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1.
Mil Med ; 184(Suppl 1): 335-341, 2019 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30901399

ABSTRACT

Over the past 15 years of conflict, eye injuries have ocurred at a steady rate of 5-10% of combat casualties, attributed to the enemy's use of improvised explosive devices. Many of these injuries result in a compartment syndrome of the orbit, easily decompressed through the use of a simple procedure called a Lateral Canthotomy and Cantholysis (LCC). Current training curricula at the U.S. Army Center for Pre-Hospital Medicine at Fort Sam Houston, Texas incorporates LCC training presented in lectures and taught using cadavers and goats (resources permitting), but lacks a LCC training device for the development of psychomotor skills. Requirements analysis, iterative design and development, and testing were performed for a simulation-based training system that may be used to practice the LCC procedure. Subject matter experts have conducted numerous reviews of the prototype system, where feedback is used to drive subsequent designs. Further work, including formal analysis of training effectiveness, will be performed to validate the training system. This will benefit will benefit military and civilian training programs by training psychomotor skills to enhance competency in the LCC procedure for preserving eyesight.


Subject(s)
Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures/education , Patient Simulation , Teaching , Decompression, Surgical/education , Decompression, Surgical/methods , Emergency Medical Services/methods , Equipment Design/standards , Eye Injuries/complications , Eye Injuries/surgery , Humans , Texas , Warfare
2.
Psychiatr Serv ; 66(12): 1271-6, 2015 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26234330

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This study evaluated financial challenges, satisfaction with financial-management supports, and interest in additional or alternative supports among clients of a mental health center. METHODS: Six focus groups were held with 39 clients of an urban community mental health center who reported having difficulty with their finances. Five focus groups were held with direct-care staff who provided services to the clients. Investigators used an inductive analytical approach to distill themes from notes taken during the focus groups. RESULTS: Clients emphasized the challenges of living in poverty and described using complex strategies to sustain themselves, including negotiating benefits systems, carefully planning purchases, and developing and relying on social relationships. They spoke of having uneven access to tools and services for managing their money, such as advice from direct-care staff, representative payees, and bank accounts, and had varying opinions about their value. Noting concerns similar to those of clients, direct-care staff expressed frustration at the lack of support services for helping clients manage their finances. Both clients and staff expressed the need for more services to help clients with their finances. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest a need for more services to support people with mental illness to manage their finances, particularly a more flexible and broader range of options than are provided by current representative-payee mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Community Mental Health Centers , Mental Disorders/economics , Patient Advocacy/economics , Poverty/economics , Connecticut , Focus Groups , Humans , Mental Health/economics , Patient Satisfaction , Social Support , Urban Population
3.
Am J Community Psychol ; 54(3-4): 397-408, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25245601

ABSTRACT

Historically, consumers of mental health services have not been given meaningful roles in research and change efforts related to the services they use. This is quickly changing as scholars and a growing number of funding bodies now call for greater consumer involvement in mental health services research and improvement. Amidst these calls, community-based participatory research (CBPR) has emerged as an approach which holds unique promise for capitalizing on consumer involvement in mental health services research and change. Yet, there have been few discussions of the value added by this approach above and beyond that of traditional means of inquiry and enhancement in adult mental health services. The purpose of this paper is to add to this discussion an understanding of potential multilevel and multifaceted benefits associated with consumer-involved CBPR. This is accomplished through presenting the first-person accounts of four stakeholder groups who were part of a consumer-involved CBPR project purposed to improve the services of a local community mental health center. We present these accounts with the hope that by illustrating the unique outcomes associated with CBPR, there will be invigorated interest in CBPR as a vehicle for consumer involvement in adult mental health services research and enhancement.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research , Mental Health Services , Quality Improvement , Attitude to Health , Consumer Behavior , Female , Health Services Research , Humans , Male , Organizational Innovation , Qualitative Research
4.
Community Ment Health J ; 41(3): 291-306, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16131008

ABSTRACT

Clients disabled by psychiatric illness may be assigned mental health clinicians as payees. We compared client-payee interactions among 42 clients with clinician-payees, 20 whose payees were family or friends and nine with attorney-payees. Compared to clients with attorney-payees, clients with clinician-payees felt more satisfied and more involved in their money management, and had had more contacts with their payees in the previous month. Clients' satisfaction with family/friend payees was similar to that with clinician payees. In multivariate analyses, whether or not the payee had had training about mental illness accounted for 33% of the variance in satisfaction with the payee.


Subject(s)
Family/psychology , Lawyers , Patient Satisfaction , Physicians , Reimbursement Mechanisms , Adult , Case Management , Connecticut , Data Collection , Diagnosis, Dual (Psychiatry) , Disabled Persons/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
5.
ISA Trans ; 42(3): 485-95, 2003 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12858981

ABSTRACT

Reliable, automated detection and diagnosis of abnormal behavior within vapor compression refrigeration cycle (VCRC) equipment is extremely desirable for equipment owners and operators. The specific type of VCRC equipment studied in this paper is a 70-ton helical rotary, air-cooled chiller. The fault detection and diagnostic (FDD) tool developed as part of this research analyzes chiller operating data and detects faults through recognizing trends or patterns existing within the data. The FDD method incorporates a neural network (NN) classifier to infer the current state given a vector of observables. Therefore the FDD method relies upon the availability of normal and fault empirical data for training purposes and therefore a fault library of empirical data is assembled. This paper presents procedures for conducting sophisticated fault experiments on chillers that simulate air-cooled condenser, refrigerant, and oil related faults. The experimental processes described here are not well documented in literature and therefore will provide the interested reader with a useful guide. In addition, the authors provide evidence, based on both thermodynamics and empirical data analysis, that chiller performance is significantly degraded during fault operation. The chiller's performance degradation is successfully detected and classified by the NN FDD classifier as discussed in the paper's final section.

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