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2021 ◽  
pp. bmjmilitary-2021-001922
Author(s):  
Jamie Coleman ◽  
S Fair ◽  
H Doughty ◽  
M J Stacey

This is an observational study of heat-related illness in UK Service Personnel deployed into summer conditions in Northern Kuwait and Southern Iraq. Among 622 hospitalisations reported during a 9-week period at the historical British Military Hospital, Shaibah, 303 consecutive admissions are reviewed in detail. Several clinical syndromes attributable to thermal stress were observed. These ranged from self-limiting debility to life-threatening failures of homeostasis, with 5.0% developing a critical care requirement. Hyponatraemia was a commonly occurring electrolyte disturbance by which, relative to the local reference range, a majority of heat-attributed admissions were affected. Reductions in measured serum sodium could be profound (<125 mmol/L in 20.1% of all heat-related casualties). Hypokalaemia was observed in half of cases, though only a minority were affected by severely low potassium (<2.5 mmol/L in 4.0%). Despite preventive measures prescribed on hospital discharge, illness and significant biochemical derangements could recur upon return to duties in the heat. We reiterate the need for primary prevention of heat illness wherever possible and importance of early, effective interventions to treat and protect Service Personnel from secondary injury. We also highlight the requirement for comprehensive assessment to inform prognostication and occupational decision-making in relation to extreme climatic heat, including aeromedical evacuation. We draw additional attention to the contribution of psychological factors in select cases and identify research questions to improve understanding of environment-induced incapacitation in general.


Author(s):  
Omer Ayten ◽  
Inşa Gül Ekiz İscanlı ◽  
Cengiz Özdemir ◽  
Bengu Saylan ◽  
Kadir Canoğlu ◽  
...  

Aims: Metabolic Syndrome has become the greatest health hazard in the modern world, along with infectious diseases. We aimed to evaluate the effects of metabolic syndrome on disease course, laboratory values and mortality in patients with COVID 19 pneumonia. Methods: COVID 19 pneumonia patients with and without metabolic syndrome were compared in terms of laboratory parameters, clinical results and mortality rates retrospectively. Results: A total of 194 patients hospitalized with COVID 19 pneumonia (with and without metabolic syndrome n = 93 and 101, respectively) were included in the study. Patients with metabolic syndrome had lower oxygen saturation at the time of admission (88.76 vs 93.66 p <0.0001), higher neutrophil (5.85 vs 4.81 p = 0.02) and CRP levels (88.36 vs 62.93 p = 0.009) and COVID 19 involvement was more common in lung tomography (12.3 vs 7.7 p <0.0001). Total length of stay (12.3 vs 6.5 days p <0.0001) and clinical length of stay (7.8 vs 5.9 days p = 0.003) were longer in patients with metabolic syndrome. Requirement of intensive care (45.2% vs 4.9% p <0.0001) and mortality rates (24.7% vs 0.9% p <0.0001) were higher in patients with metabolic syndrome. Presence of metabolic syndrome (OR 32.86, 95% CI 4.34 to 249 p<0.05) were significantly associated with increased mortality. Discussion and conclusion: Our results demonstrated that patients with metabolic syndrome that were hospitalized with COVID 19 pneumonia had significantly higher mortality and intensive care requirement. They have lower oxygen saturations, higher CRP levels and more widespread radiological involvement. Keywords: Covid 19 - Metabolic syndrome – Pneumonia - Mortality


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 237796082110446
Author(s):  
Linda Hargreaves ◽  
Petra Zickgraf ◽  
Nikaesha Paniagua ◽  
Teena Lee Evans ◽  
Lisa Radesi

Introduction The COVID-19 pandemic affected nursing students dramatically when the clinical sites and the onsite classrooms closed to physical participation. This necessitated a move to virtual classrooms and virtual clinical experiences. Some nursing schools adopted telenursing to comply with their Board of Registered Nursing direct patient care requirements. Students value the hands-on nursing in a direct care facility and clinical instructors must replicate this in a virtual setting. This article discusses telenursing and Teach-Back processes with student active engagement that facilitates learning and meets the direct care requirement. The purpose is to share best practice ideas for clinical instructors to educate when clinical settings are unavailable. Methods This innovation includes examples from five clinical instructors when in-person clinicals were not available due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They used virtual teaching and telenursing for nursing students which complied with clinical requirements of preconference, clinical experience, and post-conference. Telenursing combines case studies or shared documents, student collaboration, and includes a patient or patient actor via telehealth. Clinical instructors present a patient history or case study and allow students time for preparation. Socratic questioning helps students focus on determining the correct questions to ask. Telenursing call to the patient and teach-back questioning validated patient learning. Following the call, the instructor leads a post-conference debrief and students independently document the call. Conclusion Five clinical instructors follow the process of pre-brief, case presentation, and debrief while students develop critical thinking, strong communication skills, documentation requirements, and utilize the nursing process of assessment, diagnosis, outcome, plan, interventions, and evaluation. Students will have future opportunities to develop hands-on skills as they return to the clinical setting.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (SPL1) ◽  
pp. 1798-1803
Author(s):  
Ayoush verma

The extreme intense breathing disorder coronavirus 2 pandemic features phenomenal emergency care utilities. The gigantic number of coronavirus sickness (coronavirus) case in the US had brought about a huge populace of survivor with delayed after septic indications. The making of integrative present coronavirus facilities on location both diligent manifestations and potential long hau care requirement needed comprehension of the intense sickness and the awakening information with respect to coronavirus results. Involvement in serious, intense breathing disorder and mid breathing state, after-intense breathing trouble disorder intricacies, and after-escalated care state additionally adverses foreseen sequelae and clinical orientation plan. After-corona virus clinical projects should be set up to think about people recently hospital with coronavirus (counting the individuals who needed basic consideration to uphold), nonhospital people with determined breathing side effects following coronavirus, and people with previous lung infection confounded by a coronavirus. Viable integrative joint effort models influence caretaking picked up at the time of the beginning stages of the pandemic to beat the exceptional strategic emergency care requirement presented by pandemic states. A coordinated effort among doctors and analysts across orders will give understanding into outlastership that may shape the therapy of both intense sickness and ongoing emergency care requirement. In a survey, we examine the points, general standards, components of a plan, and emergency care requirement of a fruitful integrative model to address the needed menus of coronavirus outlasts. Coordinated efforts required by doctors and survivors to overcome the extreme intense situation. Recovery of outlasters depends upon coordinated efforts of doctors and survivors. Recovery from the coronavirus is a delayed course of action. Risk factors and comorbidities are equally prime.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. e000396
Author(s):  
Junji Haruta ◽  
Sho Tsugawa ◽  
Kazunari Ogura

ObjectiveCurrently, use of social networking services (SNSs) for interprofessional collaboration is increasing. However, few studies have reported on virtual interprofessional interactions in community healthcare services. Revealing such structural characteristics of the networks can provide insight into the functions of the interprofessional information-sharing network and lead to smoother collaboration. Thus, we aimed to explore the structure of SNS-based information-sharing clinical networks.DesignSocial network analysis (SNA).SettingWe selected a community in City X in Japan.Data collectionWe analysed SNS-based information-sharing clinical network data linked to patients receiving home medical care or care services between January and December 2018. A network was created for each patient to allow healthcare professionals to post and view messages on the web platform. In the SNA, healthcare professions registered in a patient group were represented as nodes, and message posting/viewing relationships were represented as links in the patient network. We investigated the structural characteristics of the target networks using several measures for SNA, including indegree centrality and outdegree centrality, which reflect the number of incoming and outgoing links to/from a node, respectively. Additionally, the professions forming the most central nodes were investigated based on their ranking to identify those with a central role in the networks. Finally, to compare the networks of nursing care levels 1–3 (lighter care requirement) and those with nursing care levels 4–5 (heavier care requirement), we analysed the structural differences in the networks and investigated the roles of healthcare professionals using centrality measures of nodes.ResultsAmong 844 groups, 247 groups with any nursing care level data were available for analysis. Increasing nursing care level showed higher density, reciprocity and lower centralisation. Healthcare professions with high indegree centrality (physicians, care workers and physical therapists) differed from those with high outdegree centrality (home care workers, physical therapists, and registered dieticians). Visiting nurses and nurses in the clinic played a central role, but visiting nurses tended to have higher indegree and outdegree centrality, while nurses in the clinic had higher closeness and betweenness centrality in networks with heavier care requirement.ConclusionThe SNS-based information-sharing clinical network structure showed that different professions played some form of a central role. Associations between network structures and patient outcomes, cost effectiveness and other factors warrant further investigation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 479-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte Poussardin ◽  
Walid Oulehri ◽  
Marie Eve Isner ◽  
Paul Michel Mertes ◽  
Olivier Collange

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