Browsing by Author "Salinas, Rodrigo"
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Item Dimensión ética en la organización de la atención de salud(Sociedad Médica de Santiago, 2013) Burrows, Jaime; Echeverría, Carlos; Goic, Alejandro; Herrera, Carolina; Quintana, Carlos; Rojas, Alberto; Salinas, Rodrigo; Serani, Alejandro; Taboada, Paulina; Vacarreza, RicardoEl cuidado y atención de salud de la población, en las sociedades contemporáneas de estructura moderna, se ha transformado en una tarea compleja y de enormes dimensiones. Determinar los modos adecuados de organizar la atención de salud, de forma que responda a las necesidades reales de las personas, es un desafío con fuertes implicancias éticas, toda vez que se trata de acciones que afectan a las personas en sus dimensiones más significativas. El presente trabajo investiga acerca de algunos bienes, valores o principios éticos que deberían ser considerados a la hora de concebir e implementar soluciones de salud en el ámbito de la comunidad organizada y, en particular, en nuestro país.Item El respeto a la intimidad del paciente(Sociedad Médica de Santiago, 2014) Burrows, Jaime; Echeverría, Carlos; Goic, Alejandro; Herrera, Carolina; Quintana, Carlos; Rojas, Alberto; Ruiz-Esquide, Gonzalo; Salinas, Rodrigo; Serani, Alejandro; Taboada, Paulina; Ricardo, Vacarezza; Grupo de estudios de ética clínica de la Sociedad Médica de SantiagoTransparency as a general rule for all our professional acts casts doubts about the statement of the Hippocratic Oath that says “Whatever I see or hear in the lives of my patients, I will keep secret, as considering all such things to be private”. Medical secrecy protects the intimacy of patients, who reveal to their physicians their most hidden secrets aiming to recover their health. Therefore, physicians should receive those secrets with reverence and care, as servers and not as their owners. The values associated with the respect for personal intimacy are the anthropological basis of medical confidentiality. A medical act is performed by definition between two equally honorable individuals. Therefore, the professional honors the trust of his patient, maintaining strict confidence of what is revealed. Therefore, medical secrecy must be strengthened rather than weakened, pursuing common wealth and dignityItem Epidemiology of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy in the South-Eastern area of Santiago, Chile(2020) Cea, Gabriel; Idiáquez, Juan Francisco; Salinas, Rodrigo; Matamala, José Manuel; Villagra, Roque; Stuardo, AndrésChronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) is an immune-mediated polyneuropathy. It usually has an insidious onset, progressive course and heterogeneous clinical features. As far as we know, there is no epidemiological information on CIDP in South America and the Caribbean. Our aim was to estimate the frequency of CIDP in the South-Eastern region of Santiago, where our hospital is based and the population number assigned is officially reported every year by the health authorities. Records of 581 patients registered with the diagnosis of neuropathy were found and all patients meeting the diagnostic criteria of the EFNS/PNS for definitive and possible CIDP were included. Data were collected using a data extraction protocol designed by the authors and which included demographic, clinical, laboratory and electrophysiological information. The estimated prevalence and incidence of CIDP were 2.95/100,000 and 0.46/100,000 respectively. Fifteen patients (8 men, 7 women) were classified as definitive or possible CIDP. Nine patients had typical CIDP and three also had diabetes mellitus. The prevalence and incidence rates were similar to those reported in other regions of the worldItem Thymectomy for non-thymomatous myasthenia gravis(John Wiley & Sons, 2013) Cea, Gabriel; Benatar, Michael; Verdugo, Renato; Salinas, RodrigoBACKGROUND: Treatments currently used for patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) include steroids, non-steroid immune suppressive agents, plasma exchange, intravenous immunoglobulin and thymectomy. Data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) support the use of some of these therapeutic modalities and the evidence for non-surgical therapies are the subject of other Cochrane reviews. Significant uncertainty and variation persist in clinical practice regarding the potential role of thymectomy in the treatment of people with MG. OBJECTIVES: To assess the efficacy and safety of thymectomy in the management of people with non-thymomatous MG. SEARCH METHODS: On 31 March 2013, we searched the Cochrane Neuromuscular Disease Group Specialized Register, CENTRAL (2013, Issue 3), MEDLINE (January 1966 to March 2013), EMBASE (January 1980 to March 2013) and LILACS (January 1992 to March 2013) for RCTs. Two authors (RS and GC) read all retrieved abstracts and reviewed the full texts of potentially relevant articles. These two authors checked references of all manuscripts identified in the review to identify additional articles that were of relevance and contacted experts in the field to identify additional published and unpublished data. Where necessary, authors were contacted for further information. SELECTION CRITERIA: Randomized or quasi-randomized controlled trials of thymectomy against no treatment or any medical treatment, and thymectomy plus medical treatment against medical treatment alone, in people with non-thymomatous MG.We did not use measured outcomes as criteria for study selection. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: We planned that two authors would independently extract data onto a specially designed data extraction form and assess risk of bias; however, there were no included studies in the review. We would have identified any adverse effects of thymectomy from the included trials. MAIN RESULTS: We did not identify any RCTs testing the efficacy of thymectomy in the treatment of MG. In the absence of data from RCTs, we were unable to do any further analysis. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is no randomized controlled trial literature that allows meaningful conclusions about the efficacy of thymectomy on MG. Data from several class III observational studies suggest that thymectomy could be beneficial in MG. An RCT is needed to elucidate if thymectomy is useful, and to what extent, in MG.