by Tadesse Tarik Tamir, Berhan Tekeba, Alebachew Ferede Zegeye, Deresse Abebe Gebrehana, Mulugeta Wassie, Gebreeyesus Abera Zeleke, Enyew Getaneh Mekonen
IntroductionSolitary childbirth—giving birth without any form of assistance—remains a serious global public health issue, especially in low-resource settings. It is associated with preventable maternal complications such as hemorrhage and sepsis, and poses significant risks to newborns, including birth asphyxia, infection, and early neonatal death. In Ethiopia, where many births occur outside health facilities, understanding the spatial and socio-demographic patterns of solitary childbirth is vital for informing targeted interventions to improve maternal and child health outcomes. This study aims to identify and map the spatial distribution of solitary childbirth across Ethiopia and to analyze its determinants using data from the 2019 national Interim Demographic and Health Survey.
MethodWe analyzed data from the 2019 Interim Ethiopian Demographic and Health Survey to determine the spatial distribution and factors of solitary birth in Ethiopia. A total weighted sample of 3,884 women was included in the analysis. Spatial analysis was used to determine the regional distribution of solitary birth, and multilevel logistic regression was employed to identify its determinants. ArcGIS 10.8 was used for spatial analysis, and Stata 17 was used for multilevel analysis. The fixed effect was analyzed by determining the adjusted odds ratio with a 95% confidence interval.
ResultThe prevalence of solitary childbirths in Ethiopia was 12.73%, with a 95% confidence interval spanning from 11.71% to 13.81%. The western and southern parts of Oromia, all of Benishangul-Gumuz, most parts of the SNNPR, and the west of Amhara regions were hotspot areas for solitary birth. Having no formal education, not attending ANC visits, and residing in pastoral regions were significantly associated with higher odds of solitary birth in Ethiopia.
CocnlusionA notable proportion of women are experiencing childbirth alone, which highlights a significant aspect of maternal health in the country, reflecting both the challenges and improvements in childbirth practices. The distribution of solitary births exhibited spatial clustering with its hotspot areas located in western and southern parts of Oromia, all of Benishangul-Gumuz, most parts of the SNNPR, and west of Amhara regions. Lack of education, not having an ANC visit, and being a resident of pastoral regions were significant determinants of solitary birth. The implementation of maternal and child health strategies in Ethiopia could benefit from considering the hotspot areas and determinants of solitary birth.
In non-intubated patients, symptomatic treatment of hypoxaemic respiratory failure is still debated, with different options: (1) standard oxygen therapy (SOT), (2) high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy (HFNC) and (3) non-invasive ventilation (NIV). The objective of this study is to compare the effects of HFNC and NIV on lung volumes assessed by CT scan to allow a better understanding of their effectiveness.
The HONIVAH study (High-flow Oxygen therapy and Non-Invasive ventilation on lung Volumes and on upper Airway in Hypoxemic critically ill patients) is an investigator-initiated, prospective, single-centre, physiological, randomised, parallel-group, unblinded trial with an electronic system-based randomisation. Patients with hypoxaemic respiratory failure, defined as the need for SOT flow ≥3 L/min to maintain a pulsed oxygen saturation ≥95%, and a CT scan prescribed by the physician in charge of the patient, will be randomly assigned to the HFNC group or the NIV group. Two inspiratory thoracic CT scans will be performed, one with SOT as part of the routine patient management and a second thoracic CT scan with HFNC or NIV, depending on the allocation group. The primary outcome is the comparison of the relative variation in ‘poorly aerated’ and ‘non-aerated’ lung volumes before and after the intervention between the HFNC group and NIV group, assessed by thoracic CT scan. Secondary outcomes included the variation in tracheal cross-sectional upper airway area, lung volumes, gas exchange and patient comfort.
The study project has been approved by the appropriate ethics committee (Comité de Protection des Personnes Sud-Ouest et Outre-mer 1, France, 2022-A02458-35). Informed consent is required. The results will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal and presented at one or more scientific conferences.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT05643911.
To assess the incidence of delirium and its predictors among adult patients admitted to the intensive care units of comprehensive specialised hospitals in the Amhara region of northwest Ethiopia from 18 October 2024 to 20 February 2025.
A multicentre prospective observational study was conducted.
Four comprehensive specialised hospitals in the Amhara region of northwest Ethiopia, from 18 October 2024 to 20 February 2025.
A total of 351 patients were included in the final analysis during the study period.
The primary outcome measure of this study was the incidence of delirium. Additionally, the study investigated the factors associated with delirium incidence among adult patients admitted to intensive care units.
The incidence of delirium among adult patients in intensive care units was 42.17% (95% CI: 37.08 to 47.42). Pain (adjusted HR (AHR) = 4.74; 95% CI: 2.38 to 9.44), mechanical ventilation (AHR = 2.96; 95% CI: 1.56 to 5.63), age 65 years or older (AHR = 2.18; 95% CI: 1.48 to 3.21) and agitation (Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS) ≥1) (AHR = 3.26; 95% CI: 2.09 to 5.09) were statistically significant factors associated with delirium.
In the present study, more than one-third of patients developed delirium. Pain, mechanical ventilation, age 65 or older and agitation (RASS≥1) were significantly associated with delirium occurrence. To reduce the incidence of delirium, the current study recommends treating or preventing pain and agitation. Additionally, special attention should be given to patients receiving mechanical ventilation and those aged 65 or older during care.
Dementia resulting from type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) complications significantly impacts older adults' quality of life, increasing suffering for both patients and their families. Numerous studies have identified self-management as a key factor in adopting appropriate health behaviors to prevent diabetes-related complications. However, internationally, there is insufficient empirical evidence for individual and family process factors predicting dementia prevention behaviors in older adults with T2DM. Therefore, we aimed to explore how dementia-preventive self-management behaviors (outcome dimension) are related to contextual and process dimensions based on the Individual and Family Self-Management Theory (IFSMT).
A cross-sectional observational study.
The 444 older adults with T2DM from six community hospitals in Chiang Mai completed valid and reliable self-reported measures, including a Socio-demographic Questionnaire, the Dementia Prevention of Individual and Family Self-Management Process Questionnaire (DP-IFSM-PQ), and the Dementia Preventive Self-Management Behavior Questionnaire (DPSMBQ). Data were analyzed using bivariate correlations, partial correlations, and multivariate linear regression with the stepwise method.
Most participants exhibited high levels of individual and family self-management processes and dementia-preventive self-management behaviors. Bivariate and partial correlation analyses revealed a significant association between DP-IFSM-PQ and DPSMBQ scores. Stepwise multiple linear regression identified self-efficacy, a subdomain of DP-IFSM-PQ, as the strongest predictor of DPSMBQ scores. Other significant predictors included awareness of dementia prevention among family members, neighbors, and the community; family income sufficiency; history of comorbidities; distance to the hospital; and knowledge and beliefs (a subdomain of the DP-IFSM-PQ). The regression model was statistically significant (F [1, 437] = 46.662, p = 0.000, Adjusted R 2 = 0.382).
Self-efficacy and knowledge and beliefs, based on IFSMT, are key predictors of dementia-preventive behaviors among older adults with T2DM. These predictors could be used as potential intervention components in a subsequent co-design study for promoting dementia preventive self-management behaviors in older adults with T2DM. The results also reinforce the importance of family members and healthcare providers in supporting older adults with T2DM to enhance their dementia prevention behaviors.
People with a learning disability face significant health and mortality inequalities as well as wider systemic inequities. Challenges in palliative and end of life care (PEOLC) include communication difficulties, lack of involvement in decision-making and multimorbidity. Early identification of PEOLC needs is challenging, impacting timely care planning. The study aims to (1) understand barriers and enablers to providing high-quality, accessible PEOLC for people with a learning disability, and identify effective service delivery models and interventions and (2) improve PEOLC quality and accessibility by developing robust guidance for health and social care services.
This is a mixed-methods study guided by the NHS England 2021 Ambitions Framework and adopting the Social Model of Disability. There are four workstreams: (1) a retrospective cohort analysis of the Clinical Practice Research Datalink; (2) a rapid scoping review; (3) field work in four study sites across England, involving (a) interviews with senior leaders and commissioners (n=up to 16) and informal stakeholder engagement conversations; (b) ethnographic case studies with people with a learning disability at the end of life (n=up to 20) and retrospective case reviews of people with a learning disability who have died (n=up to 40), using family and staff interviews and (c) development and piloting of methods for enabling systematic identification of PEOLC need, using experience-based co-design and (4) patient and public involvement (PPI) activities and a co-production group of 10 people with a learning disability to support data analysis and outputs. Data will be analysed using adapted framework analysis methodology. This is an inclusive, co-produced study with significant involvement of advisors and researchers with a learning disability as part of the study team.
Ethical approval has been obtained for workstreams 1, 3a and 3b. Significant attention has been paid to ensuring informed consent, making adjustments for capacity. Accessible information and consent forms will be used, involving consultees and adhering to the Mental Capacity Act for participants who lack capacity. Data security will follow General Data Protection Regulation rules. Dissemination will include patient exemplars, guidance and various resources, engaging stakeholders through multiple formats.
researchregistry10500.
by Tamrat Endebu Gebre, Girma Taye, Wakgari Deressa
Loss to follow-up (LTFU) remains a major challenge in HIV care, particularly in resource-limited settings. While several studies have identified its predictors, many have neglected the competing risks of transfer out and death, as well as the dynamic influence of these predictors over time. A retrospective cohort study was conducted among adult HIV patients who initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) between 2019 and 2024. LTFU was a primary outcome, whereas transfer out and death were competing risks. A Fine‒Gray subdistribution hazard ratio (SHR) regression analysis identified LTFU predictors within a competing risk framework. An extended SHR model with a time‒covariate interaction term was used to examine the predictors’ time‒varying effects on LTFU risk. Data analysis was performed via STATA 17 and Python 3.9. In a cohort of 4,135 HIV patients (8,521.54 person-years of follow-up), the overall incidence of LTFU was 13.10 per 100 person-years (95% CI: 12.35–13.89), with cumulative risks of 15%, 25%, and 35% at 1, 3, and 5 years post-ART, respectively. The predictors of LTFU included younger age (15–24 years: aSHR = 1.51), male sex (aSHR = 1.24), incomplete address details (aSHR = 1.72), noninitiation/noncompletion of TPT (aSHR = 2.16), poor adherence (aSHR = 2.54), and undernutrition (aSHR = 2.03). While younger age (e.g., 15–24 years) was associated with an increased risk of LTFU at baseline (baseline aSHR = 1.36, p = 0.014), this association diminished over time (interaction aSHR = 0.54, p = 0.001). Undernutrition consistently predicted LTFU (baseline aSHR = 1.64, pCardiac surgery remains a high-risk procedure for bleeding despite advances in patient blood management. Conventional centrifugation-based autotransfusion devices primarily recover red blood cells, losing platelets and coagulation factors. The SAME autotransfusion device (i-SEP, Nantes, France) introduces an innovative filtration-based approach, recovering erythrocytes, leucocytes and platelets to enhance perioperative haemostasis. The main objective is to determine whether the filtration-based SAME device reduces significant perioperative bleeding compared with the centrifugation-based system in high-risk cardiac surgery patients.
The Centrifugation-based vs filtration-based intraOperative cell saLvage on qualiTy of peRioperAtive haemostasis iN cardiac surgEry (COLTRANE) trial is a multicentre, parallel-group, single-blinded, superiority-randomised clinical trial. Conducted over 19 months in 10 French hospitals, the study will target patients at high risk of bleeding undergoing on-pump cardiac surgery via sternotomy. A total of 570 patients (285 per group) are required to achieve 80% statistical power for detecting clinically significant differences. Eligible patients will be randomised to either a centrifugation-based or filtration-based autotransfusion group. Both groups will follow standardised perioperative and cardiopulmonary bypass management, with the devices used only intraoperatively. The primary outcome is the proportion of patients with clinically significant perioperative bleeding defined as classes 2 to 4 of the Universal Definition of Perioperative Bleeding. The secondary outcomes include device efficiency and safety, perioperative haemostasis, lengths of intensive care unit and hospital stays, early postoperative morbidity and 30-day all-cause mortality. Ancillary studies will be performed to evaluate cell recovery and washing performance, the viscoelastic properties of retransfused blood (Quantra Qplus; Stago, Asnières-sur-Seine, France), and the effect of salvaged leucocytes on postoperative inflammation and immune function.
This trial has received a favourable opinion from the Committee for the Protection of Persons and authorisation from the French authorities (Comité de protection des personnes Nord Ouest, IDRCB: 2023-A02566-39). Protocol V.1.1 was approved on 22 January 2024. The trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT06425614). The findings will be disseminated through oral communications at national and international scientific meetings and peer-reviewed journal publications. Individual participant data will be made available on reasonable request to qualified researchers, following review and approval by the study sponsor and ethics committee.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT06425614.
Randomised controlled trials have aimed to assess the effectiveness of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) with curative intent versus surgical resection for individuals diagnosed with early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) but have failed to recruit sufficient numbers of patients. Non-randomised studies for early-stage NSCLC have reported mixed outcomes following curative SABR versus surgical resection, but did not fully address confounding by indication. The Surgery Or RadioTherapy for early-stage cancer study (SORT) will assess the comparative effectiveness of SABR with curative intent versus surgical resection for NSCLC with a target trial emulation approach, as this can reduce biases in observational studies that aim to estimate the causal effect of interventions.
The SORT study will use the National Cancer Registry for individuals diagnosed with early-stage NSCLC in England during 2015–2020 (inclusive) who received SABR with curative intent or surgical resection. These data will be linked to Hospital Episode Statistics, National Radiotherapy Data Set and the Systemic Anti-Cancer Therapy dataset to obtain information on clinical and sociodemographic characteristics and the treatment received. This target trial emulation will define study population eligibility criteria and regimens for SABR with curative intent and surgical resection. We will reduce the risk of residual confounding with instrumental variable analyses that will exploit geographical variation across the National Health Service in England in the use of SABR with curative intent versus surgical resection for early-stage NSCLC. The primary outcome will be 3-year all-cause mortality after treatment initiation. Secondary outcomes will include 3-month, 6-month, 12-month and 24-month all-cause and lung-cancer mortality, time to death, numbers of hospitalisations, incremental costs and incremental cost-effectiveness.
Ethical approval was obtained from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Research Ethics Committee (reference number 29 717–1). Results will be disseminated to clinicians, patients, policy-makers and researchers.
To determine associations between arm and ankle systolic blood pressures (SBPs), develop and validate a multivariable model predicting arm SBP from ankle SBP, and investigate associations between ankle SBP, cardiovascular disease and mortality.
Ankle-arm SBP differences were examined in two-stage individual participant data (IPD) meta-analyses using multivariable hierarchical linear regression models. Models were used to derive and validate a prediction model for arm SBP based on ankle SBP. Model performance was assessed using area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curve analyses. Prognostic associations of ankle SBP with outcomes were examined using Cox proportional hazards models.
Searches identified cohorts for the Inter-arm Blood Pressure Difference IPD (INTERPRESS-IPD) Collaboration from Medline, Old Medline, Medline in process, Embase and CINAHL databases from inception until January 2017; unpublished data were also sought. Required primary outcomes were all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and/or fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events.
Prospective studies from community, primary care or general clinic settings, without language restriction, that recorded SBP in both arms were eligible. Adults aged ≥18 years with SBP measured in all four limbs, in a supine position, were included in the current analyses. People with peripheral artery disease were excluded.
Anonymised datasets were individually cleaned and then combined into a single dataset for the INTERPRESS-IPD Collaboration.
The current dataset included 33 710 participants from 14 studies; mean age 58 years, 45% female, mean baseline arm blood pressure 138/80 (SD: 20/12) mm Hg. Mean ankle SBP was 12.0 mm Hg (95% CI 8.8 to 15.2) higher than arm SBP. The multivariable model predicting arm SBP from ankle SBP demonstrated excellent performance (AUROC curves, sensitivities and specificities were >0.82, 0.80 and 0.82, respectively, at all BP thresholds from 130 to 160 mm Hg). Model performance was superior to existing arithmetic formulae.
Ankle SBP was neither associated with all-cause nor cardiovascular mortality (HR 1.000 (0.997 to 1.002; p=0.682) and 1.001 (0.996 to 1.005; p=0.840), respectively). However, lower-reading ankle SBP was associated with fatal or non-fatal cardiovascular events (HR 1.005 (1.002 to 1.007; p
On average, ankle SBP is 12 mm Hg higher than arm SBP. Estimating individual arm SBP from ankle SBP measurements with a multivariable model is more accurate than existing fixed arithmetic formulae. This model, operationalised in an online calculator (https://ablebp.research.exeter.ac.uk/), could facilitate hypertension management and cardiovascular care for people unable to have arm SBP measured.
CRD42015031227.
by Claudia Di Dio, Antonella Porrazzo, Alex De Gregorio, Patrizia Morciano, Maria Antonella Tabocchini, Giovanni Cenci, Francesca Cipressa, Giuseppe Esposito
Although the biological effects of low doses/dose rates of ionising radiation have been extensively studied both in vitro and in vivo, there are still knowledge gaps to be filled. For example, the mechanisms underlying the phenomena of radioadaptive responses and hypersensitivity to low doses of radiation are still not fully understood. This study aims to investigate the phenomenon of radioadaptive response in Drosophila melanogaster larval neuroblasts, focusing on the influence of different gamma priming doses and priming dose rates. We examined the modulation of cytogenetic damage, specifically the frequency of chromosome breaks, induced by a challenging dose of 10 Gy following different priming doses (0–2.7 Gy) delivered at dose rates ranging from 1.4 to 17 mGy/h. Our findings reveal the presence of a distinct window in which radioadaptive responses occurs, notably above a certain threshold dose when delivered at a rate of 1.4 mGy/h. Consistently with our previous results, we confirmed that the maximal protection was observed at a priming dose of 0.4 Gy delivered at 2.5 mGy/h. Additionally, we studied the occurrence of chromosome breaks after irradiating larval neuroblasts at doses ranging from 0.7 to 10 Gy. Notably, in this case we observed a low-dose hyper-radiosensitivity phenomenon up to 2.7 Gy, followed by increased resistance above 2.7 Gy. Our results provide insight into the complex cellular responses to low-dose/dose rate radiation and have implications in various fields, including radiation protection, diagnostics, theragnostics and biodosimetry.Approximately 25% of the Brazilian population suffers from mental disorders, a prevalence exacerbated by systemic and cultural factors such as socioeconomic inequalities, underfunded mental health services, regional disparities, and persistent stigma. These conditions significantly impact hospital care. Nurses, due to their direct contact with these patients, face challenges ranging from managing physical conditions to handling verbal aggression and psychiatric crises. This study aimed to assess the scientific evidence regarding nursing care for hospitalized patients with psychiatric disorders.
A systematic review with a mixed-methods approach was conducted, registered in PROSPERO (#CRD42022359288) and guided by PRISMA standards. Databases, such as MEDLINE, LILACS, PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and BDEnf, were searched using keywords like “Mental disorder,” “Psychiatric health,” “Nursing care,” and “Hospital.” Methodological quality was assessed using JBI and SQUIRE tools. The integration of quantitative and qualitative components occurred through meta-aggregation of qualitative data and frequency-based coding of quantitative themes, allowing thematic convergence across study designs.
Six studies were included. Meta-aggregation revealed frequent terms, such as “Nurse,” “Emergency,” “Screening,” “Patient,” and “Care.” Similarity analysis linked “Nurse” with “perception” and “experience” and “Emergency” with “Screening” and “Mental health,” highlighting the importance of experience and training. Five categories emerged: (1) professional experience (19.05%, showing skill gaps despite experience); (2) caring process (19.05%, stressing efficient screening); (3) barriers and challenges (19.05%, revealing difficulty with comorbidities); (4) training process (19.05%, identifying training deficiencies); and (5) therapeutic interventions (23.81%, discussing restraint use). These percentages refer to the proportional frequency of themes identified across the total number of studies analyzed. For thematic classification, only statistically significant chi-square values (p < 0.05) were considered in the grouping of content.
Nursing care for psychiatric patients in hospitals faces challenges like insufficient training and difficulty managing psychiatric comorbidities. Recommendations include incorporating structured mental health content into nursing curricula and hospital-based continuing education programs. These strategies may guide future healthcare policies in Brazil by improving patient safety, reducing hospital readmissions, and promoting more humane, evidence-based therapeutic interventions.
The findings emphasize the urgent need for targeted education and training to improve nursing care for psychiatric patients in hospital settings.
There is a need for diagnostic and prognostic biosignatures to improve long-term outcomes in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Here, we describe the establishment of the Swedish Inception Cohort in IBD (SIC-IBD) and demonstrate its potential for the identification of such signatures.
Patients aged ≥18 years with gastrointestinal symptoms who were referred to the gastroenterology unit due to suspected IBD at eight Swedish hospitals between November 2011 and March 2021 were eligible for inclusion.
In total, 367 patients with IBD (Crohn’s disease, n=142; ulcerative colitis, n=201; IBD-unclassified, n=24) and 168 symptomatic controls were included. In addition, 59 healthy controls without gastrointestinal symptoms were recruited as a second control group. Biospecimens and clinical data were collected at inclusion and in patients with IBD also during follow-up to 10 years. Levels of faecal calprotectin and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein were higher in patients with IBD compared with symptomatic controls and healthy controls. Preliminary results highlight the potential of serum protein signatures and autoantibodies, as well as results from faecal markers, to differentiate between IBD and symptomatic controls in the cohort. During the first year of follow-up, 37% (53/142) of the patients with Crohn’s disease, 24% (48/201) with ulcerative colitis and 4% (1/24) with IBD-U experienced an aggressive disease course.
We have established an inception cohort enabling ongoing initiatives to collect and generate clinical data and multi-omics datasets. The cohort will allow analyses for translation into candidate biosignatures to support clinical decision-making in IBD. Additionally, the data will provide insights into mechanisms of disease pathogenesis.
Breast cancer is a global concern, especially for women of African descent, with rising cases in Ghana. While awareness and diagnostic screening have improved, studies in Ghana and many African countries have prioritised breast self-examinations, with limited focus on mammography.
Our study explores beliefs and attitudes towards mammography screening among mothers at Teshie Community in Ghana.
The study methodology was qualitative and an exploratory design was used. Convenience sampling was used to select 30 participants until saturation was reached. Indepth, one-on-one interviews were conducted with a semistructured interview guide with probes until saturation was reached. Then data were audiotaped audiotaped, transcribed and coded. Content analysis was done to generate themes and subthemes.
Most participants, 93%, had not undergone mammography screening. Only two individuals (7%) had experienced mammography screening. The study identified two major themes: beliefs and perceptions regarding mammography, and attitudes towards mammography screening. Participants generally displayed limited knowledge of mammography screening, along with mixed attitudes and varying degrees of motivation. Notably, many participants enjoyed strong spousal support for mammography screening.
It was recommended that nurses should create awareness of mammography to increase the knowledge of women and the general population about mammography, as this is believed to increase the uptake of mammography screening.
This study assessed the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and its relationship with clinical factors and comorbidities in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) treated in primary care settings.
Cross-sectional study design: This study assessed the HRQoL using a 36-item Short Form Survey (SF-36) tool in eight domains. The HRQoL scores ranged from 0% to 100% for each domain, with higher scores indicating better HRQoL. Linear regression was used to assess the association of HRQoL domain scores with clinical covariates and comorbidities.
A countrywide study was conducted on individuals with established T2DM (N=635) attending primary healthcare services for various conditions across nine federal states of Austria from 2021 to 2023.
A total of 635 individuals, aged above 50 years and diagnosed with T2DM, were recruited by the attending physician to evaluate their HRQoL in relation to T2DM and its associated comorbidities.
The mean SF-36 scores for physical functioning (69±28), role-physical (62±42), mental health (72±20), role-emotional (73±41), social functioning (79±25), bodily pain (67±28) and vitality (55±22) were satisfactory, except for general health (41±10). Age and body mass were inversely associated with physical, mental and social HRQoL (p
Our analysis showed that advanced age, obesity, depression, cardiovascular disease, chronic lung diseases and multimorbidity were associated with poor HRQoL of individuals with T2DM at the primary care level. These findings highlight the need for strengthening holistic management in primary care to address the diverse physical, social and emotional needs of individuals with T2DM.
To analyse and synthesise knowledge on workplace violence perpetrated by patients and caregivers against nurses, its consequences and strategies to prevent this phenomenon.
A systematic review of the literature was conducted following the method of the Center for Reviews and Determination and reported in accordance with the PRISMA checklist. A pre-defined protocol was designed (PROSPERO ID: CRD42023432271).
Three researchers screened eligible studies independently. The Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal for Analytical Cross-Sectional Studies was used to assess the risk of bias within the studies included.
Quantitative primary studies published between January 2012 and June 2023 were included through specific research strings used in the CINHAL, Scopus, PubMed and PsychInfo databases.
A total of 15 studies were selected, the majority of which were cross-sectional and observational. The consequences related to events of verbal and physical violence were highlighted, ranging from the psychological to the physical effects on nurses' mental health, for example, gastrointestinal symptoms, headache and sleep problems. Four studies analysed the strategies used to cope with such violence.
The results showed that aggression on the part of patients affects nurses' health adversely on both a personal and a work level, and makes it necessary to pay more attention to the phenomenon and to find strategies to reduce the incidents, such as developing policies to safeguard the professionals' physical and mental health.
Nurses and nursing managers should be aware of violence and its consequences on the victims' health. Therefore, it is essential for nursing managers to develop effective policies to reduce violence and its consequences.
To define nurse-led clinics in primary health care, identify barriers and enablers that influence their successful implementation, and understand what impact they have on patient and population health outcomes.
Nurse-led clinics definitions remain inconsistent. There is limited understanding regarding what enablers and barriers impact successful nurse-led clinic implementation and their impact on patient health care.
Scoping review using narrative synthesis.
PubMed, MEDLINE, Web of Science, Scopus, CINAHL and PsycINFO were searched to identify nurse-led clinic definitions and models of care between 2000 and 2023. Screening and selection of studies were based on eligibility criteria and methodological quality assessment. Narrative synthesis enabled to communicate the phenomena of interest and follows the PRISMA for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) checklist.
Among the 36 identified studies, key principles of what constitutes nurse-led clinics were articulated providing a robust definition. Nurse-led clinics are, in most cases, commensurate with standard care, however, they provide more time with patients leading to greater satisfaction. Enablers highlight nurse-led clinic success is achieved through champions, partners, systems, and clear processes, while barriers encompass key risk points and sustainability considerations.
The review highlights several fundamental elements are central to nurse-led clinic success and are highly recommended when developing interventional nurse-led strategies. Nurse-led clinics within primary health care seek to address health care through community driven, health professional and policy supported strategies. Overall, a robust and contemporary definition of nurse-led care and the clinics in which they operate is provided.
The comprehensive definition, clear mediators of success and the health impact of nurse-led clinics provide a clear framework to effectively build greater capacity among nursing services within primary health care. This, in addition, highlights the need for good health care policy to ensure sustainability.
No Patient or Public Contribution.