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Lohmann Gunter posted an update 9 hours, 53 minutes ago
To characterize the problem of community-acquired pressure injuries (CAPIs) in a work-related spinal cord injury (SCI) population in Canada and assess the benefits of a person-centered solution. Characterization of the problem and a solution, albeit in an insured Worker’s Compensation Board of British Columbia (WorkSafeBC) cohort, may inform the supply of solutions in the larger SCI population with disparate access to healthcare.
For this observational study, data on 244 WorkSafeBC clients, who received an intervention featuring pressure injury (PI) assessment between 2011 and 2015, were used to characterize the problem. Data on observed injuries, risk, referrals, and outcomes were linked to healthcare service claims. Employing an activity-based costing methodology, total expenditures on attributed services were calculated for clients with 1 or more PIs. Intervention cost and benefits from the insurer’s perspective are considered.
84 of 244 clients had 1 or more PIs at assessment, with attributed mean cosed to reactive, solutions in the larger SCI population.
Previous evidence has demonstrated an exacerbating effect of increased operative time on short-term complications in total joint arthroplasty. While the same relationship may be expected for unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA), supporting evidence remains sparse. The purpose of this study is to determine the impact of operative time on short-term complication rates after UKA and determine a critical threshold in operative times after which complications may increase.
The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Project was queried from 2007 to 2018 to identify 11,633 UKA procedures that were included in the final analysis. The effect of operative time on complications within 30 days was evaluated using multivariate logistic regression models. Receiver operating characteristics curves and spline regression models were used to identify critical thresholds in operative time that increase the likelihood of short-term complications.
Longer operative times (in minutes) were assosing operative time, odds ratios of reported complications are relatively low.
The present study found a positive correlation between increased operative times and short-term postoperative complication rates after UKA. Despite a statistically significant association with increasing operative time, odds ratios of reported complications are relatively low.
Chest drainage tube after surgery causes pain and prolonged length of hospital stay. Especially, young patients tend to experience greater postoperative pain than elderly patients. Therefore, we needed to discuss the indication of chest tube placement. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the safety and advantages of post-operative management without drainage tube placement, by comparing cases with and without drainage tube placement.
Patients who underwent bullectomy for spontaneous pneumothorax were enrolled in this prospective randomized controlled study and randomized into two groups group with a post-operative chest tube and group without a chest tube. Ac-FLTD-CMK manufacturer Surgery and post-operative management were performed according to our protocol.
Among the 42 patients, pneumothorax occurred in 1 patient with a chest tube a day after tube removal. Patients without chest tube had significantly lower post-operative pain (P=0.107∼P<0.001), despite their reduced use of rescue drugs. The mean length of post-operative hospital stay was 2.5 days in patients with chest tube, which was significantly longer than that of patients without chest tube (1.2 days; P<0.001).
Our patient selection and surgical protocols may be feasible and contribute to post-operative pain control.
Our patient selection and surgical protocols may be feasible and contribute to post-operative pain control.This study aims to describe twenty years of early detection, prognosis and preventive care in the Outreach and Support In South-London (OASIS) mental health service for individuals at Clinical High risk of psychosis (CHR-P). The study presents a comprehensive analysis of the 2001- 2020 activity of the OASIS team encompassing core domains (i) service characteristics, (ii) detection, (iii) prognosis, (iv) treatment and (v) clinical research. The analyses employed descriptive statistics, population-level data, the epidemiological incidence of psychosis, Kaplan Meier failure functions and Greenwood 95% CIs and Electronic Health Records. OASIS is part of the South London and Maudsley (SLaM) NHS trust, the largest European mental health provider, serving a total urban population of 1,358,646 individuals (population aged 16-35 454,525). Incidence of psychosis in OASIS’s catchment area ranges from 58.3 to 71.9 cases per 100,000 person-years, and it is higher than the national average of 41.5 cases per 100,000 person–0.437). At six years follow-up, across two-third of individuals non-transitioning to psychosis, 79.24% still displayed some mental health problem, and only 20.75% achieved a complete clinical remission. Research conducted at OASIS encompassed clinical, prognostic, neurobiological and interventional studies and leveraged local, national and international infrastructures; over the past ten years, OASIS-related research attracted about £ 50 million of grant income, with 5,922 citations in the international databases. Future developments may include broadening OASIS to prevent other serious mental disorders beyond psychosis and fostering translational risk prediction and interventional research. With a twenty-years activity, OASIS’ cutting-edge quality of preventive care, combined with translational research innovations, consolidated the service as a leading reference model for evidence-based prevention of psychosis worldwide.
This project assessed the feasibility and acceptability of Parent Connext, a positive parenting program that integrates screening and co-located parent coaching within pediatric primary care.
Eleven practices implemented Parent Connext in phases between November 1, 2016, and July 31, 2019. Screening and surveillance for parenting and family psychosocial concerns were performed during patient visits. Providers responded with brief motivational interviewing and referral. Parenting Specialists provided individualized parent coaching to referred caregivers.
Screens were completed at 13,346 (65%) targeted visits, with 26% positive for concerns. Parent coaching was provided to 1,301 of 2,711 (48%) referred families (average 2.2 sessions per family). Providers and staff felt significantly more supported, confident, and knowledgeable about addressing parenting and family psychosocial concerns after implementing Parent Connext and felt the program improved their relationships with families and quality of care.
Co-located parent coaching was found to be a feasible and worthwhile addition to pediatric primary care.