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Factors associated with cerebral palsy among children in Hawassa University comprehensive specialized hospital: Case-control study

by Bethelhem Bashe, Desalegn Dawit Assele, Worku Ketema, Mulugeta Sitot Shibeshi

Background

Cerebral palsy is a frequent physical disability of childhood, causing motor impairment, sensory impairment, cognitive and behavioral issues, and secondary musculoskeletal deformities, with a global incidence of 1–4 per 1,000 children. It significantly impacts children’s quality of life and imposes an economic burden on families and healthcare systems. There is limited evidence of the risk factors of cerebral palsy in Ethiopia, including in the study setting. We investigated factors associated with cerebral palsy among children attending Hawassa University Comprehensive Specialized Hospital.

Methods

An institution-based, unmatched case-control study was conducted among children who visited Hawassa University Comprehensive Specialized Hospital from January 2019 to December 2023. Consecutive cases were recruited until the required sample size was reached, and controls were randomly selected. Data were extracted from 80 cases and 160 control charts. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to identify risk factors for cerebral palsy. An adjusted odds ratio with a 95% confidence interval was reported to show the strength of the association. The significance of the association was declared at a p-value  Results

A total of 240 participants (80 cases and 160 controls) were enrolled in the study. Maternal infection during pregnancy [AOR:4.1; 95%; 1.39, 12.1], low birth weight [AOR:4.1; 95%; 1.49, 11.2], prolonged labor [AOR:3.2; 95%;1.47, 7.00], history of perinatal asphyxia [AOR: 2.65; 95%;1.06, 6.65], and central nervous system infection during infancy [AOR:3.4; 95%; 1.21, 9.64] were risk factors for cerebral palsy.

Conclusion

Perinatal asphyxia, maternal infection, low birth weight, prolonged labor, and CNS infection during infancy are significantly associated with cerebral palsy. Public health education should promote awareness about cerebral palsy, encourage antenatal care, and educate healthcare professionals on emergency obstetrics and newborn care. Appropriate measures should be taken to reduce the incidence of CNS infections during infancy.

Development of a work-integrated learning programme for chronic pain physiotherapy in Dutch private practice using co-design methods: description of a journey

Por: van Dijk · H. · Köke · A. · Elbers · S. · van Gessel · C. · de Vries · R. · Zitter · I. · Smeets · R. · Wittink · H.
Background

Physiotherapists recognise the biopsychosocial model as important in treating chronic pain. However, the adoption of this model in Dutch private practice is limited. Participatory action research, including co-design methods and an explicit perspective on workplace learning, may be helpful in developing a work-integrated learning programme to facilitate the use of a biopsychosocial perspective in private practice physiotherapy.

Objective

To give insight into the development of a work-integrated learning programme for private practice physiotherapists in assessing and treating patients with chronic pain from a biopsychosocial perspective.

Methods

An interprofessional development team of designers, developers, educational professionals and researchers engaged in a co-design process together with private practice physiotherapists, experts in chronic pain, patients and other relevant stakeholders. In this design process, the team developed several prototypes and the subsequent work-integrated learning programme during three 2-week design sprints, living-lab tests and validation sessions. All available co-design data were structured and analysed by three researchers, resulting in a plan of requirements as a foundation for the work-integrated learning programme.

Results

The data rendered two specific outcomes: (1) a plan of requirements to be used as an educational foundation for the work-integrated learning programme and (2) several prototypes based on the underlying principles that are used in the development and validation of the work-integrated learning programme.

Conclusions

This study shows how co-design methods can be successfully applied to generate insights and develop interventions that bridge theory and practice for physiotherapists working in private practice. The designed prototypes and subsequent distilled plan of requirements for the development of a work-integrated learning programme offer new opportunities to facilitate the transition to working from a biopsychosocial perspective in private practice physiotherapy.

Trial registration number

RAAK.PUB06.014.

Challenges of using and managing medication: a meta-ethnography of the experiences and perceptions of people with intellectual disability and people who support them

Por: Ghosh · I. · Adams · D. · Auguste · P. · Brown · A. · Chaplin · E. · Flynn · S. · Gauly · J. · Gill · P. · Langdon · P. E. · Mahon · D. · Martin · K. · Patterson · S. · Sutherland · D. · Tromans · S. J. · Chen · Y.-F. · Seers · K. · Supporting Medication use In people with a LEarning d
Objective

To explore the challenges experienced by people with intellectual disability, their carers and health and social care professionals when using and managing medication.

Design

A synthesis of qualitative research using meta-ethnography.

Data source

We searched seven databases: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Science, Social Science and Conference Proceedings Citation Indices (Web of Science), Cochrane Library, PsycINFO and Proquest Dissertations and Theses from inception to September 2022 (updated in July 2023).

Eligibility criteria for selecting studies

We included studies exploring the challenges and perceptions of people with intellectual disability, their carers and health and social care professionals regarding medication management and use.

Results

We reviewed 7593 abstracts and 475 full texts, resulting in 45 included papers. Four major themes were identified: (1) Medication-related issues, (2) navigating autonomy and relationships, (3) knowledge and training needs and (4) inequalities in the healthcare system. We formulated a conceptual framework centred around people with intellectual disability and described the interconnectedness between them, their carers and health and social care professionals in the process of managing and using medication. We identified challenges that could be associated with the person, the medication and/or the context, along with a lack of understanding of these challenges and a lack of capability or resources to tackle them. We developed an overarching concept of ‘collective collaboration’ as a potential solution to prevent or mitigate problems related to medication use in people with intellectual disability.

Conclusions

The effective management of medication for people with intellectual disability requires a collaborative and holistic approach. By fostering person-centred care and shared decision-making, providing educational and practical support, and nurturing strong relationships between all partners involved to form a collective collaboration surrounding people with intellectual disability, improved medication adherence and optimised therapeutic outcomes can be achieved.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD42022362903.

Development of intersectoral medical care for patients with 'chronic critical illness: protocol for a telemedicine interventional study with a pre-post design in out-of-hospital intensive care facilities (E=MC{superscript 2})

Por: Edel · A. · Jöbges · S. · Weiss · B. · Paul · N. · Lyall · M. L. · Hoffmann · C. · Schüürhuis · S. · Piper · S. K. K. · Konietschke · F. · Berger · E. · Busse · R. · Marschall · U. · Kraufmann · B. · Witzenrath · M. · Eckardt · K.-U. · Spies · C.
Introduction

Patients receiving long-term ventilation (LTV) in out-of-hospital intensive care facilities often suffer from persistent impairments of their cognition, mental health and physical health, limiting their social participation. Chronically ill patients are often unable to express their care preferences. Thus, their medical care often lacks integration of patients’ wishes and values. Telemedicine may be used to collect patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) from these patients to align medical care with their preferences. Early integration of teleconsultation to provide rapid support for specific patient symptoms can reduce economic costs.

Method and analysis

This is a multicentre, prospective, non-blinded, single-arm interventional trial with a pre-post design and follows the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials statement. 10 out-of-hospital intensive care facilities in Berlin and Brandenburg, Germany, are grouped into three clusters. The study population includes adult patients (≥18 years) receiving LTV and residing in participating care facilities. During the preintervention phase, standard patient care remains unchanged. From the start of the intervention phase, enrolled patients receive telemedicine rounds in addition to standard care. These telemedicine rounds, conducted at least weekly, involve on-site healthcare professionals, patients and their relatives. Data are collected at predefined time points—study months 1,3, 9, 15 and 21—with a target of 57 participants at each time point. The study aims to evaluate whether a structured telemedicine intervention (1) increases the proportion of patients receiving record-documented PROMs in routine care and (2) reduces hospital readmissions. Secondary outcomes include the evaluation of post-intensive care syndrome, healthcare costs and the usability, applicability and perceived benefits of telemedicine. Additionally, qualitative interviews with patients, their relatives and healthcare professionals will explore individual experiences with chronic critical illness, the perceived quality of life of the patients and how team members manage moral distress in caregiving contexts. A mixed-effects logistic regression model will be used to analyse patients’ access to PROMs, while a mixed-effects Poisson regression model will be employed to evaluate hospital readmission rates. The findings may provide valuable insights into how telemedicine can improve patient-centred care for this particular patient group.

Ethics and dissemination

This study protocol received approval from the Ethics Committee of Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany (EA2/136/22). The findings will be disseminated through publication in a peer-reviewed scientific journal and presented at international conferences.

Trial registration number

This study was registered in the ‘German Register of Clinical Studies’ (DRKS; DRKS00029326).

Personalised Exercise Rehabilitation FOR people with Multiple long-term conditions (PERFORM): findings from a process evaluation of a randomised feasibility study

Por: Brown · S. E. · Simpson · S. A. A. · Greaves · C. · Daw · P. · Dean · S. G. · Evans · R. A. · Withers · T. M. · Ahmed · Z. · Barber · S. · Barwell · G. · Doherty · P. J. · Gardiner · N. · Ibbotson · T. · Jani · B. · Jolly · K. · Mair · F. · Manifield · J. R. · McIntosh · E. · Miller · D. · O
Objective

The number of people living with multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs or ‘multimorbidity’) is growing. Evidence indicates that exercise-based rehabilitation can improve health-related quality of life and reduce hospital admissions for a number of single long-term conditions. However, it is increasingly recognised that such condition-focused rehabilitation programmes do not meet the needs of people living with MLTCs. The aims for this study were to (1) evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of the newly developed Personalised Exercise Rehabilitation FOR people with Multiple long-term conditions (PERFORM) intervention; (2) assess the feasibility of study methods to inform progression to a definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT) and (3) refine our intervention programme theory.

Design

Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with patients receiving and healthcare practitioners delivering the PERFORM intervention, to seek their experiences of the intervention and taking part in the study. Interviews were analysed thematically, informed by Normalisation Process Theory and the programme theory.

Setting

Three UK sites (two acute hospital settings, one community-based healthcare setting).

Participants

18 of the 60 PERFORM participants and 6 healthcare professionals were interviewed.

Intervention

The intervention consisted of 8 weeks of supervised group-based exercise rehabilitation and structured self-care symptom-based support.

Results

All participants and staff interviewed found PERFORM useful for physical and mental well-being and noted positive impacts of participation, although some specific modifications to the intervention delivery and training and study methods were identified. Scheduling, staffing and space limitations were barriers that must be considered for future evaluation and implementation. Key intervention mechanisms identified were social support, patient education, building routines and habits, as well as support from healthcare professionals.

Conclusions

We found the PERFORM intervention to be acceptable and feasible, with the potential to improve the health and well-being of people with MLTCs. The findings of the process evaluation inform the future delivery of the PERFORM intervention and the design of our planned full RCT. A definitive trial is needed to assess the clinical and cost-effectiveness.

Trial registration number

ISRCTN68786622.

Developing an approach to enhance recruitment for a cluster-randomised implementation trial: leveraging deliberative participation and credible messengers

Por: Vaughn · V. M. · Horowitz · J. · Gandhi · T. · Neetz · R. A. · Petty · L. · Hersh · A. · Lindenauer · P. · Bernstein · S. J. · Flanders · S. A. · Harrison · J. D. · Smith · J. D. · White · A. T. · Szymczak · J. E.
Objectives

To evaluate an innovative approach to recruit 40 hospitals to a cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) to improve discharge antibiotic prescribing.

Design

This study describes the design, implementation and impact of a theory-informed recruitment approach for hospitals participating in the Reducing Overuse of Antibiotics at Discharge (ROAD) Home trial.

Setting

An inperson meeting of a quality improvement collaborative of acute care hospitals in the state of Michigan.

Participants

Representatives from acute care hospitals that are part of the Michigan Hospital Medicine Safety Consortium.

Interventions

Small group recruitment sessions that combined deliberative participation and credible messengers to recruit hospitals to participate in a cluster RCT on a single date (1 November 2023).

Primary and secondary outcomes

The primary outcome was the number of hospitals which agreed to participate in the trial. We also assessed participant feedback, effectiveness of recruitment methods and resources required for implementation of this approach.

Results

We recruited 51 (74%) of 69 eligible hospitals. Survey participants reported: sessions made clear the purpose of the trial (94%, 64/68) and time commitment required (87%, 59/68); agreed deliberative participation was helpful (82%, 56/68) and were ‘very satisfied’ with the session (82%, 56/68). Investigators largely reported credible messengers were a positive influence, though this varied across sessions. Hospital recruitment was time intensive, taking 179.5 total person hours. The recruitment process involved 3 months of preparation for the sessions and 2 months of follow-up prior to closing recruitment.

Conclusions

We demonstrated the feasibility and impact of a novel approach to recruit hospitals from an existing collaborative to a cluster RCT using the principles of deliberative participation and credible messengers. While the approach was time-consuming, we achieved success at over-recruiting hospitals in a relatively short period of time. Strategies presented here may assist future trial organisers in implementing hospital-based cluster RCTs.

Trial registration number

The ROAD Home trial is registered on Clinical.Trials.gov (NCT06106204).

Ages of sitting and walking milestone attainment in typically developing children worldwide: protocol for a scoping review

Por: Wickstrom · J. · Choudhry · I. · Leone · E. J. · Piergies · A. M. H. · Das · T. · Chenowith · A. · Hehn · A. · Friedman · E. B. · Livinski · A. A. · Silfen · K. · Shad · A. · Iverson · J. M. · Thurm · A.
Introduction

Ages of attainment for early gross motor milestones have been widely studied, but definitions and measurement methods have varied greatly. Since delays in motor milestones have been used extensively as one of the earliest indicators of atypical development, it is imperative to establish a universal understanding of the methods and results reported on motor milestones in typically developing children. Therefore, the primary aim of this scoping review is to provide an overview of recent studies reporting ages of onset for independent sitting and walking in typically developing children worldwide; this will be achieved by summarising how these milestones have been operationalised and evaluated, the samples from whom these data have been drawn, and the reported ages of acquisition.

Methods and analysis

To meet inclusion criteria, articles must: be original research papers published in any language since 2003, contain a sample of typically developing children and report actual ages of onset for independent sitting and/or walking. To conduct this scoping review, the Joanna Briggs Institute methodological framework will be used. Search terms will include variations of the following concepts: acquisition of motor milestone (independent sitting and/or walking), age of onset, infancy. Six databases (CINAHL Plus, Embase, PsycNet: PsycINFO & PsycArticles, PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science: Core Collection) will be searched. Records from these databases will be screened for eligibility. Two people will independently review each record during title and abstract screening, and three people will independently screen full texts and extract data. Results will be displayed in tables, graphs and narrative summaries in the scoping review.

Ethics and dissemination

As the review will only include previously published data, ethics approval is not required. Findings will be shared at scientific conferences and in a peer-reviewed journal.

How can cities accelerate, support and evaluate actions for active movement for health: protocol for CITY-MOVE, a multicase implementation research study in six cities in three continents

Por: van Olmen · J. · Thornton · L. · Ndejjo · R. · Lowry · R. · Wouters · E. · Correa Senior · J. C. · Negrin Marques · T. H. · Walker · J. · Oldenhof · L. · Bastiaens · H. · Klemenc Ketis · Z. · De Witte · C. · Exel · J. v. · on behalf of CITY-MOVE Consortium · Garzon · Manyahuillca
Introduction

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are a leading cause of global mortality, disproportionately affecting low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Physical inactivity, a key contributor to NCDs, is prevalent worldwide despite evidence supporting the health benefits of physical activity (PA). Cities, while often associated with barriers to PA, also present unique opportunities to enhance PA through systemic, context-sensitive interventions or so-called actions. However, evidence on effective city-level PA strategies, particularly in LMICs, remains limited. The CITY based interventions to stimulate active MOVEment for health (CITY-MOVE) project aims to accelerate, support and evaluate the implementation of PA actions at the city level by adapting the WHO Global Action Plan on Physical Activity into locally relevant strategies across six cities worldwide, accompanied by a cross-contextual evaluation framework to ensure transferability and scalability.

Methods and analysis

This multicase study examines 13 PA actions in six cities (Bogotá, Lima, Kampala, Antwerp, Rotterdam and Ljubljana) across three continents, addressing both early (design and implementation) and late (evaluation) action stages. Early-stage actions employ action research in Living Labs to codesign and implement PA initiatives with local stakeholders, while late-stage interventions focus on retrospective evaluations of implementation outcomes. The framework integrates the Medical Research Council guidance on complex interventions with the Context and Implementation of Complex Interventions. Mixed methods are employed, including document review, interviews, participatory workshops and quantitative analysis of PA and NCD indicators. A cross-contextual Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) framework will synthesise findings to inform scalability and transferability of actions.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethics approvals were obtained from local review boards in the participating cities.

Dissemination will occur at three levels: local, regional and global. Locally, findings will be shared with city authorities, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and healthcare providers through Living Labs and policy dialogues. At the regional level, knowledge will be spread across cities in Europe, Latin America and East Africa through Communities of Practice and the use of tools like the MCDA framework. Globally, the project will contribute to the scientific community and international organisations such as the WHO and UN-Habitat, by sharing results through open access publications, conferences and global networks to ensure widespread dissemination and sustainability of the project’s impacts.

Registration details

This study and its outcomes are publicly accessible on OSF (https://osf.io/mn8zd/) and ZENODO (https://zenodo.org/communities/citymove/).

Emergency physicians experiences managing patients with a suspected cancer diagnosis in Ontario, Canada: a qualitative study

Por: Moore · C. · Petrovic · B. · Bender · J. L. · Thompson · C. · McLeod · S. L. · Savage · D. · Borgundvaag · B. · Ovens · H. · Irish · J. · Eskander · A. · Cheskes · S. · Krzyzanowska · M. · de Wit · K. · Mohindra · R. · Thiruganasambandamoorthy · V. · Grewal · K.
Objective

The emergency department (ED) often serves as a crucial pathway for cancer diagnosis. However, little is known about the management of patients with new suspected cancer diagnoses in the ED. The objective of this study was to explore emergency physicians’ experiences in managing patients with a newly suspected cancer diagnosis in the ED.

Design

Between January and April 2024, we conducted a qualitative descriptive study. Interviews were conducted by trained research personnel using a semistructured interview guide. Interviews were conducted until thematic saturation was achieved. The interview transcripts were coded and thematic analysis was used to uncover key themes.

Setting and participants

Emergency physicians practising in Ontario, Canada.

Results

20 emergency physicians were interviewed. Four themes around the management of patients with new suspected cancer diagnoses in the ED were identified: (1) healthcare system-level factors that impact suspected cancer diagnosis through the ED, (2) institutional and provider-level challenges associated with managing patients with a suspected cancer diagnosis in the ED, (3) patient-level characteristics and experiences of receiving a cancer diagnosis in the ED and (4) the need for care coordination for patients with suspected cancer in the ED.

Conclusions

Physicians experienced several unique challenges in managing patients with a suspected cancer diagnosis in the ED. Overall, the findings of this study suggest these challenges often make the ED a difficult environment in which to deliver a suspected cancer diagnosis.

Clinical decision-making and care pathways for people with multiple long-term conditions admitted to hospital: a scoping review

Por: Howe · N. L. · Blackburn · E.-R. · Sheppard · A. · Pretorius · S. · Suklan · J. · Bellass · S. · Cooper · R. · Gallier · S. · Sapey · E. · Sayer · A. A. P. · Witham · M.
Objectives

People living with multiple long-term conditions (MLTC) admitted to hospital have worse outcomes and report lower satisfaction with care. Understanding how people living with MLTC admitted to the hospital are cared for is a key step in redesigning systems to better meet their needs. This scoping review aimed to identify existing evidence regarding clinical decision-making and care pathways for people with MLTC admitted to the hospital. In addition, we described research methods used to investigate hospital care for people living with MLTC.

Design

A scoping review methodological framework formed the basis of this review. We took a narrative approach to describe our study findings.

Data sources

A search of Medline, Embase and PsycInfo electronic databases in July 2024 captured relevant literature published from 1996 to 2024.

Eligibility criteria

Studies that explored care pathways and clinical decision-making for people living with MLTC or co-morbidities, studies conducted fully or primarily in secondary or tertiary care published in English Language and with full text available.

Data extraction and synthesis

Titles and abstracts were independently screened by two authors. Extracted data included country of origin, aims, study design, any use of an analytical framework or design, type of analyses performed, setting, participant group, number of participants included, health condition(s) studied and main findings. Included studies were categorised as either: studies reviewing existing literature, studies reviewing guidance, studies utilising qualitative methods or ‘other’.

Results

A total of 521 articles were screened, 17 of which met the inclusion criteria. We identified a range of investigative methods. Eight studies used qualitative methods (interviews or focus groups), four were guideline reviews, four were literature reviews and one was classified as ‘other’. Often, researchers choose to combine methods, gathering evidence both empirically and from reviews of existing evidence or guidelines. However, none of the empirical qualitative studies directly or solely investigated clinical decision-making when treating people living with MLTC in acute care and the emergency department. Studies identified complexities in care for people living with MLTC, and some authors attempted to make their own recommendations or draft their own guidance to counter these.

Conclusions

This scoping review highlights the limitations of the current evidence base, which, while diverse in methods, provides sparse insights into clinical decision-making and care pathways for people living with MLTC admitted to hospital. Further research is recommended, including reviews of guidelines and gathering insights from both healthcare professionals and people living with MLTC.

Breakfast consumption patterns and associated factors among adolescent high-school students in Tullo District, Eastern Ethiopia

by Natnael Teferi, Tara Wilfong, Dawit Firdisa, Samrawit Berihun, Behailu Hawulte

Background

There is growing proof to recommend eating breakfast has positive health and school-related outcomes for adolescents, including improved performance, attention, brain development, and physical growth. However, there is a dearth of evidence on the comprehensive understanding of breakfast consumption patterns and associated factors. Therefore, this study aimed to assess breakfast consumption patterns and their associated factors among adolescent high school students in the Tullo district, Eastern Ethiopia.

Methods

An institution-based cross-sectional study design was conducted among 405 randomly selected adolescent high school students in the Tullo District, Eastern Ethiopia, from October 09–29, 2023. A self-administered questionnaire was utilized to collect the data. Epidata version 4.6 and SPSS Statistics version 27.0.1 were used for data entry and analysis, respectively. Both bivariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to identify the factors associated with breakfast consumption patterns. An adjusted odds ratio (AOR) with a 95% confidence interval (CI) was calculated to determine the strength of the association, and a p-value of 0.05 was used to determine statistical significance.

Result

Nearly half, 46.2% (95% CI: 41.5, 51.4), of participants had irregular breakfast consumption (skipped). Being female (AOR = 5.28; 95% CI: 2.69, 10.36), family size of >5 (AOR = 4.76; 95% CI: 2.41, 9.36), being a rural resident (AOR = 3.34; 95% CI: 1.78, 6.25), no formal maternal education (AOR = 3.89; 95% CI: 2.09, 7.22), chewing khat (AOR = 3.13; 95% CI: 1.59, 6.16), cigarette smoking (AOR = 3.06; 95% CI: 1.02, 9.17), and eating disorders (AOR = 6.54; 95% CI: 2.19, 19.43) were significantly associated with irregular breakfast consumption patterns among adolescents.

Conclusion

The findings of this study showed that the prevalence of irregular breakfast consumption (breakfast skipping) among adolescent high school students was high. Being female, rural residency, no formal maternal education, current smoking of cigarettes, current khat chewing, and eating disorders were identified as factors associated with breakfast consumption patterns. Given that almost half of adolescents in Tullo District skip breakfast, several modifiable factors associated with this practice, focused interventions are essential.

Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Informal Carer Experiences of Older Adult Care Transitions From Hospital to Home: A Scoping Review

ABSTRACT

Aim

To review the evidence on the experiences and perceptions of culturally and linguistically diverse informal carers supporting older adults during transitions from hospital to home, including their interactions with transitional care interventions.

Design

Scoping review guided by Arksey and O'Malley's framework.

Data Sources

We searched CINAHL, MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, AMED, PsycINFO, Global Health, Social Work Abstracts, JBI EBP, Scopus, Web of Science Core Collection, ProQuest and Informit for studies published between January 2010 and November 2024.

Methods

Two reviewers independently screened studies and extracted data. Analysis followed the Patterns, Advances, Gaps, Evidence for Practice and Research recommendations framework.

Results

Seventeen studies involving 1275 carers were included. Carer experiences were summarised into four themes: (1) cultural and communication barriers; (2) role ambiguity and practical challenges; (3) limited involvement in discharge planning and (4) barriers to accessing support and services. Perceptions of transitional care interventions were mixed. While some interventions improved carer preparedness and reduced stress, most lacked cultural tailoring and did not address carers' psychosocial and communication needs.

Conclusion

Culturally and linguistically diverse informal carers face challenges navigating transitional care. While involving them in care planning improves outcomes, implementation remains inconsistent. Emotional support and culturally tailored services are insufficient.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

There is a need for culturally and linguistically tailored transitional care programmes that prioritise carer education and communication support. Key areas for improvement include: (1) health literacy and system navigation; (2) involvement in care planning; (3) communication with providers; (4) psychosocial and emotional support and (5) culturally appropriate services. Future research should explore the unique emotional and psychosocial needs of these carers to inform targeted support strategies.

Reporting Method

This review follows the PRISMA guideline for reporting.

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient or public contribution.

Inhalational nitrous oxide as a transdiagnostic approach for the treatment of suicidal ideation and suicidality in psychiatric inpatients: protocol for a double-blind randomised, controlled clinical single-centre trial

Por: Kronenberg · G. · Bankwitz · A. · Provaznikova · B. · Müller · M. · Quednow · B. B. · Seifritz · E. · Olbrich · S.
Introduction

Suicidal thoughts and behaviours are linked to a wide range of mental health conditions. New interest in the psychiatric benefits of nitrous oxide (N2O) has only recently emerged. The broad pharmacological effects of N2O are thought to be due in large part to N-methyl-d-aspartate antagonism and opioid effects. The purpose of this study protocol is to test whether inhalational N2O exerts rapid antisuicidal effects as a transdiagnostic treatment for suicidal ideation.

Methods and analysis

This is the protocol of a single-centre pilot study of N2O inhalation in 85 psychiatric inpatients. The initial 45-min double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled inhalation session either consists of 50% N2O and 50% oxygen (‘active treatment’) or 50% oxygen plus air. The primary outcome is the change in Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation scores between the day before and the day after inhalation. A second inhalation containing N2O will be administered 1 week after the first inhalation to ensure that all study participants receive the active treatment at least once. For the mechanism of action and prediction, a nested biomarker substudy will employ multimodal techniques, including analysis of hair and blood samples and electroencephalography.

Ethics and dissemination

This study was approved by the local ethics committee (‘Kantonale Ethikkommission—Kanton Zürich’) and by the Swiss Agency for Therapeutic Products (Swissmedic). Study results will be disseminated primarily by peer-reviewed scientific journals and also by conference presentations, patient and public events and social media.

Trial registration number

ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT06636357.

Genicular nerve radiofrequency ablation, phenol neurolysis or conservative medical management in patients with knee osteoarthritis: protocol for the RADIOPHENOL randomised controlled multicentre trial with three parallel groups

Por: Wit · P. R. d. · Beek · R. v. · Schokker · M. · Wensing · C. · Hollmann · M. W. · Kallewaard · J.-W. · Oei · G. · RADIOPHENOL collaborators · Collaborative group name · Kampen · Elzinga · Hendriks · de Heiden · Godfried · Haumann · Thiel · Coumou
Introduction

Guidelines for symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (OA) dictate the initiation of conservative treatment (physical therapy, analgesics and intra-articular injections with corticosteroids) as a first line defence. When conservative treatment fails, the golden standard is invasive joint replacement surgery, but for a substantial group of patients who do not respond to the current conservative treatment, this is not (yet) indicated. The RADIOPHENOL study investigates if denervation of knee sensory (genicular) nerves can serve the gap between conservative and invasive treatment for younger patients and for patients who cannot undergo joint replacement surgery due to comorbid health conditions.

Methods and analysis

The RADIOPHENOL study is a multicentre unblinded randomised controlled trial with three parallel arms (1:1:1). In total, 192 patients with knee OA Kellgren-Lawrence grades 2–4 but not eligible for joint replacement according to the orthopaedic surgeon due to young age, old age and/or comorbidity or technical reasons are eligible and will be randomised to three groups of 64 patients. Group A: traditional radiofrequency ablation, group B: chemical neurolysis with phenol, group C: conservative medical management. Primary outcome is the Oxford Knee Score at 6 months. Secondary outcomes include Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, knee pain by numeric rating scale, physical functionality, health-related quality of life, mental health, change in medication use, predictive value of a diagnostic block, procedure time, patient discomfort score during the intervention and adverse events.

Ethics and dissemination

The protocol (V.2.0, 15 May 2023), was approved by the Ethics Committee of Amsterdam UMC (NL83410.018.22 – METC2022.0890) on 31 July 2023. We aim to publish our results in international peer-reviewed journals.

Trial registration details

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06094660, including the WHO Trial Registration data set items. Registered on 20 October 2023, first patient enrolled on 27 November 2023.

Patient-Reported Experience Measures in Vascular Surgery Enhancement (PREMIERE) study: protocol for a mixed-methods study to develop and validate a vascular surgery-specific patient-reported experience measure

Por: Darwish · M. · Palmer · R. · Coulson · J. · Bosanquet · D. C. · Withers · K.
Introduction

Patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) capture patients’ healthcare journey experiences. No validated PREMs are specific to vascular surgery patients. This study aims to develop and validate a vascular surgery-specific PREM to assess patient experience and satisfaction.

Methods and analysis

Patient Reported Experience Measures In Vascular Surgery Enhancement Study is a two-phase multisite sequential mixed-methods study. The qualitative phase will develop a draft PREM; the quantitative phase will validate it. The study will be conducted across three major vascular units in Wales. Up to 40 patients and healthcare professionals will participate in the qualitative phase. Approximately 150–200 patients will be recruited for the quantitative validation. Inclusion criteria are: (1) age ≥18; (2) recent vascular procedure; (3) inpatient vascular care; (4) not cognitively impaired; (5) consent to participate and (6) English or Welsh proficiency. Primary outcomes will be construct validity and reliability. Secondary outcomes will include patient engagement, healthcare provider perspectives and health system impacts. Thematic analysis will be conducted using NVivo. Psychometric validation will include item analysis, internal consistency testing and factor analysis.

Ethics and dissemination

The study was approved by the London—Camberwell St Giles Research Ethics Committee, coordinated by the Health Research Authority and Health and Care Research Wales (REC reference: 24/PR/0522).

Trial registration number

NCT06363175.

Cross-sectional study of the association between diet and physical inactivity with obesity, diabetes and hypertension among older adults in Sierra Leone

Por: Bockarie · T. · Shanker · A. · Jalloh · M. B. · Kamara · A. M. · Odland · M. L. · Wurie · H. · Ansumana · R. · Lamin · J. · Witham · M. · Oyebode · O. · Davies · J.
Objective

To examine the association between behavioural risk factors and their physiological sequelae among adults aged 40 and above in Bo District, Sierra Leone.

Design

Cross-sectional study.

Setting

Household survey in Bo District, Sierra Leone.

Participants

The study included 1978 randomly sampled adults aged 40 and above (44.4% male and 55.6% female). The majority of participants were aged 40–49 years (34.5%). Data were collected using a household survey based on the validated WHO STEPs questionnaire.

Methods

Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to determine associations between behavioural risk factors (diet, physical activity and salt intake) and the presence of hypertension, diabetes and/or obesity, adjusting for sociodemographic variables.

Primary outcome measure

The primary outcomes were the presence of hypertension, diabetes or overweight/obesity. Hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure of ≥140 mm Hg and/or diastolic blood pressure of ≥90 (measured); diabetes as fasting glucose of ≥7.0 mmol/L, random plasma glucose level of ≥11.1 mmol/L or the use of antidiabetic medications (self-reported) and overweight/obesity as having a body mass index of ≥25 kg/m² (measured).

Results

At least one physiological risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, that is, hypertension, obesity or diabetes, was present in 43.5% of participants. Hypertension was associated with urban living (OR=1.46, 95% CI (1.41 to 1.51)), older age (OR for 80+=3.98, 95% CI (3.70 to 4.28)), insufficient fruit and vegetable intake (OR=1.52, 95% CI (1.46 to 1.60)) and low physical activity (OR=1.35, 95% CI (1.27 to 1.43)). Diabetes was associated with urban residence (OR=1.84, 95% CI (1.66 to 2.05)), older age (OR for 70–79=3.82, 95% CI (3.28 to 4.45)), low fruit and vegetable consumption (OR=1.61, 95% CI (1.36 to 1.90)), high salt intake (OR=1.34, 95% CI (1.21 to 1.49)) and low physical activity (OR=1.47, 95% CI (1.26 to 1.71)). Obesity was associated with urban living (OR=1.66, 95% CI (1.59 to 1.72)), high salt intake from two or more sources (OR=1.21, 95% CI (1.17 to 1.25)) and low physical activity (OR=1.30, 95% CI (1.22 to 1.39)). Male sex (OR=0.37, 95% CI (0.36 to 0.38)) and older age (OR for 80+=0.39, 95% CI (0.35 to 0.43)) were protective factors.

Conclusions

In Bo District, nearly half of adults over 40 face hypertension, diabetes or obesity, especially urban dwellers, older age groups and those eating too few fruits and vegetables, consuming excess salt and getting little exercise. Public health efforts should focus on urban-targeted nutrition education, salt-reduction strategies, community exercise programmes and routine blood pressure and glucose screening, working with local leaders to ensure sustainable lifestyle changes and early disease detection.

Developing and integrating a destination decision support algorithm into an innovative electronic communication platform to improve injury care service coordination in Rwanda: the Rwanda912 study protocol

Introduction

Delays in getting injured patients to the hospital in a timely manner can increase avoidable death and disability. Like many low-income or middle-income countries, Rwanda experiences delays related to a lack of efficient prehospital communication and formal guidelines to triage patients for hospital care. This study describes the protocol to develop, roll-out and evaluate the effectiveness of a destination decision support algorithm (DDSA) integrated in an electronic communication platform, ‘912Rwanda’. The DDSA will facilitate the linkage of patients to health facilities able to treat their condition(s).

Methods and analysis

Work will be conducted in the prehospital emergency service ‘Service d'Aide Médicale Urgente’ and health facilities in Kigali city and Musanze district, which serve predominantly urban and rural populations, respectively. We will develop interfaces to capture facility and patient-relevant data, which feed into a guideline-based electronic DDSA to match patients to hospitals. We will assess existing trauma care processes using qualitative and quantitative methodologies. This will be followed by a series of consensus workshops to develop at-scene triage guidelines and agree on variables to capture in the interfaces. The DDSA will be developed based on outputs from these workshops and will be tested against historical ambulance data and expert opinion until acceptable thresholds of performance are achieved. User interfaces will be developed and tested using human–computer interface design principles.

Discussion

The combined collaborative approach of bringing together experts and software developers, and with deep engagement of Rwandan stakeholders, including leadership of Rwanda Ministry of Health through its technical arm, Rwanda Biomedical Center, should lead to an ambulance communication system which is used, sustained and effective.

Ethics and dissemination

The project was approved by the Rwanda National Research Ethics Committee. Annual reports will be disseminated to relevant stakeholders, followed by the public. Publications will be open access as per the funding policy.

Trial registration number

ISRCTN97674565. Registered on 29 July 2024. https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN97674565.

Multicomponent intervention for controlling hypertension in the adult rural population of Pakistan: a protocol for a hybrid type III implementation-effectiveness cluster randomised controlled trial

Por: Naeem · I. · Almas · A. · Sheikh · A. · Hewitt · C. · Khwaja · H. · Afaq · S. · Bukhari · S. · Soofi · S. · S Virani · S. · Hanif · S. · Hashmi · S. · Walker · S. · Bhutta · Z. A. · Siddiqi · K. · Samad · Z.
Introduction

Though prior trials have shown the effectiveness of community-based hypertension detection and care delivery models, their adoption and translation to practice has been slow. In this study, we will develop and test strategies for the implementation and scale-up of a proven multicomponent hypertension intervention (MCHI) in Pakistan that comprises health education, blood pressure (BP) monitoring and referrals by lady health workers (LHWs) and hypertension management by physicians in primary care settings.

Methods and analysis

In this 24-month hybrid type III implementation-effectiveness cluster-randomised controlled trial, we will recruit 3000 adult hypertensive patients from two rural districts of Pakistan. We will engage public health sector managers, physicians and LHWs and use the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research to identify barriers and facilitators to the implementation of an already proven-to-be-effective MCHI. Using Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change and the modified Delphi technique, a set of implementation strategies addressing barriers will be identified. The strategies will be categorised as level 1 (requiring a change in processes), level 2 (requiring a change in infrastructure) and level 3 (financial restructuring). Basic health units and 250–300 households from their catchment will be considered as clusters. Clusters will be randomised in a ratio of 1:1 to intervention and control. While MCHI will be offered in both trial arms (intervention and control), the aforementioned implementation strategies will be randomised to the intervention arm only, starting with level 1 and moving to levels 2 and 3 as needed. Baseline and 6-monthly follow-up surveys, each of 6 months duration, will be conducted to collect data from the recruited participants on sociodemographics, cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors, CVD-related expenses and quality of life. The primary outcome will be the mean difference in BP-lowering medications per participant between the intervention and control arms. The primary outcome will be analysed using a linear mixed model with fixed effects for baseline value of the outcome. Additional outcomes include implementation outcomes: proportion of LHWs conducting health education, BP screening and monitoring, facility referrals and proportion of physicians diagnosing and treating hypertensive patients; effectiveness outcomes: proportion of participants with controlled BP and improved EQ-5D-5L score.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethical approval has been obtained from the Ethics Review Committee of Aga Khan University Pakistan (ERC # 2023-9084-26739). Findings will be reported to: (1) study participants; (2) funding body and institutes collaborating and supporting the study; (3) provincial and district health departments to inform policy; (4) presented at local, national and international conferences and (5) disseminated by peer-review publications

Trial registration number

NCT06726057.

Application of video surveillance in preclinical safety studies in canines: Understanding the interobserver reliability and validity to recognize clinical behavior

by Eline Eberhardt, Fetene Tekle, Greet Teuns, Jill Witters, Bianca Feyen, Sarah De Landtsheer, Ivan Kopljar

Preclinical in vivo studies are critical to identify potential adverse effects of drugs under development. However, a significant number of drug candidates are terminated during human clinical trials due to unexpected adverse events which were not predicted or detected in preclinical studies. Video surveillance can be a valuable tool to reduce the risk of missing and/or misclassifying adverse clinical observations (COs) in animals. To explore the applicability of detecting COs on video, the agreement between observers (reliability) and agreement between observers and experts (construct validity) of 13 important COs was evaluated. The reliability was investigated by evaluating the interobserver agreement between 23 observers with different experience levels and primary roles on defined COs and normal behavior, recorded on video during preclinical studies in canines. The validity was investigated by comparing the observers’ assessments to the ground truth confirmed by three experts. This investigation showed a substantial reliability and validity of the observers’ assessments without significant differences between experience levels or primary roles. Normal behavior was challenging to recognize (56% correct), while half of the COs appeared straightforward to identify with a validity of ≥ 90%: salivation, aggressiveness, circling, vomiting, head shaking and convulsions. Other COs were more challenging to detect with lowest scores for limb stiff/hypertonia, tremors and excitation. Regardless of experience-level, observers missed very few COs. This investigation showed the complexity when multiple COs occurred simultaneously, as well as the limitations of differentiating between visually similar COs (tremors vs. twitches; limping vs. limb stiff) on video without the possibility of in-person observation. Given the substantial overall reliability and validity, it is concluded that clinical canine behavior can be accurately detected on video by trained observers. This permits more objective and quantifiable monitoring of animal behavior and application of computer vision for future automatic monitoring of canine studies.

A Scoping Review on the Development, Implementation, and Evaluation of Nurse Well‐Being Initiatives in Academic Health Systems

ABSTRACT

Background

Nursing well-being is foundational to the specialties workforce and broader healthcare industry worldwide. Despite frequent reports and descriptions of activities that support nurses' well-being, most reports describe singular activities and programs that lack science-based structures contextualized within academic healthcare systems (AHS) with validated impact.

Aims

To evaluate and synthesize the existing national and international literature on nurse well-being initiatives offered in AHS.

Methods

Over 18 months, an 8-member interprofessional team conducted a scoping review adhering to PRISMA-ScR reporting guidelines. Five databases were searched, and results were screened in a multistep process by researcher pairs. Discrepancies were resolved by a third team member's review. Citations were reviewed uniquely three times to ensure methodological rigor. A final set of 54 articles was extracted for key data elements pertinent to the research question describing setting, population, study design, intervention, and other subsidiary fields. Reviewers additionally analyzed publication quality indicators and trends for additional implications for research and practice.

Results

Among the 54 eligible articles, 72% were research and 28% were evidence-based practice, quality improvement, or doctoral dissertations. The concepts studied were psychosocial (e.g., resiliency) and physical (e.g., sleep). The number of instruments used per study ranged from 1 to 11. Thirty percent of studies utilized a framework from various disciplines that included nursing, social and behavioral sciences, and safety science principles. Nurses were included as authors 67% of the time, and 35% received funding from either the public or private sector.

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