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1.
Neth J Med ; 78(6): 401-403, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33380539

ABSTRACT

We report on a 75-year-old man with a history of metastatic prostate cancer who presented with haematuria, peripheral oedema, metabolic alkalosis, hypokalaemia, and hypertension. Laboratory evaluation was compatible with the diagnosis of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-dependent cushing's syndrome and suggestive of ectopic ACTH production. Pathology of a prostate biopsy specimen showed a large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) of the prostate. This report describes a case of Cushing's syndrome that was probably caused by ectopic ACTH secretion by a LCNEC of the prostate.


Subject(s)
Cushing Syndrome , Hypokalemia , Prostatic Neoplasms , Aged , Cushing Syndrome/etiology , Edema/etiology , Humans , Hypokalemia/etiology , Male , Prostatic Neoplasms/complications
2.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd ; 161: D1601, 2017.
Article in Dutch | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29098968

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: There is a trend for General Practitioner Cooperatives (GPCs) to co-locate with emergency departments (EDs) of hospitals at Emergency Care Access Points (ECAPs), where the GPCs generally conduct triage and treat a large part of self-referrals who would have gone to the ED by themselves in the past. We have examined patient and care characteristics of self-referrals at ECAPs where triage was conducted by GPCs, also to determine the percentage of self-referrals being referred to the ED. DESIGN: Retrospective cross-sectional observational study. METHOD: Descriptive analyses of routine registration data from self-referrals of five ECAPs (n = 20.451). Patient age, gender, arrival time, urgency, diagnosis and referral were analysed. RESULTS: Of the self-referrals, 57.9% was male and the mean age was 32.7 years. The number of self-referrals per hour was highest during weekends, particularly between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. On weekdays, there was a peak between 5 and 9 p.m. Self-referrals were mostly assigned a low-urgency grade (35.7% - U4 or U5) or a mid-urgency grade (49% - U3). Almost half of the self-referrals had trauma of the locomotor system (28%) or the skin (27.3%). In total, 23% of the patients was referred to the ED. CONCLUSION: Self-referred patients at GPCs are typically young, male and have low- to mid-urgency trauma-related problems. Many self-referrals present themselves on weekend days or early weekday evenings. Over three quarters of these patients can be treated by the GPCs, without referral to the ED. This reduces the workload at the ED.


Subject(s)
Emergency Service, Hospital , General Practitioners , Physician Self-Referral , Adult , After-Hours Care , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emergency Medical Services , Humans , Male , Referral and Consultation , Retrospective Studies , Triage
4.
Am J Transplant ; 12(6): 1584-92, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22390625

ABSTRACT

The effects of exercise training after lung transplantation have not been studied in a randomized controlled trial so far. We investigated whether 3 months of supervised training, initiated immediately after hospital discharge, improve functional recovery and cardiovascular morbidity of patients up to 1 year after lung transplantation. Patients older than 40 years, who experienced an uncomplicated postoperative period, were eligible for this single blind, parallel group study. Sealed envelopes were used to randomly allocate patients to 3 months of exercise training (n = 21) or a control intervention (n = 19). Minutes of daily walking time (primary outcome), physical fitness, quality of life and cardiovascular morbidity were compared between groups adjusting for baseline assessments in a mixed models analysis. After 1 year daily walking time in the treated patients (n = 18) was 85 ± 27 min and in the control group (n = 16) 54 ± 30 min (adjusted difference 26 min [95%CI 8-45 min, p = 0.006]). Quadriceps force (p = 0.001), 6-minute walking distance (p = 0.002) and self-reported physical functioning (p = 0.039) were significantly higher in the intervention group. Average 24 h ambulatory blood pressures were significantly lower in the treated patients (p ≤ 0.01). Based on these results patients should be strongly encouraged to participate in an exercise training intervention after lung transplantation.


Subject(s)
Activities of Daily Living , Exercise , Lung Transplantation , Humans
5.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd ; 149(14): 735-6, 2005 Apr 02.
Article in Dutch | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15835621

ABSTRACT

When medical students first enter the clinic, they will experience situations in which they feel threatened or intimidated. In some cases, this may entail sexual harassment, as described by Van den Muijsenbergh and Lagro-Janssen in their study of students at Nijmegen Medical School. Such behaviour is often difficult to prevent if it concerns patients, especially psychiatric patients. However, it should be prevented if it concerns staff or supervisors. In all cases, students should be aware that such incidents may happen and be prepared to deal with them. They also deserve a safe environment in which to share and discuss such experiences. It is up to the University Medical Centres to provide such a safe haven.


Subject(s)
Sexual Harassment , Students, Medical/psychology , Ethics, Clinical , Ethics, Professional , Female , Humans , Male , Netherlands
6.
Health Policy ; 60(2): 171-84, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11897375

ABSTRACT

Criteria are used to prioritise patients on waiting lists for health care services. This is also true for waiting lists for admission to psychogeriatric nursing homes. A patient's position on these latter waiting lists is determined by (changes in) urgency and waiting time. The present article focuses on the process and outcome of an urgency coding system in a fair selection of patients. It discusses the use of urgency codes in the daily practice of waiting list management and the related waiting times. Patients and their informal caregivers were followed from entry on the waiting list to admission to a nursing home. Caregivers were interviewed during the waiting period and after their relative's admission to a nursing home, and the formal urgency codes on the waiting list were monitored. Seventy-eight of the initial 93 patients were admitted to a nursing home. High urgency codes were commonly assigned and the waiting times were shorter for patients with higher urgency codes. Negative consequences of an urgency coding system, e.g. patients with less urgency not being admitted at all and patients not being admitted to the nursing home of their choice, could not be demonstrated. Patients without higher urgency codes were admitted after a mean waiting time of 28 weeks. It may be questioned whether this long waiting time is problematic, because satisfaction of the caregivers with regard to waiting times was not influenced by the actual waiting times. An urgency coding system enables health care professionals to react to changes in the situation of both patients and caregivers by adjusting urgency codes to influence the length of time until nursing home admission.


Subject(s)
Geriatric Assessment/classification , Geriatric Psychiatry , Nursing Homes/statistics & numerical data , Patient Admission/standards , Patient Selection , Triage/classification , Waiting Lists , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Caregivers/psychology , Consumer Behavior , Dementia/nursing , Female , Frail Elderly/psychology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Netherlands , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Time Management , Triage/standards
7.
Qual Health Care ; 10(4): 218-23, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11743150

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the deleterious effects of waiting for admission to a nursing home on the state of health of patients and their informal caregivers, and on the burden of caring. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS: Prospective longitudinal study consisting of interviews with informal caregivers during the period on the waiting list and after admission of the patient to a nursing home. Analysis of patients' files on diagnosis, date of registration on the waiting list, and date of admission to nursing home. SETTING: Ninety three patients registered on waiting lists for admission to a psychogeriatric nursing home in two regions of Amsterdam. RESULTS: Seventy eight of the 93 patients were admitted to a nursing home. The burden on the caregivers declined after admission of the patient but depressive symptoms did not. After 6 months a subgroup of 19 caregivers whose relatives were still waiting to be admitted were interviewed. The health of these patients remained stable during this waiting period and only problems in activities of daily living increased. The burden on these 19 informal caregivers and their state of health remained stable during the waiting period. CONCLUSIONS: A decline in the state of health and a rise in the burden on caregivers during the waiting period did not occur. However, a decrease in the burden and an improvement in mental health could have started earlier if patients had been admitted earlier.


Subject(s)
Caregivers/psychology , Cost of Illness , Dementia/psychology , Homes for the Aged/statistics & numerical data , Nursing Homes/statistics & numerical data , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Patient Admission , Waiting Lists , Aged , Data Collection , Female , Geriatric Psychiatry , Homes for the Aged/standards , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Netherlands , Nursing Homes/standards , Prospective Studies , Time Factors
8.
Qual Life Res ; 10(2): 123-32, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11642682

ABSTRACT

The quality of life (QoL) of survivors of a myocardial infarction (MI) remains lower than that of their peers long after the acute event. Previous research on this subject has indicated, however, that this difference might lessen somewhat over time for the dimension 'emotional functioning' (as measured by the sickness impact profile (SIP): a generic instrument for QoL). The present study explores this phenomenon further using two instruments that specifically measure emotional functioning i.e. the hospital anxiety and depression scale (HAD) and the heart patients psychological questionnaire (HPPQ). Ninety-nine participants of a large population-based cohort (the Rotterdam study), who had been admitted to the hospital because of an MI in the previous 6-60 months, and 101 reference subjects, without a history of infarction of heart or brain, from the same age and gender-groups, were interviewed twice (at 1- to 3-year time intervals). The results of the present study confirm earlier findings that the emotional functioning (in terms of 'anxiety', 'depression', 'well-being', 'feeling disabled', and 'displeasure') of MI survivors is impaired when compared to their unaffected peers. Moreover, they did not show any improvement in 'anxiety', 'depression', 'well-being' and 'displeasure' over time in the MI survivors. The results did, however, show that the difference between MI survivors and referents became less in time in the dimension 'feeling disabled'. This decrease was partly because MI survivors improved and partly because referents felt more disabled over time. One explanation for this might be that referents (51% aged 70 years and over) had difficulties in adapting emotionally to decreasing levels of physical functioning with increasing age, while the MI survivors tended to adjust to and accept the impairments they had contracted several years earlier.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Myocardial Infarction/psychology , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Quality of Life , Sickness Impact Profile
10.
Scand J Public Health ; 29(2): 113-21, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11484863

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Institutionalising a relative is a difficult decision and often relatives have to feel heavily burdened before they take such a step. Then the following delay because of waiting lists can be too much. This paper examines the experiences of caregivers of demented patients at the moment of registration on the waiting list for nursing-home care. METHODS: Interviews were carried out with 93 informal caregivers and analysis was made of the files of patients who were registered on the waiting list for nursing-home admission in Amsterdam in 1997 and 1998. Data collection included the Interview for Deterioration in Daily living activities in Dementia, The Revised Memory and Behaviour Problem Checklist, the Social Support List-Interaction, and three subscales of the Caregiver Reaction Assessment (CRA) scale. RESULTS: At the moment of admission to the waiting list, half of the respondents were rather heavily burdened or worse. Less severe dementia, lower age of the patient and providing more hours of informal care especially accounted for more negative experiences of caregivers. The self-esteem derived from caregiving was higher for caregivers with lower income and for those who perceived the quality of the relationship with the demented person as better. CONCLUSIONS: The high burden levels at the moment the decision to institutionalise the patient is taken put a heavy claim on the energy needed to continue to care during the ensuing waiting period. More social support and formal home care may reduce the level of burden of caregiving.


Subject(s)
Caregivers/psychology , Cost of Illness , Dementia/nursing , Home Nursing/psychology , Institutionalization , Waiting Lists , Aged , Decision Making , Dementia/psychology , Family Characteristics , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Netherlands , Nursing Homes , Social Support
11.
Health Policy ; 57(3): 169-77, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11459624

ABSTRACT

Intersectoral health policy implies negotiations with politicians outside the health sector. Health politicians have a stronger position if they can quantify health impact. In this Dutch case-study we used a computer simulation approach to answer the following questions: Which anti-tobacco intervention has the largest health gain? Will a commuter cycling policy result in any substantial health gain? What is the relative health gain of promoting higher consumption of vegetables and fruit? We concluded that substantial health gain can be achieved if cigarette packet price were to increase by 2 Dutch guilders. A commitment of all general practitioners to implement a smoking cessation intervention will result in a similar health gain. Stimulating commuter cycling could be a promising example of intersectoral health policy. Interventions to promote higher vegetable and fruit consumption will result in a relatively small health gain. Pros and cons of simulation models to support intersectoral health policy are discussed.


Subject(s)
Community Health Planning/organization & administration , Health Policy , Health Promotion/organization & administration , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Public Health Administration , Adult , Bicycling , Cooperative Behavior , Humans , Interinstitutional Relations , Life Expectancy , Male , Middle Aged , Negotiating , Netherlands , Nutrition Policy , Organizational Case Studies , Politics , Smoking Cessation
13.
J Epidemiol Community Health ; 55(5): 342-7, 2001 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11297657

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: It is generally accepted that a wide range of factors determine the health of a population, many of which are beyond the remit of the Ministry of Health. The aim of intersectoral health policy is to influence these factors. Success depends on a multi-stage process. This paper aims to provide support for the first stage of this process in the form of a quick scan for appraising the feasibility of intersectoral health policy. DESIGN: The content of the quick scan for intersectoral health policy was derived from a literature review. To determine the usefulness of this quick scan, the study looked at two examples in the policy sectors of education and safety. MAIN RESULTS: The quick scan distinguishes between three factors: (1) the availability of evidence, (2) the degree of support, and (3) the availability of tools for implementation. The quick scan made it possible to review the two policy sectors systematically in a relatively short time and to obtain sufficient information for priority setting in intersectoral health policy. The examples in this paper suggest that intersectoral health policy for community safety is more feasible than intersectoral policy for psychosocial problems in secondary education. However, specific information is required for a more precise assessment of feasibility. CONCLUSIONS: There are many ways of improving health through intersectoral health policy. The proposed quick scan may provide systematic support for setting priorities before developing policies of this kind.


Subject(s)
Decision Making, Organizational , Health Policy , Public Health Administration , Adolescent , Humans , Netherlands , Policy Making , Public Health Administration/standards
14.
J Epidemiol Community Health ; 55(1): 24-8, 2001 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11112947

ABSTRACT

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To explore whether the observed age related decline in the relative risk of death associated with low employment grade can be explained by the profiles of smoking, blood pressure and plasma cholesterol changing differently with age between the employment grades. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study with 25 years of mortality follow up. SETTING: Whitehall study. PARTICIPANTS: There were 16,984 men aged 40 to 69 years at baseline with complete information on smoking, blood pressure and plasma cholesterol. MAIN RESULTS: The relative risk of death associated with low employment grade decreased from 2.1 at 55-59 years of age to 1.3 at 85-89 years of age. Adjustment for smoking status and blood pressure, attenuated the age related decline of the relative risk by 18% and 3% respectively; adjustment for plasma cholesterol increased the decline by 3%. Taken together, these risk factors explain 20% of the observed age related decline. CONCLUSIONS: A small part of the observed age related decline in the relative risk of death associated with low employment grade can be explained by differential changes in the profiles of smoking, blood pressure and plasma cholesterol with age between the employment grades.


Subject(s)
Employment , Smoking/mortality , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Blood Pressure , Cholesterol/blood , Cohort Studies , England/epidemiology , Follow-Up Studies , Health Status , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Risk , Smoking/blood , Smoking/physiopathology , Social Class
15.
Health Policy ; 53(1): 1-11, 2000 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10940459

ABSTRACT

This article reviews the start of the use of targets as a tool in health policy, summarises the fruitful uses and frequently-heard objections, and proposes some conditions for successful health target setting. Targets as tool in health policy are based on the 'management by objectives' approach (1954). The use in health policy was possible due to advances in the use of epidemiology for public health purposes. It provisionally ends with the new health targets adopted by WHO in 1998. The setting and monitoring of health targets is one way in which a government can provide leadership, guidance and strategic direction for the health sector. These benefits, and others, will also be reviewed. Drawbacks - such as political accountability and the limited malleability of society - will also be discussed. To overcome most of the objections, the article ends with some SMART conditions for successful health target setting: specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-bound. When SMART conditions are met, political will and daring are the recipe for a successful health target approach.


Subject(s)
Community Health Planning/organization & administration , Health Policy , Health Priorities , Organizational Objectives , Community Health Planning/methods , Developed Countries , Guidelines as Topic , Health Status Indicators , Netherlands/epidemiology , Policy Making , World Health Organization
16.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd ; 144(3): 125-9, 2000 Jan 15.
Article in Dutch | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10674119

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the proportion of patients with familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) who were identified with hypercholesterolaemia in general practice prior to screening by means of pedigree research and DNA analysis by the National Foundation for the Identification of Familial Hypercholesterolemia (StOEH). DESIGN: Retrospective. METHOD: General practice files of FH patients, diagnosed through genetic screening by the StOEH in 1992-1997 whose general practitioner's (GP's) practice in Amsterdam, Haarlem or Alkmaar, were studied for cholesterol and FH related information documented in the period prior to the screening. RESULTS: Out of the 121 persons selected 80 agreed to the study; one GP refused to co-operate. There was no difference between respondents and non respondents with regard to age, sex or domicile of the GP. In 48 of 79 (61%) general practice files studied, cholesterol measurements were reported prior to screening; 39 patients (49%) had hypercholesterolaemia and 29 (37%) were being treated with cholesterol lowering drugs. Mean age of the FH patients who had no record of their cholesterol levels was 25.1 years (SD: 17.0) at the time of screening, 22 years younger than the mean age of FH patients who did have cholesterol levels on record prior to screening (47.1 (SD: 18.4); p < 0.0001). CONCLUSION: Of the FH patients identified through family based genetic screening especially the younger FH patients are newly brought to the attention of their GP.


Subject(s)
Family Practice/statistics & numerical data , Genetic Testing , Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II/diagnosis , Adult , Age Distribution , Cholesterol/blood , Female , Humans , Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II/blood , Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II/epidemiology , Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II/genetics , Male , Medical History Taking , Middle Aged , Netherlands/epidemiology , Population Surveillance , Prevalence , Referral and Consultation/statistics & numerical data , Retrospective Studies
19.
Heart ; 82(1): 52-6, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10377309

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine the relation between trends over time in mortality and hospital morbidity caused by various cardiovascular diseases in the Netherlands. DESIGN: Trend analysis by Poisson regression of national data on mortality and hospital admissions from 1975 to 1995. SUBJECTS: The Dutch population. RESULTS: All cardiovascular diseases combined were responsible for 39% of all deaths and 16% of all hospital admissions in 1995. From 1975 to 1995, age adjusted cardiovascular mortality declined by an annual change of -2.0% (95% confidence intervals (CI) -2.1% to -1.9%), while in the same period age adjusted discharge rates increased annually by 1. 3% (95% CI 1.1% to 1.5%). Around 60% of the gain in life expectancy in this period was related to lower cardiovascular mortality. For mortality, major reductions were seen in coronary heart disease (annual change -2.9%) and in stroke (-2.1%), whereas the increase in hospital admissions was mainly caused by chronic manifestations of coronary heart disease (5.1%), heart failure (2.1%), and diseases of the arteries (1.8%). In recent years, the gap between men and women at risk of dying from coronary heart disease became smaller for those aged

Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality , Adolescent , Adult , Age Distribution , Aged , Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology , Cause of Death , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Hospitalization/trends , Humans , Infant , Male , Middle Aged , Morbidity/trends , Netherlands/epidemiology , Sex Distribution
20.
Acta Oncol ; 38(1): 57-61, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10090689

ABSTRACT

In discussions about equity there is a tendency to focus on the inequalities in health status that appear to be the result of the material and immaterial consequences of a lower income, professional or social status in society. If we look at publications such as the Black Report in the UK or Ongelijke gezondheid in The Netherlands, we have to accept that despite our universal access to healthcare and the existence in many Western countries of social security measures that preclude 'real' poverty, considerable differences in health continue to exist between socioeconomic groups. This is corroborated for many other European countries in the research carried out by a concerted action led by Mackenbach. These inequalities in health have been referred to in many countries as inequities, meaning that society finds them unjust and expects them to be 'avoidable' or amenable to policy interventions. However, the research on the causal networks underlying the occurrence and the avoidability of inequalities in health remains sparse and intervention studies seem to focus on policy measures that can be evaluated, but which will most likely have a limited impact on the inequalities measured at the population level. Thus the research community leaves policymakers with very little evidence on which to build policy initiatives that are nevertheless requested by many governments. The third element, which needs to be addressed in this context, is the ominous inequality in access to healthcare. Since the debate on equity in health has rightly been initiated in the context of a broader, more intersectoral approach to health policy, very little attention has been paid, so far, to the issue of universal access to quality healthcare services. This is because in the second half of this century most Western (European) countries have created a healthcare system with universal access, financed either through taxation or through social insurance schemes. It is these financing systems that will be threatened in the years to come by the considerable demographic shift occasioned by the ageing of the post-war baby boom and the incentives for risk selection that have been introduced in many systems as part of the 'market' mechanisms. The benefits of these incentives have clearly been a greater efficiency at the patient or service level, but there is still the question of whether it will be a more efficient system also at a population level if equity considerations continue to require a system of universal access to all the healthcare technology that will become available in the coming years. The other side of the coin of risk solidarity is the delimitation of the collective responsibility, thus of a basic benefit package. It is important to realize that equity has been a fundamental underlying value that has led to the creation of the healthcare systems as we know them but which may have become so accepted that it is no longer carefully considered when looking at issues of rationing or health reforms.


Subject(s)
Health Status , Social Class , Forecasting , Health Care Rationing , Health Services Accessibility , Humans
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