13 research outputs found
Cross-cultural validation of the patient-practitioner orientation scale among primary care professionals in Spain
In recent decades, many self-report instruments have been developed to assess the extent to which patients want to be informed and involved in decisions about their health as part of the concept of person-centred care (PCC). The main objective of this research was to translate, adapt and validate the Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale (PPOS) using a sample of primary care health-care professionals in Spain. Baseline analysis of PPOS scores for 321 primary care professionals (general practitioners and nurses) from 63 centres and 3 Spanish regions participating in a randomized controlled trial. We analysed missing values, distributions and descriptive statistics, item-to-scale correlations and internal consistency. Performed were confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) of the 2-factor model (sharing and caring dimensions), scale depuration and principal component analysis (PCA). Low inter-item correlations were observed, and the CFA 2-factor model only obtained a good fit to the data after excluding 8 items. Internal consistency of the 10-item PPOS was acceptable (0.77), but low for individual subscales (0.70 and 0.55). PCA results suggest a possible 3-factor structure. Participants showed a patient-oriented style (mean = 4.46, SD = 0.73), with higher scores for caring than sharing. Although the 2-factor model obtained empirical support, measurement indicators of the PPOS (caring dimension) could be improved. Spanish primary care health-care professionals overall show a patient-oriented attitude, although less marked in issues such as patients' need for and management of medical information
The synovial and blood monocyte DNA methylomes mirror prognosis, evolution, and treatment in early arthritis
Identifying predictive biomarkers at early stages of inflammatory arthritis is crucial for starting appropriate therapies to avoid poor outcomes. Monocytes (MOs) and macrophages, largely associated with arthritis, are contributors and sensors of inflammation through epigenetic modifications. In this study, we investigated associations between clinical features and DNA methylation in blood and synovial fluid (SF) MOs in a prospective cohort of patients with early inflammatory arthritis. DNA methylation profiles of undifferentiated arthritis (UA) blood MOs exhibited marked alterations in comparison with those from healthy donors. We identified additional differences both in blood and SF MOs after comparing patients with UA grouped by their future outcomes, i.e., good versus poor. Patient profiles in subsequent visits revealed a reversion toward a healthy level in both groups, those requiring disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and those who remitted spontaneously. Changes in disease activity between visits also affected DNA methylation, which was partially concomitant in the SF of UA and in blood MOs of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Epigenetic similarities between arthritis types allow a common prediction of disease activity. Our results constitute a resource of DNA methylation-based biomarkers of poor prognosis, disease activity, and treatment efficacy for the personalized clinical management of early inflammatory arthritis.We thank CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya and the Josep Carreras Foundation for institutional support. The authors thank all the patients who graciously donated their time and samples to further
arthritis research. We are also thankful to Núria Sapena, Marta Bassas, and Cristina González, nurses from
the outpatient clinic of the Department of Rheumatology, for their help in the management of biologic
samples. This research was funded by Fondo de Investigación en Salud (FIS) grant PI17/00993 from the
Institute of Health Carlos III (ISCIII) (to JDC); by grants SAF2017-88086-R and PID2020-117212RB-I00 /
AEI / 10.13038/501100011033) from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) (to EB);
and by the Thematic Networks for Cooperative Research (RETICS) grant provided by ISCII, Research
Network for Inflammation and Rheumatic Diseases (RIER) RD16/0012/0013, cofinanced by the European Fund for Regional Development’s (FEDER) Una manera de hacer Europa program (to JDC and EB).Peer reviewe
Correction : Chaparro et al. Incidence, Clinical Characteristics and Management of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Spain: Large-Scale Epidemiological Study. J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10, 2885
The authors wish to make the following corrections to this paper [...]
Incidence, Clinical Characteristics and Management of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Spain : Large-Scale Epidemiological Study
(1) Aims: To assess the incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in Spain, to describe the main epidemiological and clinical characteristics at diagnosis and the evolution of the disease, and to explore the use of drug treatments. (2) Methods: Prospective, population-based nationwide registry. Adult patients diagnosed with IBD-Crohn's disease (CD), ulcerative colitis (UC) or IBD unclassified (IBD-U)-during 2017 in Spain were included and were followed-up for 1 year. (3) Results: We identified 3611 incident cases of IBD diagnosed during 2017 in 108 hospitals covering over 22 million inhabitants. The overall incidence (cases/100,000 person-years) was 16 for IBD, 7.5 for CD, 8 for UC, and 0.5 for IBD-U; 53% of patients were male and median age was 43 years (interquartile range = 31-56 years). During a median 12-month follow-up, 34% of patients were treated with systemic steroids, 25% with immunomodulators, 15% with biologics and 5.6% underwent surgery. The percentage of patients under these treatments was significantly higher in CD than UC and IBD-U. Use of systemic steroids and biologics was significantly higher in hospitals with high resources. In total, 28% of patients were hospitalized (35% CD and 22% UC patients, p < 0.01). (4) Conclusion: The incidence of IBD in Spain is rather high and similar to that reported in Northern Europe. IBD patients require substantial therapeutic resources, which are greater in CD and in hospitals with high resources, and much higher than previously reported. One third of patients are hospitalized in the first year after diagnosis and a relevant proportion undergo surgery
Acceptability and feasibility of a virtual community of practice to primary care professionals regarding patient empowerment: A qualitative pilot study
Background: Virtual communities of practice (vCoPs) facilitate online learning via the exchange of experiences and knowledge between interested participants. Compared to other communities, vCoPs need to overcome technological structures and specific barriers. Our objective was to pilot the acceptability and feasibility of a vCoP aimed at improving the attitudes of primary care professionals to the empowerment of patients with chronic conditions. Methods: We used a qualitative approach based on 2 focus groups: one composed of 6 general practitioners and the other of 6 practice nurses. Discussion guidelines on the topics to be investigated were provided to the moderator. Sessions were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Thematic analysis was performed using the ATLAS-ti software. Results: The available operating systems and browsers and the lack of suitable spaces and time were reported as the main difficulties with the vCoP. The vCoP was perceived to be a flexible learning mode that provided up-to-date resources applicable to routine practice and offered a space for the exchange of experiences and approaches. Conclusions: The results from this pilot study show that the vCoP was considered useful for learning how to empower patients. However, while vCoPs have the potential to facilitate learning and as shown create professional awareness regarding patient empowerment, attention needs to be paid to technological and access issues and the time demands on professionals. We collected relevant inputs to improve the features, content and educational methods to be included in further vCoP implementation. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02757781. Registered on 25 April 2016.This study was financed by Instituto de Salud Carlos III and Cofinanced by Fondo
Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER). Ministerio de Economía
y Competitividad. Gobierno de España. (PI15/00164, PI15/00586, PI15/00566
I Congresso Ibero-Americano de Bibliotecas Escolares
Actas de la primera edición del I Congreso Iberoamericano de Bibliotecas Escolares, CIBES 2015, organizado por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (España), la Universidad Estatal Paulista (Brasil) y el Ayuntamiento de Getafe (España). Celebrado: 21 - 23 de octubre de 2015 en la Universidad Estatal Paulista (Marília) y 26 - 28 de octubre de 2015 en la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (Getafe)Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (España)Universidad Estatal Paulista (Brasil)Ayuntamiento de Getafe (España)Dimensiones y visiones de la biblioteca escolar en una Educación por competencias: la
necesidad de una política estratégica / Miguel Ángel Marzal. -- Getafe ciudad educadora,
lectora y escritora: Bibliotecas escolares / Lourdes Muñoz Santiuste. -- Presente y
futuro: biblioteca escolar-CREA y proyectos interdisciplinares / Rosa Piquín. -- Cultura
en información: un reto esencial de la biblioteca escolar / Mónica Baró. -- Bibliotecas
escolares de Galicia: un mundo de oportunidades a favor de la Educación / Cristina Novoa.
-- 10 años de la Red de Bibliotecas Escolares de Extremadura (REBEX) / Casildo Macías
Pereira. -- Biblioteca Escolar y uso ético de la información para una Cultura de Paz / Ana
Barrero Tíscar. -- Dinamización de la Biblioteca Escolar Plumita durante el curso escolar
2014/15 / María Antonia Cano Cañada. -- Experiencia de la creación de una biblioteca
escolar / Susana Santos Martín. -- Grupo cooperativo Bibliotecas escolares en Red-Albacete
/ José Manuel Garrido Argandoña y Eva Leal Scasso. -- La BCREA "Juan Leiva". El fomento de
la lectura desde la web social / Andrés Pulido Villar. -- Proceso de implantación de una
herramienta de autoevaluación en la red de bibliotecas escolares de Extremadura (REBEX) /
Casildo Macías Pereira. -- La biblioteca escolar: abriendo fronteras / Lorena Verónica
Cabrera Orellana. -- O programa RBE e a avaliaçao das bibliotecas escolares: melhoria,
desenvolvimiento e innovaçao / Elsa Conde. -- Profesional de Biblioteconomía y
Documentación: esencial en la plantilla de la escuela / Pilar del Campo Puerta. -- Una
mirada activa al proceso educativo desde la biblioteca escolar / María Jesús Fontela
Fernández . -- Con otra mirada "La ilustración como vehículo de comunicación y aprendizaje
en las bibliotecas escolares" / Pablo Jurado Sánchez-Galán. -- Fingertips. Recriar a
biblioteca escolar na sala de aula / Rui Alfonso Mateus. -- Hablemos de libros. Cómo
transformar una clase de literatura en una comunidad de interpretación de textos /
Francisco César Díaz Rey. -- Inclusión social de familias inmigrantes a través de un
programa de aprendizaje de la lengua castellana / Ana Carmen Tolino Fernández-Henarejos.
-- O desenvolvimento de atividades de mediação de leitura em biblioteca escolar: o caso da
biblioteca da Escola Sesc de Ensino Médio / Vagner Amaro. -- La biblioteca escolar.
Proceso de enseñanza-aprendizaje de padres a hijos / Ana Carmen Tolino Fernández-
Henarejos. -- Leo con y para los demás / Ismael Fernández Fernández, Ana María Moreno
Vicente y Ana Beatriz Vicente Pérez. -- Nanas y arrullo. Poesía a la deriva / Bernardo
Fuentes Navarrete y Carlos García-Romeral Pérez. -- Gestión y evaluación de servicios
bibliotecarios para personas con dislexia: una biblioteca escolar inclusiva desde una
perspectiva internacional / Carmen Jorge García-Reyes. -- Sueños lectores compartidos
hechos realidad: la biblioteca escolar del C.E.I.P-S.E.S-A.A “LA PAZ” de Albacete / Ana
Rosa Cabañero Tobarra, Juan Manuel Herráez, Eva Leal Scasso, María Marín Sánchez, Ana
Belén Medrano Martínez y María José Nortes Ruipérez. -- El programa biblioteca escuela en
Civican. La literatura como elemento motivador para la alfabetización informacional /
Villar Arellano Yanguas. -- La competencia digital en el diseño curricular: desde la
biblioteca al aula / Felicidad Campal García. -- O deselvomimento da pesquisa escolar por
meio da competência em informaçao / Luciane de Fátima Cavalcante Beckman y Marta Leandro
da Mata. -- Proyecto escolar de investigación documental "Te pillé leyendo" / José Manuel
Garrido Argandoña. -- Aprender com a Biblioteca Escolar: formar para as literacias / Paula
Correia y Isabel Mendinhos. -- Sucedió en el siglo XX / María Antonia Becerra Montalbán,
Ángel Bernabé Muñoz y Sofía Vaz Romero. -- El Club de lectura en la nube / Belén Benito
Blázquez y Ana Ordás García. -- Promover a leitura e a escrita na era digital:
prácticas nas bibliotecas escolares / María Raquel Ramos. -- A biblioteca escolar e o
desafío da interculturalidade: o projeto Ser + cidadao / María da Conceição Tomé. --
Cuando la competencia digital encontró a la alfabetización informacional o Mucho ruido y
pocas nueces / Felicidad Campal García. -- Hora de ler, un programa para el fomento de la
lectura en contexto educativo / Cristina Novoa. -- Hábitos de lectura para las
competencias en información y alfabetización en información en bibliotecas escolares de
Puerto Rico / Karen Denise Centeno Casillas. -- Repositorios digitales en las bibliotecas
escolares andaluzas: situación, modelos y herramientas para su creación / Dolores Olmos
Olmos y Andrés Pulido Villar. -- Trabajando las competencias clave con las aventuras de
Mozarito en Extremadura / María Teresa Carballosa González y María Esther Nieto Vidal. --
Análisis de modelos de evaluación de la web de la biblioteca escolar / Raúl Cremades
García. -- Emociónate con las historias: El bosque de las emociones e historias con mucho
teatro / Esther Luis Pérez y Ana María Peromingo Fernández. -- Biblioteca escolar de
innovación y continuación / E. María Guerrero Palacios y Silvia Mora Ramírez. -- Uso de
estándares y licencias para la creación y difusión de contenidos en las bibliotecas
escolares / José Luis Barreiro Cebey. -- La biblioteca escolar digital móvil / Javier
Fernández Delgado. -- Uso de aplicaciones móviles para el desarrollo de
la competencia lingüística. Proyecto Hansel App Gretel / Dolores Olmos Olmos. -- A memória
e a mediação segundo Vigotski / Leda Maria Araújo, Patricia Celia Santana, Sueli Bortolin
y Leticia Gorri Molina. -- Bibliotecas escolares como tema de estudo dos alunos de
graduação em blioteconomia do Instituto de Ensino Superior da FUNLEC: estado da arte /
Tiago Pereira Nocera y Rodrigo Pereira. -- Ações de mediação da leitura e da informação
em bibliotecas escolares: um olhar sobre as bibliotecas dos Colégios de Aplicação /
Tatyanne Christina Gonçalves Ferreira Valdez y Alberto Calil Júnior. -- Mediação
pedagógica numa biblioteca de escola pública em Londrina / Rovilson José da Silva, Teba
Silva Yllana y Sueli Bortolin. -- Utilização de categorias por cores em sistema de
biblioteca voltado ao público infanto-juvenil / Liliana Giusti Serra. -- Atividades de
ensino dos atos de leitura com crianças em risco social / Adriana Naomi Fukushima da Silva
y Dagoberto Buim Arena. -- Biblioteca escolar: espaço de significados entre
alunos, professores e bibliotecários / Rodrigo Barbosa Paulo, Marisa Xavier, Helen Castro
Casarin y Creuza Barbaroto. -- A Biblioteca Escolar no Contexto da Legislação e
do Processo Educativo / Eliane Lourdes da Silva Moro, Francisca Rosaline Leite Mota y
Raimundo Martins de Lima. -- O jornal impresso como fonte de informação: a importância da
formação de leitores críticos / Mariana Pícaro Cerigatto. -- Bibliotecas escolares no
estado do Rio Grande do Sul: a trajetória de realização dos fóruns gaúchos pela melhoria
das bibliotecas escolares / Eliane Lourdes da Silva Moro y Lizandra Brasil Estabel. -- O
acesso à informação dos usuários surdos na biblioteca escolar / André Luís Onório
Coneglian y Mayara Melo Santana. -- Aprendizagem coletiva de bibliotecários e a
competência de pesquisa dos docentes: o caso do Instituto Federal do Espírito Santo /
Maristela Almeida Mercandeli Rodrigues y Beatriz Quiroz Villardi. -- Biblioteca escolar:
atores, parâmetros e competências / Mavi Galante Mancera Dall´Acqua Carvalho y Claudio
Marcondes de Castro Filho. -- Estratégias de aprendizagem de escrita no
Ensino Fundamental II / Érika Christina Kohle. -- Bebês e livros: leitura nas bebetecas.
Kenia Adriana de Aquino Modesto Silva, Juliane Francischeti Martins Motoyama y Renata
Junqueira de Souza. -- Práticas alternativas para organização de acervos nos espaços de
leitura em ambientes escolares / Luciana Souza Gracioso, Ariovaldo Alves,
Débora Nascimento, Suelen Redondo, Tainara Torika Kiri de Castro, Elizabete Angelon y
Eduardo Barbosa. -- Reflexões sobre a modelagem e criação de uma Rede Virtual de Leitores
para Bibliotecas Escolares / Carla Floriana Martins y Raoni Guerra Rajão. -- Biblioteca
escolar: espaço de formação leitora? / Silvana Ferreira de Souza Balsan y Renata
Junqueira de Souza. -- “Se a Biblioteca Escolar é minha mãe, o Google é meu pai”:
representações da relação entre Biblioteca Escolar e Google no imaginário de
alunos do ensino técnico / Adriana Bogliolo Sirihal-Duarte, Maria L. Amorim Antunes y
Raquel Miranda Vilela Paiva. -- Desafios e propostas para a universalização das
bibliotecas escolares no Brasil e na Espanha / Rodrigo Pereira, Daniela Spudeit y Fernanda
de Sales. -- Bibliotecário educador: possibilidades de atuação no contexto da biblioteca
escolar / André Carlos da Silva, Valéria Martin Valls y Mariana de Paula Silva. -- Uma ONG
para Bibliotecas Escolares : estratégia para ampliar a igualdade e capacidade de acesso
e uso da informação e educação escolar de qualidade / Suelen Camilo Ferreira y Luciana de
Souza Gracioso. -- O aluno com deficência: o papel do bibliotecário na disponibilidade de
recursos acessíveis na biblioteca escolar / Adriano de Sales Coelho, Rosilene de Melo
Oliveira y Marcos Pastana Santos. -- Biblioteca digital virtual e o uso do tablete: uma
possibilidade de construção de novas práticas de leitura na escola / Barbara Cibelli da
Silva Monteagudo y Dagoberto Buim Arena. -- A importância da biblioteca na educação de
crianças de 0 a 3 anos / Yngrid Karolline Mendonça Costa y Cyntia Graziella Guizelim
Simões Girotto. -- Comportamento Informacional de adolescentes: a relação com bibliotecas
e escolas / Nelson Sebastian Silva-Jerez y Helen de Castro S. Casarin
Spatiotemporal Characteristics of the Largest HIV-1 CRF02_AG Outbreak in Spain: Evidence for Onward Transmissions
Background and Aim: The circulating recombinant form 02_AG (CRF02_AG) is the predominant clade among the human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) non-Bs with a prevalence of 5.97% (95% Confidence Interval-CI: 5.41–6.57%) across Spain. Our aim was to estimate the levels of regional clustering for CRF02_AG and the spatiotemporal characteristics of the largest CRF02_AG subepidemic in Spain.Methods: We studied 396 CRF02_AG sequences obtained from HIV-1 diagnosed patients during 2000–2014 from 10 autonomous communities of Spain. Phylogenetic analysis was performed on the 391 CRF02_AG sequences along with all globally sampled CRF02_AG sequences (N = 3,302) as references. Phylodynamic and phylogeographic analysis was performed to the largest CRF02_AG monophyletic cluster by a Bayesian method in BEAST v1.8.0 and by reconstructing ancestral states using the criterion of parsimony in Mesquite v3.4, respectively.Results: The HIV-1 CRF02_AG prevalence differed across Spanish autonomous communities we sampled from (p < 0.001). Phylogenetic analysis revealed that 52.7% of the CRF02_AG sequences formed 56 monophyletic clusters, with a range of 2–79 sequences. The CRF02_AG regional dispersal differed across Spain (p = 0.003), as suggested by monophyletic clustering. For the largest monophyletic cluster (subepidemic) (N = 79), 49.4% of the clustered sequences originated from Madrid, while most sequences (51.9%) had been obtained from men having sex with men (MSM). Molecular clock analysis suggested that the origin (tMRCA) of the CRF02_AG subepidemic was in 2002 (median estimate; 95% Highest Posterior Density-HPD interval: 1999–2004). Additionally, we found significant clustering within the CRF02_AG subepidemic according to the ethnic origin.Conclusion: CRF02_AG has been introduced as a result of multiple introductions in Spain, following regional dispersal in several cases. We showed that CRF02_AG transmissions were mostly due to regional dispersal in Spain. The hot-spot for the largest CRF02_AG regional subepidemic in Spain was in Madrid associated with MSM transmission risk group. The existence of subepidemics suggest that several spillovers occurred from Madrid to other areas. CRF02_AG sequences from Hispanics were clustered in a separate subclade suggesting no linkage between the local and Hispanic subepidemics
Co-Design Process of a Virtual Community of Practice for the Empowerment of People with Ischemic Heart Disease
Virtual Communities of Practices (vCoP) offer patients the possibility to interact and share tools and knowledge necessary for their empowerment. This paper describes the co-design process of a vCoP for the empowerment of people with ischemic heart disease (IHD). We used a modified experience-based design approach to co-design the vCoP in collaboration with people with IHD and health professionals consisting of two phases: exploratory and development phase. Data collection techniques included listening labs, workshops, and online participation. Twenty-five people with IHD and ten health professionals participated. Experiences and needs for empowerment in IHD were identified in the exploratory phase allowing for the development of a Patient Journey Map. In the development phase, people with IHD prioritized needs to be addressed by the vCoP content framework in addition to content proposals. The Patient Journey Map helped to easily visualize the empowerment needs of people with IHD and it might be transferable for the development of other people-centred interventions. The co-design process also allowed the development of training materials adapted to the priorities of people with IHD. A people-centred co-design process of a vCoP may facilitate the empowerment of people with IHD
Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a virtual community of practice to improve the empowerment of patients with ischaemic heart disease : study protocol of a randomised controlled trial
Virtual Communities of Practice (VCoP) or knowledge-sharing virtual communities offer ubiquitous access to information and exchange possibilities for people in similar situations, which might be especially valuable for the self-management of patients with chronic diseases. In view of the scarce evidence on the clinical and economic impact of these interventions on chronic conditions, we aim to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a VCoP in the improvement of the activation and other patient empowerment measures in patients with ischaemic heart disease (IHD). A pragmatic randomised controlled trial will be performed in Catalonia, Madrid and Canary Islands, Spain. Two hundred and fifty patients with a recent diagnosis of IHD attending the participating centres will be selected and randomised to the intervention or control group. The intervention group will be offered participation for 12 months in a VCoP based on a gamified web 2.0 platform where there is interaction with other patients and a multidisciplinary professional team. Intervention and control groups will receive usual care. The primary outcome will be measured with the Patient Activation Measure questionnaire at baseline, 6, 12 and 18 months. Secondary outcomes will include: clinical variables; knowledge (Questionnaire of Cardiovascular Risk Factors), attitudes (Self-efficacy Managing Chronic Disease Scale), adherence to the Mediterranean diet (Mediterranean Diet Questionnaire), level of physical activity (International Physical Activity Questionnaire), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire), anxiety (Hospital Anxiety Scale-A), medication adherence (Adherence to Refill Medication Scale), quality of life (EQ-5D-5L) and health resources use. Data will be collected from self-reported questionnaires and electronic medical records. The trial was approved by Clinical Research Ethics Committee of Gregorio Marañón University Hospital in Madrid, Nuestra Señora de Candelaria University Hospital in Santa Cruz de Tenerife and IDIAP Jordi Gol in Barcelona. The results will be disseminated through workshops, policy briefs, peer-reviewed publications, local/international conferences