48 research outputs found

    Sustaining a “culture of silence” in the neonatal intensive care unit during nonemergency situations: A grounded theory on ensuring adherence to behavioral modification to reduce noise levels

    Get PDF
    The aim of this study was to generate a substantive theory explaining how the staff in a resource-limited neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of a developing nation manage to ensure adherence to behavioral modification components of a noise reduction protocol (NsRP) during nonemergency situations. The study was conducted after implementation of an NsRP in a level III NICU of south India. The normal routine of the NICU is highly dynamic because of various categories of staff conducting clinical rounds followed by care-giving activities. This is unpredictably interspersed with very noisy emergency management of neonates who suddenly fall sick. In-depth interviews were conducted with 36 staff members of the NICU (20 staff nurses, six nursing aides, and 10 physicians). Group discussions were conducted with 20 staff nurses and six nursing aides. Data analysis was done in line with the reformulated grounded theory approach, which was based on inductive examination of textual information. The results of the analysis showed that the main concern was to ensure adherence to behavioral modification components of the NsRP. This was addressed by using strategies to “sustain a culture of silence in NICU during nonemergency situations” (core category). The main strategies employed were building awareness momentum, causing awareness percolation, developing a sense of ownership, expansion of caring practices, evolution of adherence, and displaying performance indicators. The “culture of silence” reconditions the existing staff and conditions new staff members joining the NICU. During emergency situations, a “noisy culture” prevailed because of pragmatic neglect of behavioral modification when life support overrode all other concerns. In addition to this, the process of operant conditioning should be formally conducted once every 18 months. The results of this study may be adapted to create similar strategies and establish context specific NsRPs in NICUs with resource constraints

    Candidiasis caused by Candida kefyr in a neonate: Case report

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Systemic <it>Candidia </it>infections are of major concern in neonates, especially in those with risk factors such as longer use of broad spectrum antibiotics. Recent studies showed that also term babies with underlying gastrointestinal or urinary tract abnormalities are much more prone to systemic <it>Candida </it>infection. We report a very rare case of candidiasis caused by <it>Candida kefyr </it>in a term neonate.</p> <p>Case Presentation</p> <p>Renal agenesis on the left side was diagnosed antenatally and anal atresia postnatally. Moreover, a vesico-ureteral-reflux (VUR) grade V was detected by cystography. The first surgical procedure, creating a protective colostoma, was uneventful. Afterwards our patient developed urosepsis caused by <it>Enterococcus faecalis </it>and was treated with piperacillin. The child improved initially, but deteriorated again. A further urine analysis revealed <it>Candida kefyr </it>in a significant number. As antibiotic resistance data about this non-<it>albicans Candida </it>species are limited, we started liposomal amphotericin B (AMB), but later changed to fluconazole after receiving the antibiogram. Candiduria persisted and abdominal imaging showed a <it>Candida </it>pyelonephritis. Since high grade reflux was prevalent we instilled AMB into the child's bladder as a therapeutic approach. While undergoing surgery (creating a neo-rectum) a recto-vesical fistula could be shown and subsequently was resected. The child recovered completely under systemic fluconazole therapy over 3 months.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Candidiasis is still of major concern in neonates with accompanying risk factors. As clinicians are confronted with an increasing number of non-<it>albicans Candida </it>species, knowledge about these pathogens and their sensitivities is of major importance.</p

    MATERIALI IN TEHNOLOGIJE

    No full text
    Various recycling processes for WC-Co cermets from cutting tools, such as chemical modification, thermal modification, the cold-stream method and the electrochemical method have been investigated and some of them are actually employed in industry. However, these conventional methods have many problems to be solved and they are not always established technologies. Therefore, a more economical and high-efficiency recycling procedure needs to be developed. In this study we investigated the applicability of the zinc-melt method (ZMM) for recycling WC-Co as a powder from cutting-tool scraps. It was proven that ZMM is an available technique for recovering the WC powder from the cutting tools. WC-Co powders are recovered and then spray dried, sintered and obtained as a feedstock material for thermal-spray coating processes

    From free text to clusters of content in health records: An unsupervised graph partitioning approach

    No full text
    Electronic Healthcare records contain large volumes of unstructured data in different forms. Free text constitutes a large portion of such data, yet this source of richly detailed information often remains under-used in practice because of a lack of suitable methodologies to extract interpretable content in a timely manner. Here we apply network-theoretical tools to the analysis of free text in Hospital Patient Incident reports in the English National Health Service, to find clusters of reports in an unsupervised manner and at different levels of resolution based directly on the free text descriptions contained within them. To do so, we combine recently developed deep neural network text-embedding methodologies based on paragraph vectors with multi-scale Markov Stability community detection applied to a similarity graph of documents obtained from sparsified text vector similarities. We showcase the approach with the analysis of incident reports submitted in Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London. The multiscale community structure reveals levels of meaning with different resolution in the topics of the dataset, as shown by relevant descriptive terms extracted from the groups of records, as well as by comparing a posteriori against hand-coded categories assigned by healthcare personnel. Our content communities exhibit good correspondence with well-defined hand-coded categories, yet our results also provide further medical detail in certain areas as well as revealing complementary descriptors of incidents beyond the external classification. We also discuss how the method can be used to monitor reports over time and across different healthcare providers, and to detect emerging trends that fall outside of pre-existing categories

    Is the mycobacteria-derived purified protein response in atopic asthmatic children different? A case study from Istanbul, Turkey

    No full text
    Background: The response to mycobacteria-derived purified protein (PPD) is mediated primarily by T-helper-1 response and is expected to be inhibited in atopic diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the PPD response is different in atopic asthmatic children. Methods: 40 atopic asthmatic children (mean age 8.3 +/- 4.9 years) and 40 healthy age- and sex-matched children who had received bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccination were included in the study. Five PPD units were administered intradermally to all children and were interpreted after 48 h. Results: There was no correlation between serum total IgE level and PPD induration (p = 0.054). The PPD induration was not statistically different between the children who used inhaled corticosteroid and those who did not. Although the PPD positivity (induration 6 5 mm) rate was higher in atopic asthmatic children (50%) than in healthy children (32.5%), the difference was not found to be statistically significant. The PPD induration in atopic asthmatic children (7.41 8 5.58 mm) was found to be greater than the one in healthy children (5.21 +/- 3.39) (p < 0.039). The induration in atopic asthmatic children (5.21 +/- 3.77) and healthy children (4.43 +/- 2.32) did not show a difference in children who where vaccinated only once with BCG, but it was found to be statistically significantly greater in atopic asthmatic children (12.50 +/- 5.90) than healthy children (7.08 +/- 4.70) who were vaccinated with BCG twice (p < 0.012). The proportion of having a PPD induration of 6 10 mm was found to be higher in atopic asthmatic children than in the healthy ones (32.5 vs. 12.5%) (p < 0.032). Conclusion: Our data showed that the PPD response was stronger in BCG-vaccinated atopic asthmatic children than in healthy BCG-vaccinated ones. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel

    How Safe Is Safety Number? A User Study on SIGNAL’s Fingerprint and Safety Number Methods for Public Key Verification

    No full text
    21st Information Security Conference, ISC 2018Communication security has become an indispensable demand of smartphone users. End-to-end encryption is the key factor for providing communication security, which mainly relies on public key cryptography. The main and unresolved issue for public key cryptography is to correctly match a public key with its owner. Failing to do so could lead to man-in-the-middle attacks. Different public key verification methods have been proposed in the literature. The methods which are based on verification by the users themselves are preferable with respect to cost and deployability than the methods such as digital certificates that involve the use of trusted third parties. One of these methods, fingerprinting was recently replaced by a method called safety number in the open source messaging application, SIGNAL. The developers of SIGNAL claimed this change would bring usability and security advantages however no formal user study was conducted supporting this claim. In this study, we compare the usability and security aspects of these two methods with a user study on 42 participants. The results indicate with significance that the safety number method leads to more successful results in less time for public key verification as compared to the fingerprint method
    corecore