Publications by authors named "Haggie M"

Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on mapping interprofessional (IP) competency requirements in health education across 12 professions in Aotearoa New Zealand, aiming to improve interprofessional education (IPE) delivery.
  • A detailed audit analyzed regulatory and curricular standards, confirming that most professions expect students to develop IP competencies, with exceptions for clinical exercise physiology and counselling.
  • Key competency domains identified included coordination, collaboration, communication, shared values, reflexivity, and role-understanding, highlighting both similarities and differences across the various disciplines.
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Diabetes is a major cause of morbidity and premature mortality worldwide and now identified as a 'public health emergency' and a 'modern and preventable pandemic'. Indigenous populations are disproportionately affected by type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and associated complications. Student run free clinics (SRFCs) may play an important role in the prevention and management of T2DM.

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Increasingly, interprofessional teamwork is required for the effective delivery of public health services in primary healthcare settings. Interprofessional competencies should therefore be incorporated within all health and social service education programs. Educational innovation in the development of student-led clinics (SLC) provides a unique opportunity to assess and develop such competencies.

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Background: Student-run clinics (SRCs) offer an innovative approach to expand healthcare access and equity and increase clinical placement opportunities for students. However, research on the health benefits and/or outcomes of such clinics is currently fragmented.

Methods: An integrative review was conducted to capture and synthesize findings across a range of study types involving varied student disciplines, student delivered intervention types, and health conditions addressed or care areas of focus.

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1,003 patients with meningococcal disease admitted to a single hospital during the course of a three-month epidemic were studied. A progressive decline in mortality, especially among patients with acute meningococcaemia, and a falling incidence of systemic and severe neurological complications among patients with meningitis were observed. It is suggested that the virulence of the causative group A meningococcus declined as the epidemic progressed.

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In 1977 Zaria, in Northern Nigeria, was affected by a severe epidemic of group A meningococcal infection, 1,257 patients being admitted to hospital with the disease during a three-month period. The epidemic started towards the end of the dry season when it was hot, dry and dusty and finished shortly after the onset of the rains. The over-all attack rate was 3.

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