Home About us Contact | |||
Month Prospective Study (month + prospective_study)
Selected AbstractsPrognostic implications of a biphasic waveform for APTT analysis in a district general hospitalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LABORATORY HEMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2008G. MAIR Summary Activated partial thromboplastin time analysis creates waveforms of light transmittance against time. An abnormal biphasic waveform has been linked to morbidity and mortality. This study aims to quantify this link for patients in a district general hospital and determine the prognostic implications of the biphasic waveform. Data were collected over a 5-month period and analysed retrospectively to ascertain rates of infection, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and death. This was followed by a one month prospective study to assess prognostic implications. Rates of infection, DIC and death were high in this study population. The biphasic waveform often pre-empts these outcomes and is shown to be useful in predicting a poor prognosis. [source] Maximizing Clinical Research Participation in Vulnerable Older Persons: Identification of Barriers and MotivatorsJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 8 2008Edward R. Marcantonio MD OBJECTIVES: To identify barriers and motivators to participation in long-term clinical research by high-risk elderly people and to develop procedures to maximize recruitment and retention. DESIGN: Quantitative and qualitative survey. SETTING: Academic primary care medicine and pre-anesthesia testing clinics. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty patients aged 70 and older, including 25 medical patients at high risk of hospitalization and 25 patients with planned major surgery. MEASUREMENTS: Fifteen- to 20-minute interviews involved open- and closed-ended questions guided by an in-depth script. Two planned study protocols were presented to each participant. Both involved serial neuropsychological assessments, blood testing, and magnetic resonance brain imaging (MRI); one added lumbar puncture (LP). Participants were asked whether they would be willing to participate in these protocols, rated barriers and incentives to participation, and were probed with open-ended questions. RESULTS: Of 50 participants (average age 78, 44% male, 40% nonwhite), 32 (64%) expressed willingness to participate in the LP-containing protocol, with LP cited as the strongest disincentive. Thirty-eight (76%) expressed willingness to participate in the protocol without LP, with phlebotomy and long interviews cited as the strongest disincentives. Altruism was a strong motivator for participation, whereas transportation was a major barrier. Study visits at home, flexible appointment times, assessments shorter than 75 minutes, and providing transportation and free parking were strategies developed to maximize study participation. CONCLUSION: Vulnerable elderly people expressed a high rate of willingness to participate in an 18-month prospective study. Participants identified incentives and barriers that enabled investigators to develop procedures to maximize recruitment and retention. [source] Couple distress after sudden infant or perinatal death: A 30-month follow upJOURNAL OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, Issue 4 2002JC Vance Objective: To examine, using a 30-month prospective study, patterns of anxiety, depression and alcohol use in couples following stillbirth, neonatal death or sudden infant death syndrome. Methodology: One hundred and thirty-eight bereaved and 156 non-bereaved couples completed standardized interviews at 2, 8, 15 and 30 months post-loss. Results: At all interviews, bereaved couples were significantly more likely than non-bereaved couples to have at least one distressed partner. Rarely were both partners distressed in either group. For bereaved couples, ,mother only' distress declined from 21% to 10% during the study. ,Father only' distress ranged from 7% to 15%, peaking at 30 months. Bereaved mothers who were distressed at 2 months reported significantly lower marital satisfaction at 30 months. Conclusions: At the couple level, the experience of a baby's death is multifaceted. Gender differences are common and partners' needs may change over time. Early recognition of these differences may facilitate longer-term adjustment for both partners. [source] Prospective monitoring of lipid profiles in children receiving pravastatin preemptively after renal transplantationPEDIATRIC TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 6 2005Lavjay Butani Abstract:, Hyperlipidemia is common after renal transplantation (Tx) and contributes to the increased cardiovascular morbidity seen in the post-transplant period. Limited data are available on the utility of the statins in children after renal Tx. This 12-month prospective study was undertaken to determine the efficacy of pravastatin in reducing dyslipidemia after renal Tx in children and to determine predictors of dyslipidemia after Tx. From August 2001 to April 2004, all 17 newly transplanted pediatric renal transplant recipients at our center were preemptively treated with pravastatin from the immediate post-transplant period. Fasting lipid profiles were obtained at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after Tx. Trends in the lipid profile were analyzed using the repeated measures general linear model (GLM). A historical cohort of pediatric renal-transplant recipients not treated with pravastatin was used as the control population. The mixed effects GLM was used for multivariable logistic regression analyses to determine the independent effect of age, pretransplant cholesterol (Chol), body mass index (BMI), creatinine clearance (CrCl), and corticosteroid and tacrolimus doses on the development of dyslipidemia. The mean age of the children at Tx was 8.7 yr. The GLM analysis showed that with time, there was a significant decline in the total Chol, serum triglyceride (TG), LDL and also HDL-Chol (p-value <0.05 for each). Compared with the controls, the mean serum Chol was lower at all time points post-transplant in the treated patients. However, despite treatment, the prevalence of hypercholesterolemia increased from 31% pretransplant to 53% at 1-month, but declined thereafter to 6% at 3 and 6 months and 0% at 1 yr. Multivariable regression analyses showed the prednisone dose, pretransplant Chol and age to be the most important risk factors for the development of dyslipidemia. No child developed complications related to therapy. In summary, pravastatin is safe in the post-transplant period in children and reduces serum Chol, LDL-Chol and TG. An unexpected finding in our study was the decline in HDL-Chol after Tx. Whether the preemptive use of the statins will result in lower cardiovascular morbidity, especially considering the concomitant reduction in HDL-Chol remains to be determined. [source] Predictors of shoulder and back injuries in nursing home workers: A prospective studyAMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, Issue 6 2002Douglas Myers MA Abstract Background Nursing assistants (NAs) working in nursing homes have among the highest back and shoulder injury rates in the US. Incidence, severity, and cost of non-traumatic soft tissue musculoskeletal disorders in the nursing home industry in Washington State are quite high. Methods To determine whether resident characteristics data reported on the Health Care Financing Administration Minimum Data Set (MDS) could be used as a surrogate measure of cumulative exposure to physical loads, we conducted an 18-month prospective study in one nursing home. Results The combined NA injury incidence rate (IR) was 45.8 self-reported back and shoulder injuries per 100 [FTE] workers per year. In general, MDS reported resident characteristics failed to predict risk with the exception of exposure to loss of voluntary leg mobility (OR,=,1.11 per person-shifts of exposure, 95% CI [0.97,1.27]), with the highest risk on the day shift (OR,=,1.15, 95% CI [0.95,1.40]). Conclusions These findings suggest social integration and work organization issues may be more important predictors of back and shoulder injuries in nursing assistants than reported resident characteristics as measured by the MDS. Am. J. Ind. Med. 41:466,476, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Impact of introducing a sedation management guideline in intensive careANAESTHESIA, Issue 3 2006C. Adam Summary To ensure that sedative agents in the intensive care unit are used for maximum benefit, a guideline that promotes the accurate and continuous assessment of patients' needs is indicated. This observational 24-month prospective study investigated the effect of introducing a sedation management guideline into a 10-bedded multidisciplinary intensive care unit on length of stay, severity of illness, mortality and the number of bed days provided. Costs for all sedative drugs were calculated as cost per bed day. Intensive care unit mortality remained constant before and after guideline introduction. The length of stay of non-cardiac surgery patients was mean (SD) 4.6 (4.4) and 5.1 (4.3) days, respectively (p = 0.2). Monthly sedative cost before guideline introduction was £6285 compared to £3629 afterwards (p,0.0001), representing a real saving of £63 759 in sedative costs over the 2 years following introduction of the guideline. Guideline-directed management for sedation significantly reduces the cost of sedative drugs per bed day without any negative effect on length of ICU stay and outcome. [source] |