Publications by authors named "S Minha"

Article Synopsis
  • Combat casualty care has improved due to evidence-based protocols, with a study comparing prehospital care and outcomes of patients from conflicts in 2014 and 2023 in southern Israel.
  • The study found that the number of evacuated patients increased significantly from 251 in 2014 to 940 in 2023, while the time to hospital arrival decreased.
  • There was an increase in the proportion of severely injured patients, a decrease in some advanced prehospital interventions, and an increase in prehospital blood transfusions, but in-hospital mortality rates remained stable across both conflicts.
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Background: Acute Decompensated Heart Failure (ADHF) is associated with frequent hospitalizations, posing a significant health and economic burden globally. Despite advancements in heart failure management, studies delineating temporal trends in ADHF outcomes are sparse.Methods: in this retrospective analysis, ADHF patients admitted to Shamir Medical Center from 2007 to 2017 were categorized into two cohorts: early (2007-2011) and recent (2012-2017).

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Article Synopsis
  • * Among 5978 patients, 73.9% had an indication for statin therapy, but only 38.2% were on statins at admission, which increased to 56.1% by discharge.
  • * Initiation of statin therapy during hospital stays is linked to lower long-term mortality rates, underscoring the potential benefits of statin use in this patient population.
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This study shows that we can use synthetic cohorts created from medical risk calculators to gain insights into how risk estimations, clinical reasoning, data-driven subgrouping, and the confidence in risk calculator scores are connected. When prediction variables aren't evenly distributed in these synthetic cohorts, they can be used to group similar cases together, revealing new insights about how cohorts behave. We also found that the confidence in predictions made by these calculators can vary depending on patient characteristics.

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(1) Background: The "obesity paradox" refers to a protective effect of higher body mass index (BMI) on mortality in acute infectious disease patients. However, the long-term impact of this paradox remains uncertain. (2) Methods: A retrospective study of patients diagnosed with community-acquired acute infectious diseases at Shamir Medical Center, Israel (2010-2020) was conducted.

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