2012
DOI: 10.7453/gahmj.2012.1.4.006
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Test Result Management in Global Health Settings

Abstract: OVERVIEWAcross the globe, the ways in which patients' test results are managed are as varied as the many different types of healthcare systems that manage these data. The outcomes, however, are often not too dissimilar: too many clinically significant test results fall through the cracks. The consequences of not following up test results in a timely manner are serious and often devastating to patients: diagnoses are delayed, treatments are not initiated or altered in time, and diseases progress. In resource-po… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Ranked data not useable for meta-analyses, authors contacted for unadjusted M and SD values. Lin et al, 2019 [ 78 ] (Moderate-Low) 90 Nurses (China) RCT Multimodal mindfulness-based cognitive therapy vs. WLC 8 × 2 h weekly group mindfulness sessions + recommended practice vs. nil Pre-training, post-training, 3 months PSS; PANAS; CDRS Significant post-training improvements in perceived stress, positive affect, and negative affect maintained at follow up, improved resilience at follow-up compared with baseline McCraty et al, 2009 [ 79 ] (Moderate-High) 75 Correctional officers (USA) RCT Psycho-educational and physiological stress management with HRV-BF (Power to Change Performance) vs. WLC 2 days + 3mons recommended practice at work Pre-training, 3 months post-training Salivary cortisol and DHEA; BP; HR Rest ; HRV components (RMSSD, HF, LF, VLF, total power, LF/HF ratio); BSI subscales; POQA subscales Significantly lower DHEA, BP, HR, anger and increased LF/HF HRV ratio post-training, no physiological changes, and increases in depressive symptoms in control group McCraty & Atkinson, 2012 [ 80 ] (Moderate-Low) 59 Police officers (USA) RCT Psycho-educational and physiological resilience promotion stress management with HRV-BF (Coherence Advantage Program) vs. WLC 3 × 4 h sessions Pre-training, post-training POQA subscales; BP and IBI during critical incident scenarios ( n = 23, 12 exp, 11 ctrl) Depression declined by 13% among trained officers while it increased by 17% in the control group. Significantly greater decrease in IBI during the post-training scenario in experimental group only.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Ranked data not useable for meta-analyses, authors contacted for unadjusted M and SD values. Lin et al, 2019 [ 78 ] (Moderate-Low) 90 Nurses (China) RCT Multimodal mindfulness-based cognitive therapy vs. WLC 8 × 2 h weekly group mindfulness sessions + recommended practice vs. nil Pre-training, post-training, 3 months PSS; PANAS; CDRS Significant post-training improvements in perceived stress, positive affect, and negative affect maintained at follow up, improved resilience at follow-up compared with baseline McCraty et al, 2009 [ 79 ] (Moderate-High) 75 Correctional officers (USA) RCT Psycho-educational and physiological stress management with HRV-BF (Power to Change Performance) vs. WLC 2 days + 3mons recommended practice at work Pre-training, 3 months post-training Salivary cortisol and DHEA; BP; HR Rest ; HRV components (RMSSD, HF, LF, VLF, total power, LF/HF ratio); BSI subscales; POQA subscales Significantly lower DHEA, BP, HR, anger and increased LF/HF HRV ratio post-training, no physiological changes, and increases in depressive symptoms in control group McCraty & Atkinson, 2012 [ 80 ] (Moderate-Low) 59 Police officers (USA) RCT Psycho-educational and physiological resilience promotion stress management with HRV-BF (Coherence Advantage Program) vs. WLC 3 × 4 h sessions Pre-training, post-training POQA subscales; BP and IBI during critical incident scenarios ( n = 23, 12 exp, 11 ctrl) Depression declined by 13% among trained officers while it increased by 17% in the control group. Significantly greater decrease in IBI during the post-training scenario in experimental group only.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was also no evidence for post-training improvements in physiological biomarkers of stress except for heart rate (Table 5 ), which was the third most common outcome measure and included several studies that condition adaptive through heart rate variability biofeedback training (HRV-BF). Despite the limited evidence supporting the effectiveness of HRV-BF as a possible tool for modulating stress physiology, doing so requires substantial resources such as medical-grade cardiovascular equipment, software, repeated training sessions, and qualified personnel psychophysiology to guide psychoeducational modules [ 35 , 36 , 40 , 79 , 80 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…seems to be a natural conclusion of this result. After this paper was completed , the positive answer for the above question was found [6]. Most intriguing and interesting would be to find the fine grained uncertainty relations using anti-commuting observables as a follow up to this work.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…14,21 Studies of resilient groups can provide valuable insight into the true nature of resilience and its relationship to health and well-being. 27…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%