Swiss medical weekly
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59 (82%) of 72 patients with multiple injuries but excluding severe brain trauma or paraplegia, studied 5 or 6 years after intensive care, were fully reintegrated, working normally, and not in receipt of insurance compensation. In patients with severe head injury studied 8 years after intensive care, 38 (55%) of 66 patients had the same final outcome. ⋯ Treatment during intensive care was found to be the most costly part of therapy. Considerations on costs and benefits demonstrate that the treatment of severely injured patients, who otherwise would die, results in a considerable social and economic saving (approximately 90 million Swiss francs for the 316 trauma patients analyzed).
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Swiss medical weekly · Apr 1988
[2-year anti-HIV donor screening in the Central Laboratory of the Swiss Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service].
612526 blood donations collected by the Central Laboratory of the Swiss Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service between July 1985 and June 1987 were routinely tested for antibodies to HIV.96 donations (82 men, 14 women were anti-HIV positive (0.157%, 1 of 6369 donations). The prevalence of anti-HIV positive donations was higher in men (0.172%, 1/5814) than in women (0.104%, 1/9615). Donations collected in military units were markedly more frequently seropositive (0.570%, 1/1754 in refresher courses, 0.261%, 1/3831 in recruit training). ⋯ It was lowest at the end of the observation period (0.098% or 1/10200 between January and June 1987). Doubtful positive results were recorded chiefly among women, at a rate increasing with age. The majority of such results are presumably due to antibodies with other specificities and must therefore be considered false positive.