5 research outputs found

    Interprofessionelles Teamteaching : eine Lehrmethode im BSc-Studiengang Hebamme an der Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften ZHAW

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    Einleitung: Im Bachelorstudiengang Hebamme an der Fachhochschule werden geburtshilfliche Themen im interprofessionellen Teamteaching unterrichtet. Hebamme und Fachärztin unterrichten gemeinsam zu ausgewählten geburtshilflichen Themen. Laut Schärli et al. (2017) wird in Zukunft die interprofessionelle Zusammenarbeit im Gesundheitswesen immer wichtiger. Ein mögliches Lehrkonzept um diese interprofessionelle Zusammenarbeit zu fördern, ist die Methode des Teamteachings (Kriecke und Reich, 2016). Es braucht eine geburtshilfliche und pädagogische Fachexpertise, sowie eine konstruktive Kommunikation aller Beteiligten, damit ein Teamteaching gelingen kann. Die Wichtigkeit einer guten Zusammenarbeit in Theorie und Praxis für die Studierenden kann somit aufgezeigt werden. Solche interprofessionelle Lehr- und Lernkonzepte an Fachhochschulen fördern und ermöglichen eine systematische und gezielte Kompetenzentwicklung (Walkenhorst et. al., 2015). Ziel: Das Unterrichtsziel ist es den Studierenden die Bedeutung einer interprofessionellen Zusammenarbeit in geburtshilflichen Situationen zwischen Hebamme und Fachärztin näher zu bringen und Rollenvorbilder zu erkennen. Forschungsmethode: Die Datenerhebung erfolgt durch halbstrukturierte Interviews mit Hebammen-studierenden, Fachärztin und Hebammendozentin. Ergebnisse: Erste Ergebnisse aus der systematischen Auswertung der Interviews zeigen die Wichtigkeit der Kommunikation und das Vorbild für eine gute interprofessionelle Zusammenarbeit. Weitere Ergebnisse werden folgen. Diskussion: Durch den Unterricht wird die Wichtigkeit einer zielgerichteten gemeinsamen Kommunikation erkannt. Die Fachexpertisen der Dozierenden verdeutlichen die Wichtigkeit einer gemeinsamen Meinung und Haltungen, sowie ein konstruktiver Diskurs bei gegensätzlicher Standpunkten. Dadurch wird eine Implementierung der interprofessionellen Zusammenarbeit in der Lehre gefördert und wird zu einer Selbstverständlichkeit für Studierende, Ärzte und Hebammen

    MR imaging of pubic symphysis after uncomplicated vaginal delivery and planned caesarean delivery in the first postpartum week

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    PURPOSE To compare changes in the pubic symphysis between women with vaginal delivery and women with caesarean sections within the first postpartum week. MATERIALS AND METHODS After institutional review board approval 30 healthy women were prospectively examined with MRI (transverse STIR-sequence) three days after delivery. 17 women with vaginal delivery (mean age 33.2 ± 4 years) and 13 with caesarean delivery (35.2 ± 5.6 years) were compared by two musculoskeletal radiologists. Bone marrow edema (location and extent), fluid in the joint gap, joint space width and stress fractures were assessed. RESULTS Prevalence of bone marrow edema was high and not different between groups (13/17 (76.5%) vaginal deliveries) and 10/13 (76.9% caesarean deliveries) for reader 1 (p = 0.992) and 14/17 (82.4%) and 10/13 (76.9%) for reader 2 (p = 0.762). Size of bone marrow edema was not statistically significantly different for both readers (results reader 1: right side 2.5 ± 3.3 mm vs. 6.3 ± 7.3 mm, p = 0.300; left side 3.4 ± 4.1 mm vs. 4.1 ± 4.6 mm, p = 0.837). Fluid in the joint was seen in 4/17 (23.5%) vs. 2/13 (15.4%) (p = 0.580) for reader 1 (similar for reader 2). Joint space width did not differ between groups (2.6 ± 0.7 mm vs. 3.1 ± 1.2 mm, p = 0.198). Pubic symphysis diastasis (joint space width > 10 mm) was not observed. Interreader agreement for these parameters was substantial to almost perfect (0.671-0.984, kappa values/intraclass correlation). Reader 1 found no stress fractures, while reader 2 suspected 1 stress fracture on a right pubic bone in a woman after caesarean delivery. CONCLUSIONS Pubic bone marrow edema is present in 3 of 4 women in the first postpartum week unrelated to the delivery mode

    Postpartum Bone Marrow Edema at the Sacroiliac Joints May Mimic Sacroiliitis of Axial Spondyloarthritis on MRI

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    OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to compare MRI findings in the sacroiliac joints of postpartum women (as a model of mechanical changes) and women with known axial spondyloarthritis (as an inflammatory model). SUBJECTS AND METHODS For this prospective multicenter age-matched, case-control study, sacroiliac joint MRI examinations of 30 healthy women (mean age, 34.0 years) in the early postpartum period (mechanical group) and 30 age-matched women (mean age, 33.8 years) with known axial spondyloarthritis (retrospective inflammatory group) were compared. Blinded to clinical information, readers assessed MR images using the following scoring systems: Spondyloarthritis Research Consortium of Canada (SPARCC) MRI index, Berlin method, Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) criteria, and SPARCC MRI structural score. Descriptive statistics as percentages of the different findings (i.e., bone marrow edema [BME], erosion, fatty bone marrow replacement, backfill, ankylosis) and scores between groups and between delivery modes were compared. RESULTS In the postpartum group, 63.3% (19/30) of women showed BME around the sacroiliac joints compared with 86.7% (26/30) of women in the spondyloarthritis group (based on ASAS criteria). Erosions were uncommon in the postpartum group (10.0% [3/30] postpartum vs 56.7% [17/30] spondyloarthritis). Fatty bone marrow replacement, backfill, and ankylosis were not seen in the postpartum group. In subjects with positive MRI findings for sacroiliitis based on ASAS criteria, the SPARCC MRI index (mean ± SD, 13.6 ± 14.5 vs 13.0 ± 10.7; p = 0.818) and Berlin method (4.5 ± 3.0 and 5.5 ± 3.5, p = 0.378) were not different between the postpartum and spondyloarthritis groups. Scores were not different between birth modalities. CONCLUSION Pregnancy-induced BME at the sacroiliac joints, as a result of prolonged mechanical stress, was present in 63.3% of women who underwent MRI during the early postpartum period and may mimic sacroiliitis of axial spondyloarthritis

    High-resolution chromosomal microarrays in prenatal diagnosis significantly increase diagnostic power

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    OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to determine for the first time the reliability and the diagnostic power of high-resolution microarray testing in routine prenatal diagnostics. METHODS We applied high-resolution chromosomal microarray testing in 464 cytogenetically normal prenatal samples with any indication for invasive testing. RESULTS High-resolution testing revealed a diagnostic yield of 6.9% and 1.6% in cases of fetal ultrasound anomalies and cases of advanced maternal age (AMA), respectively, which is similar to previous studies using low-resolution microarrays. In three (0.6%) additional cases with an indication of AMA, an aberration in susceptibility risk loci was detected. Moreover, one case (0.2%) showed an X-linked aberration in a female fetus, a finding relevant for future family planning. We found the rate of cases, in which the parents had to be tested for interpretation of unreported copy number variants (3.7%), and the rate of remaining variants of unknown significance (0.4%) acceptably low. Of note, these findings did not cause termination of pregnancy after expert genetic counseling. The 0.4% rate of confined placental mosaicism was similar to that observed by conventional karyotyping and notably involved a case of placental microdeletion. CONCLUSION High-resolution prenatal microarray testing is a reliable technique that increases diagnostic yield by at least 17.3% when compared with conventional karyotyping, without an increase in the frequency of variants of uncertain significance
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