription of antiplatelet agents and rates of CEA. Results: There were twofold differences (P < 0·00005, ,2 test) in the incidence of cerebrovascular disease between Regional Health Authorities (RHAs) between the years 1992 and 1996 and also for each year. Mean stroke incidence per annum was 143 per 100 000 and TIA incidence 183 per 100 000. Yorkshire had the highest incidence at 170 (stroke) and 206 (TIA) per 100 000 of the population compared with 95 and 98 per 100 000 for Oxford. Some 37 per cent of new patients with stroke and 19 per cent of patients with TIA were referred for specialist opinion following initial diagnosis. These rates did not change over time. There was no positive correlation between disease incidence and referral rate; Yorkshire referred the least (14 per cent) and Oxford the most (26 per cent). The majority of referrals for TIA were made to general medicine (39 per cent); 6 per cent of patients were referred directly for surgical opinion. Mean prescription rate of antiplatelet medication over the time period was 17 per cent for patients with stroke and 35 per cent for those with TIA. Mean CEA rate for English RHAs for the time interval was 15·5 per 100 000. There was a positive correlation between the incidence of disease and rate of CEA, with the regions with the highest incidence of disease tending to perform the most CEAs. Conclusion: The incidence of cerebrovascular disease varies significantly across health regions in the UK. There was no correlation between the regional incidence of disease and the number of patients referred for specialist opinion, but CEA rates were generally correlated with the regional difference in incidence of disease. The low referral rate may be a factor in the perceived underperformance of CEA in the UK and the low usage of antiplatelet medication is surprising. © 2000 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd [source] Health reform in Alberta: The introduction of health regionsCANADIAN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION/ADMINISTRATION PUBLIQUE DU CANADA, Issue 2 2008John Church Consistent with the larger fiscal agenda, the government's intention was to address health-care system efficiency through larger integrated management and governance structures. In this article, the authors examine why Alberta decided to create regional health authorities for the management and delivery of a significant range of health services. In examining the interaction of ideas, interests and institutions, the authors conclude that the government was partially successful in aligning existing institutional and interest relationships with an emerging political consensus about cost and sustainability of the health-care system. Sommaire: En 1994, le gouvernement de l'Alberta a adopté la loi intitulée Regional Health Authorities Act (Loi sur les offices régionaux de santé) en vue d'abolir près de 200 commissions hospitalières et commissions de santé publique locales et de les remplacer par dix-sept offices régionaux de la santé. Conformément au programme fiscal plus large, l'intention du gouvernement était d'examiner l'efficience du système des soins de santé grâce à des structures intégrées de gestion et de gouvernance plus vastes. Dans le présent article, les auteurs examinent les raisons pour lesquelles l'Alberta a décidé de créer des offices régionaux de la santé pour la gestion et la prestation d'une gamme importante de services de santé. Après avoir étudié les interactions d'idées, d'intérêts et d'institutions, les auteurs ont conclu que le gouvernement avait partiellement réussi à aligner les relations institutionnelles et les relations d'intérêts existantes sur un consensus politique émergent au sujet des coûts et de la viabilité du système de soins de santé. [source] |