Objective: In 2018, the Network of the National Libraries of Medicine (NNLM) launched a sponsorship program to support public library staff in completing the Medical Library Association's Consumer ...Health Information Specialization (CHIS). The objectives of our study were to: (1) determine whether completion of the sponsored specialization improved ability to provide consumer health information; (2) identify new health information services, programming, and outreach activities at public libraries; (3) investigate benefits of the specialization; and (4) determine the impact of sponsorship on obtaining and continuing the specialization. Methods: We used REDCap to administer a 16-question survey in August 2019 to 224 public library staff who were sponsored during the first year of the program. We measured competence in providing consumer health information aligned with the eight Core Competencies for Providing Consumer Health Information Services 1 as well as new activities at public libraries, benefits of the specialization to public library staff, career gains, and the likelihood of continuing the specialization based on funding. Results: More than 80% of 136 participants reported an increase in core consumer health competencies, with a statistically significant improvement in mean competency scores after completing the specialization. Ninety percent of participants have continued their engagement with NNLM, and more than half offered new health information programs and services. While more than half planned to renew the specialization or obtain the Level II specialization, 72% indicated they would not continue without NNLM sponsorship. Conclusions: Findings indicate that NNLM sponsorship of the CHIS specialization was successful in increasing the capacity of public library staff to provide health information to their communities. Keywords: consumer health; public libraries; continuing education
Black students represent nearly 15% of the college student population, yet nationally only 6% of these students participate in internships and study abroad. Comparatively, White students represent ...approximately 52% of the college student population, and they represent over 70% of the students who participate in internships and study abroad. This is significant because internships and study abroad experiences can help students gain access to mentors and improve their retention and graduation rates. This study sought to determine if Black students believed they gained career readiness competencies during their experiences. This qualitative study included interviews, observations and photos from Black seniors who attend or are recent graduates of a southeastern, public, predominantly white, 4-year institution. The historically contentious nature of how Black students accessed predominantly white institutions during the Civil Rights Movement provided insight into why Black students may not access the experiences at the rate of their peers. The researcher asserts that due to the culture of predominantly white institutions, Black students may not feel a sense of belonging to access the experiences, and those who do gain access have relationships with faculty and staff or personal connections that helped them navigate the institution to gain access to internship and study abroad experiences. Students perceived race as a major factor in the way they experienced the predominantly white campus environment, and it impacted their access to internships and study abroad. Several students in the study participated in these experiences due to a requirement for graduation or because it was expected in their academic department. The research study finds that internship and study abroad experiences helped students gain career readiness competencies that will prepare them for post-graduation employment. The students who gained access to internship and study abroad experiences believed they developed more self-confidence, improved their communication skills, and gained a better understanding of their career of interest. They believed these experiences helped prepare them for their post-graduation plans to find employment or attend graduate or professional school.
CONTEXT In patients with suspected lower extremity deep vein thrombosis (DVT), compression ultrasound (CUS) is typically the initial test to confirm or exclude DVT. Patients with an initial negative ...CUS result often require repeat CUS after 5 to 7 days. Whole-leg CUS may exclude proximal and distal DVT in a single evaluation. OBJECTIVE To determine the risk of venous thromboembolism after withholding anticoagulation in patients with suspected lower extremity DVT following a single negative whole-leg CUS result. DATA SOURCES MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, LILACS, Cochrane, and Health Technology Assessments databases were searched for articles published from January 1970 through November 2009. Supplemental searches were performed of Internet resources, reference lists, and by contacting content experts. STUDY SELECTION Included studies were randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies of patients with suspected DVT and a negative whole-leg CUS result who did not receive anticoagulant therapy, and were followed up at least 90 days for venous thromboembolism events. DATA EXTRACTION Two authors independently reviewed and extracted data regarding a single positive or negative whole-leg CUS result, occurrence of venous thromboembolism during follow-up, and study quality. RESULTS Seven studies were included totaling 4731 patients with negative whole-leg CUS examinations who did not receive anticoagulation. Of these, up to 647 patients (13.7%) had active cancer and up to 725 patients (15.3%) recently underwent a major surgery. Most participants were identified from an ambulatory setting. Venous thromboembolism or suspected venous thromboembolism–related death occurred in 34 patients (0.7%), including 11 patients with distal DVT (32.4%); 7 patients with proximal DVT (20.6%); 7 patients with nonfatal pulmonary emboli (20.6%); and 9 patients (26.5%) who died, possibly related to venous thromboembolism. Using a random-effects model with inverse variance weighting, the combined venous thromboembolism event rate at 3 months was 0.57% (95% confidence interval, 0.25%-0.89%). CONCLUSION Withholding anticoagulation following a single negative whole-leg CUS result was associated with a low risk of venous thromboembolism during 3-month follow-up.
Antithrombotic Therapy for VTE Disease Stevens, Scott M.; Woller, Scott C.; Kreuziger, Lisa Baumann ...
Chest,
December 2021, 2021-12-00, Letnik:
160, Številka:
6
Journal Article
Recenzirano
This is the 2nd update to the 9th edition of these guidelines. We provide recommendations on 17 PICO (Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome) questions, four of which have not been addressed ...previously.
We generate strong and weak recommendations based on high-, moderate-, and low-certainty evidence, using GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) methodology.
The panel generated 29 guidance statements, 13 of which are graded as strong recommendations, covering aspects of antithrombotic management of VTE from initial management through secondary prevention and risk reduction of postthrombotic syndrome. Four new guidance statements have been added that did not appear in the 9th edition (2012) or 1st update (2016). Eight statements have been substantially modified from the 1st update.
New evidence has emerged since 2016 that further informs the standard of care for patients with VTE. Substantial uncertainty remains regarding important management questions, particularly in limited disease and special patient populations.
Executive Summary Stevens, Scott M.; Woller, Scott C.; Baumann Kreuziger, Lisa ...
Chest,
December 2021, Letnik:
160, Številka:
6
Journal Article
Recenzirano
This is the 2nd update to the 9th edition of these guidelines. We provide recommendations on 17 PICO (Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome) questions, four of which have not been addressed ...previously.
We generate strong and weak recommendations based on high-, moderate-, and low-certainty evidence, using GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) methodology.
The panel generated 29 guidance statements, 13 of which are graded as strong recommendations, covering aspects of antithrombotic management of VTE from initial management through secondary prevention and risk reduction of postthrombotic syndrome. Four new guidance statements have been added that did not appear in the 9th edition (2012) or 1st update (2016). Eight statements have been substantially modified from the 1st update.
New evidence has emerged since 2016 that further informs the standard of care for patients with VTE. Substantial uncertainty remains regarding important management questions, particularly in limited disease and special patient populations.
The aim of this healthcare improvement project was to evaluate healthcare provider use of screening and brief interventions (SBIs) for patients screening positive for alcohol at an upper Midwestern ...adult trauma center transitioning from Level II to Level I.
Trauma registry data for 2,112 adult patients with trauma who screened positive for alcohol were compared between three periods: pre-formal-SBI protocol (January 1, 2010, to November 29, 2011); first post-SBI protocol (February 6, 2012, to April 17, 2016) after protocol implementation, healthcare provider training, and documentation changes; and second post-SBI protocol (June 1, 2016, to June, 30, 2019) after additional training and process improvements. Data analysis included descriptive statistics and logistic regression for comparisons over time and between admitting services.
For the trauma admitting service, SBI rates increased from 32% to 90% over time, compared with 18%-51% for other admitting services combined. Trauma-service-admitted patients screening positive for alcohol had higher odds of receiving a brief intervention than other admitting services in each period in adjusted models: pre-SBI (OR = 1.99, 95% CI 1.15, 3.43, p = .014), first post-SBI (OR = 2.89, 95% CI 2.04, 4.11, p < .001), and second post-SBI (OR = 11.40, 95% CI 6.27, 20.75, p < .001) protocol periods. Within trauma service admissions, first post-SBI protocol (OR = 2.15, 95% CI 1.64, 2.82, p < .001) and second post-SBI protocol (OR = 21.56, 95% CI 14.61, 31.81, p < .001) periods had higher rates and odds of receiving an SBI than the pre-SBI protocol period.
The number of SBIs completed with alcohol-positive adult patients with trauma significantly increased over time through SBI protocol implementation, healthcare provider training, and process improvements, suggesting other admitting services with lower SBI rates could adopt similar approaches.
Supplementing patient education content with pictographs can improve the comprehension and recall of information, especially patients with low health literacy. Pictograph design and testing, however, ...are costly and time consuming. We created a Web-based game, Doodle Health, for crowdsourcing the drawing and validation of pictographs. The objective of this pilot study was to test the usability of the game and its appeal to healthcare consumers. The chief purpose of the game is to involve a diverse population in the co-design and evaluation of pictographs. We conducted a community-based focus group to inform the game design. Game designers, health sciences librarians, informatics researchers, clinicians, and community members participated in two Design Box meetings. The results of the meetings were used to create the Doodle Health crowdsourcing game. The game was presented and tested at two public fairs. Initial testing indicates crowdsourcing is a promising approach to pictograph development and testing for relevancy and comprehension. Over 596 drawings were collected and 1,758 guesses were performed to date with 70-90% accuracies, which are satisfactorily high.
Abstract 243
In patients with suspected lower extremity deep vein thrombosis (DVT), compression ultrasonography (CUS) is typically used as the initial test to confirm or exclude DVT. Patients with a ...negative CUS and either a moderate-to-high probability and/or a positive D-dimer usually require repeat CUS testing after 5–7 days to exclude proximal propagation of distal DVT, reducing diagnostic efficiency. Whole-leg compression ultrasound may safely exclude proximal and distal DVT in a single evaluation.
To assess the safety of withholding anticoagulation in patients presenting with suspected lower extremity DVT following a single negative whole-leg CUS.
MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, LILACS, Cochrane, Health Technology Assessments databases were searched from January 1970 to April 2009 without language restrictions. This search was supplemented by reviewing Google, Google Scholar, clinicaltrials.gov, meeting abstracts, conference proceedings, reference lists, and by contacting content experts.
Randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies of patients with suspected DVT with a negative whole-leg CUS, not treated with anticoagulation, and followed at least 90 days for occurrence of venous thromboembolism (VTE). Studies required objective confirmation of VTE events during follow-up. Two authors independently reviewed articles and extracted data.
Six studies were included totaling 4,229 patients with negative whole-leg CUS exams and not receiving anticoagulation. VTE or suspected VTE-related death occurred within the follow-up period in 24 (0.6%) patients. Of these 24 events, 9 (37.5%) were distal DVT, 7 (29.2%) were proximal DVT, 6 (25.0%) were non-fatal pulmonary embolism, and 2 (8.3%) were deaths, possibly related to VTE. Combined VTE event rate at 3 months was 0.46% (95% CI 0.22, 0.70).
Pretest probability assessment was not available for all analyzed patients.
Withholding anticoagulation in patients with suspected DVT based on a single whole-leg CUS is associated with a low risk of VTE (0.46%) during 3 months of follow-up. This strategy represents a safe and efficient alternative to serial CUS testing in patients with suspected DVT.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
A study was conducted to evaluate the risk of deep vein thrombosis after withholding anticoagulation in patients following a single negative whole-leg compression ultrasound (CUS). Results indicated ...that such withholding did lead to a reduction in the risk of venous thromboembolism.