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Frontiers in Psychiatry 2024In times of war, mental health professionals are at an increased risk of developing psychological problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The effects...
BACKGROUND
In times of war, mental health professionals are at an increased risk of developing psychological problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The effects of conflicts or wars on mental health professionals in Palestine and their coping methods of dealing with these challenges remain unknown. This study aimed to assess the prevalence of PTSD symptoms and strategies for coping among mental health professionals in Palestine, in light of the ongoing Gaza war and political violence.
METHODS
The study utilized a cross-sectional research design. Self-reported questionnaires, including the PCL-5 and Brief COPE scales, were used to gather data. The relationship between the research variables and PTSD symptoms was investigated using frequencies, percentages, bivariate analysis, Pearson correlation, and Pearson's chi-square test.
RESULTS
A total of 514 participants were recruited, with an estimated prevalence of PTSD of 38.7%. Furthermore, the multivariate analysis revealed that having a prior history of trauma and feeling disabled or unable to deal with your patients during the current Gaza war and Israeli-Palestinian political violence increases the likelihood of developing PTSD symptoms. In addition, using venting, self-blame, and behavioral disengagement as coping strategies increases the likelihood of developing symptoms of PTSD. Moreover, using acceptance and substance use as coping strategies reduces the risk of developing PTSD symptoms.
CONCLUSION
The findings revealed a high prevalence of PTSD symptoms among mental health professionals during wartime and political violence. As a result, mental health professionals need immediate assistance in enhancing their mental wellbeing through supervision, psychotherapy, and comprehensive and continuous training.
PubMed: 38911708
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1396228 -
Access to insurance navigation support through the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP).Health Affairs Scholar Jun 2024Medicare enrollment is complex, particularly for low-income individuals who are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid, and the wrong plan choice can adversely impact...
Medicare enrollment is complex, particularly for low-income individuals who are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid, and the wrong plan choice can adversely impact beneficiaries' out-of-pocket costs and access to providers and medications. The State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) is a federal program that provides counseling on Medicare coverage, but the degree to which SHIP services are accessible to low-income beneficiaries is unknown. We interviewed SHIP counselors and coordinators to characterize factors affecting access to and quality of SHIP services for low-income beneficiaries. Availability of volunteers was cited as the primary barrier to SHIP services. Topics related to dual eligibility for Medicare and Medicaid were frequently covered in counseling sessions, and staff expressed a desire for more training related to Medicaid and integrated-care programs. Our results suggest that additional counselors and increased training on topics relevant to dually eligible individuals may improve SHIP's ability to provide health insurance-related information to low-income Medicare beneficiaries.
PubMed: 38911681
DOI: 10.1093/haschl/qxae072 -
Journal of Environmental Science and... 2024Cardiovascular diseases are a significant cause of mortality worldwide, and their prevalence can be amplified by a range of environmental factors. This review article...
Cardiovascular diseases are a significant cause of mortality worldwide, and their prevalence can be amplified by a range of environmental factors. This review article critically evaluated the published information on the epidemiology and pathophysiological mechanisms of various environmental factors such as air indoor and outdoor air pollution, water pollution, climate change, and soil pollution. Preventative measures to mitigate these effects including public health responses are discussed with gaps in our knowledge for future studies.
PubMed: 38911615
DOI: 10.26502/jesph.96120206 -
Journal of Scleroderma and Related... Jun 2024People with systemic sclerosis (SSc) face barriers to physical activity. Few studies have described physical activity in SSc, and none have explored physical activity...
INTRODUCTION/OBJECTIVE
People with systemic sclerosis (SSc) face barriers to physical activity. Few studies have described physical activity in SSc, and none have explored physical activity longitudinally during COVID-19. We evaluated physical activity from April 2020 to March 2022 among people with SSc.
METHODS
The Scleroderma Patient-centred Intervention Network (SPIN) COVID-19 Cohort was launched in April 2020 and included participants from the ongoing SPIN Cohort plus external enrolees. Participants completed measures bi-weekly through July 2020, then every 4 weeks afterwards (28 assessments). Physical activity was assessed via the self-reported International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Elderly. Analyses included estimated means with 95% confidence intervals for physical activity across assessments. Missing data were imputed for main analyses. Sensitivity analyses included evaluating only participants who completed >90% of items for >21 of 28 possible assessments ('completers') and stratified analyses by sex, age, country and SSc subtype.
RESULTS
A total of 800 people with SSc enrolled. Mean age was 55.6 (standard deviation (SD) = 12.6) years. Physical activity significantly decreased from April 2020 to March 2021 (standardized mean difference (SMD) = -0.17, 95% confidence interval (CI) = -0.26 to -0.07) and was stable from March 2021 to March 2022 (SMD = -0.05, 95% CI = -0.15 to 0.05). Results were similar for completers and subgroups. The proportion of participants who met World Health Organization minimum physical activity recommendations of at least 150 min of moderate-to-vigorous activity per week ranged from 63% to 82% across assessments.
CONCLUSION
Physical activity decreased by a relatively small amount, on average, across the pandemic. Most participants met recommended physical activity levels.
PubMed: 38910597
DOI: 10.1177/23971983241241593 -
Inquiry : a Journal of Medical Care... 2024Several states are considering competitive procurement to help shape Medicaid managed care markets. In New York state, the focus of our study, regulators propose...
Several states are considering competitive procurement to help shape Medicaid managed care markets. In New York state, the focus of our study, regulators propose contracts that reward quality improvement and simplify state administration by rewarding plans that operate across several of the state's 62 counties. This case analysis uses novel regulatory data from New York state, obtained via public records request, to examine incentives underlying Medicaid markets and help inform contracting design. The data report plan enrollment by county and plan spending across administrative activities for all 16 Medicaid plans in New York state for 2018. We examine the counties in which plans operate, profitability, and administrative resource allocation. We compare outcomes by tertile of plan profitability, measured as net income per member-month. Plan profitability ranged widely, with the most profitable plan realizing nearly $30 per member-month while the least profitable 5 plans realized net negative earnings. Operational differences across plan profitability emerged most clearly in administrative spending. The most profitable plans reported greater spending on salaries overall and for executive management, and taxes, while the least profitable plans spent more on operational functions including utilization management/ quality improvement, claims processing, and informational systems. We observe modest differences in county rurality and little in geographic breadth. Procurement design that rewards capacity-building in key administrative functions might impact market evolution, given that on average, highly profitable firms spent less on these activities in New York's Medicaid managed care market in 2018.
Topics: Managed Care Programs; New York; Medicaid; United States; Humans; Motivation
PubMed: 38910529
DOI: 10.1177/00469580241258653 -
Surgery Jun 2024Stigma surrounds parental leave during general surgery residency, yet 25% to 29% of general surgery residents have children. Parental leave experiences of...
BACKGROUND
Stigma surrounds parental leave during general surgery residency, yet 25% to 29% of general surgery residents have children. Parental leave experiences of non-childbearing general surgery resident parents have not been described. This study aimed to describe the non-childbearing population's parental leave experiences.
METHODS
Using a purposive sampling strategy, semi-structured interviews (n = 20) were conducted via Zoom (August 2021-March 2022) with current general surgery residents or fellows who had at least 1 child during residency as the non-childbearing parent. Interviews explored participants' experiences with parental leave policies, timing, structure, motivations/influences for taking leave, career/training impacts, and reflections on their experiences. Transcripts were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Participant demographics were analyzed using univariate analysis.
RESULTS
Of the 20 participants, there were 31 unique parental leave experiences. The following 6 themes were identified from interviews: program/professional policies, cultural climate, support (institutional and social), parental leave experiences, impact, and recommendations. Participants cited needing to rely on informal support (eg, the assistance of other residents) to arrange leave and feeling compelled not to take the full time allowed in order to not burden co-residents or because others took less time. Overall, participants felt dissatisfied with their parental leave experiences.
CONCLUSION
Non-childbearing general surgery resident parents underuse parental leave due to perceived or actual lack of access to leave and stigma. This results in dissatisfaction with their parental leave experiences and has the potential to lead to negative professional and personal outcomes. There is a critical need for improved support through cultural change and policy revision, implementation, and adherence.
PubMed: 38910045
DOI: 10.1016/j.surg.2024.04.035 -
BMJ Open Jun 2024What are the Canadian public's understanding of and views toward medical assistance in dying (MAID) in persons refusing recommended treatment or lacking access to...
OBJECTIVES
What are the Canadian public's understanding of and views toward medical assistance in dying (MAID) in persons refusing recommended treatment or lacking access to standard treatment or resources?
DESIGN/SETTING
An online survey assessed knowledge of and support for Canadian MAID law, and views about four specific scenarios in a two (medical or psychiatric) by two (treatment refusal or lack of access) design.
PARTICIPANTS
A quota sample (N=2140) matched to the 2021 Canadian census by age, gender, income, education and province.
MAIN OUTCOMES
Participants' level of support for MAID in general and in the four specific scenarios.
RESULTS
Only 12.1% correctly answered ≥4 of 5 knowledge questions about the MAID law; only 19.2% knew terminal illness is not required and 20.2% knew treatment refusal is compatible with eligibility. 73.3% of participants expressed support for the MAID law in general, matching a nationally representative poll that used the same question. 40.4% of respondents supported MAID for mental illnesses. Support for MAID in the scenarios depicting refusal or lack of access to treatment ranged from 23.2% (lack of access in medical condition) to 32.0% (treatment refusal in medical illness). Older age, more education, higher income, lower religious attendance or being white was associated with greater support for MAID in general but was either negatively associated or not associated with support for MAID in the four refusal or lack of access scenarios.
CONCLUSIONS
Most Canadians support the current MAID law but appear unaware that MAID cases they do not support are compatible with that law. The lower support for MAID in the four scenarios cuts across sociodemographics. The gap between current policy and public opinion warrants further study. For jurisdictions debating MAID, opinion surveys may need to go beyond assessing general attitudes, and target knowledge and views regarding implications of legalisation.
Topics: Humans; Canada; Male; Female; Middle Aged; Adult; Suicide, Assisted; Aged; Surveys and Questionnaires; Public Opinion; Young Adult; Adolescent; Treatment Refusal; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Health Services Accessibility
PubMed: 38910003
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087736 -
Nature Communications Jun 2024Given limited institutional resources, low-income populations often rely on social networks to improve their socioeconomic outcomes. However, it remains in question...
Given limited institutional resources, low-income populations often rely on social networks to improve their socioeconomic outcomes. However, it remains in question whether small-scale social interactions could affect large-scale economic inequalities in under-resourced contexts. Here, we leverage population-level data from one of the poorest South African settings to construct a large-scale, geographically defined, inter-household social network. Using a multilevel network model, we show that having social ties in close geographic proximity is associated with stable household asset conditions, while geographically distant ties correlate to changes in asset allocation. Notably, we find that localised network interactions are associated with an increase in wealth inequality at the regional level, demonstrating how macro-level inequality may arise from micro-level social processes. Our findings highlight the importance of understanding complex social connections underpinning inter-household resource dynamics, and raise the potential of large-scale social assistance programs to reduce disparities in resource-ownership by accounting for local social constraints.
Topics: Humans; South Africa; Socioeconomic Factors; Social Networking; Poverty; Family Characteristics; Income; Male; Female; Social Support; Social Interaction
PubMed: 38909070
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-49607-0 -
International Journal of Retina and... Jun 2024Macular holes (MHs), including atraumatic idiopathic and refractory MHs, affect central vision acuity due to full-thickness defects in the retinal tissue. The existing... (Review)
Review
Macular holes (MHs), including atraumatic idiopathic and refractory MHs, affect central vision acuity due to full-thickness defects in the retinal tissue. The existing controversy regarding the pathophysiology and management of MHs has significantly improved with the implementation of internal limiting membrane (ILM) surgical techniques and improved MH closure rates. Thus, to determine the effect of ILM techniques on large idiopathic and refractory MH management, the present study systematically reviewed 5910 original research articles extracted from online literature databases, including PubMed, Cochrane, Google Scholar, and Embase, following the PRISMA guidelines. The primary outcome measures were MH closure rate and postoperative visual acuity. A total of 23 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with adequate patient information and information on the effect of ILM peeling, inverted ILM flaps, autologous retinal transplantation (ART), and ILM insertion techniques on large idiopathic and refractory MH patients were retrieved and analyzed using RevMan software (version 5.3) provided by the Cochrane Collaboration. Statistical risk of bias analysis was also conducted on the selected sources using RoB2, which showed a low risk of bias in the included studies. A meta-analysis indicated that the inverted ILM flap technique had a significantly greater MH closure rate for primary MH than the other treatment methods (OR = 3. 22, 95% CI 1.34-7.43; p = 0.01). Furthermore, the findings showed that the inverted ILM flap group had significantly better postoperative visual acuity than did the other treatment options for patients with idiopathic MH (WMD = - 0.13; 95% CI = 0.22-0.09; p = 0.0002). The ILM peeling technique had the second highest statistical significance for MH closure rates in patients with idiopathic MH (OR = 2. 72, 95% CI: 1.26-6.32; p = 0.016). In refractory MHs, autologous retinal transplant (ART) and multilayer ILM plug (MIP) techniques improve the closure rate and visual function; human amniotic membrane grafting (hAMG) provides a high degree of anatomical outcomes but disappointing visual results. This study demonstrated the reliability and effectiveness of ILM techniques in improving the functional and anatomical outcomes of large idiopathic and refractory MH surgery. These findings will help clinicians choose the appropriate treatment technique for patients with idiopathic and refractory MH.
PubMed: 38907361
DOI: 10.1186/s40942-024-00564-2 -
Supportive Care in Cancer : Official... Jun 2024Travel burden leads to worse cancer outcomes. Understanding travel burden and the level and types of travel support provided at large cancer centers is critical for...
INTRODUCTION
Travel burden leads to worse cancer outcomes. Understanding travel burden and the level and types of travel support provided at large cancer centers is critical for developing systematic programs to alleviate travel burden. This study analyzed patients who received travel assistance, including their travel burden, types and amount of travel support received, and factors that influenced these outcomes.
METHODS
We analyzed 1063 patients who received travel support from 1/1/2021 to 5/1/2023 at Winship Cancer Institute, in which ~18,000 patients received cancer care annually. Travel burden was measured using distance and time to Winship sites from patients' residential address. Travel support was evaluated using the monetary value of total travel support and type of support received. Patients' sociodemographic and clinical factors were extracted from electronic medical records. Area-level socioeconomic disadvantage was coded by the Area Deprivation Index using patient ZIP codes.
RESULTS
On average, patients traveled 57.2 miles and 67.3 min for care and received $74.1 in total for travel support. Most patients (88.3%) received travel-related funds (e.g., gas cards), 5% received direct rides (e.g., Uber), 3.8% received vouchers for taxi or public transportation, and 3% received combined travel support. Male and White had longer travel distance and higher travel time than female and other races, respectively. Patients residing in more disadvantaged neighborhoods had an increased travel distance and travel time. Other races and Hispanics received more travel support ($) than Black and White patients or non-Hispanics. Patients with higher travel distance and travel time were more like to receive travel-related financial support.
CONCLUSION
Among patients who received travel support, those from socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods had greater travel burden. Patients with greater travel burden were more likely to receive travel funds versus other types of support. Further understanding of the impact of travel burden and travel support on cancer outcomes is needed.
Topics: Humans; Male; Female; Middle Aged; Travel; Neoplasms; Aged; Southeastern United States; Adult; Cancer Care Facilities; Cost of Illness; Socioeconomic Factors
PubMed: 38907006
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-024-08656-3