39 research outputs found

    Awareness, attitudes and knowledge about evidence based medicine among doctors in Gaza:A cross sectional survey

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    Evidence-based medicine (EBM) has emerged as a strategy to integrate research evidence within clinical decision-making. We have explored awareness, knowledge and attitudes about EBM among doctors in the Gaza Strip. In 2014, we conducted a cross-sectional survey among doctors working in health centres in Gaza, using a 20 item, web-based self-administered questionnaire. Approximately two thirds of the respondents welcomed EBM in principle, and believed that it could improve patient care. However, they had a relatively low level of knowledge about EBM. The main barriers to EBM mentioned by respondents were lack of knowledge needed to practise EBM [n= 47 (35%)]; negative attitude among senior colleagues [n= 34 (25%)]; lack of relevant resources [n= 31 (23%)]; work overload [n= 27 (20%)]; and lack of institutional support [n= 248 (18%)]. Thus, there are personal and organisational barriers to its practice that need to be addressed

    The Palestinian Day of Return: from a short day of commemoration to a long day of mourning

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    On Friday, March 30, 2018, marking the 42nd anniversary of Land Day—when Israeli forces killed six Palestinians during protests against land confiscation in 1976—Palestinians in the Gaza Strip marched to the eastern border with Israel beginning a six-week protest—what they termed the Great March of Return. It was the bloodiest day in Gaza since the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict. 1 Thousands of Palestinian civilians including women and children participated in the protest, mostly staying 500–700 m from the perimeter fence between Israel and the Gaza Strip in five places—eastern Jabalia, eastern Gaza, eastern Bureij, eastern Khanyounis, and eastern Rafah. 2 The precise conduct of some participants in the march is disputed, but it is indisputable that the Israeli army responded with live ammunition from snipers, tank fire, plastic coated steel bullets, rubber bullets, and tear gas grenades launched from armoured military vehicles. 3 I have reviewed the latest official statistics and reports from the Ministry of Health in Gaza, 4 official reports from the WHO office in Gaza, 5 the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR), 6 and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) 7 to collate this report on the number and type of injuries sustained by marchers. I have also followed up the patients who were admitted to hospitals by contacting hospital directors and the official spokesman for the Palestinian Ministry of Health (MOH) and comparing the numbers with official reports released by the Palestinian Health Information center at the MOH Gaza office. During our followup, we checked on the numbers of those patients who subsequently

    Can the use of “WHO Surgical safety checklist” Save lives? Gathering the evidence.

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    Background: World health Organization (WHO) has published in 2009, the first edition of the surgery safety checklist (A 20-items tool) that focus on teamwork, communication, adherence to good practice, and anticipation of adverse events. The checklist aims to ensure that teams consistently follow a few critical safety steps and thereby minimize the most common and avoidable risks endangering the lives and well-being of surgical patients worldwide (WHO, 2015)

    Antibiotic prophylaxis in caesarean section at Al-Helal Al-Emirati Hospital (Al-HEH), Gaza Strip, Palestine: A clinical audit

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    Background Nowadays, there is a general consensus among the current best guidelines about the procedural aspects of antibiotic prophylaxis in Caesarean Section (CS). Clinical audit, which has never been done before in the Gaza strip, is a tool of quality control used worldwide for healthcare improvement and is aimed at assessing clinicians’ and other clinical staffs’ adherence to the applicable guidelines. Objective This study was undertaken to audit the use of antibiotic prophylaxis in CS at Al-HEH, Gaza Strip, Palestine. Methods A sample of 38 cases was selected randomly among all the women who underwent CS during the period from 22 March 2015 to 16 April 2015. Using SPSS program, data were analysed for age, type of CS, whether they received antibiotics or not, type of antibiotics, and timing of its administration. Results Of the total 38 patients, urgent CS was carried out in 31.57% of cases while the procedure was elective in 68.42%. Antibiotic prophylaxis was given in 60.53% of cases before the surgery while no prophylaxis was received by the rest. Using Chi-Square Statistic, it was found that the correlation between the type of CS and the decision of prescribing antibiotics before the surgery to be statistically significant (P= 0.02). Moreover, 81.58% of cases were found to have received antibiotics after the surgery and a lack of uniformity of the antibiotics given to this group was also noted. Conclusion This study indicates that clinicians at Al-HEH do not follow evidence-based practice regarding antibiotic prophylaxis when managing CS patients. Moreover, the non-justified use of antibiotics again in many of those who received

    The Social and Spiritual Factors Affecting Chronic Renal Dialysis Patients in Gaza Strip

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    Background: End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) is a progressive worsening of kidney function over a period of months or years. It is a complex debilitating disease that needs a lifelong treatment. Because patients with ESRD cannot be cured of their underlying conditions and mostly underwent hemodialysis program, it usually leads to many physical and medical consequences and complications, and beside them, there are lots of concealed social and spiritual factors that can affect people who have this disease or are on renal dialysis. Some studies about medical and clinical consequences of ESRD and renal dialysis were conducted but this study will be the first one to determine the factors affecting the social and spiritual wellbeing of patients who are on renal dialysis in Gaza Strip. Objectives: It is important to give a detailed picture about the social and spiritual wellbeing of patients who are on renal dialysis to

    Evidence-based health care in the occupied Palestinian territory: findings from a conference-based preparatory workshop

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    Background The principles of evidence-based health-care (EBHC) are not widely appreciated in the occupied Palestinian territory. During the past 5 years, interest in EBHC in Gaza has been generated through a series of lectures and workshops run by the EBHC Unit in Gaza. To further promulgate the principles of EBHC in the occupied Palestinian territory and to raise awareness of differences between local practice and best evidence, a 2 day conference was organised in October 2013. In this study our objectives were to promote the principles of EBHC and to improve clinical practice in 15 specific areas of clinical practice. Methods Five subcommittees were established 6 months before the conference that addressed general surgery, medicine, paediatrics, obstetrics, and orthopaedics and neurosurgery. Each subcommittee comprised a senior and a junior specialist and was given 5 months to identify the three most

    The quality of reports of medical and public health research from Palestinian institutions:A systematic review

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    Research reports are the most common way to communicate research findings for target readerships. Complete, accurate and transparent reporting of research studies facilitates dissemination, interpretation, translation and replication of research findings. Inadequate reporting has major consequences for clinicians, researchers, policy makers and ultimately patients. It impairs critical assessment of the validity, relevance and trustworthiness of research and so impedes its use in practice. It also limits the usability of study findings by other researchers conducting systematic reviews and meta-analyses and building on or replicating studies. In addition, inadequate reporting is one of the key contributors to avoidable waste in biomedical research. Researchers thus have an ethical obligation to research participants, funding organisations and society as a whole to report their findings in ways that are of use in practice and policy makin

    Informed-Consent Taking Procedure for Elective Surgery in Gaza strip: Patient's Satisfaction with Doctor's Communication

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    BACKGROUND : Widespread dissatisfaction and mistrust exists among patients in the Gaza Strip towards doctors. A sense of a lack of sufficient information regarding diagnosis, risks and benefits of interventions and subsequent management plans is present among patients. All of these areas are considered essential components in the surgical consent process. A gap between patients’ actual understanding and that perceived by doctors has been shown to exist in different settings.1 Unfortunately, no former study has been done on this topic in the Gaza-Strip.   OBECTIVES : This study aims to assess the satisfaction of patients in Gaza with the information provided to them during the consent process prior to an invasive procedure and compare this to the current practice and attitudes of surgeons.   METHODS : A five-section self-designed questionnaire was administered using convenience sampling to the first 60 patients and first 60 surgeons who met the selection criteria in the two hospitals in the Gaza Strip: Al-Shifa Hospital and the European Gaza Hospital.   FINDINGS : Among the surgeons surveyed, 55% answered that informed consent should be obtained by doctors only, 3% thought that it can be obtained by nurses only, while 45% stipulated either doctors or nurses can obtain it. In total only 38% of those healthcare professionals taking the consent from the patient, actually performed the procedure. During consent procedures, 73% of surgeons reported providing written documents 30% drawings explaining the procedure, 3% giving videos or animations and 8% suggesting website links for more information. The survey of patients revealed that only 25% of surveyed surgeons identified themselves to their patients, and 12% asked for the patients’ signature without a complete discussion of the intervention. Around 35% of surgeons depended on verbal communication only. Surgeons identified barriers for best practice as time constraints, as well as lack of hospital policies and informational resources. However, 87% of surgeons believed that informed consent has an impact on patient wellbeing. A total of 90% of surveyed patients thought they received the right treatment and were satisfied. While 43% of patients prefer to travel overseas to get treatment, 77% of these because of a perceived lack of medical equipment and facilities

    Inpatient management of community-acquired pneumonia at the European Gaza Hospital: a clinical audit

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    Background Disease severity scores such as CURB-65 are often used to guide the management of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Early and adequate empirical antibiotic treatment reduces mortality. The aim of this study was to examine the severity assessment and management of patients presenting with community-acquired pneumonia at the European Gaza Hospital in the Gaza Strip and to compare this to the best available evidence. Methods Medical records of all patients admitted to the European Gaza Hospital with a diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia between Dec 1, 2015, and March 31, 2016, were reviewed retrospectively. Clinical practice was compared with recommendations for severity assessment and the management of community-acquired pneumonia, as reported in guidelines by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and the American Thoracic Society

    Intraosseous Lipoma of Calcaneus as a Rare Cause of Heel Pain

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    Bone lipoma is a rare, primary and benign tumor. In recent years, its detection rate is higher as a result of the increasing use of accurate and more detailed cross-sectional imaging techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) plus the utilization of advanced histological diagnostic facilities. The radiographic appearance on x-ray is not usually characteristic of this lesion and therefore requires differential diagnostics conducted for a long time. However, CT and MRI allow for a tissue-specific diagnosis. The microscopic features are usually those of mature adipose tissue. Sometimes, still, pathological reports may show discordance with radiologic findings. For optimal management, surgical curettage and packing with autogenous bone grafts is usually recommended if the lesion is causing the pain or if the correct diagnosis cannot otherwise be obtained. Our case is a 43-year-old female patient who presented to our clinic with chronic left foot pain. Pain was localized over the left heel with radiation to surrounding areas. The radiological diagnosis of intraosseous lipoma was made based on CT imaging and confirmed later through biopsy. Surgical intervention was needed after failure of conservative management. Curettage of all lesion and packing with autogenous bone grafts was done. Postoperatively, the patient showed remarkable improvement and follow up consultations showed good healing and no signs of recurrence
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