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2.
Anaesthesia ; 78(5): 626-635, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2310011

ABSTRACT

Viral infections form a substantial part of the intensive care workload, even before the recent and ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The growing availability of molecular diagnostics for viral infections has led to increased recognition of these pathogens. This additional information, however, provides new challenges for interpretation and management. As the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has amply demonstrated, the emergence and global spread of novel viruses are likely to provide continued challenges for critical care physicians into the future. This article will provide an overview of viral infections relevant to the critical care physician, discussing the diagnosis and management of respiratory viral infections, blood borne and enteric viruses. We will also discuss herpesviridae complications, commonly seen due to reactivation of latent infections. Further, we explore some rarer and emerging viruses, including recognition of viral haemorrhagic fevers, and briefly discuss post-viral syndromes which may present to the intensive care unit. Finally, we will discuss infection control and its importance in preventing nosocomial viral transmission.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Virus Diseases , Humans , COVID-19/prevention & control , SARS-CoV-2 , Pandemics , Virus Diseases/diagnosis , Virus Diseases/therapy , Critical Care
3.
Database (Oxford) ; 20232023 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2297651

ABSTRACT

The mapping of human-entered data to codified data formats that can be analysed is a common problem across medical research and health care. To identify risk and protective factors for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) susceptibility and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) severity, frequent questionnaires were sent out to participants of the Lifelines Cohort Study starting 30 March 2020. Because specific drugs were suspected COVID-19 risk factors, the questionnaires contained multiple-choice questions about commonly used drugs and open-ended questions to capture all other drugs used. To classify and evaluate the effects of those drugs and group participants taking similar drugs, the free-text answers needed to be translated into standard Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) codes. This translation includes handling misspelt drug names, brand names, comments or multiple drugs listed in one line that would prevent a computer from finding these terms in a simple lookup table. In the past, the translation of free-text responses to ATC codes was time-intensive manual labour for experts. To reduce the amount of manual curation required, we developed a method for the semi-automated recoding of the free-text questionnaire responses into ATC codes suitable for further analysis. For this purpose, we built an ontology containing the Dutch drug names linked to their respective ATC code(s). In addition, we designed a semi-automated process that builds upon the Molgenis method SORTA to map the responses to ATC codes. This method can be applied to support the encoding of free-text responses to facilitate the evaluation, categorization and filtering of free-text responses. Our semi-automatic approach to coding of drugs using SORTA turned out to be more than two times faster than current manual approaches to performing this activity. Database URL https://doi.org/10.1093/database/baad019.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , Cohort Studies , COVID-19/epidemiology , SARS-CoV-2 , Surveys and Questionnaires , Databases, Factual
4.
Compare ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2262412

ABSTRACT

This article draws on two surveys of international students in Sydney and Melbourne, undertaken in 2019 and during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns. Using the concept of bounded agency, we identify how the challenges of living in one of the world's most expensive rental housing markets impact students' perceptions of their academic attainment. We find housing insecurity, unaffordability and condition, amplified by financial stress, contribute significantly to student anxiety about their studies. These relationships differ by student background and education. We argue students' agency to meet their educational ambitions in Australia is constrained by the cost of housing and the housing choices they consequently make to mitigate financial stress. Our findings suggest the importance of ‘town' or non-institutional aspects of the international student experience on their satisfaction and academic outcomes. We call for further research to explore these relationships in other global contexts. © 2023 British Association for International and Comparative Education.

5.
Haemophilia ; 29(Supplement 1):19-20, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2258980

ABSTRACT

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic forced many established processes to be assessed and changed, prompting new ways of working to overcome obstacles. This opened the door to a new patient referral pathway, with a nurse led screening clinic a viable option for patients as well as a development opportunity for nursing staff. Method(s): All outpatient clinics were cancelled in March 2020, with consultant slots reinstated as telephone only from April. Referrals were previously booked into a new patient consultant clinic followed by investigative blood work, before a second appointment for results. It became impractical for new referrals to be processed due to the impossibility of remote investigative blood tests, and the lack of an initial face to face review. Referrals are now screened by the attending consultant who ascertains urgency and which blood tests are required, before the patient is booked into a nurse appointment within the following month. This is a first face to face consultation where a full history is taken including medical diagnoses, family and bleed history, medications, allergies, social factors and surgical challenges. The consultation is documented electronically and blood samples are taken. The results are monitored by the nurses and repeat samples +/- further investigations are obtained, to ensure all results are available for the 1st consultant clinic appointment. Result(s): This new process enables us to safely manage urgency of appointments with clear, relevant history taking and extensive and accurate blood work being completed. This ensures all referrals into the consultant clinic are relevant and appropriate with the focus on diagnosis and discharge, as the doctor will be equipped with a full set of blood work and appropriate results. The number of patients reviewed has been steadily increasing, with 30 adults and 13 children in the past 12 months. Discussion/Conclusion: This approach enables safe screening for new patients whilst actively managing valuable consultant clinic appointment slots. It is important to be aware of the time requirement for the reviewing nurse to complete this appointment, and ensure staffing is sufficient to enable a thorough nurse led consultation to take place. Going forward we plan to formalise appointments in an official nurse screening clinic, and will also look to audit patients already seen, to ensure this approach is received as intended and to continue to obtain best practice.

6.
Journal of Social Work ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2251763

ABSTRACT

Summary (methods and approach) : Social workers support clients' psychosocial and resource needs across care settings. Social workers are typically not, however, trained to engage in emergency response practices such as the ones that may be necessary to support needs brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. This article reports findings from a cross-sectional survey of social work students and recent graduates entering the field of social work during COVID-19, exploring their preparation, perceived readiness, and training needs. Findings : The study sample (N = 94) included 70 students and 24 recent graduates. The sample was 52% White, 22% Hispanic, and 21% Black/African American. Respondents reported training needs in the areas of trauma-informed care (70%), behavioral health (57%), culturally competent practice (49%), telehealth (48%), loss and grief (44%), and emergency management (43%). No significant differences emerged in self-efficacy ratings of students and recent graduates;both groups reported low self-efficacy in their ability to apply advanced practice skills. After controlling for demographics, receiving training specific to the COVID-19 pandemic (β =.271, p <.05), perceived readiness (β =.779, p <.001), and satisfaction with training/preparation (β =.4450, p <.001) significantly contribute to levels of perceived self-efficacy among SW students and recent graduates. Applications : Social work curricular developments, and continuing education, are needed to prepare and support emerging social workers for practice in the context of COVID-19 and its long-term implications. This includes enhancing social workers' readiness to engage in telehealth, trauma-informed practice, emergency management, policy interpretation, self-care, and grief support. © The Author(s) 2023.

7.
J Hosp Infect ; 135: 81-89, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2253380

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Aerosol spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a major problem in hospitals, leading to an increase in supplementary high-efficiency particulate air filtration aimed at reducing nosocomial transmission. This article reports a natural experiment that occurred when an air cleaning unit (ACU) on a medicine for older people ward was switched off accidentally while being commissioned. AIM: To assess aerosol transport within the ward and determine whether the ACU reduced airborne particulate matter (PM) levels. METHODS: An ACU was placed in a ward comprising two six-bedded bays plus three single-bed isolation rooms which had previously experienced several outbreaks of coronavirus disease 2019. During commissioning, real-time measurements of key indoor air quality parameters (PM1-10, CO2, temperature and humidity) were collected from multiple sensors over 2 days. During this period, the ACU was switched off accidentally for approximately 7 h, allowing the impact of the intervention on PM to be assessed. FINDINGS: The ACU reduced the PM counts considerably (e.g. PM1 65.5-78.2%) throughout the ward (P<0.001 all sizes), with positive correlation found for all PM fractions and CO2 (r=0.343-0.817; all P<0.001). PM counts rose/fell simultaneously when the ACU was off, with correlation of PM signals from multiple locations (e.g. r=0.343-0.868; all P<0.001) for particulates <1 µm). CONCLUSION: Aerosols migrated rapidly between the various ward subcompartments, suggesting that social distancing alone cannot prevent nosocomial transmission of SARS-CoV-2 as this fails to mitigate longer-range (>2 m) transmission. The ACU reduced PM levels considerably throughout the ward space, indicating its potential as an effective intervention to reduce the risk posed by infectious airborne particles.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor , COVID-19 , Cross Infection , Humans , Aged , Particulate Matter/analysis , COVID-19/prevention & control , SARS-CoV-2 , Carbon Dioxide , Respiratory Aerosols and Droplets , Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis , Hospitals , Cross Infection/prevention & control , United Kingdom
8.
Cell Genom ; : 100232, 2022 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2237461

ABSTRACT

SARS-CoV-2 infection causes severe COVID-19 in some patients and mild in others. Dysfunctional innate immune responses have been identified to contribute to COVID-19 severity, but the key regulators are still unknown. Here, we present an integrative single-cell multi-omics analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from hospitalized and convalescent COVID-19 patients. In classical monocytes, we identified genes that were potentially regulated by differential chromatin accessibility. Then, sub-clustering and motif-enrichment analyses reveals disease condition-specific regulation by transcription factors and their targets, including an interaction between C/EBPs and a long-noncoding RNA LUCAT1, which we validated through loss-of-function experiments. Finally, we investigated genetic risk variants that exhibit allele-specific open chromatin (AsoC) in COVID-19 patients and identified a SNP rs6800484-C, which is associated with lower expression of CCR2 and may contribute to higher viral loads and higher risk of COVID-19 hospitalization. Altogether, our study highlights the diverse genetic and epigenetic regulators that contribute to COVID-19.

9.
Cognitive Behaviour Therapist ; 15, 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2133055

ABSTRACT

The UK government implemented national social-distancing measures in response to the global COVID19 pandemic. As a result, many appointments in the National Health Service (NHS) took place virtually, including psychological interventions in out-patient settings. This study explored the experiences of adolescents participating in a dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT-A) programme via teletherapy (i.e. via video or telephone call) in a Children and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS). Thirteen adolescents with emotion dysregulation and related problems completed an online qualitative survey about their experience and acceptance of DBT-A delivered virtually. Thematic analysis was conducted on the survey data and generated three over-arching themes: (1) sense of loss;(2) feeling uncontained;and (3) benefits of virtual DBT. These over-arching themes were composed of eight subthemes ('loss of connection with group and therapist';'loss of skills-building opportunities';'limited privacy';'lack of safe therapy space';'difficult endings';'home comforts';'convenience and accessibility';and 'easier to participate with others'). This study suggests that adolescents doing virtual DBT-A need approaches that acknowledge and address the additional relational, emotional and practical challenges of online therapy while maintaining fidelity to the evidence-based treatment model. Suggestions for further research and preliminary practice guidelines are discussed. Key learning aims To learn about the experiences of adolescents participating in a DBT programme for adolescents (DBT-A) conducted virtually, including the challenges and benefits they identified. To learn about implications for clinical practice and future research directions.

10.
New England Journal of Medicine ; 387(5):474-475, 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2112345
11.
Journal of Clinical Oncology ; 40(28 Supplement):50, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2098607

ABSTRACT

Background: Educating staff on new anticancer medications is imperative for patient safety. Infusion nurses at Dana Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) satellite infusion centers were surveyed on their comfort level administering newer oncology drugs. Results revealed only 57% of nurses were extremely comfortable or somewhat comfortable, while 32% of nurses were somewhat uncomfortable or very uncomfortable. This project aimed to increase percentage of nurses at the satellites indicating they are extremely comfortable or somewhat comfortable from baseline of 57% to >=75%. Method(s): An interdisciplinary team including pharmacy, medical oncology, and nursing was formed to analyze workflows around new drug onboarding, staff education, and satellite communication. The team utilized Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle methodology. Tools included process maps and fishbone to identify areas of improvement. Intervention development tools included a Pareto chart and a priority matrix. Results were analyzed using statistical process control charts. Result(s): PDSA cycle 1 consisted of making the pharmacy driven education sheet, At-A-Glance (AAG), more accessible for new drugs. AAGs for drugs approved by the FDA in the previous 18 months were posted on the DFCI pharmacy intranet page. Nurses were educated on how to access AAG weekly. For PDSA cycle 2, the survey was modified to target individual nurses administering new drugs rather than all nurses. A Nursing consideration section was added to the AAG template and workflow developed;Navigation and review of AAG was added to nursing competency. Monthly nursing/pharmacy huddles were established to optimize communication. These interventions increased the percentage of nurses indicating they are extremely comfortable or somewhat comfortable to >=75% which was sustainable through PDSA cycle 2 (see Table). Conclusion(s): Making an easy-to-use nursing education resource accessible improved nursing comfort level. There were challenges with nursing survey due to COVID-19 surge and staff shortages. Routine huddles are essential for sustainability.

13.
COVID-19 Pandemic: Lessons from the Frontline ; : 109-120, 2021.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2048764

ABSTRACT

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the disease arising from the beta coronavirus severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has presented a major challenge to health-care systems and societies across the world. Although previous highly pathogenic coronaviruses have emerged, namely severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 1 and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, neither had the spread nor the persistence to result in large clinical trials of drug therapy. Much of our therapeutic knowledge in these viruses was therefore informed by inference from observational, in vitro, and experimental model studies. As a result, when SARS-CoV-2 emerged with a noted high morbidity and mortality, initial therapeutic drug treatment was often empiric. There are currently over 4400 trials concerning COVID-19 registered on the World Health Organization international clinical trials registry, and while not all these are interventional therapeutic trials, this illustrates the desire of the international clinical-scientific community to develop systematic and evidence-based approaches for the management of this major threat. This chapter discusses the broad strategies of therapeutic pharmacological approaches suggested, namely antiviral therapy, antiinflammatories, and immunomodulatory. Nonpharmacological approaches are also to be discussed. Then, it reviews the approaches to trials and trial design, the development and use of core outcome sets, and regulation of trials in pandemic settings. It reviews the publication and preprint availability of completed trials before discussing the ethics of empiric treatment outside the context of trials. © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

14.
The Evolving College Presidency: Emerging Trends, Issues, and Challenges ; : 175-197, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2024508

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 has shaken higher education and exposed the need for examination of the current system. This, along with the mass exodus of community college presidents due to expected retirements, has shown the need for candidates that can take the reins and lead institutions into the future. As such, leadership and understanding of the community college environment will be paramount in the coming years. The purpose of this chapter is to explore how community college presidents are hired, the process behind it, what colleges say they want in a president, and what changes will need to be made to find leaders that can guide institutions into the future. To assist in providing a look at contemporary KSIs, qualities, and characteristics being requested by boards, a content-analysis of current presidential listings was conducted. This, in conjunction of a review of the literature, will provide insights into current and future practices of community college presidential hiring. Common themes are discussed and recommendations made on the impact this has on presidential hiring.. © 2022, IGI Global. All rights reserved.

15.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases ; 81:946-947, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2008953

ABSTRACT

Background: In March 2020, as part of the UK's COVID-19 prevention strategy, those identifed as 'clinically extremely vulnerable,' were advised to shield. This included a number of patients prescribed anti-rheumatic drugs, who were asked to continue their current treatment unless they developed symptoms of infection. Suboptimal treatment adherence (16.0%-81.0%) has been reported in patients with arthritic diseases, and is associated with psychological factors, including anxiety (1). Previous literature in non-UK cohorts has highlighted suboptimal adherence levels in immunosuppressed patients during the pandemic, although many were single centre studies (2,3). Objectives: The aim of this multi-centre study is to investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on adherence to anti-rheumatic medications in patients with established rheumatoid (RA) and psoriatic (PsA) arthritis in the UK who had recently commenced a biologic or targeted synthetic DMARD. Methods: Between September 2020 and May 2021, RA and PsA patients prescribed biologic or targeted synthetic anti-rheumatic drugs from two multi-centre observational studies (BRAGGSS and OUTPASS) were sent a questionnaire on medication usage, adherence, and perceptions to establish the impact of COVID-19 on these parameters. Patients were asked about compliance during the COVID-19 pandemic using a 5-point Likert scale (always, often, sometimes, rarely, and never) and the reason for non-adherence. Adherence was defned as never missing or delaying a dose, unless medically advised. Descriptive summary statistics were calculated, and logistic regression and Pearson's chi-squared tests were employed to investigate variables associated with self-reported non-adherence. Results: In total 159 questionnaires were returned (81.1% RA and 18.9% PsA). Methotrexate (53.5%) was the most frequently prescribed agent, followed by etan-ercept (25.2%), sulfasalazine (22.6%), hydroxychloroquine (21.4%) and adalimumab (19.5%). Furthermore, 68.6% of patients were prescribed ≥2 drugs. During the pandemic, 42.1% of patients reported missing or delaying a treatment dose for any reason. Adherence information was available for 97.5% of patients with 25.8% reporting non-adherence which was not medically advised. Methotrexate non-adherence was 27.1%, with similar levels reported for etanercept (20.0%), sulfasalazine (27.8%), hydroxychloroquine (35.3%) and adalimumab (29.0%). No drugs had signifcantly different adherence compared to methotrexate. Furthermore, there was no association between disease type or perception of disease control and adherence. Of non-adherent patients, 17.5% reported increased anxiety, fear, and increased risk due to the COVID-19 pandemic as an influencing factor. Meanwhile, 37.5% of non-adherent patients listed non-COVID-19 intentional reasons and 45.0% reported non-intentional reasons, with forgetting and running out of treatment listed most frequently. Conclusion: In a UK cohort self-reported non-adherence was reported in 25.8% of patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, despite medical advice, with reasons including increased anxiety due to COVID-19.

18.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine ; 205:1, 2022.
Article in English | English Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1880710
19.
Fertility and Sterility ; 116(3 SUPPL):e473-e474, 2021.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1880607

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Misinformation regarding Covid vaccination has contributed to vaccine hesitancy. Initially, there were claims that immune cross reactivity between the SARS CoV-2 spike protein and syncytin-1 would prevent embryo implantation. We previously demonstrated no difference in implantation and sustained implantation rates between previously vaccinated or infected women compared to other women.1 More recently, misinterpretation of vaccine biodistribution data has led to a second claim that mRNA containing lipid nanoparticles are concentrated in the ovaries and spike protein produced there would also cause infertility. The purpose of this study is to determine whether prior in vivo ovarian exposure to lipid nanoparticle-mRNA vaccination against SARS-CoV2 spike protein reduces subsequent fertility in women. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is an ongoing observational study of women undergoing frozen embryo transfer with a single expanded blastocyst. This is an interim report (n =128) encompassing transfers between Jan 1 and Jul 02. All patients had serum analyzed prior to starting stimulation for egg retrieval to quantitatively determine the level of AntiSARS-CoV-2 Spike IgG. Reactive (antibody positive) patients were questioned to determine a history of vaccination or infection. Patients were divided into three groups based on their status. Women who were vaccinated (n = 26);women who had previous infection with SARS-CoV-2 (n=11) and women without a history of either vaccination or infection (n=91). Only patients receiving the mRNA vaccines from BioNTech / Pfizer (BNT162b2) and Moderna (mRNA-1273) were analyzed. Outcome measure for the three groups were initial implantation rate (serum hCG level > 5 mIU/mL obtained 8 days after embryo transfer followed by a rising level two to three days later), sustained implantation rate (transvaginal ultrasound documented positive FHTs at two time points at least one week apart) and miscarriage rate (the difference between initial and sustained implantation rates). Baseline characteristics were analyzed using ANOVA. Chi square analysis was used to compare pregnancy rates. RESULTS: CONCLUSIONS: Embryos produced from oocytes exposed in vivo to lipid nanoparticles containing mRNA for the SARS CoV-2 spike protein are not less likely to produce pregnancy or more likely to miscarry. IMPACT STATEMENT: This data refutes the rumors that Covid-19 vaccinations are “toxic” to the ovaries & adds to the growing body of evidence that vaccinations do not cause infertility. (Table Presented).

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