173 results on '"J. Flamaing"'
Search Results
2. Leverlijden bij oudere personen
- Author
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T. Ghillemijn, W. Laleman, and J. Flamaing
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hepatitis ,leverlijden ,ouderen ,Medicine - Abstract
Een niet te verwaarlozen percentage van de morbiditeit en de mortaliteit bij oudere personen is toe te schrijven aan leverlijden. Een bespreking van de klinische presentatie en de vooropgestelde behandeling van geselecteerde leverziekten bij oudere personen is daarom op zijn plaats. Aan de hand van literatuurgegevens wordt ingegaan op het klinisch verloop en de behandelingsmodaliteiten van virale en auto-immune hepatitis, hepatocellulair carcinoma en toxisch leverlijden bij oudere personen.
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- 2011
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3. Veralgemeende of selectieve screening voor dragerschap van methicilline resistente Staphylococcus aureus bij opname op een geriatrische dienst
- Author
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N. Myngheer, A. Schuermans, and J. Flamaing
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dragerschap ,geriatrische dienst ,methicilline resistente staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) ,risicofactoren ,screening ,Medicine - Abstract
Doel: De risicofactoren voor dragerschap van methicilline resistente Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bevestigen, een vereenvoudigde risicoscore opstellen en nagaan of hiermee een gerichte MRSA screening mogelijk is. Studie-opzet: Een prospectieve studie met MRSA screening van 1125 geriatrische patiënten binnen de 24 u na opname. Methoden: Afname van een lijst met risicofactoren, gebaseerd op recent gepubliceerde risicoscores (Preop Score en Ger Score). Resultaten: De prevalentie van MRSA dragerschap in onze populatie was 8,44%. Multivariaat analyse weerhield leeftijd ≥ 87jaar, aanwezigheid van verblijfscatheter en MRSA in het verleden als onafhankelijke risicofactoren. De nieuw samengestelde score (Novel Score met cut-off ≥1) had een sensitiviteit van 73,7%, specificiteit van 64%, positief predictieve waarde van 15,9%, negatief predictieve waarde van 96,3% en area under the curve van 0,688. De Novel Score laat een reductie van het aantal screeningen toe van 57,2%, maar mist 26% van de positieve gevallen. Zestien % van de MRSA-dragers ontwikkelden een infectie met MRSA waarvoor behandeling met vancomycine. Conclusie: Een belangrijke reductie in werkbelasting en kosten is mogelijk wanneer we een gerichte MRSA screening doorvoeren in vergelijking met een veralgemeende screening. Bij een selectieve screening kunnen echter MRSA dragers gemist worden, zodat de epidemiologische context, het transmissierisico en het MRSA infectierisico in rekening gebracht moeten worden vooraleer over te gaan op een gerichte screening.
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- 2011
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4. Predictie van functionele achteruitgang bij ambulante geriatrische patiënten op de spoedgevallendienst
- Author
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K. Geyskens, K. De Ridder, M. Sabbe, T. Braes, K. Milisen, J. Flamaing, and Ph. Moons
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functionele achteruitgang ,ouderen ,predictieve validiteit ,screeningsinstrument ,spoedgevallendienst ,Medicine - Abstract
Doel Het doel van deze studie is de predictieve validiteit te onderzoeken van vijf screeningsinstrumenten in het voorspellen van functionele achteruitgang bij ouderen die ambulant verzorgd werden op een spoedgevallendienst. Methode Bij 83 ouderen die ambulant op de spoedgevallendienst van UZ Leuven werden verzorgd, werden de Identification of Seniors at Risk (ISAR), Triage Risk Screening Tool (TRST), de vragenlijst van Runciman, de vragenlijst van Rowland en de Voorlopige Indicator voor Plaatsing (VIP) afgenomen. De functionele status 14 dagen voor opname, bij opname, en 14, 30 en 90 dagen na ontslag werd in kaart gebracht met behulp van de Katz schaal. Resultaten De screeningsinstrumenten met de beste verhouding tussen de sensitiviteit en negatief predictieve waarde 14 dagen na ontslag zijn de vragenlijst van Rowland en de ISAR. Dertig en negentig dagen na ontslag is dit de ISAR. Conclusie Uit dit onderzoek blijkt dat, in aanmerking genomen dat voor een screeningsinstrument de sensitiviteit en negatief predictieve waarde de belangrijkste parameters zijn, de ISAR het meest geschikte instrument is om functionele achteruitgang bij ouderen na een ambulante verzorging op de spoedgevallendienst te voorspellen. De ISAR is eenvoudig in het verpleegdossier te integreren en kan standaard bij elke patiënt op de spoedgevallendienst afgenomen worden.
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- 2008
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5. Highly Variable Paracetamol Pharmacokinetics After Multiple Oral Dosing in Frail Older People
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L. T. van der Heijden, P. Mian, J. Hias, B. C. M. de Winter, J. Tournoy, L. Van der Linden, D. Tibboel, K. Walgraeve, J. Flamaing, B. C. P. Koch, K. Allegaert, I. Spriet, Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG, Pediatric Surgery, and Pharmacy
- Subjects
Pharmacology (medical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Abstract
Introduction: Paracetamol pharmacokinetics (PK) is highly variable in older fit adults after intravenous administration. Frailty and oral administration likely result in additional variability. The aim was to determine oral paracetamol PK and variability in geriatric inpatients.Methods: A population PK analysis, using NONMEM 7.2, was performed on 245 paracetamol samples in 40 geriatric inpatients (median age 87 [range 80–95] years, bodyweight 66.4 [49.3–110] kg, 92.5% frail [Edmonton Frail Scale]). All subjects received paracetamol 1000 mg as tablet (72.5%) or granulate (27.5%) three times daily. Simulations of dosing regimens (1000 mg every 6 hours [q6h] or q8h) were performed to determine target attainment, using mean steady-state concentration (Css-mean) of 10 mg/L as target.Results: A one-compartment model with first order absorption and lag time best described the data. The inter-individual variability was high, with absorption rate constant containing the highest variability. The inter-individual variability could not be explained by covariates. Simulations of 1000 mg q6h and q8h resulted in a Css-mean of 10.8 [25–75th percentiles 8.2–12.7] and 8.13 [6.3–9.6] mg/L, respectively, for the average geriatric inpatient. The majority of the population remained off-target (22.2% [q6h] and 52.2% [q8h] 12 mg/L).Conclusion: A population of average geriatric inpatients achieved target Css-mean with paracetamol 1000 mg q6h, while q8h resulted in underexposure for the majority of them. Due to high unexplained variability, a relevant proportion remained either above or below the target concentration of 10 mg/L. Research focusing on PK, efficacy and safety is needed to recommend dosing regimens.
- Published
- 2021
6. Hospitalizations, emergency department visits and home care in older patients after cancer diagnosis: results from a large data linkage study with 3 year follow-up
- Author
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V. Depoorter, K. Vanschoenbeek, L. Decoster, H. De Schutter, P.R. Debruyne, I. De Groof, D. Bron, F. Cornélis, S. Luce, C. Focan, V. Verschaeve, G. Debugne, C. Langenaeken, H. Van Den Bulck, J.C. Goeminne, W. Teurfs, G. Jerusalem, D. Schrijvers, B. Petit, M. Rasschaert, J.P. Praet, K. Vandenborre, K. Milisen, J. Flamaing, C. Kenis, F. Verdoodt, and H. Wildiers
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Oncology ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Published
- 2022
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7. 1265MO Cause and place of death in older patients with cancer: Results from a large cohort study using linked clinical and population-based data
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V. Depoorter, K. Vanschoenbeek, L. Decoster, H. De Schutter, P.R. Debruyne, I. De Groof, D. Bron, F. Cornelis, S. Luce, C. Focan, V. Verschaeve, G. Debugne, C.M. Langenaeken, H.F.M. van den Bulck, J-C. Goeminne, K. Milisen, J. Flamaing, C. Kenis, F. Verdoodt, and H. Wildiers
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Oncology ,Hematology - Published
- 2022
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8. Lyme neuroborreliose: een zeldzame oorzaak van rugpijn in geriatrie
- Author
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A. Vanhauwaert, J. Flamaing, and K. Lagrou
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Medicine ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Lyme neuroborreliosis: a rare cause of back pain in geriatrics Lyme neuroborreliosis is a neurological disease caused by the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi. This disease has a variable presentation. Using a case report of a patient with back pain, this article presents an overview of the current diagnostic and therapeutic guidelines.
- Published
- 2021
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9. Geriatric screening and assessment among older patients with cancer: evaluation of long-term outcomes in a multicentric cohort of > 7, 000 patients
- Author
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V. Depoorter, K. Vanschoenbeek, L. Decoster, H. De Schutter, P.R. Debruyne, I. De Groof, D. Bron, F. Cornélis, S. Luce, C. Focan, V. Verschaeve, G. Debugne, C. Langenaeken, H. Van Den Bulck, J.C. Goeminne, W. Teurfs, G. Jerusalem, D. Schrijvers, B. Petit, K. Geboers, K. Forceville, J.P. Praet, K. Vandenborre, K. Milisen, J. Flamaing, C. Kenis, F. Verdoodt, and H. Wildiers
- Subjects
Oncology ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Published
- 2021
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10. Infecties bij ouderen
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J. Flamaing
- Published
- 2020
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11. Infecties
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J. Flamaing
- Published
- 2015
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12. Antibiotica geassocieerde en Clostridium difficile geassocieerde diarree bij ouderen
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M. Hiele, J. Flamaing, and C. Van Dessel
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,business.industry ,Antibiotics ,Clostridium difficile ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Asymptomatic ,Diarrhea ,Regimen ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,Antibiotic-associated diarrhea ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Complication ,Gerontology - Abstract
Antibiotic associated diarrhea (AAD) is a common complication when antibiotics are used and is frequent in the elderly. It has an impact on the length of hospital stay and increases the comorbidity. Together with the type of antibiotic that is given, the length of antibiotical treatment and the combination of antibiotics is more predictive for the evolution of diarrhea when compared to the total given dose. Mostly AAD is benign, but an infection with C. difficile should always be excluded. C. difficile-enterocolitis is frequent among residents in nursing homes and in hospitalised patients. The clinical presentation varies from asymptomatic colonisation tot severe debilitating disease. A rapid diagnosis can be performed by detection of C. difficile toxin by an enzyme-linked immunoassay. Oral metronidazole and oral vancomycine are equally effective in the therapy. In relapsing infection an extended tapering regimen is sometimes necessary.
- Published
- 2005
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13. Vaccinaties en ouderen: een update
- Author
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T Carels and J Flamaing
- Subjects
Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Geriatrics gerontology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Gerontology - Abstract
Vaccineren van ouderen blijft een aandachtspunt. De vaccinatiegraad bij ouderen voor tetanus, influenza en pneumokokken blijkt respectievelijk slechts 40, 60 en 30 % te zijn. Naast de klassieke reductie van de mortaliteit (67 %) en van de hospitalisatie voor pneumonie en influenza (50 %) is er bij vaccinatie tegen influenza eveneens een reductie van de cardio- en cerebrovasculaire morbiditeit (20 %) en van het aantal artsenbezoeken voor respiratoire aandoeningen bij COPD patienten (11 %). Het vaccineren van het personeel in de gezondheidszorg en van kinderen voorkomt ernstige infecties en mortaliteit door influenza bij ouderen. Invasieve pneumokokkeninfecties worden door vaccinatie gereduceerd met 50 %. De introductie van het conjugaatvaccin bij jonge kinderen kan een bijkomende daling van de incidentie van invasieve pneumokokkeninfectie bij ouderen veroorzaken. Het nastreven van een zo hoog mogelijke vaccinatiegraad bij ouderen, kinderen en risico personen blijft prioritair.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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14. Acute infectieuze (niet Clostridium difficile geassocieerde) diarree bij ouderen
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J. Flamaing, C. Van Dessel, and M. Hiele
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Geriatrics gerontology ,Medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Gerontology - Abstract
Acute –niet antibiotica geassocieerde- diarree is een frequente aandoening die bij ouderen ernstig kan verlopen omwille van de grotere fragiliteit van deze bevolkingsgroep. Acute diarree is meestal van infectieuze oorsprong, en meest frequent te wijten aan een virale infectie. De belangrijkste therapeutische maatregel is het voorzien van voldoende rehydratie. Bij ernstige diarree van bacteriele oorsprong is een antibiotische behandeling aangewezen.
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- 2005
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15. Cement augmentation of hip implants in osteoporotic bone: how much cement is needed and where should it go?
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A, Sermon, L, Hofmann-Fliri, R G, Richards, J, Flamaing, and M, Windolf
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Weight-Bearing ,Fracture Fixation, Internal ,Hip Fractures ,Bone Cements ,Humans ,Osteoporosis ,Female ,Bone Nails - Abstract
Several studies proved the beneficial effect of cement augmentation of proximal femoral nail antirotation (PFNA) blades on implant purchase in osteoporotic bone. We investigated the effect of different localizations and amounts of bone cement. Polyurethane foam specimens were instrumented with a PFNA blade and subsequently augmented with PMMA bone cement. Eight study groups were formed based on localization and amount of cement volume related to the blade. All specimens underwent cyclic loading with physiological orientation of the force vector until construct failure. Foam groups were compared between each other and to a cadaveric control group. The experiments revealed a significant dependency of implant purchase on localization and amount of cement. Biomechanically favorable cement positions were found at the implant tip and at the cranial side. However, none of the tested augmentation patterns performed significantly inferior to the cadaveric benchmark. These findings will allow surgeons to further reduce the amount of injected PMMA, decreasing the risk of cement leakage or cartilage damage.
- Published
- 2013
16. [Liver disease in the elderly]
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T, Ghillemijn, W, Laleman, and J, Flamaing
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Aging ,Treatment Outcome ,Liver Diseases ,Liver Neoplasms ,Humans ,Female ,Prognosis ,Aged ,Hepatitis - Abstract
A non-negligible percentage of the morbidity and mortality in older persons is due to liver disease. A discussion of the clinical presentation and proposed treatment of selected liver diseases in the elderly is therefore appropriate. Based on literature we will discuss the clinical course and treatment modalities of viral and autoimmune hepatitis, hepatocellular carcinoma and drug induced liver injury in the elderly.
- Published
- 2012
17. [Generalized or targeted screening for carriage of MRSA on admission to a geriatric hospital]
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N, Myngheer, A, Schuermans, and J, Flamaing
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Cross Infection ,Health Services for the Aged ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Cohort Studies ,Hospitalization ,Risk Factors ,Carrier State ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Female ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
To confirm previously risk factors for MRSA carriage in our geriatric patient population and to suggest a simplified risk score with a combination of these risk factors, to test the Novel Score and to check if a targeted MRSA screening on admission is possible to reduce the screening workload and cost.a prospective in-hospital cohort study.1125 geriatric patients were screened for MRSA carriage within 24 hours after admission to a geriatric hospital.Risk factors, based on recently published risk scores (Preop Score and Ger Score) were determined.Prevalence of MRSA carriage was 8.44%. In a multivariate analysis ageor = 87 year (OR 1,864; 95% CI 1,145-3,035), presence of a long-term catheter (OR 2,813; 95% CI 1,562-5,065) and prior carriage of MRSA (OR 13,25; 95% CI 8,007-21,926) remained predictors of MRSA carriage. The Novel Score (cut-offor = 1) had a sensitivity of 73.7%, a specificity of 64%, PPV 15.9%, NPV 96.3% and AUC of 0.688. The Novel Score allows reduction of the screening load by 57.2%, but misses 26% of positive cases. 16% of MRSA carriers develop an infection that needs to be treated with vancomycin.With targeted MRSA screening on admission based on a risk score a substantial reduction of workload and costs is possible compared to generalized screening for MRSA. Because MRSA carriers can be missed with a risk score, the epidemiological context and the risk of transmission and infection with MRSA must be taken in to account when introducing a targeted screening.
- Published
- 2011
18. 83 Implementation of geriatric assessment in older cancer patients: a survey on treating physicians' general experiences and expectations
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G. Jerusalem, R. Moor, Pieter Heeren, J. Flamaing, Lore Decoster, J.P. Lobelle, H. Wildiers, C. Kenis, T. Pepersack, and Koen Milisen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology (nursing) ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,Cancer ,Geriatric assessment ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2014
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19. [Prediction of functional decline in elderly patients discharged from the accident and emergency department]
- Author
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K, Geyskens, K, De Ridder, M, Sabbe, T, Braes, K, Milisen, J, Flamaing, and P, Moons
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Time Factors ,Age Factors ,Patient Readmission ,Risk Assessment ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Patient Discharge ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Health Care Surveys ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Triage ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Geriatric Assessment ,Aged ,Netherlands - Abstract
The aim of this study is to investigate the predictive validity of 5 screening tools with respect to functional decline in older persons discharged from the AccidentEmergency Department.The Identification of Seniors at Risk (ISAR), Triage Risk Screening Tool (TRST), questionnaire of Runciman, questionnaire of Rowland and the Voorlopige Indicator voor Plaatsing (VIP) were collected in 83 older persons discharged from the Emergency Department of the University Hospitals of Leuven. Functional decline was derived from the Katz-scale, reflecting the condition 14 days before admission, at admission, 14, 30 and 90 days after discharge.The screening tools with the highest sensitivity and negative predictive value at 14 days after discharge were the questionnaire of Rowland and the ISAR. Thirty and ninety days after discharge, the ISAR was most sensitive and predictive.Sensitivity and negative predictive value are the most important parameters for screening tools. Hence, our study suggests that the ISAR instrument is the most appropriate instrument to predict functional decline in ambulatory older persons admitted to the emergency department. The ISAR can easily be integrated in nursing records and can be systematically employed in older persons at the emergency department.
- Published
- 2008
20. [Antibiotic associated diarrhea and Clostridium difficile associated diarrhea in the elderly]
- Author
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C, Van Dessel, J, Flamaing, and M, Hiele
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Hospitalization ,Male ,Feces ,Clostridioides difficile ,Humans ,Female ,Length of Stay ,Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous ,Aged ,Anti-Bacterial Agents - Abstract
Antibiotic associated diarrhea (AAD) is a common complication when antibiotics are used and is frequent in the elderly. It has an impact on the length of hospital stay and increases the comorbidity. Together with the type of antibiotic that is given, the length of antibiotical treatment and the combination of antibiotics is more predictive for the evolution of diarrhea when compared to the total given dose. Mostly AAD is benign, but an infection with C. difficile should always be excluded. C. difficile-enterocolitis is frequent among residents in nursing homes and in hospitalised patients. The clinical presentation varies from asymptomatic colonisation tot severe debilitating disease. A rapid diagnosis can be performed by detection of C. difficile toxin by an enzyme-linked immunoassay. Oral metronidazole and oral vancomycine are equally effective in the therapy. In relapsing infection an extended tapering regimen is sometimes necessary.
- Published
- 2006
21. [Acute infectious (not Clostridium difficile-associated) diarrhea in the elderly]
- Author
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C, Van Dessel, J, Flamaing, and M, Hiele
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Dehydration ,Acute Disease ,Fluid Therapy ,Humans ,Aged - Abstract
Acute diarrhoea, non-antibiotic associated, is a common problem and a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in old age. In most cases diarrhoea has an infectious etiology. A number of different micro organisms can cause infectious diarrhoea. Most frequent are viral infections with a benign evolution. Rehydration is the only important therapeutic measure. Infections with bacteria are less common, antibiotics should be prescribed only in severe cases, and when there is suspicion of invasive infections by enteropathogenic bacteria.
- Published
- 2005
22. [Vaccination of the elderly: an update]
- Author
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T, Carels and J, Flamaing
- Subjects
Male ,Pneumococcal Vaccines ,Belgium ,Health Services for the Aged ,Influenza Vaccines ,Risk Factors ,Population Surveillance ,Vaccination ,Tetanus Toxoid ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,Netherlands - Abstract
Vaccination of the elderly still requires attention. The vaccination coverage for tetanus, influenza and pneumococcal infections is merely 40, 60 and 30%, respectively. Besides a reduction in mortality (67%) and a reduction of hospitalisation for pneumonia and influenza (50%), vaccination against influenza also results in a decrease in cardio- and cerebrovascular morbidity (20%) as well as in a decrease in the frequency of doctor visits for respiratory infections for COPD patients. Vaccination of children and health care personnel can further reduce transmission of influenza and subsequent influenza related complications in the elderly. Pneumococcal invasive disease can be reduced by 50% through vaccination. Vaccination of children with the conjugate vaccine can further reduce the incidence of pneumococcal invasive disease in the elderly. Further improvements in vaccine coverage levels are needed, mainly among elderly persons, children and persons at increased risk.
- Published
- 2005
23. Esophageal tuberculosis mimicking malignancy
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J Flamaing, A L Baert, Johny Verschakelen, Marc Decramer, Eric Ponette, Jan Bogaert, and E Geusens
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,Esophageal Neoplasms ,Tracheoesophageal fistula ,Disease ,Esophageal Diseases ,Malignancy ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Necrosis ,Fatal Outcome ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Esophagus ,Tuberculosis, Pulmonary ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Lung ,Esophageal disease ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Differential diagnosis ,business ,Tracheoesophageal Fistula - Abstract
A case of pulmonary and esophageal tuberculosis in an 82-year-old female is presented. Esophageal tuberculosis is very rarely seen in Europe and the United States, but the disease is still endemic in India. The major differential diagnosis is esophageal malignancy. Findings that can suggest the diagnosis are tracheo-esophageal fistula formation, enlarged, centrally necrotizing lymph nodes, and a micronodular lung pattern.
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- 1996
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24. Predicting decline in functionality and chemotherapy toxicity: A prospective multicentre study
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J.P. Lobelle, Hannelore Bode, Julie Bastin, J. P. De Greve, Cindy Kenis, Lore Decoster, M.C. Knapen, K. Van Puyvelde, Hans Wildiers, Godelieve Conings, Katrien Vanorle, K. Milisen, and J. Flamaing
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Qualitative interviews ,Treatment options ,Patient preference ,Preference ,Age discrimination ,Oncology ,Patient age ,Family medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Older people ,business - Abstract
The highest preference for milder treatment options was found amongst Spanish respondents, and this was higher than for England (p=0.005). Swedish respondents were less likely to prefer milder treatments than those in England (p=0.013) (Fig. 4). Overall, the majority of respondents agreed that they would expect to be offered the same treatment choices as younger patients. Again, this proportion was highest in England. There was also, however, a strong preference for letting the doctor make decisions on the patient's behalf: some three-quarters of English respondents indicated agreement, as did the majority of those in other countries. Conclusions: The results indicate the level of acceptance of risk in choice of treatment amongst older people in the countries surveyed. Respondents in England were particularly likely to accept more aggressive options. Against this background, there was a high level of trust in doctors to make decisions on patients' behalf. Such trust clearly needs to be reflected in doctors' understanding of patient preferences and appetite for risk. In particular, matching treatment options to individual patient preferences is likely to be important in meeting patient expectations. These findings will be further investigated through in-depth qualitative interviews with older people with cancer in the UK. References [1] Centre for Policy on Ageing (CPA). Ageism and age discrimination in secondary health care in the United Kingdom. CPA; 2009. [2] National Cancer Equality Initiative and the Pharmaceutical Oncology Initiative (NCIN). The impact of patient age on clinical decision making in oncology. Department of Health; 2012.
- Published
- 2012
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25. The knowledge on vaccines by adults and family members is linked to the (pneumococcal) vaccines coverage rate
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J. Flamaing
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Gerontology - Published
- 2012
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26. P441: Rationalisation of polypharmacy by the RASP list through a geriatric liaison intervention: a pilot study
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J. Flamaing
- Subjects
Polypharmacy ,Nursing ,business.industry ,Intervention (counseling) ,Rasp ,Medicine ,Rationalisation ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Gerontology - Published
- 2014
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27. Vaccinaties en ouderen: stand van zaken
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J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, FLAMAING
- Published
- 2005
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28. Antibiotica geassocieerde en Clostridium difficile geassocieerde diarree bij ouderen
- Author
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C van Dessel, J Flamaing, and M Hiele
- Subjects
antibiotica ,Clostridium difficile ,diarree ,ouderen ,Medicine - Abstract
Antibiotica geassocieerde diarree (AAD) is een vaak voorkomende aandoening bij gebruik van antibiotica en komt frequent voor bij ouderen. AAD is verantwoordelijk voor verlengde hospitalisatieduur en verhoogde co-morbiditeit van de patie¨nten. Naast het type antibiotica zijn de duur van de antibiotische therapie en combinatietherapie van antibiotica meest predictief voor het ontwikkelen van AAD, eerder dan de totale dosis of de toedieningsweg ervan. Meestal is AAD goedaardig en slechts in een minderheid van de gevallen is het te wijten aan een infectie met Clostridium difficile (C. difficile).C. difficile-geassocieerde diarree is vooral frequent bij ouderen verblijvend in een residentie¨le instelling voor ouderenzorg of in een ziekenhuis. Het klinisch spectrum omvat asymptomatisch dragerschap tot ernstige pseudomembraneuze colitis met sepsis. Snelle diagnostiek gebeurt door detectie van C. difficile toxine met een enzym-linked immunoassay. Orale metronidazole of vancomycine zijn therapeutisch noodzakelijk, en even effectief. Recidiverende infecties met C. difficile worden bij voorkeur langdurig behandeld.
- Published
- 2024
29. Accuracy of an Activity Monitor in Assessing Physical Activity of Hospitalized Geriatric Rehabilitation Patients With Slow Walking Speed Using a Walking Aid.
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van Dijk M, Bijnens W, Van Driessche C, Van Meerbeek T, Allegaert P, Van Cleynenbreugel H, Verschueren S, Verheyden G, Tournoy J, and Flamaing J
- Abstract
Background/objectives: Accurate assessment of physical activity is essential in hospital settings, but difficult for geriatric rehabilitation patients who have slow walking speed and rely on walking aids. This study conducted an external validation of the MOX activity monitor accuracy in distinguishing between sedentary (lying, sitting), standing, and dynamic activities among hospitalized geriatric rehabilitation patients. Additionally, the study assessed clinical tolerance and ease of use of the monitor., Methods: Inclusion criteria were being hospitalized on the geriatric rehabilitation ward, aged 70 years or older, and using a walking aid. The monitor was placed on the upper leg, and remained in place for 1 week. In a test-session, four activities of 4 min each (lying, sitting, standing, and walking) were filmed. Video analyses created a direct observation timeline. Daily skin irritation assessments were conducted and participants noted their discomfort level at the week's end., Results: The study included 20 participants who relied on walking aids, with 10 requiring additional physical support while walking. The MOX activity monitor exhibited excellent accuracy in classifying the four activities, with a zero mean percentage error for sedentary activity, 2.2% for standing, and 2.7% for walking. Participants reported minimal hindrance, and the monitor proved user-friendly., Conclusion: The MOX activity monitor demonstrated remarkable accuracy in distinguishing between these four activities in a test-session and displayed strong clinical applicability., Significance: The monitor shows substantial promise as a valuable tool for assessing physical activity in hospitalized geriatric rehabilitation patients using walking aids.
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- 2024
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30. Decreased Kidney Function Explains Higher Vancomycin Exposure in Older Adults.
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Edwina AE, Dreesen E, Gijsen M, van den Hout HC, Desmet S, Flamaing J, Van der Linden L, Spriet I, and Tournoy J
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- Humans, Aged, Male, Female, Aged, 80 and over, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Kidney drug effects, Kidney metabolism, Vancomycin adverse effects, Vancomycin pharmacokinetics, Vancomycin administration & dosage, Vancomycin blood, Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacokinetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Glomerular Filtration Rate drug effects
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Introduction: Older adults face a higher risk of vancomycin-related toxicity given their (patho)-physiological changes, making early management of supratherapeutic exposure crucial. Yet, data on vancomycin exposure in older adults is scarce. This study aims to compare vancomycin concentrations between older and younger patients, emphasizing supratherapeutic concentrations and the effect of patient characteristics., Methods: This observational retrospective study was conducted in the University Hospital of Leuven (EC Research S65213). We analyzed early (first) vancomycin concentrations between older (≥ 75 years) and younger patients. Multivariable analyses were conducted to evaluate the association between baseline patient characteristics with supratherapeutic exposure (logistic regression), and dose-normalized concentrations (linear regression)., Results: We included 449 patients aged ≥ 75 years (median 80) and 1609 aged < 75 years (median 61). In univariable analysis, the first-measured vancomycin concentrations were significantly higher in older adults (p < 0.001), who more frequently reached supratherapeutic concentrations (30.7% versus 21%; p < 0.001). In multivariable analysis, factors associated with supratherapeutic concentrations were decreased the estimated glomerular filtration rate calculated by using the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration equation (eGFR
CKD-EPI ) [odds ratio (OR) of 0.98, confidence interval (CI) 0.97-0.98]. Supratherapeutic concentrations had inverse association with giving lower loading dose (OR of 0.59, CI 0.39-0.90), and lower maintenance dose (OR of 0.45, CI 0.26-0.77). Factors that predicted increased dose-normalized concentrations included decreased eGFRCKD-EPI (coefficient of -0.05, CI -0.06 to -0.04), lower body weight (coefficient of -0.04, CI -0.05 to -0.03), increased blood urea nitrogen (coefficient of 0.02, CI 0.01-0.03), and delayed time to therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) sampling (coefficient of 0.08, CI 0.06-0.09)., Conclusions: The absence of age as a significant factor in the multivariable analysis suggests that eGFRCKD-EPI mediated the relationship between age and vancomycin exposure. Older adults may benefit more from vancomycin TDM., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)- Published
- 2024
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31. Determinants influencing the implementation of multifactorial falls risk assessment and multidomain interventions in community- dwelling older people: a systematic review.
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Vandervelde S, Van den Bosch N, Vlaeyen E, Dierckx de Casterlé B, Flamaing J, Belaen G, Tuand K, Vandendriessche T, and Milisen K
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- Humans, Risk Assessment, Aged, Risk Factors, Geriatric Assessment methods, Female, Male, Aged, 80 and over, Accidental Falls prevention & control, Independent Living
- Abstract
Background: Multifactorial falls risk assessment and multidomain interventions are recommended by the World guidelines for falls prevention and management. To successfully implement these interventions, it is important to understand determinants influencing the implementation., Methods: A literature search was conducted for this systematic review on the 3 December 2021 and updated on the 3 April 2023 in five databases: PubMed (including MEDLINE), EMBASE (via Embase.com), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (via Cochrane Library), Web of Science Core Collection and CINAHL (via EBSCO). Studies were included if they reported on determinants influencing the implementation of a multifactorial falls risk assessment and/or multidomain interventions in community-dwelling older people. Editorials, opinion papers, systematic reviews and studies focusing on one population (e.g. Parkinson) were excluded. Two researchers independently screened the articles on title, abstract and full text. The quality was evaluated based on a sensitivity analysis. 'The Comprehensive Integrated Checklist of Determinants of practice' was used to categorise the determinants., Results: Twenty-nine studies were included. Determinants were classified as barriers (n = 40) and facilitators (n = 35). The availability of necessary resources is the most reported determinant. Other commonly reported determinants are knowledge, intention/beliefs and motivation at the levels of older people and healthcare professionals, fitting of the intervention into current practice, communication, team and referral processes and financial (dis)incentives., Conclusions: Mapping of the barriers and facilitators is essential to choose implementation strategies tailored to the context, and to enhance the uptake and effectiveness of a multifactorial falls risk assessment and/or multidomain interventions., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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32. Need to treat?
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Lanneer L, Flamaing J, and Roelandt P
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Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest
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- 2024
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33. Mapping implementation strategies to reach community-dwelling older adults in Northwest Switzerland.
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Mendieta MJ, Goderis G, Zeller A, Yip O, Siqeca F, Zúñiga F, Zullig LL, De Geest SM, Deschodt M, Flamaing J, and Dhaini S
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- Humans, Switzerland, Aged, Male, Female, Aged, 80 and over, Implementation Science, Caregivers, Feasibility Studies, Community Health Services organization & administration, Independent Living
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Background: In Northwestern Switzerland, recent legislation tackles the needs of community-dwelling older adults by creating Information and Advice Centers (IACs). IACs are a new service in the community that aims to assess the needs and provide information on age-related issues to community-dwelling older adults and their families. Previous studies reported difficulties in reaching community-dwelling older adults for community-based programs. We aimed to: 1) systematically identify implementation strategies to promote the IAC among community care providers, older adults and informal caregivers; 2) monitor the delivery of these strategies by the IAC management; and 3) describe the impact of those strategies on reach of community-dwelling older adults. This study was conducted as part of the TRANS-SENIOR project., Methods: As part of the INSPIRE feasibility assessment, we conducted a pre-test post-test study between March and September 2022. The sample included 8,840 older adults aged 65 + visiting/calling or being referred to the IAC for the first time. Implementation strategies were selected using implementation mapping and organized in bundles for each group of community care providers and older adults/caregivers. Our evaluation included: estimation of fidelity to the delivery of implementation strategies and bundles by the IAC management and their coverage; referral source of older adults to the IAC; and impact of the strategies on reach of the IAC on the 65 + population living in the care region. Adaptations to the strategies were documented using the FRAME-IS. Descriptive statistics were calculated and reported., Results: Seven implementation strategies were selected and organized in bundles for each community care provider and older adults and their caregivers. The lowest fidelity score was found in implementation strategies selected for nursing homes whereas the highest score corresponded to strategies targeting older adults and caregivers. "Informational visits" was the strategy with the lowest coverage (2.5% for nursing homes and 10.5% for hospitals and specialized clinics). The main referral sources were self-referrals and referrals by caregivers, followed by nursing homes. The IAC reach among the 65 + population was 5.4%., Conclusion: We demonstrated the use of implementation mapping to select implementation strategies to reach community-dwelling older adults. The reach was low suggesting that higher fidelity to the delivery of the strategies, and reflection on the causal pathway of the implementation strategies might be needed., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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34. In-hospital rehabilitation with the Geriatric Activation Program Pellenberg improves functional performance in a heterogeneous geriatric population.
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van Dijk M, Allegaert P, Locus M, Saenen L, Breuls S, Michiels D, Vermeulen L, Jannes S, Van Kerckhoven Y, Tournoy J, Verheyden G, and Flamaing J
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- Humans, Aged, Hospitals, Rehabilitation, Walking Speed, Geriatric Assessment, Physical Functional Performance, Gait, Postural Balance physiology, Physical Therapy Modalities
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Background: Regaining independent living can be challenging in patients undergoing inpatient geriatric rehabilitation. Given the paucity of evidence-based physiotherapy programs for this particular heterogeneous group, the Geriatric Activation Program Pellenberg (GAPP) was developed., Purpose: Investigate the evolution of functional performance, and predict detectable changes throughout 4 weeks of GAPP. Methods: Participants in this observational study (2017-2019) followed GAPP as part of their rehabilitation program. Functional balance (Berg balance scale (BBS)) and independence (Katz scale) were the primary outcomes, with gait speed, elbow and knee extension strength, cognitive processing speed, and mood as secondary outcomes. All outcomes were assessed at baseline, 2 weeks and 4 weeks later. Prediction analysis was conducted using logistic regression modeling. Previously reported minimal detectable change with 95% confidence interval (MDC95) was used as detectable change., Results: We recruited 111 participants, with 83 completing 4 weeks of GAPP and all assessments. Over 4 weeks, all outcome measures showed a significant improvement (p ≤ .007). Detectable change was found for BBS (mean improvement of 12.8 points (95% CI: 10.9-14.8), MDC95 = 6.6) and gait speed (mean improvement of 0.24 m/s (95% CI: 0.19-0.29), MDC95 = 0.1 m/s). We found that baseline scores lower than 26 on the BBS (75% sensitivity, 65% specificity) and gait speed lower than 0.34 m/s (53% sensitivity, 81% specificity) were associated with participants achieving detectable change at 4 weeks on BBS and gait speed, respectively., Conclusion: Functional performance of a heterogeneous group of geriatric inpatients improved notably after 4 weeks of GAPP. Baseline scores on BBS and gait speed can partially predict detectable changes in functional performance.
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- 2024
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35. A consensus statement on minimum operational standards for geriatric emergency care in Belgium: a modified Delphi study.
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Heeren P, Islam F, Desruelles D, Flamaing J, Sabbe M, and Milisen K
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- Aged, Humans, Belgium, Delphi Technique, Emergency Service, Hospital, Emergency Treatment, Emergency Medical Services
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Background: As emergency department (ED) leaders started integrating geriatric emergency guidelines on a facultative basis, important variations have emerged between EDs in care for older patients. The aim of this study was to establish a consensus on minimum operational standards for Geriatric ED care in Belgium., Methods: A two-stage modified Delphi study was conducted. Twenty panellists were recruited from Dutch and French speaking regions in Belgium to join an interdisciplinary expert panel. In the first stage, an online survey was conducted to identify and define all possible elements of geriatric emergency care. In the second stage, an online survey and online expert panel meeting were organized consecutively to determine which elements should be recognized as minimum operational standards., Results: Between March 2020 and February 2021, the expert panel developed a broad consensus including ten statements focusing on the target population, specific goals, availability of geriatric practitioners and quality assurance. Additionally, the expert panel also determined which protocols, materials and accommodation criteria should be available in conventional EDs (39 standards) and in observational EDs (57 standards)., Conclusions: This study presents a consensus on minimum operational standards for geriatric emergency care in two ED types: the conventional ED and the observational ED. These findings may serve as a starting point towards broadly supported minimum standards of care stipulated by legislation in Belgium or other countries., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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36. Flanders Nursing Home (FLANH) project: Protocol of a multicenter longitudinal observational study on staffing, work environment, rationing of care, and resident and care worker outcomes.
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Geyskens L, Declercq A, Milisen K, Flamaing J, and Deschodt M
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- Humans, Skilled Nursing Facilities, Regression Analysis, Workforce, Observational Studies as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Working Conditions, Nursing Homes
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Background: While the demand for high quality of care in nursing homes is rising, it is becoming increasingly difficult to recruit and retain qualified care workers. To date, evidence regarding key organizational factors such as staffing, work environment, and rationing of care, and their relationship with resident and care worker outcomes in nursing homes is still scarce. Therefore, the Flanders Nursing Home (FLANH) project aims to comprehensively examine these relationships in order to contribute to the scientific knowledge base needed for optimal quality of care and workforce planning in nursing homes., Methods: FLANH is a multicenter longitudinal observational study in Flemish nursing homes based on survey and registry data that will be collected in 2023 and 2025. Nursing home characteristics and staffing variables will be collected through a management survey, while work environment variables, rationing of care, and care worker characteristics and outcomes will be collected through a care worker survey. Resident characteristics and outcomes will be retrieved from the Belgian Resident Assessment Instrument for long-Term Care Facilities (BelRAI LTCF) database. Multilevel regression analyses will be applied to examine the relationships between staffing variables, work environment variables, and rationing of care and resident and care worker outcomes., Conclusion: This study will contribute to a comprehensive understanding of the nursing home context and the interrelated factors influencing residents and care workers. The findings will inform the decision-making of nursing home managers and policymakers, and evidence-based strategies to optimize quality of care and workforce planning in nursing homes., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Geyskens et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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37. From research to daily clinical practice: implementation of orthogeriatric co-management in the trauma ward.
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Janssens S, Deschodt M, Dejaeger M, Fagard K, Cerulus M, Cosyns H, Flamaing J, Herteleer M, and Sermon A
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Introduction: Evidence strongly suggests that orthogeriatric co-management improves patient outcomes in frail older patients with a fracture, but evidence regarding how to implement this model of care in daily clinical practice is scarce. In this paper, we first describe the implementation process and selection of implementation strategies for an orthogeriatric co-management program in the traumatology ward of the University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium. Second, we report the results of a multi-method feasibility study. This study (1) measures the fidelity towards the program's core components, (2) quantifies the perceived feasibility and acceptability by the healthcare professionals, and (3) defines implementation determinants., Methods: Implementation strategies were operationalized based on the Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change (ERIC) guidelines. In the feasibility study, fidelity towards the core components of the program was measured in a group of 15 patients aged 75 years and over by using electronic health records. Feasibility and acceptability as perceived by the involved healthcare professionals was measured using a 15-question survey with a 5-point Likert scale. Implementation determinants were mapped thematically based on seven focus group discussions and two semi-structured interviews by focusing on the healthcare professionals' experiences., Results: We observed low fidelity towards completion of a screening questionnaire to map the premorbid situation (13%), but high fidelity towards the other program core components: multidimensional evaluation (100%), development of an individual care plan (100%), and systematic follow-up (80%). Of the 50 survey respondents, 94% accepted the program and 62% perceived it as feasible. Important implementation determinants were feasibility, awareness and familiarity, and improved communication between healthcare professionals that positively influenced program adherence., Conclusions: Fidelity, acceptability, and feasibility of an orthogeriatric co-management program were high as a result of an iterative process of selecting implementation strategies with intensive stakeholder involvement from the beginning., Clinical Trial Registration: [https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN20491828], International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number (ISRCTN) Registry: [ISRCTN20491828]. Registered on October 11, 2021., 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., (© 2023 Janssens, Deschodt, Dejaeger, Fagard, Cerulus, Cosyns, Flamaing, Herteleer and Sermon.)
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- 2023
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38. Long-term health-care utilisation in older patients with cancer and the association with the Geriatric 8 screening tool: a retrospective analysis using linked clinical and population-based data in Belgium.
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Depoorter V, Vanschoenbeek K, Decoster L, Silversmit G, Debruyne PR, De Groof I, Bron D, Cornélis F, Luce S, Focan C, Verschaeve V, Debugne G, Langenaeken C, Van Den Bulck H, Goeminne JC, Teurfs W, Jerusalem G, Schrijvers D, Petit B, Rasschaert M, Praet JP, Vandenborre K, Milisen K, Flamaing J, Kenis C, Verdoodt F, and Wildiers H
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- Humans, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Belgium epidemiology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Early Detection of Cancer, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: Little evidence is available on the long-term health-care utilisation of older patients with cancer and whether this is associated with geriatric screening results. We aimed to evaluate long-term health-care utilisation among older patients after cancer diagnosis and the association with baseline Geriatric 8 (G8) screening results., Methods: For this retrospective analysis, we included data from three cohort studies for patients (aged ≥70 years) with a new cancer diagnosis who underwent G8 screening between Oct 19, 2009 and Feb 27, 2015, and who survived more than 3 months after G8 screening. The clinical data were linked to cancer registry and health-care reimbursement data for long-term follow-up. The occurrence of outcomes (inpatient hospital admissions, emergency department visits, use of intensive care, contacts with general practitioner [GP], contacts with a specialist, use of home care, and nursing home admissions) was assessed in the 3 years after G8 screening. We assessed the association between outcomes and baseline G8 score (normal score [>14] or abnormal [≤14]) using adjusted rate ratios (aRRs) calculated from Poisson regression and using cumulative incidence calculated as a time-to-event analysis with the Kaplan-Meier method., Findings: 7556 patients had a new cancer diagnosis, of whom 6391 patients (median age 77 years [IQR 74-82]) met inclusion criteria and were included. 4110 (64·3%) of 6391 patients had an abnormal baseline G8 score (≤14 of 17 points). In the first 3 months after G8 screening, health-care utilisation peaked and then decreased over time, with the exception of GP contacts and home care days, which remained high throughout the 3-year follow-up period. Compared with patients with a normal baseline G8 score, patients with an abnormal baseline G8 score had more hospital admissions (aRR 1·20 [95% CI 1·15-1·25]; p<0·0001), hospital days (1·66 [1·64-1·68]; p<0·0001), emergency department visits (1·42 [1·34-1·52]; p<0·0001), intensive care days (1·49 [1·39-1·60]; p<0·0001), general practitioner contacts (1·19 [1·17-1·20]; p<0·0001), home care days (1·59 [1·58-1·60]; p<0·0001), and nursing home admissions (16·7% vs 3·1%; p<0·0001) in the 3-year follow-up period. At 3 years, of the 2281 patients with a normal baseline G8 score, 1421 (62·3%) continued to live at home independently and 503 (22·0%) had died. Of the 4110 patients with an abnormal baseline G8 score, 1057 (25·7%) continued to live at home independently and 2191 (53·3%) had died., Interpretation: An abnormal G8 score at cancer diagnosis was associated with increased health-care utilisation in the subsequent 3 years among patients who survived longer than 3 months., Funding: Stand up to Cancer, the Flemish Cancer Society., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests LD reports a research grant (via their institution) from Boehringer Ingelheim; consulting fees from Roche; lecture fees from Roche, Bristol Myers Squibb, MSD, Servier, and Sanofi; travel expenses from Roche, AstraZeneca, and MSD; and advisory board fees from MSD, Bristol Myers Squibb, and AstraZeneca. PRD reports a research grant (via their institution) from Pfizer; consulting fees from Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck/Pfizer, and Ipsen; lecture fees from Bayer; travel expenses from Janssen; and owns stock in Alkermes and Biocartis Group NV. GJ reports research grants (via their institution) from Novartis, Roche, and Pfizer; and reports consulting fees, lecture fees, travel expenses, or advisory board fees from Novartis, Amgen, Roche, Pfizer, Bristol Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, AstraZeneca, Daiichi Sankyo, AbbVie, Seagen, Medimmune, and Merck. DB reports consulting fees from Incyte and travel expenses from the European Hematology Association, I-Well, Abbvie, and Janssen. JF received advisory board fees or lecture fees (via their institution) from Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, and Janssen. HW received research grants (via their institution) from Roche, Novartis, and Gilead; and received consulting fees, lecture fees, or travel expenses from AbbVie, Daiichi, Gilead, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, EISAI, Immutep Pty, MSD, AstraZeneca Ireland, and Relay Therapeutics. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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39. End-of-Life Care in the Last Three Months before Death in Older Patients with Cancer in Belgium: A Large Retrospective Cohort Study Using Data Linkage.
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Depoorter V, Vanschoenbeek K, Decoster L, Silversmit G, Debruyne PR, De Groof I, Bron D, Cornélis F, Luce S, Focan C, Verschaeve V, Debugne G, Langenaeken C, Van Den Bulck H, Goeminne JC, Teurfs W, Jerusalem G, Schrijvers D, Petit B, Rasschaert M, Praet JP, Vandenborre K, De Schutter H, Milisen K, Flamaing J, Kenis C, Verdoodt F, and Wildiers H
- Abstract
This study aims to describe end-of-life (EOL) care in older patients with cancer and investigate the association between geriatric assessment (GA) results and specialized palliative care (SPC) use. Older patients with a new cancer diagnosis (2009-2015) originally included in a previous multicentric study were selected if they died before the end of follow-up (2019). At the time of cancer diagnosis, patients underwent geriatric screening with Geriatric 8 (G8) followed by GA in case of a G8 score ≤14/17. These data were linked to the cancer registry and healthcare reimbursement data for follow-up. EOL care was assessed in the last three months before death, and associations were analyzed using logistic regression. A total of 3546 deceased older patients with cancer with a median age of 79 years at diagnosis were included. Breast, colon, and lung cancer were the most common diagnoses. In the last three months of life, 76.3% were hospitalized, 49.1% had an emergency department visit, and 43.5% received SPC. In total, 55.0% died in the hospital (38.5% in a non-palliative care unit and 16.4% in a palliative care unit). In multivariable analyses, functional and cognitive impairment at cancer diagnosis was associated with less SPC. Further research on optimizing EOL healthcare utilization and broadening access to SPC is needed.
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- 2023
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40. Prognostic factors and prediction model for 1-year mortality after proximal humeral fracture.
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Van Grootven B, Janssens S, De Keyser L, Voortmans J, Nijs S, Flamaing J, and Dejaeger M
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- Humans, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Calibration, Models, Statistical, Shoulder Fractures
- Abstract
The goal was to investigate if patient characteristics can be used to predict 1-year post-fracture mortality after proximal humeral fracture (PHF). A clinical prediction model showed that the combination of 6 pre-fracture characteristics demonstrated good predictive properties for mortality within 1 year of PHF., Introduction: Proximal humeral fractures (PFH) are the third most common major non-vertebral osteoporotic fractures in older persons and result in an increased mortality risk. The aim of this study was to investigate if patient characteristics can be used to predict 1-year post-fracture mortality., Methods: Retrospective study with 261 patients aged 65 and older who were treated for a PHF in University Hospitals Leuven between 2016 and 2018. Baseline variables including demographics, residential status, and comorbidities were collected. The primary outcome was 1-year mortality. A clinical prediction model was developed using LASSO regression and validated using split sample and bootstrapping methods. The discrimination and calibration were evaluated., Results: Twenty-seven (10.3%) participants died within 1-year post-PHF. Pre-fracture independent ambulation (p < 0.001), living at home at time of fracture (p < 0.001), younger age (p = 0.006), higher BMI (p = 0.012), female gender (p = 0.014), and low number of comorbidities (p < 0.001) were predictors for 1-year survival. LASSO regression identified 6 stable predictors for a prediction model: age, gender, Charlson comorbidity score, BMI, cognitive impairment, and pre-fracture nursing home residency. The discrimination was 0.891 (95% CI, 0.833 to 0.949) in the training sample, 0.878 (0.792 to 0.963) in the validation sample and 0.756 (0.636 to 0.876) in the bootstrapping samples. A similar performance was observed for patients with and without surgery. The developed model demonstrated good calibration., Conclusions: The combination of 6 pre-fracture characteristics demonstrated good predictive properties for mortality within 1 year of PHF. These findings can guide PHF treatment decisions., (© 2023. International Osteoporosis Foundation and Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation.)
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- 2023
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41. A survey on the availability of geriatric-friendly protocols, equipment and physical environment across emergency departments in Flanders, Belgium.
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Heeren P, Lombaert L, Janssens P, Islam F, Flamaing J, Sabbe M, and Milisen K
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- Aged, Humans, Belgium epidemiology, Emergency Service, Hospital, Surveys and Questionnaires, Emergency Medical Services, Physicians, Health Services for the Aged
- Abstract
Background: The acquisition of geriatric-friendly resources is an important part of adapting emergency department (ED) care to the needs of vulnerable older patients. The aim of this study was to explore the availability of geriatric-friendly protocols, equipment and physical environment criteria in EDs and to identify related improvement opportunities., Methods: The head nurse of 63 EDs in Flanders and Brussels Capital Region was invited to complete a survey in collaboration with the chief physician of the ED. The questionnaire was inspired by the American College of Emergency Physicians Geriatric ED Accreditation Program and explored the availability, relevance and feasibility of geriatric-friendly protocols, equipment and physical environment. Descriptive analyses were performed. A region-wide improvement opportunity was defined as a resource that was never to occasionally (0-50%) available on Flemish EDs and was scored (rather or very) relevant by at least 75% of respondents., Results: A total of 32 questionnaires were analysed. The response rate was 50.8%. All surveyed resources were available in at least one ED. Eighteen out of 52 resources (34.6%) were available in more than half of EDs. Ten region-wide improvement opportunities were identified. These comprised seven protocols and three physical environment characteristics: 1) a geriatric approach initiated from physical triage, 2) elder abuse, 3) discharge to residential facility, 4) frequent geriatric pathologies, 5) access to geriatric specific follow-up clinics, 6) medication reconciliation, 7) minimising 'nihil per os' designation, 8) a large-face, analogue clock in each patient room, 9) raised toilet seats and 10) non-slip floors., Conclusions: Currently available resources supporting optimal ED care for older patients in Flanders are very heterogeneous. Researchers, clinicians and policy makers need to define which geriatric-friendly protocols, equipment and physical environment criteria should become region-wide minimum operational standards. Findings of this study are relevant to facilitate the development process of this endeavour., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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42. Orthogeriatric co-management for older patients with a major osteoporotic fracture: Protocol of an observational pre-post study.
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Janssens S, Dejaeger M, Sermon A, Fagard K, Cerulus M, Cosyns H, Flamaing J, and Deschodt M
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- Aged, Humans, Activities of Daily Living, Observational Studies as Topic, Patient Readmission, Quality of Life psychology, Syndrome, Osteoporotic Fractures
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Background: Osteoporotic fractures are associated with postoperative complications, increased mortality, reduced quality of life, and excessive costs. The care for older patients with a fracture is often complex due to multimorbidity, polypharmacy, and presence of geriatric syndromes requiring a holistic multidisciplinary approach based on a comprehensive geriatric assessment. Nurse-led geriatric co-management has proven to prevent functional decline and complications, and improve quality of life. The aim of this study is to prove that nurse-led orthogeriatric co-management in patients with a major osteoporotic fracture is more effective than inpatient geriatric consultation to prevent in-hospital complications and several secondary outcomes in at least a cost-neutral manner., Methods: An observational pre-post study will be performed on the traumatology ward of the University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium including 108 patients aged 75 years and older hospitalized with a major osteoporotic fracture in each cohort. A feasibility study was conducted after the usual care cohort and prior to the intervention cohort to measure fidelity to the intervention components. The intervention includes proactive geriatric care based on automated protocols for the prevention of common geriatric syndromes, a comprehensive geriatric evaluation followed by multidisciplinary interventions, and systematic follow-up. The primary outcome is the proportion of patients having one or more in-hospital complications. Secondary outcomes include functional status, instrumental activities of daily living status, mobility status, nutritional status, in-hospital cognitive decline, quality of life, return to pre-fracture living situation, unplanned hospital readmissions, incidence of new falls, and mortality. A process evaluation and cost-benefit analysis will also be conducted., Discussion: This study wants to prove the beneficial impact of orthogeriatric co-management in improving patient outcomes and costs in a heterogenous population in daily clinical practice with the ambition of long-term sustainability of the intervention., Trial Registration: International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number (ISRCTN) Registry: ISRCTN20491828. Registered on October 11, 2021, https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN20491828., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Janssens et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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43. Geriatric care for surgical patients: results and reflections from a cross-sectional survey in acute Belgian hospitals.
- Author
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Fagard K, Deschodt M, Geyskens L, Willems S, Boland B, Wolthuis A, and Flamaing J
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Belgium epidemiology, Hospitals, Hospitalization, Geriatricians
- Abstract
Purpose: To explore geriatric care for surgical patients in Belgian hospitals and geriatricians' reflections on current practice., Methods: A web-based survey was developed based on literature review and local expertise, and was pretested with 4 participants. In June 2021, the 27-question survey was sent to 91 heads of geriatrics departments. Descriptive statistics and thematic analysis were performed., Results: Fifty-four surveys were completed, corresponding to a response rate of 59%. Preoperative geriatric risk screening is performed in 25 hospitals and systematically followed by geriatric assessment in 17 hospitals. During the perioperative hospitalisation, 91% of geriatric teams provide non-medical and 82% provide medical advice. To a lesser extent, they provide geriatric protocols, geriatric education and training, and attend multidisciplinary team meetings. Overall, time allocation of geriatric teams goes mainly to postoperative evaluations and interventions, rather than to preoperative assessment and care planning. Most surgical patients are hospitalised on surgical wards, with reactive (73%) or proactive (46%) geriatric consultation. In 36 hospitals, surgical patients are also admitted on geriatric wards, predominantly orthopaedic/trauma, abdominal and vascular surgery. Ninety-eight per cent of geriatricians feel that more geriatric input for surgical patients is needed. The most common reported barriers to further implement geriatric-surgical services are shortage of geriatricians and geriatric nurses, and unadjusted legislation and financing., Conclusion: Geriatric care for surgical patients in Belgian hospitals is mainly reactive, although geriatricians favour more proactive services. The main opportunities and challenges for improvement are to resolve staff shortages in the geriatric work field and to update legislation and financing., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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44. Linking clinical and population-based data in older patients with cancer in Belgium: Feasibility and clinical outcomes.
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Depoorter V, Vanschoenbeek K, Decoster L, De Schutter H, Debruyne PR, De Groof I, Bron D, Cornélis F, Luce S, Focan C, Verschaeve V, Debugne G, Langenaeken C, Van Den Bulck H, Goeminne JC, Teurfs W, Jerusalem G, Schrijvers D, Petit B, Rasschaert M, Praet JP, Vandenborre K, Milisen K, Flamaing J, Kenis C, Verdoodt F, and Wildiers H
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Belgium epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Feasibility Studies, Prospective Studies, Geriatric Assessment methods, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Geriatric screening and geriatric assessment (GS/GA) have proven their benefits in the care for older patients with cancer. However, less is known about the predictive value of GS/GA for outcomes. To research this, clinical data on GS/GA can be enriched with population-based data. In this article we describe the methods and feasibility of data linkage, and first clinical outcomes (GS/GA results and overall survival)., Materials and Methods: A large cohort study consisting of patients aged ≥70 years with a new cancer diagnosis was established using linked data from clinical and population-based databases. Clinical data were derived from a previous prospective study where older patients with cancer were screened with G8, followed by GA in case of an abnormal result (GS/GA study; 2009-2015). These data were linked to cancer registration data from the Belgian Cancer Registry (BCR), reimbursement data of the health insurance companies (InterMutualistic Agency, IMA), and hospital discharge data (Technical Cell, TCT). Cox regression analyses were conducted to evaluate the prognostic value of the G8 geriatric screening tool., Results: Of the 8067 eligible patients with a new cancer diagnosis, linkage of data from the GS/GA study and data from the BCR was successful for 93.7%, resulting in a cohort of 7556 patients available for the current analysis. Further linkage with the IMA and TCT database resulted in a cohort of 7314 patients (96.8%). Based on G8 geriatric screening, 67.9% of the patients had a geriatric risk profile. Malnutrition and functional dependence were the most common GA-identified risk factors. An abnormal baseline G8 score (≤14/17) was associated with lower overall survival (adjusted HR [aHR] = 1.62 [1.50-1.75], p < 0.001)., Discussion: Linking clinical and population-based databases for older patients with cancer has shown to be feasible. The GS/GA results at cancer diagnosis demonstrate the vulnerability of this population and the G8 score showed prognostic value for overall survival. The established cohort of almost 8000 patients with long-term follow-up will serve as a basis in the future for detailed analyses on long-term outcomes beyond survival., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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45. Strategies to implement multifactorial falls prevention interventions in community-dwelling older persons: a systematic review.
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Vandervelde S, Vlaeyen E, de Casterlé BD, Flamaing J, Valy S, Meurrens J, Poels J, Himpe M, Belaen G, and Milisen K
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Independent Living, Health Personnel
- Abstract
Background: One-third of the community-dwelling older persons fall annually. Guidelines recommend the use of multifactorial falls prevention interventions. However, these interventions are difficult to implement into the community. This systematic review aimed to explore strategies used to implement multifactorial falls prevention interventions into the community., Methods: A systematic search in PubMed (including MEDLINE), CINAHL (EBSCO), Embase, Web of Science (core collection), and Cochrane Library was performed and updated on the 25th of August, 2022. Studies reporting on the evaluation of implementation strategies for multifactorial falls prevention interventions in the community setting were included. Two reviewers independently performed the search, screening, data extraction, and synthesis process (PRISMA flow diagram). The quality of the included reports was appraised by means of a sensitivity analysis, assessing the relevance to the research question and the methodological quality (Mixed Method Appraisal Tool). Implementation strategies were reported according to Proctor et al.'s (2013) guideline for specifying and reporting implementation strategies and the Taxonomy of Behavioral Change Methods of Kok et al. (2016)., Results: Twenty-three reports (eighteen studies) met the inclusion criteria, of which fourteen reports scored high and nine moderate on the sensitivity analysis. All studies combined implementation strategies, addressing different determinants. The most frequently used implementation strategies at individual level were "tailoring," "active learning," "personalize risk," "individualization," "consciousness raising," and "participation." At environmental level, the most often described strategies were "technical assistance," "use of lay health workers, peer education," "increasing stakeholder influence," and "forming coalitions." The included studies did not describe the implementation strategies in detail, and a variety of labels for implementation strategies were used. Twelve studies used implementation theories, models, and frameworks; no studies described neither the use of a determinant framework nor how the implementation strategy targeted influencing factors., Conclusions: This review highlights gaps in the detailed description of implementation strategies and the effective use of implementation frameworks, models, and theories. The review found that studies mainly focused on implementation strategies at the level of the older person and healthcare professional, emphasizing the importance of "tailoring," "consciousness raising," and "participation" in the implementation process. Studies describing implementation strategies at the level of the organization, community, and policy/society show that "technical assistance," "actively involving stakeholders," and "forming coalitions" are important strategies., Trial Registration: PROSPERO CRD42020187450., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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46. The 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV20): expected added value.
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Janssens E, Flamaing J, Vandermeulen C, Peetermans WE, Desmet S, and De Munter P
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- Child, Adult, Humans, Infant, Heptavalent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine, Vaccines, Conjugate, Pneumococcal Vaccines, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Pneumococcal Infections epidemiology, Pneumococcal Infections prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: Currently existing pneumococcal vaccines have contributed to a major reduction in pneumococcal disease. However, there remains an unmet need for vaccine coverage of serotypes not included in PCV13 to further reduce the burden of disease. The objective of this review is to assess the potential impact of implementation of the investigational 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV20) in the childhood and adult immunization programme in Belgium and Europe., Methods: A literature search was conducted to identify publications and surveillance reports concerning the effectiveness and safety of pneumococcal vaccines, epidemiological data on pneumococcal disease or serotype distribution dynamics after introduction of systematic vaccination., Results: Serotypes included in PCV20 currently account for the majority of pneumococcal disease in Belgium and Europe. In Belgium, PCV20-serotypes accounted for 71.4% of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) cases across all age groups in 2019, of which 39.2% were caused by PCV20-non-PCV13-serotypes. In Europe, these seven serotypes accounted for 37,6% of IPD cases in 2018. PCV20 has proven to be well tolerated in vaccine-naïve adults and elicits a substantial immune response against all serotypes included., Conclusion: Due to serotype replacement following the introduction of PCV7 and PCV13, a considerable proportion of pneumococcal disease is currently caused by PCV20-serotypes. PCV20 has the potential of preventing more pneumococcal disease in children and the adult population at risk than the existing conjugate vaccines. The available evidence on safety and immunogenicity of PCV20 is promising, but further research is needed to provide data about vaccine effectiveness, immune response duration and replacement phenomenon after introduction of PCV20.
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- 2023
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47. Identifying vulnerable older adults at risk for functional decline in cardiac care wards: time to shift the paradigm.
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Jeuris A, Van Grootven B, Geyskens L, Milisen K, Flamaing J, and Deschodt M
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- Humans, Aged, Risk Assessment, Prospective Studies, Hospitals, University, Geriatric Assessment, Activities of Daily Living, Hospitalization
- Abstract
Objective: To determine whether routine screening with the Flemish version of the Triage Risk Screening Tool (fTRST) is a valid approach to determine which patients on cardiac care wards are at risk for inhospital functional decline and would benefit from geriatric expertise consultation., Methods: A secondary data-analysis of the G-COACH before-cohort, describing patient profiles and routine care processes, in 189 older adults on two cardiac care wards in the University Hospitals Leuven between September 2016 and June 2017. Inhospital functional decline was defined as an increase of at least one point on the Katz Index of Activities of Daily Living or death between hospital admission and discharge., Results: Nine in 10 patients had at least one geriatric syndrome and one-third developed functional decline. Based on the fTRST proposed cut-off of ≥2, 156 (82.5%) patients were at risk for functional decline (sensitivity of 95.2%, specificity of 23.8%, negative predictive value of 90.9% and Area Under the Curve of 0.60). Of the 156 'at risk' patients, 43 (27.6%) received a consultation by the geriatric consultation team after a median of four hospitalization days. A positive fTRST was not significantly related to geriatric consultations (x
2 = 0.57; p = 0.45)., Conclusion: The fTRST has a low discriminative value in identifying older cardiology patients at risk for functional decline. Given the high prevalence of geriatric syndromes, we propose a new paradigm were all older adults on cardiac care wards undergo a needs assessment upon hospital admission.- Published
- 2023
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48. Stakeholders' experiences and perception on transitional care initiatives within an integrated care project in Belgium: a qualitative interview study.
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Leithaus M, Fakha A, Flamaing J, Verbeek H, Deschodt M, van Pottelbergh G, and Goderis G
- Subjects
- Humans, Belgium, Pilot Projects, Qualitative Research, Perception, Transitional Care, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated
- Abstract
Background: In 2015, a plan for integrated care was launched by the Belgium government that resulted in the implementation of 12 integrated care pilot project across Belgium. The pilot project Zorgzaam Leuven consists of a multidisciplinary local consortium aiming to bring lasting change towards integrated care for the region of Leuven. This study aims to explore experiences and perceptions of stakeholders involved in four transitional care actions that are part of Zorgzaam Leuven., Methods: This qualitative case study is part of the European TRANS-SENIOR project. Four actions with a focus on improving transitional care were selected and stakeholders involved in those actions were identified using the snow-ball method. Fourteen semi-structured interviews were conducted and inductive thematic analysis was performed., Results: Professionals appreciated to be involved in the decision making early onwards either by proposing own initiatives or by providing their input in shaping actions. Improved team spirit and community feeling with other health care professionals (HCPs) was reported to reduce communication barriers and was perceived to benefit both patients and professionals. The actions provided supportive tools and various learning opportunities that participants acknowledged. Technical shortcomings (e.g. lack of integrated patient records) and financial and political support were identified as key challenges impeding the sustainable implementation of the transitional care actions., Conclusion: The pilot project Zorgzaam Leuven created conditions that triggered work motivation for HCPs. It supported the development of multidisciplinary care partnerships at the local level that allowed early involvement and increased collaboration, which is crucial to successfully improve transitional care for vulnerable patients., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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49. Incidence of falls and fall-related injuries and their predictive factors in frail older persons with cancer: a multicenter study.
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Kenis C, Decoster L, Flamaing J, Debruyne PR, De Groof I, Focan C, Cornélis F, Verschaeve V, Bachmann C, Bron D, Van den Bulck H, Schrijvers D, Langenaeken C, Specenier P, Jerusalem G, Praet JP, De Cock J, Lobelle JP, Wildiers H, and Milisen K
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Accidental Falls prevention & control, Incidence, Frail Elderly, Activities of Daily Living, Prospective Studies, Fear, Frailty diagnosis, Frailty epidemiology, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: Falls and fall-related injuries are a major public health problem. Data on falls in older persons with cancer is limited and robust data on falls within those with a frailty profile are missing. The aim of this study is to investigate the incidence and predictive factors for falls and fall-related injuries in frail older persons with cancer., Methods: This study is a secondary data analysis from data previously collected in a large prospective multicenter observational cohort study in older persons with cancer in 22 Belgian hospitals (November 2012-February 2015). Patients ≥70 years with a malignant tumor and a frailty profile based on an abnormal G8 score were included upon treatment decision and evaluated with a Geriatric Assessment (GA). At follow-up, data on falls and fall-related injuries were documented., Results: At baseline 2141 (37.2%) of 5759 included patients reported at least one fall in the past 12 months, 1427 patients (66.7%) sustained an injury. Fall-related data of 3681 patients were available at follow-up and at least one fall was reported by 769 patients (20.9%) at follow-up, of whom 289 (37.6%) fell more than once and a fall-related injury was reported by 484 patients (62.9%). Fear of falling was reported in 47.4% of the patients at baseline and in 55.6% of the patients at follow-up. In multivariable analysis, sex and falls history in the past 12 months were predictive factors for both falls and fall-related injuries at follow-up. Other predictive factors for falls, were risk for depression, cognitive impairment, dependency in activities of daily living, fear of falling, and use of professional home care., Conclusion: Given the high number of falls and fall-related injuries and high prevalence of fear of falling, multifactorial falls risk assessment and management programs should be integrated in the care of frail older persons with cancer. Further studies with long-term follow-up, subsequent impact on cancer treatment and interventions for fall prevention, and integration of other important topics like medication and circumstances of a fall, are warranted., Trial Registration: B322201215495., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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50. Functional status in older patients with cancer and a frailty risk profile: A multicenter observational study.
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Meert G, Kenis C, Milisen K, Debruyne PR, De Groof I, Focan C, Cornélis F, Verschaeve V, Bachmann C, Bron D, Den Bulck HV, Schrijvers D, Langenaeken C, Specenier P, Jerusalem G, Praet JP, Lobelle JP, Flamaing J, Wildiers H, and Decoster L
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Male, Activities of Daily Living, Prospective Studies, Functional Status, Geriatric Assessment, Frailty epidemiology, Frailty diagnosis, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Functional status (FS) and frailty are significant concerns for older adults, especially those with cancer. Data on FS (Activities of Daily Living [ADL]; Instrumental Activities of Daily Living [IADL]) and its evolution during cancer treatment in older patients and a frailty risk profile are scarce. Therefore, this study examines FS and its evolution in older patients with cancer and a frailty risk profile and investigates characteristics associated with functional decline., Material and Methods: This secondary data-analysis, focusing on FS, uses data from a large prospective multicenter observational cohort study. Patients ≥70 years with a solid tumor and a frailty risk profile based on the G8 screening tool (score ≤ 14) were included. A geriatric assessment was performed including evaluation of FS based on ADL and IADL. At approximately three months of follow-up, FS was reassessed. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to identify predictive factors for functional decline in ADL and IADL., Results: Data on ADL and IADL were available at baseline and follow-up in 3388 patients. At baseline 1886 (55.7%) patients were dependent for ADL, whereas 2085 (61.5%) patients were dependent at follow-up. Functional decline was observed in 23.6% of patients. For IADL 2218 (65.5%) patients were dependent for IADL, whereas 2591 (76.5%) patients were dependent at follow-up. Functional decline in IADL was observed in 41.0% of patients. In multivariable analysis, disease stage III or IV, comorbidities, falls history in the past twelve months, and FS measured by IADL were predictive factors for functional decline in both ADL and IADL. Other predictive factors for functional decline in ADL were polypharmacy, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-Performance Status (ECOG-PS) score 2-4, and cognitive impairment, and for functional decline in IADL were female sex, fatigue, and risk for depression., Discussion: Functional impairments are frequent in older persons with cancer and a frailty risk profile, and several characteristics are identified that are significantly associated with functional decline. Therefore, FS is an essential part of the geriatric assessment which should be standard of care for this patient population. Next step is to proceed with directed interventions with the aim to limit the risk of functional decline as much as possible., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2022
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