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2.
Public Health ; 168: 117-127, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30743013

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The deprivation amplification hypothesis postulates that the socially disadvantaged are exposed to further structural deprivation by their residential environment such that social inequalities are therefore amplified. To date, no publication has investigated deprivation amplification solely using playgrounds; the present health geography study investigates this hypothesis with regard to the availability of playgrounds in a typical large German city. STUDY DESIGN: Between July 2016 and January 2017, all playgrounds in the city of Mannheim, Germany, were identified and evaluated by systematic audits. The playground attributes such as availability, accessibility, surface area, and provided amenities were operationalized using well-established, validated instruments. METHODS: Geo-information about playgrounds was digitalized in ArcGIS 10.2-10.4 and linked to socioeconomic indicators on the meso-level, that is, on the level of 44 social areas. Availability and accessibility of playgrounds were quantified by calculating kernel density and Euclidean distance, respectively. Playground surface area and equipment provided were linked to the number of children and adolescents in the particular social area. The association between availability and accessibility of playgrounds and area-level indicators were assessed using bivariate and multiple Poisson regressions on the meso-level. RESULTS: In the city of Mannheim, which covers 145 km2 and is home to 311,000 inhabitants, 271 playgrounds were identified. Bivariate and multiple analyses showed no association between availability and accessibility of playgrounds and area-level indicators. However, significant negative associations were found in the bivariate analyses between playground area and amenities provided per child and various area-level indicators, but not in multiple models. CONCLUSIONS: Children are provided with different opportunities to play and to be physically active, depending upon the population density of their social neighborhood. At least in our study area, many socially disadvantaged families are forced to move to densely populated areas for economic reasons. Against that background, the phenomenon of 'deprivation amplification' was not confirmed for availability and accessibility of playgrounds but for playground area and number of amenities provided.


Subject(s)
Environment Design/statistics & numerical data , Exercise , Parks, Recreational/statistics & numerical data , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Child , Cities , Germany , Humans , Socioeconomic Factors
3.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol ; 143(5): 895-904, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28188361

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Modern cancer care is provided in highly specialized structures as certificated centres and comprehensive cancer center, as well as specialized practices. In contrast, the position of the general practitioner (GP) is less well characterised and there is a lack of information about his importance in the care for cancer patients. The aim of our survey was to assess the role of GPs in German cancer care from patients' perspective. METHODS: In several steps we developed a standardized anonymous questionnaire in cooperation with the German Association of General Practitioners and the Federal Association of German Self-Help Groups. This questionnaire was used in a print and an online version and distributed by the self-help organizations to their members. RESULTS: Seven hundred and forty participants took part in the survey, 66.5% women and 30.1% men. 71% had visited the GP during cancer therapy and 34.5% discussed decisions concerning diagnostics and therapy with him. The most relevant reasons to visit the GP during cancer therapy were to get a blood test (63.3%), comorbidities (42.7%) and complaints and side effects (38.3%). For the latter, most often a detailed discussion ensued (57%), fooled by a prescription (37.7%). In 63.4% the GP offered support when patients had some questions or worries concerning their cancer. Yet, 17% of the patients reported that the GP did not try to help. 85.5% of the participants thought that it is important that their GP is informed about the therapy on a regular basis. For 77.0%, a simultaneous care provided by the GP is important or very important. CONCLUSION: Our survey points to the importance of the GP during cancer therapy from the patient's point of view. Patients want their GP to take an active part in the cancer therapy. Furthermore, early integration of the GP may also enhance early integration of palliative care and also help family members and caregivers. A strategy to integrate GPs is the establishment of shared care models, in which GPs are supported by specialists and get additional training in cancer care.


Subject(s)
General Practitioners , Neoplasms/therapy , Patient Satisfaction , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasms/psychology , Primary Health Care/methods , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
4.
Eur J Cancer Care (Engl) ; 25(6): 1015-1023, 2016 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27550233

ABSTRACT

Oncology is a rapidly developing field with a growing number of publications every year. The main goal of this survey was to learn more about the information needs of oncologists and general practitioners. Data were collected using a standardised questionnaire developed in collaboration with the German Cancer Society (Deutsche Krebsgesellschaft) and the German Association of General Practitioners (Deutscher Hausärzteverband). A total of 495 questionnaires could be evaluated. Medical congresses were the preferred source of information for all participants. General practitioners preferred textbooks, while oncologists preferred journals and the Internet (all p < .001). Reasons for a lack of confidence during patient consultation were lack of time (60% of participants), lack of knowledge (61% of general practitioners and 26% of oncologists) and lack of data (>50%). Oncologists felt more confident in searching scientific databases than general practitioners did. Both groups required rapid access to transparent information. For general practitioners, reviews and comments by experts helped to put new information in the context of cancer treatment. Oncologists and general practitioners showed significantly different information needs and different ways to access specific information. In order to better integrate general practitioners while simultaneously serving the needs of oncologists, a database that is up to date, rapidly accessible and does not incur high costs would be helpful.


Subject(s)
Access to Information , General Practitioners/psychology , Neoplasms/therapy , Oncologists/psychology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Germany , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Personnel/psychology , Humans , Information Services , Male , Middle Aged , Needs Assessment , Personal Satisfaction , Young Adult
6.
Phys Med Biol ; 54(15): 4777-92, 2009 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19622852

ABSTRACT

To precisely ablate tumor in radiation therapy, it is important to locate the tumor position in real time during treatment. However, respiration-induced tumor motions are difficult to track. They are semi-periodic and exhibit variations in baseline, frequency and fundamental pattern (oscillatory amplitude and shape). In this study, we try to decompose the above-mentioned components from discrete observations in real time. Baseline drift, frequency (equivalently phase) variation and fundamental pattern change characterize different aspects of respiratory motion and have distinctive clinical indications. Furthermore, smoothness is a valid assumption for each one of these components in their own spaces, and facilitates effective extrapolation for the purpose of estimation and prediction. We call this process 'profiling' to reflect the integration of information extraction, decomposition, processing and recovery. The proposed method has three major ingredients: (1) real-time baseline and phase estimation based on elliptical shape tracking in augmented state space and Poincaré sectioning principle; (2) estimation of the fundamental pattern by unwarping the observation with phase estimate from the previous step; (3) filtering of individual components and assembly in the original temporal-displacement signal space. We tested the proposed method with both simulated and clinical data. For the purpose of prediction, the results are comparable to what one would expect from a human operator. The proposed approach is fully unsupervised and data driven, making it ideal for applications requiring economy, efficiency and flexibility.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Models, Biological , Movement , Respiration , Humans , Neoplasms/physiopathology , Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Time Factors
7.
Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 47(5): 289-302, 2009 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19473591

ABSTRACT

Physiological changes in old age: loss of muscle mass; reduction in bone mass; percentage of fat increased; lower amount of body water; lack of thirst; diminishing kidney function (caution: sufficient intake of fluids: 1.5-2 l and moderate intake of protein 8 g/kg body weight); reduced secretion of digestive enzymes, delayed emptying of stomach (which means premature feeling of repletion). Lack of fluids and nutrition is therefore likely. Daily intake of 1,500 kcal and 1.5-2 l fluids is necessary. An indicator for malnutrition is low body weight (defined for persons older than 65 years of age as BMI < 20) and a protein serum concentration < 35 g/l. Malnutrition carries an increased risk of infections, falling and fractures, bed sores, anemia, decompensation of chronic diseases. 10-20% of subjects over 80 years of age show signs of malnutrition, 40-60% of subjects in care institutions or hospitals. There are regressive changes in the locomotor and the nervous system of the elderly which have an effect on physical fitness. These changes reduce strength, endurance, proprioceptive capacity (e.g. coordination, balance) and mobility. Exercise in the old and very old should increase skeletal muscle strength in particular and improve coordination and balance. Regular physical exercise and moderate training has a positive effect on mobility and thereby improves independence and reduces falls. Moreover, it has a positive effect on cardiac output, maximum heart rate, stroke volume and the risk of a cardiovascular event and mortality can be reduced. Moreover, moderate physical exercise is often more effective in treating chronic disease than drug therapy e.g. heart failure, coronary heart disease, asthma/COPD, stroke, diabetes mellitus Type 2, degenerative diseases of the joints, depression and others. Examine cardiovascular risks in persons over the age of 50 before beginning physical exercise. Avoid maximum stress levels.


Subject(s)
Exercise , Nutritional Requirements , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Aged , Family Practice , Humans , Nutrition Assessment , Nutrition Disorders/physiopathology , Nutrition Disorders/therapy , Nutritional Status , Physical Endurance , Resistance Training
9.
Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 47(4): 223-8, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19356387

ABSTRACT

This article contains the 4th part of the Pharmacotherapy Guidelines for the Aged by Family Doctors for Family Doctors. Part 4 is dedicated to fecal incontinence and chronic constipation. The diagnostic categories are divided according to severity and dysfuntion of bowel and pelvic floor, sphincter and neural control. Therapy is also outlined. Importance is given to patient history, in particular the use and abuse of drugs that stimulate peristalsis and promote constipation. Therapy in the elderly is guided by the maxim: use the most conservative therapy possible, where stool training has considerable importance. Drug therapy based on symptoms can only be recommended when non-drug measures continue to fail. In patients with fecal incontinence: 1) opiates (which reduce colonic motility), 2) loperamide (which has the capacity to dilate the rectum) and 3) anion exchangers which have the capacity to prevent cholonic diarrhea. In patients with chronic obstipation: 1) trial: stool-forming laxatives (ensure intake of sufficient amount of fluids) 2) trial: laxatives with an osmotic effect and 3) trial: stimulating laxatives (beware abuse, do not use in cases of acute abdomen).


Subject(s)
Constipation/drug therapy , Fecal Incontinence/drug therapy , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Aged , Chronic Disease , Constipation/etiology , Constipation/therapy , Family Practice , Fecal Incontinence/etiology , Fecal Incontinence/therapy , Humans , Laxatives/therapeutic use
10.
Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 47(3): 141-52, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19281722

ABSTRACT

The part "Special pharmacology of the aged" of this guideline contains recommendations for typical conditions in the family doctors practice: in the January issue 2009 dementia and Morbus Parkinson, in this issue osteoporosis and urinary incontinence and in the next issue rectal incontinence and obstipation. This issue of the IJCPT contains the third part of the Pharmacotherapy guidelines for the aged by family doctors for family doctors. Part 3: Osteoporosis and urinary incontinence. Osteoporosis is a systematic disease characterized by low bone mass and declining bone structure. Exercise, adequate diet, nicotine abstinence as well as reduction of alcohol consumption may counteract the progression of the disease. Osteoporosis manifests in bone fractures with minimal trauma. Attention must be given to the risk of falling, e.g., by avoiding drugs that increase the risk of falling: e.g., psychotropic agents, analgesic drugs and antiarrhythmic agents. Specific osteoporosis medication e.g. calcium, vitamin D, biphosphonates and SERM (selective estrogen receptor modulators) is evaluated by family doctors according to indication, dosage, contraindications, long-term therapy and nature of any fracture. Duration of therapy is at least 3 - max. 5 years followed by reassessment of indication. There are 3 types of urine incontinence (urge-, stress-, and overflow-incontinence). Another standardization of urinary incontinence follows dysfunctions of the pelvic floor: detrusor muscle-dependent, due to sphincter spasm, prostate gland dependent. Urge incontinence with a dysfunction of the detrusor muscle is the most common type. Mixed types are frequent. Non-drug measures (e.g. pelvic muscle training, bladder training, toilet training are first choice treatments. Drug therapy (estrogen, imipramine) are without proven effect.


Subject(s)
Family Practice , Osteoporosis/drug therapy , Urinary Incontinence/rehabilitation , Aged , Calcium/therapeutic use , Diphosphonates/therapeutic use , Estrogen Replacement Therapy , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Humans , Male , Osteoporosis/diagnosis , Osteoporosis/physiopathology , Physical Therapy Modalities , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators/therapeutic use , Urinary Incontinence/physiopathology , Urinary Incontinence/therapy , Vitamin D/therapeutic use
11.
Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 47(1): 11-22, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19203528

ABSTRACT

Part C of the guideline is preceded by Part B General Pharmacology IJCPT. 2008; 46: 600 - 617. Included in Part C are practical guidelines for improving the therapy of some age-specific diseases and problems commonly encountered in general practice. The article in this issue is dedicated to the therapy of Dementia and M. Parkinson. Further guidelines for the other age specific diseases and problems named above will be published in the following issues of IJCPT. An important feature of these guidelines are the inclusion of Levels of Evidence and of the Strength of Recommendations for the therapy which are shown when reliable studies are available. (For both see levels of evidence at the end of this article.).


Subject(s)
Dementia/drug therapy , Family Practice , Parkinsonian Disorders/drug therapy , Aged , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Dementia/diagnosis , Dementia/physiopathology , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Parkinsonian Disorders/diagnosis , Parkinsonian Disorders/physiopathology , Practice Patterns, Physicians'
12.
Phys Med Biol ; 53(11): 2923-36, 2008 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18460744

ABSTRACT

It is important to monitor tumor movement during radiotherapy. Respiration-induced motion affects tumors in the thorax and abdomen (in particular, those located in the lung region). For image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) systems, it is desirable to minimize imaging dose, so external surrogates are used to infer the internal tumor motion between image acquisitions. This process relies on consistent correspondence between the external surrogate signal and the internal tumor motion. Respiratory hysteresis complicates the external/internal correspondence because two distinct tumor positions during different breathing phases can yield the same external observation. Previous attempts to resolve this ambiguity often subdivided the data into inhale/exhale stages and restricted the estimation to only one of these directions. In this study, we propose a new approach to infer the internal tumor motion from external surrogate signal using state augmentation. This method resolves the hysteresis ambiguity by incorporating higher-order system dynamics. It circumvents the segmentation of the internal/external trajectory into different phases, and estimates the inference map based on all the available external/internal correspondence pairs. Optimization of the state augmentation is investigated. This method generalizes naturally to adaptive on-line algorithms.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/radiotherapy , Carcinoma, Small Cell/radiotherapy , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/radiotherapy , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Movement/physiology , Respiration
13.
Phys Med Biol ; 52(23): 7137-52, 2007 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18029998

ABSTRACT

Recent developments in modulation techniques enable conformal delivery of radiation doses to small, localized target volumes. One of the challenges in using these techniques is real-time tracking and predicting target motion, which is necessary to accommodate system latencies. For image-guided-radiotherapy systems, it is also desirable to minimize sampling rates to reduce imaging dose. This study focuses on predicting respiratory motion, which can significantly affect lung tumours. Predicting respiratory motion in real-time is challenging, due to the complexity of breathing patterns and the many sources of variability. We propose a prediction method based on local regression. There are three major ingredients of this approach: (1) forming an augmented state space to capture system dynamics, (2) local regression in the augmented space to train the predictor from previous observation data using semi-periodicity of respiratory motion, (3) local weighting adjustment to incorporate fading temporal correlations. To evaluate prediction accuracy, we computed the root mean square error between predicted tumor motion and its observed location for ten patients. For comparison, we also investigated commonly used predictive methods, namely linear prediction, neural networks and Kalman filtering to the same data. The proposed method reduced the prediction error for all imaging rates and latency lengths, particularly for long prediction lengths.


Subject(s)
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Lung Neoplasms/diagnosis , Lung Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Models, Biological , Movement , Radiotherapy, Conformal/methods , Respiratory Mechanics , Computer Simulation , Humans , Regression Analysis
14.
Inf Process Med Imaging ; 19: 174-85, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17354694

ABSTRACT

Many types of transformations are used to model deformations in medical image registration. While some focus on modeling local changes, some on continuity and invertibility, there is no closed-form nonlinear parametric approach that addresses all these properties. This paper presents a class of nonlinear transformations that are local, continuous and invertible under certain conditions. They are straightforward to implement, fast to compute and can be used particularly in cases where locally affine deformations need to be recovered. We use our new transformation model to demonstrate some results on synthetic images using a multi-scale approach to multi-modality mutual information based image registration. The original images were deformed using B-splines at three levels of scale. The results show that the proposed method can recover these deformations almost completely with very few iterations of a gradient based optimizer.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Brain/anatomy & histology , Image Enhancement/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Pattern Recognition, Automated/methods , Subtraction Technique , Artificial Intelligence , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Nonlinear Dynamics , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
15.
Pneumologie ; 58(12): 858-62, 2004 Dec.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15597254

ABSTRACT

In order to promote the care of patients with COPD in Germany a national guideline clearing project was initiated jointly by autonomous corporate bodies of the German health care system. Following a systematic search of literature data bases between 1992 and 2002, 20 guidelines were identified that met the inclusion criteria and were evaluated with the German Checklist for Methodological Guideline Appraisal. Following this, a multidisciplinary expert group appointed by the German Guideline Clearinghouse (Leitlinien-Clearingstelle im Arztlichen Zentrum fur Qualitat in der Medizin, AZQ) reviewed the suitability of these guidelines for the use in the German health care system. Referring to methodological aspects, criteria were best met by the guideline of the Veteran's Health Administration/Department of Defense (US), followed by the one of the Deutsche Atemwegsliga and the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Pneumologie. Aiming at the production respectivly a revision of a German national guideline for COPD the expert group agreed on recommendations organized in 19 chapters. Among others these strengthened the role of a precise definition of COPD based primarily on the pathogenesis, of a subtle description of all diagnostic and therapeutic tools and of a detailed description of quality assurance and quality management. The feasability of recommendations were demonstrated by examples chosen from the evaluated guidelines. Additionally the presented findings may be used as steering tools in the German Health care system.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/standards , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/therapy , Germany , Humans , Practice Guidelines as Topic
16.
Phys Med Biol ; 49(11): 2157-68, 2004 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15248570

ABSTRACT

We compare two different implementations of a 3D SPECT system model for iterative reconstruction, both of which compensate for non-uniform photon attenuation and depth-dependent system response. One implementation performs fast rotation of images represented using a basis of rectangular voxels, whereas the other represents images using a basis of rotationally symmetric volume elements. In our simulations the blob-based approach was found to slightly outperform the rotation-based one in terms of the bias-variance tradeoff in the reconstructed images. Their difference can be significant, however, in terms of computational load. The rotation-based method is faster for many typical SPECT reconstruction problems, but the blob-based one can be better-suited to cases where the reconstruction algorithm needs to process one volume element at a time.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Image Enhancement/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Numerical Analysis, Computer-Assisted , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon/methods , Computer Simulation , Equipment Failure Analysis/methods , Humans , Models, Biological , Models, Statistical , Phantoms, Imaging , Reproducibility of Results , Rotation , Sensitivity and Specificity , Thorax/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon/instrumentation , Transducers
17.
Pneumologie ; 58(3): 165-75, 2004 Mar.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15007789

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In order to promote the quality of asthma management in Germany, a national asthma guidelines clearing project was initiated in 2000 by the German Guidelines Clearinghouse (Sponsors: German Medical Association (GMA), National Association of the Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (NASHIP), German Hospital Federation, Federal Association of the Statutory Sickness Funds. This Part shows the key topics which should be dealt with in a German guideline on bronchial asthma. SUMMARY POINTS: For quality promotion of bronchial asthma management in Germany, the development of a national evidence-based guideline, using the internationally accepted quality criteria for clinical practice guidelines, was recommended by an expert group of the German Guideline Clearinghouse. The experts identified and peer-reviewed 16 out of 54 guidelines, which might be useful as benchmarks and examples for a German asthma guideline. From the peer review results, the expert group identified 18 key topics for a national asthma guideline.


Subject(s)
Asthma/therapy , Asthma/rehabilitation , Germany , Health Promotion , Humans , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Quality of Life
18.
Pneumologie ; 57(8): 459-67, 2003 Aug.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12928987

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In order to promote quality of asthma management in Germany, a national asthma guidelines clearing project was initiated in 2000 by the German Guidelines Clearinghouse (Sponsors: German Medical Association (GMA), National Association of the Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (NASHIP), German Hospital Federation, Federal Association of the Statutory Sickness Funds. Part 1 of this article shows the methodology and the results of the appraisal, part 2 (to be published) shows the key topics which should be dealt with in a german guideline on bronchial asthma. OBJECTIVES: To identify and compare evidence-based, high-quality German- and English language asthma guidelines as benchmarks for ongoing guideline development and implementation programmes. To disseminate information about asthma guidelines developed in accordance with current methodological know-how. To identify and consent key topics for a national evidence-based guideline for Germany. METHODS: Search procedure, formal appraisal: Systematic search using literature databases (XMED, incl. Medline and Embase) and English-/German-language guideline databases (via www. leitlinien.de), published between January 1990 and March 2000. Abstract screening of the search results according to the inclusion criteria (n = 54 of a total of 502 hits). Methodological guideline evaluation of 16 guidelines using the German checklist for methodological guideline appraisal. Appraisal of guidelines' contents: Peer review of guidelines with the following inclusion criteria: Bronchial Asthma-general, German and English language, based in references published later than 1994, new guideline or actual update. Peer review was performed by a multidisciplinary focus group of EBM experts (clinical and ambulatory settings). No expert was involved in guideline production during the review period. RESULTS: Methodological appraisal: 16 out of guidelines were in accordance with the formal minimal standard with a wide range within the following domains: "description of the development process", "declaration of authors' independence", "explicit link between recommendations and the supporting evidence", "management options", "tools for implementation". The focus group recommended for future national asthma guidelines to rely on the following procedures: (1) to formulate the recommendations using standardized, clearly described consensus methods basing on evidence retrieved and selected in a systematic way (2) to prove links between recommendations and supporting evidence (3) to develop guideline versions for health care professionals as well as for consumer/patients (4) to develop guideline-based education tools (5) to ensure periodical updates of the asthma guideline (6) to consider the methodological recommendations and to give reasons for deviations from the methodological recommendations. APPRAISAL OF GUIDELINES CONTENT: None of the guidelines identified comprised information about all of the following key topics considered to be relevant for a German national guideline by the focus group: (1) intended guideline users/goals, (2) definition (3) cause of disease, (4) form of disease, (5) severity, (6) diagnosis, (7) therapeutic goals, (8) prevention, (9) pharmacotherapy, (10) non-pharmacotherapy, (11) therapy control and compliance, (12) emergency treatment, (13) rehabilitation, (14) comorbidity, (15) special aspects, (16) coordination of care, (17) quality assurance/quality management, (18) implementation. SUMMARY POINTS: For quality promotion of bronchial asthma management in Germany, the development of a national evidence-based guideline, using the internationally accepted quality criteria for clinical practice guidelines, was recommended by an expert group of the German Guideline Clearinghouse. The experts identified and peer-reviewed 16 out of 54 guidelines, which might be useful as benchmarks and examples for a German asthma guideline. From the peer review results, the expert group identified 18 key topics for a national asthma guideline.


Subject(s)
Asthma/prevention & control , Health Promotion/standards , Databases, Factual , Germany , Humans , MEDLINE , Quality Assurance, Health Care
19.
Methods Inf Med ; 40(4): 359-61, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11552349

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To introduce term and concept of infoethics and to argue on its importance for health information systems. METHODS: To argue about our viewpoint of the dominance of the human component, which has been discussed at an IMIA working conference held in Helsinki, Finland (February 1998) devoted to the evaluation of health information systems. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Any technology sets a relationship between human beings and their environment, both physical and human. No technology can be seen as merely instrumental. This is especially relevant when dealing with large automatic information systems, developed to contribute to the management and integration of large organizations, such as hospitals. In such a context, the environment is mainly made up of humans. In evaluating such information systems, human factors preside over merely technical factors. Even if satisfying the latter is mandatory, they are never really sufficient. A perfect hard- and software system can be an absolute failure in everyday use. In any information system, the human factor is, of course, human-computer interaction, which always occurs when one person interacts with the machinery. However, in a simultaneous multi-user context, human-human interaction is the main question to tackle. The evaluation of large information systems, such as those found in hospitals, is founded in the whole concept of inter-human relationships which underlie the design and use of the system. Indeed, such an information system predominately appears as a social system, with its psychological, sociological and ethical features.


Subject(s)
Ethics , Information Systems , Humans , Patient-Centered Care , Social Justice
20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 98(19): 10710-5, 2001 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11535823

ABSTRACT

The UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase (GT) is a protein folding sensor and glycosyltransferase that constitutes an important component of the protein quality control machinery. With the use of quantitative immunogold electron microscopy, we established the subcellular distribution of GT in rat liver and pancreas and Drosophila melanogaster salivary gland as well as cell lines and correlated it with that of glucosidase II, calreticulin, and pre-Golgi intermediate markers. Labeling for GT, as well as for glucosidase II and calreticulin, was found in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), including nuclear envelope and pre-Golgi intermediates located between ER and Golgi apparatus, and in the cell periphery. In the rough ER, labeling for GT was inhomogeneous, with variously sized labeled and unlabeled cisternal regions alternating, indicative of a meshwork of quality control checkpoints. Notably, labeling intensity for GT was highest in pre-Golgi intermediates, corresponding to twice that of rough ER, whereas the Golgi apparatus exhibited no specific labeling. These results suggest that protein quality control is not restricted to the ER and that the pre-Golgi intermediates, by virtue of the presence of GT, glucosidase II, and calreticulin, are involved in this fundamental cellular process.


Subject(s)
Glucosyltransferases/analysis , Golgi Apparatus/enzymology , Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Drosophila melanogaster , Endoplasmic Reticulum/enzymology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/ultrastructure , Golgi Apparatus/ultrastructure , Liver/enzymology , Pancreas/enzymology , Rats
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