Introduction: Paediatric neurology (PN) remains 'hidden' somewhere between paediatrics and neurology in almost all health care centres and this makes it difficult to allocate resources in a proper manner.
Aims: Our objective in this study was to analyse PN health care activity and compare it with adult neurology (AN) and with non-neurological paediatrics (NNP).
Material And Methods: PN health care activity registry for the year 2002. AN and NNP data were collected from the hospital's Computer Service.
Results: In all, 1300 PN visits were made, 428 of which were new and 872 successive, which represent 16.2% of paediatric visits (30% new, 13.3% successive) and 10.3% of neurological visits (12.4% new, 10.2% successive). The rates of new and successive visits in PN are: 32.6, 10.7 and 21.9 per 1000 children, and in AN: 44.2, 12.5 and 31.7 per 1000 adults. A total number of 94 hospitalised children were attended, 3.3% of all paediatric admissions and 9.2% of the total neurological attention in inpatients. The rates are 2.36 per 1000 children in PN and 3.9 per 1000 adults in AN. There is greater demand among smaller children. The most frequent pathologies are headaches in clinical visits and epilepsy in hospitalised patients.
Conclusions: PN is essentially a service used by outpatients. It accounts for a high percentage of hospital paediatric visits. The activity rates per 1000 children and per 1000 adults are similar. The increased birth rate raises PN activity to a level that is higher than would normally be desirable, due to the growth in the population.
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J Int AIDS Soc
February 2025
Centre for Integrated Data and Epidemiological Research, School of Public Health, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Introduction: Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in pregnancy are associated with an increased risk of vertical HIV transmission and adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes. In South Africa, syndromic management is the standard of care for STI management. We assessed the potential impact of point-of-care (POC) screening for curable STIs (Chlamydia trachomatis [CT], Trichomonas vaginalis [TV] and Neisseria gonorrhoeae [NG]) during pregnancy on vertical HIV transmission and adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEarly Interv Psychiatry
February 2025
Orygen, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Aim: Accurate and appropriate cognitive screening can significantly enhance early psychosis care, yet no screening tools have been validated for the early psychosis population and little is known about current screening practices, experiences, or factors that may influence implementation. CogScreen is a hybrid type 1 study aiming to validate two promising screening tools with young people with first episode psychosis (primary aim) and to understand the context for implementing cognitive screening in early psychosis settings (secondary aim). This protocol outlines the implementation study, which aims to explore the current practices, acceptability, feasibility and determinants of cognitive screening in early psychosis settings from the perspective of key stakeholders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Nurs
January 2025
Nursing Science (INS), Department Public Health (DPH), Faculty of Medicine, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Aim: To implement and evaluate an Advanced Practice Nurse-led transitional care model (AdvantAGE) to reduce rehospitalisation rates in frail older adults discharged from a Swiss geriatric hospital.
Design: The study adopts an effectiveness-implementation hybrid design (Type 1) to simultaneously evaluate the effectiveness of the care model and explore the implementation process.
Methods: The primary outcome, the 90-day rehospitalisation rate, will be evaluated using a matched-cohort design with a prospective intervention group and a retrospective control group.
Aim: To discuss inter-organisational collaboration in the context of the successful COVID-19 vaccination programme in North Central London (NCL).
Design: An action research study in 2023-2024.
Methods: Six action research cycles used mixed qualitative methods.
Cancer
February 2025
General Medicine Service, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Background: Breast cancer screening (BCS) inequities are evident at national and local levels, and many health systems want to address these inequities, but may lack data about contributing factors. The objective of this study was to inform health system interventions through an exploratory analysis of potential multilevel contributors to BCS inequities using health system data.
Methods: The authors conducted a cross-sectional analysis within a large academic health system including 19,774 individuals who identified as Black (n = 1445) or White (n = 18,329) race and were eligible for BCS.
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