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Background: Patients without urinary tract infection (UTI) symptoms but with a positive urine culture are considered to have asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB). This often represents colonization and treatment is not recommended or clinically beneficial. Treatment of ASB can promote antimicrobial resistance and increased rates of Clostriodies difficile infections. Many cases of ASB are incorrectly assigned as CAUTIs due to over-culturing practices. We hypothesized that a urine culture algorithm, embedded within a best practice alert (BPA) in the electronic medical record (EMR), would reduce urine culturing practices for ASB. Methods: From Feb 2022 through May 2023, a multidisciplinary team implemented an Inpatient Urine Culturing Stewardship Guideline. A BPA fired when a provider placed a urinalysis with reflex to culture (UACC) or urine culture (UC) order for patients who met criteria (Image 1). The BPA directed providers to remove the order, select the appropriate pathway from the guideline, or provide a rationale for placing the order. The intervention was piloted on three intensive care units and two progressive care units, containing both medical and surgical patients. Monthly ordering practices, CAUTI rates, and gram-negative rod (GNR) bacteremia rates from a 13-month pre-intervention baseline period were compared to a 16-month intervention period. Over the same time periods, we also assessed changes in ordering practices for comparison units which did not implement the intervention. Pre-and-post intervention cohorts were analyzed using median two sample tests and Exact Poison Method, as appropriate. Results: On intervention units there was a 41.0% reduction in the median number of UACC and UC orders per 1000 patient days from 16.31 during the baseline period to 9.62 in the intervention period (p=0.0036). Pan cultures per 1000 patient days in which one of the orders was a UACC or UC fell by 42.2% from a median of 10.20 per 1000 patient days to 5.90 (p=0.0008). The comparison units saw no significant reductions in UACC and UC orders (p=0.21) or pan cultures (p=1.0). On the intervention units, the CAUTI rate for the baseline period was 1.31 per 1000 catheter days versus 0.79 in the intervention period (IRR = 1.65; p=0.44). GNR bacteremias remained stable on the intervention units between the baseline and intervention periods (p=0.82). Conclusion: This multidisciplinary intervention, leveraging EMR clinical decision support, reduced urine and pan culturing practices while demonstrating a trend towards a reduced CAUTI rate. The prevalence of GNR bacteremias remained consistent with baseline levels, suggesting the intervention did not cause harm.
A refrigerant system (like that of a supermarket) is a complex system if we consider all the stakeholders throughout its lifecycle phases (use, maintenance, technological update, end of life). The lack of stakeholders' interaction during the design and other lifecycle stages of such a system generates issues and leads to sub-optimal system performances. We used the RID methodology to identify the main areas for improvement for these activities related to the refrigerant system. It is precisely designed to analyze, within the scope of activity, the major stakeholders' problems (user profiles) during lifecycle phases (use situations) to deduce areas for improvement (value buckets). Therefore, we built a process of interviews and data collection on existing practices to feed into a RID model. The first results are an archetypal description of the actors and problems encountered according to the lifecycle phases. The second part is a prioritized mapping of the areas to improve despite a certain number of known available solutions but proven insufficient.
The value of services for those with the ‘At Risk Mental State for Psychosis’ (ARMS) continues to be disputed. ARMS services have provided a valuable stimulus to academic research into the transition into psychosis. Furthermore, there is currently a welcome trend to transform such clinics into youth mental health services catering for the broader clientele of young people suffering from anxiety and depression, who already constitute the bulk of those seen at ARMS clinics. However, such services are never likely to make major inroads into preventing psychosis because they only reach a small proportion of those at risk. Evidence from medicine shows that avoiding exposure to factors which increase the risk of disease (e.g. poor nutrition, transmission of infection, tobacco smoking), produces greater public benefit than focussing efforts on individuals with, or about to develop, disease. We consider that the most productive approach for psychosis prevention is avoiding exposure to risk-increasing factors. The best-established risk factors for psychosis are obstetric events, childhood abuse, migration, city living, adverse life events and cannabis use. Some as city living, are likely proxies for an unknown causal factor(s) while preventing others such as childhood abuse is currently beyond our powers. The risk factor for psychosis which is most readily open to this approach is the use of cannabis. Therefore, as an initial step towards a strategy for universal primary prevention, we advocate public health campaigns to educate young people about the harms of regular use of high potency cannabis.
Little is known about the experiences of people living alone with dementia in the community and their non-resident relatives and friends who support them. In this paper, we explore their respective attitudes and approaches to the future, particularly regarding the future care and living arrangements of those living with dementia. The study is based on a qualitative secondary analysis of interviews with 24 people living alone with early-stage dementia in North Wales, United Kingdom, and one of their relatives or friends who supported them. All but four of the dyads were interviewed twice over 12 months (a total of 88 interviews). In the analysis, it was observed that several people with dementia expressed the desire to continue living at home for ‘as long as possible’. A framework approach was used to investigate this theme in more depth, drawing on concepts from the existing studies of people living with dementia and across disciplines. Similarities and differences in the future outlook and temporal orientation of the participants were identified. The results support previous research suggesting that the future outlook of people living with early-stage dementia can be interpreted in part as a response to their situation and a way of coping with the threats that it is perceived to present, and not just an impaired view of time. Priorities for future research are highlighted in the discussion.
Neuroanatomical abnormalities in first-episode psychosis (FEP) tend to be subtle and widespread. The vast majority of previous studies have used small samples, and therefore may have been underpowered. In addition, most studies have examined participants at a single research site, and therefore the results may be specific to the local sample investigated. Consequently, the findings reported in the existing literature are highly heterogeneous. This study aimed to overcome these issues by testing for neuroanatomical abnormalities in individuals with FEP that are expressed consistently across several independent samples.
Methods
Structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging data were acquired from a total of 572 FEP and 502 age and gender comparable healthy controls at five sites. Voxel-based morphometry was used to investigate differences in grey matter volume (GMV) between the two groups. Statistical inferences were made at p < 0.05 after family-wise error correction for multiple comparisons.
Results
FEP showed a widespread pattern of decreased GMV in fronto-temporal, insular and occipital regions bilaterally; these decreases were not dependent on anti-psychotic medication. The region with the most pronounced decrease – gyrus rectus – was negatively correlated with the severity of positive and negative symptoms.
Conclusions
This study identified a consistent pattern of fronto-temporal, insular and occipital abnormalities in five independent FEP samples; furthermore, the extent of these alterations is dependent on the severity of symptoms and duration of illness. This provides evidence for reliable neuroanatomical alternations in FEP, expressed above and beyond site-related differences in anti-psychotic medication, scanning parameters and recruitment criteria.
The first episode of psychosis is a critical period in the emergence of cardiometabolic risk.
Aims
We set out to explore the influence of individual and lifestyle factors on cardiometabolic outcomes in early psychosis.
Method
This was a prospective cohort study of 293 UK adults presenting with first-episode psychosis investigating the influence of sociodemographics, lifestyle (physical activity, sedentary behaviour, nutrition, smoking, alcohol, substance use) and medication on cardiometabolic outcomes over the following 12 months.
Results
Rates of obesity and glucose dysregulation rose from 17.8% and 12%, respectively, at baseline to 23.7% and 23.7% at 1 year. Little change was seen over time in the 76.8% tobacco smoking rate or the quarter who were sedentary for over 10 h daily. We found no association between lifestyle at baseline or type of antipsychotic medication prescribed with either baseline or 1-year cardiometabolic outcomes. Median haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) rose by 3.3 mmol/mol in participants from Black and minority ethnic (BME) groups, with little change observed in their White counterparts. At 12 months, one-third of those with BME heritage exceeded the threshold for prediabetes (HbA1c >39 mmol/mol).
Conclusions
Unhealthy lifestyle choices are prevalent in early psychosis and cardiometabolic risk worsens over the next year, creating an important window for prevention. We found no evidence, however, that preventative strategies should be preferentially directed based on lifestyle habits. Further work is needed to determine whether clinical strategies should allow for differential patterns of emergence of cardiometabolic risk in people of different ethnicities.
Reducing hospitalisation and length of stay (LOS) in hospital following first episode psychosis (FEP) is important, yet reliable measures of these outcomes and their moderators are lacking. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate the proportion of FEP cases who were hospitalised after their first contact with services and the LOS in a hospital during follow-up.
Methods
Studies were identified from a systematic search across major electronic databases from inception to October 2017. Random effects meta-analyses and meta-regression analyses were conducted.
Results
81 longitudinal studies encompassing data for 23 280 FEP patients with an average follow-up length of 7 years were included. 55% (95% CI 50.3–60.5%) of FEP cases were hospitalised at least once during follow-up with the pooled average LOS of 116.7 days (95% CI 95.1–138.3). Older age of illness onset and being in a stable relationship were associated with a lower proportion of people who were hospitalised. While the proportion of hospitalised patients has not decreased over time, LOS has, with the sharpest reduction in the latest time period. The proportion of patients hospitalised during follow-up was highest in Australia and New Zealand (78.4%) compared to Europe (58.1%) and North America (48.0%); and lowest in Asia (32.5%). Black ethnicity and longer duration of untreated psychosis were associated with longer LOS; while less severe psychotic symptoms at baseline were associated with shorter LOS.
Conclusion
One in two FEP cases required hospitalisation at least once during a 7-year follow-up with an average length of hospitalisation of 4 months during this period. LOS has declined over time, particularly in those countries in which it was previously longest.
This chapter consolidates findings on student assessment, plagiarism and academic misconduct of interest to computing researchers and instructors. This builds on the literature recommendation that savvy assessment design can reduce the opportunities for student plagiarism. Despite this recommendation, it is uncommon for assessment research and plagiarism research to be considered on an equal footing. Computing courses are unusual in that they include both technical situations, such as computer programming classes, alongside more general activity, such as writing reports. This requires instructors to use of a diverse range of assessments. Many traditional assessment practices are susceptible to plagiarism and cheating, including contract cheating, the behaviour where students engage a third party to complete their assessments for them. The chapter provides practical suggestions for designing robust assessments and promoting academic integrity. It also identifies technical solutions that can be deployed to reduce the threat of academic misconduct. The chapter concludes by exploring opportunities for future computing research in the assessment and plagiarism areas.