Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
1.
Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol ; 118: 115-119, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30611096

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Deep interarytenoid notch (DIN) is a congenital variation of the larynx often associated with dysphagia and aspiration (DA) in young children. Feeding therapy with thickeners and surgical management with injection larygoplasty (IL) are used with various efficacies. Thickeners address the functional domain and IL addresses the anatomical domain of treatment. Our objective was to evaluate DIN patients managed with both interventions. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective pilot descriptive study of DIN patients with DA aged 1-3 years receiving thickeners and IL. Patients received a systematic weekly reduction of thickeners, referred to as the Thickener Weaning Protocol (TWP), based on clinical signs and symptoms of DA. The outcomes were assessed by the rate of thickener level reduction and DA-related sign/symptom frequency achieved at 6 months post-treatment. RESULTS: Thirteen patients with DIN associated DA were analyzed. The TWP was initiated within 2 months in 77% of patients, and within 4 months in 100% of patients. Thickener scores improved from an average of 5.76 (3/4 honey) to 2.15 (thin) (p = 0.001). DA-related signs/symptoms frequency improved from an average of 3.3 to 0.84 (p = 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that treatment of DIN associated DA with a combination of thickeners and IL results in significant clinical improvements in young children.


Subject(s)
Congenital Abnormalities/therapy , Deglutition Disorders/therapy , Laryngoplasty/methods , Larynx/abnormalities , Respiratory Aspiration/therapy , Child, Preschool , Deglutition Disorders/etiology , Female , Humans , Infant , Injections , Male , Pilot Projects , Respiratory Aspiration/etiology , Retrospective Studies , Weaning
2.
Soc Sci Med ; 212: 145-152, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30031980

ABSTRACT

Although women in the United States use birth control at high rates, they also discontinue it at high rates, often citing dissatisfaction and side effects. At the same time, research shows that clinicians often neglect to discuss or discursively downplay the importance of side effects in contraceptive counseling. Scholars have yet to consider how clinicians' beliefs about the legitimacy of patient concerns and dissatisfaction may undergird these patterns. This study uses in-depth interviews with reproductive healthcare providers (N = 24) to examine their attitudes about common complaints regarding hormonal birth control. I identify how their reliance on formal medical knowledge, including evidence-based models, can lead them to frame patients' experiences or concerns about side effects as "myths" or "misconceptions" to be corrected rather than legitimized. I also describe a pattern of providers portraying negative side effects as normal to contraception and therefore encouraging patients to "stick with" methods despite dissatisfaction. Finally, I explore how these themes manifest in racialized and classed discourses about patient populations. I discuss the potential cumulative impact of these attitudes - if providers do carry them into clinical practice, they can have the effect of minimizing patient concerns and dissatisfaction, while steering women towards more effective methods of contraception.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Contraception/psychology , Health Personnel/psychology , Patient Satisfaction , Adult , Contraception/adverse effects , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Health Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Patient Education as Topic , Physician-Patient Relations , Qualitative Research , Reproductive Health Services , United States
3.
Curr Gastroenterol Rep ; 19(7): 33, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28639091

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The prevalence of feeding disorders in medically complex children is estimated to be as high as 80%. Enteral tube nutrition (ETN) is commonly used for nutritional support in children with feeding disorders. Adverse consequences of ETN include medical complications, psychosocial problems, and higher healthcare costs. We used a retrospective cohort controlled study design to compare outcomes of our outpatient multidisciplinary intensive feeding therapy (IFT) program to our traditional therapy (TT) of single-discipline, once weekly feeding therapy to reduce ETN dependence in medically complex young children. RECENT FINDINGS: Children in the IFT cohort experienced a median reduction in ETN dependence of 49% (34.5-58.5%) compared with a median reduction of 0% (0-25%) for TT (p > 0.0001). Almost half of the IFT cohort no longer required ETN by the conclusion of the 5-week program. Medically complex young children (median age 26 months) successfully reduce or eliminate ETN in an outpatient multidisciplinary intensive feeding program.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care/methods , Enteral Nutrition/statistics & numerical data , Feeding and Eating Disorders of Childhood/therapy , Ambulatory Care/statistics & numerical data , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Patient Care Team , Program Evaluation , Retrospective Studies , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
4.
J Health Soc Behav ; 57(4): 471-485, 2016 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27803265

ABSTRACT

Increasingly, leading health organizations recommend that women who are pregnant or considering pregnancy avoid certain toxic chemicals found in our products, homes, and communities in order to protect fetuses from developmental and future harm. In the contemporary United States, women's maternal bodies have been treated as sites of exceptional risk and individual responsibility. Many studies have examined this phenomenon through the lens of lifestyle behaviors like smoking, drinking, and exercise. However, we know little about how environmental hazards fit into the dominant framework of gendered, individual responsibility for risk regulation. I draw on in-depth interviews with 19 reproductive healthcare providers in the United States to explore how they think about their patients' exposure to environmental contaminants and sometimes subvert this gendered, individualized responsibility and adopt more collective frames for understanding risk.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure , Environmental Pollutants/adverse effects , Maternal Health , Personal Autonomy , Risk Reduction Behavior , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Risk Assessment , Sex Factors , United States
5.
Soc Sci Med ; 139: 44-52, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26151389

ABSTRACT

A major health care goal in the United States is increasing the proportion of pregnancies that are planned. While many studies examine family planning from the perspective of individual women or couples, few investigate the perceptions and practices of health care providers, who are gatekeepers to medicalized fertility control. In this paper, I draw on 24 in-depth interviews with providers to investigate how they interpret and enact the objective to "plan parenthood" and analyze their perspectives in the context of broader discourses about reproduction, family planning, and motherhood. Interviews reveal two central discourses: one defines pregnancy planning as an individual choice, that is as patients setting their own pregnancy intentions; the second incorporates normative expectations about what it means to be ready to have a baby that exclude poor, single, and young women. In the latter discourse, planning is a broader process of achieving middle-class life markers like a long-term relationship, a good job, and financial stability, before having children. Especially illuminating are cases where a patient's pregnancy intention and the normative expectations of "readiness" do not align. With these, I demonstrate that providers may prioritize normative notions of readiness over a patient's own intentions. I argue that these negotiations of intention and readiness reflect broader tensions in family planning and demonstrate that at times the seemingly neutral notion of "planned parenthood" can mask a source of stratification in reproductive health care.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Family Planning Services/methods , Health Services Accessibility , Reproduction , Family Planning Services/statistics & numerical data , Female , Health Personnel , Humans , Pregnancy , United States
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...