1.How to Run the Counselor's Office for Diabetics and Address Problems Awaiting Solution
Emi NAKAMOTO ; Masami SAEKI ; Natsumi FUJIMOTO ; Kazufumi ISHIDA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2005;54(4):672-675
Diabetic patients must keep on exercising self-management for life in order to prevent diabetic complications and hold in check the progress of the disease. Moreover, fighting against the disease is an integral part of everyday life. Depending on the condition, patients may have to switch over to another treatment method in a short space of time. Such patients accept the alteration without proper understanding of it, although physicians thought they had given full explanations to the patients. There are some patients who cannot adequately communicate with their doctors. They blame the exacerbation of the condition on their poor self-management, get depressed and eventually driven to desperation. Tired out of long years of the life under medical treatment, diabetics may want to have someone to talk to or to turn to for advice. Doctors and nurses ought to understand their feelings, listen to them, give proper instruction, and review it later. For this purpose, medical institutions should have a counselor's office easy of access by patients and their families.
seconds
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Counselors
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Office
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Solutions
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Doctors
2.Understanding How Postnatal Depression Screening and Early Intervention Work in the Real World - A Singaporean Perspective.
Theresa My LEE ; Dianne BAUTISTA ; Helen Y CHEN
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2016;45(10):466-470
Postnatal depression is a major public health problem with clearly established adverse effects in child outcomes. This study examines the 4-year outcomes of a screening and early intervention programme, in relation to improvement in symptoms, functioning and health quality of life. Women were prospectively recruited up to 6 months postdelivery, using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) as a screening tool. High-scorers (EPDS >13), were offered psychiatric consultation, and those with borderline scores (EPDS 10-12) were provided counselling, and offered follow-up phone counselling by the assigned case manager. Outcome measures were obtained at baseline, and at 6 months or discharge if earlier, for levels of symptoms, functioning, and health quality of life. From 2008 to 2012, 5245 women were screened, with 307 (5.9%) women with EPDS >13 receiving intervention. Of these, 70.0% had depression, 4.6% anxiety and 3.4% psychosis. In the depression subgroup, the net change was improvement of 93.4% EPDS symptom scores, 92.2% Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scores, and 88.3% visual analogue scale (EQ VAS) health quality of life scores. Outcome scores across diagnostic categories demonstrated median changes of 10 points on EPDS, 20 points on GAF, and 25 points on EQ VAS, reflecting 73.9%, 36.4% and 41.7% change from baseline scores. Women with psychosis showed the biggest (80.0%) relative change in GAF functioning scores from baseline to discharge but had the lowest median change in EPDS symptom scores. A screening and intervention programme rightly-sited within an obstetric setting can improve clinical outcomes because of early detection and intervention.
Adult
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Anxiety Disorders
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diagnosis
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therapy
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Case Management
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Counselors
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Delivery of Health Care
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Depression, Postpartum
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diagnosis
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therapy
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Early Medical Intervention
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Female
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Health Status
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Humans
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Mass Screening
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Obstetrics
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Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
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Prospective Studies
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Psychiatry
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Psychotic Disorders
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diagnosis
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therapy
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Puerperal Disorders
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diagnosis
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therapy
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Quality of Life
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Referral and Consultation
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Singapore