The American journal of medicine
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This study was designed to evaluate the immunogenicity of the 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine in Alaska Native chronic alcoholics and compare these responses with those in age- and sex-matched nonalcoholic, Native and non-Native control subjects. ⋯ In this study of Alaska Natives with chronic alcoholism, Native and non-Native participants responded adequately to immunization with the 23-valent pneumococcal vaccine, although significant differences in some serotypes were evident.
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To assess the association between implementation of the Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA) and (1) the use of formal, written advance directives, (2) the use of informal advance care arrangements, and (3) discussions between patients and their physicians and proxies an advance care planning and end-of-life treatment preferences. ⋯ The PSDA was associated with significant effects on general advance care planning issues, increasing the proportion of patients who had (1) some kind of advance care arrangements and (2) general discussions of end-of-life issues with their proxies. However, the PSDA did not appear associated with significant increases (1) in the use of formal, written advance care documents, (2) in the frequency of discussions between patients and their physicians on advance care documents or end-of-life issues, or (3) in the frequency of discussions about specific treatment preferences between patients and their proxies.
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Review
Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus in prisoners: meeting the health care challenge.
The magnitude and the scope of health care problems posed by human prison inmates seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are enormous. Prisoners represent a substantial proportion of HIV-infected individuals in North America. A high proportion of prisoners are intravenous drug users who often have not received appropriate health care or HIV-directed services prior to incarceration. ⋯ The Brown University medical community, in conjunction with the Rhode Island Department of Health and Corrections, has developed an effective program for the health care of such prisoners, both during incarceration and after release from prison. Academic medical centers are uniquely poised to assume the leading role in meeting this obligation. We believe that this general approach, with region-specific modifications, may be effectively applied in many correctional institutions in North America.