Introduction Among surgeons worldwide, a concern with the use of minimally invasive techniques has been raised due to a proposed risk of viral transmission of the coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) with the creation of pneumoperitoneum. Due to this proposed concern, we sought to collect the available data and evaluate the use of laparoscopy and the risk of COVID-19 transmission.Methods A literature review of viral transmission in surgery and of the available literature regarding the transmission of the COVID-19 virus was performed. We additionally reviewed surgical society guidelines and recommendations regarding surgery during this pandemic. Results Few studies have been performed on viral transmission during surgery, but to date there is no study that demonstrates or can suggest the ability for a virus to be transmitted during surgical treatment whether open or laparoscopic. There is no societal consensus on limiting or restricting laparoscopic or robotic surgery; however, there is expert consensus on the modification of standard practices to minimize any risk of transmission. Conclusions Despite very little evidence to support viral transmission through laparoscopic or open approaches, we recommend making modifications to surgical practice such as the use of smoke evacuation and minimizing energy device use among other measures to minimize operative staff exposure to aerosolized particles.
Objective Alert fatigue limits the effectiveness of medication safety alerts, a type of computerized clinical decision support (CDS). Researchers have suggested alternative interactive designs, as well as tailoring alerts to clinical roles. As examples, alerts may be tiered to convey risk, and certain alerts may be sent to pharmacists. We aimed to evaluate which variants elicit less alert fatigue. Materials and Methods We searched for articles published between 2007 and 2017 using the PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, and Cochrane databases. We included articles documenting peer-reviewed empirical research that described the interactive design of a CDS system, to which clinical role it was presented, and how often prescribers accepted the resultant advice. Next, we compared the acceptance rates of conventional CDS—presenting prescribers with interruptive modal dialogs (ie, “pop-ups”)—with alternative designs, such as role-tailored alerts. Results Of 1011 articles returned by the search, we included 39. We found different methods for measuring acceptance rates; these produced incomparable results. The most common type of CDS—in which modals interrupted prescribers—was accepted the least often. Tiering by risk, providing shortcuts for common corrections, requiring a reason to override, and tailoring CDS to match the roles of pharmacists and prescribers were the most common alternatives. Only 1 alternative appeared to increase prescriber acceptance: role tailoring. Possible reasons include the importance of etiquette in delivering advice, the cognitive benefits of delegation, and the difficulties of computing “relevance.” Conclusions Alert fatigue may be mitigated by redesigning the interactive behavior of CDS and tailoring CDS to clinical roles. Further research is needed to develop alternative designs, and to standardize measurement methods to enable meta-analyses.
This article examines the contribution of Denmark's news media to the formation of intolerant opinions about ethnic minorities. Based on an empirical investigation using discourse analysis and a narrative approach to the contents of the daily news flow on ethnic affairs in the dominant news media, the article argues that the media have played an important role in the (re)production of a prejudiced discourse on ethnic minorities. In this discursive process, Muslim minorities have been the primary victims. In the absence of social interaction between the majority population and minority groups, the cognitive frame of reference through which members of the ethnic majority premise their arguments is largely based on mental models of ethnic events that are constituted by media-mediated themes and topics on minority issues in the daily news flow of the national media.
Objective The US CDC identified prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) as a tool to address the contemporary opioid crisis, but few studies have investigated PDMP usability and effectiveness from the users’ perspective. Even fewer have considered how practices differ across medical domains. In this study, we aimed to address these gaps, soliciting perspectives on PDMPs from providers contending with the opioid crisis: physicians working in emergency departments (EDs) and pain management clinics. We aimed to provide practical design recommendations to improve PDMP workflow integration, as well as controlled substance history retrieval, interpretation, and decision support. Methods We conducted 16 in-depth semi-structured interviews with practicing emergency and pain physicians regarding their procedures, problems, and proposed solutions surrounding their use of CURES, California’s PDMP. We investigated design problems in CURES by combining users’ feedback with our usability inspection, drawing upon an extensive body of design literature. Then, we generated alternatives using design methods. Results We found CURES’s design did not accommodate the unique information needs of different medical domains. Further, clinicians had trouble accessing CURES and retrieving patients’ controlled substance histories, mainly due to usability problems that could be addressed with little technical adjustment. Additionally, CURES rendered patient histories in large, cluttered tables, devoid of overview or context, making interpretation difficult and precarious. Lastly, our interviewees had rarely noticed or used advanced features, such as decision support. Discussion and Conclusion Usability barriers inhibited adoption and effective use. We provide practical recommendations for improving opioid control by way of improving PDMP design, based on interviewees’ suggestions and research-based design principles. Our findings have implications for other disciplines, including surgery and primary care.
Objective-To examine variants at the 9p21 locus in a case-control study of acute myocardial infarction (MI) in Pakistanis and to perform an updated meta-analysis of published studies in people of European ancestry. Methods and Results-A total of 1851 patients with first-ever confirmed MI and 1903 controls were genotyped for 89 tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms at locus 9p21, including the lead variant (rs1333049) identified by the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium. Minor allele frequencies and extent of linkage disequilibrium observed in Pakistanis were broadly similar to those seen in Europeans. In the Pakistani study, 6 variants were associated with MI (PϽ10 Ϫ2) in the initial sample set, and in an additional 741 cases and 674 controls in whom further genotyping was performed for these variants. For Pakistanis, the odds ratio for MI was 1.13 (95% CI, 1.05 to 1.22; Pϭ2ϫ10 Ϫ3) for each copy of the C allele at rs1333049. In comparison, a meta-analysis of studies in Europeans yielded an odds ratio of 1.31 (95% CI, 1.26 to 1.37) for the same variant (Pϭ1ϫ10 Key Words: myocardial infarction Ⅲ 9p21 Ⅲ Pakistanis Ⅲ risk factor Ⅲ South Asia Ⅲ meta-analysis V ariants at the 9p21.3 locus have been established as among the strongest common genetic factors associated with the risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) in people of European continental ancestry. [1][2][3][4][5] These variants are in highlinkage disequilibrium (LD) and span a 58-kb region that has multiple neighboring genes (CDKN2A, CDNK2B, and MTAP), without annotating to any single protein sequence. 5 An RNA coding gene, ANRIL, that overlaps with the risk To our knowledge, we report the first large-scale study of variants at the 9p21 locus in relation to risk of acute myocardial infarction (MI) in Pakistanis. This study involved 1851 patients with confirmed diagnoses of first-ever MI and 1903 control subjects from the Pakistan Risk of Myocardial Infarction Study 8 (PROMIS). Genotyping was conducted on 89 tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at the 9p21.3 locus, including the lead variant (rs1333049) identified by the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium in association with CAD. 1,2 To place our findings in context, we also report a literaturebased meta-analysis of relevant studies, encompassing information on 23 variants at the 9p21 locus in up to 38 250 CAD cases and 84 820 controls. The current meta-analysis substantially updates a previous relevant review, 5 involving data from an additional 82 117 participants and 20 additional variants. Methods Study DesignThis article follows the reporting recommendations of STrengthening the REporting of Genetic Association studies. 9 PROMIS is a casecontrol study of acute first-ever MI in urban Pakistan. 8 Patients with MI experienced the following: (1) symptoms within 24 hours of hospital presentation, (2) typical ECG characteristics (eg, Ն1-mm ST elevation in any Ն2 contiguous limb leads or new-onset left bundle branch block), and (3) a positive troponin test result (Ͼ1 ng/mL). Controls were indi...
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