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1.
Hosp Pediatr ; 11(10): 1137-1152, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2253175

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many children are undervaccinated at the time of hospital admission. Our objective was to explore the facilitators and barriers to vaccinating during hospitalization. METHODS: We conducted qualitative interviews of parents, primary care pediatricians, emergency department (ED) physicians, and pediatric hospitalists. Parents of undervaccinated hospitalized children who were admitted through the ED were invited to participate. We used purposive sampling to identify physician participants. Semistructured interviews querying participants' perspectives on hospital-based vaccination were audiorecorded and transcribed. Parent demographics and physician practice characteristics were collected. Transcripts were analyzed for facilitators and barriers to vaccinating during acute hospital visits by using inductive content analysis. A conceptual framework was developed on the basis of the social ecological model. RESULTS: Twenty-one parent interviews and 10 physician interviews were conducted. Of parent participants, 86% were female; 76% were white. Physician participants included 3 primary care pediatricians, 3 ED physicians, and 4 hospitalists. Facilitators and barriers fell under 4 major themes: (1) systems-level factors, (2) physician-level factors, (3) parent-provider interactional factors, and (4) parent- and child-level factors. Parent participants reported a willingness to receive vaccines during hospitalizations, which aligned with physician participants' experiences. Another key facilitator identified by parent and physician participants was the availability of shared immunization data. Identified by parent and physician participants included the availability of shared immunization data. Barriers included being unaware that the child was vaccine-eligible, parental beliefs against vaccination, and ED and inpatient physicians' perceived lack of skills to effectively communicate with vaccine-hesitant parents. CONCLUSIONS: Parents and physicians identified several key facilitators and barriers to vaccinating during hospitalization. Efforts to provide inpatient vaccines need to address existing barriers.


Subject(s)
Physicians , Child , Child, Hospitalized , Female , Hospitals , Humans , Parents , Qualitative Research , Vaccination
2.
BMC Public Health ; 23(1): 235, 2023 02 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2234729

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This article's purpose is to compare burnout syndrome indicators at different levels of teaching in Brazil during the covid-19 pandemic. The comparison also considers the teachers' quality of life and health, working conditions, and digital competence. METHODS: The hypotheses of this study are that there are statistically significant differences in teachers' burnout rates, quality of life, working conditions, and digital competences depending on the teaching level. A mixed-methods ex-post-facto survey involved 438 Brazilian teachers, with a mean age of 42.93 years (SD = 9.66), 330 females (75%) and 108 males (25%). Data were collected through an online questionnaire. Statistical analysis of variance (ANOVA) tests was performed to compare groups, the Tukey test for paired comparison of the analyzed groups, and the chi-square to verify the association between variables. RESULTS: Higher levels of digital competence were associated with lower burnout syndrome scores. Elementary and middle school teachers presented worse quality of life and health indexes. Adapting pedagogical work involved learning but also overwork, exhaustion, and frustration. CONCLUSIONS: The study concludes that basic education teachers had higher burnout rate scores than higher education teachers during the covid-19 pandemic and that early childhood education should be treated as a separate category. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Ethics approval was obtained from the University of Santa Catarina (UFSC) Research Ethics Committee (4.432.063, December 7, 2020). Informed consent was obtained from all subjects.


Subject(s)
Burnout, Professional , COVID-19 , Child, Preschool , Male , Female , Humans , Adult , Brazil/epidemiology , Quality of Life , Pandemics , COVID-19/epidemiology , Burnout, Professional/epidemiology
3.
2020.
Non-conventional in Portuguese | LILACS (Americas) | ID: grc-742587

ABSTRACT

Esta nota técnica busca informar, com dados e ressaltando todas as limitações inerentes a eles, um único aspecto do problema multifacetário que afeta as redes de ensino no curso da pandemia da Covid-19, aspecto esse delimitado em três questões: - Quantos estudantes do ensino regular, tanto entre quem está na fase de escolarização obrigatória (pré-escola ao ensino médio) quanto entre quem está no nível superior (graduação e pós-graduação stricto sensu), não têm acesso domiciliar à internet minimamente de qualidade para atividades remotas de ensino-aprendizagem enquanto o retorno às atividades presenciais não for possível ou for severamente limitado? - Em que medida a distribuição de celulares ou de tablets com chips 4G seria uma política efetiva e viável para contornar o problema do não-acesso às tecnologias necessárias às atividades remotas? - Que iniciativas complementares poderiam alcançar quem não conseguiria acesso a atividades remotas de ensino aprendizagem mesmo após a distribuição de celulares ou de tablets com chips 4G?

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