6 results on '"Garrido, D."'
Search Results
2. Anticipated prehospital decision delay in response to different symptom clusters in acute coronary syndrome: Results from the Spanish Cardiobarometer study.
- Author
-
Petrova D, Garrido D, Catena A, Ramírez-Hernández JA, Blakoe M, Fernández-Martínez NF, Pérez-Gómez B, Sánchez MJ, and Garcia-Retamero R
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Spain epidemiology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Time Factors, Chest Pain psychology, Chest Pain etiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Acute Coronary Syndrome psychology, Decision Making
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Reducing patient decision delay - the time elapsed between symptom onset and the moment the patient decides to seek medical attention - can help improve acute coronary syndrome survival. Patient decision delay is typically investigated in retrospective studies of acute coronary syndrome survivors that are prone to several biases. To offer an alternative approach, the goal of this research was to investigate anticipated patient decision delay in the general population in response to different symptom clusters., Methods: We developed scenarios representing four commonly experienced symptom clusters: classic (chest symptoms only), heavy (a large number of very intense symptoms including chest pain), diffuse (mild symptoms including chest pain), and weary (mild symptoms without clear chest involvement). The scenarios were administered in random order in a representative survey of 1002 adults ≥55 years old from the non-institutionalized general population in Spain. We measured help-seeking intentions, anticipated patient decision delay (waiting >30 min to seek help), and symptom attribution., Results: Patient decision delay was most common in the diffuse scenario (55%), followed by the weary (34%), classic (22%), and heavy (11%) scenarios. Attributing the symptoms to a cardiovascular cause and intentions to call emergency services were least frequent in the weary and diffuse scenarios. Women were less likely to intend to seek help than men in the classic (OR = 0.48, [0.27, 0.85], diffuse (OR = 0.67, [0.48, 0.92]), and weary (OR = 0.66, [0.44, 0.98]) scenarios, despite being more likely to attribute symptoms to cardiovascular causes. Participants with traditional cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension) reported faster help-seeking, whereas participants with obesity and history of depression were more likely to delay., Discussion: The diverse manifestations of acute coronary syndrome generate fundamentally different appraisals. Anticipated patient decision delay varies as a function of socio-demographic characteristics and medical history, supporting findings from studies with patients who experienced ACS. Measuring anticipated patient decision delay in the general population can help reveal potential barriers to help-seeking and capture effects of population interventions., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Anticipated help-seeking for cancer symptoms before and after the coronavirus pandemic: results from the Onco-barometer population survey in Spain.
- Author
-
Petrova D, Pollán M, Rodriguez-Barranco M, Garrido D, Borrás JM, and Sánchez MJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 virology, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms complications, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms virology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, SARS-CoV-2 pathogenicity, Spain epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, COVID-19 epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology, Pandemics
- Abstract
Background: The patient interval-the time patients wait before consulting their physician after noticing cancer symptoms-contributes to diagnostic delays. We compared anticipated help-seeking times for cancer symptoms and perceived barriers to help-seeking before and after the coronavirus pandemic., Methods: Two waves (pre-Coronavirus: February 2020, N = 3269; and post-Coronavirus: August 2020, N = 1500) of the Spanish Onco-barometer population survey were compared. The international ABC instrument was administered. Pre-post comparisons were performed using multiple logistic and Poisson regression models., Results: There was a consistent and significant increase in anticipated times to help-seeking for 12 of 13 cancer symptoms, with the largest increases for breast changes (OR = 1.54, 95% CI 1.22-1-96) and unexplained bleeding (OR = 1.50, 1.26-1.79). Respondents were more likely to report barriers to help-seeking in the post wave, most notably worry about what the doctor may find (OR = 1.58, 1.35-1.84) and worry about wasting the doctor's time (OR = 1.48, 1.25-1.74). Women and older individuals were the most affected., Conclusions: Participants reported longer waiting times to help-seeking for cancer symptoms after the pandemic. There is an urgent need for public interventions encouraging people to consult their physicians with symptoms suggestive of cancer and counteracting the main barriers perceived during the pandemic situation.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. First and second waves of coronavirus disease-19: A comparative study in hospitalized patients in Reus, Spain.
- Author
-
Iftimie S, López-Azcona AF, Vallverdú I, Hernández-Flix S, de Febrer G, Parra S, Hernández-Aguilera A, Riu F, Joven J, Andreychuk N, Baiges-Gaya G, Ballester F, Benavent M, Burdeos J, Català A, Castañé È, Castañé H, Colom J, Feliu M, Gabaldó X, Garrido D, Garrido P, Gil J, Guelbenzu P, Lozano C, Marimon F, Pardo P, Pujol I, Rabassa A, Revuelta L, Ríos M, Rius-Gordillo N, Rodríguez-Tomàs E, Rojewski W, Roquer-Fanlo E, Sabaté N, Teixidó A, Vasco C, Camps J, and Castro A
- Subjects
- Aged, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Spain epidemiology, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 therapy, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Many countries have seen a two-wave pattern in reported cases of coronavirus disease-19 during the 2020 pandemic, with a first wave during spring followed by the current second wave in late summer and autumn. Empirical data show that the characteristics of the effects of the virus do vary between the two periods. Differences in age range and severity of the disease have been reported, although the comparative characteristics of the two waves still remain largely unknown. Those characteristics are compared in this study using data from two equal periods of 3 and a half months. The first period, between 15th March and 30th June, corresponding to the entire first wave, and the second, between 1st July and 15th October, corresponding to part of the second wave, still present at the time of writing this article. Two hundred and four patients were hospitalized during the first period, and 264 during the second period. Patients in the second wave were younger and the duration of hospitalization and case fatality rate were lower than those in the first wave. In the second wave, there were more children, and pregnant and post-partum women. The most frequent signs and symptoms in both waves were fever, dyspnea, pneumonia, and cough, and the most relevant comorbidities were cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and chronic neurological diseases. Patients from the second wave more frequently presented renal and gastrointestinal symptoms, were more often treated with non-invasive mechanical ventilation and corticoids, and less often with invasive mechanical ventilation, conventional oxygen therapy and anticoagulants. Several differences in mortality risk factors were also observed. These results might help to understand the characteristics of the second wave and the behaviour and danger of SARS-CoV-2 in the Mediterranean area and in Western Europe. Further studies are needed to confirm our findings., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The chronology of hand stencils in European Palaeolithic rock art: implications of new U-series results from El Castillo Cave (Cantabria, Spain).
- Author
-
García-Diez M, Garrido D, Hoffmann D, Pettitt P, Pike A, and Zilhão J
- Subjects
- Archaeology, Caves, History, Ancient, Humans, Radiometric Dating, Spain, Art history
- Abstract
The hand stencils of European Paleolithic art tend to be considered of pre-Magdalenian age and scholars have generally assigned them to the Gravettian period. At El Castillo Cave, application of U-series dating to calcite accretions has established a minimum age of 37,290 years for underlying red hand stencils, implying execution in the earlier part of the Aurignacian if not beforehand. Together with the series of red disks, one of which has a minimum age of 40,800 years, these motifs lie at the base of the El Castillo parietal stratigraphy. The similarity in technique and colour support the notion that both kinds of artistic manifestations are synchronic and define an initial, non-figurative phase of European cave art. However, available data indicate that hand stencils continued to be painted subsequently. Currently, the youngest, reliably dated examples fall in the Late Gravettian, approximately 27,000 years ago.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Crop losses due to olive moth mediated by ethylene.
- Author
-
Ramos P, Rosales R, Sabouni I, Garrido D, and Ramos JM
- Subjects
- Animals, Fruit drug effects, Fruit parasitology, Fruit physiology, Insecticides pharmacology, Moths physiology, Olea drug effects, Olea physiology, Oviposition drug effects, Spain, Agriculture economics, Ethylenes pharmacology, Fruit economics, Insect Control, Moths drug effects, Olea parasitology
- Abstract
Background: Studies for nine years in southern Spain on the olive moth, Prays oleae Bern., have tested the possibility of altering oviposition behaviour on newly formed olive fruits by means of a single ethylene application., Results: A single spraying of ethylene on the olive trees at the beginning of fruiting significantly decreased the olive moth egg populations and consequent the olive fruit fall. At the same time, no negative effect was found in the activity of natural oophagous predators of the olive moth., Conclusions: The ethylene treatments against P. oleae yielded substantial economical benefits each year (a mean of euro526 ha(-1)), benefits that fluctuated depending on the olive crop and on the annual fruit fall caused by this major pest.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.