利用健康技术促进学习障碍者的身体健康:护理点测试

Dolly Sud, Archana Anandaram, Helen Atkins, Robyn McAskill, Sion Scott
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摘要

世界卫生组织将卫生技术定义为“为解决健康问题和提高生活质量而开发的设备、药物、疫苗、程序和系统等形式的有组织的知识和技能的应用”。创新卫生技术在改善人类健康和福祉方面具有巨大潜力。然而,它们的出现并不能保证公平的卫生结果。并非所有人都能平等地获得卫生技术,导致这些人的健康结果不同。在采用、实施、获取、研究和设计方面的障碍可能导致弱势群体或边缘群体(例如智力残疾者)已经经历的卫生不平等被排斥并长期存在。护理点检测(POCT)是一种用于监测身体健康的卫生技术,已有近十年的历史。据报道,POCT具有微创性,可在广泛的环境中进行,缩短临床决策时间,改善健康状况的自我管理和患者赋权。尽管POCT有好处,但在身份识别人群中采用、使用、认识和研究使用这项技术来监测身体健康的情况似乎很少。本文将探讨POCT在这组个体中的应用,有证据表明,与一般人群相比,这些个体的死亡时间最长可早25年,而身体健康疾病占绝大多数过早死亡。这是一篇叙述性综述,探讨POCT在ID患者身体健康中的应用。
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Utilisation of Health Technologies for Physical Health of People with Learning Disabilities: Point of Care Testing
Abstract The World Health Organisation defines health technologies as the “application of organized knowledge and skills in the form of devices, medicines, vaccines, procedures and systems developed to solve a health problem and improve quality of lives.” Innovative health technologies have immense potential to improve human health and well-being. However, their advent does not guarantee equitable health outcomes. Not all individuals have equal access to health technologies resulting in different health outcomes for those individuals. Barriers to adoption, implementation, access, research and design can lead to exclusion and perpetuate the health inequalities already experienced by vulnerable or marginalised groups, for example those with intellectual disabilities (ID). Point of care testing (POCT) is a health technology used to monitor physical health and has been available for almost a decade. POCT is reported to be minimally invasive, can be conducted in a wide range of settings, enables shorter time to clinical decision making, improved self-management of health conditions and patient empowerment. Despite the benefits of POCT, adoption, use, awareness and research of the use of this technology in people with ID to monitor physical health appears to be scant. This article will explore the application of POCT in this group of individuals for whom evidence informs us die up to 25 years earlier when compared to the general population, and physical health disease account for the overwhelming majority of premature deaths. This is a narrative review exploring the use of POCT for physical health of people with ID.
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