To address claims of human exceptionalism, we determine where humans fit within the greater mammalian distribution of reproductive inequality. We show that humans exhibit lower reproductive skew (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrograms seeking to transform undergraduate science, technology, engineering, and mathematics courses often strive for participating faculty to share their knowledge of innovative teaching practices with other faculty in their home departments. Here, we provide interview, survey, and social network analyses revealing that faculty who use innovative teaching practices preferentially talk to each other, suggesting that greater steps are needed for information about innovative practices to reach faculty more broadly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To describe antimicrobial prescribing by Belgian dentists in ambulatory care, from 2010 until 2016.
Materials And Methods: Reimbursement data from the Belgian National Institute for Health and Disability Insurance were analysed to evaluate antimicrobial prescribing (WHO ATC-codes J01/P01AB). Utilisation was expressed in defined daily doses (DDDs), and in DDDs and packages per 1000 inhabitants per day (DID and PID, respectively).
Structural nested failure time models (SNFTMs) are models for the effect of a time-dependent exposure on a survival outcome. They have been introduced along with so-called G-estimation methods to provide valid adjustment for time-dependent confounding induced by time-varying variables. Adjustment for informative censoring in SNFTMs is possible via inverse probability of censoring weighting (IPCW).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Surveillance of central-line-associated bloodstream infections requires the labor-intensive counting of central-line days (CLDs). This workload could be reduced by sampling. Our objective was to evaluate the accuracy of various sampling strategies in the estimation of CLDs in intensive care units (ICUs) and to establish a set of rules to identify optimal sampling strategies depending on ICU characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The present study aimed to investigate the dose response relationship between the prescriptions of antimicrobial agents and infection/colonization with methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) taking additional factors like stay in a health care facility into account.
Methods: Multi-centre retrospective study on a cohort of patients that underwent microbiological diagnostics in Belgium during 2005. The bacteriological results retrieved from 17 voluntary participating clinical laboratories were coupled with the individual antimicrobial consumption patterns (July 2004-December 2005) and other variables as provided by pooled data of health insurance funds.
Background: Residents in long-term care facilities are predisposed to healthcare-associated infections that are likely caused by antimicrobial-resistant micro-organisms. Long-term care facilities are increasingly able to offer parenteral antimicrobial treatment but there are few data on the use and appropriateness of such treatment in this setting. Information on the use of parenteral antimicrobials and associated factors in long-term care facilities is necessary to assess the risks and benefits of this treatment and to support the development of antimicrobial policies aimed at minimizing the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Patients admitted to intensive-care units are at high risk of health-care-associated infections, and many are caused by antimicrobial-resistant pathogens. We aimed to assess excess mortality and length of stay in intensive-care units from bloodstream infections and pneumonia.
Methods: We analysed data collected prospectively from intensive-care units that reported according to the European standard protocol for surveillance of health-care-associated infections.
Lifetime Data Anal
January 2010
Despite decades of research in the medical literature, assessment of the attributable mortality due to nosocomial infections in the intensive care unit (ICU) remains controversial, with different studies describing effect estimates ranging from being neutral to extremely risk increasing. Interpretation of study results is further hindered by inappropriate adjustment (a) for censoring of the survival time by discharge from the ICU, and (b) for time-dependent confounders on the causal path from infection to mortality. In previous work (Vansteelandt et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntensive care unit (ICU) patients are highly susceptible to hospital-acquired infections due to their poor health and many invasive therapeutic treatments. The effect on mortality of acquiring such infections is, however, poorly understood. Our goal is to quantify this using data from the National Surveillance Study of Nosocomial Infections in ICUs (Belgium).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The acylcarnitine profiles obtained from dried blood spots on "Guthrie cards" have been widely used for the diagnosis and follow-up of children suspected of carrying an inherited error of metabolism, but little attention has been paid to potential age-related variations in the reference values. In this study, we evaluated the variations in free carnitine and acylcarnitine concentrations with age, as measured by tandem mass spectrometry.
Methods: Filter-paper blood spots were collected from 433 healthy individuals over a period of 17 months.