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Showing 2 results for Emergency Service

Azam Nabavi, Abbas Allami, Reza Qasemibarqi,
Volume 34, Issue 1 (2-2020)
Abstract

Background: Lipid profiles are infrequently measured in clinical management of sepsis patients. Sepsis leads to significant alterations in the metabolism of lipids. The aim of the present study was to determine whether changes in plasma lipid concentrations during sepsis treatment were associated with clinical outcome.
   Methods: In this study, 74 adult septic patients were included in this prospective observational study from January to December 2017. Patients taking lipid lowering agents were excluded. A detailed medical history was obtained and clinical examination was performed. Serum total cholesterol (STC) and its fractions [low-and high-density lipoprotein] and triglyceride levels were measured in the morning of the first day after admission and then once weekly. The primary outcomes of the study were in-hospital mortality, and hospital stay and hypocholesterolemia were defined as STC levels < 50 mg/dL. Manne-Whitney U and chi-squared tests were used for data analysis, and significance level was set at p<0.05.
   Results: In this study, 78.4% (CI 95%: 67.3-87.1) of patients had hypocholesterolemia. During the study period, 21.6% (CI 95%: 12.9- 32.7) of patients died. All lipid (except TG) concentrations continuously decreased in deceased sepsis patients but increased in recovering patient (p value for STC (p=0.004), LDL (p=0.006), HDL (p=0.010), and TG (p=0.052)). The serum lipids concentration was not associated with length of hospital stay (p value for STC (p=0.524), LDL (p=0.813), HDL (p=0.799) and TG (p=0.581)).
   Conclusion: In this study it was found that the additional decline of lipid profile was significantly associated with increased mortality rate of sepsis patients. Thus, the clinically termed 'the lipaemia of sepsis' is not true in all situations.
Akbar Sheikhrabori, Hamid Peyrovi, Hamidreza Khankeh,
Volume 36, Issue 1 (1-2022)
Abstract

Background: Resilience refers to the capacity for suitable responding to stress in achieving the objectives at the least physical and psychological costs. The present review aims to illustrate the individual and contextual features of resilience improvement in healthcare professions.
   Methods: A scoping review was conducted according to the PRISMA-ScR guidelines and searching the online databases as PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar from January 2014 to December 2020 using a combination of MESH and EMTREE entry terms and free keywords.  The English articles, book chapters, and grey literature were included in the study. The data were recorded to an extraction form designed in Excel. The quality assessment of studies wasn’t performed due to scoping review. Thematic analysis was used to synthesize the data.
   Results: 5434 articles were identified via searching in the databases. 63 articles were reviewed that most of them from the USA (30 articles, 46%) and conducted as a qualitative study (32 articles, 50%). The main aspects of resilience that were extracted from the included studies were personal resilience, resilience in the emergency department, and resilience in healthcare providers. The main feature of resilience among healthcare providers was coping.
   Conclusion: Studies with more accurate methodology should investigate the situation of the healthcare providers’ resilience in difficult healthcare conditions instead of the mere emphasis on providing a fixed concept for all persons without considering the system impacts.

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