Journal of clinical epidemiology
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Self-reported chronic diseases and health status are associated with resource use. However, few data exist regarding their ability to predict mortality or hospitalizations. We sought to determine whether self-reported chronic medical conditions and the SF-36 could be used individually or in combination to assess co-morbidity in the outpatient setting. ⋯ The SF-36 component scores and the SIC had comparable discriminatory ability (AUC for discrimination of death within 2 y 0.71 for both models). When combined, the SIC and SF-36 together had improved discrimination for mortality (AUC = 0.74, p-value for difference in AUC < 0.005). A new outpatient co-morbidity score developed using self-identified chronic medical conditions on a baseline health inventory checklist was predictive of 2-y mortality and hospitalization within the VA system in general internal medicine patients.
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The objective of this article was to examine the possible association between benzodiazepine use and the risk of dementia in the elderly. This was a nested case--control study set in community settings in Bordeaux area, France. The participants were a representative sample of 3,777 elderly persons (65 years of age and older) followed from 1989 to 1997. ⋯ Former use was associated with a significantly increased risk of dementia (adjusted OR, 2.3; 95% CI,1.2-4.5). No association was found between dementia and the current use of benzodiazepines (adjusted OR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.6-1.6). Our finding suggest that former use of benzodiazepines could be a risk factor for dementia, but more detailed investigation are needed.
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Disease-specific registries have many important applications in epidemiologic, clinical and health services research. Since 1989 the Department of Veterans Affairs has maintained a national HIV registry. VA's HIV registry is national in scope, it contains longitudinal data and detailed resource utilization and clinical information. ⋯ Missing data occurred for some elements related to the computer programming that creates the registry (e.g., pharmacy files), and for other elements because manual entry is required (e.g., ethnicity). Lack of a standardized data classification system was a problem, especially for the pharmacy and laboratory files. In using VA's national HIV registry we have learned important lessons, which, if taken into account in the future, could lead to the creation of model disease-specific registries.
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We compared six inflammatory mediators (C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6), soluble tumour necrosis factor receptors (p55 and p75) and soluble adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, E-selectin)) as early diagnostic tests for neonatal sepsis, and studied the possible benefit of combining parameters. Blood samples were obtained from 166 consecutively admitted neonates, who were suspected to suffer from infection within the first week of life. Neonates were retrospectively classified as infected (sepsis, clinical sepsis or pneumonia), possibly infected, or non-infected. ⋯ Using infected neonates as reference standard alone, and including possibly infected as controls, sensitivity increased to 96%, whereas specificity decreased to 58%; a negative test result (CRP < 10 mg/l and IL-6 < 20 pg/ml) ruled out sepsis with high certainty (likelihood ratio = 0.07). CRP performed best as a diagnostic test for neonatal sepsis. Diagnostic accuracy was further improved by combining CRP and IL-6, whereas the other parameters (p55, p75, ICAM-1 and E-selectin) added no further diagnostic information.
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There is no empirical evidence on the sensitivity and specificity of methods to identify the possible overuse and underuse of medical procedures. To estimate the sensitivity and specificity of the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. Parallel three-way replication of the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method for each of two procedures, coronary revascularization and hysterectomy. ⋯ The sensitivity and specificity of detecting the underuse of coronary revascularization were 94% (92-95%) and 97% (96-98%), respectively. Past applications of the appropriateness method have overestimated the prevalence of the overuse of hysterectomy, underestimated the prevalence of the overuse of the coronary revascularization, and provided true estimates of the underuse of revascularization. The sensitivity and specificity of the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method vary according to the procedure assessed and appear to estimate the underuse of procedures more accurately than their overuse.