• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 57
  • 43
  • 16
  • 11
  • 9
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 154
  • 154
  • 154
  • 43
  • 42
  • 28
  • 23
  • 23
  • 22
  • 22
  • 21
  • 17
  • 17
  • 15
  • 15
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

Den andliga vårdens möjligheter och begränsningar : Ett religionssociologiskt perspektiv på andlig vård inom hälso- och sjukvården och Kriminalvården. / The possibilities and limitations of spiritual care : A religious sociological perspective on spiritual care in the field of healthcare services and correctional treatment.

Condró, Fransisko January 2022 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to understand what is meant by spiritual care (andlig vård) as structured within the founding statutes and guidelines of the hospital church (Sjukhuskyrkan), the correctional services (Kriminalvården), and the health care services (hälso- och sjukvården) in Sweden. How the possibilities and limitations of spiritual care in Sweden are made visible from a socio-religious perspective is an overarching research question that forms the basis for the three sub-questions on how spiritual care is defined, designated and structured. The basis for the empirical material is partly text material from laws, presentations, guidelines, directives and basic documents for spiritual care and partly interview material from selected informants.Parts of the Constitution of Society by Anthony Giddens (1984) became the theoretical perspective. The method chosen emanated in the qualitative methods of Kirsti Malterud. The conclusions are that the structure for spiritual care in Sweden is strictly community-centered, and is reproduced through the individual actors, where the dominance of the Hospital Church maintains another ongoing and changing social system in spiritual care. This can create an unbalanced social structure in the arena of spiritual care. SST, Myndigheten för stöd till trossamfund (the Swedish Agency for Support to Faith Communities) and the Hospital Church have the means of power through the external caregiver structure on which spiritual care is based. This structure applies in a similar way to the spiritual care within the Swedish Prison and Probation Service, that reports structural imbalances that can lead to social vulnerability, discrimination and intolerance in prisons and demanding a Swedish vocational education. A clearer, patient-centered, approach is pointed out in this study, where patients with an existential crisis can be treated with either a general spirituality or a religious spirituality, where the concept of existential health through existential support can then be about both spiritual care and nursing.
42

Reasons Persons with Stroke Seek Health Care Services After Discharge Home

Pawlak, Rosalyn Joy 16 May 2006 (has links)
No description available.
43

Barriers Preventing Access to Health Care Services for Women in Rural Samoa

Miller, Paige Lynn January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
44

The rights-based approach to development :|baccess to health care services at Ratshaatsha Community Health Centre in Blouberg Municipality of Limpopo

Rammutla, Chuene William Thabisa January 2013 (has links)
Thesis (M. Dev) -- University of Limpopo, 2013 / Refer to document
45

Sveikatos priežiūros paslaugų poreikis Alytaus miesto mokyklose / The need of health care services at the secondary schools of Alytus town

Kubilienė, Daiva 07 June 2005 (has links)
SUMMARY THE NEED OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES AT THE SECONDARY SCHOOLS OF ALYTUS TOWN Author: Daiva Kubiliene Supervisor: Linas Sumskas, PhD, Assoc. Professor, Department of Preventive Medicine, faculty of Public Health, Kaunas University of Medicine Aim of study. To evaluate the need of health care services in the secondary schools of Alytus. Objectives: 1. To assess the health and health behavioral problems in school-aged children. 2. To evaluate the attitudes of parents to the need of health care services at the secondary schools. 3. To evaluate the attitudes of staff of health care services at school about the provision of health care services in school settings. Methods. Questionnaire survey was carried out in parents of school-aged children of 3rd, 7th and 11th grades at the secondary schools in Alytus town in 2004. 216 respondents were selected for the study, 161 (74.5%) of them have filled in the questionnaire forms (response rate – 74.5%). A set of questions was addressed to parents in order to clarify parents’ attitudes about the health care services at schools. Also another questionnaire was developed for health care specialists of secondary schools: 9 from 12 have responded (75.0%). Statistical analysis was carried out using SPSS 10; criterion and p<0.05 confidence level was used for comparison between the variables. Results. Health care services were provided for students at all 18 secondary schools in Alytus. 12 health care specialists were conducting their duties... [to full text]
46

Professional nurses' perceptions of the skills required to render comprehensive primary health care services / Modiane Salamina Hlahane

Hlahane, Modiane Salamina January 2003 (has links)
In South Africa professional nurses undergo training which gives them different levels of skills. It is difficult for professional nurses to render comprehensive primary health care services without specific knowledge and skills. Some lack skills in preventative and promotive health care delivery; others are not trained to take care of a pregnant woman or a baby after delivery, or of a mental health patient; while yet others are only curatively oriented. It is possible that they do not recognise their own limitations and are not aware of the skills needed to render comprehensive primary health care services. Their perceptions could influence their practice and severely affect the quality of health services. The aim of this research was to explore and describe the perceptions that professional nurses working in primary health care clinics have of the skills required to render quality comprehensive primary health care services, and the perceptions they have of their own level of skills to render quality comprehensive primary health care services, as well as to formulate guidelines for the facilitation of trained professional nurses to truly render quality comprehensive primary health care services. A qualitative design was followed. Permission was obtained from the Potchefstroom District Health Manager to conduct this research. Purposive voluntary sampling was used to identify the three samples who complied with the set selection criteria. Data collection was done by means of semi-structured interviews. Experts in qualitative research evaluated the semi-structured interview schedule. A trial run was done and the interview schedule was then finalised to conduct the interviews. The interviews were recorded on audiotape and then transcribed. The interviewer made field notes to serve as an analytical basis for the collected data. Data was collected until data saturation was achieved. Data analysis was done by means of open coding. A co-coder was appointed and two consensus meetings took place. The findings indicated that professional nurses perceive the skills required to render quality comprehensive primary health care services as the ability to assess, diagnose and manage patients, as well as specific skills acquired during the various nurse training programmes. The more comprehensively trained, the more competent they feel. The less comprehensively trained, the more negative they experience their work. They view their own level of skills as ranging from adequate to lacking and inadequate, depending on their training. They feel that it is impo~ant to develop skills ranging from computer skills to the full range of skills. The conclusions drawn are that the professional nurses with different training and levels of skills are well aware of the skills required to re.nder comprehensive primary health care services. They maintain that trained professional nurses need qualifications in General Nursing, Midwifery, Community Nursing, Psychiatric Nursing and Clinical Nursing Science, and Health Assessment, Treatment and Care. The professional nurses with all five qualifications feel confident and enjoy their work, whereas those who are not fully trained lack certain skills and experience negative feelings working in the primary health care clinics. Recommendations are made for nursing education, nursing research and nursing practice with specific reference to the formulation of guidelines for the facilitation of trained professional nurses to truly render comprehensive primary health care services, with a focus on quality control, orientation, mentoring, planning of training, support systems, and consultancy. / Thesis (M.Cur.)--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003
47

Community participation in rural primary health care services from the community's perspective / Mokhantso Ranthithi

Ranthithi, Mokhantso January 2014 (has links)
The World Health Organization (WHO) (WHO, 2004:20) describes a community as a social group of any size, with its members residing in a specific locality, sharing government and a common cultural and historical heritage. In the context of health, a community can be considered as those who are affected by similar health issues, or it can simply be defined as stakeholders, such as health professionals or patients. Community participation is collaboration in which people voluntarily, or due to some incentive, collaborate with externally determined projects, either contributing their labour and/or resources for some expected benefit. Within the health system community participation can either be guided by law or regulations, for instance, the White Paper for Transformation of the Health System in South Africa and the South African patients' bill of rights charter, or it can be on a voluntary basis without any guidelines. The researcher believes that the focus should be on how the community can participate in the decisions that affect their health. The research was aimed at exploring and describing a rural community’s perceptions on community participation in Primary Health Care (PHC) services rendered to improve the quality of the current PHC services. The main question asked was: What does effective community participation in PHC services entails to improve the quality of health care according to the community members’ perspectives in a rural community? A qualitative research approach was used to conduct the research on the perceptions of community members on community participation in PHC services. The research took place in Dewetsdorp, a rural area situated in the Xhariep district of the Free State province in South Africa. Data was collected by means of focus groups, making use of a semi-structured interview schedule consisting of four questions in an endeavour to reach an answer on the research question. Three focus groups realised; one consisting of the community leaders as members of the community, another consisting of members from Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and the last consisting of community members utilising the PHC services in Dewetsdorp. Digitally voice recorded focus groups were transcribed for data analysis. Data saturation occurred after three focus groups, with an average of seven participants per group. The themes that emerged from the focus groups are discussed with literature integration. The findings of the research suggest that the community members of Dewetsdorp have a strong sense that community participation should form part of the PHC services. They expressed the view that they play an important role that should be acknowledged and they want to be respected as partners who are willing to take ownership of the PHC services in their community through participation. From the research results and conclusions, the researcher compiled recommendations for nursing education, nursing research and primary health care nursing practice. / MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
48

Professional nurses' perceptions of the skills required to render comprehensive primary health care services / Modiane Salamina Hlahane

Hlahane, Modiane Salamina January 2003 (has links)
In South Africa professional nurses undergo training which gives them different levels of skills. It is difficult for professional nurses to render comprehensive primary health care services without specific knowledge and skills. Some lack skills in preventative and promotive health care delivery; others are not trained to take care of a pregnant woman or a baby after delivery, or of a mental health patient; while yet others are only curatively oriented. It is possible that they do not recognise their own limitations and are not aware of the skills needed to render comprehensive primary health care services. Their perceptions could influence their practice and severely affect the quality of health services. The aim of this research was to explore and describe the perceptions that professional nurses working in primary health care clinics have of the skills required to render quality comprehensive primary health care services, and the perceptions they have of their own level of skills to render quality comprehensive primary health care services, as well as to formulate guidelines for the facilitation of trained professional nurses to truly render quality comprehensive primary health care services. A qualitative design was followed. Permission was obtained from the Potchefstroom District Health Manager to conduct this research. Purposive voluntary sampling was used to identify the three samples who complied with the set selection criteria. Data collection was done by means of semi-structured interviews. Experts in qualitative research evaluated the semi-structured interview schedule. A trial run was done and the interview schedule was then finalised to conduct the interviews. The interviews were recorded on audiotape and then transcribed. The interviewer made field notes to serve as an analytical basis for the collected data. Data was collected until data saturation was achieved. Data analysis was done by means of open coding. A co-coder was appointed and two consensus meetings took place. The findings indicated that professional nurses perceive the skills required to render quality comprehensive primary health care services as the ability to assess, diagnose and manage patients, as well as specific skills acquired during the various nurse training programmes. The more comprehensively trained, the more competent they feel. The less comprehensively trained, the more negative they experience their work. They view their own level of skills as ranging from adequate to lacking and inadequate, depending on their training. They feel that it is impo~ant to develop skills ranging from computer skills to the full range of skills. The conclusions drawn are that the professional nurses with different training and levels of skills are well aware of the skills required to re.nder comprehensive primary health care services. They maintain that trained professional nurses need qualifications in General Nursing, Midwifery, Community Nursing, Psychiatric Nursing and Clinical Nursing Science, and Health Assessment, Treatment and Care. The professional nurses with all five qualifications feel confident and enjoy their work, whereas those who are not fully trained lack certain skills and experience negative feelings working in the primary health care clinics. Recommendations are made for nursing education, nursing research and nursing practice with specific reference to the formulation of guidelines for the facilitation of trained professional nurses to truly render comprehensive primary health care services, with a focus on quality control, orientation, mentoring, planning of training, support systems, and consultancy. / Thesis (M.Cur.)--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003
49

Community participation in rural primary health care services from the community's perspective / Mokhantso Ranthithi

Ranthithi, Mokhantso January 2014 (has links)
The World Health Organization (WHO) (WHO, 2004:20) describes a community as a social group of any size, with its members residing in a specific locality, sharing government and a common cultural and historical heritage. In the context of health, a community can be considered as those who are affected by similar health issues, or it can simply be defined as stakeholders, such as health professionals or patients. Community participation is collaboration in which people voluntarily, or due to some incentive, collaborate with externally determined projects, either contributing their labour and/or resources for some expected benefit. Within the health system community participation can either be guided by law or regulations, for instance, the White Paper for Transformation of the Health System in South Africa and the South African patients' bill of rights charter, or it can be on a voluntary basis without any guidelines. The researcher believes that the focus should be on how the community can participate in the decisions that affect their health. The research was aimed at exploring and describing a rural community’s perceptions on community participation in Primary Health Care (PHC) services rendered to improve the quality of the current PHC services. The main question asked was: What does effective community participation in PHC services entails to improve the quality of health care according to the community members’ perspectives in a rural community? A qualitative research approach was used to conduct the research on the perceptions of community members on community participation in PHC services. The research took place in Dewetsdorp, a rural area situated in the Xhariep district of the Free State province in South Africa. Data was collected by means of focus groups, making use of a semi-structured interview schedule consisting of four questions in an endeavour to reach an answer on the research question. Three focus groups realised; one consisting of the community leaders as members of the community, another consisting of members from Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and the last consisting of community members utilising the PHC services in Dewetsdorp. Digitally voice recorded focus groups were transcribed for data analysis. Data saturation occurred after three focus groups, with an average of seven participants per group. The themes that emerged from the focus groups are discussed with literature integration. The findings of the research suggest that the community members of Dewetsdorp have a strong sense that community participation should form part of the PHC services. They expressed the view that they play an important role that should be acknowledged and they want to be respected as partners who are willing to take ownership of the PHC services in their community through participation. From the research results and conclusions, the researcher compiled recommendations for nursing education, nursing research and primary health care nursing practice. / MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
50

Mobile clinic users' opinions on health care service provision in the Muldersdrift area,Gauteng province

Tshabalala, Amme Mardulate 17 November 2006 (has links)
Student Number : 0008922X - MPH research report - Faculty of Health Sciences / The use of the mobile clinics for rendering health care services in South Africa is part of the services rendered according to the Primary Health Care Service Package that was officially published in 2001. Mobile clinics have been found to be instrumental in rendering of health care especially in the rural and semi- rural areas. In the majority of these areas, the mobile clinic is the only source of health care provision at community level. Lack of well developed infrastructure and poor roads contribute to inaccessibility of health care services in rural and semi-rural areas. Health programmes are often of poor quality or offer incomplete services. Factors such as lack of knowledge of available health care services, satisfaction with the quality and range of services provided, and unavailability of the mobile clinic service when there is a health need, can result in the mobile health care clinic being less utilized. The purpose of the study was to address the following question: What are mobile clinic users’ opinions on health care service provision in the Muldersdrift area Gauteng Province? To answer the question three research objectives were formulated. These were to: describe the mobile clinic users’ level of service utilization, to assess their level of knowledge of available health care services and to determine their level of satisfaction with the services provided. To achieve the study objectives, an exploratory, descriptive survey was used as the research design. Three sampling techniques were used in this study. Cluster sampling was used for developing sampling framework for the 35 mobile points. Stratified sampling used to stratification of the mobile points. A non- probability convenience sampling was then used for final selection of the nine mobile clinic points and for selection of a sample size of 94 mobile clinic users’ to be included in the study. Data were analysed using the Statistical Package 7.0. The results show that the mobile clinic service was optimally utilized, 59% had used the service more than thrice within a period of six months. The majority of participants (89.3%) had knowledge of all the services being offered on the mobile clinic. Very few respondents (19.5%) were aware of the availability of HIV and AIDS counseling and testing on the mobile clinic. All most all the respondents (98.9%) were satisfied the range of services offered on the mobile clinic. Almost half (48.9%) were not satisfied with the service being offered once a month, (4.4%) with the attitude of the staff, (5.3%) with treatment of common ailments and (2%) said the mobile clinic service was bad.

Page generated in 0.1232 seconds