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1.
Gynecol Endocrinol ; 38(4): 345-349, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35238278

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To observe and compare the expression of energy regulators (leptin/ghrelin) and PAI-1 in girls with abnormal uterine bleeding-ovulatory dysfunction (AUB-O) and healthy adolescent girls. METHODS: A total of 80 adolescent girls were studied including 60 with AUB-O and 20 healthy girls. All the general characteristics of subjects including height, weight, age, and age at menarche were collected after consent. The concentration of plasma leptin, ghrelin, PAI-1, and sex hormones was examined using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and DXI800 Access immunoassay system respectively. RESULTS: Two groups were comparable in the age at menarche, visiting age, postmenarchal years, and BMI SDS (p > .05). Levels of leptin (11.12 ± 4.96 ng/ml vs. 18.59 ± 13.22 ng/ml, p < .001) and PAI-1 (116.40 ± 36.63 ng/ml vs. 173.19 ± 52.44 ng/ml, p < .001) in girls with AUB-O were significantly lower than that in healthy girls, and the levels of ghrelin were significantly higher than that in healthy girls (1.52 ± 4.20 ng/ml vs. 0.43 ± 0.64 ng/ml, p = .01). At the same time, we also found that girls with AUB-O showed negative correlation between the level of leptin, ghrelin, and estradiol. CONCLUSIONS: Energy metabolism and coagulation might play a role in the development of AUB-O in adolescent girls.


Assuntos
Leptina/sangue , Inibidor 1 de Ativador de Plasminogênio/sangue , Adolescente , Estatura , Feminino , Grelina , Humanos , Hemorragia Uterina
2.
Health Policy Plan ; 34(1): 37-46, 2019 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30715314

RESUMO

The rapid diffusion of medical technologies is widely recognized as a key driver of healthcare cost escalation. The excessive duplication of technologies gives rise to the so-called medical arms race. Conventional wisdom tends to explain this phenomenon by external reimbursement mechanisms and hospitals' competitive strategies, but has largely neglected the role played by health regulations that may also affect hospitals' technology adoption decisions. This study sheds new light on the medical arms race with evidence from China, which has witnessed an unprecedented expansion of big tertiary hospitals and a keen pursuit of expensive medical technologies. Chinese hospitals aggressively pursue high-tech medical equipment as an opportunistic reaction to the peculiar health regulatory environment. By analysing a panel dataset collected from Shenzhen City, this study reveals a series of important impacts of the medical arms race in Chinese public hospitals. High-tech medical equipment is found to lead to an increase in hospital revenues and patient volumes, but no significant impact is noted on unit costs. While high-tech medical equipment is associated with a discernible improvement in clinical outcomes, no contribution to hospitals' operational efficiency is noted. These findings are interpreted in the context of the broader health regulatory framework and China's public hospital reforms.


Assuntos
Tecnologia Biomédica/economia , Competição Econômica , Economia Hospitalar , Hospitais Públicos/economia , Hospitais Públicos/organização & administração , China , Eficiência Organizacional , Política de Saúde , Administração Hospitalar/métodos , Hospitais Públicos/legislação & jurisprudência , Humanos
3.
Health Policy Plan ; 31(10): 1391-1401, 2016 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27375127

RESUMO

A rapid ageing population coupled with changes in family structure has brought about profound implications to social policy in China. Although the past decade has seen a steady increase in public funding to long-term care (LTC), the narrow financing base and vast population have created significant unmet demand, calling for reforms in financing. This paper focuses on the financing of institutional LTC care by examining new models that have emerged from local policy experiments against two policy goals: equity and efficiency. Three emerging models are explored: Social Health Insurance (SHI) in Shanghai, LTC Nursing Insurance (LTCNI) in Qingdao and a means-tested model in Nanjing. A focused systematic narrative review of academic and grey literature is conducted to identify and assess these models, supplemented with qualitative interviews with government officials from relevant departments, care home staff and service users. This paper argues that, although SHI appears to be a convenient solution to fund LTC, this model has led to systematic bias in affordable access among participants of different insurance schemes, and has created a powerful incentive for the over-provision of unnecessary services. The means-tested method has been remarkably constrained by narrow eligibility and insufficiency of funding resources. The LTCNI model is by far the most desirable policy option among the three studied here, but the narrow definition of eligibility has substantively excluded a large proportion of elders in need from access to care, which needs to be addressed in future reforms. This paper proposes three lines of LTC financing reforms for policy-makers: (1) the establishment of a prepaid financing mechanism pooled specifically for LTC costs; (2) the incorporation of more stringent eligibility rules and needs assessment; and (3) reforming the dominant fee-for-service methods in paying LTC service providers.


Assuntos
Organização do Financiamento/organização & administração , Política de Saúde , Seguro de Assistência de Longo Prazo/economia , Assistência de Longa Duração/economia , China , Humanos , Assistência de Longa Duração/organização & administração , Política Pública
4.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM (Pacífico Ocidental) | ID: wpr-459855

RESUMO

The rapid cost escalation and vast supplier-induced demands in the Chinese health care system are well-known to the health policy research community. The existing literature tends to explain the pervasive overprovision of care by financial incentives of hospitals and physicians. Behind this is a series of misaligned perverse incentives embedded in the Chinese health system for decades. With a survey of public hospital physicians in a city of Guangdong, this study re-veals that the overprovision of care, especially overprescription, is not solely driven by economic incentives, but also by physicians’ motive of avoiding potential disputes with patients, reflecting defensive medical behaviors. The survey was con-ducted in December 2013, which selected 504 licensed physicians by random sampling. The regression analysis suggests that low income and the perceived imbalance between efforts and rewards indeed contribute to physicians’ motivation of de-fensive medicine. In the meantime, their past experiences of medical disputes with patients are also found significantly as-sociated with defensive behaviors. This study has revealed the critical impacts of the escalating tension between doctors and patients in distorting physician’ behaviors, and lays out policy recommendations.

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