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    Occupational, academic, and personal determinants of wellbeing and psychological distress in residents: results of a survey in Lyon, France

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    IntroductionThe mental health of residents is a growing significant concern, particularly with respect to hospital and university training conditions. Our goal was to assess the professional, academic, and psychological determinants of the mental health status of all residents of the academy of Lyon, France.Materials and methodsThe Health Barometer of Lyon Subdivision Residents (BASIL) is an initiative which consists in proposing a recurrent online survey to all residents in medicine, pharmacy, and dentistry, belonging to the Lyon subdivision. The first of these surveys was conducted from May to July 2022. Participants should complete a series of validated questionnaires, including the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS), and the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K6), respectively, and ad-hoc questions assessing their global health and hospital and academic working conditions. A Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) analysis was conducted prior to multivariable analyses, to explore the determinants associated with low wellbeing (WEMWBS <43) and high psychological distress (K6 ≥ 13).ResultsA total of 904 residents (response rate: 46.7%) participated in the survey. A low level of wellbeing was observed in 23% of participants, and was significantly associated to job strain (OR = 2.18; 95%CI = [1.32–3.60]), low social support (OR = 3.13; 95%CI = [2.05–4.78]) and the experience of very poor university teaching (OR = 2.51; 95%CI = [1.29–4.91]). A high level of psychological distress was identified for 13% of participants, and associated with low social support (OR = 2.41; 95%CI = [1.48–3.93]) and the experience of very poor university teaching (OR = 2.89, 95%CI = [1.16–7.21]).ConclusionHospital working conditions, social support, and the perception of teaching quality, were three major determinants of wellbeing and psychological distress among health profession residents. Demographic determinants, personal life and lifestyle habits were also associated. This supports a multilevel action in prevention programs aiming to enhance wellbeing and reduce mental distress in this specific population and local organizational specificities

    Origin, causes and effects of increased nitrite concentrations in aquatic environments

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    Literature frequently mentions increased nitrite concentrations along with its inhibitory effect towards bacteria and aquatic life. Nitrite accumulation has been studied for decades, and although numerous causal factors have already been commented on in literature, the mechanism of nitrite accumulation is not always clear. From the broad range of parameters and environmental factors reviewed in this paper, it is obvious that the causes and consequences of nitrite accumulation are not yet completely understood. Among others, pH, dissolved oxygen, volatile fatty acids, phosphate and reactor operation have been found to play a role in nitrite accumulation, which results from differential inhibition or disruption of the linkage of the different steps in both nitrification and denitrification. In the case of nitrification, this differential inhibition could lead to the displacement or unlinking of the ammonia oxidisers and nitrite oxidisers. In this paper, the idea is formulated that the nitrifier population forms a role model for the total microbial community. Increased nitrite concentrations would in this aspect not only signal a disruption of nitrifiers, but possibly also of the total configuration of the microbial community. [KEYWORDS: denitrification, nitrification, nitrite accumulation, nitrite toxicity]
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