1.Simulation Results for Contamination Comparisons by Various Use Protocols of Personal Protective Equipment
Korean Journal of Medicine 2018;93(1):41-49
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Due to a lack of scientific evidence and unstandardized protocols, the correct use of personal protective equipment (PPE) is not always easy for healthcare personnel (HCP). This study aimed to generate experimental evidence to reduce contaminations during PPE doffing. METHODS: With institutional review board approval, 4 standardized HCP were recruited to examine selected PPE protocols based on consultations with 10 invited Korean infection control leaders. Using fluorescent powder and ultraviolet light, each PPE protocol was evaluated for contaminations by comparing methods or steps. Pictures of contaminated areas and videos of HCP practice were evaluated for case analysis by linking all collected data using assigned study experiment codes. RESULTS: A total of 38 simulation experiments were conducted during December 14–20, 2016. No significant difference was found among minor variations in PPE protocols. Rather, after an intensive, 1-minute patient care simulation (e.g., physical assessment), severe powder contaminations on the front and under the sleeves of coveralls were found. Even after the outer-glove surface was wiped clean, partial contaminations still remained, especially between fingers and on fingertips. Moreover, after cleaning glove surface contaminations using wipes, each doffing step caused different contaminations. Among different types of N95 respirators, the foldable N95 type was the most stable during doffing processes, with less possibility of contamination. CONCLUSIONS: Based on this study's findings with visual evidence of contaminations during PPE doffing processes, some meaningful recommendations were feasible, such as the use of disposable long-sleeve aprons over coveralls. Further study is necessary to evaluate these recommendations.
Delivery of Health Care
;
Equipment Contamination
;
Ethics Committees, Research
;
Fingers
;
Health Personnel
;
Humans
;
Infection Control
;
Patient Care
;
Personal Protective Equipment
;
Referral and Consultation
;
Ultraviolet Rays
;
Ventilators, Mechanical
2.Evaluation of a personal and professional development module in an undergraduate medical curriculum in India.
Ramnarayan KOMATTIL ; Shyamala Handattu HANDE ; Ciraj Ali MOHAMMED ; Barathi SUBRAMANIAM
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2016;28(1):117-121
The study aimed at evaluating the personal and professional development (PPD) module in the undergraduate medical curriculum in Melaka Manipal Medical College, India. PPD hours were incorporated in the curriculum. A team of faculty members and a faculty coordinator identified relevant topics and students were introduced to topics such as medical humanities, leadership skills, communication skills, ethics, professional behavior, and patient narratives. The module was evaluated using a prevalidated course feedback questionnaire which was administered to three consecutive batches of students from March 2011 to March 2013. To analyze faculty perspectives, one to one in-depth interviews and focus group discussions were conducted by the coordinators with faculty members who conducted the PPD classes. Analysis of the course feedback form revealed that majority (80%) of students agreed that the module was well prepared and was "highly relevant" to the profession. Faculty found the topics new and interdisciplinary and there was a sense of sharing responsibility and workload by the faculty. PPD modules are necessary components of the curriculum and help to mould students while they are still acquiescent as they assume their roles as doctors of the future.
*Attitude of Health Personnel
;
Communication
;
*Curriculum
;
*Education, Medical, Undergraduate
;
Ethics, Medical
;
*Faculty, Medical
;
Focus Groups
;
Humanities
;
Humans
;
India
;
Leadership
;
Physician-Patient Relations
;
*Professionalism
;
*Schools, Medical
;
*Students, Medical
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
3.Ethical Problems Experienced by Community Mental Health Nurses in Korea.
Journal of Korean Academy of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing 2016;25(4):418-429
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to explore ethical problems that cause moral distress in nurses and affects the quality of care provided by community mental health nurses working in community mental health settings. METHODS: Three focus group interviews were held with 14 nurses working in 3 community mental health centers in Korea. Qualitative descriptive methods and qualitative content analysis were used. RESULTS: Data analysis found 5 domains (decision making, communication, resources, safety, advocacy), 9 categories (personal information sharing issues, ethical insensibility, collisions between principles and practice, institutions unprepared in ethical problems, ethical dilemma in interactions with clients, problems with the evaluation system, problems with the budget structure, problems with the lack of safety measure, and problems with role limitation as a professional) and 11 subcategories. CONCLUSION: Results of this study suggest a) a need for further research on identifying ethical conflicts arising in community mental health fields, and b) on what nurses actually do when they deal with ethical conflicts, c) efforts to develop ethics support programs such as ethics education, training and reflection meetings to enhance nurses' ethical sensitivity, d) consideration of a supportive environment and culture that prioritizes ethical concerns in practitioners as well as administrators.
Administrative Personnel
;
Budgets
;
Community Mental Health Centers
;
Education
;
Ethics
;
Focus Groups
;
Humans
;
Information Dissemination
;
Korea*
;
Mental Health Services
;
Mental Health*
;
Nursing
;
Qualitative Research
;
Statistics as Topic
4.Distancing sedation in end-of-life care from physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia.
Tze Ling Gwendoline Beatrice SOH ; Lalit Kumar Radha KRISHNA ; Shin Wei SIM ; Alethea Chung Peng YEE
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(5):220-227
Lipuma equates continuous sedation until death (CSD) to physician-assisted suicide/euthanasia (PAS/E) based on the premise that iatrogenic unconsciousness negates social function and, thus, personhood, leaving a patient effectively 'dead'. Others have extrapolated upon this position further, to suggest that any use of sedation and/or opioids at the end of life would be analogous to CSD and thus tantamount to PAS/E. These posits sit diametrically opposite to standard end-of-life care practices. This paper will refute Lipuma's position and the posits borne from it. We first show that prevailing end-of-life care guidelines require proportional and monitored use of sedatives and/or opioids to attenuate fears that the use of such treatment could hasten death. These guidelines also classify CSD as a last resort treatment, employed only when symptoms prove intractable, and not amenable to all standard treatment options. Furthermore, CSD is applied only when deemed appropriate by a multidisciplinary palliative medicine team. We also show that empirical data based on local views of personhood will discount concerns that iatrogenic unconsciousness is tantamount to a loss of personhood and death.
Analgesics, Opioid
;
therapeutic use
;
Attitude of Health Personnel
;
Death
;
Deep Sedation
;
ethics
;
Ethics, Medical
;
Euthanasia
;
ethics
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
Humans
;
Hypnotics and Sedatives
;
therapeutic use
;
Palliative Care
;
ethics
;
Personhood
;
Philosophy, Medical
;
Practice Guidelines as Topic
;
Suicide, Assisted
;
ethics
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
Terminal Care
;
ethics
;
Unconsciousness
5.Acceptability of physical examination by male doctors in medical care: Taking breast palpation as an example.
Yan-jie WANG ; Jie YANG ; Li-xia KANG ; Zhen JIA ; Dong-ming CHEN ; Ping ZHANG ; Zhan-chun FENG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2015;35(5):781-784
In this study, we conducted an investigation among medical workers, patients and college students concerning their acceptability of breast palpation performed by male doctors (hereinafter referred to as "acceptability", or "the examination", respectively, if not otherwise indicated), to get the information about their acceptability and reasons for accepting or declining the examination among the three population. A questionnaire investigation was conducted in 500 patients with breast diseases, 700 students of medical colleges, and 280 medical workers working in hospitals. The subjects were asked to choose between two options: accept or do not accept (the examination). The subjects were asked to fill out the questionnaire forms on free and anonymous basis and the questionnaire forms were collected on spot, immediately after completion. The questionnaires collected were coded, sorted out and checked. Data of the eligible questionnaires were input into Epidata software and analyzed by SPSS. Upon the establishment of the database, the intra-group data were tested by utilizing χ(2) test. Among 1480 questionnaires, 1293 (90.41%) questionnaires were retrieved. Our results showed that 56.78% of patients reported that they could accept breast palpation by male doctors. About 59.66% of medical staff expressed their acceptance of the examination, but only 35.03% of students said the examination. On the basis of this study, we were led to conclude that the examination is not well accepted by different populations, and therefore, (1) medical professionals and administrators should pay attention to the gender-related ethics in their practice and the feeling of patients should be respected when medical examinations involve private or sensitive body parts; (2) to this end, related departments should be properly staffed with doctors of both sexes, and this is especially true of the departments involving the examination or treatment of private or sensitive body parts; (3) health education should, among other things, include helping female patients to overcome the fear and anxiety in such examinations. This is of great importance since some women may miss the opportunity to get timely diagnosis.
Adult
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Female
;
Health Personnel
;
psychology
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Mammary Glands, Human
;
physiology
;
physiopathology
;
Middle Aged
;
Outpatients
;
psychology
;
Palpation
;
psychology
;
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
;
ethnology
;
psychology
;
Physical Examination
;
ethics
;
Physicians
;
ethics
;
Students, Medical
;
psychology
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
6.A New Measure for Assessing the Public Health Response to a Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Outbreak.
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2015;48(6):277-279
Contact monitoring is an essential component of the public health response to a Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus outbreak, and is required for an effective quarantine to contain the epidemic. The timeliness of a quarantine is associated with its effectiveness. This paper provides a conceptual framework to describe the process of contact monitoring, and proposes a new measure called the "timely quarantined proportion" as a tool to assess the adequacy of a public health response.
Coronavirus Infections/epidemiology/*prevention & control/transmission
;
Disease Outbreaks
;
Health Personnel/ethics
;
Humans
;
Public Health/*ethics/legislation & jurisprudence
;
Quarantine
;
Republic of Korea/epidemiology
7.Ethics in the Intensive Care Unit.
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2015;78(3):175-179
The intensive care unit (ICU) is the most common place to die. Also, ethical conflicts among stakeholders occur frequently in the ICU. Thus, ICU clinicians should be competent in all aspects for ethical decision-making. Major sources of conflicts are behavioral issues, such as verbal abuse or poor communication between physicians and nurses, and end-of-life care issues including a lack of respect for the patient's autonomy. The ethical conflicts are significantly associated with the job strain and burn-out syndrome of healthcare workers, and consequently, may threaten the quality of care. To improve the quality of care, handling ethical conflicts properly is emerging as a vital and more comprehensive area. The ICU physicians themselves need to be more sensitive to behavioral conflicts and enable shared decision making in end-of-life care. At the same time, the institutions and administrators should develop their processes to find and resolve common ethical problems in their ICUs.
Administrative Personnel
;
Decision Making
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Ethics*
;
Humans
;
Intensive Care Units*
;
Terminal Care
9.Medical ethics and self-regulation in Korean medical society.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2013;56(4):258-260
Consumption of medical services has been expanding since the health insurance system was established in the Republic of Korea. However, physicians do not seem to be satisfied with the current state of medical practice. One of the main reasons for this dissatisfaction seems to be related to underpayment of costs. The monopolistic insurance agency has kept reimbursements for appropriate medical services below cost. The public also seems to have less trust in doctors than in the past because of repeated scandales in the news media such as doctors' accepting inappropriate rebates from the pharmaceutical industry. Patients are vulnerable to illness and depend on their doctors' decision making and advising. Plus family members and taxpayers must share in caring and the financial burden that patients face. Therefore, society has high ethical standards for physicians. The medical society also has been responding to these practices. To meet society's expectations, doctors should not abandon self-regulation through the medical society. Furthermore, because the identity of a professional healthcare provider is based on the trust and endorsement of society, physicians should attempt to maintain appropriate care for patients' best interests. The public should support physicians' appropriate medical practice via reasonable reimbursement of medical costs. Through self-support and self-regulation to maintain appropriate medical practice for patients, physicians can enhance public trust. In turn, public trust in doctors will address this country's distorted medical services and restore the eroded reputation of physicians as healthcare professionals.
Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A1
;
Decision Making
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Drug Industry
;
Ethics, Medical
;
Health Personnel
;
Humans
;
Insurance
;
Insurance, Health
;
Republic of Korea
;
Societies, Medical
10.Ethical considerations in the review of Singapore's H1N1 pandemic response framework in 2009.
Wei Wei TIONG ; Gerald C H KOH
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2013;42(5):246-250
Attitude to Health
;
Civil Defense
;
ethics
;
Communicable Disease Control
;
Communication
;
Ethics, Medical
;
Freedom
;
Health Personnel
;
ethics
;
Health Planning
;
ethics
;
Health Priorities
;
ethics
;
Humans
;
Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype
;
isolation & purification
;
Influenza, Human
;
epidemiology
;
Mandatory Programs
;
ethics
;
Moral Obligations
;
Pandemics
;
ethics
;
Patient Rights
;
ethics
;
Primary Health Care
;
ethics
;
Public Health
;
ethics
;
Public Health Administration
;
ethics
;
Resource Allocation
;
ethics
;
Singapore
;
Trust

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