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1.
Diabetes Metab Res Rev ; 40(5): e3828, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38859687

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To investigate the association between stuttering during adolescence and the onset of dysglycemia (prediabetes or type 2 diabetes) in early adulthood among men and women. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This cohort study included Maccabi Health Services members assessed for mandatory military service at ages 16-19 during 1990-2019 and followed until 31 December 2020. Stuttering status was recorded in the baseline medical evaluation. Incident cases of dysglycemia were identified systematically using prediabetes and diabetes registries. Cox proportional hazard models were applied for men and women separately, adjusting for sociodemographics and medical status. RESULTS: The study cohort comprised 866,304 individuals (55% men; 0.21% with stuttering) followed for a total of 12,696,250 person-years. During the study period, 7.6% (n = 36,603) of men and 9.0% (n = 34,723) of women were diagnosed with dysglycemia. The mean ages at diagnosis were 34 and 32 years for men and women, respectively. Women with stuttering exhibited the highest dysglycemia incidence rate (102.3 per 10,000 person-years) compared with the other groups (61.4, 69.0, and 51.9 per 10,000 person-years for women without stuttering, men with stuttering, and men without stuttering, respectively). For both men and women, those with stuttering showed an increased risk of being diagnosed with dysglycemia compared with those without (adjusted hazard ratios 1.18 [1.01-1.38] and 1.61 [1.15-2.26], respectively). The associations persisted in extensive sub-analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Stuttering in adolescence is associated with a higher risk of dysglycemia in early adulthood for men and women. Screening and targeted prevention in this population, especially women, may be beneficial.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 , Prediabetic State , Stuttering , Humans , Female , Male , Adolescent , Adult , Stuttering/epidemiology , Stuttering/etiology , Stuttering/complications , Young Adult , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology , Risk Factors , Incidence , Prediabetic State/epidemiology , Prediabetic State/complications , Follow-Up Studies , Blood Glucose/analysis , Cohort Studies , Prognosis
2.
Surg Innov ; 30(5): 586-594, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37496258

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Current casualty care training modalities present several challenges, including limited simulation facilities, instructor dependence, lack of standardization, documentation of trainees' performance and training personalization. The study presents the design, development and preliminary evaluation of a novel hybrid training platform to address these challenges. METHODS: A mixed reality platform was chosen and developed to address field operators' requirements. The platform is easy to operate and can be set up by laypeople within 20-min in multiple environments. Individual-level training documentation is generated autonomously following each session, evaluating 30 aspects of performance. From this, a unique aggregated dataset emerges as a substrate for executives' dashboards and intelligent planning of future sessions. RESULTS: An evaluation process took part using simulator-based training in different stages along the project using a questionnaire (Likert-scale based). Fifty military physicians took part in an identical head injury scenario requiring airway management by endotracheal intubation and were immediately surveyed. CONCLUSION: TrauMR is an agile hybrid training that harbors the potential to address many of the emerging challenges of training for prehospital care in combat and civilian environments.


Subject(s)
Augmented Reality , Emergency Medicine , Simulation Training , Computer Simulation , Intubation, Intratracheal
3.
Aerosp Med Hum Perform ; 94(7): 546-549, 2023 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37349917

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Exertional heatstroke affects athletes and soldiers and can lead to temporary heat intolerance. The heat tolerance test (HTT) was developed to assist in the return-to-duty decisions of military personnel. Although there are several possible causes for heat intolerance, a soldier who fails the test is prevented from returning to serve in a front-line combat unit, regardless of the underlying reason.CASE REPORT: A 19-yr-old special infantry male soldier with unremarkable medical history collapsed during an afternoon hand-to-hand combat training session in the gym. The medic on site promptly initiated inefficient tap water cooling and measured a rectal temperature of 38.7 °C; he returned to duty the same evening. A few weeks later, after intensive physical training, he experienced exhaustion during a stretcher-carrying foot march. He was referred by the unit's physician, who suspected a condition of heat intolerance, to an HTT. The soldier underwent two HTTs, which were found to be positive. Consequently, he was discharged from serving in his infantry unit. No congenital or functional underlying causes could explain the diagnosis of heat intolerance.DISCUSSION: We discuss the possibility that the only explaining cause for the two positive HTTs was the soldier's anthropometric measures, particularly the low body surface area to body weight ratio. We raise the question of whether this soldier could have been returned safely to duty.Rabotin A, Epstein Y, Ketko I. Heat intolerance, body size, and return to duty. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2023; 94(7):546-549.


Subject(s)
Heat Stroke , Military Personnel , Humans , Male , Hot Temperature , Exercise , Body Size
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