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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jum.14670 | DOI Listing |
ATS Sch
January 2025
Critical Care Medicine Department, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Rapid accumulation of knowledge and skills by trainees in the intensive care unit assumes prior mastery of clinically relevant core physiology concepts. However, for many fellows, their foundational physiology knowledge was acquired years earlier during their preclinical medical curricula and variably reinforced during the remainder of their undergraduate and graduate medical training. We sought to assess the retention of clinically relevant pulmonary physiology knowledge among pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) and critical care medicine (CCM) fellows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio)
January 2025
Emergency and Critical Care Department, The Schwarzman Animal Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
Objective: To assess the value of the abdominal fluid score (AFS) in cats following trauma in determining surgical needs, transfusion needs, and mortality.
Design: Multicenter retrospective observational study utilizing data from the Veterinary Committee on Trauma (VetCOT) registry.
Setting: VetCOT Veterinary Trauma Centers.
Public Health Nurs
January 2025
College of Nursing, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Republic of Korea.
Objective: This study explores the influence of social network structures on self-management behaviors among older adults with diabetes in rural Korean villages, focusing on dietary management, physical activity, and blood glucose monitoring.
Design: Employing social network analysis (SNA), the study assessed network structures in three villages, focusing on variations in degree, closeness, and betweenness centralities to understand their impact on health behavior dissemination and adoption.
Results: The analysis identified significant differences in network configurations across the villages.
J Hand Microsurg
March 2025
Orthopaedic Research Group, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.
Background: The Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS) is a well-established and extensively utilized shoulder score translated into Western and Asian languages for use in respective countries. Our study aimed to translate, cross-culturally adapt, and psychometrically validate the OSS in the Tamil language community.
Methods: The translation and cross-cultural adaptation were conducted according to previously established standards.
J Biol Methods
October 2024
Indian Council of Medical Research-National Institute of Occupational Health, Ahmedabad, Gujarat 380016, India.
Background: Earlier studies conducted by Indian researchers have demonstrated that the elimination of tuberculosis (TB) requires proactive control of silicosis, given India's significant burden of silicosis and its common comorbidity, pulmonary TB, also known as silicotuberculosis. The TB Control Indian Health Authority saw human immunodeficiency virus infection, diabetes, and malnutrition, among others, as important risk factors for case findings, but overlooked the significance of silicosis. Silicotuberculosis control is often confronted with challenges of detecting microorganisms, uncertain treatment outcomes, a higher likelihood of mono-drug and multi-drug resistance, and increased mortality due to treatment failure.
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