Background:The current 2019 novel coronavirus outbreak is rapidly evolving. YouTube has been recognized as a popular source of information in previous disease outbreaks. We analysed the content on YouTube about n-CoV in English and Mandarin languages. MethodsYouTube was searched using the terms '2019 novel coronavirus', 'Wuhan virus' and '武汉病毒' (Mandarin for Wuhan virus) on 1 st and 2 nd February 2020. First 50 videos in each group were analyzed. Videos in other languages, duplicate videos, those without an audio and duration >15 mins were excluded .72 videos in English and 42 in Mandarin were reviewed . 2 reviewers classified the videos as useful, misleading or news based on pre specified criterion. Inter-observer agreement was evaluated with kappa coefficient. Modified DISCERN index for reliability and medical information and content index (MICI) score were used for content analysis .Results . These videos attracted cumulative 21,288,856 views. 67% of English and 50 % Mandarin videos had useful information. The viewership of misleading Mandarin videos was higher than the useful ones. WHO accounted for only 4% of useful videos. Mean DISCERN score for reliability was 3.12/5 and 3.25/5 for English and Mandarin videos respectively.Mean cumulative MICI score of useful videos was low (6.71/25 for English and 6.28/25 for Mandarin).Conclusions YouTube viewership during 2019 n-CoV outbreak is higher than previous outbreaks. The medical content of videos is suboptimal International health agencies are
Aim: Interaction of patient in marital dyad may have bearing on long-term patient outcome. Depression, subjective stress, and marital discord have been reported in healthy spouses of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Depressed patients on dialysis along with their spouses can function as depressed dyad. We looked at the incidence and factors associated with depression and marital stress among Indian hemodialysis patients and their spouses. Methods: A total of 49 (32 males, 17 females) patients on maintenance hemodialysis and their spouses were independently administered Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale, and self-rated subjective quality-oflife scale. Their demographic parameters, socioeconomic status, and type of family (nuclear or joint) were also noted. Results: About 57.1% of patients were depressed compared with 42.8% of spouses (p = 0.133). In both patients and spouses, BDI correlated with quality of life and perceived marital stress. About 36.7% of patients and 24.4% of spouses reported marital stress (p = 0.69). Male spouses had more marital stress compared with female spouses (p < 0.0001). Depression and marital stress in patients and spouses was not associated with socioeconomic status, literacy levels, and employment. Depression in patients had direct correlation with depression in spouse (r = 0.572, p < 0.0001) and degree of marital dissatisfaction in spouse (r = 0.623, p < 0.0001). Patients living in nuclear family were more depressed and had more marital stress. Conclusion: Married ESRD patients and their spouses function as a complex psychosocial dyad with significant two-way interactions. Social support, as is seen in joint families, leads to significantly lesser depression and better marital understanding.
With the exponential surge in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) worldwide, the resources needed to provide continuous kidney replacement therapy (CKRT) for patients with acute kidney injury or kidney failure may be threatened. This article summarizes subsisting strategies that can be implemented immediately. Pre-emptive weekly multicenter projections of CKRT demand based on evolving COVID-19 epidemiology and routine workload should be made. Corresponding consumables should be quantified and acquired, with diversification of sources from multiple vendors. Supply procurement should be stepped up accordingly so that a several-week stock is amassed, with administrative oversight to prevent disproportionate hoarding by institutions. Consumption of CKRT resources can be made more efficient by optimizing circuit anticoagulation to preserve filters, extending use of each vascular access, lowering blood flows to reduce citrate consumption, moderating the CKRT intensity to conserve fluids, or running accelerated KRT at higher clearance to treat more patients per machine. If logistically feasible, earlier transition to intermittent hemodialysis with online-generated dialysate, or urgent peritoneal dialysis in selected patients, may help reduce CKRT dependency. These measures, coupled to multicenter collaboration and a corresponding increase in trained medical and nursing staffing levels, may avoid downstream rationing of care and save lives during the peak of the pandemic. Complete author and article information provided before references.
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