by Anni Varjonen, Toni Saari, Sari Aaltonen, Teemu Palviainen, Mia Urjansson, Paula Iso-Markku, Jaakko Kaprio, Eero Vuoksimaa
We examined the associations of midlife and old-age cardiovascular risk factors, education, and midlife dementia risk scores with cognition at 90 + years, using data from a population-based study with 48 years of follow-up. Participants were 96 individuals aged 90–97 from the older Finnish Twin Cohort study. Individual cardiovascular risk factors assessed via questionnaires in 1975, 1981, 1990, and 2021–2023 included blood pressure, body mass index, physical activity, and cholesterol, and self-reported educational attainment. The Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Aging, and Dementia (CAIDE) score and an educational-occupational attainment score were used as midlife dementia risk scores. Cognitive assessments included semantic fluency, immediate and delayed recall from a 10-word list learning task, and a composite cognitive score. Regression analyses were conducted with dementia risk factors predicting cognition at 90 + years, adjusting for age, sex, education, follow-up time, and apolipoprotein E genotype (ε4-carrier vs non-carriers). Results showed that higher education and higher educational-occupational score were associated with better cognitive performance in all cognitive measures. Those with high midlife blood pressure scored significantly higher in all cognitive tests than those with normal blood pressure. Conversely, those with high old-age blood pressure scored lower in semantic fluency and composite cognitive score, but not in immediate or delayed recall. Other cardiovascular risk factors and the CAIDE score did not show consistent associations with cognition. Education appears to have a long-lasting protective effect in cognitive aging, whereas midlife and old-age cardiovascular risk factors were not significantly associated with cognition at 90 + years.The use of direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) as stroke prophylaxis in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) has increased steadily since the introduction in 2011. In Sweden today, more patients are treated with DOACs than with warfarin. However, it is not shown that an increased proportion of DOAC prescriptions correlates to lower event rates of stroke and systemic embolism.
This study aims to investigate whether the increased prescription of DOACs in Sweden correlates with lower event rates for all-cause stroke, systemic embolism and bleeding complications, using real-life data for the whole NVAF population.
Nationwide retrospective register study.
Data were obtained from the Swedish National Patient Registry, covering patients aged 18 years or older with NVAF, between 1 January 2014, and 31 December 2017. Exposure to oral anticoagulants was determined based on pharmaceutical data, calculating treatment duration by the number of pills dispensed and the prescribed daily usage rate. Baseline characteristics and endpoints were collected from hospital administrative registers using International Classification of Diseases, 10th edition (ICD-10) codes.
All patients with NVAF were identified using ICD-10 codes during the study period. Entry criteria included having a first recorded atrial fibrillation diagnosis after 1 January 2014 or being previously diagnosed with atrial fibrillation before 2014 but still receiving care after this date.
The outcomes were event rates (per 100 person-years) of ischaemic stroke, systemic embolism, all-cause stroke, major bleeding and intracranial bleeding (including haemorrhagic stroke). Event rates were calculated and compared across the study period using Cox proportional hazard models.
In the total NVAF population, the proportional decrease in event rates (per 100 treatment years) in 2017 compared with 2014 was ischaemic stroke 24% (1.70–1.30), all-cause mortality 4% (9.40–9.00), all-cause stroke 24% (2.10–1.60) and all-cause stroke and systemic embolism 23% (2.20–1.70). During the same time, the proportion of major bleeding and intracranial bleeding rates, including haemorrhagic stroke, also decreased: 5% (2.00–1.90), 6% (0.68–0.64) and 17% (0.30–0.25), respectively. DOACs use increased from 4.1% to 28.3% in the total population and from 22.7% to 60.9% in newly diagnosed patients.
In the initial years following the introduction when DOAC uptake in the population was high, an increasing proportion of Swedish NVAF patients receiving DOACs was accompanied by lower event rates of all-cause stroke and systemic embolism, ischaemic stroke and all-cause mortality, intracranial bleeding and major bleeding, highlighting the improved risk-benefit balance of DOACs in stroke prophylaxis.
Evidence-based healthcare (EBHC) enables consistent and effective healthcare that prioritises patient safety. The competencies of advanced practice nurses (APNs) are essential for implementing EBHC because their professional duties include promoting EBHC.
To identify, critically appraise, and synthesise the best available evidence concerning the EBHC competence of APNs and associated factors.
A systematic review.
CINAHL, PubMed, Scopus, Medic, ProQuest, and MedNar.
Databases were searched for studies (until 19 September 2023) that examined the EBHC competence and associated factors of APNs were included. Quantitative studies published in English, Swedish and Finnish were included. We followed the JBI methodology for systematic review and performed a narrative synthesis.
The review included 12 quantitative studies, using 15 different instruments, and involved 3163 participants. The quality of the studies was fair. The APNs' EBHC competence areas were categorised into five segments according to the JBI EBHC model. The strongest areas of competencies were in global health as a goal, transferring and implementing evidence, while the weakest were generating and synthesising evidence. Evidence on factors influencing APNs' EBHC competencies was contradictory, but higher levels of education and the presence of an organisational research council may be positively associated with APNs' EBHC competencies.
The development of EBHC competencies for APNs should prioritise evidence generation and synthesis. Elevating the education level of APNs and establishing a Research Council within the organisation can potentially enhance the EBHC competence of APNs.
We should consider weaknesses in EBHC competence when developing education and practical exercises for APNs. This approach will promote the development of APNs' EBHC competence and EBHC implementation in nursing practice.
The review was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42021226578), and reporting followed the PRISMA checklist.
None.
To describe patients' experiences of the quality of counselling to develop new digital counselling solutions for patients with cerebrovascular disease.
A descriptive, qualitative approach.
Semi-structured in-person interviews were conducted among 22 patients diagnosed with acute cerebrovascular disease and treated as inpatients at a single university hospital in Finland between September 2021 and February 2022. Data were analysed using deductive and inductive content analysis.
The identified facilitators, barriers and possible solutions for the development of new digital counselling solutions were deductively categorized into five main categories: (1) background factors, (2) resources, (3) implementation, (4) sufficiency, and (5) effects and 12 generic categories. Patients with cerebrovascular diseases worry about symptoms affecting their ability to receive information and valued a supportive atmosphere. Staff should have more time for counselling and use motivational digital counselling solutions in plain language, moderate length and with multimedia content. Patients desired reminders, easy search functions and possibilities for two-way communication.
New digital counselling solutions could be beneficial in supporting the patients' knowledge, emotions and adherence. For the success of such solutions, patients' special needs concerning different levels of cognitive impairment need to be considered.
The results of this study may benefit healthcare organizations in the development of digital counselling solutions that meet the patients' needs.
We have adhered to relevant EQUATOR guidelines with the COREQ reporting method.
Patients were involved as the study population.
To identify and synthesise nurses' experiences of competence in lifestyle counselling with adult patients in healthcare settings.
Modifiable lifestyle risk behaviours contribute to an increased prevalence of chronic diseases worldwide. Lifestyle counselling is part of nurses' role which enables them to make a significant contribution to patients' long-term health in various healthcare contexts, but requires particular competence.
Qualitative systematic literature review and meta-aggregation.
The review was guided by Joanna Briggs Institute's methodology for conducting synthesis of qualitative studies. PRISMA-checklist guided the review process. Relevant original studies were search from databases (CINAHL, PubMed, Scopus, Medic and Psych Articles, Ebscho Open Dissertations and Web of Science). After researcher consensus was reached and quality of the studies evaluated, 20 studies were subjected to meta-aggregation.
From 20 studies meeting the inclusion criteria, 75 findings were extracted and categorised into 13 groups based on their meaning, resulting in the identification of 5 synthesised findings for competence description: Supporting healthy lifestyle adherence, creating interactive and patient-centred counselling situations, acquiring competence through clinical experience and continuous self-improvement, collaborating with other professionals and patients, planning lifestyle counselling and managing work across various stages of the patient's disease care path.
The review provides an evidence base that can be used to support nurses' competence in lifestyle counselling when working with adult patients in healthcare settings. Lifestyle counselling competence is a complex and rather abstract phenomenon. The review identified, analysed and synthesised the evidence derived from nurses' experience which shows that lifestyle counselling competence is a multidimensional entity which relates to many other competencies within nurses' work.
Recognising the competencies of nurses in lifestyle counselling for adult patients can stimulate nurses' motivation. The acquisition of these competencies can have a positive impact on patients' lives and their health.
No Patient or Public Contribution.
The research may enhance nurses' competence in lifestyle counselling, leading to improved health outcomes, better adherence to recommendations and overall well-being. It may also drive the development of interventions, improving healthcare delivery in lifestyle counselling.
The review was undertaken and reported using the PRISMA guidelines.
Blinded for the review.