83 results on '"B. Cassou"'
Search Results
2. La lutte contre la douleur : priorité de santé publique ?
- Author
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B. Cassou
- Subjects
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Political science ,Humanities - Abstract
L’action publique autour de la prise en charge de la douleur s’est progressivement structuree dans le courant des annees 1990 en France. De nombreuses lois, circulaires et plans nationaux ont suscite des changements dans les comportements des acteurs du systeme de soins. Mais l’impact reel pour la population des mesures de sante publique est difficile a evaluer en l’absence d’une methodologie d’evaluation appropriee, de la mise en place d’un systeme d’information en lien avec les objectifs et d’un programme de mesures periodiques des indicateurs.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Work-related factors associated with age at natural menopause in a generation of French gainfully employed women
- Author
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B. Cassou, F. Derriennic, P Aegerter, A. Touranchet, and L. Mandereau
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Employment ,Aging ,Epidemiology ,Job control ,Work related ,Body Mass Index ,Age Distribution ,History of depression ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Occupations ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Survival analysis ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Depression ,Smoking ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Menopause ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Menarche ,Female ,France ,business - Abstract
This study's purpose was to identify occupational factors that may influence the age at natural menopause in a random sample of gainfully employed French women born in 1938 (n = 1,594). Occupational physicians selected the subjects from their files and interviewed them during their annual visits in 1990 and 1995. The authors used Kaplan-Meier survival curves to estimate median age at menopause (52 years) and multiple Cox models to estimate associations among women's characteristics, occupational factors, and age at menopause separately within two strata distinguished by a self-reported history of depression. Among women without such a history, earlier menopause was associated with smoking more than 10 cigarettes per day in 1990 (p < 0.001), a high-strain job (p = 0.01) in 1990, and difficult schedules before 1990 (p = 0.03). Later menopause was associated with higher educational status (p = 0.003) and repetitive work in 1990 (p = 0.005). Among women with a history of depression, a later menopause was associated with having at least one child (p < 0.001) and menarche later than the age of 13 years (p = 0.004). Earlier menopause was associated with a high job control in 1990 (p = 0.03) and high school education (p < 0.01). These results suggest that certain physical job stressors may be related to age at menopause.
- Published
- 2007
4. [Evaluation of a multifaceted intervention for implementing national guidelines: the case of physical restraint in geriatric care]
- Author
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I, Vedel, L, Lechowski, M, De Stampa, P, Aegerter, I, Simon, V, Pedrono, C, Lazarovici, C, Mauriat, J, Ankri, and B, Cassou
- Subjects
Hospitalization ,Restraint, Physical ,Geriatrics ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Documentation ,France ,Hospitals, Special ,Medical Records ,Aged - Abstract
There is a growing interest in developing guidelines. The French Agency for accreditation and Evaluation (Anaes) published in October 2000 guidelines on the use of restraint in geriatric care settings because in spite of the risks this practice remains widespread in that type of care setting. A multifaceted intervention was conducted in a Parisian geriatric hospital in order to improve the implementation of the published guidelines. An epidemiological study was conducted to assess the outcomes of this intervention.The intervention consisted in distributing educational materials and a specific prescription sheet, and in staff training sessions. A time series study was used to assess outcomes. The three time points were: before the intervention, just after the end of the intervention and one year later. Two dimensions were studied: implementation of the guidelines using markers collected from patients' charts and restraining practices noted in an observational study of hospitalized patients.The results of the study suggest that five recommendations were followed better: restraint prescription (8.7 to 57.4%), writing in the patient chart the reasons for restraining (3.5 to 35.3%), follow-up prescription, assessment of potential benefits and risks for the patient and patient information (0% to 19-34%). Nevertheless, the prevalence of restraint and of devices employed (around 70%) remained unchanged after the intervention. The various outcomes of the intervention might be explained by the guidelines themselves, which were variably practical or precise. Moreover, the effect of certain factors directly related with the use of restraint, a routine practice strongly supported by myths about its efficacy, as well as factors related to intervention design may merely have prevented any decrease in the use of restraint practices.Multifaceted intervention can favour implementation of certain national guidelines such as prescribing restraint, but can also fail in stimulating the implementation of others such as decreasing the prevalence of restraint in geriatric practice. Therefore the next intervention should emphasize alternatives to physical restraint practices.
- Published
- 2005
5. [Measuring quality of life in the elderly]
- Author
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B, Cassou
- Subjects
Geriatrics ,Age Factors ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Aged - Published
- 2002
6. [The geriatric Inter-Clin of Public Assistance-Hospitals of Paris, a nursing service network in geriatric hospitals]
- Author
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B, Cassou
- Subjects
Cross Infection ,Health Planning ,Infection Control ,Paris ,National Health Programs ,Geriatrics ,Health Services for the Aged ,Hospitals, Public ,Population Surveillance ,Humans ,Hospitals, Special ,Aged - Published
- 2002
7. [Control of nosocomial infections by multiresistant bacteria in geriatric services]
- Author
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B, Prieur and B, Cassou
- Subjects
Cross Infection ,Bacteria ,Health Services for the Aged ,Humans ,France ,Child ,Drug Resistance, Multiple - Abstract
Geriatric wards have a higher prevalence of infection than surgical or acute medical wards, and multiresistant organisms contribute a nonnegligeable proportion of infections in elderly inpatients. The measures used to prevent nosocomial infections in geriatric wards are the same as in other types of wards. They include identifying and ensuring the technical and geographic isolation of colonized and infected patients. Health care providers should be informed of the situation, and antimicrobials used with discernment to avoid the selection of multiresistant organisms. Implementation of these measures is made difficult by architectural factors, the fact that many geriatric patients require assistance in all the activities of daily living, and the long duration of stays in geriatric wards. Additional measures are probably essential to achieve long-term control of nosocomial infections. Insufficient attention has been given to health care providers' perceptions of nosocomial infection and to defining the tasks actually performed by these providers.
- Published
- 1998
8. [Predictive factors of physical disability in a cohort of retired persons in Paris followed during 10 years]
- Author
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B, Cassou, F, Derriennic, C, Monfort, Y, Iwatsubo, and M, Amphoux
- Subjects
Male ,Paris ,Retirement ,Time Factors ,Mental Disorders ,Physical Exertion ,Age Factors ,Interviews as Topic ,Logistic Models ,Sex Factors ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Activities of Daily Living ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies ,Occupations ,Aged ,Follow-Up Studies ,Forecasting - Abstract
The objective of the present study was to examine predictors of physical disability in a survey of retired men and women living in the Paris area followed-up longitudinally for 10 years.Subjects were randomly selected in a supplementary retirement pension fund. In all 627 subjects took part in the first phase of the survey (1982-83) and 392 in the follow-up phase (1992-93). At the 10-year follow-up, there were 185 confirmed deaths and 50 subjects refused to participate or could not be traced. Physical disability was measured by difficulties reported by the subjects for seven basic activities of daily life. Possible predictors, socio-demographic, impairments, physical activities, working conditions during working life were explored at T1.The incidence of physical disability was 41.4% for men and 57.6% for women. For disability in mobility, the incidence was 37.1% for men and 54.7% for women. In multivariate analysis, predictors of physical disability were social category (clerks), no physical activities, use of medicine, mental impairment. The predictors of disability in mobility were sex (women), social category (clerks), use of medicine, cardio-respiratory and sensory impairments. On the contrary, subjects with mental impairment had a lower incidence of disability in mobility than subjects without mental impairment.The results confirm the two poles of disability: biomedical and social. Working conditions during working life do not seem to play a direct part in incidence of disability at ten years follow-up.
- Published
- 1998
9. [Age, work and spinal pain]
- Author
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F, Derriennic, B, Cassou, C, Monfort, and A, Touranchet
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Work ,Depression ,Smoking ,Age Factors ,Pain ,Middle Aged ,Sampling Studies ,Random Allocation ,Logistic Models ,Sex Factors ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Back Pain ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Spinal Diseases ,Occupations ,Low Back Pain - Abstract
To examine whether the relationship between age and musculoskeletal disorders in the spine is specific to one localization (cervical, dorsal, lumbar) or due to the accumulation of lesions with age.Data were gathered from the ESTEV study among a randomly selected sample of 21,378 French workers, followed by 390 occupational physicians during the year 1990. The subjects, males or females, were born in 1938, 1943, 1948, 1953. Participation rate (88%) did not depend on age and sex. Data were collected during annual medical examination for medical variables, and using standardized self questionnaires for occupational exposures and work constraints for actual or past jobs.Data on musculo-skeletal disorders, defined as pains during the last 6 months before examination, were recorded by occupational physician. Each painful localization was associated with the main factors described in the literature, particularly heavy physical work factors and psycho-social factors of work. There was no interaction between age and any of these. At the opposite, in male as female subjects, there was a statistically significant interaction between age, multiple exposures to heavy physical work factors and the frequency of multiple localizations of pain in the spine.Results suggest that accumulation of pain in the different localizations of the spine might account for accelerated aging process of the musculo-skeletal structure of the spine which can reflect effects of environmental work factors.
- Published
- 1998
10. [Survival after 60 years of age among elderly retired miners]
- Author
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R, Gonthier, R, Ecochard, R, Simand, Y, Delomier, F, Derriennic, P, Legrand, and B, Cassou
- Subjects
Male ,Risk ,Retirement ,Time Factors ,Middle Aged ,Survival Analysis ,Mining ,Cohort Studies ,Occupational Exposure ,Confidence Intervals ,Humans ,France ,Mortality ,Aged ,Healthy Worker Effect - Abstract
This study analyses long term effects of working conditions at an advanced age and post retirement. A longitudinal study was done among 63,000 retired miners between 60 to 65 years old. The standardised mortality ratio (SMR) in the cohort was above that expected on the basis of concurrent mortality in the reference population (SMR = 111; 95% confidence interval (CI): 108-114). The excess mortality was observed in occupational groups with exposure to underground tasks (10 years of underground tasks: RR = 2; 95% CI: .1.7-2.5), but there was sign of a healthy worker effect after 25 underground years. The effects of modern technologies and of medical progress have changed working conditions and care has reduced mortality for retired manual workers: exposure to underground tasks before 1950: RR = 1.7; CI 95%: 1.4-2.0; after 1950: RR = 1.2; CI 95%: 1.1-1.2.
- Published
- 1997
11. Risk factors of early menopause in two generations of gainfully employed French women
- Author
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B. Cassou, F. Derriennic, A. Touranchet, Christine Monfort, and P. Dell'accio
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Menopause, Premature ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Sampling Studies ,Menstruation ,Risk Factors ,Occupational Exposure ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Childbirth ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Life Style ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Public health ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Menopause ,Occupational Diseases ,Marital status ,Female ,France ,business - Abstract
Objectives: Numerous studies have been focused on the detection of factors which can act on the age of menopause. Little is known about the factors related to the occurrence of an early menopause. Some factors such as occupational work factors and generational effects have not been taken into account as yet. Methods: We examined the risk factors of early natural menopause (before age 45) in a large random sample of gainfully employed French women born in the years 1938 (n = 1743) and 1943 (n = 1959). The subjects were selected from files of an occupational physician. A woman was considered to be post-menopausal when at least 12 consecutive months had passed without menstruation at the time of the survey. Subjects were questioned and examined during their annual visit by the occupational physician. Occupational history, working conditions, living conditions, smoking habits and reproductive history were explored. Results: The prevalence of early natural menopause, before age 45, was higher in the generation of 1938 (5.3%) than in that of 1943 (3.3%) with P < 0.01. After multivariate regressions, significant relationships existed statistically between the occurrence of early natural menopause and marital status, educational level, age at first childbirth and breast-feeding of children. Conclusions: Our results show important generation effects. There was no evidence of a significant relationship between early natural menopause at 45 years of age and factors relative to heavy physical work conditions.
- Published
- 1997
12. [Occupational cancers: notification, compensation and prevention]
- Author
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J, Brugère, A, Thébaud-Mony, H, Pézerat, and B, Cassou
- Subjects
Male ,Occupational Diseases ,Legislation, Medical ,Risk Factors ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Workers' Compensation ,Female ,France - Abstract
Less than 140 occupational cancers (OC) are compensated every year in France although the incidence is estimated for at least 6,000 new cases, as estimated by the epidemiologists (4% of the mortality by cancers). This situation can be explained by different factors: few compensation claims by the patients or families, frequent lack of interest from medical doctors for relation between cancer and work, occurrence of the OC after retirement, difficulty to distinguish the role of occupational factors from individual comportmental factors in many OC (for ex. a lung cancer hitting a smoker). The consequences of such a situation are multiple: no compensation for more than 95% of patients or relatives, taking for granted that OC is a minor problem, insufficient prevention of the carcinogenic factors on the work place, prevention of cancers restricted to individual comportmental changes. Physicians working in cancerology units have to incite their patients in notifying the OC and help them in compensation claims. They have also to ask for epidemiologic and toxicologic research when clusters of OC are identified in a plant, in order to get better prevention, compensation and regulations.
- Published
- 1994
13. [Development in health status of a group of retired subjects in the Paris region according to their practice of physical activity]
- Author
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B, Cassou, F, Derriennic, Y, Iwatsubo, and M, Amphoux
- Subjects
Male ,Paris ,Retirement ,Health Status ,Physical Exertion ,Health Promotion ,Middle Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Multivariate Analysis ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Morbidity ,Exercise ,Life Style ,Aged - Abstract
The relation between physical activity and health among retired people aged 65 and over was studied in a sample of 993 subjects, men and women, living at home in the Paris area and randomly selected from a pension fund roll. In 1982-1983 (T1), 627 subjects were interviewed. Five years later (T2), 464 subjects participated in the survey. Health was measured by the number and types of impairments and disability. The incidence of cardiorespiratory impairment and the incidence of disability were weaker among subjects with physical activity in T1 than among subjects without physical activity. These findings were unchanged after adjustment for age, sex, socioeconomic status, cigarette smoking, body mass index, uncomfortable housing, living alone and hard physical conditions during working life. This result suggests the beneficial effect of physical activity in promoting health among retired people aged 65 and over.
- Published
- 1992
14. [Loss of autonomy in elderly. Etiology, method of evaluation, consequences on the medico-social management]
- Author
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B, Cassou
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Life Change Events ,Urinary Incontinence ,Health Services for the Aged ,Social Medicine ,Dependency, Psychological ,Humans ,Accidental Falls ,Self Concept ,Aged - Published
- 1991
15. [Elderly people. Demography, economic and social relief, sanitary and social services]
- Author
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B, Cassou
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Health Services for the Aged ,Old Age Assistance ,Humans ,France ,Aged ,Demography - Published
- 1991
16. Faut-il individualiser le syndrome de Sharp (Mixed connective-tissue disease) du lupus érythémateux disséminé ?
- Author
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M.-F. Kahn and B. Cassou
- Subjects
Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Apres avoir rappele les caracteristiques du syndrome decrit par Sharp et coll. en 1972, sous le nom de Mixed connective-tissue disease, les auteurs passent en revue les arguments qui font douter de l'individualite de cette affection au sein des connectivites. Cependant, l'examen des manifestations cliniques des patients possedant seulement l'anticorps anti-RNP, leur permet de noter a cote de patients atteints de connectivites bien caracterisees ou de syndrome de chevauchement, une majorite de sujets difficilement classables dans les cadres habituels. Ces patients ont un syndrome limite a des polyarthralgies ou des arthrosynovites non destructrices, un phenomene de Raynaud et des gros doigts boudines. Cette association de signes que les auteurs proposent d'appeler syndrome de Sharp reste dans la majorite des cas isole. L'apparition d'anticorps anti-ADN et/ou Sm associes aux anti-RNP serait un facteur de pronostic plus grave et caracteriserait les formes qui evoluent vers une connectivite majeure.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Kidney involvement in Beh�et's syndrome
- Author
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G. Herreman, B. Wechsler, P. Godeau, Chomette G, J. C. Roujeau, B. Cassou, Auriol M, and H. Beaufils
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Biopsy ,Kidney Glomerulus ,Arteriolosclerosis ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Renal function ,Kidney ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Glomerulonephritis ,medicine ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Proteinuria ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Behcet Syndrome ,Amyloidosis ,Complement C3 ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Immunoglobulin A ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mesangium ,Immunoglobulin G ,Renal biopsy ,Anatomy ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The finding of a focal and segmental glomerulonephritis (GN) in a patient with a Behcet's syndrome led us to perform systematic renal biopsies in ten other patients with the disease. Renal biopsy specimens of 11 patients with Behcet's syndrome (followed for 6 months to 15 years) have been studied by light, electron and immunofluorescence microscopy. In all cases, blood pressure and renal function were normal. Proteinuria was present in five patients. By light and electron microscopy, amyloidosis could not be demonstrated in any case. In one patient, the focal and segmental GN was associated with fibrinoid, electron dense, mesangial and irregular subepithelial deposits. These deposits were also detected in seven other patients but to a lesser degree. Arteriolosclerosis was present in all cases. By immuno fluorescence, small scattered granules of C3 were observed in 10 patients in the mesangium and along the capillary basement membrane. They were diffuse in six cases and focal in four. Small focal deposits containing IgA and/or IgG, Clq were also observed in four cases. Circulating immune complexes found in six out of seven patients in whom they were sought. Rare cases of focal and segmental GN and amyloidosis have been reported in Behcet's syndrome. To our knowledge, glomerular C3 deposits have not been yet reported. These findings with the presence of circulating immune complexes suggest that renal symptoms occasionnally observed in Behcet's syndrome could be related to immune complex deposition.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Sur la conservation de longue durée des spermatozoïdes de taureau
- Author
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Jean Jacquet, Sylvie Lemarinier, R. Cassou, and B. Cassou
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,urogenital system - Abstract
The fecondity of bull sperm after dilution in milk medium and congelation in liquid nitrogen is not decreased after a 66 months conservation. Even after 22 years, the ultrastructural details are exactly as beautiful as those of the fresh cells. The microbial flora is in few number and limited to some species resisting to the used antibiotics., La fécondité du sperme de taureau, dilué dans un milieu au lait et congelé dans l'azote liquide, n’est pas diminuée au bout de 5 ans et demi de conservation. Les détails ultrastructuraux sont semblables à ceux des cellules fraîches, même après 22 ans. La flore microbienne accompagnatrice est en faible quantité et limitée à un tout petit nombre d'espèces résistantes aux antibiotiques utilisés., Jacquet Jean, Lemarinier Sylvie, Cassou R., Cassou B. Sur la conservation de longue durée des spermatozoïdes de taureau. In: Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France tome 132 n°2, 1979. pp. 283-286.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. [Morphological and immunopathological study of the kidney in Behcet's syndrome (apropos of 11 cases)]
- Author
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H, Beaufils, B, Cassou, J C, Roujeau, B, Wechsler, and G, Herreman
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Behcet Syndrome ,Kidney Glomerulus ,Humans ,Immunoglobulins ,Antigen-Antibody Complex ,Complement C3 ,Kidney - Published
- 1978
20. Rhumatisme Chronique et Restriction d’Activite Resultats d’une Enquete de Population
- Author
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M. Chavance, J. C. Henrard, P. Lazar, and B. Cassou
- Subjects
Professional environment ,Psychology ,Demography ,Population survey - Abstract
A population survey was carried out to estimate the prevalence and consequences of rheumatic diseases. Notions of impairment, disability and handicap have been used, and indicators have been built up to get measurements of them. 19.5 % of the subjects were suffering from at least one chronic rhumatismal impairment. 77 % of them were presenting at least one functional limitation and 59 % an activity restriction in at least one of the 4 investigated dimensions. Nevertheless, these results are biased since the answer rate is only 52 %. The analysis of the relation between the answer rate and the impairment rate allows us to bring down the latter from 19.5 % to 13 %. As regards the nature of the indicators, deficiency and functional limitation are essentially biomedical ; activity restriction,taken as a handicap indicator, while depending on biomedical state, is largely function of social and professional environment.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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21. [Genetics and schizophrenia. Reevaluation of a consensus]
- Author
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B, Cassou, M, Schiff, and J, Stewart
- Subjects
Male ,Models, Genetic ,Pregnancy ,Child, Preschool ,Schizophrenia ,Twins ,Humans ,Infant ,Female ,Child ,Child, Abandoned - Published
- 1980
22. [Should Sharp's syndrome (mixed connective tissue disease) be differentiated from systemic lupus erythematosus?]
- Author
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B, Cassou and M F, Kahn
- Subjects
Diagnosis, Differential ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Connective Tissue Diseases ,Mixed Connective Tissue Disease - Published
- 1980
23. [Locomotor and cardiorespiratory impairments after retirement in relation to certain occupational exposures during working life]
- Author
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F, Derriennic, B, Cassou, G, Lecuyer, and M, Amphoux
- Subjects
Male ,Occupational Diseases ,Paris ,Retirement ,Movement Disorders ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Humans ,Female ,Locomotion ,Aged - Abstract
The relationships between locomotor and cardiorespiratory impairments and occupational exposures during working life were examined, using a sample of 627 retired persons in the greater Paris area. Among men, there was a significant statistical association between carrying heavy weights and locomotor impairment. There were also significant associations between exposure to toxic products, tiring postures and vibrations and cardiorespiratory impairment among men. Concerning women, associations between exposure to dust and tiring postures during working life and cardiorespiratory impairment were observed. These results were obtained after adjusting for age, socio-professional status, tobacco use, living alone and after adjusting also for the other occupational exposures. These results are compatible with the hypothesis of long-term effects of occupational exposures on the principal health characteristics of the aged.
- Published
- 1987
24. [Psychosomatic and psychosocial aspects of backache]
- Author
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M F, Kahn and B, Cassou
- Subjects
Legislation, Medical ,Back Pain ,Humans ,France ,Psychophysiologic Disorders - Published
- 1986
25. [Sulfhydryl-based treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (penicillamine, pyrithioxin, thiopronine)]
- Author
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J P, Camus, A, Prier, B, Cassou, and H, Bergevin
- Subjects
Arthritis, Rheumatoid ,Amino Acids, Sulfur ,Pyridines ,Penicillamine ,Tiopronin ,Humans ,Pyrithioxin ,Sulfhydryl Compounds - Published
- 1980
26. [Frequency of radiologic chondrocalcinosis in patients over 80 years of age. A prospective study]
- Author
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M C, Delauche, B, Stehle, B, Cassou, J M, Verret, and M F, Kahn
- Subjects
Male ,Radiography ,Age Factors ,Humans ,Chondrocalcinosis ,Female ,Knee ,Prospective Studies ,Wrist ,Hand ,Pelvic Bones ,Aged - Published
- 1977
27. Behcet's syndrome and renal involvement: a histological and immunofluorescent study of eleven renal biopsies
- Author
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J. Boujeau, Hélène Beaufils, G. Herreman, Chomette G, B. Wechsler, B. Cassou, and P. Godeau
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Glomerular deposits ,Biopsy ,Kidney Glomerulus ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Kidney ,Focal Glomerulonephritis ,Nephropathy ,Pathogenesis ,Glomerulonephritis ,Leukocytes ,Medicine ,Humans ,Immune Complex Diseases ,Hyaline ,Microscopy ,S syndrome ,Proteinuria ,business.industry ,Behcet Syndrome ,General Medicine ,Complement C3 ,medicine.disease ,Immune complex ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The finding of focal glomerulonephritis in a patient with Behcet’s syndrome led us to perform systematic renal biopsies in ten other patients with the disease. None of the patients had symptoms of renal disease. Proteinuria was found in five, two of whom had associated leukocyturia. By light microscopy mesangial and extramembranous glomerular deposits were observed in eight patients. Arterioles in ten patients showed subendothelial and medial hyaline deposits. A granular pattern of fluorescent staining identified the presence of the third component of complement in these deposits. Circulating immune deposits were sought and found in six out of seven patients. The finding of circulating immune complexes and deposition of complement in glomerular and arteriolar tissues supports an immune complex mediated nephropathy and is consistent with the hypothesis of an immunological pathogenesis in Behcet’s syndrome.
- Published
- 1982
28. [Impairments, disabilities and handicaps in a group of retired people in the Paris metropolitan area in relation to their socio-occupational status]
- Author
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B, Cassou, F, Derriennic, G, Lecuyer, and M, Amphoux
- Subjects
Male ,Paris ,Retirement ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,Occupations ,Aged - Abstract
Interviewers using a questionnaire carried out a home survey among 627 retired persons (62.7% of the sample) in the greater Paris area for the purpose of exploring relationships between disablement (impairments, disabilities, and handicaps) and socio-professional status. The subjects were randomly selected from a pension fund roll. Among men, manual laborers had higher rates of disablement than did white-collar employees and executives. Among women, laborers, office workers and those in the services had similar disablement rates, while rates among executive women were lower. Overall, women had higher rates than men. But no relationship between age and disablement was observed. The examination of disablement indicates that socioeconomic differences--earlier shown to exist with regard to mortality and morbidity--also have their effect in retirement.
- Published
- 1986
29. [Comparative studies of semen freezing technics using French straws and ampoules]
- Author
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R, Hahn, B, Cassou, and K, Eibl
- Subjects
Male ,Semen ,Freezing ,Preservation, Biological ,Animals ,Cattle ,Insemination, Artificial - Published
- 1969
30. Non-surgical transfer of bovine embryos under farm conditions using a new cassou transfer device
- Author
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C.J. Munar, B. Cassou, and M.A. Nigro
- Subjects
Food Animals ,Surgical transfer ,Equine ,Chemistry ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Bovine embryo ,Small Animals ,Cell biology - Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The effect of fall prevention exercise programmes on fall induced injuries in community dwelling older adults.
- Author
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El-Khoury F, Cassou B, Charles MA, and Dargent-Molina P
- Abstract
Study Question: Are fall prevention exercise interventions for older people living in the community effective in preventing different types of fall related injuries?, Summary Answer: Exercise programmes designed to prevent falls in older adults seem also to prevent injuries caused by falls, including the most severe injuries. Such programmes also reduce the rate of falls leading to medical care., (Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Authors' reply to Bonten.
- Author
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El-Khoury F, Cassou B, and Dargent-Molina P
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Accidental Falls prevention & control, Accidents, Home prevention & control, Exercise Therapy methods, Patient Compliance statistics & numerical data, Resistance Training methods
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Effectiveness of two year balance training programme on prevention of fall induced injuries in at risk women aged 75-85 living in community: Ossébo randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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El-Khoury F, Cassou B, Latouche A, Aegerter P, Charles MA, and Dargent-Molina P
- Subjects
- Accidental Falls statistics & numerical data, Accidents, Home statistics & numerical data, Activities of Daily Living, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Environment Design, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Postural Balance, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome, Accidental Falls prevention & control, Accidents, Home prevention & control, Exercise Therapy methods, Patient Compliance statistics & numerical data, Resistance Training methods
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the effectiveness of a two year exercise programme of progressive balance retraining in reducing injurious falls among women aged 75-85 at increased risk of falls and injuries and living in the community., Design: Pragmatic multicentre, two arm, parallel group, randomised controlled trial., Setting: 20 study sites in 16 medium to large cities throughout France., Participants: 706 women aged 75-85, living in their own home, and with diminished balance and gait capacities, randomly allocated to the experimental intervention group (exercise programme, n=352) or the control group (no intervention, n=354)., Intervention: Weekly supervised group sessions of progressive balance training offered in community based premises for two years, supplemented by individually prescribed home exercises., Outcome Measures: A geriatrician blinded to group assignment classified falls into one of three categories (no consequence, moderate, severe) based on physical damage and medical care. The primary outcome was the rate of injurious falls (moderate and severe). The two groups were compared for rates of injurious falls with a "shared frailty" model. Other outcomes included the rates of all falls, physical functional capacities (balance and motor function test results), fear of falling (FES-I), physical activity level, and perceived health related quality of life (SF-36). Analysis was by intention to treat., Results: There were 305 injurious falls in the intervention group and 397 in the control group (hazard ratio 0.81, 95% confidence interval 0.67 to 0.99). The difference in severe injuries (68 in intervention group v 87 in control group) was of the same order of magnitude (0.83, 0.60 to 1.16). At two years, women in the intervention group performed significantly better on all physical tests and had significantly better perception of their overall physical function than women in the control group. Among women who started the intervention (n=294), the median number of group sessions attended was 53 (interquartile range 16-71). Five injurious falls related to the intervention were recorded., Conclusion: A two year progressive balance retraining programme combining weekly group and individual sessions was effective in reducing injurious falls and in improving measured and perceived physical function in women aged 75-85 at risk of falling.Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00545350)., (© El-Khoury et al 2015.)
- Published
- 2015
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34. Use of calcium supplements, vitamin D supplements and specific osteoporosis drugs among French women aged 75-85 years: patterns of use and associated factors.
- Author
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Castro-Lionard K, Dargent-Molina P, Fermanian C, Gonthier R, and Cassou B
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bone Density Conservation Agents therapeutic use, Calcium therapeutic use, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dietary Supplements, Diphosphonates therapeutic use, Female, France, Humans, Vitamin D therapeutic use, Bone Density Conservation Agents administration & dosage, Calcium administration & dosage, Diphosphonates administration & dosage, Drug Utilization Review, Osteoporosis drug therapy, Vitamin D administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: Despite the availability of effective preventive and curative medications for osteoporosis, and guidelines for its diagnosis and management, few individuals are treated for osteoporosis, even among those who have already had a fracture., Objectives: Our objective was to describe the patterns of use of medication for osteoporosis, i.e., calcium supplements, vitamin D supplements, and specific anti-osteoporotic drugs, such as bisphosphonates, in a large sample of French older women living at home, and to identify individual factors associated with use of these medications overall and in two specific clinical situations., Methods: Cross-sectional analysis of data from 4,221 women aged 75-85 years who participated in a balance and mobility examination as part of the screening procedure for the Ossébo study, a randomized controlled trial testing the effectiveness of exercise for the prevention of fall-related injuries. Electoral rolls were used to invite women in 16 towns to participate (participation rate 10.3 %). Information collected through questionnaires included current medication use and, in particular, use of osteoporosis medications (specific osteoporosis drugs, calcium and vitamin D supplementation) in the past 6 months, and history of fracture since the age of 50, including fracture locations. Fractures were categorized in three groups: no fracture, major osteoporotic fracture (hip, humerus, wrist, pelvis, and vertebra), and other fracture., Results: Nearly 48 % of the participants reported they did not take calcium or vitamin D supplements or any specific osteoporosis drugs. Of the 2,133 women who reported using osteoporosis medication, 85 % used vitamin D supplements (25 % as the sole medication against this disease), 59 % calcium supplements, and 42 % a specific anti-osteoporotic drug (75 % of them combining it with vitamin D supplementation). The use of any osteoporosis medication was significantly associated (p < 0.001) with a history of a major osteoporotic fracture, lower weight, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) bone-density measurement in the past 5 years, a cancer-screening examination in the past 5 years, and a positive attitude toward medication use in general. Living alone was associated with a lower likelihood of using a specific anti-osteoporotic drug, and a higher education level was associated with a higher likelihood of vitamin D supplementation. Of the 1,553 women who had already had a major osteoporotic fracture, one-third (34.8 %) were not taking any osteoporosis medication. In this subgroup, use of this medication was associated with the same factors as in the overall study population. In particular, neither older age nor a history of falls in the previous 12 months was associated with a higher likelihood of using osteoporosis medication. Among the 909 women who reported using a specific osteoporosis drug, vitamin D use was associated with a higher educational level and a more frequent preventive attitude., Conclusion: In France, as in other western countries, women aged 75 years and over are not managed according to guidelines. Further studies should address the barriers encountered in improving quality of care in osteoporosis management.
- Published
- 2013
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35. Mobility impairment is associated with urge but not stress urinary incontinence in community-dwelling older women: results from the Ossébo study.
- Author
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Fritel X, Lachal L, Cassou B, Fauconnier A, and Dargent-Molina P
- Subjects
- Accidental Falls statistics & numerical data, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Independent Living, Movement Disorders physiopathology, Postural Balance physiology, Psychomotor Disorders complications, Psychomotor Disorders physiopathology, Quality of Life, Urinary Incontinence, Stress physiopathology, Urinary Incontinence, Urge physiopathology, Walking physiology, Movement Disorders complications, Urinary Incontinence, Stress complications, Urinary Incontinence, Urge complications
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the association between functional limitations related to mobility and urinary incontinence (UI) in elderly women., Design: An observational cross-sectional study., Setting: Nine 'balance' workshops in France., Population: A total of 1942 community-dwelling women aged 75-85 years, who were invited, based on voter registration lists, to a 'balance assessment'., Methods: Mobility and balance test results for incontinent women were compared with those for continent women according to the severity and type of incontinence., Main Outcome Measures: Data on UI were collected using a self-administered questionnaire (International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire-Short Form). Motor-related physical abilities were assessed using standardised balance and functional gait tests., Results: Forty-two per cent of women had involuntary urine leakage, with daily leaks in 57% of them; 24% had stress UI, 31% had urge UI, and 37% had mixed UI. Results for each functional test were poorer for women with UI and the limitation was more pronounced when the incontinence was severe. Multivariate logistic regression analyses showed that balance and gait impairments were significantly and independently associated with urge UI (walking speed, lower versus higher quartile, odds ratio (OR) 2.2; 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.4-3.5; walking balance, unable versus able to do four tandem steps (OR 1.6; 95% CI 1.2-2.2) but not with stress UI., Conclusions: In this large population of older women living at home, there was a strong association between limitation of motor and balance skills and UI, which was proportional to the severity of incontinence and related specifically to urge incontinence. These results offer new perspectives on the prevention and treatment of urge incontinence in elderly women., (© 2013 RCOG.)
- Published
- 2013
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36. The 'Ossebo' intervention for the prevention of injurious falls in elderly women: background and design.
- Author
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Dargent-Molina P, El Khoury F, and Cassou B
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, France, Humans, Motor Activity, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Accidental Falls prevention & control, Accidents, Home prevention & control, Environment Design
- Abstract
Unlabelled: This paper reviews the literature that contributed to the design of the 'Ossébo' intervention and describes the study that is underway., Background: Falls and fall-related injuries are a major cause of morbidity and mortality among older people. Extensive research into falls prevention has established physical exercise as an efficient method to reduce falls, but the effect of exercise on serious injuries caused by falls remains unclear. Moreover, populations that would benefit most from these interventions, as well as factors that determine adherence to exercise remain underreported. THE OSSÉBO INTERVENTION: 'Ossébo' is an on-going multicenter randomized controlled trial, aiming to assess the effect of a two-year community-based group physical exercise program on the prevention of falls among women aged 75-85 years old. The primary outcome examined is the rate of falls and injurious falls: secondary outcomes include functional capacities, fear of falling and quality of life. This study will help determine the effectiveness of a large scale falls prevention program and the factors that can potentially assist its success.
- Published
- 2013
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37. The course of physical functional limitations and occupational conditions in a middle-aged working population in France.
- Author
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de Stampa M, Latouche A, Derriennic F, Monfort C, Touranchet A, and Cassou B
- Abstract
Background: Physical functional limitations (PFL) have mainly been studied in older populations. The aim of this study was to better understand the course of PFL and associations with occupational factors by gender in a middle-aged working population., Methods: The data came from 16,950 workers in the ESTEV (Enquête Santé Travail et Vieillissement) cohort in France. PFL were assessed using the physical abilities section of the Nottingham Health Profile. Occupational conditions were measured with a self-administered questionnaire covering physical and psychosocial factors in 1990 and 1995. Multivariate analyses were used to assess the associations., Results: The PFL appearance rate in 1995 was the same by gender (6.3%); the rate of PFL recovery was higher in men (23.9% versus 20.9%). Age was an independent factor of PFL at age 47 years or older in both genders after adjusting for confounding factors. The PFL appearance rate in 1995 was higher with physical occupational exposure in 1990, such as awkward work with a dose relation in both genders, while the PFL recovery rate decreased significantly only for men. Exposure to psychosocial occupational conditions, such as having the means to produce quality work in 1990, was significantly associated with a decreased PFL appearance rate in 1995 in both genders, and having high decision latitude in 1990 was associated with a decreased PFL appearance rate in 1995 only in men. Changes in exposure to occupational factors between 1990 and 1995 were associated with the PFL appearance and recovery rates in 1995 in both genders., Conclusions: After five years, the course of PFL in this working population changed and was associated with physical and psychosocial occupational factors. Relationships were stronger for the PFL appearance rate in both genders and were weaker for recovery from PFL, mainly among women.
- Published
- 2012
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38. [A gerontological network as an interface between healthcare professionals and homecare professionals].
- Author
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Ghadi V, Vedel I, Routelous C, de Stampa M, Ankri J, Cassou B, and Lapointe L
- Subjects
- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, France, General Practitioners, Humans, Physician's Role, Community Networks organization & administration, Health Services for the Aged organization & administration, Home Care Services organization & administration
- Abstract
The increase in the number of elderly people requires a reorganization of patient care based on integrated networks of healthcare and community services. These services enable patients to remain at home, thus avoiding the significant costs incurred as a result of long hospital stays and numerous visits to emergency departments. Despite the interest of policy-makers in integrated services, the real impact of gerontological networks remains unknown. This study aims to investigate healthcare professionals' perceptions of the links between the various actors involved in older patient care (professionals, health services and community services) and to examine the perceived impact of a gerontological network among a range of different actors. The qualitative study conducted as part of this research examined the Parisian gerontological network Ancrage and its partners based on three main data sources: Ancrage documentation; interviews with 40 healthcare professionals; and observations (inter-service meetings and case management meetings). The data were analyzed using qualitative research methods. Data analysis highlighted three characteristics: the central role of the general practitioner, who remains responsible for the trajectory of care; the relevance of the geriatrician's interventions in the case of severely dependent patients and the assessment of older patients' needs; and the interface between hospitals, general practitioners and homecare professionals. Healthcare professionals highlighted improvements in patients' transition between home and hospital. Two particular areas for improvement emerged from the data. The relationship between the case manager and general practitioners was found to be akin to a delegation of homecare responsibilities and has little impact on practices and relationships between actors. In addition, although geriatricians are gaining in legitimacy, collaboration with general practitioners remains limited.
- Published
- 2011
39. Diagnostic study, design and implementation of an integrated model of care in France: a bottom-up process with continuous leadership.
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de Stampa M, Vedel I, Mauriat C, Bagaragaza E, Routelous C, Bergman H, Lapointe L, Cassou B, Ankri J, and Henrard JC
- Abstract
Background: Sustaining integrated care is difficult, in large part because of problems encountered securing the participation of health care and social service professionals and, in particular, general practitioners (GPs)., Purpose: To present an innovative bottom-up and pragmatic strategy used to implement a new integrated care model in France for community-dwelling elderly people with complex needs., Results: In the first step, a diagnostic study was conducted with face-to-face interviews to gather data on current practices from a sample of health and social stakeholders working with elderly people. In the second step, an integrated care model called Coordination Personnes Agées (COPA) was designed by the same major stakeholders in order to define its detailed characteristics based on the local context. In the third step, the model was implemented in two phases: adoption and maintenance. This strategy was carried out by a continuous and flexible leadership throughout the process, initially with a mixed leadership (clinician and researcher) followed by a double one (clinician and managers of services) in the implementation phase., Conclusion: The implementation of this bottom-up and pragmatic strategy relied on establishing a collaborative dynamic among health and social stakeholders. This enhanced their involvement throughout the implementation phase, particularly among the GPs, and allowed them to support the change practices and services arrangements.
- Published
- 2010
40. A novel model of integrated care for the elderly: COPA, Coordination of Professional Care for the Elderly.
- Author
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Vedel I, De Stampa M, Bergman H, Ankri J, Cassou B, Mauriat C, Blanchard F, Bagaragaza E, and Lapointe L
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Continuity of Patient Care, Decision Making, Female, Humans, Male, Patient Satisfaction, Physicians, Family, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated organization & administration, Health Services for the Aged organization & administration, Models, Organizational, Patient Care Team organization & administration
- Abstract
Despite strong evidence for the efficacy of integrated systems, securing the participation of health professionals, particularly primary care physicians (PCPs), has proven difficult. Novel approaches are needed to resolve these problems. We developed a model - COPA - that is based on scientific evidence and an original design process in which health professionals, including PCPs, and managers participated actively. COPA targets very frail community-dwelling elders recruited through their PCP. It was designed to provide a better fit between the services provided and the needs of the elderly in order to reduce excess healthcare use, including unnecessary emergency room (ER) visits and hospitalizations, and prevent inappropriate long-term nursing home placements. The model's originality lies in: 1) having reinforced the role played by the PCP, which includes patient recruitment and care plan development; 2) having integrated health professionals into a multidisciplinary primary care team that includes case managers who collaborate closely with the PCP to perform a geriatric assessment (InterRAI MDS-HC) and implement care management programs; and 3) having integrated primary medical care and specialized care by introducing geriatricians into the community to see patients in their homes and organize direct hospitalizations while maintaining the PCP responsibility for medical decisions. Since COPA is currently the subject of both a quasi-experimental study and a qualitative study, we are also providing preliminary findings. These findings suggest that the model is feasible and well accepted by PCPs and patients. Moreover, our results indicate that the level of service utilization in COPA was less than what is reported at the national level, without any compromises in quality of care.
- Published
- 2009
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41. In vivo performance evaluation of bi-directional ultrasonic axial transmission for cortical bone assessment.
- Author
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Talmant M, Kolta S, Roux Ch, Haguenauer D, Vedel I, Cassou B, Bossy E, and Laugier P
- Subjects
- Absorptiometry, Photon, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging physiology, Body Mass Index, Bone Density, Female, Fractures, Bone etiology, Fractures, Bone physiopathology, Humans, Middle Aged, Observer Variation, Osteoporosis complications, Osteoporosis physiopathology, Radius diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Young Adult, Osteoporosis diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Our objective was to assess a new quantitative ultrasound device suitable for the measurement of speed of sound in radius. The so-called "bidirectional" technique allows an accurate estimation of velocity based on a compensation for soft tissue effects implemented directly inside the probe. Velocity measurements at 1 MHz of the first arriving signal were performed at the one third distal radius in 358 enrolled women. The average velocity by age decade increases to a peak velocity of 4043 m/s in the class 30-39 y (n = 19) and decreases thereafter. Fracture discrimination was investigated on the subset of the population for which dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry measurement was available, in addition to first arriving signal velocity measurements. The study group consisted of 122 postmenopausal women without history of fracture (group NF) and 44 postmenopausal patients (group F) with osteoporotic fractures (hip, spine, Colles fracture). When adjusted for age and bone mass index, the odds ratio (OR) for fracture prediction by ultrasound velocity, was 1.81 (1.21; 2.70) and OR associated to neck femur BMD was 2.07 (1.31-3.29). For the full model including age and body mass index as cofactors, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.77, either for ultrasound velocity or neck femur bone mineral density. Despite the small population and the variety of fractures in the fracture group, our data indicate that the velocity of the first arriving signal measured by bidirectional technique discriminates patients with osteoporotic fracture from controls.
- Published
- 2009
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42. Healthcare professionals and managers' participation in developing an intervention: a pre-intervention study in the elderly care context.
- Author
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Vedel I, De Stampa M, Bergman H, Ankri J, Cassou B, Blanchard F, and Lapointe L
- Abstract
Background: In order to increase the chances of success in new interventions in healthcare, it is generally recommended to tailor the intervention to the target setting and the target professionals. Nonetheless, pre-intervention studies are rarely conducted or are very limited in scope. Moreover, little is known about how to integrate the results of a pre-intervention study into an intervention. As part of a project to develop an intervention aimed at improving care for the elderly in France, a pre-intervention study was conducted to systematically gather data on the current practices, issues, and expectations of healthcare professionals and managers in order to determine the defining features of a successful intervention., Methods: A qualitative study was carried out from 2004 to 2006 using a grounded theory approach and involving a purposeful sample of 56 healthcare professionals and managers in Paris, France. Four sources of evidence were used: interviews, focus groups, observation, and documentation., Results: The stepwise approach comprised three phases, and each provided specific results. In the first step of the pre-intervention study, we gathered data on practices, perceived issues, and expectations of healthcare professionals and managers. The second step involved holding focus groups in order to define the characteristics of a tailor-made intervention. The third step allowed validation of the findings. Using this approach, we were able to design and develop an intervention in elderly care that met the professionals' and managers' expectations., Conclusion: This article reports on an in-depth pre-intervention study that led to the design and development of an intervention in partnership with local healthcare professionals and managers. The stepwise approach represents an innovative strategy for developing tailored interventions, particularly in complex domains such as chronic care. It highlights the usefulness of seeking out the insight of healthcare professionalnd managers and emphasizes the need to intervene at different levels. Further research will be needed in order to develop a more thorough understanding of the impacts of such strategies on the final outcomes of intervention implementations.
- Published
- 2009
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43. [Evaluation of a multifaceted intervention for implementing national guidelines: the case of physical restraint in geriatric care].
- Author
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Vedel I, Lechowski L, De Stampa M, Aegerter P, Simon I, Pedrono V, Lazarovici C, Mauriat C, Ankri J, and Cassou B
- Subjects
- Aged, Documentation, France, Geriatrics, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Special, Humans, Medical Records, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Restraint, Physical standards
- Abstract
Background: There is a growing interest in developing guidelines. The French Agency for accreditation and Evaluation (Anaes) published in October 2000 guidelines on the use of restraint in geriatric care settings because in spite of the risks this practice remains widespread in that type of care setting. A multifaceted intervention was conducted in a Parisian geriatric hospital in order to improve the implementation of the published guidelines. An epidemiological study was conducted to assess the outcomes of this intervention., Methods: The intervention consisted in distributing educational materials and a specific prescription sheet, and in staff training sessions. A time series study was used to assess outcomes. The three time points were: before the intervention, just after the end of the intervention and one year later. Two dimensions were studied: implementation of the guidelines using markers collected from patients' charts and restraining practices noted in an observational study of hospitalized patients., Results: The results of the study suggest that five recommendations were followed better: restraint prescription (8.7 to 57.4%), writing in the patient chart the reasons for restraining (3.5 to 35.3%), follow-up prescription, assessment of potential benefits and risks for the patient and patient information (0% to 19-34%). Nevertheless, the prevalence of restraint and of devices employed (around 70%) remained unchanged after the intervention. The various outcomes of the intervention might be explained by the guidelines themselves, which were variably practical or precise. Moreover, the effect of certain factors directly related with the use of restraint, a routine practice strongly supported by myths about its efficacy, as well as factors related to intervention design may merely have prevented any decrease in the use of restraint practices., Conclusion: Multifaceted intervention can favour implementation of certain national guidelines such as prescribing restraint, but can also fail in stimulating the implementation of others such as decreasing the prevalence of restraint in geriatric practice. Therefore the next intervention should emphasize alternatives to physical restraint practices.
- Published
- 2007
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44. [Preventing the occurrence of infections associated with care in geriatrics, the role of the Geriatric Inter-Clin of AP-HP].
- Author
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Cassou B
- Subjects
- Aged, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection etiology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Hospital Restructuring organization & administration, Hospitals, Public organization & administration, Hospitals, Special organization & administration, Humans, Mass Screening organization & administration, Needs Assessment organization & administration, Paris epidemiology, Population Surveillance methods, Cross Infection prevention & control, Geriatrics organization & administration, Infection Control organization & administration, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Professional Staff Committees organization & administration
- Published
- 2006
45. [Nosocomial infections in geriatric facilities].
- Author
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Simon I, Cocquelin A, and Cassou B
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Cross Infection drug therapy, Cross Infection microbiology, Cross Infection prevention & control, Humans, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Cross Infection epidemiology, Homes for the Aged, Nursing Homes
- Abstract
Epidemiology: In long term geriatric facilities, the prevalence of nosocomial infections (to the order of 10% in the surveys) is greater than that observed in short-term medical care centers. An endemia of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, of between 24 and 57% of hospitalized patients, is noted in many geriatric facilities. In decreasing order, the infections that predominate are: urinary (1/3), lower respiratory tract (1/4) and cutaneous tissue infections (1/5). However, these are often manifested by misleading semiology, and orient towards an organ other that which is infected., Transmission and Prevention: Nosocomial infections are frequently related to the general health of the patient and/or to transmission during handling. Invasive treatments are rarely the cause in geriatry. Preventive measures are identical to those used in short-term care centers (handwashing, source isolation and appropriate use of antibiotics)., Problems: Encountered However, their application raises many problems. The living conditions (few facilities with single beds), the state of health of these elderly patients, often exhibiting multiple diseases and requiring assistance for their daily gestures, and the reduced number of staff at the bedside, require that these measures be adapted to each particularity.
- Published
- 2002
46. Chronic neck and shoulder pain, age, and working conditions: longitudinal results from a large random sample in France.
- Author
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Cassou B, Derriennic F, Monfort C, Norton J, and Touranchet A
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Incidence, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Neck Pain etiology, Occupational Exposure, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Sex Factors, Shoulder Pain etiology, Neck Pain epidemiology, Occupational Diseases etiology, Shoulder Pain epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims: To analyse the effects of age and occupational factors on both the incidence and the disappearance of chronic neck and shoulder pain after a five year follow up period., Methods: A prospective longitudinal investigation (ESTEV) was carried out in 1990 and 1995 in seven regions of France. A random sample of male and female workers born in 1938, 1943, 1948, and 1953 was selected from the occupational physicians' files. In 1990, 21 378 subjects were interviewed (88% of those contacted), and 87% were interviewed again in 1995. Chronic neck and shoulder pain satisfying specific criteria, and psychosocial working conditions were investigated by a structured self administered questionnaire and a clinical examination., Results: Prevalence (men 7.8%, women 14.8% in 1990) and incidence (men 7.3%, women 12.5% for the period 1990-95) of chronic neck and shoulder pain increased with age, and were more frequent among women than men in every birth cohort. The disappearance rate of chronic neck and shoulder pain decreased with age. Some adverse working conditions (repetitive work under time constraints, awkward work for men, repetitive work for women) contributed to the development of these disorders, independently of age. Psychosocial factors seemed to play a role in both the development and disappearance of chronic neck and shoulder pain. Data did not show specific interactions between age and working conditions., Conclusions: The aging of the workforce appears to contribute to the widespread concern about chronic neck and shoulder pain. A better understanding of work activity regulation of older workers can open up new preventive prospects.
- Published
- 2002
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47. Nosocomial infections in geriatric long-term-care and rehabilitation facilities: exploration in the development of a risk index for epidemiological surveillance.
- Author
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Golliot F, Astagneau P, Cassou B, Okra N, Rothan-Tondeur M, and Brücker G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Epidemiologic Studies, Female, France epidemiology, Health Surveys, Humans, Long-Term Care, Male, Middle Aged, Rehabilitation Centers, Risk Factors, Cross Infection epidemiology, Health Services for the Aged, Hospital Units
- Abstract
Objective: To compute a risk index for nosocomial infection (NI) surveillance in geriatric long-term-care facilities (LTCFs) and rehabilitation facilities., Design: Analysis of data collected during the French national prevalence survey on NIs conducted in 1996. Risk indices were constructed based on the patient case-mix defined according to risk factors for NIs identified in the elderly., Setting: 248 geriatric units in 77 hospitals located in northern France., Participants: All hospital inpatients on the day of the survey were included., Results: Data from 11,254 patients were recorded. The overall rate of infected patients was 9.9%. Urinary tract, respiratory tract, and skin were the most common infection sites in both rehabilitation facilities and LTCFs. Eleven risk indices, categorizing patients in 3 to 7 levels of increasing NI risk, ranging from 2.7% to 36.2%, were obtained. Indices offered risk adjustment according to NI rate stratification and clinical relevance of risk factors such as indwelling devices, open bedsores, swallowing disorders, sphincter incontinence, lack of mobility, immunodeficiency, or rehabilitation activity., Conclusion: The optimal index should be tailored to the strategy selected for NI surveillance in geriatric facilities in view of available financial and human resources.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. [Measuring quality of life in the elderly].
- Author
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Cassou B
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Humans, Geriatrics, Quality of Life
- Published
- 2001
49. [The geriatric Inter-Clin of Public Assistance-Hospitals of Paris, a nursing service network in geriatric hospitals].
- Author
-
Cassou B
- Subjects
- Aged, Geriatrics, Health Planning organization & administration, Hospitals, Public, Hospitals, Special, Humans, National Health Programs, Paris, Cross Infection prevention & control, Health Services for the Aged organization & administration, Infection Control organization & administration, Population Surveillance methods
- Published
- 2001
50. Social prognostic factors of mortality in a random cohort of Geneva subjects followed up for a period of 12 years.
- Author
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Gognalons-Nicolet M, Derriennic F, Monfort C, and Cassou B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cohort Studies, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Risk Factors, Social Environment, Socioeconomic Factors, Switzerland epidemiology, Life Style ethnology, Mortality
- Abstract
Study Objective: To analyse the relative risk (RR) of mortality related to social factors independent of health status and occupational category., Setting: Subjects were Swiss men and women aged 40-65 years., Design: A random sample of 820 people living in Geneva were followed up prospectively between 1984 and 1996. The social, occupational, and health data were gathered at subjects' homes in 1984 using a standardised questionnaire. Information about deaths and the corresponding dates were obtained from updated files of the Swiss Federal Office of Statistics (OFS). Risk of mortality was examined according to a Cox model., Main Results: There were several social prognostic factors of mortality with relative risks greater than 3.0 (RR > 3.0) independent of health and occupational status. These factors were: a period of unemployment during life time, the feeling of not demonstrating initiative in the occupational setting, and not having participated in social activities., Conclusion: The results suggest that differential mortality determined by occupational status can be explained in part by factors that are characteristic of "life style", social dynamics, occupational context, and ruptures during the course of occupational life.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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