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This study examines more than 5.8 million bed days of data from private and National Health Service care providers who contribute to the Mental Health Services Monthly Statistics in the UK. The use of oral chemical restraint is compared with provider size, and the relative use of oral chemical restraint as opposed to seclusion is investigated.
Results
The data-set has large amounts of missing data. The use of oral chemical restraint is proportional to provider size in terms of bed days. Analysis of those providers who reliably submit data demonstrates patterns of reported use of oral chemical restraint versus use of seclusion.
Clinical implications
Further research is required into the institutional characteristics that are correlated with increased use of oral chemical restraint. Efforts to investigate the use of restrictive interventions in mental health settings are frustrated by inconsistent reporting.
NASA’s all-sky survey mission, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), is specifically engineered to detect exoplanets that transit bright stars. Thus far, TESS has successfully identified approximately 400 transiting exoplanets, in addition to roughly 6 000 candidate exoplanets pending confirmation. In this study, we present the results of our ongoing project, the Validation of Transiting Exoplanets using Statistical Tools (VaTEST). Our dedicated effort is focused on the confirmation and characterisation of new exoplanets through the application of statistical validation tools. Through a combination of ground-based telescope data, high-resolution imaging, and the utilisation of the statistical validation tool known as TRICERATOPS, we have successfully discovered eight potential super-Earths. These planets bear the designations: TOI-238b (1.61$^{+0.09} _{-0.10}$ R$_\oplus$), TOI-771b (1.42$^{+0.11} _{-0.09}$ R$_\oplus$), TOI-871b (1.66$^{+0.11} _{-0.11}$ R$_\oplus$), TOI-1467b (1.83$^{+0.16} _{-0.15}$ R$_\oplus$), TOI-1739b (1.69$^{+0.10} _{-0.08}$ R$_\oplus$), TOI-2068b (1.82$^{+0.16} _{-0.15}$ R$_\oplus$), TOI-4559b (1.42$^{+0.13} _{-0.11}$ R$_\oplus$), and TOI-5799b (1.62$^{+0.19} _{-0.13}$ R$_\oplus$). Among all these planets, six of them fall within the region known as ‘keystone planets’, which makes them particularly interesting for study. Based on the location of TOI-771b and TOI-4559b below the radius valley we characterised them as likely super-Earths, though radial velocity mass measurements for these planets will provide more details about their characterisation. It is noteworthy that planets within the size range investigated herein are absent from our own solar system, making their study crucial for gaining insights into the evolutionary stages between Earth and Neptune.
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: The objective is to describe the process for developing two measurement tools to measure confidence (self-efficacy) of the anti-racist advocate in an academic setting. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We proposed five spheres encountered by the academic trainees: Academic/Research, Clinical, Policy, Interpersonal, and Intrapersonal. We evaluated a book, by Shereen Daniels, used in anti-racism literature: The Anti-Racist Organization - Dismantling Systemic Racism in the Workplace. Using the proposed metric of RACE framework, Recognize the problem, Analyze the impact, Commit to action, Empower for change, we sought to establish readiness on the spectrum of anti-racism advocacy. We developed a list of anti-racism and anti-bias advocacy skills based on: 1) Informational interviews with anti-racism and anti-bias experts, 2) Scoping literature review and 3) Academic trainees’ and faculty lived experience. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: The first assessment, “5-Spheres”, consists of 10 items that perform, 1) Analysis of readiness on the spectrum of anti-racism advocacy using RACE framework (Figure 1 [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1A3nMArEn7ZSxZSuSgDkYl_row-VOhOXf/view?usp=drive_link]), 2) Assessment of workplace environment. The second assessment, “Skills”, consists of 25 items (Figure 2 [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GTdfSgn0-mPu-flSUVSN-vIKTxBCkFW3/view?usp=drive_link]) that perform assessment of confidence of specific skills within each of the five spheres using the following scale: 1 – Not confident at all, 2 – Lacking some confidence, 3 – Somewhat confident, 4 – Completely confident DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: This proposed measurement tool can extend to anti-bias as well as anti-racism. Potential uses of the self-assessment includes: 1) Measurement and 2) Gap-spotting.
To investigate the source and transmission dynamics of an endoscope-associated New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase-producing Klebsiella pneumonia (NDM-KP) outbreak.
Design:
Epidemiological and genomic investigation.
Setting:
Academic acute care hospital in New Jersey.
Patients:
Five patients with active NDM-KP infection identified on clinical isolates, and four NDM-KP colonized patients identified via rectal swab screening.
Results:
Over a twelve-month period, nine patients were identified with NDM-KP infection or colonization. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) revealed that all of the identified cases were related by 25 mutational events or less. Seven of the cases were linked to gastrointestinal endoscopic procedures (four clinical cases and three positive screens among patients exposed to endoscopes suspected of transmission). Two cases demonstrated delayed transmission that occurred five months after the initial outbreak, likely through shared usage of a non-therapeutic gastroscope without an elevator channel.
Conclusions:
Although all endoscope cultures in our investigation were negative, the epidemiological link to gastrointestinal endoscopes, the high degree of relatedness via WGS, and the identification of asymptomatic NDM-KP colonization among patients exposed to shared endoscopes make the endoscopic mode of transmission most likely. This investigation highlights the probable transmission of NDM-KP via a gastroscope without an elevator channel, observed several months after an initial outbreak. We hypothesize that persistent mechanical defects may have contributed to the delayed device-related transmission of NDM-KP.
Constraints on the tectonic setting of the upper Triassic to lower Jurassic in the Sverdrup Basin can be elucidated from detrital-zircon U-Pb ages. During the Triassic, there was a dual provenance system into sedimentary basins along the western and northern margins of Laurentia. One of the sediment sources was from an extra-basinal igneous source of Permian-Triassic zircon while the other source was recycled sediment eroded from older sedimentary basins. The Heiberg Formation/Group was deposited during a period of significant siliciclastic sedimentation into the basin from the upper Triassic to the lower Jurassic and comprises three members: Romulus, Fosheim and Remus. Previous work has interpreted that the Carboniferous-Permian-Triassic detrital zircon had stopped reaching the northern part of the Sverdrup Basin by deposition of the upper Heiberg Formation (lower Jurassic). New detrital-zircon age analyses from samples along the northern part of the basin spanning different horizons in the Heiberg Formation show that the typical extra-basinal signature, with abundant Carboniferous-Permian-Triassic ages, was no longer recorded during the initial deposition of the Fosheim Member during the latest Triassic. Previously published basin analysis from the Sverdrup Basin interprets syn-Jurassic extensional faults and so we relate the provenance change to the onset of extension. It is interpreted that the Sverdrup Basin transitioned from a basin that received sediment from a northern extra-basinal igneous source during deposition of the Romulus Member to an extensional basin by the deposition of the Fosheim Member in the latest Triassic, as the northern sediment source was interrupted by intervening extensional basins of the proto-Amerasia Basin.
Hexavalent chromium (Cr6+) is a toxic carcinogenic pollutant that might be released by the mining and processing of ultramafic rocks and nickel laterites and which requires permanent removal from the contaminated biosphere. Ultramafic material can also serve as a feedstock for the sequestration of CO2 resulting from the growth of new minerals, raising the intriguing proposition of integrated sequestration of both pollutants, CO2 and chromium, into magnesium carbonates. Such a synergistic process downstream of ore recovery and mineral processing could be an elegant proposition for more sustainable utilisation and management of the Earth's resources. We have therefore carried out an experimental and microanalytical study to investigate potentially suitable carbonate minerals. Uptake of chromium in carbonate phases was determined, followed by identification of the crystalline phases and characterisation of the local structural environment around the incorporated chromium centres. The results suggest that neither nesquehonite nor hydromagnesite have the structural capacity to incorporate Cr6+ or Cr3+ significantly at room temperature. We therefore propose that further research into this technology should focus on laboratory assessments of other phases, such as layered double hyroxides, that have a natural structural capacity to uptake both chromium and CO2.
Around 200,000 veterans (up to 32% of those deployed) of the 1991 Gulf War (GW) suffer from GW veterans’ illness (GWVI). GWVI is a poorly understood chronic medical condition, characterized by symptoms indicative of brain function deficits in multiple domains. Among the symptoms of brain impairment GWVI-related chronic headaches and body muscle and joint pain conditions (GWVI-HAP) are the most debilitating, affecting around 64% of the GWVI veterans. Further, depression carries a very high co-morbid rate (>50%) in patients with chronic pain, including GWVI-HAP. In this preliminary study, we examined the integrity of brain function networks in a group of GWI-HAP veterans, with resting state fMRI (rsfMRI).
Participants and Methods:
Data from the first twenty-two GWVI-HAP veterans from two ongoing parallel clinical trials was examined. Of these 14 subjects (GWVI-HAP-DM) had mild depression (Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HSRD < 13); and 8 subjects (GWVI-HAP-DS) had moderate to severe depression (HSRD > 14). Written informed consent was obtained from all participants in the protocol approved by the local Institutional Review Board. RsfMRI data was acquired on a Siemens 3T Prisma-Fit MRI scanner using a 10-minute whole-brain high resolution simultaneous multi-slice (SMS) gradient echo echo-planar imaging (EPI) sequence: TR/TE/FA = 2.2 sec/ 27 msec/80°, and analyzed with well-established image processing pipelines. Functional connectivity (FC) to different regions implicated in depression and chronic pain was assessed with seed-based correlation analysis. Between group differences in FC were obtained with 2-sample t-tests.
Results:
GWVI-HAP-DS group exhibited significantly (p < 0.05) reduced FC compared to GWVI-HAP-DM between frontal lobe (medial (mPFC), and dorsolateral (dlPFC) prefrontal cortex) and the striatum. This indicates that malfunction of fronto-striatal circuits could be a source of the increased chronic pain and depression seen in veterans with GWVI- HAP-DS. Dysregulation of fronto-striatal networks has been implicated in major depressive disorder as well as many chronic pain conditions. In addition, FC between mPFC, and salience network (SN; anterior insula and dorsal anterior cingulate) and limbic (subgenual and ventral anterior cingulate) regions were also reduced in GWVI-HAP-DS. Similarly, mPFC and SN also exhibited reduced FC to pain processing regions (posterior insula, centromedian thalamus and cerebellum). These FC impairments could reflect greater deficits in regulation of and salience attribution to emotions and nociception in the GWVI-HAP-DS group. Finally, GWVI-HAP-DS also exhibited reduced FC between nodes of the default mode network. DMN impairments also have been observed in many depressive and chronic pain conditions.
Conclusions:
The results of this preliminary analysis implicate impairments in cognitive control of emotion and nociception as a mechanism underlying the enhanced chronic pain and depression observed in GWVI-HAP veterans, especially those with moderate to severe depression. A fuller picture of deficits in FC in brain function networks is expected to emerge as more GWI-HAP subjects of both groups along with age matched healthy controls are examined in this ongoing project. Better understanding of impairments in these networks in GWI-HAP will benefit the rehabilitation of veterans with GWI-HAP.
Aging is associated with changes in cortical excitability which may affect motor learning and cognitive function via selective modulation of gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA). Previous studies using magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) to measure GABA in older adults found that increased baseline GABA levels in the sensorimotor cortex (M1S1) were associated with better motor performance. GABA levels in M1S1 have tended to decrease during the execution of a repeated motor sequence. The dynamic change in GABA density in M1S1 in older adults is currently unknown and represents a critical gap in our understanding of how it could impact motor learning and cognitive performance. As such, the purpose of the current study is to quantify changes in cortical GABA during motor learning in the aging brain and examine those changes in relation to motor and cognitive performance. We hypothesize that older adults with greater dynamic range in M1S1 GABA levels will display more efficient motor learning and increased cognitive scores.
Participants and Methods:
We report on a total of 18 healthy older adults aged 64 to 80 years (M = 70.44, SD = 4.99, 12 females). Using MRS at 3T, we measured changes in GABA concentration in M1S1 at rest, during an eight or 12 finger-movement motor entrainment task, and during a recall task. Gannett was used for GABA quantification relative to water. Change in GABA was calculated by subtracting Rest1 GABA from Recall1 GABA. In a separate session, participants completed a battery of cognitive assessments. We computed linear regressions to examine the relationship between dynamic GABA change, recall accuracy of the motor task and cognitive performance.
Results:
In relation to motor performance, we found that both greater baseline (Rest1) GABA levels and greater dynamic change in GABA significantly predicted better recall accuracy on the motor task. For cognitive performance, we found that greater dynamic change in GABA significantly predicted better performance on Word Reading in the Stroop Color and Word Test and Delayed Recall in the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test (HVLT). No additional significant relationships were found for the remaining cognitive assessments.
Conclusions:
Older adults who were able to accurately perform the task had a greater dynamic change in GABA and increased baseline GABA levels. These adults with greater dynamic change also had better cognitive performance on HVLT Delay and Stroop Word Reading. This modulation of GABA associated with better performance could be related to changes in neuroplasticity. Although these results are in the preliminary stages, they point to a greater understanding of aging related changes in motor and cognitive performance. We’ll continue to explore the relationship between sensory motor performance and changes in GABA concentration as a potential predictor for cognitive performance and future rehabilitation.
Studies of early fourth-millennium BC Britain have typically focused on the Early Neolithic sites of Wessex and Orkney; what can the investigation of sites located in areas beyond these core regions add? The authors report on excavations (2011–2019) at Dorstone Hill in Herefordshire, which have revealed a remarkable complex of Early Neolithic monuments: three long barrows constructed on the footprints of three timber buildings that had been deliberately burned, plus a nearby causewayed enclosure. A Bayesian chronological model demonstrates the precocious character of many of the site's elements and strengthens the evidence for the role of tombs and houses/halls in the creation and commemoration of foundational social groups in Neolithic Britain.
Cross-sectional studies have shown that the COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the mental health of healthcare staff. However, it is less well understood how working over the long term in successive COVID-19 waves affects staff well-being.
Aims
To identify subpopulations within the health and social care staff workforce with differentiated trajectories of mental health symptoms during phases of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Method
The COVID-19 Staff Wellbeing Survey assessed health and social care staff well-being within an area of the UK at four time points, separated by 3-month intervals, spanning November 2020 to August 2021.
Results
Growth mixture models were performed on the depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder longitudinal data. Two class solutions provided the best fit for all models. The vast majority of the workforce were best represented by the low-symptom class trajectory, where by symptoms were consistently below the clinical cut-off for moderate-to-severe symptoms. A sizable minority (13–16%) were categorised as being in the high-symptom class, a group who had symptom levels in the moderate-to-severe range throughout the peaks and troughs of the pandemic. In the depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder models, the high-symptom class perceived communication from their organisation to be less effective than the low-symptom class.
Conclusions
This research identified a group of health service staff who reported persistently high mental health symptoms during the pandemic. This group of staff may well have particular needs in terms of the provision of well-being support services.
Demand for prehospital emergency services has been increasing worldwide. Significant challenges exist in meeting response times in rural environments when faced with surges in demand related to weather events or sustained demand surge such as the pandemic environment. Significant pressure also exists in the hospital environment receiving such large volumes of patients with short duration handovers to allow prehospital assets return to their primary roles. The aim of this study is to determine trends for ambulance presentations in a rural emergency department over seven years with absolute numbers and percentage of overall attendances.
Method:
A retrospective analysis of anonymized electronic registration data on the iPMS system from initiation in 2014 to 2022 including total registration numbers, presentation by ambulance, and handover times. Excel is used to record and examine data.
Results:
ED attendances rose from 29,236 in 2014 to 43,184 in 2021 with total ambulance presentations ranging from 4,859 in 2014 (16.62% of attendances), maxing in 2019 at 10,326 out of total attendances of 42,637 (24.22% of attendances).Lowest monthly ambulance presentations occurred in April 2014 (441 or 15.82% of 2788 attendances) and maximal monthly presentations was 1,023 in May 2022 (23.38% of 4376 attendances). Lowest percentage of attendances arriving by ambulance occurred in May 2014 with 14.97% (468) out of 3,127 ED presentations. Highest percentage of attendances arriving by ambulance occurred in January 2021 with 33.67% (875) of 2,599 ED presentations which was during the lockdown phase of COVID in Ireland.
Conclusion:
Overall total numbers of patients arriving by ambulance has been steadily increasing for years but numbers (and percentages) dramatically increased during COVID and this has been sustained in the POST Lockdown pandemic phase. Strategies are required to manage demand, increase turnaround and educate the public on appropriate use of prehospital emergency services.
The National Ambulance Service (NAS) must transport patients with acute psychiatric needs to their nearest emergency department for assessment. Wexford General Hospital (WGH) does not have on-site medical psychiatric services after hours, in-patient psychiatric beds, or dedicated psychiatric doctors. Patients requiring formal acute psychiatric assessment and/or admission after ED review need to be transferred 60-80 km to other healthcare facilities.
Aimed to assess average ED stays of psychiatric patients and determine what degree transfer time contributed to their total time would help to determine what delay there was to providing acute psychiatric care due to the lack of after hours/on-site services.
Method:
Data was collected from the iPMS system. A total of 125 patients presented with primary psychiatric complaints between January 1, 2021 and December 31, 2021 and required onward transfer for acute psychiatric assessment or admission. Patients were excluded if less than 18 years or had been admitted to another WGH service before transfer. There are no existing guidelines in the National Clinical Program for Psychiatry or NICE guidelines for acute psychiatric patient transfer times or ED stays.
Results:
The average WGH ED attendance time was 15h 27min (range 0h08min and 19h22min). The longest interval contributing to overall time was Transfer Booked to Transfer Time (average 3h 27min). The time from Psychiatric Referral to Transfer accounted for 30% (on average) of patients’ attendance time.
Conclusion:
There are significant delays in accessing acute psychiatric care due to the absence of Ambulance Service Bypass Protocols to transport patients to the most appropriate rather than the nearest ED. Proposed Trauma bypass system changes offer unique opportunities to review such inequity of access to acute psychiatric services.
As the population in the Republic of Ireland increases, the number of Emergency Department (ED) attendances and admission rates increase, placing significant pressure on the health care system, the limited staff and hospital resources.
The aim of this study is to assess the admission rates in an Irish Public Hospital Emergency Department between 2014 and 2022.
Method:
This retrospective study was done using information provided by the Health Service Executive Integrated Patient Management System. Data for the period between February 2014 to September 2022 were collected. From the data, the admission rate can be calculated and trends observed.
Results:
Emergency department attendance rates have increased from 29,236 to 42,637 between 2014 and 2019, with a decline noticed in 2020 to 37,751 and a drastic increase in 2021 at 43,182. Currently up until September 2022 there has been 35,503 attendances and 8,570 admissions, with an admission rate of 24.14%. The number of admissions has ranged from 9,056 in 2014 to the highest being 12,175 in 2019. This means the admission rate is averaging between 24% to 31% per annum, with the highest being 31,04% in 2015, and the lowest in 2017 at 24,99%.
Conclusion:
This study showed a steady increase in attendances per annum, which correlates to an increase in the total admissions from 2014 to 2022, with approximately one third of all ED attendances resulting in admission. The increase in attendances and admission rate could be related to the population growth from 4.6 to 5.1 million from 2014 to 2022. The decrease in attendances during 2020 could be attributed to the Covid-19 pandemic restrictions being implemented, and lifted in 2021 which showed a drastic increase in ED numbers. Ultimately, the increase in admissions will place a burden on the Public Hospitals in Ireland.
Trauma is one of the leading causes of death in patients under 40 years of age. The Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) Guidelines are widely accepted as the standardized approach to trauma and classify hemorrhagic shock according to heart rate (HR), blood pressure (BP), urinary output, and mental status. Paradoxical bradycardia (defined as HR <60 bpm) in hemorrhagic shock is an uncommon presenting feature and presents a diagnostic challenge to the physician; its true incidence is unknown.
Method:
A case of paradoxical bradycardia was examined as a presenting feature in hemorrhagic shock.
Results:
A 17-year-old male patient presented to our Emergency Department (ED) with collapse and abdominal pain following a collision with another player during a sports match.
The patient was hypotensive (BP 92/42) and bradycardic at triage, with a heart rate of 50. He was pale and diaphoretic with a Glasgow Coma Scale of 13/15, thready pulses, and localized peritonitis in the left upper quadrant of his abdomen.
An increase in blood pressure was observed following initial fluid resuscitation; however, this was transient and preceded the onset of profound hypotension (BP 64/30). Bradycardia with a heart rate between 50-60bpm was persistent despite resuscitative efforts.
Abdominal ultrasound demonstrated intraperitoneal free-fluid, and Computerized Tomography confirmed the presence of a grade V splenic laceration. He was taken to the operating theater for emergency laparotomy and underwent splenectomy. A 2.3 liter hemoperitoneum was found intraoperatively. There were no further complications post-operatively, and he made a full recovery.
Conclusion:
Tachycardia is a potentially unreliable marker of blood loss, especially in young, healthy patients. A high index of suspicion is necessary to prevent this uncommon but life-threatening feature of hemorrhagic shock from being overlooked.
Ultrasound is the standard imaging technique for diagnosing lower limb deep venous thrombosis (DVT). The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidance 158 recommendation 1.1.3 states that all patients with sufficient pretest probability for DVT should be offered a proximal leg vein ultrasound within four hours. However, due to high patient volumes, formal radiology department ultrasound wait times often exceed one week. Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is used to bridge diagnostic delay in our emergency department (ED) .
This study aimed to quantify numbers offered POCUS for suspected proximal lower DVT in our ED and accuracy of such studies.
Method:
A retrospective review of electronic records was conducted for patients who underwent formal lower-limb ultrasound for suspected DVT at our hospital over a three-month period (August 1, 2022-October 12, 2022). Patient charts for all ED presentations were assessed to determine whether POCUS was offered and whether DVT was diagnosed.
Statistical analysis was conducted using PRISM v9.
Results:
80 formal ultrasound scans were performed at our hospital for lower limb DVT. 58 were requested for patients presenting to ED, of which 42 had complete records available meeting selection criteria.
POCUS was offered to 24 patients in ED (57.1%). Sensitivity was 66% (95% CI 12%- 98%), and specificity was 94.1% (95% CI 75%-99%). Overall accuracy was 90%, with only one false negative study identified at formal follow-up ultrasound.
Conclusion:
Although sample size was small, our results suggest that POCUS is an accurate but underused tool to diagnose lower limb DVT. Developing a standardized protocol for performing and reporting POCUS DVT scans in ED should allow for earlier diagnosis and initiation of appropriate treatment where necessary.
Health service capacity has been an issue in Ireland since the 1980s swinging cuts. Government reports from 2003 have consistently identified a requirement for 3,000-5,000 extra beds on top of the current approximately 10,500 capacity. Acute hospital bed capacity issues have escalated, the formal system of recording “over capacity” patients or “patients on trolleys” has developed. A “Trolleygar” reports issues from the Health Service Executive (HSE) three times daily. This count is an underestimate as patients temporarily housed in day care units, surgical, or medical assessment units, discharge lounges and other clinical areas which have a bed space are not counted in this overcapacity measure. This study's aim is to calculate the annual number of days on which no patients were lodged on trolleys in Wexford General Hospital.
Method:
Descriptive study using anonymized freely available data from the national HSE Trolley GAR reports on trolley patients in Wexford General Hospital from January 2019 until September 2022. A Golden Zero trolley day was stated as a day on which there were no reported trolley-patients at the three time points, Silver Zero trolley day when two of the time periods recorded no trolleys and a Bronze Zero Trolley day when one period recorded a zero trolley count.
Results:
Data was collected on 1,369 days, with 90 days excluded due to missing data sets. There were 162 Golden days recorded (12.67% of total days). The year 2020 recorded the highest number of Golden days at 28.69% (105 days), followed by 2021 with 11.23% (41 days). During 2019 there were 3.84% (14 days) Golden days and 2022 had the lowest number (January-September) with 0.73% (2 days).
Conclusion:
Despite a zero-tolerance policy, Golden days are disappearing rapidly, capacity is urgently required with post-pandemic ED attendance surges worldwide. True recording of overcapacity patients is required for appropriate capacity modeling.
COVID-19 resulted in 1.8 million reported deaths in 2020 and an excess mortality of at least 3,000,000 to date. Following the announcement of emergency measures mandating various public health interventions, international studies demonstrated a decline in ED attendances, potentiating a delay in seeking health services.
The objective was to examine ED attendance trends by age group and to categorize the attendances following the implementation of regulations related to COVID-19.
Method:
A single-center retrospective observational study of ED attendances from 2014 to 2022 at Wexford General Hospital, a 225-bed acute general hospital. Monthly attendance trends were analyzed covering all phases of the national response. Information was extracted from the electronic health record system iPMS.
Results:
Overall attendances decreased by 11.5% {42,637 (2019) to 37,751 (2020)}, well below expected annual growth projections from 2019 to 2020. A significant reduction in pediatric attendance (≤16 years) occurred, with 31.68% negative growth (10,351 to 7,071) in 2020 and sustained decrease of 15.3% (8,767 attendances) in 2021. In contrast, geriatric (≥65 years) attendances were unchanged in 2020 (17,751), with a surge of 8.9% to 19,333 attendances in 2021, the largest year-on-year growth since 2018. Comparisons of month-to-month trends in relation to public health measures correlated to a marked decline in attendances at the extremes of age during “lockdown” periods.
Conclusion:
The reduction in attendances is likely multifactorial, such as a reduction in school-related stress and patients deciding to stay home for fear of attending during the pandemic with non-emergent conditions. The increase in geriatric presentations in 2021 may reflect continuing restricted access to primary care and GP services, or neglect of prior conditions. Examining changing demographic attendances may offer opportunities to develop alternative ways of supporting frail populations and families in community care avoiding ED presentations.
Case studies have linked SARS-CoV-2 infection to suicidal behaviour. However, conclusive evidence is lacking.
Aims
To examine whether a history of SARS-CoV-2 infection or SARS-CoV-2-related hospital admission was associated with self-harm in the general population and in high-risk groups.
Method
A cohort design was applied to nationwide data on all people aged ≥15 years and living in Denmark between 27 February 2020 and 15 October 2021. Exposure was identified as having had a positive SARS-CoV-2 PCR test, and further assessed as SARS-CoV-2-related hospital admission. Rates of probable self-harm were examined using adjusted incidence rate ratios (aIRRs). The following subgroups were identified: (a) lower educational level, (b) chronic medical conditions, (c) disability pension, (d) mental disorders, (e) substance use disorders, and history of (f) homelessness and (g) imprisonment.
Results
Among 4 412 248 included individuals, 260 663 (5.9%) had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. Out of 5453 individuals presenting with self-harm, 131 (2.4%) had been infected. Individuals with a history of a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result had an aIRR for self-harm of 0.86 (95% CI 0.72–1.03) compared with those without. High rates were found after a SARS-CoV-2-related hospital admission (aIRR = 7.68; 95% CI 5.61–10.51) or a non-SARS-CoV-2-related admission (aIRR = 10.27; 95% CI 9.65–10.93) versus non-infected and not admitted. In sensitivity analyses with a more restrictive definition of self-harm, a positive PCR test was associated with lower rates of self-harm.
Conclusions
Individuals with a PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection did not have higher rates of self-harm than those without. Hospital admission in general, rather than being SARS-CoV-2 positive. seemed to be linked to elevated rates of self-harm.
Innovative shoe insoles, designed to enhance sensory information on the plantar surface of the feet, could help to improve walking in people with Multiple Sclerosis.
Objective:
To compare the effects of wearing textured versus smooth insoles, on measures of gait, foot sensation and patient-reported outcomes, in people with Multiple Sclerosis.
Methods:
A prospective, randomised controlled trial was conducted with concealed allocation, assessor blinding and intention-to-treat analysis. Thirty ambulant men and women with multiple sclerosis (MS) (Disease Steps rating 1–4) were randomly allocated to wear textured or smooth insoles for 12 weeks. Self-reported insole wear and falls diaries were completed over the intervention period. Laboratory assessments of spatiotemporal gait patterns, foot sensation and proprioception, and patient-reported outcomes, were performed at Weeks 0 (Baseline 1), 4 (Baseline 2) and 16 (Post-Intervention). The primary outcome was the size of the mediolateral base of support (stride/step width) when walking over even and uneven surfaces. Independent t-tests were performed on change from baseline (average of baseline measures) to post-intervention.
Results:
There were no differences in stride width between groups, when walking over the even or uneven surfaces (P ≥ 0.20) at post-intervention. There were no between-group differences for any secondary outcomes including gait (all P values > 0.23), foot sensory function (all P values ≥ 0.08) and patient-reported outcomes (all P values ≥ 0.23).
Conclusions:
In our small trial, prolonged wear of textured insoles did not appear to alter walking or foot sensation in people with MS who have limited foot sensory loss. Further investigation is needed to explore optimal insole design.
Clinical Trial Registration:
Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12615000421538).
Evidence for working rock crystal, a rare form of water-clear type of quartz, is occasionally recovered from prehistoric sites in Britain and Ireland, however, very little has been written on the specific methods of working this material, and its potential significance in the past. This paper presents the first synthesis of rock crystal evidence from Britain and Ireland, before examining a new assemblage from the Early Neolithic site of Dorstone Hill, Herefordshire. This outlines a methodology for analysing and interpreting this unusual material, and, through comparison with the flint assemblage, examines the specific uses and treatments of this material. Far from being used to make tools, we argue the distinctive and exotic rock crystal was being used to create distinctive and memorable moments, binding individuals together, forging local identities, and connecting the living and the dead.