PurposeTo explore how, in health professions education (HPE), the concept of critical consciousness has been defined and discussed, and to consider and suggest how critical pedagogy could be applied in practice. This exploration responds to increasing calls in the literature for HPE to foster compassionate care and social consciousness through the social sciences and humanities.MethodThe authors searched Medline/PubMed, ERIC and Web of Science for articles focusing on critical consciousness and/or critical pedagogy involving health professions. A thematic analysis aimed to identify key themes of critical consciousness in HPE literature.ResultsThe authors included 30 papers in their review. Key themes related to defining and discussing core attributes of critical consciousness in HPE were: 1) appreciating context in education and practice; 2) illuminating power structures; 3) moving beyond ‘procedural’; 4) enacting reflection; and 5) promoting equity and social justice.ConclusionsCritical consciousness may inform an appropriate critical pedagogy for fostering compassionate, humanistic, socially conscious health professionals who act as agents of change. While the authors share critical teaching practices for educators, considerable care must be taken in efforts to use critical pedagogy within the current structures of HPE programmes. The authors suggest attending to the philosophical and theoretical origins of critical consciousness and those of the dominant models of contemporary HPE (e. g. competency-based approaches) in order to ensure the tenets of critical pedagogy can be enacted authentically.
We examined the degree to which depressive symptoms, clinical staging of HIV disease, and neuropsychological (NP) functioning were related to neurocognitive complaints in HIV-infection. One hundred adults with HIV-infection (12 asymptomatic, 41 mildly symptomatic, and 47 with AIDS) were administered NP tests of attention and working memory, language, psychomotor speed, verbal memory, and conceptual problem-solving, the Beck Depression Inventory, and the Patient's Assessment of Own Functioning Inventory (Chelune, Heaton & Lehman, 1986), a subjective neurocognitive complaint questionnaire where patients rated their problems with memory, language and communication, sensory-motor skills, and higher-level cognitive and intellectual functions. Neurocognitive complaints (regardless of specific type) were correlated significantly with depressive symptoms and with NP measures of attention and working memory, psychomotor skills, and learning efficiency. However, multiple regression analyses revealed that depressive symptoms accounted for the majority of variance explained in neurocognitive complaints with psychomotor efficiency generally predicting the remaining variance. Neurocognitive complaints did not differ according to HIV clinical staging.
Fatigue and depressive symptoms are common in HIV-infection. The relationship between these symptoms and neuropsychological functioning is poorly understood, particularly in symptomatic infection/AIDS. This study examined the associations among fatigue, depressive symptoms, subjective neurocognitive complaints, and objective neuropsychological performance in HIV/AIDS. Sixty-eight men with HIV-infection (27 adults with HIV-infection but not AIDS and 41 with AIDS diagnosis) completed a neuropsychological test battery and self-report measures of fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale), depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory), and subjective neurocognitive complaints (Patient's Assessment of Own Functioning). High levels of fatigue were endorsed by participants. Fatigue severity was related to depressive symptoms but not to AIDS diagnosis or medication status. Verbal learning and motor function was worse in participants with AIDS, but neuropsychological functioning was not significantly correlated with fatigue or depressive symptoms. Subjective neurocognitive complaints were predicted by both depressive symptoms and fatigue. Our results suggest that adults with fatigue and HIV-infection (with or without AIDS) should be screened for depression. Neither fatigue nor depressive symptoms appear to affect neuropsychological functioning in HIV/AIDS. Future research is needed to develop and evaluate instruments and methods to differentiate depression-related fatigue from fatigue that may reflect underlying medical disease. Such research will further the development of effective treatments for fatigue associated with HIV-infection.
Although responsive to the total symptom profile, psychosocial measures typically utilized for evaluating quality of life and mental health status in HIV disease lacked sensitivity and specificity for measuring the consequences of lipodystrophy-associated fat distribution changes alone. Lipodystrophy severity did impact negatively on body image.
HAART-treated ADC patients with baseline CSF markers of viral and immunologic inactivity did not necessarily have inactive ADC when followed over 12 weeks. More sensitive CSF markers to judge the activity of ADC are urgently needed, whereas the interpretation of these markers should be considered with caution in HAART-treated ADC patients.
Neuropsychological impairment and depression are common among individual with HIV-infection, resulting in significantly altered everyday functioning. The objective of this study was to examine the impact of these two important neurobehavioural complications on health-related quality of life in adults with HIV-infection. Participants (n = 155) received a 3-hours comprehensive neuropsychological examination, the Beck Depression Inventory, and the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Quality of Life instrument. Four groups were formed based on the presence or absence of depression and neuropsychological impairment. Results suggest that neuropsychological impairment and depression can differentially affect dimensions of health-related quality of Life. Specifically, depression has a significant impact on mental health dimensions of health-related quality of life. Some evidence exists for an impact of neuropsychological impairment, or a combined impact of depression and neuropsychological impairment, on the Physical Health dimensions of health-related quality of life. These results confirm the importance of depression as a determinant of health-related quality of life in HIV/AIDS and provide a potential avenue for improving health-related quality of life in adults with HIV-infection.
Ninety-one adults with HIV-infection who varied in the concordance between their subjective memory complaints (or metamemory) on the Patient's Assessment of Own Functioning (Chelune, Heaton, & Lehman, 1986) and their memory performance on the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT), were compared on the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and on neuropsychological (NP) tests of attention, language, psychomotor speed, and conceptual problem-solving. Subjects with low memory complaints and normal CVLT performance (n = 29) had low BDI scores and were normal in all other NP abilities. Subjects with high memory complaints and impaired CVLT performance (n = 20) had elevations on the BDI as well as NP impairments in psychomotor speed and category fluency. Subjects with low memory complaints but impaired CVLT performance (n = 16) had low BDI scores and were selectively impaired in conceptual problem-solving. Subjects with high memory complaints but normal CVLT performance (n = 26) had high BDI scores and normal NP functioning in all other abilities. These results suggest that there are at least two key determinants to metamemory inaccuracy in HIV-infection, namely, frontal executive impairments and mood disturbance.
This paper reports on the transformation that has occurred in the care of people living with HIV/AIDS in a Toronto Hospice. Casey House opened in the pre-HAART era to care exclusively for people with HIV/AIDS, an incurable disease. At the time, all patients were admitted for palliative care and all deaths were due to AIDS-defining conditions. AIDS-defining malignancies accounted for 22 percent of deaths, mainly, Kaposi sarcoma and lymphoma. In the post-HAART era, AIDS-defining malignancies dropped dramatically and non-AIDS-defining malignancies became a significant cause of death, including liver cancer, lung cancer and gastric cancers. In the post-HAART era, people living with HIV/AIDS served at Casey House have changed considerably, with increasing numbers of patients facing homelessness and mental health issues, including substance use. Casey House offers a picture of the evolving epidemic and provides insight into changes and improvements made in the care of these patients.
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