280 research outputs found

    Geographic Variation in Informed Consent Law: Two Standards for Disclosure of Treatment Risks

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    We analyzed 714 jury verdicts in informed consent cases tried in 25 states in 1985–2002 to determine whether the applicable standard of care (“patient” vs. “professional” standard) affected the outcome. Verdicts for plaintiffs were significantly more frequent in states with a patient standard than in states with a professional standard (27 percent vs. 17 percent, P = 0.02). This difference in outcomes did not hold for other types of medical malpractice litigation (36 percent vs. 37 percent, P = 0.8). The multivariate odds of a plaintiff’s verdict were more than twice as high in states with a patient standard than in states with a professional standard (odds ratio = 2.15, 95% confidence interval = 1.32–3.50). The law’s expectations of clinicians with respect to risk disclosure appear to vary geographically

    Comparación de aceites esenciales de Matricaria recutita L. de origen diverso

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    Variations in the essential oil content of Matricaria recutita L., cultivated in different European countries, were determined.The oil was obtained in yields of 3.6-6.6 mg/g from dried samples. 38 components were identified, representing over 95%of the total yield of oil. The principal biologically active compound in chamomile oil, of British origin, was bisabololoxide B (25%). In oils from Belgium, Estonia and France, bisabolol oxide A (43-55%) was predominant, whereas inHungarian oil the main compound was alpha-bisabolol (24%). (E)-beta-Farnesene content was predominant (5–7%) inoils from Belgium and France. Chamazulene was present in 1–14% of oils and its content was highest in oil of Britishorigin (14%).En el presente trabajo se han determinado las variaciones en la composición de aceites esenciales de Chamomillarecutita (L.) Rauschert, especie cultivada en distintos países de Europa. Los aceites esenciales han sido extraídos delas muestras secas, con unos rendimientos de 3.6–6.6 mg/g y en ellos se han identificado 38 componentes, los cualesrepresentan más del 95% del total del aceite esencial. El principal compuesto biológicamente activo en el aceiteesencial de la manzanilla procedente de Gran Bretaña fue el óxido de β-bisabolol (25%); en los procedentes deBélgica, Estonia y Francia predominaba el óxido de α-bisabolol (43–55%) y el compuesto principal en el de Hungríafue el α-bisabolol (24%). El (E)-β-farneseno se encontraba en sus mayores proporciones (5-7%) en los de Bélgica yFrancia, mientras que el camazuleno representaba del 1 al 14% del total de los distintos aceites esenciales siendo másabundante en los aceites procedentes de Gran Bretaña (14%)

    Changes in cardiovascular spending, care utilization, and clinical outcomes associated with participation in bundled payments for care improvement - Advanced

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    BACKGROUND: Bundled Payments for Care Improvement - Advanced (BPCI-A) is a Medicare initiative that aims to incentivize reductions in spending for episodes of care that start with a hospitalization and end 90 days after discharge. Cardiovascular disease, an important driver of Medicare spending, is one of the areas of focus BPCI-A. It is unknown whether BPCI-A is associated with spending reductions or quality improvements for the 3 cardiovascular medical events or 5 cardiovascular procedures in the model. METHODS: In this retrospective cohort study, we conducted difference-in-differences analyses using Medicare claims for patients discharged between January 1, 2017, and September 30, 2019, to assess differences between BPCI-A hospitals and matched nonparticipating control hospitals. Our primary outcomes were the differential changes in spending, before versus after implementation of BPCI-A, for cardiac medical and procedural conditions at BPCI-A hospitals compared with controls. Secondary outcomes included changes in patient complexity, care utilization, healthy days at home, readmissions, and mortality. RESULTS: Baseline spending for cardiac medical episodes at BPCI-A hospitals was 25606.ThedifferentialchangeinspendingforcardiacmedicalepisodesatBPCIAversuscontrolhospitalswas25 606. The differential change in spending for cardiac medical episodes at BPCI-A versus control hospitals was 16 (95% CI, -228to228 to 261; CONCLUSIONS: Participation in BPCI-A was not associated with spending reductions, changes in care utilization, or quality improvements for the cardiovascular medical events or procedures offered in the model

    Comparison of essential oil content of Matricaria recutita L. from different origins

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    En el presente trabajo se han determinado las variaciones en la composición de aceites esenciales de Chamomilla recutita (L.) Rauschert, especie cultivada en distintos países de Europa. Los aceites esenciales han sido extraídos de las muestras secas, con unos rendimientos de 3.6–6.6 mg/g y en ellos se han identificado 38 componentes, los cuales representan más del 95% del total del aceite esencial. El principal compuesto biológicamente activo en el aceite esencial de la manzanilla procedente de Gran Bretaña fue el óxido de β-bisabolol (25%); en los procedentes de Bélgica, Estonia y Francia predominaba el óxido de α-bisabolol (43–55%) y el compuesto principal en el de Hungría fue el α-bisabolol (24%). El (E)-β-farneseno se encontraba en sus mayores proporciones (5-7%) en los de Bélgica y Francia, mientras que el camazuleno representaba del 1 al 14% del total de los distintos aceites esenciales siendo más abundante en los aceites procedentes de Gran Bretaña (14%).Variations in the essential oil content of Matricaria recutita L., cultivated in different European countries, were determined. The oil was obtained in yields of 3.6-6.6 mg/g from dried samples. 38 components were identified, representing over 95% of the total yield of oil. The principal biologically active compound in chamomile oil, of British origin, was bisabolol oxide B (25%). In oils from Belgium, Estonia and France, bisabolol oxide A (43-55%) was predominant, whereas in Hungarian oil the main compound was alpha-bisabolol (24%). (E)-beta-Farnesene content was predominant (5–7%) in oils from Belgium and France. Chamazulene was present in 1–14% of oils and its content was highest in oil of British origin (14%).Este trabajo ha sido financiado a través de la beca número 4332 de la Fudación Científica de Estonia

    Individual pulmonary vein size and survival in infants with totally anomalous pulmonary venous connection

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    AbstractObjectives. We investigated whether mortality in totally anomalous pulmonary venous connection could be predicted from preoperative individual pulmonary vein size.Background. Some infants with this anomaly die with or without surgical repair because of stenosis of individual pulmonary veins.Methods. Individual pulmonary vein, vertical vein and pulmonary venous confluence diameters were retrospectively measured from preoperative echocardiograms in 32 infants with totally anomalous pulmonary venous connection presenting to Children's Hospital, Boston over a 1/2-year period. Data on body surface area, other cardiac anomalies, presence of initial pulmonary venous obstruction and early surgery and outcome were also recorded.Results. Of 32 patients, 6 (18.8%) died before hospital discharge, and 8 (25.0%) died subsequently. Six (75.0%) of the eight patients who died late had individual pulmonary vein stenosis at sites remote from the surgical anastomosis to the left atrium. The remaining 18 patients (56.3%) are alive at a mean follow-up period of 9.7 months. A Cox proportional hazard model revealed that small sum of individual pulmonary vein diameters (p = 0.0004), small confluence size (p = 0.02) and presence of heterotaxy syndrome (p = 0.008) were each significant univariate predictors of survival. Multivariate analysis showed that small pulmonary vein sum was a strong predictor of survival (p = 0.008), independent of the presence of heterotaxy syndrome. An analysis stratified by the presence of heterotaxy syndrome showed that the predictive effect of small pulmonary vein sum on survival was strongest in patients without heterotaxy syndrome.Conclusions. These data show that individual pulmonary vein size at diagnosis is a strong, independent predictor of survival in patients with totally anomalous pulmonary venous connection. In patients with this anomaly and small individual pulmonary veins, the anomaly may not be correctable by surgical creation of an anastomosis between the pulmonary venous confluence and the left atrium

    Valsartan for attenuating disease evolution in early sarcomeric hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: the design of the Valsartan for Attenuating Disease Evolution in Early Sarcomeric Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (VANISH) trial

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    Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is often caused by sarcomere gene mutations, resulting in left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), myocardial fibrosis, and increased risk of sudden cardiac death and heart failure. Studies in mouse models of sarcomeric HCM demonstrated that early treatment with an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) reduced development of LVH and fibrosis. In contrast, prior human studies using ARBs for HCM have targeted heterogeneous adult cohorts with well-established disease. The VANISH trial is testing the safety and feasibility of disease-modifying therapy with an ARB in genotyped HCM patients with early disease. Methods: A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial is being conducted in sarcomere mutation carriers, 8 to 45 years old, with HCM and no/minimal symptoms, or those with early phenotypic manifestations but no LVH. Participants are randomly assigned to receive valsartan 80 to 320 mg daily (depending on age and weight) or placebo. The primary endpoint is a composite of 9 z-scores in domains representing myocardial injury/hemodynamic stress, cardiac morphology, and function. Total z-scores reflecting change from baseline to final visits will be compared between treatment groups. Secondary endpoints will assess the impact of treatment on mutation carriers without LVH, and analyze the influence of age, sex, and genotype. Conclusions: The VANISH trial is testing a new strategy of disease modification for treating sarcomere mutation carriers with early HCM, and those at risk for its development. In addition, further insight into disease mechanisms, response to therapy, and phenotypic evolution will be gained

    Adherence to the Mediterranean Diet and Incidence of Pre-Frailty and Frailty in Community-Dwelling Adults 70+: The 3-Year DO-HEALTH Study

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    The Mediterranean diet has been associated with many health benefits. Therefore, we investigated whether the degree of adherence to the Mediterranean diet at baseline, or changes in adherence over time, were associated with the incidence of pre-frailty or frailty in generally healthy older adults. This study used the DO-HEALTH trial data. We evaluated Mediterranean diet adherence with Panagiotakos’ MedDietScore at baseline and at 3-year follow-up; frailty was assessed annually with the Fried frailty phenotype. We used minimally and fully adjusted mixed logistic regression models to estimate the exposure–disease relationship. We included 1811 participants without frailty at baseline (mean age 74.7 years; 59.4% women). Baseline adherence, as reflected by the MedDietScore, was not associated with becoming pre-frail [OR(95%CI) = 0.93 (0.83–1.03) for five-point greater adherence] or frail [OR(95%CI) = 0.90 (0.73–1.12) for five points]. However, a five-point increase in the MedDietScore over three years was associated with lower odds of becoming pre-frail [OR(95%CI) = 0.77 (0.68–0.88)] and frail [OR(95%CI) = 0.77 (0.64–0.92)]. In generally healthy and active older adults, baseline adherence to the Mediterranean diet was not associated with the incidence of pre-frailty or frailty over a 3-year follow-up. However, improved adherence to the Mediterranean diet over time was associated with significantly lower odds of becoming pre-frail or frail

    Prospective Study of Ageing Trajectories in the European DO-HEALTH Study.

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    INTRODUCTION Ageing trajectories range from delayed ageing with extended health to accelerated ageing, with an increased risk of frailty. We evaluated the prevalence and prospective change between health states among community-dwelling European older adults. METHODS This prospective study is a secondary analysis of DO-HEALTH, a randomized trial that included adults aged 70 years and older across 5 European countries. Healthy agers (HA) fulfilled the Nurses' Health Study healthy ageing criteria and accelerated agers were non-HA being at least pre-frail according to the Fried frailty criteria. We assessed the proportion of participants changing between health states over 4 assessments and evaluated the odds of changing to a more favourable category. To increase reliability and avoid regression to the mean, we averaged the first 2 years and compared them to the average of the last 2 years. RESULTS Of 2,157 participants, 12.4% were excluded for meeting both healthy ageing and pre-frailty criteria simultaneously. Among the remaining 1,889 participants (mean age 75.1 years, 60.9% female), 23.1% were initially HA, 44.4% were non-HA but not pre-frail, and 32.6% were pre-frail or frail. Subsequently, 65.3% remained in the same health state, 12.0% improved to a healthier state, and 22.8% progressed to a less advantageous state. After adjusting for sex, study centre, treatment, and body mass index, each year of age was associated with 6% lower odds of improving health states. Women had 35% higher odds than men of following a disadvantageous trajectory. CONCLUSION We observed dynamic trajectories of ageing where transitioning to a healthier state became less likely with advancing age and among women
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