77 results on '"Aznar-Lou I"'
Search Results
2. RWD173 Chronification in the Use of Benzodiacepines: Incidence Stratified by Sex and Age Groups
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Aznar-Lou, I., primary, Peñarrubia-María, M., additional, and Parker, L., additional
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- 2023
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3. RWD151 Evaluation of the Effect of Methodological Assumptions on Estimates of Adherence to Antipsychotics: A Real-World Data Study
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Fuente-Moreno, M., primary, Serrano-Blanco, A., additional, Rubio-Valera, M., additional, Dima, A.L., additional, and Aznar-Lou, I., additional
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- 2023
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4. Effectiveness of watchful waiting versus antidepressants for patients diagnosed of mild to moderate depression in primary care: A 12-month pragmatic clinical trial (INFAP study)
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Iglesias-González, M., Aznar-Lou, I., Peñarrubia-María, M.T., Gil-Girbau, M., Fernández-Vergel, R., Alonso, J., Serrano-Blanco, A., and Rubio-Valera, M.
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- 2018
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5. Impact of the mass media OBERTAMENT campaign on the levels of stigma among the population of Catalonia, Spain
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Rubio-Valera, M., Fernández, A., Evans-Lacko, S., Luciano, J.V., Thornicroft, G., Aznar-Lou, I., and Serrano-Blanco, A.
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- 2016
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6. Non-initiation of prescribed medication from a Spanish health professionals' perspective: A qualitative exploration based on Grounded Theory.
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Peñarrubia-María, MT, Gil-Girbau, M, Gallardo-González, MC, Aznar-Lou, I, Serrano-Blanco, A, Mendive Arbeloa, JM, Garcia-Cardenas, V, Sánchez-Viñas, A, Rubio-Valera, M, Peñarrubia-María, MT, Gil-Girbau, M, Gallardo-González, MC, Aznar-Lou, I, Serrano-Blanco, A, Mendive Arbeloa, JM, Garcia-Cardenas, V, Sánchez-Viñas, A, and Rubio-Valera, M
- Abstract
We explore, from the perspective of primary care health professionals, the motivations that lead patients to not initiate prescribed treatments, by developing a qualitative study in Spanish primary care. Six focus groups (N = 46) were conducted with general practitioners, nurse practitioners, social workers and community pharmacists and carried out in primary care (PC) of Barcelona Province, from April to July of 2018. The 46 participants were identified by three general practitioners and two pharmacists. In the interviews, the reasons for non-initiation of PC patients' medication were explored. Triangulated content analysis was performed. Patients' perspective, analysed in a previous study, and professionals' perspective agree on most of the factors that affect non-initiation. New factors were categorized into existent categories, confirming, and supplementing the model developed with patients. Health professionals identified some new factors which were not present in the patients' discourse, such as stigma related to the drug, hidden reasons for consultation, the role of nurses in prescription and support, the role of the pharmacy technician, illiteracy and lack of social support. The professionals confirm and expand on the Theoretical Model of Medication Non-Initiation. Primary care professionals should consider the factors described when prescribing a new medication. Knowledge contributed by the model should guide the design of interventions to improve initiation.
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- 2022
7. Pediatric Medication Noninitiation in Spain.
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Carbonell-Duacastella, C, Rubio-Valera, M, Marqués-Ercilla, S, Peñarrubia-María, MT, Gil-Girbau, M, Garcia-Cardenas, V, Pasarín, MI, Parody-Rúa, E, Aznar-Lou, I, Carbonell-Duacastella, C, Rubio-Valera, M, Marqués-Ercilla, S, Peñarrubia-María, MT, Gil-Girbau, M, Garcia-Cardenas, V, Pasarín, MI, Parody-Rúa, E, and Aznar-Lou, I
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OBJECTIVES: To estimate medication noninitiation prevalence in the pediatric population and identify the explanatory factors underlying this behavior. METHODS: Observational study of patients (<18 years old) receiving at least 1 new prescription (28 pharmaceutical subgroups; July 2017 to June 2018) in Catalonia, Spain. A prescription was considered new when there was no prescription for the same pharmaceutical subgroup in the previous 6 months. Noninitiation occurred when a prescription was not filled within 1 month or 6 months (sensitivity analysis). Prevalence was estimated as the proportion of total prescriptions not initiated. To identify explanatory factors, a multivariable multilevel logistic regression model was used, and adjusted odds ratios were reported. RESULTS: Overall, 1 539 003 new prescriptions were issued to 715 895 children. The overall prevalence of 1-month noninitiation was 9.0% (ranging from 2.6% [oral antibiotics] to 21.5% [proton pump inhibitors]), and the prevalence of 6-month noninitiation was 8.5%. Noninitiation was higher in the youngest and oldest population groups, in children from families with a 0% copayment rate (vulnerable populations) and those with conditions from external causes. Out-of-pocket costs of drugs increased the odds of noninitiation. The odds of noninitiation were lower when the prescription was issued by a pediatrician (compared with a primary or secondary care clinician). CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of noninitiation of medical treatments in pediatrics is high and varies according to patients' ages and medical groups. Results suggest that there are inequities in access to pharmacologic treatments in this population that must be taken into account by health care planners and providers.
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- 2022
8. Social network size, loneliness, physical functioning and depressive symptoms among older adults: Examining reciprocal associations in four waves of the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA)
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Joan Domènech Abella, Mundó J, Switsers L, van Tilburg T, Fernández D, and Aznar-Lou I
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depressive symptoms ,social isolation ,physical functioning ,older adults ,loneliness - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Previous research indicates that social isolation, loneliness, physical dysfunction and depressive symptoms are interrelated factors, little is known about the potential pathways among them. The aim of the study is to analyse simultaneously reciprocal relationships that could exist between the four factors to clarify potential mediation effects. METHODS: Within a large representative sample of older people in the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA), participants aged 75 and over were followed up over a period of 11 years (four waves). We tested cross-lagged and autoregressive longitudinal associations of social network size, loneliness, physical functioning and depressive symptoms using structural equation modelling (SEM). RESULTS: Several statistically significant cross-lagged associations were found: decreasing physical functioning (Coef. = -0.03; p
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- 2021
9. Diagnostic accuracy and treatment approach to depression in primary care: predictive factors
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Aznar-Lou I, Maria Iglesias Gonzalez, Rubio-Valera M, Peñarrubia-María MT, Mendive Arbeloa JM, Murrugarra-Centurión AG, Maria Montserrat Gil Gribau, González Suñer L, Peuters C, and Serrano-Blanco A
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OBJECTIVE: The study assessed the predictive factors of diagnostic accuracy and treatment approach (antidepressants versus active monitoring) for depression in primary care. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study that uses information from a naturalistic prospective controlled trial performed in Barcelona (Spain) enrolling newly diagnosed patients with mild to moderate depression by GPs. Treatment approach was based on clinical judgement. Diagnosis was later assessed according to DSM-IV criteria using Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I) interview by an external researcher. Patients (sociodemographic, psychiatric diagnosis, severity of depression and anxiety, health-related quality of life, disability, beliefs about medication and illness and comorbidities) and GP factors associated with diagnostic accuracy and treatment approach were assessed using multilevel logistic regression. Variables with missing data were imputed through multiple imputations. RESULTS: Two hundred sixty-three patients were recruited by 53 GPs. Mean age was 51 years (SD = 15). Thirty percent met DSM-IV criteria for major depression. Mean depression symptomatology was moderate-severe. Using multivariate analyses, patients' beliefs about medicines were the only variable associated with the antidepressant approach. Specialization in general medicine and being a resident tutor were associated with a more accurate diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical depression diagnosis by GPs was not always associated with a formal diagnosis through a SCID-I. GPs' training background was central to an adequate depression diagnosis. Patients' beliefs in medication were the only factor associated with treatment approach. More resources should be allocated to improving the diagnosis of depression.
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- 2019
10. Use of proton pump inhibitors among Danish children: A 16-year register-based nationwide study
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Aznar-Lou I, Reilev M, Lødrup AB, Rubio-Valera M, Haastrup PF, and Pottegård A
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pharmacoepidemiology ,treatment patterns ,prescription registry ,prevalence ,persistence - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Proton pump inhibitors (PPI) are among the most frequently used drugs in the developed countries. In recent years, their use among children and adolescents has been on the increase. Guidelines recommend use for a period no longer than 4-8 weeks. The aim of this study was to describe time trends in prescribing patterns of PPI use among children, with emphasis on persistence to therapy. METHODS: We used the Danish nationwide healthcare registries and identified all Danish children (0-17 years old) who were provided with a filled in PPI prescription between 2000 and 2015. Based on descriptive analyses, we reported trends over time in annual use, prevalent and incident users. Moreover, we evaluated persistence to treatment and doses used over time. Analyses were stratified by age groups (0-4, 5-11 and 12-17 years). RESULTS: We identified 212 056 filled in PPI prescriptions prescribed to 78 489 children. The total annual use of PPIs among children increased eight times from 2000 to 2015. Omeprazole was most frequently used (60% of all use). The proportion of prevalent users increased from 0.1 in 2000 to 3.1 per 1000 children in 2015, while the rate of new users increased from 1.2 to 8.0 per 1000 child years. In general, persistence to PPIs was low: in the youngest age groups (14%), slightly more children were covered by treatment 12 months after the first prescription compared with the oldest age groups (5%). CONCLUSION: The use of PPIs among Danish children has increased substantially during the last 15 years. In general, treatment with PPIs among children was of short duration. Attention should be paid to indications and rationality behind initiation of therapy.
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- 2019
11. In-patient costs of agitation and containment in a mental health catchment area
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Serrano-Blanco A, Rubio-Valera M, Aznar-Lou I, Baladon L, Gibert K, Gracia Canales A, Kaskens L, Ortiz Moreno JM, and Salvador-Carulla L
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Violence ,Costs ,In-patient ,Containment ,Restraint ,Seclusion ,Aggression ,Mental health ,Agitation ,Health economics - Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a scarce number of studies on the cost of agitation and containment interventions and their results are still inconclusive. We aimed to calculate the economic consequences of agitation events in an in-patient psychiatric facility providing care for an urban catchment area. METHODS: A mixed approach combining secondary analysis of clinical databases, surveys and expert knowledge was used to model the 2013 direct costs of agitation and containment events for adult inpatients with mental disorders in an area of 640,572 adult inhabitants in South Barcelona (Spain). To calculate costs, a seven-step methodology with novel definition of agitation was used along with a staff survey, a database of containment events, and data on aggressive incidents. A micro-costing analysis of specific containment interventions was used to estimate both prevalence and direct costs from the healthcare provider perspective, by means of a mixed approach with a probabilistic model evaluated on real data. Due to the complex interaction of the multivariate covariances, a sensitivity analysis was conducted to have empirical bounds of variability. RESULTS: During 2013, 918 patients were admitted to the Acute Inpatient Unit. Of these, 52.8% were men, with a mean age of 44.6 years (SD = 15.5), 74.4% were compulsory admissions, 40.1% were diagnosed with schizophrenia or non-affective psychosis, with a mean length of stay of 24.6 days (SD = 16.9). The annual estimate of total agitation events was 508. The cost of containment interventions ranges from 282€ at the lowest level of agitation to 822€ when verbal containment plus seclusion and restraint have to be used. The annual total cost of agitation was 280,535€, representing 6.87% of the total costs of acute hospitalisation in the local area. CONCLUSIONS: Agitation events are frequent and costly. Strategies to reduce their number and severity should be implemented to reduce costs to the Health System and alleviate patient suffering.
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- 2017
12. Effectiveness of the What's Up! Intervention to Reduce Stigma and Psychometric Properties of the Youth Program Questionnaire (YPQ): Results from a Cluster Non-randomized Controlled Trial Conducted in Catalan High Schools
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Andrés Rodríguez L, Adrián Pérez Aranda, Feliu-Soler A, Rubio-Valera M, Aznar-Lou I, Serrano-Blanco A, Juncosa M, Tosas A, Bernadàs A, and Luciano JV
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Reported and Intended Behavior Scale, Youth Program Questionnaire, mental disorders, non-randomized controlled trial, stigma - Abstract
Mental disorders are highly prevalent in the general population, and people who experience them are frequently stigmatized. Stigma has a very negative impact on social, academic/professional, and personal life. Considering the high rates of mental disorders among children and adolescents (13.4%) and how critical this age is in the formation of nuclear beliefs, many campaigns to combat stigma have been developed in the last decade, with mixed results. The OBERTAMENT initiative has produced various anti-stigma campaigns in Catalonia (Spain). In the present study, the main objective was to report on the effectiveness of the OBERTAMENT What's up! intervention, a curricular intervention including education and social contact conducted by the teachers in the classroom with teenagers aged between 14 and 18. Prior to this, we examined the psychometric properties of the Youth Program Questionnaire (YPQ), our main outcome measure, in terms of dimensionality, reliability, and validity. A cluster non-randomized controlled trial was conducted to assess this intervention, which was tested in nine high schools situated in the Barcelona region. A convenience sample of 261 students formed the intervention group and 132 the control group (52% women, mean age = 14, SD = 0.47). The assignment to study conditions was conducted by Departament d'Ensenyament (Department of Education), Generalitat de Catalunya (Catalan Government). Participants were evaluated at baseline, post-intervention, and 9-month follow-up. The main outcome measure of this study was the YPQ. The Reported and Intended Behavior Scale (RIBS) was used as secondary outcome measure. The statistical analysis indicated that the YPQ possesses a two-factor structure (stereotypical attitudes and intended behavior) and sound psychometric properties. The multilevel mixed-effects models revealed statistically significant interactions for both study measures and post hoc intragroup analyses revealed a significant but small improvement in the YPQ and RIBS scores in the intervention group. Overall, our results indicate that What's up! produced statistically significant, albeit small improvements in stereotypical attributions and intended behavior toward people with mental disorders. Some methodological limitations and the relatively low levels of stigma observed in our sample may undermine our results. The implications of our results are discussed in relation to stigma research.
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- 2017
13. Impact of initial medication non-adherence on use of healthcare services and sick leave
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Aznar-Lou, I, Fernandez, A, Gil-Girbau, M, Sabes-Figuera, R, Fajo-Pascual, M, Penarrubia-Maria, MT, Serrano-Blanco, A, Moreno-Peral, P, Sanchez-Niubo, A, March-Pujol, M, and Rubio-Valera, M
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primary health care ,big data ,medication adherence ,sick leave ,database ,health services research - Abstract
Background Initial medication non-adherence is highly prevalent in primary care but no previous studies have evaluated its impact on the use of healthcare services and/or days on sick leave. Aim To estimate the impact of initial medication non-adherence on the use of healthcare services, days of sick leave, and costs overall and in specific medication groups. Design and setting A 3-year longitudinal register-based study of all primary care patients (a cohort of 1.7 million) who were prescribed a new medication in Catalonia (Spain) in 2012. Method Thirteen of the most prescribed and/or costly medication subgroups were considered. All medication and medication subgroups (chronic, analgesics, and penicillin) were analysed. The number of healthcare services used and days on sick leave were considered. Multilevel multivariate linear regression was used. Three levels were included: patient, GP, and primary care centre. Results Initially adherent patients made more use of medicines and some healthcare services than non-adherent and partially adherent patients. They had lower productivity losses, producing a net economic return, especially when drugs for acute diseases (such as penicillins) were considered. Initial medication non-adherence resulted in a higher economic burden to the system in the short term. Conclusion Initial medication non-adherence seems to have a short-term impact on productivity losses and costs. The clinical consequences and long-term economic consequences of initial medication non-adherence need to be assessed. Interventions to promote initial medication adherence in primary care may reduce costs and improve health outcomes.
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- 2017
14. Initial medication non-adherence: prevalence and predictive factors in a cohort of 1.6 million primary care patients
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Aznar-Lou I, Fernández A, Maria Montserrat Gil Gribau, Fajó-Pascual M, Moreno-Peral P, Peñarrubia-Teresa MT, Serrano-Blanco A, Sánchez-Niubó A, March-Pujol MA, Jové AM, and Rubio-Valera M
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clinical pharmacology ,primary care ,pharmacoepidemiology ,adherence ,big data - Abstract
AIMS: Adherence to medicines is vital in treating diseases. Initial medication non-adherence (IMNA) - defined as not obtaining a medication the first time it is prescribed - has been poorly explored. Previous studies show IMNA rates between 6 and 28% in primary care (PC). The aims of this study were to determine prevalence and predictive factors of IMNA in the most prescribed and expensive pharmacotherapeutic groups in the Catalan health system. METHODS: This is a retrospective, register-based cohort study which linked the Catalan PC System (Spain) prescription and invoicing databases. Medication was considered non-initiated when it was not collected from the pharmacy by the end of the month following the one in which it was prescribed. IMNA prevalence was calculated using July 2013-June 2014 prescription data. Predictive factors related to patients, general practitioners and PC centres were identified through multilevel logistic regression analyses. Missing data were attributed using simple imputation. RESULTS: Some 1.6 million patients with 2.9 million prescriptions were included in the study sample. Total IMNA prevalence was 17.6% of prescriptions. The highest IMNA rate was observed in anilides (22.6%) and the lowest in angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors (7.4%). Predictors of IMNA are younger age, American nationality, having a pain-related or mental disorder and being treated by a substitute/resident general practitioner in a resident-training centre. CONCLUSIONS: The rate of IMNA is high when all medications are taken into account. Attempts to strengthen trust in resident general practitioners and improve motivation to initiate a needed medication in the general young and older immigrant population should be addressed in Catalan PC.
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- 2017
15. Comparing watchful waiting with antidepressants for the management of subclinical depression symptoms to mild-moderate depression in primary care: a systematic review
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Maria Iglesias Gonzalez, Aznar-Lou I, Maria Montserrat Gil Gribau, Moreno-Peral P, Peñarrubia-María MT, Rubio-Valera M, and Serrano-Blanco A
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Antidepressant medication ,primary care ,psychiatry ,mental health ,psychotherapy/counselling ,depression/mood disorder - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The benefits of watchful waiting (WW) over antidepressants (ADs) for the treatment of depression in primary care (PC) are unclear. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to systematically review the evidence supporting either WW or ADs for the treatment of subclinical depressive symptoms and mild-moderate depression in a PC setting. METHODS: This systematic review was registered at PROSPERO (42016036345). Four electronic sources (EMBASE, PubMed, PsycINFO, Web of Knowledge) were systematically searched from inception to November 2016 for controlled trials comparing WW and ADs in PC following established guidelines. The studies had to include adult population with new symptoms of subclinical depression or mild-moderate depression. Patients in the intervention group should receive a WW approach, while patients in the control group underwent treatment with ADs. The abstraction form included information on the setting, characteristics of the study population, total sample size, size of the control and intervention groups and date of the study. Outcome measures and variability were extracted. RESULTS: The scarcity of studies and the considerable clinical and methodological heterogeneity discouraged us from performing a meta-analysis. Three articles were included and qualitatively synthesized. There was no evidence for the superiority of one treatment option over the other, although two of the studies suggested small differences in favour of ADs when less conservative analyses were conducted (per protocol analysis and analysis not adjusted for missingness predictors). CONCLUSIONS: Superiority was not demonstrated by either treatment option. More robust evidence is needed to inform recommendations for the management of depressive symptoms in PC.
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- 2017
16. Impact of pharmaceutical intervention in preventing relapses in depression in Primary Care
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Rubio-Valera M, Peñarrubia-María MT, Fernández-Vergel R, Carvajal Tejadillo AC, Fernández A, Aznar-Lou I, March-Pujol M, and Serrano-Blanco A
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Primary Health Care ,Depression ,Antidepressants ,Relapse ,Community Pharmacies ,Medication Adherence - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the long-term impact of a brief pharmacist intervention (PI) compared with usual care (UC) on prevention of depression relapse. Design: randomised controlled clinical trial Setting: Primary Care Participants: Of the 179 depressed patients initiating antidepressants, the 113 whose clinical symptoms had remitted (main definition) at 6 months assessment were selected for this secondary study (PI = 58; UC = 55). Intervention: PI was an interview to promote medication adherence when patients get antidepressants from pharmacy. Main measurements: Baseline, 3 months, and six-months follow-up assessments were made. The severity of depressive symptoms was evaluated with PHQ9. Patients presenting a remission of symptoms were selected. The patient medical records were reviewed to identify a relapse in the following 12 months by using 4 indicators. Results: There was a lower proportion of patients that relapsed in the PI group than in the UC group 18 months after initiation of treatment, but the difference was not statistically significant either in the intent-to-treat analysis (OR = 0.734 [95%CI; 0.273-1.975]) or the per-protocol analysis (OR = 0.615 [95%Cl; 0.183-2.060]). All the sensitivity analyses showed consistent results. The sample size and adherence to the protocol in the intervention group were low. Conclusion: PI group showed a non-statistically significant tendency towards presenting fewer relapses. This could be related to the improvement in adherence among patients that received the intervention. (C) 2015 Elsevier Espana, S.L.U.
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- 2016
17. Attitudes and intended behaviour to mental disorders and associated factors in catalan population, Spain: cross-sectional population-based survey
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Aznar-Lou I, Serrano-Blanco A, Ana Fernandez, Jv, Luciano, and Rubio-Valera M
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Spain ,Social Discrimination ,Social stigma ,Mental-Health - Abstract
Mental disorders have a huge impact on the European population. Two of the main causes of this impact are stigma and discrimination. The aim of this paper is to assess the stigma regarding mental disorder in Catalonia and to explore factors associated with stigma.
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- 2016
18. Qualitative study of the agitation states and their characterization, and the interventions used to attend them
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Rubio-Valera M, Huerta-Ramos E, Baladón L, Aznar-Lou I, Jm, Ortiz-Moreno, Jv, Luciano, Pn, Roset-Arisso, Salvador-Carulla L, Jose Villagran, Mayoral F, and Serrano-Blanco A
19. Qualitative study of the agitation states and their characterization, and the interventions used to attend them,Estudio cualitativo sobre los estados de agitación y su caracterización, y los procedimientos de atención utilizados en su contención
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Rubio-Valera, M., Ramos, E. H., Baladón, L., Aznar-Lou, I., Ortiz-Moreno, J. M., Luciano, J. V., Roset-Arisso, P. N., Salvador-Carulla, L., Jose Villagran, Mayoral, F., Gracia, A., and Serrano-Blanco, A.
20. Qualitative study of the agitation states and their characterization, and the interventions used to attend them | Estudio cualitativo sobre los estados de agitación y su caracterización, y los procedimientos de atención utilizados en su contención
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Rubio-Valera, M., Ramos, E. H., Baladón, L., Aznar-Lou, I., Ortiz-Moreno, J. M., Luciano, J. V., Roset-Arisso, P. N., Salvador-Carulla, L., Villagrán, J. M., Mayoral, F., Gracia, A., and Antoni Serrano-Blanco
21. Qualitative study of the agitation states and their characterization, and the interventions used to attend them
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Maria Rubio-Valera, Huerta-Ramos E, Baladón L, Aznar-Lou I, Jm, Ortiz-Moreno, Jv, Luciano, Pn, Roset-Arisso, Salvador-Carulla L, Jm, Villagrán, Mayoral F, Gracia A, and Serrano-Blanco A
22. Correction: Effectiveness and cost‑effectiveness of an intervention to improve Initial Medication Adherence to treatments for cardiovascular diseases and diabetes in primary care: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster randomised controlled trial and economic model (the IMA‑cRCT study).
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Sanchez-Vinas A, Corral-Partearroyo C, Gil-Girbau M, Penarrubia-Maria MT, Gallardo-Gonzalez C, Olmos-Palenzuela MD, Aznar-Lou I, Serrano-Blanco A, and Rubio-Valera M
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- 2024
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23. Correction: Cost-effectiveness analysis of a multiple health behaviour change intervention in people aged between 45 and 75 years: a cluster randomized controlled trial in primary care (EIRA study).
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Aznar-Lou I, Zabaleta-Del-Olmo E, Casajuana-Closas M, Sánchez-Viñas A, Parody-Rúa E, Bolíbar B, Iracheta-Todó M, Bulilete O, López-Jiménez T, Pombo-Ramos H, Martín Miguel MV, Magallón-Botaya R, Maderuelo-Fernández JÁ, Motrico E, Bellón J, Martí-Lluch R, Rubio-Valera M, and Serrano-Blanco A
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- 2024
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24. Costs during the first year after stroke by degree of functional disability: A societal perspective.
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Soler-Font M, Ribera A, Aznar-Lou I, Sánchez-Viñas A, Slof J, Vela E, Salvat-Plana M, Villa-García L, Serrano-Blanco A, Pérez de la Osa N, Ribó M, and Abilleira S
- Abstract
Introduction: The aim of this study was to estimate societal costs during the first year after stroke by degree of functional disability., Patients and Methods: Descriptive study of the cumulative costs incurred during 1-year follow-up of a cohort of patients with stroke in Catalonia (Spain) participating in a multicentre, population-based, cluster-randomised trial (RACECAT). Patients were recruited between September 2017 and January 2019. Costs were collected for each patient from stroke onset to 1-year follow-up through hospital accounting records, electronic healthcare records and structured telephone-based interviews at 6 and 12-months follow-up. Disability was assessed using the 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS). Healthcare, community care, and patient/family costs were included. We used complete data from 567 eligible participants. Cost data were analysed using generalised linear models (GLMs) with gamma distributions and log link functions. For variables with >10% zero values, two-part models were applied. We performed sensitivity analyses modifying unit costs for patient/family costs., Results: Of the 567 patients included, 53% had ischaemic large vessel oclusion (LVO) stroke, 24% intracranial haemorrhage and 23% ischaemic non-LVO stroke. Mean cost per patient during the first year after stroke was €29,673 ± 28,632, and increased with degree of disability (mRS 0-2: €18,568 ± 12,244; mRS 3: €38,214 ± 28,172; mRS 4-5: €52,859 ± 36,383). Healthcare costs represented the highest proportion of total costs (63%; €18,724/patient) across all disability levels, with index hospitalisation being the highest (€12,319 ± 17,675); however, community care and patient/family costs represented over 40% of total cost in patients with higher disability levels., Discussion and Conclusion: Our results are in line with other studies; the costs during the first year after stroke are high and increase with disability. These results are valuable for calculating the cost of severe stroke cases., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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25. Cost-Effectiveness of a Multi-faceted Workplace Intervention to Reduce Musculoskeletal Pain in Nursing Staff: A Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial (INTEVAL_Spain).
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Soler-Font M, Aznar-Lou I, Almansa J, Peña P, Silva-Peñaherrera M, Serra C, and Ramada JM
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Purpose: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a multifaceted workplace intervention to reduce musculoskeletal pain (MSP) in nursing staff., Methods: The study was a 1-year cluster-randomized controlled trial. The intervention combined participatory ergonomics, health promotion, and case management. The control group received usual care. Societal and health system perspectives were used. Costs included direct health and indirect costs. The effects were MSP and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). MSP was measured using the Standardized Nordic Questionnaire at baseline and 6- and 12-month follow-up. QALYs were measured using the EuroQol-5D-3L at 6- and 12-month follow-up. Incremental costs and QALYs were modelled using generalized linear models. MSP was analysed through generalized logistic models. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were calculated, and cost-effectiveness planes and acceptability curves were constructed., Results: Total mean costs per person were €614 and €216 for the intervention and control group, respectively, with a societal perspective. The intervention mean cost was €38/person. From the societal perspective, the ICER showed that overall additional €68 (€9 from a health system perspective) were required to achieve 1-extra-percentage-point reduction of MSP. ICERs were €34 from the societal and €4 from the health system perspectives for neck, shoulders and upper back pain; €53 and €7 for low back; €179 and €23 for hands; €39 and €5 for legs; €115 and €14 for the knees; €36 and €5 for feet For MSP in the elbows. For participants with pain in the elbow, and for QALYs, the ICER showed that the intervention group was dominated by the control group., Conclusion: This intervention was not cost-effective in terms of QALYs. However, in terms of MSP, with a willingness to pay of €100, the probability of the intervention being cost-effective was around 90%. Further studies incorporating our recommendations are needed to confirm these findings., Study Registration: ISRCTN15780649, retrospectively registered., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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26. Neurologic comorbidity in psychiatric inpatients: evidence from neurologic consultations in a Spanish center.
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Peña-Salazar C, Kazah N, Carrillo B, Díaz C, Callén A, Serrano-Blanco A, and Aznar-Lou I
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Male, Spain epidemiology, Middle Aged, Adult, Neurology, Inpatients, Aged, Epilepsy complications, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Nervous System Diseases complications, Referral and Consultation, Comorbidity
- Abstract
Introduction: The presence of psychiatric comorbidity in some neurological disorders is common. A bi-directional influence between some psychiatric and neurological disorders has been discussed, but not widely studied. There is an absence of literature on the typology and rates of neurology consultations in different types of psychiatric inpatients., Materials and Methods: Cross-sectional study based on real world data on patients who had a neurological consultation during hospitalization on a psychiatric ward., Results: The most frequent reasons for visits to neurologists in our study were cluster 'Epilepsy/other types of non-epileptic seizures' (n = 177, 36.44%), followed by cluster 'Movement disorders' (n = 77, 20.48%), 'Cognitive disorder' (n = 69, 18.35%), and finally cluster 'Neuropathy' (n = 21, 5.59%). The most frequent type of psychiatric patient who required neurologic consultation presented a psychotic disorder (n = 100, 26.60%), follow by problem behavior (n = 82, 21.81%), bipolar disorder (n = 78, 20.78%), depressive disorder (n = 42, 11.17%) and autism spectrum disorder (n = 20, 5.32%). We found a statistically significant relationship between (problem behavior and intellectual disability) and neurologic consultation for epilepsy/other types of non-epileptic seizures, and between (depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability) and neurologic consultation for movement disorders., Conclusions: This is the first study in the literature which analyzes the rates and typology of neurologic consultations in people hospitalized with psychiatric disorders. A deep knowledge of epilepsy, movement disorders and cognitive disorders should be required for health professionals to treat psychiatric inpatients appropriately. Patients with particular psychiatric disorders seem to require a higher number of neurologic consultations than others during their hospitalization.
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- 2024
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27. Evaluation of adherence to antipsychotics: A real-world data study using four different dosing assumptions.
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Fuente-Moreno M, Dima AL, Rubio-Valera M, Baladon L, Chavarria V, Contaldo SF, Peña-Salazar C, Serra-Sutton V, Hermida-González P, de Loño JP, Rey-Abella ME, Aznar-Lou I, and Serrano-Blanco A
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Female, Spain, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Aged, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Practice Patterns, Physicians' standards, Antipsychotic Agents administration & dosage, Assessment of Medication Adherence
- Abstract
Aims: This study aimed to assess the frequency of dosing inconsistencies in prescription data and the effect of four dosing assumption strategies on adherence estimates for antipsychotic treatment., Methods: A retrospective cohort, which linked prescription and dispensing data of adult patients with ≥1 antipsychotic prescription between 2015-2016 and followed up until 2019, in Catalonia (Spain). Four strategies were proposed for selecting the recommended dosing in overlapping prescription periods for the same patient and antipsychotic drug: (i) the minimum dosing prescribed; (ii) the dose corresponding to the latest prescription issued; (iii) the highest dosing prescribed; and (iv) all doses included in the overlapped period. For each strategy, one treatment episode per patient was selected, and the Continuous Medication Availability measure was used to assess adherence. Descriptive statistics were used to describe results by strategy., Results: Of the 277 324 prescriptions included, 76% overlapped with other prescriptions (40% with different recommended dosing instructions). The number and characteristics of patients and treatment episodes (18 292, 18 303, 18 339 and 18 536, respectively per strategy) were similar across strategies. Mean adherence was similar between strategies, ranging from 57 to 60%. However, the proportion of patients with adherence ≥90% was lower when selecting all doses (28%) compared with the other strategies (35%)., Conclusion: Despite the high prevalence of overlapping prescriptions, the strategies proposed did not show a major effect on the adherence estimates for antipsychotic treatment. Taking into consideration the particularities of antipsychotic prescription practices, selecting the highest dose in the overlapped period seemed to provide a more accurate adherence estimate., (© 2024 British Pharmacological Society.)
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- 2024
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28. Cost Analysis of Low-Volume Versus Standard-Volume Ultrasound-Guided Interscalene Brachial Plexus Block in Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgery.
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Oliver-Fornies P, Sánchez-Viñas A, Gomez Gomez R, Ortega Lahuerta JP, Loscos-Lopez D, Aragon-Benedi C, Yamak Altinpulluk E, Fajardo Perez M, and Aznar-Lou I
- Abstract
Background Economic evaluation has become an essential decision-making tool for health systems worldwide. This study was aimed at estimating the difference in the use of healthcare resources, days on sick leave, and costs between patients undergoing a standard-volume versus a low-volume ultrasound-guided interscalene brachial plexus block. Methods This is a post-hoc cost analysis of a double-blind, randomized, and controlled clinical trial. Forty-eight patients undergoing ultrasound-guided interscalene block received either 10 ml or 20 ml of levobupivacaine 0.25%. Analyses involved the public healthcare payer perspective (including visits to general practitioners, nursing staff, physiotherapy facilities, hospital admissions, outpatient diagnostic tests, etc.) and the limited societal perspective, including productivity losses (days on sick leave). Measurements were made at one-month and one-year follow-ups post-intervention. Differences in costs were estimated using two-part models adjusted by the costs incurred in the previous year. Results Subjects in the 10 ml group made greater use of general practitioner visits (mean difference [95% CI]: 3.35 [0.219 to 6.49]; p=0.036) and diagnostic tests (2.43 [0.601 to 4.26]; p=0.009), but less use of physical therapy (-12.9 [-21.7 to -4.06]; p=0.004). Mean (SD) cost differences from the public healthcare payer's perspective were 1,461.34 $ (1,541.62) and 1,024.08$ (943.83) for the 10 ml and 20 ml groups, respectively (p=0.293). From the limited societal perspective, the differences were as follows: 7,036.53$ (8,077.58) and 8,666.56$ (9,841.10), respectively (p=0.937). While there were no differences in the above parameters at the one-month follow-up. Conclusion The volume reduction proposed following interscalene block resulted in meaningful, albeit not statistically significant, clinical benefits and lower costs from a limited societal perspective for shoulder surgery. Thus, healthcare use and days on sick leave are variables to be taken into consideration when calculating the economic impact of surgical procedures., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2023, Oliver-Fornies et al.)
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- 2023
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29. Improving equity in access to early diagnosis of cancer in different healthcare systems of Latin America: protocol for the EquityCancer-LA implementation-effectiveness hybrid study.
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Vázquez ML, Vargas I, Rubio-Valera M, Aznar-Lou I, Eguiguren P, Mogollón-Pérez AS, Torres AL, Peralta A, Dias S, and Jervelund SS
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- Humans, Latin America, Delivery of Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Early Detection of Cancer, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Healthcare fragmentation, a main cause for delay in cancer diagnosis and treatment, contributes to high mortality in Latin America (LA), particularly among disadvantaged populations. This research focuses on integrated care interventions, which have been limitedly implemented in the region. The objective is to evaluate the contextual effectiveness of scaling-up an integrated care intervention to improve early diagnosis of frequent cancers in healthcare networks of Chile, Colombia and Ecuador., Methods and Analysis: This research is two pronged: (A) quasi-experimental design (controlled before and after) with an intervention and a control healthcare network in each LA country, using an implementation-effectiveness hybrid approach to assess the intervention process, effectiveness and costs; and (B) case study design to analyse access to diagnosis of most frequent cancers. Focusing on the most vulnerable socioeconomic population, it develops in four phases: (1) analysis of delays and barriers to early diagnosis (baseline); (2) intervention adaptation and implementation (primary care training, fast-track referral pathway and patient information); (3) intracountry evaluation of intervention and (4) cross-country analysis. Baseline and evaluation studies adopt mixed-methods qualitative (semistructured individual interviews) and quantitative (patient questionnaire survey) methods. For the latter, a sample size of 174 patients with cancer diagnosis per healthcare network and year was calculated to detect a proportions difference of 15%, before and after intervention (α=0.05; β=0.2) in a two-sided test. A participatory approach will be used to tailor the intervention to each context, led by a local steering committee (professionals, managers, policy makers, patients and researchers)., Ethics and Dissemination: This study complies with international and national legal stipulations on ethics. It was approved by each country's ethical committee and informed consent will be obtained from participants. Besides the coproduction of knowledge with key stakeholders, it will be disseminated through strategies such as policy briefs, workshops, e-tools and scientific papers., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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30. Improving Initial Medication Adherence to cardiovascular disease and diabetes treatments in primary care: Pilot trial of a complex intervention.
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Corral-Partearroyo C, Sánchez-Viñas A, Gil-Girbau M, Peñarrubia-María MT, Aznar-Lou I, Serrano-Blanco A, Carbonell-Duacastella C, Gallardo-González C, Olmos-Palenzuela MDC, and Rubio-Valera M
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Pandemics, Medication Adherence, Primary Health Care, Cardiovascular Diseases drug therapy, COVID-19, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: The Initial Medication Adherence (IMA) intervention is a multidisciplinary and shared decision-making intervention to improve initial medication adherence addressed to patients in need of new treatments for cardiovascular diseases and diabetes in primary care (PC). This pilot study aims to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the IMA intervention and the feasibility of a cluster-RCT to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the intervention., Methods: A 3-month pilot trial with an embedded process evaluation was conducted in five PC centers in Catalonia (Spain). Electronic health data were descriptively analyzed to test the availability and quality of records of the trial outcomes (initiation, implementation, clinical parameters and use of services). Recruitment and retention rates of professionals were analyzed. Twenty-nine semi-structured interviews with professionals (general practitioners, nurses, and community pharmacists) and patients were conducted to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention. Three discussion groups with a total of fifteen patients were performed to review and redesign the intervention decision aids. Qualitative data were thematically analyzed., Results: A total of 901 new treatments were prescribed to 604 patients. The proportion of missing data in the electronic health records was up to 30% for use of services and around 70% for clinical parameters 5 months before and after a new prescription. Primary and secondary outcomes were within plausible ranges and outliers were barely detected. The IMA intervention and its implementation strategy were considered feasible and acceptable by pilot-study participants. Low recruitment and retention rates, understanding of shared decision-making by professionals, and format and content of decision aids were the main barriers to the feasibility of the IMA intervention., Discussion: Involving patients in the decision-making process is crucial to achieving better clinical outcomes. The IMA intervention is feasible and showed good acceptability among professionals and patients. However, we identified barriers and facilitators to implementing the intervention and adapting it to a context affected by the COVID-19 pandemic that should be considered before launching a cluster-RCT. This pilot study identified opportunities for refining the intervention and improving the design of the definitive cluster-RCT to evaluate its effectiveness and cost-effectiveness., Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT05094986., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The handling editor declared a shared research network (Research Network in Chronicity, Primary Care and Health Promotion RICAPPS) with the authors MG-G, MO-P, and CG-G at the time of the review., (Copyright © 2022 Corral-Partearroyo, Sánchez-Viñas, Gil-Girbau, Peñarrubia-María, Aznar-Lou, Serrano-Blanco, Carbonell-Duacastella, Gallardo-González, Olmos-Palenzuela and Rubio-Valera.)
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- 2022
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31. Costs and Factors Associated with Hospitalizations Due to Severe Influenza in Catalonia (2017-2020).
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Soler-Font M, Aznar-Lou I, Basile L, Soldevila N, Godoy P, Martínez A, Serrano-Blanco A, Domínguez A, and The Surveillance Of Hospitalized Cases Of Severe Influenza In Catalonia Working Group
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- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Spain epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospitalization, Influenza Vaccines therapeutic use, Influenza, Human prevention & control
- Abstract
This study aimed to estimate the cost and factors associated with severe hospitalized patients due to influenza in unvaccinated and vaccinated cases. The study had a cross-sectional design and included three influenza seasons in 16 sentinel hospitals in Catalonia, Spain. Data were collected from a surveillance system of influenza and other acute respiratory infections. Generalized linear models (GLM) were used to analyze mean costs stratified by comorbidities and pregnancy. Multivariate logistic models were used to analyze bacterial coinfection, multi-organ failure, acute respiratory distress syndrome, death and ICU admission by season and by vaccination status. Costs of ICU, hospitalization and total mean costs were analyzed using GLM, by season and by vaccination status. All models were adjusted for age and sex. A total of 2742 hospitalized cases were included in the analyses. Cases were mostly aged ≥ 60 years (70.17%), with recommended vaccination (86.14%) and unvaccinated (68.05%). The ICU admission level was statistically significant higher in unvaccinated compared to vaccinated cases. Costs of cases with more than or equal to two comorbidities (Diff = EUR - 1881.32), diabetes (Diff = EUR - 1953.21), chronic kidney disease (Diff = EUR - 2260.88), chronic cardiovascular disease (Diff = EUR - 1964.86), chronic liver disease (Diff = EUR - 3595.60), hospitalization (EUR 9419.42 vs. EUR 9055.45), and total mean costs (EUR 11,540.04 vs. 10,221.34) were statistically significant higher in unvaccinated compared to vaccinated patients. The influenza vaccine reduces the costs of hospitalization. There is a need to focus strategies in recommended vaccination groups.
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- 2022
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32. Complex multidisciplinary intervention to improve Initial Medication Adherence to cardiovascular disease and diabetes treatments in primary care (the IMA-cRCT study): mixed-methods process evaluation protocol.
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Corral-Partearroyo C, Sánchez-Viñas A, Gil-Girbau M, Peñarrubia-María MT, Aznar-Lou I, Gallardo-González C, Olmos-Palenzuela MDC, and Rubio-Valera M
- Subjects
- Humans, Medication Adherence, Surveys and Questionnaires, Primary Health Care, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Cardiovascular Diseases drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Medication non-initiation, or primary non-adherence, is a persistent public health problem that increases the risk of adverse clinical outcomes. The initial medication adherence (IMA) intervention is a complex multidisciplinary intervention to improve adherence to cardiovascular and diabetes treatments in primary care by empowering the patient and promoting informed prescriptions based on shared decision-making. This paper presents the development and implementation strategy of the IMA intervention and the process evaluation protocol embedded in a cluster randomised controlled trial (the IMA-cRCT) to understand and interpret the outcomes of the trial and comprehend the extent of implementation and fidelity, the active mechanisms of the IMA intervention and in what context the intervention is implemented and works., Methods and Analysis: We present the protocol for a mixed-methods process evaluation including quantitative and qualitative methods to measure implementation and fidelity and to explore the active mechanisms and the interactions between the intervention, participants and its context. The process evaluation will be conducted in primary care centres and community pharmacies from the IMA-cRCT, and participants include healthcare professionals (general practitioners, nurses and community pharmacists) as well as patients. Quantitative data collection methods include data extraction from the intervention operative records, patient clinical records and participant feedback questionnaires, whereas qualitative data collection involves semistructured interviews, focus groups and field diaries. Quantitative and qualitative data will be analysed separately and triangulated to produce deeper insights and robust results., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethical approval has been obtained from the Research Ethics Comittee (CEIm) at IDIAP Jordi Gol (codeCEIm 21/051 P). Findings will be disseminated through publications and conferences, as well as presentations to healthcare professionals and stakeholders from healthcare organisations., Trial Registration Number: NCT05026775., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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33. Is epilepsy related to psychiatric disorders in people with intellectual disability? A systematic review.
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Peña-Salazar C, Alfonso-Ramos M, Arroyo-Uriarte P, Serrano-Blanco A, and Aznar-Lou I
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The prevalence of psychiatric disorders in people with Intellectual Disability (ID) is statistically higher than in the general population. There is a lack of consensus on the role that epilepsy plays in psychiatric disorders in people with ID. We carried out a systematic review of articles published between 1960 and 2022, focusing on high-quality, case-control original research studies that only included adult populations. The primary outcome was the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in people with intellectual disability with and without epilepsy. Six articles were finally included. Results were varied; some reported a statistical increase, whereas others did not find any statistical difference. Due to the current controversy on the role of epilepsy in psychiatric disorders in people with ID and the small number of publications on the topic, we cannot affirm a relationship between epilepsy and psychiatric disorders in people with ID.
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- 2022
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34. Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an intervention to improve Initial Medication Adherence to treatments for cardiovascular diseases and diabetes in primary care: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster randomised controlled trial and economic model (the IMA-cRCT study).
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Sánchez-Viñas A, Corral-Partearroyo C, Gil-Girbau M, Peñarrubia-María MT, Gallardo-González C, Olmos-Palenzuela MD, Aznar-Lou I, Serrano-Blanco A, and Rubio-Valera M
- Subjects
- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Medication Adherence, Models, Economic, Primary Health Care, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Cardiovascular Diseases drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Between 2 and 43% of patients who receive a new prescription in PC do not initiate their treatments. Non-initiation is associated with poorer clinical outcomes, more sick leave and higher costs to the healthcare system. Existing evidence suggests that shared decision-making positively impacts medication initiation. The IMA-cRCT assesses the effectiveness of the IMA intervention in improving adherence and clinical parameters compared to usual care in patients with a new treatment for cardiovascular disease and diabetes prescribed in PC, and its cost-effectiveness, through a cRCT and economic modelling., Methods: The IMA intervention is a shared decision-making intervention based on the Theoretical Model of Non-initiation. A cRCT will be conducted in 24 PC teams in Catalonia (Spain), randomly assigned to the intervention group (1:1), and community pharmacies in the catchment areas of the intervention PC teams. Healthcare professionals in the intervention group will apply the intervention to all patients who receive a new prescription for cardiovascular disease or diabetes treatment (no other prescription from the same pharmacological group in the previous 6 months). All the study variables will be collected from real-world databases for the 12 months before and after receiving a new prescription. Effectiveness analyses will assess impact on initiation, secondary adherence, cardiovascular risk, clinical parameters and cardiovascular events. Cost-effectiveness analyses will be conducted as part of the cRCT from a healthcare and societal perspective in terms of extra cost per cardiovascular risk reduction and improved adherence; all analyses will be clustered. Economic models will be built to assess the long-term cost-effectiveness of the IMA intervention, in terms of extra cost for gains in QALY and life expectancy, using clinical trial data and data from previous studies., Discussion: The IMA-cRCT represents an innovative approach to the design and evaluation of behavioural interventions that use the principles of complex interventions, pragmatic trials and implementation research. This study will provide evidence on the IMA intervention and on a new methodology for developing and evaluating complex interventions. The results of the study will be disseminated among stakeholders to facilitate its transferability to clinical practice., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05026775 . Registered 30
th August 2021., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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35. [Pre-post evaluation of an intergenerational program to improve wellbeing in older adults and age stereotypes in primary and secondary students: CRENCO project].
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Domènech-Abella J, Díaz-Cofine S, Rubio-Valera M, and Aznar-Lou I
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Pandemics, Quality of Life, Students, Ageism prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: The present study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the CRENCO project which was carried out during the COVID-19 pandemic including intergenerational activities shared by students from primary and secondary education and users of two centers for older adults and a day hospital in Catalonia. The effectiveness was assessed in terms of well-being in older adults and on negative stereotypes about the elderly in primary and secondary students., Methods: Three interventions were carried out in which 32 older persons (9 users of centers for older adults and 23 of a day hospital), 99 primary students and 56 secondary students participated. Participants answered a questionnaire before and after the interventions. Through multilevel linear models for repeated measures, changes in feelings of loneliness, social support, anxiety and depressive symptoms, self-reported health and health-related quality of life were evaluated in older people. In primary and secondary students, changes in age stereotypes were evaluated., Results: Health-related quality of life and self-reported health improved statistically after the interventions in older persons. Users of the day hospital also reported an improvement in social support. Primary school students improved their age stereotypes; no statistically significant changes were detected in secondary students., Conclusion: The results of the present study contribute to underlining the importance of intergenerational programs such as the one proposed by CRENCO, capable of improving well-being and providing a more realistic vision of the older adults. Our results suggest that these programs should be implemented during childhood in order to prevent the proliferation of ageist stereotypes in later life stages., (Copyright © 2022 SEGG. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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36. Influence of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Adherence to Orally Administered Antineoplastics.
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Talens A, López-Pintor E, Bejerano M, Guilabert M, Aznar MT, Aznar-Lou I, and Lumbreras B
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Background: Several factors can influence adherence to orally administered antineoplastics, including fear or anxiety resulting from situations such as the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to analyse the influence of these patients’ experiences on adherence to orally administered antineoplastics. Methods: Cross-sectional study in four hospitals including >18 year old cancer patients receiving orally administered antineoplastics during the first half of 2021. Data were collected from medical records and through telephone interviews. Adherence was assessed through the prescription refill records and pill counts. Patients’ fear resulting from the pandemic was assessed by means of a structured questionnaire using a 5-point Likert-type scale. Results: Our sample compr BARCELONAised 268 patients (54% men) with a mean age of 64 years (SD 12). More than 15% had experienced afraid and 5% had experienced a dangerous situation when attending hospital, 17% felt they had received less care, and 30% preferred telepharmacy. Adherence measured by pill count was 69.3% and 95.5% according to prescription refill records. Patients who had experienced fear or anxiety when attending hospital were less adherent (aOR 0.47, 95% CI 0.23−0.96, p = 0.039). Conclusion: The fear experienced by some patients has affected adherence to treatment.
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- 2022
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37. Pediatric Medication Noninitiation in Spain.
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Carbonell-Duacastella C, Rubio-Valera M, Marqués-Ercilla S, Peñarrubia-María MT, Gil-Girbau M, Garcia-Cardenas V, Pasarín MI, Parody-Rúa E, and Aznar-Lou I
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Prescription Fees, Severity of Illness Index, Spain, Drug Prescriptions economics, Medication Adherence psychology, Sociodemographic Factors
- Abstract
Objectives: To estimate medication noninitiation prevalence in the pediatric population and identify the explanatory factors underlying this behavior., Methods: Observational study of patients (<18 years old) receiving at least 1 new prescription (28 pharmaceutical subgroups; July 2017 to June 2018) in Catalonia, Spain. A prescription was considered new when there was no prescription for the same pharmaceutical subgroup in the previous 6 months. Noninitiation occurred when a prescription was not filled within 1 month or 6 months (sensitivity analysis). Prevalence was estimated as the proportion of total prescriptions not initiated. To identify explanatory factors, a multivariable multilevel logistic regression model was used, and adjusted odds ratios were reported., Results: Overall, 1 539 003 new prescriptions were issued to 715 895 children. The overall prevalence of 1-month noninitiation was 9.0% (ranging from 2.6% [oral antibiotics] to 21.5% [proton pump inhibitors]), and the prevalence of 6-month noninitiation was 8.5%. Noninitiation was higher in the youngest and oldest population groups, in children from families with a 0% copayment rate (vulnerable populations) and those with conditions from external causes. Out-of-pocket costs of drugs increased the odds of noninitiation. The odds of noninitiation were lower when the prescription was issued by a pediatrician (compared with a primary or secondary care clinician)., Conclusions: The prevalence of noninitiation of medical treatments in pediatrics is high and varies according to patients' ages and medical groups. Results suggest that there are inequities in access to pharmacologic treatments in this population that must be taken into account by health care planners and providers., Competing Interests: FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE: The authors have indicated they have no financial relationships relevant to this article to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2022
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38. Non-initiation of prescribed medication from a Spanish health professionals' perspective: A qualitative exploration based on Grounded Theory.
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Peñarrubia-María MT, Gil-Girbau M, Gallardo-González MC, Aznar-Lou I, Serrano-Blanco A, Mendive Arbeloa JM, Garcia-Cardenas V, Sánchez-Viñas A, and Rubio-Valera M
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- Grounded Theory, Humans, Motivation, Pharmacists, Qualitative Research, General Practitioners
- Abstract
We explore, from the perspective of primary care health professionals, the motivations that lead patients to not initiate prescribed treatments, by developing a qualitative study in Spanish primary care. Six focus groups (N = 46) were conducted with general practitioners, nurse practitioners, social workers and community pharmacists and carried out in primary care (PC) of Barcelona Province, from April to July of 2018. The 46 participants were identified by three general practitioners and two pharmacists. In the interviews, the reasons for non-initiation of PC patients' medication were explored. Triangulated content analysis was performed. Patients' perspective, analysed in a previous study, and professionals' perspective agree on most of the factors that affect non-initiation. New factors were categorized into existent categories, confirming, and supplementing the model developed with patients. Health professionals identified some new factors which were not present in the patients' discourse, such as stigma related to the drug, hidden reasons for consultation, the role of nurses in prescription and support, the role of the pharmacy technician, illiteracy and lack of social support. The professionals confirm and expand on the Theoretical Model of Medication Non-Initiation. Primary care professionals should consider the factors described when prescribing a new medication. Knowledge contributed by the model should guide the design of interventions to improve initiation., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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39. Multiple health behaviour change primary care intervention for smoking cessation, physical activity and healthy diet in adults 45 to 75 years old (EIRA study): a hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster randomised trial.
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Zabaleta-Del-Olmo E, Casajuana-Closas M, López-Jiménez T, Pombo H, Pons-Vigués M, Pujol-Ribera E, Cabezas-Peña C, Llobera J, Martí-Lluch R, Vicens C, Motrico E, Gómez-Gómez I, Maderuelo-Fernández JÁ, Recio-Rodriguez JI, Masluk B, Contreras-Martos S, Jacques-Aviñó C, Aznar-Lou I, Gil-Girbau M, Clavería A, Magallón-Botaya R, Bellón JÁ, Ramos R, Sanchez-Perez A, Moreno-Peral P, Leiva A, González-Formoso C, and Bolíbar B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Exercise, Health Behavior, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care, Diet, Healthy, Smoking Cessation
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Background: This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a) a Multiple Health Behaviour Change (MHBC) intervention on reducing smoking, increasing physical activity and adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern in people aged 45-75 years compared to usual care; and b) an implementation strategy., Methods: A cluster randomised effectiveness-implementation hybrid trial-type 2 with two parallel groups was conducted in 25 Spanish Primary Health Care (PHC) centres (3062 participants): 12 centres (1481 participants) were randomised to the intervention and 13 (1581 participants) to the control group (usual care). The intervention was based on the Transtheoretical Model and focused on all target behaviours using individual, group and community approaches. PHC professionals made it during routine care. The implementation strategy was based on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Data were analysed using generalised linear mixed models, accounting for clustering. A mixed-methods data analysis was used to evaluate implementation outcomes (adoption, acceptability, appropriateness, feasibility and fidelity) and determinants of implementation success., Results: 14.5% of participants in the intervention group and 8.9% in the usual care group showed a positive change in two or all the target behaviours. Intervention was more effective in promoting dietary behaviour change (31.9% vs 21.4%). The overall adoption rate by professionals was 48.7%. Early and final appropriateness were perceived by professionals as moderate. Early acceptability was high, whereas final acceptability was only moderate. Initial and final acceptability as perceived by the participants was high, and appropriateness moderate. Consent and recruitment rates were 82.0% and 65.5%, respectively, intervention uptake was 89.5% and completion rate 74.7%. The global value of the percentage of approaches with fidelity ≥50% was 16.7%. Eight CFIR constructs distinguished between high and low implementation, five corresponding to the Inner Setting domain., Conclusions: Compared to usual care, the EIRA intervention was more effective in promoting MHBC and dietary behaviour change. Implementation outcomes were satisfactory except for the fidelity to the planned intervention, which was low. The organisational and structural contexts of the centres proved to be significant determinants of implementation effectiveness., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov , NCT03136211 . Registered 2 May 2017, "retrospectively registered"., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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40. Social network size, loneliness, physical functioning and depressive symptoms among older adults: Examining reciprocal associations in four waves of the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA).
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Domènech-Abella J, Mundó J, Switsers L, van Tilburg T, Fernández D, and Aznar-Lou I
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- Aged, Aging, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Social Isolation, Social Networking, Depression epidemiology, Loneliness
- Abstract
Introduction: Previous research indicates that social isolation, loneliness, physical dysfunction and depressive symptoms are interrelated factors, little is known about the potential pathways among them. The aim of the study is to analyse simultaneously reciprocal relationships that could exist between the four factors to clarify potential mediation effects., Methods: Within a large representative sample of older people in the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA), participants aged 75 and over were followed up over a period of 11 years (four waves). We tested cross-lagged and autoregressive longitudinal associations of social network size, loneliness, physical functioning and depressive symptoms using structural equation modelling (SEM)., Results: Several statistically significant cross-lagged associations were found: decreasing physical functioning (Coef. = -0.03; p < 0.05), as well as social network size (Coef. = -0.02; p < 0.05), predicted higher levels of loneliness, which predicted an increase in depressive symptoms (Coef. = 0.17; p < 0.05) and further reduction of social network (Coef. = -0.20; p < 0.05). Decreasing physical functioning also predicted an increase in depressive symptoms (Coef. = -0.08; p < 0.05). All autoregressive associations were statistically significant., Conclusion: Interventions focused on promoting social activities among older adults after negative life events, such as loss of social contacts or declining physical function, may alleviate feelings of loneliness and act as mental health protector., (© 2021 The Authors. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2021
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41. Cost-effectiveness analysis of a multiple health behaviour change intervention in people aged between 45 and 75 years: a cluster randomized controlled trial in primary care (EIRA study).
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Aznar-Lou I, Zabaleta-Del-Olmo E, Casajuana-Closas M, Sánchez-Viñas A, Parody-Rúa E, Bolíbar B, Iracheta-Todó M, Bulilete O, López-Jiménez T, Pombo-Ramos H, Martín Miguel MV, Magallón-Botaya R, Maderuelo-Fernández JÁ, Motrico E, Bellón J, Martí-Lluch R, Rubio-Valera M, and Serrano-Blanco A
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- Aged, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Health Behavior, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Health Promotion economics, Quality of Life psychology
- Abstract
Background: Multiple health behaviour change (MHBC) interventions that promote healthy lifestyles may be an efficient approach in the prevention or treatment of chronic diseases in primary care. This study aims to evaluate the cost-utility and cost-effectiveness of the health promotion EIRA intervention in terms of MHBC and cardiovascular reduction., Methods: An economic evaluation alongside a 12-month cluster-randomised (1:1) controlled trial conducted between 2017 and 2018 in 25 primary healthcare centres from seven Spanish regions. The study took societal and healthcare provider perspectives. Patients included were between 45 and 75 years old and had any two of these three behaviours: smoking, insufficient physical activity or low adherence to Mediterranean dietary pattern. Intervention duration was 12 months and combined three action levels (individual, group and community). MHBC, defined as a change in at least two health risk behaviours, and cardiovascular risk (expressed in % points) were the outcomes used to calculate incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER). Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were estimated and used to calculate incremental cost-utility ratios (ICUR). Missing data was imputed and bootstrapping with 1000 replications was used to handle uncertainty in the modelling results., Results: The study included 3062 participants. Intervention costs were €295 higher than usual care costs. Five per-cent additional patients in the intervention group did a MHBC compared to usual care patients. Differences in QALYS or cardiovascular risk between-group were close to 0 (- 0.01 and 0.04 respectively). The ICER was €5598 per extra health behaviour change in one patient and €6926 per one-point reduction in cardiovascular risk from a societal perspective. The cost-utility analysis showed that the intervention increased costs and has no effect, in terms of QALYs, compared to usual care from a societal perspective. Cost-utility planes showed high uncertainty surrounding the ICUR. Sensitivity analysis showed results in line with the main analysis., Conclusion: The efficiency of EIRA intervention cannot be fully established and its recommendation should be conditioned by results on medium-long term effects., Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03136211 . Registered 02 May 2017 - Retrospectively registered.
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- 2021
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42. Who Suffers From Pharmaceutical Poverty and What Are Their Needs? Evidence From a Spanish Region.
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Rubio-Valera M, Marqués-Ercilla S, Peñarrubia-María MT, Urbanos-Garrido RM, Borrell C, Bosch J, Sánchez-Viñas A, and Aznar-Lou I
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Background: Pharmaceutical poverty occurs when a patient cannot afford the cost of prescribed medication and/or medical products. Nonprofit organizations are covering the cost of medication to those patients in some contexts. The aim of the study was to describe the population of beneficiaries of the PB, a nongovernmental organization based on the primary healthcare system, which provides free-of-charge access to medicines and their utilization pattern of medicines and healthcare products. Methods: This was an observational study using PB beneficiary data collected between November 2017 and December 2018 in Catalonia. The Catalan Health Service provided information from the general population. A descriptive analysis of the beneficiaries' characteristics was conducted and compared to the general population. Results: The beneficiaries (N = 1,206) were mainly adults with a low level of education, unemployed, with functional disability, and with ≥1 child. Compared with the general population, the beneficiaries were older, had a lower level of education, showed a higher prevalence of functional disability, were less likely to be Spanish, and were more likely to be divorced and unemployed. The beneficiaries were polymedicated, and most were using medication related to the nervous (79%), musculoskeletal (68%), and cardiovascular system (56%) and alimentary tract and metabolism (68%). Almost 19% of beneficiaries used healthcare products. Female beneficiaries were older and more likely to be divorced or widowed, employed, and with children. Compared to men, women were more likely to use medicines for pain and mental disorders. The pediatric group used medications for severe, chronic conditions (heart diseases, autoimmune diseases, conduct disorders, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). Conclusion: Patients with severe, chronic, and disabling conditions are affected by pharmaceutical poverty. While the system of copayment remains unchanged, family physicians and pediatricians should explore economic barriers to treatment and direct their patients to resources that help to cover the cost of treatment., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Rubio-Valera, Marqués-Ercilla, Peñarrubia-María, Urbanos-Garrido, Borrell, Bosch, Sánchez-Viñas and Aznar-Lou.)
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- 2021
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43. Use of Mental Health Services for Patients Diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorders in Primary Care.
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González-Suñer L, Carbonell-Duacastella C, Aznar-Lou I, Rubio-Valera M, Iglesias-González M, Peñarrubia-María MT, Gil-Girbau M, and Serrano-Blanco A
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- Anxiety Disorders, Humans, Male, Primary Health Care, Quality of Life, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Depressive Disorder, Major therapy, Mental Disorders, Mental Health Services
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Major depressive disorder (MDD) is one of the most disabling diseases worldwide, generating high use of health services. Previous studies have shown that Mental Health Services (MHS) use is associated with patient and Family Physician (FP) factors. The aim of this study was to investigate MHS use in a naturalistic sample of MDD outpatients and the factors influencing use of services in specialized psychiatric care, to know the natural mental healthcare pathway. Non-randomized clinical trial including newly depressed Primary Care (PC) patients ( n = 263) with a 12-month follow-up (from 2013 to 2015). Patient sociodemographic variables were assessed along with clinical variables (mental disorder diagnosis, severity of depression or anxiety, quality of life, disability, beliefs about illness and medication). FP ( n = 53) variables were also evaluated. A multilevel logistic regression analysis was performed to assess factors associated with public or private MHS use. Subjects were clustered by FP. Having previously used MHS was associated with the use of MHS. The use of public MHS was associated with worse perception of quality of life. No other sociodemographic, clinical, nor FP variables were associated with the use of MHS. Patient self-perception is a factor that influences the use of services, in addition to having used them before. This is in line with Value-Based Healthcare, which propose to put the focus on the patient, who is the one who must define which health outcomes are relevant to him.
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- 2021
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44. Principles of pharmacoeconomic analysis: the case of pharmacist-led interventions.
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Tonin FS, Aznar-Lou I, Pontinha VM, Pontarolo R, and Fernandez-Llimos F
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In the past years, several factors such as evidence-based healthcare culture, quality-linked incentives, and patient-centered actions, associated with an important increase of financial constraints and pressures on healthcare budgets, resulted in a growing interest by policy-makers in enlarging pharmacists' roles in care. Numerous studies have demonstrated positive therapeutic outcomes associated with pharmaceutical services in a wide array of diseases. Yet, the evidence of the economic impact of the pharmacist in decreasing total health expenditures, unnecessary care, and societal costs relies on well-performed, reliable, and transparent economic evaluations, which are scarce. Pharmacoeconomics is a branch of health economics that usually focuses on balancing the costs and benefits of an intervention towards the use of limited resources, aiming at maximizing value to patients, healthcare payers and society through data driven decision making. These decisions can be guide by a health technology assessment (HTA) process that inform governmental players about medical, social, and economic implications of development, diffusion, and use of health technologies - including clinical pharmacy interventions. This paper aims to provide an overview of the important concepts in costing in healthcare, including studies classification according to the type of analysis method (e.g. budget-impact analysis, cost-minimization analysis, cost-effectiveness analysis, cost-utility analysis), types of costs (e.g. direct, indirect and intangible costs) and outcomes (e.g. events prevented, quality adjusted life year - QALY, disability adjusted life year - DALY). Other key components of an economic evaluation such as the models' perspective, time horizon, modelling approaches (e.g. decision trees or simulation models as the Markov model) and sensitivity analysis are also briefly covered. Finally, we discuss the methodological issues for the identification, measurement and valuation of costs and benefits of pharmacy services, and suggest some recommendations for future studies, including the use of Value of Assessment Frameworks., Competing Interests: CONFLICT OF INTEREST None., (Copyright: © Pharmacy Practice and the Authors.)
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- 2021
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45. Impact of the 13-Valent Conjugated Pneumococcal Vaccine on the Direct Costs of Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Requiring Hospital Admission in Children Aged < 5 Years: A Prospective Study.
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Hernández S, Navas E, Aznar-Lou I, Ciruela P, García-García JJ, Moraga-Llop F, Muñoz-Almagro C, Codina G, F de Sevilla M, González-Peris S, Esteva C, Planes AM, Izquierdo C, Martínez-Osorio J, Campins M, Uriona S, Salleras L, Serrano-Blanco A, Jané M, and Domínguez Á
- Abstract
The lack of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) cost studies may underestimate the eect ofpneumococcal polysaccharide conjugated vaccines (PCV). The objective of this study was to estimatethe direct costs of hospitalized IPD cases. A prospective study was made in children aged <5 yearsdiagnosed with IPD in two high-tech hospitals in Catalonia (Spain) between 2007-2009 (PCV7 period)and 2012-2015 (PCV13 period). Costs were calculated according to 2014 Catalan Health Service ratesusing diagnostic-related groups. In total, 319 and 154 cases were collected, respectively. Pneumoniahad the highest cost (65.7% and 62.0%, respectively), followed by meningitis (25.8% and 26.1%,respectively). During 2007-2015, the costs associated with PCV7 serotypes (Pearson coecient (Pc) =?0.79; p = 0.036) and additional PCV13 serotypes (Pc = ?0.75; p = 0.05) decreased, but those of otherserotypes did not (Pc = 0.23 p = 0.62). The total mean cost of IPD increased in the PCV13 period by31.4% (¿3016.1 vs. ¿3963.9), mainly due to ICU stay (77.4%; ¿1051.4 vs. ¿1865.6). During the PCV13period, direct IPD costs decreased due to a reduction in the number of cases, but cases were more severe and had a higher mean cost. During 2015, IPD costs increased due to an increase in the costsassociated with non-PCV13 serotypes and serotype 3 and this requires further investigation.
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- 2020
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46. Initiation and Single Dispensing in Cardiovascular and Insulin Medications: Prevalence and Explanatory Factors.
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Vilaplana-Carnerero C, Aznar-Lou I, Peñarrubia-María MT, Serrano-Blanco A, Fernández-Vergel R, Petitbò-Antúnez D, Gil-Girbau M, March-Pujol M, Mendive JM, Sánchez-Viñas A, Carbonell-Duacastella C, and Rubio-Valera M
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- Aged, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Cardiovascular Agents therapeutic use, Cardiovascular Diseases drug therapy, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Diabetes Mellitus drug therapy, Hypoglycemic Agents therapeutic use, Insulin therapeutic use, Medication Adherence
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Background: Adherence problems have negative effects on health, but there is little information on the magnitude of non-initiation and single dispensing., Objective: The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of non-initiation and single dispensation and identify associated predictive factors for the main treatments prescribed in Primary Care (PC) for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes., Methods: Cohort study with real-world data. Patients who received a first prescription (2013-2014) for insulins, platelet aggregation inhibitors, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEI) or statins in Catalan PC were included. The prevalence of non-initiation and single dispensation was calculated. Factors that explained these behaviours were explored., Results: At three months, between 5.7% (ACEI) and 9.1% (antiplatelets) of patients did not initiate their treatment and between 10.6% (statins) and 18.4% (ACEI) filled a single prescription. Body mass index, previous CVD, place of origin and having a substitute prescriber, among others, influenced the risk of non-initiation and single dispensation., Conclusions: The prevalence of non-initiation and single dispensation of CVD medications and insulin prescribed in PC in is high. Patient and health-system factors, such as place of origin and type of prescriber, should be taken into consideration when prescribing new medications for CVD and diabetes.
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- 2020
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47. Economic Evaluations Informed Exclusively by Real World Data: A Systematic Review.
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Parody-Rúa E, Rubio-Valera M, Guevara-Cuellar C, Gómez-Lumbreras A, Casajuana-Closas M, Carbonell-Duacastella C, and Aznar-Lou I
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Data Analysis, Humans, Reference Standards, Checklist, Economics
- Abstract
Economic evaluations using Real World Data (RWD) has been increasing in the very recent years, however, this source of information has several advantages and limitations. The aim of this review was to assess the quality of full economic evaluations (EE) developed using RWD. A systematic review was carried out through articles from the following databases: PubMed, Embase, Web of Science and Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. Included were studies that employed RWD for both costs and effectiveness. Methodological quality of the studies was assessed using the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) checklist. Of the 14,011 studies identified, 93 were included. Roughly half of the studies were carried out in a hospital setting. The most frequently assessed illnesses were neoplasms while the most evaluated interventions were pharmacological. The main source of costs and effects of RWD were information systems. The most frequent clinical outcome was survival. Some 47% of studies met at least 80% of CHEERS criteria. Studies were conducted with samples of 100-1000 patients or more, were randomized, and those that reported bias controls were those that fulfilled most CHEERS criteria. In conclusion, fewer than half the studies met 80% of the CHEERS checklist criteria., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest related to this systematic review.
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- 2020
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48. Corrigendum to "Impact of initial medication non-adherence to SSRIs on medical visits and sick leaves" [J Affect Disord. 2018 Jan 15;226:282-286].
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Aznar-Lou I, Iglesias-González M, Gil-Girbau M, Serrano-Blanco A, Fernández A, Peñarrubia-María MT, Sabés-Figuera R, Murrugarra-Centurión AG, March-Pujol M, Bolívar-Prados M, and Rubio-Valera M
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- 2020
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49. Prevalence of Medication-Dietary Supplement Combined Use and Associated Factors.
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Aznar-Lou I, Carbonell-Duacastella C, Rodriguez A, Mera I, and Rubio-Valera M
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- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug Interactions, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions diagnosis, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nutrition Surveys, Prevalence, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists adverse effects, Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Antihypertensive Agents adverse effects, Dietary Supplements adverse effects, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions epidemiology, Sodium Chloride Symporter Inhibitors adverse effects, Tetracyclines adverse effects
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Introduction: The use of medication has increased in recent years in the US while the use of dietary supplements has remained stable but high. Interactions between these two kinds of products may have important consequences, especially in the case of widely used medications such as antihypertensives and antibiotics. The aim of this paper is to estimate the prevalence of potentially serious drug-dietary supplement interactions among tetracyclines, thiazides, and angiotensin II receptor blocker users by means of the NHANES 2013-2014 dataset., Methods: Data from 2013-2014 NHANES were obtained. Potential interactions analysed were tetracyclines with calcium, magnesium, and zinc, thiazides with vitamin D, and angiotensin II receptors blockers with potassium. Prevalence was calculated for each potential interaction. Logistic regression was used to assess associated factors., Results: 864 prescriptions issued to 820 patients were analysed. Overall prevalence of potential interaction was 49%. Older age and higher educational level were strongly associated with being at risk of a potential interaction. Factors such as age, race, civil status, citizenship, country of birth, BMI, and physical activity did not show notable associations., Conclusions: Healthcare professionals should be aware of other medical products when they prescribe or dispense a medication or a dietary supplement, especially to the older population and people with a higher educational level.
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- 2019
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50. Effect of copayment policies on initial medication non-adherence according to income: a population-based study.
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Aznar-Lou I, Pottegård A, Fernández A, Peñarrubia-María MT, Serrano-Blanco A, Sabés-Figuera R, Gil-Girbau M, Fajó-Pascual M, Moreno-Peral P, and Rubio-Valera M
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- Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Poverty economics, Poverty statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care methods, Retrospective Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, Spain, Deductibles and Coinsurance economics, Deductibles and Coinsurance legislation & jurisprudence, Health Care Costs, Income trends, Primary Health Care economics, Assessment of Medication Adherence
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Objective: Copayment policies aim to reduce the burden of medication expenditure but may affect adherence and generate inequities in access to healthcare. The objective was to evaluate the impact of two copayment measures on initial medication non-adherence (IMNA) in several medication groups and by income level., Design: A population-based study was conducted using real-world evidence., Setting: Primary care in Catalonia (Spain) where two separate copayment measures (fixed copayment and coinsurance) were introduced between 2011 and 2013., Participant: Every patient with a new prescription issued between 2011 and 2014 (3 million patients and 10 million prescriptions)., Outcomes: IMNA was estimated throughout dispensing and invoicing information. Changes in IMNA prevalence after the introduction of copayment policies (immediate level change and trend changes) were estimated through segmented logistic regression. The regression models were stratified by economic status and medication groups., Results: Before changes to copayment policies, IMNA prevalence remained stable. The introduction of a fixed copayment was followed by a statistically significant increase in IMNA in poor population, low/middle-income pensioners and low-income non-pensioners (OR from 1.047 to 1.370). In high-income populations, there was a large statistically non-significant increase. IMNA decreased in the low-income population after suspension of the fixed copayment and the introduction of a coinsurance policy that granted this population free access to medications (OR=0.676). Penicillins were least affected while analgesics were affected to the greatest extent. IMNA to medications for chronic conditions increased in low/middle-income pensioners., Conclusion: Even nominal charge fixed copayment may generate inequities in access to health services. An anticipation effect and expenses associated with IMNA may have generated short-term costs. A reduction in copayment can protect from non-adherence and have positive, long-term effects. Copayment scenarios could have considerable long-term consequences for health and costs due to increased IMNA in medication for chronic physical conditions., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.)
- Published
- 2018
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