In the care of adolescents, health care providers often face situations raising ethical concerns or dilemmas, such as refusal of a treatment or hospitalization, or request of confidentiality while engaging in risky behaviors or facing unplanned pregnancy. This position paper provides concrete avenues as how to assess the adolescent's capacity for autonomous decision making, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe adolescent's process of brain maturation has important consequences for their ability to reason in decision-making processes. The notion of evolving capacity, for which age is not a sufficient indicator, implies a progressive vision of the nature and degree of participation according to the level of maturity. Health professionals are at the forefront of actively promoting young people's participation, supporting their decision-making about their own health, and seeing them as true partners and agents of change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTraining with adolescent simulated patients (ASP) is increasingly recognized as an effective form of teaching interviewing skills with adolescent patients. Beyond the acknowledged effectiveness and satisfaction of training with ASP, little is known on medical students' actual experience and specific learning needs related to simulated encounters with ASP, as well as factors influencing their learning experience.The aim of this study was an in-depth exploration of medical students' perspectives about training with ASP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite obvious needs, adolescent boys do not access information and care in the field of sexual and reproductive health as easily as adolescent girls. The primary care setting gives the opportunity to tackle sexuality topics with boys. It allows to defuse frequent causes of concern in this crucial developmental phase, in a proactive and open-minded way, while focusing on strengths rather than on risks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn each professional practice, a greater or lesser part of the activity is devoted to teaching. Indeed, the transmission of the medical knowledge is an essential objective for the training of students and residents, but also an opportunity to adapt one's own practices to the current context, since fast changes are not necessarily easy to follow and assimilate. If the relationship with Medical school is rather straightforward in the university hospitals, it is not always the same for those who are more distant, but whose participation in teaching is desired, and clearly growing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdolescent athletes frequently complain of fatigue. Acute fatigue after intense training is physiological and necessary in order to develop capacity and increase performance. However, healthcare practitioners must question persistant fatigue, which causes are multiple, sometimes clear, though mostly multifactorial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSocial determinants have an impact on patients' access to care and on their health at any age. Young adults are a population at risk of being affected in their health because of a lack of social protection or unavailability of healthcare system adapted to their specific needs. Primary healthcare providers need to identify that window of social vulnerability in order to avoid a discontinuation in healthcare and to prevent biopsychosocial co-morbidity leading to ongoing consequences on their health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtopic dermatitis is the most frequent dermatosis in childhood. Numerous studies underscored the central role of skin barrier alterations in the pathogenesis of the inflammatory skin lesions. The management of atopic dermatitis has to be multidimensional.
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