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  1. Book ; Online: Redes integradas de servicios de salud en Colombia y Brasil : Un estudio de casos

    Unger, Jean-Pierre / Mogollón-Pérez, Amparo / Vázquez, María / Enfermera, Maria Ferreira / Vargas, Ingrid / de Paepe, Pierre / de Paepe, Pierre

    2018  

    Keywords Health systems & services ; Medical ; Health Care Delivery
    Size 1 Online-Ressource
    Document type Book ; Online
    Note Spanish ; Open Access
    HBZ-ID HT021029803
    ISBN 9789587388121 ; 9587388127
    Database ZB MED Catalogue: Medicine, Health, Nutrition, Environment, Agriculture

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  2. Article ; Online: Comparison of COVID-19 Health Risks With Other Viral Occupational Hazards.

    Unger, Jean-Pierre

    International journal of health services : planning, administration, evaluation

    2020  Volume 51, Issue 1, Page(s) 37–49

    Abstract: The European Commission periodically classifies viruses on their occupational hazards to define the level of protection that workers are entitled to claim. Viruses belonging to Groups 3 and 4 can cause severe human disease and hazard to workers, as well ... ...

    Abstract The European Commission periodically classifies viruses on their occupational hazards to define the level of protection that workers are entitled to claim. Viruses belonging to Groups 3 and 4 can cause severe human disease and hazard to workers, as well as a spreading risk to the community. However, there is no effective prophylaxis or treatment available for Group 4 viruses. European trade unions and the Commission are negotiating the classification of the COVID-19 virus along these 2 categories. This article weighs the reasons to classify it in Group 3 or 4 while comparing its risks to those of the most significant viruses classified in these 2 categories. COVID-19 characteristics justify its classification in Group 4. Contaminated workers in contact with the public play an important role in disseminating the virus. In hospitals and nursing homes, they increase the overall case fatality rate. By strongly protecting these workers and professionals, the European Union would not only improve health in work environments, but also activate a mechanism key to reducing the COVID-19 burden in the general population. Admittedly, the availability of a new vaccine or treatment would change this conclusion, which was reached in the middle of the first pandemic.
    MeSH term(s) COVID-19/epidemiology ; Europe/epidemiology ; Humans ; Occupational Health ; Pandemics ; Risk Assessment ; SARS-CoV-2/classification ; Virus Diseases/epidemiology ; Viruses/classification
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-08-09
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 184936-0
    ISSN 1541-4469 ; 0020-7314
    ISSN (online) 1541-4469
    ISSN 0020-7314
    DOI 10.1177/0020731420946590
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Physicians' Burnout (and That of Psychologists, Nurses, Magistrates, Researchers, and Professors) For a Control Program.

    Unger, Jean-Pierre

    International journal of health services : planning, administration, evaluation

    2019  Volume 50, Issue 1, Page(s) 73–81

    MeSH term(s) Burnout, Professional/epidemiology ; Burnout, Professional/pathology ; Burnout, Professional/prevention & control ; Burnout, Professional/therapy ; Humans ; Physicians ; Professional Autonomy
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-11-01
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 184936-0
    ISSN 1541-4469 ; 0020-7314
    ISSN (online) 1541-4469
    ISSN 0020-7314
    DOI 10.1177/0020731419883525
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article: Comparison of COVID-19 Health Risks With Other Viral Occupational Hazards

    Unger, Jean-Pierre

    Int J Health Serv

    Abstract: The European Commission periodically classifies viruses on their occupational hazards to define the level of protection that workers are entitled to claim. Viruses belonging to Groups 3 and 4 can cause severe human disease and hazard to workers, as well ... ...

    Abstract The European Commission periodically classifies viruses on their occupational hazards to define the level of protection that workers are entitled to claim. Viruses belonging to Groups 3 and 4 can cause severe human disease and hazard to workers, as well as a spreading risk to the community. However, there is no effective prophylaxis or treatment available for Group 4 viruses. European trade unions and the Commission are negotiating the classification of the COVID-19 virus along these 2 categories. This article weighs the reasons to classify it in Group 3 or 4 while comparing its risks to those of the most significant viruses classified in these 2 categories. COVID-19 characteristics justify its classification in Group 4. Contaminated workers in contact with the public play an important role in disseminating the virus. In hospitals and nursing homes, they increase the overall case fatality rate. By strongly protecting these workers and professionals, the European Union would not only improve health in work environments, but also activate a mechanism key to reducing the COVID-19 burden in the general population. Admittedly, the availability of a new vaccine or treatment would change this conclusion, which was reached in the middle of the first pandemic.
    Keywords covid19
    Publisher WHO
    Document type Article
    Note WHO #Covidence: #707410
    Database COVID19

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  5. Article ; Online: Comparison of COVID-19 Health Risks With Other Viral Occupational Hazards

    Unger, Jean-Pierre

    International Journal of Health Services

    2020  , Page(s) 2073142094659

    Abstract: The European Commission periodically classifies viruses on their occupational hazards to define the level of protection that workers are entitled to claim. Viruses belonging to Groups 3 and 4 can cause severe human disease and hazard to workers, as well ... ...

    Abstract The European Commission periodically classifies viruses on their occupational hazards to define the level of protection that workers are entitled to claim. Viruses belonging to Groups 3 and 4 can cause severe human disease and hazard to workers, as well as a spreading risk to the community. However, there is no effective prophylaxis or treatment available for Group 4 viruses. European trade unions and the Commission are negotiating the classification of the COVID-19 virus along these 2 categories. This article weighs the reasons to classify it in Group 3 or 4 while comparing its risks to those of the most significant viruses classified in these 2 categories. COVID-19 characteristics justify its classification in Group 4. Contaminated workers in contact with the public play an important role in disseminating the virus. In hospitals and nursing homes, they increase the overall case fatality rate. By strongly protecting these workers and professionals, the European Union would not only improve health in work environments, but also activate a mechanism key to reducing the COVID-19 burden in the general population. Admittedly, the availability of a new vaccine or treatment would change this conclusion, which was reached in the middle of the first pandemic.
    Keywords Health Policy ; covid19
    Language English
    Publisher SAGE Publications
    Publishing country us
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 184936-0
    ISSN 1541-4469 ; 0020-7314
    ISSN (online) 1541-4469
    ISSN 0020-7314
    DOI 10.1177/0020731420946590
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  6. Article ; Online: The physician and professionalism today: challenges to and strategies for ethical professional medical practice.

    Unger, Jean-Pierre / Morales, Ingrid / De Paepe, Pierre / Roland, Michel

    BMC health services research

    2020  Volume 20, Issue Suppl 2, Page(s) 1069

    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-09
    Publishing country England
    Document type Editorial
    ZDB-ID 2050434-2
    ISSN 1472-6963 ; 1472-6963
    ISSN (online) 1472-6963
    ISSN 1472-6963
    DOI 10.1186/s12913-020-05884-1
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article ; Online: Objectives, methods, and results in critical health systems and policy research

    Jean-Pierre Unger / Ingrid Morales / Pierre De Paepe

    BMC Health Services Research, Vol 20, Iss S2, Pp 1-

    evaluating the healthcare market

    2020  Volume 13

    Abstract: Abstract Background Since the 1980s, markets have turned increasingly to intangible goods – healthcare, education, the arts, and justice. Over 40 years, the authors investigated healthcare commoditisation to produce policy knowledge relevant to patients, ...

    Abstract Abstract Background Since the 1980s, markets have turned increasingly to intangible goods – healthcare, education, the arts, and justice. Over 40 years, the authors investigated healthcare commoditisation to produce policy knowledge relevant to patients, physicians, health professionals, and taxpayers. This paper revisits their objectives, methods, and results to enlighten healthcare policy design and research. Main text This paper meta-analyses the authors’ research that evaluated the markets impact on healthcare and professional culture and investigated how they influenced patients’ timely access to quality care and physicians’ working conditions. Based on these findings, they explored the political economic of healthcare. In low-income countries the analysed research showed that, through loans and cooperation, multilateral agencies restricted the function of public services to disease control, with subsequent catastrophic reductions in access to care, health de-medicalisation, increased avoidable mortality, and failure to attain the narrow MDGs in Africa. The pro-market reforms enacted in middle-income countries entailed the purchaser-provider split, privatisation of healthcare pre-financing, and government contracting of health finance management to private insurance companies. To establish the materiality of a cause-and-effect relationship, the authors compared the efficiency of Latin American national health systems according to whether or not they were pro-market and complied with international policy standards. While pro-market health economists acknowledge that no market can offer equitable access to healthcare without effective regulation and control, the authors showed that both regulation and control were severely constrained in Asia by governance and medical secrecy issues. In high-income countries they questioned the interest for population health of healthcare insurance companies, whilst comparing access to care and health expenditures in the European Union vs. the U.S., the Netherlands, and ...
    Keywords Health policy ; Health systems research ; Research methodology ; Public aspects of medicine ; RA1-1270
    Subject code 360
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher BMC
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  8. Article ; Online: Medical heuristics and action-research

    Jean-Pierre Unger / Ingrid Morales / Pierre De Paepe

    BMC Health Services Research, Vol 20, Iss S2, Pp 1-

    professionalism versus science

    2020  Volume 9

    Abstract: Abstract Background Professional knowledge aims at improving practice. It reduces uncertainty in decision-making, improves effectiveness in action and relevance in evaluation, stimulates reflexivity, and subjects practice to ethical standards. Heuristics ...

    Abstract Abstract Background Professional knowledge aims at improving practice. It reduces uncertainty in decision-making, improves effectiveness in action and relevance in evaluation, stimulates reflexivity, and subjects practice to ethical standards. Heuristics is an approach to problem-solving, learning, and discovery employing a practical methodology that, although not optimal, is sufficient for achieving immediate goals. This article identifies the desirable, heuristic particularities of research in professional, medical practice; and it identifies what distinguishes this research from scientific research. Main text We examine the limits of biomedical and sociological research to produce professional knowledge. Then, we derive the heuristic characteristics of professional research from a meta-analysis of two action-research projects aimed at securing access to essential generic drugs in Senegal and improving physicians’ self-assessment and healthcare coordination in Belgium. To study healthcare, biomedical sciences ignore how clinical decisions are implemented. Decisions are built into an articulated knowledge system, such as (clinical) epidemiology, where those studied are standardisable - while taking care of patients is an idiosyncratic, value-based, person-to-person process that largely eludes probabilistic methodologies. Social sciences also reach their limits here because descriptive, interpretative methods cannot help with gesture and speech quality, while the management of the patient’s suffering and risks makes each of them unique. Research into medical professionalism is normative as it is intended to formulate recommendations. Scientific data and descriptions are useful to the practitioner randomly, only from the similarities in the environment of the authors and their readers. Such recommendations can be conceived of as strategies, i.e., multi-resource and multi-stage action models to improve clinical and public health practice. Action learning and action-research are needed to design and implement these ...
    Keywords Medical knowledge ; Health management science ; Health systems ; Operation research ; Action-research ; Public aspects of medicine ; RA1-1270
    Subject code 170
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher BMC
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  9. Article ; Online: Objectives, methods, and results in critical health systems and policy research: evaluating the healthcare market.

    Unger, Jean-Pierre / Morales, Ingrid / De Paepe, Pierre

    BMC health services research

    2020  Volume 20, Issue Suppl 2, Page(s) 1072

    Abstract: Background: Since the 1980s, markets have turned increasingly to intangible goods - healthcare, education, the arts, and justice. Over 40 years, the authors investigated healthcare commoditisation to produce policy knowledge relevant to patients, ... ...

    Abstract Background: Since the 1980s, markets have turned increasingly to intangible goods - healthcare, education, the arts, and justice. Over 40 years, the authors investigated healthcare commoditisation to produce policy knowledge relevant to patients, physicians, health professionals, and taxpayers. This paper revisits their objectives, methods, and results to enlighten healthcare policy design and research.
    Main text: This paper meta-analyses the authors' research that evaluated the markets impact on healthcare and professional culture and investigated how they influenced patients' timely access to quality care and physicians' working conditions. Based on these findings, they explored the political economic of healthcare. In low-income countries the analysed research showed that, through loans and cooperation, multilateral agencies restricted the function of public services to disease control, with subsequent catastrophic reductions in access to care, health de-medicalisation, increased avoidable mortality, and failure to attain the narrow MDGs in Africa. The pro-market reforms enacted in middle-income countries entailed the purchaser-provider split, privatisation of healthcare pre-financing, and government contracting of health finance management to private insurance companies. To establish the materiality of a cause-and-effect relationship, the authors compared the efficiency of Latin American national health systems according to whether or not they were pro-market and complied with international policy standards. While pro-market health economists acknowledge that no market can offer equitable access to healthcare without effective regulation and control, the authors showed that both regulation and control were severely constrained in Asia by governance and medical secrecy issues. In high-income countries they questioned the interest for population health of healthcare insurance companies, whilst comparing access to care and health expenditures in the European Union vs. the U.S., the Netherlands, and Switzerland. They demonstrated that commoditising healthcare increases mortality and suffering amenable to care considerably and carries professional, cultural, and ethical risks for doctors and health professionals. Pro-market policies systems cause health systems inefficiency, inequity in access to care and strain professionals' ethics.
    Conclusion: Policy research methodologies benefit from being inductive, as health services and systems evaluations, and population health studies are prerequisites to challenge official discourse and to explore the historical, economic, sociocultural, and political determinants of public policies.
    MeSH term(s) Africa ; Asia ; Health Care Sector ; Health Policy ; Humans ; Netherlands ; Switzerland
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-09
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2050434-2
    ISSN 1472-6963 ; 1472-6963
    ISSN (online) 1472-6963
    ISSN 1472-6963
    DOI 10.1186/s12913-020-05889-w
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article ; Online: Medical heuristics and action-research: professionalism versus science.

    Unger, Jean-Pierre / Morales, Ingrid / De Paepe, Pierre

    BMC health services research

    2020  Volume 20, Issue Suppl 2, Page(s) 1071

    Abstract: Background: Professional knowledge aims at improving practice. It reduces uncertainty in decision-making, improves effectiveness in action and relevance in evaluation, stimulates reflexivity, and subjects practice to ethical standards. Heuristics is an ... ...

    Abstract Background: Professional knowledge aims at improving practice. It reduces uncertainty in decision-making, improves effectiveness in action and relevance in evaluation, stimulates reflexivity, and subjects practice to ethical standards. Heuristics is an approach to problem-solving, learning, and discovery employing a practical methodology that, although not optimal, is sufficient for achieving immediate goals. This article identifies the desirable, heuristic particularities of research in professional, medical practice; and it identifies what distinguishes this research from scientific research.
    Main text: We examine the limits of biomedical and sociological research to produce professional knowledge. Then, we derive the heuristic characteristics of professional research from a meta-analysis of two action-research projects aimed at securing access to essential generic drugs in Senegal and improving physicians' self-assessment and healthcare coordination in Belgium. To study healthcare, biomedical sciences ignore how clinical decisions are implemented. Decisions are built into an articulated knowledge system, such as (clinical) epidemiology, where those studied are standardisable - while taking care of patients is an idiosyncratic, value-based, person-to-person process that largely eludes probabilistic methodologies. Social sciences also reach their limits here because descriptive, interpretative methods cannot help with gesture and speech quality, while the management of the patient's suffering and risks makes each of them unique. Research into medical professionalism is normative as it is intended to formulate recommendations. Scientific data and descriptions are useful to the practitioner randomly, only from the similarities in the environment of the authors and their readers. Such recommendations can be conceived of as strategies, i.e., multi-resource and multi-stage action models to improve clinical and public health practice. Action learning and action-research are needed to design and implement these strategies, because their complexity implies trial and error. To validate a strategy, repeated experiences are needed. Its reproducibility assumes the description of the context. To participate in medical action-research, the investigator needs professional proficiency - a frequent difficulty in academic settings.
    Conclusion: Some criteria to assess the relevance of publicly funded clinical and public health research can be derived from the difference between scientific and professional knowledge, i.e. the knowledge gained with real-life experience in the field.
    MeSH term(s) Belgium ; Heuristics ; Humans ; Professionalism ; Reproducibility of Results ; Senegal
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-09
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2050434-2
    ISSN 1472-6963 ; 1472-6963
    ISSN (online) 1472-6963
    ISSN 1472-6963
    DOI 10.1186/s12913-020-05888-x
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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