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Resémenes Bibliográficos Fichero: ADOLESCENTE.DOC Proyecto de Biblioteca Hospitalaria de Atención al Paciente Infanto-Juvenil.

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Presentation on theme: "Resémenes Bibliográficos Fichero: ADOLESCENTE.DOC Proyecto de Biblioteca Hospitalaria de Atención al Paciente Infanto-Juvenil."— Presentation transcript:

1 Resémenes Bibliográficos Fichero: ADOLESCENTE.DOC Proyecto de Biblioteca Hospitalaria de Atención al Paciente Infanto-Juvenil

2 ADOLESCENT, HOSPITALIZED Cambridge: MEDLINE 1992 January AU: AUTHOR Holme R Adolescent needs. Care study. SO: SOURCE Nurs-Times; 1991 Oct 9-15; 87(41); P 34 LA: LANGUAGE English MJ: MAJOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescent, Hospitalized:PX. Femoral Fractures:NU MN: MINOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescence:. Body Image:. Case Report:. Femoral Fractures:PX. Human:. Male:

3 AU: AUTHOR Tesler MD; Savedra MC; Holzemer WL; Wilkie DJ; Ward JA; Paul SM TI: TITLE The word-graphic rating scale as a measure of children's and adolescents‘ pain intensity. SO: SOURCE Res-Nurs-Health; 1991 Oct; 14(5); P 361-71 LA: LANGUAGE English MJ: MAJOR SUBJECT HEADING Pain Measurement:MT MN: MINOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescence:. Adolescent, Hospitalized:PX. Adolescent, Hospitalized:SN. Child:. Child, Hospitalized:PX. Child, Hospitalized:SN. Comparative Study:. Evaluation Studies:. Human:. Pain:EP. Pain:PX. Pain Measurement:SN. Pain, Postoperative:EP. Pain, Postoperative:PX. Pilot Projects:. Reproducibility of Results:. Support, Non-U.S. Gov't:. Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.:

4 AB: ABSTRACT A program of studies was designed to select and test a pain intensity scale for inclusion in a multidimensional pain assessment tool for children and adolescents. The focus was on determining each scale's validity, reliability, ease of use, preference, and the lack of age, gender, and ethnic biases. Five pain scales were evaluated in four separate studies: a word-graphic rating scale, a visual analogue scale, a graded-graphic rating scale, a magnitude estimation scale (0 to 10), and a color scale. Subjects (N = 1,223) were 8 to 17 years of age and, in three of the studies, were hospitalized and judged to be in pain. In Study 1, well children used the scales to assess pain in an analogue situation selecting the color scale easiest to use and best liked. Convergent validity for the five scales was supported. In Study 2, hospitalized children, who were experiencing pain, overwhelmingly selected the word-graphic rating scale as their choice. A pilot version of a multidimensional pain assessment tool incorporating the word-graphic rating scale was tested in Study 3 using a repeated measures design. The scale demonstrated sensitivity to changes in postoperative pain intensity over time. In Study 4, convergent validity of the five scales and test-retest reliability of the word-graphic rating scale were supported. The series of four studies provides strong evidence to support use of the word-graphic rating scale to measure pain intensity in pediatric populations. ABSTRACT.

5 AU: AUTHOR Vander Stoep A; Bohn P; Melville E TI: TITLE A model for predicting discharge against medical advice from adolescent residential treatment. SO: SOURCE Hosp-Community-Psychiatry; 1991 Jul; 42(7); P 725-8 LA: LANGUAGE English MJ: MAJOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescent, Hospitalized:SN. Family:PX. Hospitals, Psychiatric:UT. Mental Disorders:TH. Patient Discharge:SN. Patient Dropouts:SN MN: MINOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescence:. Female:. Human:. Juvenile Delinquency:PX. Male:. Mental Disorders:PX. Risk Factors:. Social Support:. Treatment Refusal:. Washington:

6 AB: ABSTRACT Characteristics of adolescents discharged from a psychiatric residential treatment center were examined to create a model for predicting patient discharge against medical advice (AMA). Subjects were 81 adolescents in two consecutive cohorts discharged between 1983 and mid-1988 (N = 49 and N = 32). In both groups 41 percent of the discharges were AMA. Logistic regression analysis found that an equation based on three factors--history of juvenile court involvement, unsupportive family attitude toward treatment, and diagnosis of conduct disorder--was 69 percent accurate in predicting discharge status in group 1 and 81 percent accurate in predicting discharge status in group 2. A positive correlation between rates of staff turnover and AMA discharge was noted. ABSTRACT.

7 AU: AUTHOR Jacquet Y; Mabrut JP TI: TITLE [Multi-disciplinary approach to adolescents with problems. The Cholet experience] SO: SOURCE Arch-Fr-Pediatr; 1991 Mar; 48(3); P 179-83 LA: LANGUAGE French MJ: MAJOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescent Medicine:SN. Adolescent Psychiatry:SN. Patient Care Team:

8 MN: MINOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescence:. Adolescent, Hospitalized:. Day Care:. English Abstract:. France:. Human: AB: ABSTRACT The authors report their experience of management of 12-18 years adolescents in the year 1987 using a multidisciplinary approach. Eighty adolescents were hospitalized in the adolescent ward (5 beds) of a pediatric unit (38 beds; 1,691 admissions). Follow-up was carried out in a specialized out-patient clinic (SOPC) (660 patients) in a common-place apartment lent by the town-hall. A day hospital (12 beds) was reserved for those patients presenting with more important psychological problems. The causes for hospitalization (64% of females, 36% of males) consisted for 1/3 of somatic problems and for 2/3 of psychological problems, of which 40% were suicide attempts. 70% of these adolescents were met again in the SOPC (36% by a pediatrician, 29% by the pedopsychiatric team). Such a structure, open towards the outside, working in a multifocal and multidisciplinary way but with the same care team allows, in spite of some difficulties and doubts, responding to the local needs and facing a more global management and a better follow-up of adolescents with difficulties. ABSTRACT.

9 AU: AUTHOR Duggan AK; Adger H Jr; McDonald EM; Stokes EJ; Moore R TI: TITLE Detection of alcoholism in hospitalized children and their families [see comments] SO: SOURCE Am-J-Dis-Child; 1991 Jun; 145(6); P 613-7 LA: LANGUAGE English MJ: MAJOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescent, Hospitalized:PX. Alcoholism:DI. Child, Hospitalized:PX. Family Health: MN: MINOR SUBJECT HEADING Adolescence:. Adult:. Alcohol Drinking:. Child:. Female:. Health Status:. Human:. Interview, Psychological:. Male:. Parent-Child Relations:. Pediatrics:. Psychological Tests:. Sleep Disorders:CO. Socioeconomic

10 AB: ABSTRACT The study sought to measure provider recognition of family alcohol-related problems among hospitalized children and to identify characteristics distinguishing "positive" families. The study sample (N = 147) was drawn from admissions to the general pediatric medical service of a metropolitan teaching hospital. Positivity was assessed through parent and patient interviews that included standard alcohol abuse screening instruments. Provider recognition was assessed through record review and physician interview. Of the 22 families screened positive, only one was so identified by the child's attending or resident physician. Positive and "negative“ families were similar in most respects, although parents in positive families were more likely to report stress and sleeping problems and adolescents were more likely to report being troubled by a parent's drinking. The similarity of positive and negative families and the low pediatrician recognition rate suggest that alcohol problems are likely to go unnoticed without a conscious screening effort. ABSTRACT.


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