Social science & medicine
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Social science & medicine · Apr 2005
Social and psychological characteristics of Kuwaiti children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease that may have an impact on children's psychosocial adjustment. This study aimed to investigate the psychosocial characteristics of Kuwaiti children with type 1 diabetes as compared to healthy children without diabetes, and assess the impact of glycaemic control on psychosocial variables. A total of 349 school children aged 6-18 years with type 1 diabetes, and 409 children without diabetes having comparable age, gender, and social class were included in the study. ⋯ In conclusion, the study supported our hypotheses. Children with diabetes had worse psychological adjustment, and distress was related to glycaemic control. Since psychological distress increases the risk for future complications due to its relation with glycaemic control, longitudinal studies are recommended to identify children with diabetes having distress at an early stage when preventive interventions are effective.
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Social science & medicine · Mar 2005
"What sort of health promotion are you talking about?": a discourse analysis of the talk of general practitioners.
In New Zealand, health promotion is now expected to be an integral part of the work of a general practitioner, and in the recently implemented New Zealand Primary Health Organisation structure, specific funding is available to undertake health promotion activities in primary care. Eighteen general practitioners recruited to take part in two focus groups discussing men's health, talked extensively about health promotion. This talk was analysed through a discourse analysis. ⋯ Lack of time and lack of confidence in the evidence appeared to be barriers to undertaking health promotion within general practice consultations. In the current climate general practitioners are uncertain, to the point of ambivalence, about health promotion in their work. Further work will be required to ensure this ambivalence does not result in covert resistance.
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Social science & medicine · Feb 2005
Domestic violence, sexual ownership, and HIV risk in women in the American deep south.
Domestic violence and sexual abuse are important correlates of HIV risk in women. This paper examines the links between HIV risk and domestic violence in women in a region with the highest HIV/AIDS rates in the United States. The theoretical framework incorporates Butler's (1993) and (1990) concept of performative gender and Collins' (2000) "controlling images" of African American women as a context for domestic violence in the Deep South. ⋯ The main finding was that the women lacked the ability to control sexual activities (including condom use) in abusive relationships with HIV-positive men. The women used various strategies to escape abusive partners and to obtain treatment for HIV/AIDS. The study concludes that the links between gender inequity, domestic violence, and HIV transmission should appear in prevention materials to encourage domestic violence screening in health settings, and to provide abused women with information on the not-so-obvious risks of being infected in abusive relationships.
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Social science & medicine · Feb 2005
The teleo-affective limits of end-of-life care in the intensive care unit.
This paper explores the relevance of a specific kind of sensed connectedness or 'teleo-affectivity' to the organisation and enactment of end-of-life care. Referred to as heedful inter-relating, this teleo-affective connectedness has been found to occur among employees as they carry out their highly complex and dangerous work. ⋯ The paper argues that while several commentators appear to be calling for enhanced heedful conduct in end-of-life care, ICU practices may not admit the kind of heedful inter-relating that is evident in high-reliability organisations such as nuclear aircraft carriers. We suggest it may be unwise to gauge intensive care units' complexity purely against the brief of realising cultural scripts of the dying, and that ICU in fact manifests a broader societal concern necessitating a more variegated composition: to devise multiple ways to contain the impression and impact of (the meaning) death for society (societies) generally.
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Social science & medicine · Feb 2005
Shifting the demand for emergency care in Cuba's health system.
Cuba has developed a programme of quality improvement of its health services, which includes an extramural emergency care system in which polyclinics and general practitioner networks play an important role. Using routine health information from the decentralised first line emergency units (FLES) and from the hospital emergency service (HES) for the period 1995-2000, we evaluated the effects of the emergency care subsystem reform on the utilisation rates of first line and hospital services in Baracoa and Cerro, a rural and a metropolitan municipality, respectively. In the self-contained health system of Baracoa, the reform of the emergency subsystem resulted in a first phase of increased utilisation of the FLES, followed by a second phase of gradual decrease, during which there was an increased utilisation of general practitioners. ⋯ The proximity to a hospital seems to be the most important element in the patient's decision on which entry point to the Cerro health system to use. A potential adverse effect of the reform is an increased emergency services utilisation in situations where GP care remains below patients' expectations. Given the current world-wide trends in health-care reform, the organisational alternatives developed in the Cuban health system might remain specific to the local contextual setting.