3 results on '"Wieser, C"'
Search Results
2. Exit-site care in Austrian peritoneal dialysis centers - A nationwide survey
- Author
-
Kopriva-Altfahrt, G., König, P., Mündle, M., Prischl, F., Roob, J. M., Wiesholzer, M., Vychytil, A., Arneitz, K., Karner, A., Artes, R., Wolf, E., Auinger, M., Pawlak, A., Fraberger, J., Hofbauer, S., Galvan, G., Salmhofer, H., Pichler, B., Wazel, M., Gruber, M., Thonhofer, A., Hager, A., Malajner, S., Heiss, S., Braunsteiner, T., Zweifler, M., Rudnicki, M., Kogler, R., Kohlhauser, D., Moser, E., Peter Kotanko, Loibner, H., Nitz, H., Miska, H. J., Wenzel, R., Wölfler, M., Breuss, H., Hölzl, B., Oberortner, W., Schmekal, B., Riener, E. -M, Wonisch, W., Vikydal, R., Frank, B., Wieser, C., and Pokorny, K.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Middle Aged ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Young Adult ,Catheters, Indwelling ,Patient Education as Topic ,Austria ,Catheter-Related Infections ,Health Care Surveys ,Humans ,Female ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,Peritoneal Dialysis ,Device Removal ,Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections ,Aged - Abstract
Catheter-associated infections markedly contribute to treatment failure in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. There is much controversy surrounding prophylactic strategies to prevent these infections.In this nationwide multicenter study we analyzed strategies to prevent catheter-associated infections as performed in Austrian PD centers in 2006. A questionnaire was sent to all 23 PD centers in Austria.Ten different catheter models were used in the 332 patients being treated in the 23 Austrian PD centers. Systemic antibiotics prior to catheter placement were given by 17 of the 23 PD centers (glycopeptides, n = 7; cephalosporins, n = 10). Nasal swabs were taken preoperatively by 17 PD centers; nasal Staphylococcus aureus carriers were treated prophylactically with mupirocin cream in 15 of these centers. Dressing change was routinely performed in 318 of 332 chronic PD patients (nonocclusive film dressing, n = 58; gauze dressing, n = 260). Disinfectants for chronic exit-site care included povidone iodine (n = 155), sodium hypochlorite (n = 31), povidone iodine + sodium hypochlorite together (n = 102), and octenidine dihydrochloride/phenoxyethanol (n = 17). Water + non-disinfectant soap or 0.9% sodium chloride was administered as a cleansing agent to the exit site by 27 patients. Routine S. aureus screening (nasal and/or exit-site swabs) in chronic PD patients was performed in 12 PD centers; carriers were treated with mupirocin cream in 11 of these centers. Dialysis staff members were screened for S. aureus in 8 PD centers and spouses were screened for S. aureus in 5 PD centers. The overall exit-site infection rate was 1 episode/43.9 patient-months, tunnel infection rate was 1 episode/88.9 patient-months, and peritonitis rate was 1 episode/51.0 patient-months. Patients of centers that have installed a prophylaxis protocol for treating S. aureus carriers had lower mean infection rates compared with those not using such a protocol.Various individual prophylactic strategies are used to prevent catheter-associated infections in Austrian PD centers. Infection rates are within the range reported in the literature. There is still scope for improvement in some centers (e.g., by establishing a prophylaxis protocol).
3. Factor structure and reliability of the Italian adaptation of the Hypomania Check List-32, second revision (HCL-32-R2)
- Author
-
Matteo Martino, Concetta De Pasquale, Giorgio Consoli, Domenico De Berardis, Fulvio Bedani, Michele Fornaro, Mai Elassy, Christian Wieser, Febronia Dugo, Carlo Ignazio Cattaneo, Sergio Mungo, Monica Mazza, Felice Iasevoli, Vito Fabio Paternò, Maria Chiara Pino, Giampaolo Perna, Giovanni Martinotti, Francesca Lo Monaco, Valerio Selle, Livia Avvisati, Emanuela D׳Angelo, Antonio Ventriglio, Andrea de Bartolomeis, Luisa Indelicato, Sergio Tartaglione, Anna Romano, Alessandro Del Debbio, Jules Angst, Alessandro Valchera, Carmine Tomasetti, Ann Sarah Koshy, Ettore Favaretto, Fornaro, Michele, De Berardis, D, Mazza, M, Pino, M, Favaretto, E, Bedani, F, Wieser, C, Indelicato, L, Paternò, Vf, Lo Monaco, F, Dugo, F, Ventriglio, A, Mungo, S, Selle, V, Valchera, A, Elassy, M, Martinotti, G, DE BARTOLOMEIS, Andrea, Iasevoli, Felice, Tomasetti, Carmine, Avvisati, L, Tartaglione, S, Perna, G, Cattaneo, Ci, Consoli, G, Romano, A, Del Debbio, A, Martino, M, Angelo E, D', De Pasquale, C, Koshy, A, and Angst, J.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,34-item ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bipolar Disorder ,Italian ,Adolescent ,Psychometrics ,(HCL-32-R2) ,Comorbidity ,Young Adult ,Cronbach's alpha ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Recall bias ,Positive predicative value ,Hypomania Check-List-32, second revision (HCL-32-R2), 34-item, Italian, Depression, Bipolar disorder ,80 and over ,medicine ,Humans ,Bipolar disorder ,Medical diagnosis ,Psychiatry ,Check-List-32 second revision ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Depressive Disorder ,Depression ,Major ,Reproducibility of Results ,Hypomania ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,Female ,Italy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Major depressive disorder ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objective To assess the psychometric properties of the Italian adaptation of the Hypomania-Check-List 32-item, second revision (HCL-32-R2) for the detection of bipolarity in major depressive disorder (MDD) treatment-seeking outpatients. Methods A back-to-back Italian adaption of the “Bipolar Disorders: Improving Diagnosis, Guidance, and Education” English module of the HCL-32-R2 was administered between March 2013 and October 2014 across twelve collaborating sites in Italy. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Fourth edition (DSM-IV) diagnoses were made adopting the mini-international neuropsychiatric interview, using bipolar disorder (BD) patients as controls. Results In our sample ( n =441, of whom, BD-I=68; BD-II=117; MDD=256), using a cut-off of 14 allowed the HCL-32-R2 to discriminate DSM-IV-defined MDD patients between “true unipolar” (HCL-32-R2 − ) and “sub-threshold bipolar depression” (HCL-32-R2 + ) with sensitivity=89% and specificity=79%. Area under the curve was .888; positive and negative predictive values were 75.34% and 90.99% respectively. Owing to clinical interpretability considerations and consistency with previous adaptations of the HCL-32, a two-factor solution (F1=“ hyperactive / elated ” vs. F2=“ irritable / distractible / impulsive ”) was preferred using exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses, whereas items n.33 (“ I gamble more ”) and n.34 (“ I eat more ”) introduced in the R2 version of the scale slightly loaded onto F2 and F1 respectively. Cronbach׳s α=.88 for F1 and .71 for F2. Limitations No cross-validation with any additional validated screening tool; treatment-seeking outpatient sample; recall bias; no systematic evaluation of eventual medical/psychiatric comorbidities, current/lifetime pharmacological history, neither record of severity of current MDE. Conclusions Our results seem to indicate fair accuracy of HCL-32 as a screening instrument for BD, though replication studies are warranted.
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.