The Australian journal of rural health
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Aust J Rural Health · Aug 2001
Rural training and the state of rural health services: effect of rural background on the perception and attitude of first-year medical students at the university of melbourne.
The aim of this project is to investigate the relationship between medical students' background and their perception of the state of rural health services; willingness to undertake internship training or work as a doctor in a rural hospital; expected benefits and disadvantages of training or working as a doctor in a rural hospital; and factors interfering with acceptance of a job as a doctor in rural areas. A questionnaire-based survey was distributed to 100 first-year medical students attending the Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne at the end of semester 1. The response rate was 97%, including 44 males and 53 females. ⋯ Urban students were more likely than rural students to report that their views were a result of adverse media reports. In conclusion, students from a rural background were more willing to be trained or to work as doctors in rural areas. This was associated with a greater adverse influence by the media upon students.
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Aust J Rural Health · Aug 2001
Insights obtained from an evaluation of a falls prevention program set in a rural hospital.
An evaluation of a Falls Prevention Program that took place in a 29-bed rural hospital in New South Wales is described. The aim of the project was to ascertain the overall effectiveness of the Program and to explore the usefulness of the assessment criteria in predicting falls. The sample consisted of 111 participants, representing all patients 65 years and over who were admitted to the general ward of the hospital between January and December 1997. ⋯ However, it was less effective for those using pick-up frames or forearm support frames. The patients who fell were more likely to be in the high risk category and it was concluded that while the assessment criteria was useful in predicting falls, the Falls Prevention Program could only limit the number of falls but not prevent them altogether. Age, mental status and mobility of patients in combination with time and location of falls suggested a pattern that was possibly peculiar to this rural hospital, which has implications for funding and staffing.