652,131 research outputs found

    A Practical Application Primer on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia for Medical Residents

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    Introduction: Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is a well-established nonpharmacological intervention that is the gold standard treatment for insomnia. CBT-I has been utilized and empirically validated in many modalities, including group treatment, telemedicine, and primary care. Despite the wealth of evidence on its effectiveness, many medical providers, including those in primary care, where most insomnia complaints are raised, have limited exposure, knowledge, and resources to direct or implement this intervention. Methods: Medical educators from an academic medical center developed a module focused on teaching medical residents the techniques of CBT-I. The educational activity was an interactive 90-minute seminar that included a lecture followed by a case presentation illustrating the application of medical knowledge. A postseminar survey was used to evaluate the topic and content of the seminar. Results: In a survey of 32 primary care and psychiatry residents and sleep medicine fellows, 97% of respondents indicated that the topic of CBT-I should be included in the seminar series, and 84% indicated that the topic was of interest to them. Qualitative feedback underscored the relevance of this topic to trainees' clinical practice, as well as its underratedness. Discussion: The seminar on CBT-I was well received and viewed as a valuable tool in practicing medicine. The slides and vignettes provided enable replication of this workshop in other settings with medical learners who have a cursory knowledge of sleep medicine. The workshop is applicable to other health professionals, including medical students, nurses, social workers, and psychology trainees

    The emergency department evaluation and outcomes of elderly fallers

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    BACKGROUND: Approximately one-third of community dwelling elderly people (age ≥65 years) falls each year contributing to over 2 million elderly emergency department (ED) visits for falls annually. The cost of care for fatal falls by elderly patients in the US was 179millionin2000,andwas179 million in 2000, and was 19 billion for non-fatal falls. The risk of falling increases with various risk factors including advancing age. Despite the frequency and costs associated with elderly falls, it is not clear what evaluation elderly fallers receive in the ED, after the ED, and the outcomes of the care provided. OBJECTIVES: We sought to examine the ED and post-ED workup of elderly fallers, and to compare this evaluation to that recommended by published ED fall evaluation and treatment guidelines. We also examined the disposition of these patients and the rate of adverse events which occurred within 1 year of discharge. METHODS: This study was a retrospective chart review of elderly ED fall patients from one urban teaching hospital with >90,000 visits per year. Patients aged ≥65 years who had an ED visit in 2012 with fall related ICD-9 codes E880-886, E888 and who had been seen by a primary care physician (PCP) within our hospital network during the past 3 years were included. We excluded patients who were transferred to our hospital and subsequent visits related to the original fall. We randomly selected 350 eligible patients for chart review. We adapted our data collection instrument from published fall evaluation recommendations including the American Geriatric Society. Categorical data were presented as percentages and continuous data were recorded as mean with standard deviation (SD) if normally distributed or medians with inter-quartile ranges (IQR) if non-normally distributed. RESULTS: A random sample of 450 charts were taken, 100 were subsequently excluded for erroneous identification. The average age was 80 (SD±9) years; 124 (35%) were male, with an average Charlson comorbidity index of 7.6 (SD 2.9). In terms of history, 251/350 (72%) took 5 or more medications, 144/350 (41%) had their visual acuity checked in the past 12 months, and 34/350 (10%) had fallen two or more times in the past 3 months. In the physical exam, only 43/350 (12%) had orthostatics done. 168/350 (48%) patients had their extremity strength recorded, of these 16/168 (10%) had decreased muscle strength. Only 128/350 (37%) patients had their gait recorded, of which 108/128 (84%) were noted to have an abnormal gait. Basic chemistry laboratory tests and hematology were sent on 199/350 (57%) of patients in the ED. X-rays were taken of 275/350 (79%) patients, and CTs were taken of 184/350 (53%) patients in the ED. 277/350 (79%) patients were discharged to their place of preadmission residence from the ED, ED observation unit, or hospital while 70/350 (20%) were discharged to a skilled rehab facility, all after being admitted to the hospital. 196/350 (56%) patients returned to the ED for any reason within 1 year of discharge, averaging 2.4 ± 1.9 visits. 161/350 (46%) patients were hospitalized within 1 year after discharge, averaging 2 ± 1.4 hospital admissions. 23 (7%) of patients died within 1 year after discharge. CONCLUSION: The comprehensive evaluation of falls for well-established risk factors and causes appears to be poor in this academic medical center ED. While results may not be generalizable to other EDs, the results suggest that standardized evaluation and treatment guidelines are needed

    Exploring the relationship between the Engineering and Physical Sciences and the Health and Life Sciences by advanced bibliometric methods

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    We investigate the extent to which advances in the health and life sciences (HLS) are dependent on research in the engineering and physical sciences (EPS), particularly physics, chemistry, mathematics, and engineering. The analysis combines two different bibliometric approaches. The first approach to analyze the 'EPS-HLS interface' is based on term map visualizations of HLS research fields. We consider 16 clinical fields and five life science fields. On the basis of expert judgment, EPS research in these fields is studied by identifying EPS-related terms in the term maps. In the second approach, a large-scale citation-based network analysis is applied to publications from all fields of science. We work with about 22,000 clusters of publications, each representing a topic in the scientific literature. Citation relations are used to identify topics at the EPS-HLS interface. The two approaches complement each other. The advantages of working with textual data compensate for the limitations of working with citation relations and the other way around. An important advantage of working with textual data is in the in-depth qualitative insights it provides. Working with citation relations, on the other hand, yields many relevant quantitative statistics. We find that EPS research contributes to HLS developments mainly in the following five ways: new materials and their properties; chemical methods for analysis and molecular synthesis; imaging of parts of the body as well as of biomaterial surfaces; medical engineering mainly related to imaging, radiation therapy, signal processing technology, and other medical instrumentation; mathematical and statistical methods for data analysis. In our analysis, about 10% of all EPS and HLS publications are classified as being at the EPS-HLS interface. This percentage has remained more or less constant during the past decade

    Spectrum of topics for world congresses and other activities of the International Society for Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (ISPRM) : a first proposal

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    Background: One of the objectives of the International Society for Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine is to improve the continuity of World Congresses. This requires the development of an abstract topic list for use in congress announcements and abstract submissions. Methods: An abstract topic list was developed on the basis of the definitions of human functioning and rehabilitation research, which define 5 main areas of research (biosciences in rehabilitation, biomedical rehabilitation sciences and engineering, clinical Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (PRM) sciences, integrative rehabilitation sciences, and human functioning sciences). For the abstract topic list, these research areas were grouped according to the proposals of congress streams. In a second step, the first version of the list was systematically compared with the topics of the 2003 ISPRM World Congress. Results: The resulting comprehensive abstract topic list contains 5 chapters according to the definition of human functioning and rehabilitation research. Due to the high significance of clinical research, clinical PRM sciences were placed at the top of the list, comprising all relevant health conditions treated in PRM services. For congress announcements a short topic list was derived. Discussion: The ISPRM topic list is sustainable and covers a full range of topics. It may be useful for congresses and elsewhere in structuring research in PRM

    The prevalence of Type 2 diabetes and its associated health problems in a community-dwelling elderly population.

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    AIMS: Prevalence estimates of Type 2 diabetes and its associated health problems in elderly populations are rare, especially in the very elderly. METHODS: A sample of 15 095 community-dwelling older people aged > or = 75 years were assessed. Type 2 diabetes and associated health problems were identified using self-reporting, general practitioner records, drug histories, and blood and urine measurements. RESULTS: There were 1177 people identified as having Type 2 diabetes mellitus, giving an overall prevalence of 7.8% (95% confidence interval 7.1, 8.5), 9.4% (8.4, 10.5) for men and 6.8% (6.1, 7.6) for women. The age, sex and smoking adjusted odds ratios for various health problems, comparing people with and without diabetes were: low vision 1.6 (1.3, 1.9), proteinuria 1.7 (1.4, 2.1), chronic kidney disease stage 4 or 5 1.5 (1.0, 2.1), angina 1.3 (1.1, 1.6), myocardial infarction 1.5 (1.2, 1.8), cerebrovascular event 2.0 (1.8, 2.1) and foot ulceration 1.7 (1.2, 2.4). CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of Type 2 diabetes is not high in community-dwelling older people, but diabetes was a contributory factor to a number of health problems

    How do Astronaut Candidate Profiles differ from Airline Pilot Profile

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    Sixteen years after the second Europe-wide astronaut selection campaign, the European Space Agency started the third campaign by putting out a call for new astronauts in 2008. Due to extreme environmental conditions, expensive scientific experiments, and high public interest, not only are the psychological requirements on a high level, but they are also wide in variety: Besides cognitive and psychomotor requirements, greater importance than in comparable campaigns was put on personality and behavioral aspects, especially regarding interpersonal aspects. The psychological selection was conducted in two steps: Phase 1 concentrated mainly on performance tests and Phase 2 focused on personality and interpersonal behavior. Out of the 902 tested candidates, 46 fulfilled the psychological requirements. Significant differences were found between the astronaut candidates and the general population as well as airline pilot candidates. </jats:p

    CT Image Reconstruction by Spatial-Radon Domain Data-Driven Tight Frame Regularization

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    This paper proposes a spatial-Radon domain CT image reconstruction model based on data-driven tight frames (SRD-DDTF). The proposed SRD-DDTF model combines the idea of joint image and Radon domain inpainting model of \cite{Dong2013X} and that of the data-driven tight frames for image denoising \cite{cai2014data}. It is different from existing models in that both CT image and its corresponding high quality projection image are reconstructed simultaneously using sparsity priors by tight frames that are adaptively learned from the data to provide optimal sparse approximations. An alternative minimization algorithm is designed to solve the proposed model which is nonsmooth and nonconvex. Convergence analysis of the algorithm is provided. Numerical experiments showed that the SRD-DDTF model is superior to the model by \cite{Dong2013X} especially in recovering some subtle structures in the images

    The Prevalence and Risk Factors of GERD Among Indonesian Medical Doctors

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    Background: Based on our knowledge, the study of gastrointestinal reflux disease (GERD) among certain profession has never been conducted. The aim of this study is to determine the prevalence and risk factors of GERD among Indonesian doctors. Methods: A consecutive study involving 515 doctors was conducted in October 2015. The GerdQ score was used to the diagnosis of GERD and determined its impact on daily life. All possible risk factors were also analysed. Results: A total of 515 subjects completed the questionnaire. The mean age of them was 41.37 &plusmn; 11.92 years old. Fifty-five percent of them were male and 60.6% general practitioners. The prevalence of GERD was 27.4% of which 21.0% was had GERD with low impact on daily life, and 6.4% was GERD with high impact on daily life. The statistically significant risk factors of GERD was found in age &gt;50 y.o (p = 0.002; OR = 2.054), BMI &gt;30 kg/m2 (p = 0.016; OR = 2.53), and smokers (p = 0.031; OR = 1.982). Sex and education level were not found significant statistically as the risk factors of GERD. Conclusions: The prevalence of GERD among Indonesian physician was 27.4%. We found that age over 50 y.o, obesity and smoking habit were the risk factors of GERD in Indonesian doctors.&nbsp

    Privatisation of ambulance, emergency and firefighting services in Europe – a growing threat?

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    This paper examines the extent of privatisation in the ambulance, emergency and firefighting services in Europe, and the companies involved
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