1,305 research outputs found
Oral Health Care: An Autoethnography Reflecting on Dentistry\u27s Collective Neglect and Changes in Professional Education Resulting in the Dental Hygienist Being the Prevention-focused Primary Oral Health Care Provider
Many factors influence poor oral health among disadvantaged populations including socioeconomic circumstances, knowledge of disease prevention strategies and ability to implement those strategies, public policies, insurance status, insurance policies, dental providers and other challenges to accessing dental care. Often these issues converge and result in early disadvantages to achieving good oral health (Horton & Barker, 2010). Addressing even some of the factors that contribute to poor oral health may provide ways to change the dental health status of historically underserved populations. The purpose of this research is to explore my role as a practitioner and researcher in the creation of a hygienist-based, community-site located, teledentistry supported system of dental care for underserved populations and the intersection of my experiences with cultural, societal and educational occurrences. This autoethnography examined my own experiences and also explored the experiences of a small sample of others who participated in onsite dental care systems utilizing hygienists as the prevention-focused primary care provider.
As Ellis and Bochner (1996) note âAutoethnography stands as a current attempt to, quite literally, come to terms with sustaining questions of self and cultureâ (p. 193). The findings that emerged from my work included a realization that the dental industry creates and perpetuates the collective neglect of large portions of the US population. Some of this neglect is embedded in traditional power structures in dentistry, gender bias and distrust in professional skills as a result of separate professional education structures. The result for many people is untreated dental disease, a profound lack of health equity, increased shame due to poor oral health as well as missing school. There are ways to address the collective neglect of the dental industry through the reframing of the dental hygienist as the prevention-focused primary care oral health provider in professional education programs then integrating this provider type into community settings like schools
Rate Regulation, Safety Incentives, and Loss Growth in Workers\u27 Compensation Insurance
We analyze the relationship between insurance rate regulation, inflationary cost surges, and incentives for loss control using state-level data on workersâ compensation insurance for 24 states during 1984â90. Regulators often responded to rapid loss growth during this period by denying rate increases or approving increases that were less than initially requested by insurers. We test whether rate suppression increased loss growth by distorting incentives for loss control. Our regressions indicate a positive and statistically reliable relationship between loss growth and lagged measures of regulatory price constraints, suggesting that rate regulation increased the frequency and/or severity of employee injuries
Price Cutting in Liability Insurance Markets
This article analyzes alleged underpricing of general liability insurance prior to the mid-1980s liability insurance crisis. The theoretical analysis considers whether moral hazard and/or heterogeneous information for forecasting claim costs can cause some firms to price too low and depress other firms\u27 prices. Cross-sectional analysis of insurer loss forecast revisions (which should be greater for firms with low prices caused by moral hazard or hetero- geneous information) and premium growth provides evidence consistent with low pricing due to moral hazard but not heterogeneous information. The evidence also implies that shifts in the loss distribution produced large industrywide forecast errors
Workersâ Compensation Rate Regulation: How Price Controls Increase Costs*
In the 1980s, regulation constrained workersâ compensation insurance premiums in the face of rapid growth in loss costs. We develop and test the hypothesis that rate suppression exacerbates loss growth, leading to higher losses and premiums. The empirical analysis using rating class data for eight states for the period 1985â91 confirms that rate suppression, measured by lagged residualâmarket share of payroll, increased loss growth. The costâincreasing effects are greater in the residual market than in the voluntary market, but premiums increased more rapidly in the voluntary market. The resulting pattern of cross subsidies between and within classes is consistent with a simple model of political influence, with subsidies to high risks and small firms at the expense of low risks and insurer equity
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Gather, Report & Implement: Building an Elementary School Counseling Program in Central Falls, Rhode Island
Presented at the 2012 American School Counseling Association National Conference, this presentation outlines and summarizes the 2012 grant project aimed at establishing an effective elementary school counseling program in Central Falls, Rhode Island. The grant focused on reducing school counselor-to-student ratios, decreasing discipline referrals, and establishing a school counseling data management system, among other objectives
Delays in Leniency Application: Is There Really a Race to the Enforcer's Door?
This paper studies cartelsâ strategic behavior in delaying leniency applications, a take-up decision that has been ignored in the previous literature. Using European Commission decisions issued over a 16-year span, we show, contrary to common beliefs and the existing literature, that conspirators
often apply for leniency long after a cartel collapses. We estimate hazard and probit models to study the determinants of leniency-application delays. Statistical tests find that delays are symmetrically affected by antitrust policies and macroeconomic fluctuations. Our results shed light on the design of
enforcement programs against cartels and other forms of conspiracy
Patientsâ Attitudes Toward Deprescribing and Their Experiences Communicating with Clinicians and Pharmacists
Purpose: Developing effective deprescribing interventions relies on understanding attitudes, beliefs, and communication challenges of those involved in the deprescribing decision-making process, including the patient, the primary care clinician, and the pharmacist. The objective of this study was to assess patientsâ beliefs and attitudes and identify facilitators of and barriers to deprescribing.
Methods: As part of a larger study, we recruited patients â©Ÿ18years of age taking â©Ÿ3 chronic medications. Participants were recruited from retail pharmacies associated with the University of Kentucky HealthCare system. They completed an electronic survey that included demographic information, questions about communication with their primary care clinician and pharmacists, and the revised Patientsâ Attitudes Toward Deprescribing (rPATD) questionnaire.
Results: Our analyses included 103 participants (n=65 identified as female and n=74 as White/Caucasian) with a mean age of 50.4years [standard deviation (SD)=15.5]. Participants reported taking an average of 8.4 daily medications (SD=6.1). Most participants reported effective communication with clinicians and pharmacists (66.9%) and expressed willingness to stop one of their medications if their clinician said it was possible (83.5%). Predictors of willingness to accept deprescribing were older age [odds ratio (OR)=2.99, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.45â6.2], college/graduate degree (OR=55.25, 95% CI=5.74â531.4), perceiving medications as less appropriate (OR=8.99, 95% CI=1.1â73.62), and perceived effectiveness of communication with the clinician or pharmacist (OR=4.56, 95% CI=0.85â24.35).
Conclusion: Adults taking â©Ÿ3 chronic medications expressed high willingness to accept deprescribing of medications when their doctor said it was possible. Targeted strategies to facilitate communication within the patientâprimary care clinicianâpharmacist triad that consider patient characteristics such as age and education level may be necessary ingredients for developing successful deprescribing interventions
Positive lifestyle changes around the time of pregnancy:a cross-sectional study
OBJECTIVES: To examine the prevalence of positive lifestyle behaviours before and during pregnancy in Ireland.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.
SETTING: Population-based study in Ireland.
PARTICIPANTS: A total of 718 women of predominantly Caucasian origin from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS), Ireland, were included.
PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES
Positive lifestyle behaviour changes before and during pregnancy in Ireland on alcohol consumption, smoking, folate use and nutrition.
RESULTS: Of 1212 women surveyed, 718 (59%) responded. 26% were adherent to all three recommendations on alcohol consumption, smoking and folate use before pregnancy. This increased to 39% for the same three behaviours during pregnancy, with greater increases in adherence observed among women with the lowest adherence before pregnancy. Age, education and ethnicity gaps in adherence before pregnancy appeared to narrow during pregnancy. Adherence to all seven food pyramid guidelines was less than 1% overall, and less than 1% of participants met all four micronutrient guidelines on vitamin D, folate, calcium and iron intake around the time of pregnancy.
CONCLUSIONS: Low levels of healthy lifestyle behaviours before pregnancy and low levels of positive lifestyle behaviours during pregnancy demonstrate an urgent need for increased clinical and public health efforts to target deleterious health behaviours before, during and after pregnancy
Comparison of diabetes risk score estimates and cardiometabolic risk profiles in a middle-aged Irish population
Background: To compare diabetes risk assessment tools in estimating risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and to evaluate cardiometabolic risk profiles in a middle-aged Irish population. Methods: Future risk of developing T2DM was estimated using 7 risk scores, including clinical measures with or without anthropometric, biological and lifestyle data, in the cross-sectional Mitchelstown cohort of 2,047 middle-aged men and women. Cardiometabolic phenotypes including markers of glucose metabolism, inflammatory and lipid profiles were determined. Results: Estimates of subjects at risk for developing T2DM varied considerably according to the risk assessment tool used (0.3% to 20%), with higher proportions of males at risk (0-29.2% vs. 0.1-13.4%, for men and women, respectively). Extrapolated to the Irish population of similar age, the overall number of adults at high risk of developing T2DM ranges from 3,378 to 236,632. Numbers of non-optimal metabolic features were generally greater among those at high risk of developing T2DM. However, cardiometabolic profile characterisation revealed that only those classified at high risk by the Griffin (UK Cambridge) score displayed a more pro-inflammatory, obese, hypertensive, dysglycaemic and insulin resistant metabolic phenotype. Conclusions: Most diabetes risk scores examined offer limited ability to identify subjects with metabolic abnormalities and at risk of developing T2DM. Our results highlight the need to validate diabetes risk scoring tools for each population studied and the potential for developing an Irish diabetes risk score, which may help to promote self awareness and identify high risk individuals and diabetes hot spots for targeted public health interventions
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