Significant uncertainty surrounds the sustainability of healthcare services in which junior doctors work. It is essential that student and foundation doctors (SFDs) are actively engaged if workforce morale is rebuilt. This narrative review explores the evidence driving the individual work-streams of the Royal College of Physicians' newly formed Student and Foundation Doctor Network. Undergraduate and postgraduate training reform has coincided with concerning feedback from newly qualified doctors. System-level efforts to address this include a focus on extra-contractual matters, where small, sustainable changes could address training and work issues. Fewer foundation year-2 doctors are entering specialty training immediately after the foundation programme. Providing dedicated careers guidance and highlighting opportunities within traditional placements and other career paths can support doctors who undertake non-traditional career routes, including those who take time out of programme. Disseminating these resources through an effective peerto-peer framework and a well-established mentoring scheme could be the most appropriate way to spread good practice.
ObjectivesOver 2.4 million people have been displaced within the Thailand-Myanmar border region since 1988. The efficacy of community-driven health models within displaced populations is largely unstudied. Here, we examined the relationship between maternal healthcare access and delivery outcomes to evaluate the impact of community-provided health services for marginalised populations.SettingStudy setting was the Thailand-Myanmar border region’s single largest provider of reproductive health services to displaced mothers.ParticipantsAll women who had a delivery (n=34 240) between 2008 and 2019 at the study clinic were included in the performed retrospective analyses.Primary and secondary outcome measuresLow birth weight was measured as the study outcome to understand the relationship between antenatal care access, family planning service utilisation, demographics and healthy deliveries.ResultsFirst trimester (OR=0.86; 95% CI=0.81 to 0.91) and second trimester (OR=0.86; 95% CI=0.83 to 0.90) antenatal care visits emerged as independent protective factors against low birthweight delivery, as did prior utilisation of family planning services (OR=0.82; 95% CI=0.73 to 0.92). Additionally, advanced maternal age (OR=1.36; 95% CI=1.21 to 1.52) and teenage pregnancy (OR=1.27, 95% CI=1.13 to 1.42) were notable risk factors, while maternal gravidity (OR=0.914; 95% CI=0.89 to 0.94) displayed a protective effect against low birth weight.ConclusionAccess to community-delivered maternal health services is strongly associated with positive delivery outcomes among displaced mothers. This study calls for further inquiry into how to best engage migrant and refugee populations in their own reproductive healthcare, in order to develop resilient models of care for a growing displaced population globally.
A woman in her 20s presented with chest pain, dyspnoea, arthralgia, muscle weakness and skin discolouration. She was diagnosed with dermatomyositis. During her admission, she developed pleuritic chest pain and shortness of breath accompanied by a significant troponin I rise. Her echocardiogram showed a hyperdynamic left ventricle with a trivial pericardial effusion; there were no regional wall motion abnormalities. Gadolinium-diethylenetriaminepantaacetic-enhanced cardiac MRI showed extensive myocarditis. She was started on corticosteroids and azathioprine which led to an improvement of symptoms and biochemical markers.
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