Objectives: Contributing towards improving knowledge about access to health services in Colombia following health-sector reform, highlighting the main results and gaps in research.
Methods: Original papers were systematically reviewed through a comprehensive search and analysis of original papers published between 1994 and 2009. After selection criteria had been applied, 27 papers were included in the review. Analysis was based on Aday Aday & Andersen and Gold's theoretical frameworks, distinguishing between potential and actual healthcare access and considering the characteristics of the population, health services and insurers influencing service use.
Results: There was little explanatory analysis of service use applying determinant models; this was also partial (limited to geographical areas, diseases or specific groups). Likewise, only a few studies analysed contextual factors influencing service use (health policies and health providers and insures) or social actors' perspectives. The available studies did not seem to indicate increased actual access (except for subsidised system users) but, on the contrary the existence of barriers relating to population (insurance coverage, income and education) and health service factors (geographic and organizational accessibility and quality of care).
Conclusions: This review led to identifying important limitations in the analysis of healthcare access in Colombia and highlighted the need for further research on actual access and the better incorporation of context variables and actors perspectives in understanding the impact of reform on health service use.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0124-00642010000500001 | DOI Listing |
Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol
March 2025
Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, 200 1st St SW, Rochester, MN, 55902, USA. Electronic address:
Sarcoidosis is a complex multisystem inflammatory disease characterized by noncaseating granulomas and variable clinical manifestations, most commonly affecting the lungs, skin, heart, and nervous system. Imaging is central in its diagnosis, staging, and management, providing essential insights into organ involvement and disease activity. Pulmonary manifestations remain the hallmark, with modalities such as high-resolution chest computed tomography (CT) and chest radiography offering critical diagnostic clues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
March 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, USA; Department of Pediatrics, Brooke Army Medical Center, San Antonio, TX, USA. Electronic address:
J Evid Based Dent Pract
March 2025
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Operationalizing the oral health experience is an ongoing effort with various clinical and patient-reported outcomes contributing to such conceptualizations. Computational technology has afforded advances in the ability to model complex interactions between various phenomena and provides an opportunity to reconsider the way oral health is conceptualized. High-dimensional vector space modeling is introduced and discussed as a theoretical way to incorporate all relative features associated with understanding oral health, including clinical, patient-reported, and demographic information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Evid Based Dent Pract
March 2025
Department of Primary Dental Care, Division of Dental Hygiene, School of Dentistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA.
Objectives: Dental patient-reported outcomes, especially the Oral Health-Related Quality of Life (OHRQoL) construct, are vital for evidence-based dentistry. This construct includes four dimensions (4D): Oral Function, Orofacial Pain, Orofacial Appearance, and Psychosocial Impact. This study updates previous work characterizing 4D OHRQoL impairment among patients in dental hygiene (DH) and dental therapy (DT) settings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEndocrinol Diabetes Nutr (Engl Ed)
March 2025
Endocrinologia y Nutrición, Hospital Universitario de la Princesa, Calle Diego de León 62, 28007 Madrid, Spain.
d-Lactic acidosis is an uncommon cause of acidosis that occurs in patients with short bowel syndrome (SBS). Reduced intestinal absorption surface leads to carbohydrate malabsorption, fermented by abnormal colonic bacterial flora, resulting in elevated d-lactate levels. It should be suspected in SBS patients who exhibit typical neurological symptoms without other apparent causes, along with metabolic acidosis with normal l-lactate levels.
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