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☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Understanding the complexity of living with, and managing, secretions in motor neuron disease/amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (MND/ALS/ALS): protocol for a complex intervention systematic review

Por: Barry · C. · Farquhar · M. · Hawkes · M. · Massey · C. · Cross · J. L. — Octubre 10th 2025 at 11:24
Introduction

Motor neuron disease/amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (MND/ALS/ALS) is an incurable disease which leads to muscle weakness that worsens over time. MND/ALS is highly heterogeneous in its presentation, with many people experiencing a rapidly progressive trajectory of symptoms. Many people living with MND/ALS (plwMND/ALS) experience a combination of flaccidity and spasticity of the muscles involved in speech, swallowing, breathing and coughing. This makes it challenging to deal with the saliva and mucous (‘secretions") produced by the body. Failure to manage these problems effectively can lead to accumulation and aspiration of secretions, which may cause pneumonia and respiratory insufficiency. Knowing the best way to treat this problem is a challenge. Systematic reviews report substantive ongoing uncertainty regarding secretions management (SM). Little is known about the comparative effectiveness of secretion management interventions, their impact on quality of life and acceptability for plwMND/ALS and their unpaid/family.

Methods and analysis

A complex intervention systematic review of SM for plwMND/ALS and/or their carers will be conducted using an iterative logic model approach, designed in accordance with the principles and guidance laid out in a series of articles published by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality on complex intervention reviews . Eight electronic databases will be searched for publications between 1996 and present: Ovid Embase, EBSCO CINAHL, EBSCO Academic Search Ultimate, Scopus, EBSCO PsycInfo, Ovid MEDLINE and the Social Sciences Citation Index. This will be supplemented by hand searching of reference lists of included studies. Two reviewers will independently screen the results for potentially eligible studies using AS Review Lab (a semi-automated machine learning tool). Study selection, data extraction and risk of bias assessment, using Gough’s Weight of Evidence Framework, will be independently performed by two reviewers. A framework thematic synthesis approach will be employed to analyse and report quantitative and qualitative data. The reporting will be conducted in line with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Complex Intervention Extension Statement and Checklist.

Ethics and dissemination

This review will involve the secondary analysis of published information; therefore, ethical approvals are not required. Dissemination will be via presentation at scientific meetings, presentations to MND/ALS support groups and publications in peer-reviewed journals.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD42025102364.

☐ ☆ ✇ PLOS ONE Medicine&Health

Registered nurse effect on long length of stay in the heart failure hospitalizations of African Americans

by Tremaine B. Williams, Pearman Parker, Milan Bimali, Maryam Y. Garza, Alisha Crump, Taiquitha Robins, Emel Seker, Ava Storey, Allison Purvis, Mya Tolbert, Anthony Drake, Taren Massey Swindle, Kevin Wayne Sexton

African Americans experience approximately 2.5 times more heart failure hospitalizations than Caucasians and the complexity of heart failure requires registered nurses to work in collaboration with other types of healthcare professionals. The purpose of this study was to identify care team configurations associated with long lengths of hospital stay in African Americans with heart failure hospitalizations and the related effect of the presence of registered nurses on their length of hospital stay. This study analyzed electronic health record data on the heart failure hospitalizations of 2,274 African American patients. Binomial logistic regression identified the association between specific care team configurations and length of stay among subgroups of African American patients. Of the significant team configurations, a Kruskal-Wallis H test and linear regression further assessed the team composition and the specific change in days associated with a one-unit change in the number of registered nurses on a patient’s care team. Six team configurations were associated with a long length of stay among all African Americans regardless of age, sex, rurality, heart failure severity, and overall health severity. The configurations only differed significantly in the proportion of registered nurses with respect to other care team roles. An increase in one additional registered nurse on a care delivery team was associated with an increase in length of stay of 8.4 hours (i.e., 504 minutes). Identifying the full range of social and technical care delivery tasks performed by RNs, and controlling for their effect on length of stay, may be a key strategy for reducing length of stay and explaining why these six configurations and RNs are associated with long LOS. The identification of these models can be used to support decision-making that optimizes the availability of patient access to high-quality care (e.g., clinical staffing and supplies).
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