Home About us Contact | |||
Close Family Member (close + family_member)
Selected AbstractsThe long-term impact of bereavement upon spouse health: a 10-year follow-upACTA NEUROPSYCHIATRICA, Issue 5 2010Michael P. Jones Jones MP, Bartrop RW, Forcier L, Penny R. The long-term impact of bereavement upon spouse health: a 10-year follow-up. Objectives: This study is the first to examine the effect of bereavement of a first-degree family member on subsequent morbidity over a 10-year follow-up period. Methods: A sample of bereaved subjects (n = 72) were compared with a control group (n = 80) recruited in the same period with respect to morbidity experience during follow-up. Morbidity events were ascertained from the subject themselves, their health care providers and these sources were also compared. Results: Bereavement was associated with an elevated total burden of illness as well as with mental health and circulatory system categories diagnosed according to the International Classification of Diseases - Clinically Modified (ICD-9) classification system. The elevation ranged from approximately 20% for any illness to 60,100% among circulatory system disorders. Although in an earlier study there was a downregulation of T-cell function in the bereaved during the first 8 weeks, there was no evidence that the bereavement was associated with increased morbidity in the respiratory or immune system ICD-9 categories long-term. Conclusions: Past epidemiological research has indicated that bereavement of a close family member is associated with adverse health consequences of a generalised morbidity. Our study suggests an increase in mental health and circulatory system effects in particular. Further research is required to determine whether other systems are also affected by bereavement. [source] The beauty of the gift: the wonder of living organ donationCLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 4 2007Aaron Spital Abstract:, In a recent opinion piece, Nancy Scheper-Hughes provides a sweeping indictment of living organ donation, even in cases where the gift is directed to a close family member. She describes the process with caustic powerful phrases such as "sacrificial violence" and a "call to ,self-sacrifice.'" She concludes that living organ donation "should be consigned to a back seat as an exceptional back-up to deceased donation." But her conclusions are based on anecdotes and data that are not representative of donor practice and motivation in the United States and other developed countries. At reputable transplant centers great care is taken to identify genuine volunteers and to protect their interests. Under these circumstances living organ donation remains a generally safe and beneficial procedure for the donor as well as the recipient, and a wonderful example of the goodness of people. [source] Preferences for Perinatal Health Communication of Women in Rural TibetJOURNAL OF OBSTETRIC, GYNECOLOGIC & NEONATAL NURSING, Issue 1 2009Phuoc V. Le ABSTRACT Objective: To describe the most acceptable methods for educating women in Medrogongkar County, Tibet, about healthy pregnancy and safe motherhood. Design: Focus group discussions with key informants were used to develop a quantitative, orally administered random sample survey. Setting: Thirty-two randomly selected villages in Medrogongkar County. Participants: One hundred and forty-eight multigravida over the age of 18 living in Medrogongkar County. Results: Most participants reported receiving pregnancy-related information either from family members (n=85, 57.4%) or from community health workers (n=81, 54.7%), while very few reported group teaching or radio/television/videos as sources. When asked what modalities of health communication are most effective for them, participants preferred discussions with family members (n=59, 39.8%), specifically their mothers (n=34, 23.0%). Community health worker teaching (n=15, 10.1%) or group teaching (n=7, 4.7%) were reported as less effective. Conclusions: Despite recent efforts in Tibet to use group teaching, television/radio programs, and health professionals visiting patients' homes as health communication modalities, participants preferred to learn pregnancy-related health messages from their close family, especially their mothers. Future health communication interventions in rural Tibet and similar communities should consider targeting close family members as well as pregnant women to maximize acceptability of advice on healthy pregnancy and delivery. [source] Autoimmune disease in individuals and close family members and susceptibility to non-Hodgkin's lymphomaARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 3 2008Lene Mellemkjaer Objective Rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and Sjögren's syndrome have been consistently associated with an increased risk of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). This study was initiated to evaluate the risks of NHL associated with a personal or family history of a wide range of autoimmune diseases. Methods A population-based case,control study was conducted that included 24,728 NHL patients in Denmark (years 1977,1997) and Sweden (years 1964,1998) and 55,632 controls. Using univariate logistic and hierarchical regression models, we determined odds ratios (ORs) of NHL associated with a personal history of hospital-diagnosed autoimmune conditions. Risks of NHL associated with a family history of the same autoimmune conditions were assessed by similar regression analyses that included 25,941 NHL patients and 58,551 controls. Results A personal history of systemic autoimmune diseases (RA, SLE, Sjögren's syndrome, systemic sclerosis) was clearly linked with NHL risk, both for individual conditions (hierarchical odds ratios [ORh] ranged from 1.6 to 5.4) and as a group (ORh 2.64 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.72,4.07]). In contrast, a family history of systemic autoimmune diseases was modestly and nonsignificantly associated with NHL (ORh 1.31 [95% CI 0.85,2.03]). An increased risk of NHL was found for a personal history of 5 nonsystemic autoimmune conditions (autoimmune hemolytic anemia, Hashimoto thyroiditis, Crohn's disease, psoriasis, and sarcoidosis) (ORh ranged from 1.5 to 2.6) of 27 conditions examined. Conclusion Overall, our results demonstrate a strong relationship of personal history of systemic autoimmune diseases with NHL risk and suggest that shared susceptibility may explain a very small fraction of this increase, at best. Positive associations were found for a personal history of some, though far from all, nonsystemic autoimmune conditions. [source] |