The primary objective of this study is to investigate the perceived need and attitudinal perspectives regarding menstrual leave policies among young women in rural South India. The secondary objective was to determine the socio-demographic, menstrual and workplace-related factors associated with attitudes towards menstrual leave among young women.
An analytical cross-sectional study was performed from May 2023 to August 2023.
In a rural district of Tamil Nadu, South India.
The study encompassed 955 young female students above 18 years of age enrolled in educational institutions in a rural district of Tamil Nadu, India. Participants were pursuing diverse professional programmes including medical, dental, allied health sciences, pharmacy and engineering courses.
The primary outcomes included assessment of basic menstrual characteristics (age of menarche, regularity, product usage and pain experiences), pain evaluation using the WaLIDD scale (which measured working ability, anatomical pain location, pain intensity via Wong Baker scale and pain duration) and attitude assessment through a 10-dimension Likert scale. The attitude assessment explored both supportive factors (pain management, environmental considerations, medical leave allocation, menstruation normalisation and performance impact) and potential concerns (medicalisation, perceptions of fragility, stigma, disclosure issues and abnormal leave usage). Secondary outcome measures encompassed the analysis of factors influencing these attitudes, followed by a multivariable linear regression model to identify significant predictors.
Among 955 female students (mean age 19.56±1.33 years), the majority supported menstrual leave for maintaining hygiene (82.3%) and managing dysmenorrhoea (75.8%). A substantial proportion (64.4%) viewed it as a means of normalising menstruation discourse, while 61.6% believed it could enhance workplace performance. However, concerns existed about medicalising menstruation (47.9%) and reinforcing gender stereotypes (43.4%). Multivariate analysis revealed that medical students (B=0.67, 95% CI: 1.34 to 2.00), those with graduate-educated fathers (B=1.64, 95% CI: 0.31 to 2.97), earlier age at menarche (B=–0.23, 95% CI: –0.45 to –0.01) and participants reporting menstrual interference with daily activities (B=0.96, 95% CI: 0.02 to 0.89) held significantly more positive attitudes.
While young women generally support menstrual leave policies, particularly for hygiene and pain management, there are significant concerns about workplace stigmatisation and gender stereotyping. Educational background, parental education and personal menstrual experiences significantly influence attitudes toward menstrual leave. These findings suggest the need for carefully structured menstrual leave policies that balance biological needs with workplace/student place equality concerns.
The aim of this study was to analyse associations between crowded housing and children’s indoor living environment, respiratory and allergic disorders and general health.
A cross-sectional study.
Sweden, using data from the Swedish National Environmental Health Survey 2019.
The study sample included 48 512 children (aged 6–10 months, 4 years and 12 years). We also investigated associations in vulnerable subgroups, such as children with asthma and those living under unfavourable socioeconomic conditions.
Primary outcomes in the living environment were at least one sign of mould, poor indoor air quality, unpleasant odours, too warm indoors in summer and too cold indoors in winter. Primary outcomes for children’s health were asthma, airway problems, breathing difficulties, rhinitis symptoms, mould and mites allergy, pollen allergy, furred pet allergy and good general health.
About one in five children lived in an overcrowded home. Factors from the indoor living environment such as perceived poor indoor air quality and mould were significantly associated with crowded housing. Moreover, children who lived in overcrowded conditions were less likely to report good general health than children in non-crowded households (OR 0.64, 95% CI 0.54 to 0.76). This association was even stronger in children with asthma (OR 0.51, 95% CI 0.34 to 0.77). Few significant associations were, however, observed with the respiratory and allergic health outcomes.
Crowded housing is associated both with a poor indoor environment and with poorer general health in children. Children with asthma may experience even poorer general health.
Investigate the perception of male accessibility to the fields of nursing practice by those studying or teaching nursing in England.
Cross-sectional survey.
Online questionnaire with three closed-scale questions and two open-text questions designed to elicit perceptions on the accessibility of men to the fields of nursing practice. The questionnaire was distributed to the staff and students at 61 nursing schools in England. Inferential and descriptive statistics were used to analyse the closed questions data and inductive content analysis was used to analyse open-text questions data.
Students (n = 52) and staff (n = 51) responded to the survey. Adult (Mdn = 6, IQR = 2) and mental health (Mdn = 6, IQR = 2) were perceived as the most accessible fields of nursing practice to men, and child (Mdn = 4, IQR = 2) the least. Specialised practice areas in acute and emergency (Mdn = 6, IQR = 2), education (Mdn = 6, IQR = 2), leadership (Mdn = 7, IQR = 1), prison services (Mdn = 7, IQR = 1), and research (Mdn = 7, IQR = 2) were rated the most accessible to men and neonatal care (Mdn = 3, IQR = 3) the least. Societal stereotyping and stigma were seen as barriers to men entering the nursing profession. The perception that nursing is a feminised profession persists and a distrust of men is associated with child nursing. Men were viewed as progressing to leadership roles with greater ease than women.
Societal level stereotyping and stigma are perceived as prevalent in nursing practice areas considered less accessible to men entering the nursing profession.
This study adds insight into the gendered nature of nursing and highlights the barriers to men entering a profession with a workforce crisis.
STROBE cross-sectional studies guidelines. COREQ guidelines for content analysis.
No patient or public contribution.
To evaluate clinical nurses' perceptions and acceptability of procedure videos developed to support them during rare clinical procedures. In addition, a secondary aim was to investigate whether these videos reduce anxiety and enhance clinical reasoning.
A descriptive multi-methods study within a pre-post-implementation evaluation design.
Seven locally developed procedure videos (non-invasive ventilation (n = 2), temporary cardiac pacing (n = 3) and pericardiocentesis (n = 2)) were evaluated using questionnaires before and after a 6-month implementation period at a local health district in Australia. Participants self-rated their clinical reasoning skills in response to video procedures, mapped against the Clinical Reasoning cycle stages. The Spielberger State–Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) assessed anxiety towards rare procedures. Data from open-ended questions were analysed using inductive content analysis.
A total of 247 participants completed the pre-implementation questionnaire, and 133 completed the post-implementation questionnaire. Before implementation, many reported feeling heightened anxiety when faced with rare or infrequent procedures, reporting levels that exceeded commonly accepted clinical thresholds for concern. Content analysis revealed persistent concerns among participants, including the need for support during new procedures and a fear of making errors. Before implementation, participants reported searching online for videos to support undertaking new procedures. Following implementation, most participants reported that viewing the videos enhanced their learning experience and improved their clinical reasoning. Perceived anxiety towards undertaking rare procedures was not significantly different from post-implementation.
This study highlights the need for timely support during infrequent clinical procedures, as participants reported anxiety about them. It also demonstrates that procedure videos are valued tools for nurses before rare clinical procedures.
Rare procedures are linked to nurse anxiety and mixed emotions, some of which may be eustress. Organisations can enhance clinical resources for nursing staff by providing online videos tailored to local practices and context, which many nurses find helpful for improving clinical reasoning when undertaking rare procedures.
This study highlights the anxiety nurses experience before rare procedures and the significance of incorporating multimedia resources, especially online videos, in nursing professional development for rarely performed procedures. Additionally, it informs employers about nursing staff preferences.
SQUIRE 2.0 reporting was adhered to.
None.
Nurse-led education programs in childcare settings are critical for improving early childhood health outcomes and caregiver practices. Despite their potential, a systematic synthesis of their effectiveness is lacking.
To summarize the characteristics and evaluate the effectiveness of existing nurse-led education programs in childcare settings through a systematic review of experimental studies.
This review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. A comprehensive search was conducted in five databases from inception to December 9, 2024. Two reviewers independently screened articles, extracted data, and assessed study quality. Due to methodological heterogeneity, a narrative synthesis was performed. The review was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42024618983).
Twelve studies met the inclusion criteria, involving 900 childcare workers and 920 families. The programs targeted two main areas: prevention of child health issues and management of child health issues. Lectures and group discussions were the most frequently used strategies. Nurses assumed diverse roles, including educators, consultants, and facilitators. The findings revealed several benefits, including reduced rates of upper respiratory illness, improved family health practices—such as appropriate medication use—and enhanced childcare worker competencies in first aid knowledge.
Nurses play a critical role in implementing education programs in childcare settings. Their contributions should be fully integrated into program planning and delivery. Future research should adopt rigorous methodologies to strengthen evidence-based practices and improve child health outcomes and caregiver competencies.
by Dong Min Jung, Yong Jae Kwon, Yong Wan Cho, Jong Geol Baek, Dong Jae Jang, Yongdo Yun, Seok-Ho Lee, Gahee Son, Hyunjong Yoo, Min Cheol Han, Jin Sung Kim
Volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) for lung cancer involves complex multileaf collimator (MLC) motion, which increases sensitivity to interplay effects with tumour motion. Current dynamic conformal arc methods address this issue but may limit the achievable dose distribution optimisation compared with standard VMAT. This study examined the clinical utility of a VMAT technique with monitor unit limits (VMATliMU) to mimic conformal arc delivery and reduce interplay effects while maintaining plan quality. VMATliMU was implemented by applying monitor unit limitations during VMAT reoptimisation to minimise MLC encroachment into target volumes. Using mesh-type reference computational phantom CT images, treatment plans were generated for a simulated stage I lung cancer case prescribed to 45 Gy in three fractions. VMATliMU, conventional VMAT, VMAT with leaf speed limitations, dynamic conformal arc therapy, and constant dynamic conformal arc therapy were compared. Plans were optimised for multiple isodose line prescriptions (50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, and 90%) to investigate the impact of dose distribution. Evaluation parameters included MLC positional accuracy using area difference ratios, dosimetric indices, gradient metrics, and organ-at-risk doses. VMATliMU prevented MLC encroachment into the internal target volume across 60%–90% isodose lines, showing superior MLC accuracy compared with other methods. At the challenging 50% isodose line, VMATliMU had 4.5 times less intrusion than VMAT with leaf speed limits. VMAT plans had better dosimetric indices than dynamic conformal arc plans. VMATliMU reduced monitor units by 5.1%–19.2% across prescriptions. All plans met the clinical dose constraints, with the aortic arch below tolerance and acceptable lung doses. VMATliMU combines VMAT’s dosimetric benefits with the dynamic conformal arcs’s simplicity, minimising MLC encroachment while maintaining plan quality. Reduced monitor units lower low-dose exposure, treatment time, and interplay effects. VMATliMU is usable in existing planners with monitor unit limits, offering a practical solution for lung stereotactic body radiation therapy.Evaluate the effect of IV line labels on nurses' identification of high-alert medications in a simulated scenario of multiple infusions for critically ill patients.
Randomised crossover simulation experimental study.
A study was conducted on 29 nurses working in intensive care for over 6 months. They were given two critical scenarios in a simulated environment, one with labels and the other without labels, involving multiple intravenous infusions. The nurses had to identify the medications infused into the critical patients' intravenous lines and disconnect a specific line. The data were collected and analysed to evaluate the errors made by the nurses in identifying and disconnecting the medications and the time they spent carrying out the tasks. The Wilcoxon test was used to analyse the variation in outcome before and after the intervention.
Approximately one-third of the study participants incorrectly identified the intravenous lines in both scenarios. There was no significant difference in the average number of errors between the scenarios with and without labels. However, the time taken to perform the tasks in the scenario with labels was 1 min less than in the scenario without labels, suggesting a potential efficiency gain.
The labels on the intravenous lines allowed for quick drug identification and disconnection. The professionals performed similarly in correctly recognising the high-alert medication intravenous lines, in the scenarios with or without labels.
The label can be used as a technology to prevent misidentification of high-alert medications administered to critically ill patients through intravenous lines, thereby enhancing medication safety in healthcare institutions.
No Public Contribution.
To identify and critically appraise instruments that have been used to measure nurse resilience.
A scoping review.
Comprehensive literature searches were conducted using four electronic databases CINAHL Ultimate, MEDLINE, PsycINFO and Emcare from the year 2012 to December 2024.
The titles, then abstracts, of retrieved articles were screened by the authors against inclusion and exclusion criteria, then full-text screening was performed using Rayyan. Data about the study characteristics and the instruments used to measure nurse resilience were extracted. Copies of the instruments used to measure resilience were obtained and appraised.
Of the n = 4694 publications identified in the initial search n = 386 were included in the scoping review. Studies originated in n = 45 countries, the majority were conducted in China (n = 119) and the United States of America (n = 53). Across the n = 386 included studies, n = 15 instruments to measure resilience were identified and critically appraised. The scores for the instruments critically appraised ranged from 0 to 6 out of a total possible score of 11. Synthesis of results examined instrument development, instrument features and application of instruments.
Critical appraisal of the instruments used to measure nurse resilience revealed significant deficiencies. None of the instruments included all of the key attributes and factors that influence nurse resilience. There was a predominant focus on individual factors and little consideration of the influence of nursing work environments. Due to the shortcomings of the existing instruments, there are currently substantial limitations in our understanding of nurse resilience and how to measure it.
A profession-specific comprehensive measure of nurse resilience needs to be developed to better capture the attributes of nurse resilience.
This review highlights the limitations of instruments applied to measure nurse resilience.
The JBI scoping review framework.
No patient or public contribution.
Paediatric major trauma patients with more severe injuries and physiological or biochemical abnormalities as a result of the injury are more likely to require invasive management in the form of an operation/interventional radiology (IR). Adverse psychological outcomes, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and adjustment disorder, are frequently observed in paediatric patients with major trauma. Similarly, it is recognised that children and adolescents who have invasive management are also at an increased risk of adverse psychological outcomes. However, it is not known to what extent major trauma patients requiring invasive management are at risk of adverse psychological outcomes compared with those managed conservatively. This study aims to determine whether paediatric major trauma patients who require an operation/IR have increased odds of having an adverse psychological outcome compared with those who are managed conservatively.
The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols guidelines will be used to construct this review. The databases Medline (via Ovid), Embase (via Ovid), PsycInfo (via Ebscohost) and Cinahl (via Ebscohost) will be searched from inception to February 2025. Both title and abstract screening and full-text screening will be done by two reviewers, with an adjudicating third reviewer. For randomised controlled trials, the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool will be employed, while for non-randomised studies, the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale will be used. We will assess bias using contoured funnel plots (with p set at 0.01, 0.05 and 0.10), non-parametric trim-fill analysis, leave-one-out analysis and Galbraith plotting. We will execute formal (Egger) testing for funnel plot asymmetry and also calculate prediction intervals if sufficient study N of 10 is accrued. Certainty and confidence in cumulative evidence will be evaluated using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach.
Ethical review is not required as no original data will be collected. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and at academic conferences.
CRD42025643459.
Spironolactone is a useful and effective acne treatment option for adult female patients. We aim to establish whether spironolactone could be a safe treatment for the management of acne in the female adolescent population as well. The objective of this scoping review is to provide an evidence map of the safety profile of spironolactone in the paediatric population aged 0–17 across all clinical indications.
This scoping review will be conducted according to the Joanna Briggs Institute scoping review protocol. Relevant publications will be searched on the MEDLINE, Embase and Web of Science databases from inception until July 2025. The authors of included studies will be contacted using contact details provided in the manuscript to check for any further published or unpublished data on the review question. An initial search will be conducted using keywords to identify relevant articles. After identifying the research strategy, articles will be extracted into a reference management tool, and a two-part study selection process will be systematically applied by two reviewers. The first part consists of screening titles and abstracts to define the eligibility of each article. In the second part, the full texts will be screened and only relevant articles will be kept. All articles related to the safety of spironolactone in children and adolescents across all clinical indications will be included. Data will be extracted using a scoping review management software such as Covidence, collated and charted to summarise all the relevant methods, outcomes and key findings in the articles.
This scoping review will provide an extensive overview of the available safety evidence for the use of spironolactone in children and teenagers. Since the scoping review methodology consists of reviewing and collecting data from publicly available materials, this study does not require ethics approval. The results will be disseminated in a peer-reviewed publication.
To evaluate the effect of mutuality on self-care in people with CHD and the contribution of their caregivers, and whether such relationships can be mediated by self-efficacy.
Secondary analysis of baseline data from a multi-centre longitudinal study.
Patients at the onset of coronary artery disease who underwent angioplasty, along with their caregivers, were included in the sample. Data from 136 patients and 136 caregivers were used for the analysis. Mutuality between patients and caregivers was measured using the Mutuality Scale. Self-care was measured using the Self-Care of Coronary Heart Disease Index and the Caregiver Contribution to Self-Care of Coronary Heart Disease Index. The actor–partner interdependence mediation models were used to assess the mediating role of self-efficacy for self-care between perceived mutuality and self-care behaviours.
An actor indirect effect was found between patient mutuality and their self-care maintenance, self-care monitoring, and self-care management, through the mediation of their self-efficacy. Caregiver mutuality had a positive indirect effect on their contribution to self-care maintenance, self-care monitoring, and self-care management, through the mediation of their self-efficacy. Caregiver mutuality had a positive indirect effect on patient self-care maintenance and on patient self-care monitoring, through the mediation of patient self-efficacy. All models demonstrated satisfactory fit to the data.
Mutuality between patients and caregivers enhances self-care behaviours in patients with coronary heart disease, and self-efficacy is a crucial mediator in this relationship. Interventions targeting both mutuality and self-efficacy within patient–caregiver dyads may improve self-care outcomes.
We adhered to STROBE guidelines.
Patients and members of the public were not involved in the design, conduct, reporting, or dissemination plans of this research.
Chronic wounds represent a substantial socioeconomic, financial, and psychological burden. We examine preclinical and clinical evidence assessing the impact of chronic wounds on negative affect, cognition, and quality of life and discuss potential mechanisms underlying the link between chronic wounds and negative affect and cognition. There is limited preclinical evidence examining negative affect and wounds, but anxiety-related behaviour has been reported in a rat incisional wound model. The incidence of anxiety and depression in people with chronic wounds varies considerably. Potential mechanisms underlying the link between chronic wounds and negative affect include the immune system, pain, metabolic dysfunction, inflammation, and vascular damage. There is a paucity of both preclinical and clinical studies examining the effect of chronic wounds on cognition, highlighting a need for more studies in this area. Research suggests that there are deficiencies in the management of anxiety, depression, and cognitive impairment in people with chronic wounds, but developing and administering therapies that target these comorbidities may have a positive impact on quality of life and wound healing. Integration of mental health and cognition screening into wound care protocols would provide substantial benefits both socioeconomically and to individuals with chronic wounds.
To develop and validate the End-of-Life Care Assessment Tool for Dementia (EoLC-ATD).
A methodological study with multiple phases.
Five sub-studies comprising: a review of 90 validated dementia measures to compile an item bank of advanced dementia symptoms; focus groups with registered nurses on advanced dementia symptom identification and relevance of item bank inclusions; Delphi surveys with dementia experts seeking consensus on the EoLC-ATD constructs and items; pilot testing of the EoLC-ATD; and field testing of the EoLC-ATD in persons with dementia.
The item-bank included 180 symptoms, most of which focus group nurses (n = 17) identified as occurring in advanced dementia. Delphi surveys with dementia experts (n = 31) achieved 70% consensus for 25 of 26 EoLC-ATD items. Pilot testing of the EoLC-ATD by two nurses in eight persons with dementia showed good agreement for six constructs (Cohen's Kappa 0.856–0.927) and 26 items (Cronbach's alpha 77.0). An ‘other sympto’ item was included following RN recommendation. The 27-item EoLC-ATD field tested by 17 nurses in persons with dementia (n = 113) accurately identified advanced dementia symptoms (Cronbach's alpha 77.0, p < 0.001). Mortality at 180 days after baseline EoLC-ATD was significant (p < 0.001, area under the ROC curve p = 0.769).
The EoLC-ATD accurately and reliably identified symptoms of advanced dementia.
The EoLC-ATD provides registered nurses with a single measure of advanced dementia symptoms that will help in identifying symptom-responsive palliative care requirements.
The EoLC-ATD will address the current lack of a validated dementia symptom measure for use by aged care home registered nurses to identify unique palliative and end-of-life care needs according to presenting symptoms in persons living with advanced dementia.
STROBE Statement for cohort and mixed methods studies.
An eight-member Expert Advisory Group, which provided guidance and advice throughout the study, was composed of three carers of persons living with dementia, two dementia care clinicians, a dementia care clinical educator, and two dementia clinician researchers.
Electrical burns are among the most severe burn injuries, often leading to deep tissue damage, systemic complications, and prolonged hospitalisation. In Lebanon, limited national data on electrical burn injuries limits the understanding of their epidemiology and management. This study aims to assess the prevalence and characteristics of electrical burns in patients admitted to the specialised burn care unit in Geitaoui Hospital in Lebanon. A retrospective observational study was conducted by reviewing the medical records of patients admitted from 1st January 2011 to 31st December 2024. Data on demographics, burn characteristics, hospitalisation outcomes, infections, surgical interventions, and laboratory findings were extracted and analysed using SPSS version 26. Thirty patients were included, with a male predominance (96.7%) and the mean age was 29.6 years. Third-degree burns were observed in 70.0% of cases, and 66.7% of patients had burns affecting 10%–30% of their total body surface area. High-voltage injuries accounted for 50.0% of cases. Upper extremities were the most commonly affected site (93.3%). The mean hospital stay was 25.69 days, and the mortality rate was 10.0%. Infection was documented in 43.3% of cases. The most frequently isolated pathogens were Acinetobacter (20.0%) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (16.7%). Surgical intervention was required in 63.3% of patients, most frequently skin grafting (36.7%). This study contributes national data on electrical burns and emphasises the importance of preventive and multidisciplinary care strategies.
A assistência psiquiátrica brasileira começou nas Santas Casas de Misericórdia até o surgimento dos hospitais psiquiátricos. Os objetivos deste estudo foram identificar vestígios do cuidado de enfermagem em psiquiatria nas primeiras instituições criadas no estado do Piauí, região Nordeste do Brasil e analisar suas relações com a institucionalização deste grupo na primeira metade do
século XX. Trata-se de um estudo qualitativo, histórico social, com dados publicados na mídia jornalística, coletados em arquivos públicos brasileiros. A análise, sob o referencial teórico foucaultiano, seguiu a metodologia de triangulação das fontes e interpretação de dados. Resultados: duas instituições iniciaram a assistência psiquiátrica no estado: o Asylo de Alienados, instituição pública criada em 1907, e o Sanatório Meduna, instituição privada inaugurada em 1954. Apesar do intervalo de 47 anos entre tais instituições, ambas instituíram o modelo manicomial, cuja prática assistencial incluía longos períodos de internação e tratamento disciplinar. Tal modelo abriu o mercado de trabalho para a enfermagem em psiquiatria, que se constituiu inicialmente de pessoas sem preparo formal, devido a inexistência de cursos de enfermagem no estado. Conclusão: o cuidado de enfermagem em psiquiatria foi institucionalizado no
Piauí/Brasil de acordo com a psiquiatria tradicional e a ausência de um saber próprio da enfermagem a colocou em condições de submissão ao poder médico, com poucos avanços na primeira metade do século XX.
The 2024 revision of the Declaration of Helsinki (DoH) marks a pivotal shift in biomedical research ethics, with significant implications for nursing research. This paper critically evaluates the Declaration's relevance to nursing practice, with particular attention to challenges in low-resource settings. Key updates emphasising global health equity, environmental sustainability, participant-centred consent and artificial intelligence (AI) governance are examined through nursing's ethical lenses of justice, beneficence and patient advocacy.
Using a multidimensional ethical framework grounded in Virtue Ethics, utilitarianism and phenomenology, the manuscript explores how nurses can ethically engage vulnerable populations, safeguard data privacy and advance inclusive, community-based research.
It highlights gaps in the Declaration, particularly regarding algorithmic bias and digital consent and proposes practical strategies for nurse researchers, such as AI governance tools, dynamic consent models and context-sensitive sustainability practices.
Rather than treating ethics as an abstract principle, the paper grounds theory in real-world practice, offering case examples that reflect the lived constraints of nursing researchers in underfunded and culturally diverse environments. By aligning ethical ideals with operational realities, this work reinforces nursing's critical role in shaping equitable and ethically resilient research practices under the revised Declaration.
Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a debilitating condition characterised by the overuse of opioid medications and the development of physical and/or psychological dependence. Consequences of this condition include chronic impairment, distress and later life-altering health conditions such as overdose, all of which have been highlighted by the prominence of OUD in the USA in recent years. Buprenorphine is a standard OUD treatment and commonly used for pain management. Understanding changes in distribution patterns across the USA is vital for continuing to improve outcomes for OUD patients.
This study used the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Automated Reports and Consolidated Ordering System (ARCOS) and the US Census Bureau Population Estimates databases to analyse changes in buprenorphine distribution among pharmacies and hospitals from 2019 to 2023, to determine temporal patterns and to identify state-level disparities using the data. The data were corrected for population to identify patterns of buprenorphine distribution in the USA from 2021 to 2022 and 2022 to 2023 through examining percent changes in milligrams per 100 population at the national and state levels.
The year-to-year percent change of national buprenorphine distribution from pharmacies has remained positive but changed from a 12.2% increase from 2019 to 2020 (figure 4) to a four per cent increase every year from 2020 to 2023. From 2021 to 2022, there was a +4.9% increase in total grams of buprenorphine distributed to pharmacies and a 95% CI [–5.1, 14.9], with the District of Columbia, South Dakota and Nebraska outside of the 95% CI. Distribution to hospitals increased by 10.2% [-32.3, 52.7] during 2021–2022, with Hawaii, New Hampshire and Delaware being outside of 95% CI. From 2022 to 2023, there was an increase of +5.7% and 95% CI [–3.5, 14.9] in pharmacy distribution, with states including Washington, Rhode Island and Kansas remain outside of the 95% CI. Hospital distribution has decreased from twenty per cent between 2019 and 2020 (figure 4) to eighteen per cent between 2022 and 2023.
Following increases in buprenorphine distribution during the COVID pandemic, a consistent increase has continued year-over-year in most states and the country overall by both pharmacies and hospitals. Some states (eg, Rhode Island, Georgia, District of Columbia) have not followed this pattern. Notably, Hawaii went from the most negative percent change in hospital distribution to the most positive change in the timeframe analysed. This may offer opportunities to analyse more specific impacts of the increased buprenorphine distribution on populations and their outcomes associated with OUD.
Pain is one of the most bothersome symptoms that affects patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) but is often inadequately treated. Inadequate pain control in the inpatient setting not only impacts patients’ experience but increases opioid use and hospital length of stay. Opioids are often considered first-line treatment for severe pain but are associated with significant morbidity and mortality in IBD. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are a non-opioid analgesic option, but concerns regarding their contribution to IBD flares have limited their use. Brain-gut behavioural therapies (BGBT), such as cognitive behavioural therapy, meditation and gut-directed hypnotherapy, are effective for pain management and have a role in the treatment of IBD symptoms. However, the use of BGBT in IBD is challenging, given limited access to behavioural health specialists, especially in the inpatient setting. Virtual reality (VR)-directed BGBT programmes can bridge this gap and enhance pain treatment for inpatients with IBD. Therefore, in this study, we aim to establish feasibility and acceptability for a VR-directed BGBT inpatient programme for patients with IBD.
We will recruit 40 patients with IBD who are hospitalised at Michigan Medicine and who endorse IBD-related pain. We will assess patient-reported outcomes (pain rating, IBD-specific symptoms, perceived stress, mood) before and after treatment, cumulative inpatient analgesic requirements and hospital length of stay. Our primary objective will be to establish intervention feasibility defined by the frequency and percentage of enrolled participants that use the VR-directed BGBT inpatient intervention in any capacity. Our secondary objective will be to evaluate intervention acceptability by conducting semistructured interviews with study participants. We will also explore the preliminary effectiveness of VR-directed BGBT on patient-reported outcomes and healthcare utilisation as compared with historic controls.
The study was approved by the institutional review board of the University of Michigan Medical School on 10 October 2023 (HUM00240999). All human subjects will be required to sign an informed consent document prior to study participation. Study findings will be reported through peer-reviewed publication.
To estimate the prevalence of autism among adults living in Canada.
A Monte Carlo simulation modelling approach was employed. Input parameters included adult population estimates and mortality rates; autism population all-cause mortality risk ratios; and autism prevalence estimates derived from child and youth data due to the lack of adult data. This approach was executed through 10 000 simulations, with each iteration generating a distinct data scenario. Prevalence estimates were reported as the mean with the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles, corresponding to a 95% simulation interval (SI).
Where possible, Canadian data sources were used, including the 2019 Canadian Health Survey on Children and Youth and Statistics Canada mortality rates and population estimates.
National prevalence estimates of autistic adults living in private dwellings in Canada, with variations in prevalence by sex at birth and province/territory considered.
The findings suggest the prevalence of autism among adults in Canada to be 1.8% (95% SI 1.6%, 2.0%). National prevalence estimates by sex at birth were 0.7% (95% SI 0.6%, 0.9%) for females and 2.9% (95% SI 2.6%, 3.2%) for males. Provincial/territorial estimates ranged from 0.7% in Saskatchewan (95% SI 0.3%, 1.3%) to 3.6% in New Brunswick (95% SI 2.4%, 5.1%).
The limited availability of data on autistic adults constrains our ability to fully understand and address their unique needs. In this study, autism prevalence was estimated based on diagnosed cases, which excludes individuals without a formal diagnosis. Additionally, other factors such as data availability and methodological assumptions may influence the modelling of prevalence estimates. As a result, our findings should be interpreted within the context of these limitations. Nevertheless, this study provides a valuable reference point for understanding autism prevalence among adults in Canada.
To identify clustered trajectories of self-reported disability following the initiation of care by a physical therapist in outpatient orthopaedic settings and to determine baseline factors that distinguish between different trajectories.
Retrospective cohort study using electronic health record and patient-reported outcome data.
Data were extracted from the ATI Patient Outcomes Registry, encompassing patient encounters from over 900 ATI outpatient physical therapy clinics in 26 states across the USA.
Patients receiving physical therapy after surgery were excluded. The final analytical sample included 597 245 unique patients initiating care between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2021 for management of a spine, upper extremity or lower extremity musculoskeletal condition.
Patients received treatments which could include strengthening and range of motion exercises, manual therapy, education, functional training and pain-relieving modalities.
The primary outcome was trajectory of self-reported, joint-specific disability measure scores up to 6 months following initial evaluation.
Three distinct disability trajectory clusters were identified (proportion of sample; beta coefficient (95% CI)): significant immediate worsening (3.4%; –1.31 (–1.33, –1.28)), significant gradual improvement (61.4%; (0.36 (0.35, 0.36)) and minimal change (35.2%; –0.20 (–0.21, –0.19)). Results were similar when stratified by primary diagnosis of upper extremity, lower extremity or spine conditions, with small differences in the relative proportion of trajectory class membership by body region. Predictive factors for less favourable disability trajectories included older age, lower physical and mental health scores, body region, higher social deprivation index, insurance type and certain comorbidities.
Most patients showed improvement in disability after exposure to treatment by a physical therapist, but a notable proportion experienced minimal change or worsening. Multiple demographic, physical, mental and social health factors differentiated trajectory class membership, highlighting opportunities to improve how and to whom this type of guideline-supported non-pharmacological care is delivered.