Nurs Child Young People
August 2024
The traditional patient-clinician relationship is changing as young people and their families often now turn to the internet and social media for health information, treatment advice and support. Much of that content, however, is unregulated, unverified and inaccurate, which leads to the dissemination of health misinformation. Healthcare professionals working with young people with eczema and their families need to understand why young people turn to social media for health information, identify trends in online misinformation about eczema, and provide alternative, trustworthy sources of information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ability to form biofilms is shared by many microorganisms, including archaea. Cells in a biofilm are encased in extracellular polymeric substances that typically include polysaccharides, proteins, and extracellular DNA, conferring protection while providing a structure that allows for optimal nutrient flow. In many bacteria, flagella and evolutionarily conserved type IV pili are required for the formation of biofilms on solid surfaces or floating at the air-liquid interface of liquid media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe performance of trainee anaesthetists has been assessed by control chart methodology, but while assessment of consultants' performance has been suggested, published reports are rare. In order to test the value of control charts, I monitored my insertion of arterial and central venous cannulae over 3 years, documenting success or failure both for the first pass of the needle and for the intended site of cannulation. The resultant control charts clearly show episodes of changed performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA specialist transfer team based in the regional intensive therapy unit (ITU) at the Western Infirmary, Glasgow, acts as a central interhospital retrieval team for Glasgow and the west of Scotland. The establishment of trauma systems has been proposed. This paper describes the activities of the specialist transfer team to illustrate the potential role of a central retrieval team within such a system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransfer of the critically ill obstetric patient between hospitals is increasingly common. The specialist transfer team based at the Western Infirmary Intensive Therapy Unit, Glasgow has transported 60 such patients in the years 1985-1994. Monitoring was by direct arterial pressure measurement in 56 patients and central venous pressure measurement in 45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Little is known about the extent to which changes in postures in clinical situations affect respiratory mechanics, even in humans with healthy respiratory systems. This study tested the hypothesis that posture has only small effects on overall respiratory system mechanics in healthy subjects, despite changes in parts of the respiratory system in some postures.
Methods: Measurements were made of airway flow, airway and esophageal pressures, and rib cage and abdominal volume displacements (with inductance plethysmography) of awake, healthy subjects, relaxed at functional residual capacity, during external forcing at 0.
We studied 102 children undergoing day-case surgery, allocated randomly to receive either thiopentone 5 mg kg-1 or propofol 3 mg kg-1 i.v. at induction of anaesthesia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol
November 1992
We used a previously reported technique (Mackenzie et al., J. Appl.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChanges in monitoring and therapy during the preparation of 100 critically ill patients for interhospital transfer by a specialist team were documented prospectively with the aim of providing guidelines for nonspecialists. Severity of illness scores were recorded before and after preparation. Median duration of preparation for ambulance journeys was 50 min and for aeroplane journeys was 82 min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe measured total respiratory system and lung and chest wall resistances (Rrs, Rl, and Rcw) and elastances (Ers, El, and Ecw) in awake, relaxed human subjects during sinusoidal volume forcing at the mouth from 0.2 to 0.6 Hz with tidal volumes (VT) of 6 to 18% VC at constant mean airway pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study assessed the accuracy of oscillotonometric blood pressure measurement in critically ill patients during transfer. Direct intra-arterial pressure measurements were taken in 44 transported patients as a 'gold standard' and compared with readings from four portable automatic oscillotonometers--the Dinamap 8100, Lifestat 100, Propaq 102 and Takeda UA711. All under-read systolic pressure (by 13%, 21%, 19% and 13% respectively) and over-read diastolic pressure (by 15%, 5%, 27% and 15% respectively) in comparison to direct pressure measurement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince its first description in 1967, the mortality of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has remained unchanged despite the increasing sophistication of supportive techniques. Few patients now die of refractory hypoxemia, the majority succumbing to the multiple systems organ failure syndrome, commonly due to sepsis. Sepsis is both the most common cause of ARDS, usually involving the abdomen, and the most frequent complication, usually affecting the lungs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To identify the requirements of an interhospital transfer service for critically ill patients.
Design: Retrospective survey of the current functions of a specialist interhospital transfer team from data collected at the time of transfer and from records of intensive care unit.
Setting: Mobile intensive care unit based at a tertiary referral centre, which serves the west of Scotland.
Critically ill patients transferred between hospitals are often inadequately monitored in transit, with outcome adversely affected. In 22 such patients, we compared direct and palpated measurements of systolic pressure, oscilloscopic and aneroid manometric measurements of mean pressure, ECG and palpated measurements of heart-rate and clinical and oximetric assessments of oxygenation. On average palpated readings of systolic pressure under-read direct readings by 29% and palpated readings of heart-rate under-read ECG readings by 2%.
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