17 research outputs found

    Older adults experiences of rehabilitation in acute health care

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    Rehabilitation is a key component of nursing and allied healthcare professionalsā€™ roles in most health and social care settings. This paper reports on stage 2 of an action research project to ascertain older adult's experience of rehabilitation. Twenty postdischarge interviews were conducted and the interview transcripts were analysed using thematic content analysis. All older adults discharged from an acute older acute rehabilitation ward to their own homes in the community were eligible to participate. The only exclusion criterion was older adults who were thought to be unable to give consent to participate by the nurse in charge and the researcher. Whilst 92 older adults were eligible to participate in this research study, only 20 were interviewed. The findings from this study suggest that older adults valued communication with health professionals but were aware of their time constraints that hindered communication. This study suggests that both nurses and allied health professionals are not actively providing rehabilitative services to promote health and well-being, which contradicts the focus of active ageing. Furthermore, there was evidence of unmet needs on discharge, and older adults unable to recall the professions that were involved in their interventions and the rationale for therapy input. It is suggested that further research is needed to explore the effectiveness of allied health rehabilitation in the acute setting. This study highlights the need for further research into older adultsā€™ perceptions of the rehabilitation process in the acute setting

    Reperfusion before percutaneous coronary intervention in ST-elevation myocardial infarction patients is associated with lower NT-proBNP levels during follow up, irrespective of pretreatment with full-dose fibrinolysis

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    AIMS: N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels predict outcomes in ST-elevation myocardial infarction patients treated with fibrinolysis or primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, its role in facilitated PCI has not yet been assessed; it may be a tool to evaluate the lower event rates with primary PCI in ASSENT-4. METHODS AND RESULTS: In ASSENT-4, 1667 patients were randomized to tenecteplase (TNK) followed by PCI or primary PCI alone. Baseline, discharge/Day 7, and 90-day NT-proBNP levels were available for 1008, 971, and 813 patients. Increasing quartiles of baseline NT-proBNP levels were associated with a higher risk of the combined endpoint of death, heart failure, and shock at 90 days and 1-year mortality (P < 0.001). Events were more common with TNK + PCI, regardless of baseline NT-proBNP quartile. When analysing baseline NT-proBNP as a continuous variable, no treatment interaction was observed for the primary endpoint (P = 0.17) or 1-year mortality (P = 0.08). Overall, NT-proBNP levels at Day 7 or 90 were not different between the two treatments. In patients with TIMI 2-3 flow before PCI, NT-proBNP at Day 90 was lower in PCI-only patients (P = 0.01), although no interaction was observed (P = 0.14). In TNK-pre-treated patients without reperfusion (TIMI 0-1) after PCI, NT-proBNP levels at Day 7 or 90 were not significantly higher than in PCI patients. CONCLUSION: Baseline NT-proBNP predicts outcome at 90 days and 1 year in patients undergoing PCI with or without facilitation with TNK. A higher rate of reperfusion in lytic-pre-treated patients did not result in lower NT-proBNP during follow-up. Thus, baseline and subsequent NT-proBNP levels do not explain the lower mortality rate with PCI alone seen in this trial.status: publishe

    Constant-time maintainability

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