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1.
Eur Geriatr Med ; 2024 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38750403

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Hospital at Home (HaH) services are expanding to provide acute multidisciplinary care in an individual's home. In this pilot study, we interviewed HaH staff to understand challenges and opportunities for service development. METHODS: We conducted 23 semi-structured interviews with multidisciplinary staff working across three HaH services in Scotland. The questions focussed on service strengths and challenges. RESULTS: Four themes emerged: raising referral awareness, service design and efficiency, staff security on home visits, and sustainability. HaH staff described Emergency Department posters, experience days for non-HaH staff, and daily communication of virtual bed capacity to raise awareness for referrals. Ideas for maximising clinician time were prioritised to improve service efficiency and investment in electric vehicles was strongly supported to mitigate climate impact. CONCLUSION: We found high job satisfaction and engagement amongst HaH staff. Our interviews suggest enthusiasm for further development of HaH while raising important challenges to address during service expansion.

2.
J Clin Forensic Med ; 9(4): 171-4, 2002 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15274931

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: In child protection cases clinicians are often asked to describe and age bruises. This paper looks at both intra- and inter-observer variability in the description of childhood bruising. METHODS: Fifty-eight bruises on 44 children were described by three observers, the bruises were then photographed and the same observers described the bruises at a later date. The descriptions were compared and classified in terms of complete, partial, or no agreement, both between observers and between the in vivo and photographic descriptions. RESULTS: Complete agreement on colour description between two observers in vivo occurred in 27% of descriptions in vivo and 24% of photographs. Only 31% of descriptions completely agreed with the later description of a photograph of the same bruise. CONCLUSIONS: This marked variability in colour description, severely questions the practice of estimating the age of bruises especially from clinical photographs as evidence in child protection proceedings.

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