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1.
Am J Trop Med Hyg ; 108(6): 1157-1160, 2023 06 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37160283

ABSTRACT

Chagas disease (CD) is a parasitic disease endemic to continental Latin America that has globalized in recent years. The most relevant mechanisms of transmission of CD in non-endemic countries are transfusion with infected blood and mother-to-child transmission. There is limited information regarding practicing physicians' knowledge of CD transmission, clinical presentation, and treatment in non-endemic countries, including Spain. Our objective was to analyze the level of knowledge about CD in family and community medicine residents and how it has evolved over the last 5 years. A cross-sectional study was performed in the framework of the training program for family and community medicine specialists in Alicante, Spain. Convenience sampling was used to enroll 214 fourth-year family and community medicine residents from 2016 to 2020. Participants completed the validated Chagas Level of Knowledge Scale questionnaire prior to attending the seminar "Health Care for the Immigrant Population." The mean score on the scale was 7.1/10 points. Only 12 participants (5.6%) answered all questions correctly. Resident physicians who reported having received prior information on CD scored better than those who were not informed (mean, 7.2 versus 6.1 points). Participants from Latin America had scores similar to those of the rest of the participants. Over the 5-year study period, questionnaire scores tended to increase. Knowledge about CD among family and community medicine residents has improved in recent years, although it is still not optimal. Specific training on CD during specialized health care training is warranted.


Subject(s)
Chagas Disease , Community Medicine , Humans , Female , Cross-Sectional Studies , Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical , Spain/epidemiology
2.
Front Psychol ; 8: 1638, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29046650

ABSTRACT

Alcohol consumption in adolescents causes negative effects on familiar, social, academic life, as well as neurocognitive alterations. The binge drinking (BD) pattern of alcohol is characterized by the alternation of episodes of heavy drinking in a short interval of time, and periods of abstinence, a practice that can result in important brain alterations; even more than regular alcohol consumption. The prefrontal cortex, which acts as neural support for the executive processes, is particularly affected by alcohol; however, not all studies are in agreement about how BD alcohol consumption affects executive functioning. Some research has found that alcohol consumption in adolescence does not significantly affect executive functioning while others found it does. It is possible that these discrepancies could be due to the history of alcohol consumption, that is, at what age the subjects started drinking. The aim of our study is to assess the performance on executive functioning tasks of 13-19-year-old adolescents according to their pattern of alcohol consumption. We hypothesize that BD adolescents will perform worse than non-BD subjects in tasks that evaluate executive functions, and these differences will increase depending on how long they have been consuming alcohol. Three hundred and twenty-two students (48.14% females; age range 13-22 years; mean aged 16.7 ± 2.59) participated in the study; all of them had begun drinking at the age of 13 years. Participant were divided into three groups, according to their age range (13-15, 16-18, and 19-22 years) and divided according to their pattern of alcohol consumption (BD and control groups). Then, the subjects were evaluated with neuropsychological tasks that assess executive functions like working memory, inhibition, cognitive flexibility, or self-control among others. The entire sample showed a normal improvement in their executive performance, but this improvement was more stable and robust in the control group. Regarding the executive performance among age groups, control subjects only obtained better results than BDs in the 19-22-year-old range, whereas the performance was quite similar at younger ages. Considering that all the BD subjects started drinking at the same age (13 years old), it is possible that a kind of compensation mechanism exists in the adolescent brain which allows them to reach a normal performance in executive tasks. This theoretical mechanism would depend upon neuronal labor, which could lose efficacy over time with further alcohol ingestion. This process would account for the differences in neuropsychological performance, which were only observed in older students with a longer history of alcohol consumption.

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