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1.
Encephale ; 45(2): 107-113, 2019 Apr.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29580706

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: In psychiatric inpatient settings seclusion is a last resort to ensure the safety of the patient, other patients, and staff from disturbed behaviors. Despite its major interest for patients, seclusion could negatively impact treatment adherence and patient/staff relationships. Indeed, some secluded patients report a feeling of guilt during the measure and do not consider seclusion to be a healthcare intervention. To be more beneficial and to reduce the feeling by patients of being forced, seclusions should be as short and rare as possible. In other words, measures to reduce seclusion are available and have been clearly identified. Such measures could be applied, in the first instance, in patients with longer duration. In this way, the aim of this study was to investigate predictive factors of a seclusion of long duration. METHODS: Our study was based on the dataset of the EPIC study, an observational prospective French multicenter study of seclusion and restraint. The EPIC study occurred in seven French psychiatric hospitals in the southern region of Paris. Inclusions were realized for 73days and allowed a data collection of 302 seclusion measures. Of these measures 236 were effectively a seclusion in a standardized room. Because the median duration was 7days, we defined two groups of patients: duration<7days and duration ≥ 7 days. Our variable to be explicated was duration ≥ 7 days. Explicative variables available in EPIC study were age, sex, forced hospitalization, autoagressivity, heteroagressivity, use of sedative treatment (oral or intramuscular), history of seclusion and patient diagnoses. We used bivariate and multivariate analyses to explore the association between a seclusion duration ≥ 7 days and explicative variables. Diagnoses were classified as psychotic disorders, mood disorders and others diagnoses. To be included in multivariate logistic regressions, diagnoses were treated as dummy variables (mood disorder vs psychotic disorders; psychotic disorders vs others; mood disorders vs others). Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS software 20.0 and R 3.4.0. RESULTS: Of the 236 measures of seclusion the mean age was 38.2 (±12.8), 196 (83%) patients were forcibly hospitalized prior to their seclusion, 147 (62%) had a diagnosis of psychotic disorder, 43 (18%) a diagnosis of mood disorder and 33 (14%) an "other diagnosis". Mean duration was 10.2 (1.5) days and median was 7.1 days. One hundred and thirty-five (47%) patients were in the group of duration ≥ 7 days. In bivariate analyses, variables associated with a duration ≥ 7 days were: being in forced hospitalization prior to the seclusion (P=0.04), administration of a sedative treatment (P=0.01) and against the group of others diagnoses the diagnosis of mood disorders (P<0.0005) and psychotic disorders (P=0.001). Multivariate analyses showed that, against the group of other diagnoses, the group of psychotic disorders [OR=3.3, CI 95% (1.3-8.4), P=0.01], the group of mood disorder [OR=2.7, CI 95% (1.4-4.9), P=0.002] and administration of sedative treatment [OR=8.1, CI 95% (2.0-32.5), P=0.003] were significantly associated with a duration ≥ 7 days. These results were independent from other confusion variables. Considering the hospitalization status, psychotic disorders was the only diagnosis which showed an association between duration ≥ 7 days and forced hospitalization [OR=2.9 CI 95% (1.1-7.8), P=0.03]. CONCLUSION: Our study highlighted two profiles of higher risk to remain ≥ 7days in seclusion. The first one is patients with a diagnosis of mood disorder who needed sedative treatment. The second one is patients with a diagnosis of psychotic disorder who needed sedative treatment and forced hospitalized before seclusion. Thus, these two profiles could be a good target to practice, in the first instance, measures to reduce seclusion duration in psychiatry settings.


Subject(s)
Hospitals, Psychiatric , Length of Stay/statistics & numerical data , Patient Isolation/statistics & numerical data , Psychotic Disorders/epidemiology , Psychotic Disorders/therapy , Adult , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Psychiatric/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Inpatients , Male , Middle Aged , Paris/epidemiology , Restraint, Physical/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
2.
Anal Chem ; 81(18): 7639-49, 2009 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19681620

ABSTRACT

The aim of the present paper is to demonstrate the importance of using complementary process analyzers (PAT tools) for the process monitoring, analysis, and understanding of freeze drying. A mannitol solution was used as a model system. Raman spectroscopic, near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopic, plasma emission spectroscopic, and wireless temperature measurements (TEMPRIS) were simultaneously performed in-line and real-time during each freeze-drying experiment. The combination of these four process analyzers to monitor a freeze-drying process is unique. The Raman and NIR data were analyzed using principal component analysis (PCA) and multivariate curve resolution (MCR), while the plasma emission spectroscopic and wireless temperature measurement data were analyzed using univariate data analysis. It was shown that the considered process analyzers do not only complement but also mutually confirm each other with respect to process step end points, physical phenomena occurring during freeze drying (process understanding), and product characterization (solid state). Furthermore and most important, the combined use of the process analyzers helped to identify flaws in previous studies in which these process analyzers were studied individually. Process analyzers might wrongly indicate that some process steps are fulfilled. Finally, combining the studied process analyzers also showed that more information per process analyzer can be obtained than previously described. A combination of Raman and plasma emission spectroscopy seems favorable for the monitoring of nearly all critical freeze-drying process aspects.


Subject(s)
Freeze Drying/instrumentation , Mannitol/chemistry , Freeze Drying/methods , Principal Component Analysis , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared , Spectrum Analysis, Raman , Temperature
4.
Rev Prat ; 49(14 Suppl): S30-5, 1999 Sep 15.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10887615

ABSTRACT

The amnesiac effects of benzodiazepines were used soon after their introduction by anaesthetists for premedication. The aim was to crase any unpleasant memories of surgical intervention or its preparation. Unfortunately, these amnesiac effects are particularly undesirable in everyday living when the subject has to use his memory. The widespread usage of benzodiazepine anxiolytics for neurotic patients or depressives treated as out-patients, or treating sleeping problems, has led to a real problem of public health. Therefore, it is important to carry out trials with a strict methodology to understand the cognitive effects of these drugs, based on the application of the concepts and methods of the cognitive sciences (a field of rapid development in recent years). Whereas the amnesiac effects of benzodiazepines were ignored by physicians for years, their consequences are possibly overestimated at present, sometimes leading to a caricatural attitude in the usage of these products.


Subject(s)
Anti-Anxiety Agents/adverse effects , Memory Disorders/chemically induced , Memory/drug effects , Activities of Daily Living , Anti-Anxiety Agents/administration & dosage , Anxiety Disorders/drug therapy , Benzodiazepines , Cognition/drug effects , Depressive Disorder/drug therapy , Humans , Hypnotics and Sedatives/administration & dosage , Neurotic Disorders/drug therapy , Preanesthetic Medication , Sleep Wake Disorders/drug therapy , Surgical Procedures, Operative
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