212 research outputs found
Providing sex and relationships education for looked-after children: a qualitative exploration of how personal and institutional factors promote or limit the experience of role ambiguity, conflict and overload among caregivers
Objectives:
To explore how personal and institutional
factors promote or limit caregivers promoting sexual
health and relationships (SHR) among looked-after children
(LAC). In so doing, develop existing research dominated by
atheoretical accounts of the facilitators and barriers of SHR
promotion in care settings.
Design:
Qualitative semistructured interview study.
Setting: UK social services, residential childrenās homes
and foster care.
Participants:
22 caregivers of LAC, including 9 foster
carers, 8 residential carers and 5 social workers; half of
whom had received SHR training.
Methods:
In-depth interviews explored barriers/facilitators
to SHR discussions, and how these shaped caregiversā
experiences of discussing SHR with LAC. Data were
systematically analysed using predetermined research
questions and themes identified from reading transcripts.
Role theory was used to explore caregiversā understanding
of their role.
Results:
SHR policies clarified role expectations and
increased acceptability of discussing SHR. Training
increased knowledge and confidence, and supported
caregivers to reflect on how personally held values
impacted practice. Identified training gaps were how to:
(1) Discuss SHR with LAC demonstrating problematic
sexual behaviours. (2) Record the SHR discussions that
had occurred in LACās health plans. Contrary to previous
findings, caregivers regularly discussed SHR with LAC.
Competing demands on time resulted in prioritisation
of discussions for sexually active LAC and those āat
riskā of sexual exploitation/harm. Interagency working
addressed gaps in SHR provision. SHR discussions placed
emotional burdens on caregivers. Caregivers worried about
allegations being made against them by LAC. Managerial/
pastoral support and āsafe careā procedures minimised
these harms.
Conclusions:
While acknowledging the existing level
of SHR promotion for LAC there is scope to more firmly
embed this into the role of caregivers. Care needs to be
taken to avoid role ambiguity and tension when doing so.
Providing SHR policies and training, promoting interagency
working and providing pastoral support are important
steps towards achieving this
Problematisation and regulation: bodies, risk, and recovery within the context of Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome
Background Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) is an anticipated effect of maternal drug use during pregnancy. Yet it remains a contested area of policy and practice. In this paper, we contribute to ongoing debates about the way NAS is understood and responded to, through different treatment regimes, or logics of care. Our analysis examines the role of risk and recovery discourses, and the way in which the bodies of women and babies are conceptualised within these. Methods Qualitative interviews with 16 parents (9 mothers, 7 fathers) and four focus groups with 27 health and social care professionals based in Scotland. All the mothers were prescribed opioid replacement therapy and parents were interviewed after their baby was born. Data collection explored understandings about the causes and consequences of NAS and experiences of preparing for, and caring for, a baby with NAS. Data were analysed using a narrative and discursive approach. Results Parent and professional accounts simultaneously upheld and subverted logics of care which govern maternal drug use and the assessment and care of mother and baby. Despite acknowledging the unpredictability of NAS symptoms and the inability of the women who are opioid-dependent to prevent NAS, logics of care centred on āprovingā risk and recovery. Strategies appealed to the need for caution, intervening and control, and obscured alternative logics of care that focus on improving support for mother-infant dyads and the family as a whole. Conclusion Differing notions of risk and recovery that govern maternal drug use, child welfare and family life both compel and trouble all logics of care. The contentious nature of NAS reflects wider socio-political and moral agendas that ultimately have little to do with meeting the needs of mothers and babies. Fundamental changes in the principles, quality and delivery of care could improve outcomes for families affected by NAS
Poly-substance use and sexual risk behaviours: a cross-sectional comparison of adolescents in mainstream and alternative education settings
Background:
Surveys of young people under-represent those in alternative education settings (AES), potentially disguising health inequalities. We present the first quantitative UK evidence of health inequalities between AES and mainstream education school (MES) pupils, assessing whether observed inequalities are attributable to socioeconomic, familial, educational and peer factors.
Methods:
Cross-sectional, self-reported data on individual- and poly-substance use (PSU: combined tobacco, alcohol and cannabis use) and sexual risk-taking from 219 pupils in AES (mean age 15.9āyears) were compared with data from 4024 pupils in MES (mean age 15.5āyears). Data were collected from 2008 to 2009 as part of the quasi-experimental evaluation of Healthy Respect 2 (HR2).
Results:
AES pupils reported higher levels of substance use, including tobacco use, weekly drunkenness, using cannabis at least once a week and engaging in PSU at least once a week. AES pupils also reported higher levels of sexual health risk behaviours than their MES counterparts, including: earlier sexual activity; less protection against sexually transmitted infections (STIs); and having 3+ lifetime sexual partners. In multivariate analyses, inequalities in sexual risk-taking were fully explained after adjusting for higher deprivation, lower parental monitoring, lower parent-child connectedness, school disengagement and heightened intentions towards early parenthood among AES vs MES pupils. However, an increased risk (ORā=ā1.73, 95% CI 1.15, 2.60) of weekly PSU was found for AES vs MES pupils after adjusting for these factors and the influence of peer behaviours.
Conclusion:
AES pupils are more likely to engage in health risk behaviours, including PSU and sexual risk-taking, compared with MES pupils. AES pupils are a vulnerable group who may not be easily targeted by conventional population-level public health programmes. Health promotion interventions need to be tailored and contextualised for AES pupils, in particular for sexual health and PSU. These could be included within interventions designed to promote broader outcomes such as mental wellbeing, educational engagement, raise future aspirations and promote resilience
What are LGBTQ+ Peopleās Experiences of Alcohol Services in Scotland? A Qualitative Study of Service Users and Service Providers
This current qualitative study focused specifically on LGBTQ+ people who had accessed alcohol services or peer support in Scotland to explore their experiences and discover how services could be improved. We also explored the views of service providers to provide a more rounded account
Hospital patient experiences of contact isolation for antimicrobial resistant organisms in relation to health careāassociated infections: A systematic review and narrative synthesis of the evidence
Laura Fregonese - ORCID: 0000-0002-8399-7074
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8399-7074Background
The alarming growth of antimicrobial resistance organisms (AMRs) and the threat caused by health careāassociated infections require hospitalized individuals who are infected or colonized with AMRs to be cared for in isolation, predominantly in single rooms. None of the existing reviews focus on or specifically address the patientās experience of being cared for in contact isolation when affected by AMRs exploring this specific context.
Methods
Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidance for the conduct of systematic reviews was applied. Five databases were searched from inception to April 2019, with keywords related to adult patient experiences, AMR, and contact isolation. The evidence was certified by 2 reviewers. Principles of thematic analysis were used to produce a narrative synthesis of the findings.
Results
Eighteen eligible studies were identified. Narrative synthesis resulted in 3 overarching categories reflecting the patient experience: privacy versus loneliness; emotional responses to isolation; quality of care, recovery, and safety in isolation.
Conclusions
This review synthesizes existing evidence reflecting the patient experience of contact isolation. Study findings were often contradictory and may not reflect contemporary health care, such as shorter hospital stays, or societal preferences for greater privacy. Further research focusing on contemporary health care contexts is recommended.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2023.04.01151pubpub1
Perspectives on pre-exposure prophylaxis for people who inject drugs in the context of an HIV outbreak: a qualitative study
Background: There is an ongoing HIV outbreak amongst people who inject drugs (PWID) in Glasgow, Scotland, and one response which has not yet been widely implemented is the provision of Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). PrEP is the use of HIV anti-retrovirals prior to HIV infection to provide a barrier to infection. This has been shown to be effective amongst various at-risk populations in preventing HIV spread. The present study aimed to explore views of PWID who might benefit from PrEP provision and Service Providers working with PWID to understand will to use PrEP and literacy of PrEP, contributing to the development of a PrEP service. Methods: A qualitative approach was taken, with semi structured interviews conducted in Glasgow at two third sector service sites. 11 Service Providers and 21 PWID participated in the study. Data was analysed thematically. Results: Participants, both PWID and Service Providers, were keen to engage with PrEP and perceived substantial potential benefits of PrEP for this population. Potential barriers to engagement were identified as a lack of health literacy, motivation, and self-ascribed risk, as well as the overwhelming unpredictability of substance use. Participants wanted PrEP to be provided within already existing structures, particularly community pharmacies, and for promotion and provision to involve peers. Conclusion: This sample reported willingness to engage with PrEP, and suggested there is a specific need amongst PWID for PrEP. However, PWID have specific lived experienced contexts and needs, and are burdened by social and economic marginalisation and inequality at every level. This contrasts them from other populations currently being provided with PrEP, and must be considered in the development of provision
Inequalities in the dental health needs and access to dental services among looked after children in Scotland: a population data linkage study
Background: There is limited evidence on the health needs and service access among children and young people who are looked after by the state. The aim of this study was to compare dental treatment needs and access to dental services (as an exemplar of wider health and well-being concerns) among children and young people who are looked after with the general child population.
Methods: Population data linkage study utilising national datasets of social work referrals for ālooked afterā placements, the Scottish census of children in local authority schools, and national health serviceās dental health and service datasets.
Results: 633ā204 children in publicly funded schools in Scotland during the academic year 2011/2012, of whom 10ā927 (1.7%) were known to be looked after during that or a previous year (from 2007ā2008). The children in the looked after children (LAC) group were more likely to have urgent dental treatment need at 5āyears of age: 23%vs10% (n=209/16533), adjusted (for age, sex and area socioeconomic deprivation) OR 2.65 (95% CI 2.30 to 3.05); were less likely to attend a dentist regularly: 51%vs63% (n=5519/388934), 0.55 (0.53 to 0.58) and more likely to have teeth extracted under general anaesthesia: 9%vs5% (n=967/30253), 1.91 (1.78 to 2.04).
Conclusions: LAC are more likely to have dental treatment needs and less likely to access dental services even when accounting for sociodemographic factors. Greater efforts are required to integrate child social and healthcare for LAC and to develop preventive care pathways on entering and throughout their time in the care system
Has untargeted sexual health promotion for young people reached its limit? a quasi-experimental study
Background Theoretically, there may be benefit in augmenting school-based sexual health education with sexual health services, but the outcomes are poorly understood. Healthy Respect 2 (HR2) combined sex education with youth-friendly sexual health services, media campaigns and branding, and encouraged joint working between health services, local government and the voluntary sector.This study examined whether HR2: (1) improved young peopleās sexual health knowledge, attitudes, behaviour and use of sexual health services and (2) reduced socioeconomic inequalities in sexual health.Methods A quasi-experiment in which the intervention and comparison areas were matched for teenage pregnancy and terminations, and schools were matched by social deprivation. 5283 pupils aged 15ā16 years (2269 intervention, 3014 comparison) were recruited to cross-sectional surveys in 2007, 2008 and 2009.Results The intervention improved malesā and, to a lesser extent, femalesā sexual health knowledge. Malesā intention to use condoms, and reported use of condoms, was unaffected, compared with a reduction in both among males in the comparison arm. Although females exposed to the intervention became less accepting of condoms, there was no change in their intention to use condoms and reported condom use.Pupils became more tolerant of sexual coercion in both the intervention and comparison arms. Attitudes towards same-sex relationships remained largely unaffected. More pupils in the HR2 area used sexual health services, including those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds. This aside, sexual health inequalities remained.Conclusions Combining school-based sex education and sexual health clinics has a limited impact. Interventions that address the upstream causes of poor sexual health, such as a detrimental sociocultural environment, represent promising alternatives. These should prioritise the most vulnerable young people
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