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Review Meta Analysis
Cesarean section and risk of postpartum depression: A meta-analysis.
There is an association between emergency caesarean section and post-partum depression (OR 1.47, 1.33-1.62).
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SARS-CoV-2 can be transmitted by airborne droplets in a hamster model. Surgical masks reduce both infection & severity, particularly when worn by those infected.
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This article presents early controlled mobilization options for potentially unstable, nondisplaced, nonarticular hand fractures. Early controlled mobilization of tissues surrounding a healing fracture has the potential to enhance the quality and rate of fracture healing and a person's functional recovery. The options discussed protect the integrity of the fracture alignment, while permitting safe, pain-free protected motion of joints adjacent to the fracture. ⋯ If clinically unstable, the fracture often is considered unable to tolerate unrestricted active motion during the initial stages of healing. This article offers an alternative perspective, in which clinicians can consider the clinical factors that can be controlled to allow for early protected motion of the regional tissues surrounding a potentially unstable hand fracture. These additional clinical options offer an alternative to acute fracture immobilization and help progress the rehabilitation of hand fracture patients.
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Common pain assessment tools measure intensity, ignoring other dimensions of pain like function. The aim of this study was to test the psychometric properties of a newly developed functional pain assessment scale (FPAS) for use in clinical practice. ⋯ This pilot study provided support for the reliability and validity of the FPAS in cognitively intact patients experiencing pain. Although more research is needed, clinicians may consider using the FPAS with cognitively intact adults to assess the functional impact of pain on pain intensity. Clinical nurse specialists play a pivotal role in role modeling and guiding the introduction and testing of new assessment approaches into clinical practice settings across the continuum of care.
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Background: Although payment for home-based palliative care (HBPC) is slowly spreading, there remains significant challenges in engaging patients and physicians in palliative care programs and research. This challenge was illustrated in our previous HBPC trial that failed to identify and enroll eligible patients in both the study and in HBPC services. Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine challenges to participation in HBPC and in research among patients, caregivers, primary care physicians, HBPC providers, and accountable care organizations (ACOs). ⋯ Conclusion: These findings point to factors that contributed to the failure, and subsequent closure, of the original randomized controlled trial. Our findings may inform the further development of HBPC and, more generally, palliative care practice and policy. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03128060.