Background: Intrapartum infection usually warrants immediate delivery and impacts 5-12% of term pregnancies, with the most commonly identified pathogenic organism being of the Ureaplasma genus. When performing cervical examinations during labor, providers in the United States commonly use sterile gloves, although there are no data currently to support that this practice reduces rates of infection. Furthermore, in nearly all other settings of Gynecologic care, aside from surgery in an operating room, nonsterile gloves are used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To assess the differences in IVF outcomes between couples with obstructive azoospermia (OA), non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA), and male factor (MF).
Methods: Using the SART CORS data from 2016 to 2017, we included all initial autologous cycles with a diagnosis of male factor with ejaculated and surgically obtained sperm. We analyzed 71,121 cycles, including 3467 with a diagnosis of azoospermia and 67,654 with other non-azoospermic MF.
Objective: To demonstrate the unique use of Endoloop during laparoscopic removal of an exophytic interstitial ectopic pregnancy to ensure hemostasis, provide counter traction against a uterine manipulator, and reduce the likelihood of entry into the endometrium.
Design: Case report with intraoperative surgical footage.
Setting: Tertiary care referral center operating room.
Pemphigus is a group of autoimmune intraepidermal blistering diseases caused by immunoglobulins directed against keratinocyte cell surface components. In this case report, we identify a non-classical paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP) foliaceous related to an undifferentiated uterine sarcoma. The patient is a 54-year-old Chinese female with a past medical history of arthritis who presented with worsening fatigue in November 2017 and an itchy, blistering, erythematous annular plaque that first appeared on her chest in February 2018.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: As consumer health information technology (IT) becomes more thoroughly integrated into patient care, it is critical that these tools are appropriate for the diverse patient populations whom they are intended to serve. Cultural differences associated with ethnicity are one aspect of diversity that may play a role in user-technology interactions.
Objective: Our aim was to evaluate the current scope of consumer health IT interventions targeted to the US Spanish-speaking Latino population and to characterize these interventions in terms of technological attributes, health domains, cultural tailoring, and evaluation metrics.
Proc IEEE Syst Inf Eng Des Symp
April 2014
Latinas in the United States experience higher levels of cervical cancer (CC) incidence and mortality rates than the general population, and many lack access to healthcare or face communication, literacy, and knowledge barriers preventing proper CC screening. Interactive technological interventions, like embodied conversational agents (ECA)/virtual agents, are currently used in other populations, settings, and for other health topics, however, no known initiative has used culturally- and literacy-appropriate technological interventions to deliver Spanish-language CC education. This study aims to create a culturally tailored Spanish-language Virtual Patient Educator (VPE) application to augment a patient navigator (PN) intervention for increasing CC screening rates among Hispanic women in a rural agricultural community.
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