54 research outputs found
Co-designing Urban Living Solutions to Improve Older People’s Mobility and Well-Being
Mobility is a key aspect of active ageing enabling participation and autonomy into later life. Remaining active brings multiple physical but also social benefits leading to higher levels of well-being. With globally increasing levels of urbanisation alongside demographic shifts meaning in many parts of the world this urban population will be older people, the challenge is how cities should evolve to enable so-called active ageing. This paper reports on a co-design study with 117 participants investigating the interaction of existing urban spaces and infrastructure on mobility and well-being for older residents (aged 55 + years) in three cities. A mixed method approach was trialled to identify locations beneficial to subjective well-being and participant-led solutions to urban mobility challenges. Spatial analysis was used to identify key underlying factors in locations and infrastructure that promoted or compromised mobility and well-being for participants. Co-designed solutions were assessed for acceptability or co-benefits amongst a wider cross-section of urban residents (n = 233) using online and face-to-face surveys in each conurbation. Our analysis identified three critical intersecting and interacting thematic problems for urban mobility amongst older people: The quality of physical infrastructure; issues around the delivery, governance and quality of urban systems and services; and the attitudes and behaviors of individuals that older people encounter. This identified complexity reinforces the need for policy responses that may not necessarily involve design or retrofit measures, but instead might challenge perceptions and behaviors of use and access to urban space. Our co-design results further highlight that solutions need to move beyond the generic and placeless, instead embedding specific locally relevant solutions in inherently geographical spaces, populations and processes to ensure they relate to the intricacies of place
Chinese Americans’ Views and Use of Family Health History: A Qualitative Study
Objective
Family health history (FHH) plays a significant role in early disease detection and preven- tion. Although Asian Americans are the fastest growing U.S. immigrant group, no data exists regarding Chinese Americans’ (the largest Asian subgroup) views and use of FHH. This study examines this important issue.
Methods
Forty-nine adults from southern U.S. Chinese American communities participated in this qualitative, semi-structured, in-depth interview study. Interviews were audio recorded, tran- scribed, and analyzed with a content analysis approach.
Results
Although the majority of participants perceived the importance of collecting FHH, most lacked FHH knowledge and failed to collect FHH information. Barriers affecting FHH collec- tion and discussion among family members included long-distance separation from family members, self-defined “healthy family,� and Chinese cultural beliefs. Lack of doctors’ inqui- ries, never/rarely visiting physicians, self-defined “healthy family,� perceived insignificance of discussing FHH with doctors, and Chinese cultural beliefs were the obstacles in commu- nicating FHH with physicians.
Conclusions
Chinese Americans had limited usage of their FHH and faced cultural, distance, knowl- edge-, and healthcare system-related barriers that influenced their FHH use. Developing FHH education programs for Chinese Americans is highly recommended
Teleconsultation service to improve healthcare in rural areas: acceptance, organizational impact and appropriateness
Background: Nowadays, new organisational strategies should be indentified to improve primary
care and its link with secondary care in terms of efficacy and timeliness of interventions thus
preventing unnecessary hospital accesses and costs saving for the health system. The purpose of
this study is to assess the effects of the use of teleconsultation by general practitioners in rural
areas.
Methods: General practitioners were provided with a teleconsultation service from 2006 to 2008
to obtain a second opinion for cardiac, dermatological and diabetic problems. Access, acceptance,
organisational impact, effectiveness and economics data were collected. Clinical and access data
were systematically entered in a database while acceptance and organisational data were evaluated
through ad hoc questionnaires.
Results: There were 957 teleconsultation contacts which resulted in access to health care services
for 812 symptomatic patients living in 30 rural communities. Through the teleconsultation service,
48 general practitioners improved the appropriateness of primary care and the integration with
secondary care. In fact, the level of concordance between intentions and consultations for cardiac
problems was equal to 9%, in 86% of the cases the service entailed a saving of resources and in 5%
of the cases, it improved the timeliness. 95% of the GPs considered the overall quality positively.
For a future routine use of this service, trust in specialists, duration and workload of
teleconsultations and reimbursement should be taken into account.
Conclusions: Managerial and policy implications emerged mainly related to the support to GPs in
the provision of high quality primary care and decision-making processes in promoting similar
services
What is known about the role of rural-urban residency in relation to self-management in people affected by cancer who have completed primary treatment? A scoping review.
Purpose
Despite wide acknowledgement of differences in levels of support and health outcomes between urban and rural areas there is a lack of research that explicitly examines these differences in relation to self-management in people affected by cancer following treatment. This scoping review aimed to map the existing literature that examines self-management in people affected by cancer who were post-treatment from rural and urban areas.
Methods
Arksey and O’Malley’s framework for conducting a scoping review was utilised. Keyword searches were performed in: Academic Search Complete, CINAHL, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Scopus and Web of Science. Supplementary searching activities were also conducted.
Results
438 articles were initially retrieved and 249 duplicates removed leaving 192 articles that were screened by title, abstract and full text. 9 met the eligibility criteria and were included in the review. They were published from 2011-2018 and conducted in the USA (n=6), Australia (n=2) and Canada (n=1). None of the studies offered insight into self-managing cancer within a rural-urban context in the UK. Studies used qualitative (n=4), mixed methods (n=4) and quantitative designs (n=1).
Conclusion
If rural and urban populations define their health in different ways as some of the extant literature suggests then efforts to support self-management in both populations will need to be better informed by robust evidence given the increasing focus on patient centred care. It is important to consider if residency can be a predictor of as well as, a barrier or facilitator to self-management
Geographic variations in access and utilization of cancer screening services: examining disparities among American Indian and Alaska Native Elders
Community Readiness for Adopting a Physical Activity Program for People With Arthritis in West Virginia
Understanding the assistive technology needs of people over 55: The future of mobility aids
Lower body functioning and correlates among older American Indians: The Cerebrovascular Disease and Its Consequences in American Indians Study
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