Publications by authors named "Jaulmes D"

The context and constraints of modern medicine (hospital beds and caregivers' reductions, ambulatory shift, new therapeutic approaches, integration of supportive care…) combined with new societal and Health system changes (ageing population, chronic diseases, new requirements of the patients…) redefine the orientations of care and question professional practices. The participative approach (PA) as a model of team organization proposes solutions involving the skills of the various interacting caregivers and experimental knowledge and consideration of patient needs. The multi-professional staff (MPS) is a collaborative tool of this participative approach that federates a team around a health or care project personalized from the crosschecked eyes of care professionals and from a shared decision-making process.

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Admission of patients with hematological malignancies to intensive care unit (ICU) raises recurrent ethical issues for both hematological and intensivist teams. The decision of transfer to ICU has major consequences for end of life care for patients and their relatives. It also impacts organizational human and economic aspects for the ICU and global health policy.

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Background: Pregnancy in women with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria is rare, with few reports on maternal and fetal mortality rates.

Design And Methods: A specific questionnaire designed to solicit data on pregnancies in women with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria was sent to all members of the French Society of Hematology in January 2008.

Results: We identified 27 pregnancies in 22 women at 10 French Society of Hematology centers between 1978 and 2008.

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The << Standards, Options and Recommendations >> (SOR) project, started in 1993, is a collaboration between the Federation of French Cancer Centres (FNCLCC), the 20 French cancer centres, and specialists from French public universities, general hospitals and private clinics. The main objective is the development of clinical practice guidelines to improve the quality of health care and the outcome of cancer patients. The methodology is based on a literature review and critical appraisal by a multidisciplinary group of experts, with feedback from specialists in cancer care delivery.

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Background: As only a few studies have examined the prevalence of various hepatitis C virus (HCV) subtypes in blood donors, information about the variability and route of infection in apparently healthy persons is limited.

Study Design And Methods: Blood donations collected at a large Parisian hospital (52,441) were investigated for antibodies to HCV. Serum samples were screened with an enzyme immunoassay.

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Treatment of patients with advanced-stage hematological malignancies (HM) includes frequent transfusions. Given present limited hospital budgets, administrative pressure is increasing on hematology services to limit the cost of these transfusions. An expert multidisciplinary panel involved in hematology formed a working party to draw up a series of proposals, including definitions of advanced stage disease and the indications for platelet transfusion.

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Post-transfusional iron overload is a real problem for doctors in charge of transfusions, as shown by the survey we led in twenty French blood banks. Deferoxamine remains the most efficient chelator, but can be prescribed only in a parenteral way. It is now proved that continuous infusions, intravenous or subcutaneous, are preferable to intermittent injections as far as iron excretion is concerned.

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We studied the efficacy of high doses (100,000 IU intravenously (IV)/twice a week) of human recombinant erythropoietin (rHuEpo) in patients with transfusion dependent myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Rationale for such dose of IV Epo was the poor in vitro response of MDS erythroid progenitors (CFU-E) to physiological concentrations of Epo, and the usual high endogenous serum Epo levels of MDS patients. Seventeen patients (nine males, eight females) were included, five refractory anaemia (RA), six RA with blasts excess (RAEB), five RA with ringed sideroblasts (RARS).

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Despite the identification of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and the detection of anti-HCV antibodies in the serum of infected individuals, a sizeable proportion of patients who develop transfusion-associated acute non-A, non-B hepatitis following surgery do not develop anti-HCV antibodies. The cause of this disease remains unknown. To assess the role of homologous blood transfusion in anti-HCV-positive and -negative, non-A, non-B hepatitis following surgery, patients receiving homologous blood, autologous blood alone, or no transfusions were prospectively studied.

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In front of the successive development of an HTLV-I seroconversion and a neuromyelopathy in a French Caucasian following a cardiac transplantation, an ascendant epidemiologic investigation must be manage to search a risk factor or a possible blood donor contaminated with HTLV-I virus. We selected an HTLV-I seropositive donor whose RBC participated to the patient's transfusion. This woman from Martinique island was a regular donor in our blood center and a second investigation was initiated to examine the patients transfused with the blood products issued from her previous donation.

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