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Patients seen at the university hospital in Johannesburg: their views on truth-tellingVangu, Mboyo Di Tamba Heb'En Willy 29 April 2009 (has links)
Truth telling forms part of the contemporary debate in clinical bioethics and centers around
the right of the patient to know honest information concerning his or her medical condition /
illness and the duty of the doctor to inform the patient of such.
Anecdotal evidence seems to imply that patients have concerns with the practice of truthtelling.
Many often complain that they are not being informed and sometimes simply being
ignored in matters that primarily concerns their health. On the other hand, there may be
patients who do not to want a truthful answer to their health problems-they would in fact
rather not know.
The aim of this study was to explore my intuition that patients who attend the Johannesburg
General Hospital are not given full information about their condition(s) and / or treatment(s)
although they would like to know.
The study explored the preferences of patients regarding the practice of truth telling and
their attitudes toward truth telling in four out patient clinics of the Johannesburg General
Hospital.
Four hundred and sixty five participants completed and retuned the questionnaire from four
different out patient clinics, namely oncology, surgical (general surgery and orthopedics),
medical (gastro, renal and general internal medicine) and the nuclear medicine unit that
represented the mixed out patient clinic.
The majority of participants stated that the doctor had disclosed information about their
condition (92.90%). Almost all participants were of the opinion that patients have the right to
know about their condition (98.28%) and also that the doctor has the duty to inform them of
their condition (98.02%).
If they were suffering from a serious condition, a higher percentage of participants (86.28%)
would prefer to know about their condition while a small but significant percentage (13.72%)
would prefer not to know. The vast majority of participants (96.64%) also preferred to know
about information relating to their treatment in detail while a high percentage (87.83%)
supported disclosure to relatives.
Variables such as gender, age and level of education did not seem to impact on the
participants’ opinions of the truth telling process with significance with the exception of
iv
gender in relation with knowledge of one’s condition (p=0.0176) and education with regard
to opinions on the right of patients to disclosure (p=0.0430).
From the above results it can then be concluded that:
1. Participants in our study supported the right of patients to disclosure and the vast
majority also felt that doctors have the duty to inform patients of their condition.
2. A significant percentage of participants felt that the level of information given to them
was not satisfactory even when they have requested for more. This should be looked
at and means for improvement should be sought.
3. A small but significant group did not support disclosure and must be respected as
autonomous beings.
4. Gender seems to influence opinions of patients concerning their condition and
education impacts on opinions relating to right of patients to disclosure of
information.
5. To our appeasement, we found that patients attending the Johannesburg hospital
are in fact given information about their condition. It is rather the quality and the
quantity of information given that should be subject to scrutiny if we would like to
move towards full disclosure in the process of truth telling in our institution.
6. Future studies should be considered to assess the attitudes of doctors towards
disclosing, as well as further assess conflicting opinions in small group of patients by
means of direct interviews.
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Performance evaluation of a picture archiving and communications systemRioux, Alexandre. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.). / Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2008/01/30). Written for the Medical Physics Unit, Faculty of Medicine. Includes bibliographical references.
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A study of continuity of medical care - a social worker's evaluation of nineteen cases discharged from the Massachusetts General HospitalHouchins, Melanie R. January 1957 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University
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After outsourcing : working collaboratively to deliver patient care? /Kahnamoui, Niknaz. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Simon Fraser University, 2005. / Theses (Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences) / Simon Fraser University.
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After outsourcing : working collaboratively to deliver patient care? /Kahnamoui, Niknaz. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Simon Fraser University, 2005. / Theses (Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences) / Simon Fraser University.
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Yleissairaalapsykiatrinen konsultaatio Suomessa:yleissairaalapsykiatriseen konsultaatioon ohjautuvat työikäiset ja vanhuksetHiltunen, P. (Pirkko) 24 November 1999 (has links)
Abstract
General hospital psychiatry operates between the somatic and
psychiatric approaches concerning the treatment of patients, combining
knowledge from both somatic and psychiatric medicine. To establish
its position, the general hospital psychiatry has to specify its
role and means when rendering services.
This study revealed how consultation had been arranged in
six Finnish polyclinics of general hospitals. The goal was to find
out which types of patients were referred to the consultation of
the general hospital psychiatry and the extent of collaboration
of the consulting psychiatrist with colleagues from other medical
disciplines. Moreover, the focus of attention was on whether there were
operational differences between the polyclinics of the University
Hospital of Oulu and other hospitals. The work was also addressed
to probing operational differences, if any, pertaining to people under
or over 65. Additionally, one aspect to be clarified was how requests
for psychogeriatric consultations and the responses of the consulting
psychiatrists had developed during the five years period of the
study.
This study was part of a broad European Consultation Liaison
Working Group effort aimed at clarifying the organization of general
hospital psychiatry in 56 units in 11 European countries. The Finnish
material consisted of 1255 patients, of whom 202 were over 65. The
research methods applied here were psychiatric interviewing of clinical
patients, and filling in of data collection forms following the
instructions of the ECLW Group.
The current work revealed that the number of psychiatric consultations
was less than expected considering the incidence of psychiatric
symptoms among somatically ill patients. Of the general hospital
patients, elderly people were especially underrepresented. More
than 90% of the patients who had a psychiatric consultation
were diagnosed with a psychiatric problem. Thus the general hospital
made available psychiatric treatment via psychiatric consultation,
with a recommendation for future psychiatric care for more than
half of the patients. However, one third of the patients under 65 and
quarter of those above that age had already had on going psychiatric
treatment. In view of this type of situation the position of the
general hospital appears problematic. The object of consultation was
in 90% of the cases the patients themselves, but in Oulu,
almost half of the consultations were due to the personnel of the
somatic disciplines in charge of the of the patients. The action
mode in separate general hospitals was connected to established
traditions, although the history of general hospital psychiatry
is short and faces constraints put forward by the somatic hospitals.
Collaboration between psychiatric and somatic disciplines was facing
increasing difficulties during the five years observation period,
probably due to economic recession.
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The Health Centre for Children, 1948-1951 : a review of the development and current programme at the Vancouver General HospitalRichards, Sonia Patricia January 1952 (has links)
This study reviews the growth and development of the Health Centre for Children, Vancouver General Hospital, which has offered, for the past four years, a diagnostic and treatment service to children in low-income families. The aim of the project is to determine to what extent the need in the community for a service of this kind is being met. The main research methods used to obtain the necessary information have been interviews and studies of medical and social case records.
The medical structure is described in detail with suggestions for improvement of service in this area. The role which the social worker fulfills is outlined, and is compared with the role which the social worker would ideally assume in a setting of this type. Suggestions for improvement of service are made in this area also. Particular emphasis is placed upon the need for treatment of the "whole" individual, a factor which, because of concentration upon expansion of medical services, appears to have received too little attention in the Health Centre.
Although there is still room for improvement in the programme, there is reason to believe that the need in the community for a service of this kind is being met to a great extent. The main indication of this is the comparatively large number of people who use the Health Centre facilities. This is particularly evident when attendances for the four-year period are compared with the numbers who used the only public medical services formerly available.
Since the Health Centre will be moving into new and more spacious quarters in the course of the next few months and since, at this time, many major and minor changes will be instituted, this study is considered an interim one. It would be valuable to have a further study completed after four or five years of continued operation. / Arts, Faculty of / Social Work, School of / Graduate
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Power and Uncertainty: An Analysis of the Structure of an Emergency Ward in a General HospitalWilliams, Peter 10 1900 (has links)
This study is concerned with analyzing the ways in which the members of an organization faced with problems of unpredictability and uncertainty, adapt to the situation and achieve some degree of control over it. Chapter 1 describes the organization within which the study was conducted, and also discusses the methodology employed. Chapter 2 reviews the literature pertinent to the problem, both on the spheres of organization theory and medical sociology. Chapter 3 describes the role and mode of adaptation of the physician to the situation. Chapter 4 examines the role of the head nurse and her relations with other ward members. Chapter 4 examines the role of the head nurse and her relations with other ward members. Chapter 5 provides an analysis of the sources of tension and conflict in the ward and the final chapter contains a summery of the previous arguments and a discussion of their pertinence
to sociological theory. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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A study of the adjustment of fourteen patients with ileostomies who attended the Ileostomy Clinic group discussion at the Massachusetts General HospitalRobinson, Arlene Minerva January 1952 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University
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A study of continuity of medical care - a social worker's evaluation of nineteen cases discharged from the Massachusetts General HospitalHouchins, Melanie January 1957 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University
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