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☐ ☆ ✇ NURE Investigación

El Rol de la Enfermería Familiar y Comunitaria en la Salud Global

Por: Rosa Martínez Ortega — Abril 1st 2026 at 00:00

La Estrategia Española de Salud Global 2025-2030 y la Enfermería Familiar y Comunitaria comparten un objetivo común: garantizar una atención sanitaria integral, equitativa y sostenible. Desde la promoción de la salud hasta la respuesta ante emergencias sanitarias, la enfermería comunitaria es un pilar fundamental en la transformación del sistema de salud en España y en la consolidación de un modelo de atención centrado en la persona y la comunidad.

La inversión en enfermería comunitaria no solo fortalece los sistemas sanitarios, sino que contribuye a una sociedad más justa, saludable y resiliente ante los desafíos globales.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

What factors influence patient participation in an artificial intelligence-based initiative to optimise referrals from primary to specialist haematology care? A multicentre retrospective observational study in four Spanish hospitals

Por: Apellaniz · J. S. · Cordoba Mascunano · R. · Llamas Sillero · P. · Paredes Coronel · C. · Pfang · B. · Villegas Garcia · M. A. · Herrero Gonzalez · A. · Pascual Martinez · A. · Alonso Alonso · A. · Hernandez-Sanchez · A. M. · Rodriguez Garcia · G. · Tunon Hernandez · J. · del O — Marzo 24th 2026 at 14:54
Objectives

Increasing demand for haematological specialist care makes the optimisation of referrals and outpatient workflow a priority. Automated placing of standardised test orders prior to the first appointment may provide haematologists with necessary information to reach diagnoses and initiate treatment at the first patient encounter, reducing low-value follow-up appointments. We aimed to evaluate rates of patient participation in an initiative using artificial intelligence to place standardised test orders as well as reasons for non-participation, differences in the number of participants and non-participants discharged back to primary care with a diagnosis or appropriate treatment plan, and potentially avoidable referrals.

Design

A retrospective, multicentric cohort study.

Setting

Four academic hospitals in Madrid, Spain.

Participants

18 190 patients referred for a first haematologist appointment for 11 included presenting complaints.

Intervention

Referral notes from primary care were classified using natural language processing and automated placement of standardised test order sets was carried out prior to first appointment for participating patients.

Outcome measures

We compared demographic differences between participants and non-participants, the main motives for not participating, and the number of patients discharged back to primary care at first appointment with a diagnosis and treatment plan. Most frequent International Classification of Diseases, tenth revision codes for each of the included presenting complaints were described.

Results

During the study period, 18 190 (41%) patients were referred for a first haematologist appointment for presenting complaints included in the intervention (‘eligible patients’), of which 612 (3.3%) patients agreed to participate in the intervention. Participants were significantly younger than non-participants. Most common motives for not participating were administrative reasons (6268, 76.9%). Only 122 (1.5%) patients expressed explicit unwillingness to participate. A significant increase in the number of patients discharged upon first appointment was observed for participants (146 (23.9%) vs 3375 (19.36%); p=0.041), signifying a 22% relative reduction in avoidable follow-up. The diagnosis ‘haematological disorders ruled out’ was constantly observed as one of the ten most common diagnoses made by the haematology specialist for all but one of the included presenting complaints.

Conclusion

Natural language processing of referrals from primary to specialist haematology care with automated placing of standardised test orders can decrease low-value follow-up appointments. Explicit refusal to participate was low. Participants tended to be younger than non-participants, underlining the importance of designing strategies to target the older population in order to improve participation.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Hospital‐Acquired Pressure Injuries: Application of Preventive and Reactive Measures in Real Practice

ABSTRACT

Aims

To determine the application rate of the preventive measures, alternate air anti-decubitus mattress and postural changes in patients who develop hospital-acquired pressure injury (HAPI) on the basis of their preventive or reactive temporality.

Design

This is an ambispective observational study that included adult patients without pressure injuries admitted to Mancha Centro Hospital (Spain) who developed at least one HAPI during hospitalisation (August 2022 to March 2023).

Method

The main variables were the implementation of preventive measures and the time of their application. Other variables were comorbidities, sociodemographic and clinical variables, Braden and Barthel scale, variables related to the application of preventive measures and information to characterise HAPI.

Results

180 patients who developed 276 HAPI during their admission were included; 73.9% of the patients received a risk assessment upon admission, and 53.9% were re-evaluated. At some point during admission, an anti-decubitus mattress was placed in 73.3% of the patients, and 76.1% received postural changes.

Among the patients at risk at the time of HAPI onset, 49.4% had received anti-decubitus mattress preventively, 23.9% had received it reactively, and 26.7% did not receive it. Among the patients without contraindication for postural changes, 51.4% received them before the lesions appeared, 33.6% received them after the lesions appeared, and 13.6% did not receive them.

We detected a significant association between the preventive application of anti-decubitus mattress and postural changes with the Braden reassessment; admission to the intensive care unit; mechanical ventilation, vasopressors, nasogastric tube; mental state confused; hospital isolation; low Barthel and Braden scores; impaired mobility; inability to perform postural changes; diaper; urinary/faecal incontinence; and sedatives.

Conclusions

Only approximately half of the patients received preventive measures. Although patients with a more unfavourable clinical profile were more likely to receive these measures, increased awareness and training among healthcare professionals are necessary to ensure broader and more consistent implementation of preventive strategies.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

This study explores the real-world use of preventive measures in hospitalized patients who develop HAPI. In half of the patients, these measures were applied reactively, highlighting the need to introduce strategies that facilitate the implementation of evidence-based practices.

Reporting Method

This study was reported following the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) checklist for cross-sectional studies.

No Patient or Public Contribution

In the present study, data from patients have been obtained, but the patients or caregivers have not contributed to the development of the manuscript.

☐ ☆ ✇ International Wound Journal

Particulate Evacuation Under NPWT: Bench Evaluation of a Multilayer Foam Prototype Versus Commercial Dressings in a Simulated Exudate Model

ABSTRACT

Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is widely used to facilitate healing by improving local perfusion, reducing edema and controlling exudate. The porous foam dressing is central to NPWT effectiveness, however, its performance in viscous, particle-rich exudates remains challenging. Standard industry tests often rely on protein-free aqueous solutions, which overlook the complex rheology and particulate load of real wounds. This study reports a bench evaluation of a multilayer foam prototype compared with three commercial dressings under NPWT, using a simulated viscous exudate with suspended particles. We recorded 60-min drainage curves and quantified effluent turbidity as a simple, interpretable proxy for particulate transport, summarised as percentage of input turbidity recovered. The mass-based endpoint (percent solid matter recovered) showed the same ranking as turbidity. At −75 mmHg, the prototype recovered 31.6% of input turbidity, exceeding commercial foams (≤ 9.7%). At −125 mmHg, particulate recovery decreased across all dressings (≤ 9.1%). A matrix-only control indicated that commercial effluents, particularly at −75 mmHg, clustered near background level, whereas the prototype evacuated substantially more particulate while maintaining robust fluid drainage. These findings suggest that moderate negative pressure and multilayer architecture can help preserve channel patency and reduce clogging in complex exudates. We highlight the need for test methodologies that incorporate viscosity and particulate content, and for practical guidance that links dressing architecture and pressure settings to exudate characteristics. Prospective validation, including larger-sample confirmation, particle-size distributions and ultimately clinical endpoints, is warranted.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Test to assess claims about treatment effects for Spanish primary school children: the development process and cross-sectional validation study of the test

Por: Samso Jofra · L. · Dahlgren · A. · Alonso-Coello · P. · Canovas Martinez · E. · Perez-Gaxiola · G. · Roque i Figuls · M. · Rosenbaum · S. · Sanz-Herranz · H. · Valenzuela Rubio · N. G. · Martinez Garcia · L. — Marzo 4th 2026 at 13:24
Objectives

The aims of this study were (1) to develop and validate the interactive CLAIM Test (iCLAIM Test) to measure children’s ability to assess claims about treatment effects and make informed health choices and (2) to measure this ability in Spanish primary school children using the developed test.

Design

We followed a multistep process including (1) definition of the test scope, (2) selection of the questions, (3) translation process, (4) design and development of the online test, (5) external review with experts, (6) user-test with children and (7) cross-sectional validation study with Rasch analysis.

Setting

Spanish primary schools.

Participants

Twelve experts (75% women) participated in the review, 11 children (45% girls) participated in the user-test and 480 Spanish primary school children (46.5% girls) from fourth to sixth grades (9–12 years old) participated in the cross-sectional validation study.

Results

The iCLAIM Test is an online, interactive and user-friendly test in Spanish that measures children’s ability to understand and apply key concepts of the informed health choices (IHC) Project when assessing claims about treatment effects and making IHCs. The test includes 30 questions: six demographic questions and 24 questions from the Claim Evaluation Tools item bank. Less than 40% of the students who participated in the cross-sectional validation study showed basic knowledge of the IHC Key Concepts and how to apply them, and less than 4% showed a clear knowledge. The test showed a good fit to the Rasch model and was acceptable to the target audience.

Conclusions

The iCLAIM Test is the first instrument validated for measuring children’s ability to assess treatment claims in Spain. In the future, we can tailor IHC education interventions and improve critical thinking skills about the health of Spanish children.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Interventions to improve functionality among paediatric patients with oncological diagnosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis protocol

Por: Holanda · K. M. · Vivas Costa · J. · Pereira · W. M. G. · Barbosa · A. S. · Martinez-Silveira · M. · Garcia-Hermoso · A. · Guerra · P. H. · Bezerra · I. N. · Barbosa Filho · V. — Febrero 26th 2026 at 13:47
Introduction

Cancer is the leading cause of death and morbidity among children and adolescents worldwide. Functionality-based interventions are relevant among children and adolescents with an oncological diagnosis, whence studies summarising evidence on this topic are needed. This systematic review will summarise evidence on the effect of interventions to improve functionality indicators among paediatric patients diagnosed with cancer.

Methods and analysis

This protocol will follow Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA)-Protocols reporting guidelines. The systematic review will be conducted according to the Cochrane Handbook and PRISMA 2020. Studies will be searched in MEDLINE (PubMed), Embase, Web of Science, CENTRAL, LILACS and PEDro. Additional searches will include Google Scholar, reference lists of included studies, relevant reviews and trial registries. Studies will be included if they implement a functionality-based intervention. They must evaluate effects among paediatric patients with an oncological diagnosis. Secondary outcomes will include health-related quality of life. There will be no limits to language or year of publication, and articles published in peer-reviewed journals will be accepted. Only randomised controlled trials will be included. Risk of bias will be assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool 2. Two independent reviewers will select studies, extract data and assess risk of bias. A narrative synthesis and meta-analysis will be conducted if studies are clinically and methodologically homogeneous. Statistical heterogeneity will be assessed using Higgins’ inconsistency test (I²). Meta-analysis may estimate combined effects using random-effects and the inverse variance method. The R statistical software will be used. The certainty of evidence will be evaluated for each outcome using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation system.

Ethics and dissemination

This study used data from previously published studies, thus waiving submission to an Ethics Committee. Scientific dissemination strategies will include publication in peer-reviewed journals, conference presentations and workshops for the public.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD42024462833.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Mechanisms of SGLT inhibitor action and physiological mediators: systematic review and protocol for the MOSAIC collaborative meta-analysis

Por: Kugathasan · L. · Nardone · M. · Muskiet · M. · Diaz Martinez · J. P. · Lovblom · L. E. · Orchanian-Cheff · A. · Nielsen · S. · Rotbain · V. · Kazup · A. · Cersosimo · E. · Gullaksen · S. · Vernstrom · L. · van Baar · M. J. B. · van Bommel · E. · Kannenkeril · D. · Scholtes · R. · Hesp — Febrero 26th 2026 at 04:41
Introduction

Sodium-glucose cotransporter (SGLT) inhibitors have shown substantial benefit in reducing cardiovascular and kidney events across diverse clinical populations, but the underlying physiological mechanisms remain unclear. However, existing mechanistic studies on renal and cardiovascular haemodynamics show variability in design, have limited statistical power and yield inconsistent outcomes, thus limiting the ability to draw generalisable conclusions. To address this gap, we conducted a systematic review and proposed the first meta-analysis to aggregate individual participant-level data from mechanistic studies to identify consistent physiological patterns and enhance understanding of the therapeutic effects of SGLT inhibition.

Methods and analysis

Gold-standard measured glomerular filtration rate (mGFR) was selected as the primary outcome for this systematic review, which aimed to identify all completed mechanistic studies investigating the effects of SGLT inhibition. Electronic databases including Ovid MEDLINE; Ovid Embase; Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews; and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched using a detailed search strategy. In total, 24 studies (n=1296) were identified. This systematic review was reported according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Key variables including demographics, medical history, concomitant medications, vital signs, mGFR, renal haemodynamics, urine and plasma biochemistry, tubular sodium handling, echocardiography, cardiac output monitoring, arterial stiffness and fluid volume will be extracted. A one-stage individual participant data meta-analysis under a Bayesian framework will be conducted, using hierarchical models to simultaneously analyse data from all eligible studies. The risk of bias due to missing results will be assessed. Sensitivity analyses and subgroup evaluations will be incorporated to explore sources of heterogeneity and assess robustness of findings.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethics approval was obtained from University Health Network, Toronto, Canada. Findings from the Mechanisms of SGLT Inhibitor Action and Physiological Mediators (MOSAIC) meta-analysis will be published in peer-reviewed journals and results will be disseminated at scientific conferences.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD420251001413.

☐ ☆ ✇ PLOS ONE Medicine&Health

Effectiveness and acceptability of the unified protocol for the transdiagnostic treatment of emotional disorders in people with long COVID-19: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

by Verónica Martínez-Borba, Andrés E. Rodríguez-Márquez, Sara Garcés-Arilla, Óscar Peris-Baquero, María Vicenta Navarro-Haro, Esther del Corral-Beamonte, Jorge Osma

Background

Long COVID-19 is a medical condition associated with persistent physical, cognitive, and emotional symptoms. Despite its significant impact, there are still few psychological interventions—especially with transdiagnostic approaches— that have been rigorously tested in this population. The aim of the present protocol is to describe a randomized controlled trial to examine the effectiveness and acceptability of the online, group-delivered Unified Protocol (UP) for improving emotional, and cognitive outcomes in adults with long COVID-19. We expect greater improvements in emotional and cognitive outcomes for the UP group compared to controls. Additionally, exploratory analyses will assess changes in neurocognitive performance and hair cortisol/cortisone levels as potential correlates of treatment response.

Methods

90 individuals diagnosed with long COVID-19 will be randomized to an experimental group or a waiting-list control group (1:1 ratio). Participants in the experimental group will receive the UP across 12 online group sessions. Longitudinal assessments (pre-treatment, post-treatment and 3, 6 and 12 months follow-ups) will include psychological (e.g., anxiety and depressive symptoms) and cognitive outcomes (e.g., memory failures). Participants in the experimental group will also complete neuropsychological tests and will provide hair samples for the assessment of cortisol/cortisone levels.

Data analyses

Baseline characteristics will be described using descriptive statistics, and linear mixed-effects models will evaluate the effects of time, group, and their interaction on psychological and cognitive outcomes. Neuropsychological performance and hair cortisol levels will be analyzed over time in the experimental group. Associations between cortisol and psychological or cognitive measures will be explored through correlational analyses.

Conclusions

We expect positive outcomes after the intervention in acceptability and in emotional symptoms and cognitive complaints in individuals living with long COVID-19, the maintenance of the benefits in all follow-ups, and statistically significant changes in favor of the UP condition in comparison with the waiting-list control group. If effective, the UP could provide an accessible and evidence-based psychological treatment for this population, improving the quality of healthcare to individuals with long COVID-19.

Trial registration

clinicatrials.gov (registration identifier: NCT06928480; May 22, 2025).

☐ ☆ ✇ PLOS ONE Medicine&Health

Barriers and facilitators from the patients’ perspective in the follow-up of carpal tunnel syndrome and subacromial impingement syndrome: A qualitative study

by Eva Artigues-Barberà, Ester García-Martínez, José María Palacín Peruga, Marta Ortega-Bravo

Introduction

Chronic musculoskeletal pain is one of the leading causes of disability worldwide, affecting 11–50% of the population. In Spain, it accounts for up to 50% of the chronic pain consultations conducted in primary care settings. The most common disorders are carpal tunnel and subacromial impingement syndromes, with treatments, including surgical and nonsurgical approaches, notably the use of ultrasound-guided injections to improve symptoms.

Methods

A qualitative, phenomenological, and inductive study was conducted on patients diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome or subacromial impingement syndrome at primary care centers in Lleida to identify patient‑reported domains relevant to the routine follow-up of CTS and SAIS in primary healthcare, and to examine barriers and facilitators of treatments to inform patient‑centered follow-up protocols. Purposive sampling was used, and five focus groups were organised, selecting participants aged >18 years with or without prior surgical treatment. Data were collected between December 2022 and February 2023 using a semi-structured guide. The focus groups were recorded and thematically analysed using Atlas.ti.

Results

Twenty-one patients aged between 44–75 years, predominantly women, participated in the study. The results were organised into six themes and 12 subthemes. The barriers identified were delays in diagnostic testing, overload of healthcare personnel, lack of coordination between care levels, and brevity of consultations. Effective communication, empathy of primary care professionals, and prompt management of treatments, such as injections, were highlighted as facilitators.

Conclusion

This study highlighted the complexity of managing chronic musculoskeletal pain and the need for a multidimensional approach. The identified barriers, along with facilitators, such as effective communication and empathy of professionals, emphasize the relevance of strengthening problem-solving capacity in primary care and fostering better coordination between care levels. These findings suggest that addressing these aspects may support more tailored follow-up and contribute to improving patients’ experiences of care.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Effectiveness, acceptability and oral health-related quality of life of silver diamine fluoride compared with atraumatic restorative treatment for the management of early childhood caries: protocol of a pragmatic randomised clinical trial

Por: Munoz Millan · P. · Pineda · P. · Fontana · M. · Freyhofer · V. A. · Ormeno · A. · Munoz · K. · Martinez-Zapata · M. J. · Zaror · C. — Febrero 12th 2026 at 19:06
Introduction

Early childhood caries (ECC) continues to be a public health problem. The application of silver diamine fluoride (SDF) is a simple, non-invasive procedure. This study aims to evaluate SDF’s effectiveness, acceptability and oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) compared with atraumatic restorative treatment in managing ECC.

Methods and analysis

An open-label parallel superiority randomised clinical trial will be conducted involving children aged 2–5 years. Participants will include children with at least one active cavitated lesion (ICDAS 5+) of their primary teeth, with no signs of pulp involvement. The trial will occur at preschools in the La Araucanía and Metropolitan Regions of Chile from 2025 to 2027. The primary outcome variable will be the caries lesion arrest, acceptability and OHRQoL. We will also determine the presence of any adverse effects. Evaluations will be carried out at 6 and 12 months. A sample of 234 teeth with carious lesions per group is estimated. The primary inferential analysis will be performed on an intention-to-treat basis; a per-protocol analysis will be conducted for adverse effects. For caries lesion arrest, a multilevel logistic regression model adjusted for significant covariates will be used to account for within-child clustering. The acceptability will be assessed through quantitative and qualitative methods. The magnitude of change in OHRQoL between baseline and follow-up will be quantified using effect size estimates derived from the early childhood health impact scale survey data.

Ethics and dissemination

This study’s implementation benefits the study population, and the ethical principles of research have been considered and approved by the Science Committee of the University, Resolution N°049_19. The results and conclusions of the clinical trial will be published in academic conferences and peer-reviewed journals.

Trial registration number

NCT06786975.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Racial and Socioeconomic Determinants of Major Adverse Liver Outcomes in Patients with Coexisting Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Chronic Liver Disease: Insights from the National Inpatient Sample

Por: Vo · K. · Sierra · L. · Amador-Martinez · K. · Duong · N. — Febrero 12th 2026 at 14:16
Background

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is associated with worse major adverse liver outcomes (MALO) in patients with chronic liver disease (CLD). Although the interplay between these conditions is recognised, the contribution of external factors such as race and socioeconomic status (SES) remains unclear. We aimed to assess the association of race and socioeconomic factors with MALO in patients with IBD and CLD.

Methods

This retrospective cohort study analysed hospitalised adults with IBD and CLD using the National Inpatient Sample database (2015–2021). Demographic variables included age, sex and race. SES included household income. Clinical variables included length of hospital stay, in-hospital mortality and comorbidities. A multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to assess the independent associations between MALO and patient demographics, comorbidities and social determinants of health.

Results

Among 97 628 hospitalised adult patients with IBD, 4.11% (4011/97 628) had secondary CLD. The majority of patients with IBD-CLD were white (74.94% or 2928/3907), and over half (53.83% or 2118/3934) resided in lower-income households with incomes below US$35 000. Racial disparities were evident, with significant differences in comorbidities such as sepsis, cholangitis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Among white patients, the prevalence of depression and anxiety was 20.18% (591/2928) and 24.21% (709/2928), respectively, which was higher compared with other racial groups. In adjusted analyses, African American race (OR 1.42, p=0.003) and lowest SES (OR 1.19, p=0.04) were independently associated with increased odds of MALO.

Conclusions

African American race and lower SES are independently associated with higher odds of MALO in patients with IBD-CLD. These findings highlight disparities that warrant further investigation and suggest that targeted interventions may help improve liver-related outcomes. Interventions reducing health inequities are desperately needed to mitigate disparities in this patient population.

☐ ☆ ✇ NURE Investigación

Prevención del síndrome post cuidados intensivos en el paciente con enfermedad crítica a través del paquete de medidas “ABCDEF”

Por: Celia Álvarez Martínez — Febrero 1st 2026 at 00:00

Introducción. Se conoce como “síndrome post cuidados intensivos” a un conjunto de problemas de salud que persisten tras una enfermedad crítica, pudiendo durar incluso años tras el alta, y que incluyen síntomas cognitivos, físicos y mentales. El paquete de medidas ABCDEF ha demostrado mejorar los efectos indeseados del síndrome, como el delirium, los datos de mortalidad, los días de estancia en la unidad, y sobre todo, siendo útil en el destete de la ventilación mecánica. Objetivo. Describir si los pacientes que ingresan en unidades de cuidados intensivos con una enfermedad crítica, obtienen mejoras en las diferentes áreas del síndrome post cuidados intensivos tras el empleo del paquete de medidas ABCDEF. Método: Se llevó a cabo una revisión sistemática de la literatura disponible entre 2018 y 2023, en las bases de datos PubMed, Scopus y Web of Science (WOS). Resultados. Finalmente se incluyeron 11 artículos para formar parte de este trabajo. Gran parte de los estudios analizados coinciden en que el paquete ABCDEF es útil para minimizar determinados componentes del síndrome post cuidados intensivos, y otros aspectos del proceso de enfermedad del paciente ingresado en UCI. Discusión. El paquete de medidas ABCDEF representa una ayuda a la hora de promover una recuperación más rápida y completa de los pacientes críticos. Los resultados mejoran de manera exponencial al uso del paquete, según varios autores. También ha sido asociado a mejoras en otros aspectos secundarios como la reducción del tiempo de ventilación mecánica, tiempo de estancia en el hospital o mortalidad.

ABSTRACT

Introduction: “Post-intensive care syndrome” is a set of health problems that persist after a critical illness, and can last even months or years after discharge, and that include cognitive, physical, and mental symptoms. The ABCDEF bundle has been shown to improve the unwanted effects of the syndrome, improving delirium, mortality data, length of stay in ICU, and above all, being useful in weaning from mechanical ventilation. Objective: Describing whether critically ill patients admitted to intensive care units show signs of improvements in the different components of post-intensive care syndrome after implementing the ABCDEF bundle. Methods: A systematic review of the available literature between 2018 and 2023 was conducted, in the PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science (WOS) databases. Results: Finally, 11 articles were included to be part of this work. Most of the studies analyzed agree that the ABCDEF bundle is useful for minimizing certain components of the post-intensive care syndrome, and other aspects of the disease process of the patient admitted to the ICU. Discussion. The ABCDEF bundle represents an aid in promoting a faster and more complete recovery of critically ill patients. The results improve exponentially with the use of the bundle, according to several authors. It has also been associated with improvements in other secondary aspects such as reducing mechanical ventilation time, length of hospital stay or mortality

☐ ☆ ✇ NURE Investigación

Desde el cuidado a la igualdad: enfermeras como agentes de cambio

Por: Rosa Martínez Ortega — Febrero 1st 2026 at 00:00

A lo largo de la historia, el feminismo ha sido clave para el desarrollo de los derechos de las mujeres hacia la igualdad. A principios del siglo XX, las mujeres obtuvieron el derecho al voto en muchos países, un hito significativo en la reivindicación por la igualdad política. Además, lograron la promoción educativa y el derecho a ejercer profesiones liberales, accediendo a la educación en igualdad de condiciones que los hombres, lo que les permitió desarrollar sus capacidades y aspirar a mejores oportunidades laborales. Las mujeres también han luchado por el reconocimiento de sus derechos sexuales y reproductivos, incluyendo el acceso a métodos anticonceptivos y la libertad de decidir sobre su propio cuerpo. Este articulo hace un recorido por las demandas claves que las enfermeras deben plantear en el Día Internacional de las Mujeres y las Niñas, enfocándose en educación de calidad, empoderamiento económico, erradicación de la violencia de género, promoción de la igualdad de género y participación global en sostenibilidad. Estas acciones son esenciales para avanzar hacia una sociedad más justa e igualitaria.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Generating actionable insights to support point-of-care suicide risk decision-making in a safety-net healthcare system: a machine learning approach to predicting dynamic risk of intentional self-harm

Por: Sarkar · J. · Ghosh · A. · Liu · S. · Martinez · B. · Teigen · K. · Rush · J. A. · Blackwell · J.-M. · Shaikh · S. · Claassen · C. — Enero 29th 2026 at 14:19
Background

Suicide rates have increased over the last couple of decades globally, particularly in the United States and among populations with lower economic status who present at safety-net healthcare systems. Recently, predictive models for suicide risk have shown promise; however, a model for this specific population does not exist.

Objective

To develop a predictive risk model of suicide and intentional self-harm (ISH) for patients presenting at the psychiatric emergency department (ED) of JPS Health Network, a safety net medical and mental healthcare system in Texas.

Methods

The study used structured and unstructured electronic medical record (EMR) data (2015–2019) and local medical examiner data (2015–2020) to create predictors and outcome variables. All psychiatric ED notes during calendar years 2018 and 2019 were reviewed using natural language processing to identify presentations for any level of self-harm and subsequent manual review of identified visits to accurately classify ED presentations for treatment of an act of intentional self-harm meeting study criteria. Data from 15 987 patients were used to develop and validate a machine learning-based predictive model that leverages rolling window methodology to predict risk repeatedly across a patient’s trajectory. Feature engineering played a prominent role in defining new predictors.

Findings

The best model (XGBoost) achieved the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.81 for 30-day predictions and demonstrated concentration of ISH and suicide attempt events in high-risk quantiles of risk (65% had events in top 0.1% quantile). The predicted risk can be translated into a propensity of events (80% at the highest predicted risk) to facilitate clinical interpretation.

Conclusions

Machine learning-based models can be used with standard EMRs to identify patients presenting at the psychiatric ED with a high risk of ISH and suicide attempts within the next 30 days.

Clinical implications

Integration of a predictive model can significantly aid clinical decision-making in safety-net psychiatric EDs.

☐ ☆ ✇ Cultura de los cuidados

Historias de opresión y violencia previo al diagnóstico de VIH en mujeres indígenas del sur de México

Introducción: Entre los trastornos más importantes que genera la violencia en la salud de la mujer se encuentra la depresión, ansiedad, estrés postraumático, intento de suicidio, trastornos de la alimentación, aunado al incremento del riesgo de contraer Infecciones de Transmisión Sexual como el VIH. Objetivo: Indagar los tipos de violencias vivida en las mujeres indígenas, antes del diagnóstico de VIH. Metodología: Se realizó un estudio cualitativo etnográfico, la información se triangulo a través de la observación participante y entrevistas semiestructuradas a 10 mujeres mexicanas de tres comunidades indígenas de la etnia chinanteca, mayores de 18 años de edad, con diagnóstico de VIH de más de un año. Se realizó análisis del discurso crítico. Resultados: Las opresiones vividas por las mujeres se describieron en 3 categorías: Historias de violencia de género durante la infancia y adolescencia, Detonadores de la violencia: alcoholismo del padre, pobreza extrema y bajo nivel educativo y Naturalización comunitaria de los mandatos de género. Conclusiones: Los tipos de violencia que viven estas mujeres necesitan ser problematizados desde los derechos humanos, perspectiva de género y de la salud pública por investigadores y profesionales de la salud.

 

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

UNIversity students LIFEstyle behaviours and Mental health cohort (UNILIFE-M): study protocol of a multicentre, prospective cohort study

Por: Schuch · F. B. · Waclawoscky · A. · Tornquist · D. · Oyeyemi · A. L. · Sadarangani · K. P. · Takano · K. · Teychenne · M. · Balanza-Martinez · V. · ONeil · A. · Romain · A. J. · McGrath · A. · Alselmi · A. · Andrade-Lima · A. · Zanetti · A. C. G. · Trompetero-Gonzalez · A.-C. · Heiss — Enero 12th 2026 at 15:08
Introduction

Students enrolling in higher education often adopt lifestyles linked to worse mental health, potentially contributing to the peak age onset of mental health problems in early adulthood. However, extensive research is limited by focusing on single lifestyle behaviours, including single time points, within limited cultural contexts, and focusing on a limited set of mental health symptoms.

Methods and analysis

The UNIversity students’ LIFEstyle behaviours and Mental health cohort (UNILIFE-M) is a prospective worldwide cohort study aiming to investigate the associations between students’ lifestyle behaviours and mental health symptoms during their college years. The UNILIFE-M will gather self-reported data through an online survey on mental health symptoms (ie, depression, anxiety, mania, sleep problems, substance abuse, inattention/hyperactivity and obsessive/compulsive thoughts/behaviours) and lifestyle behaviours (ie, diet, physical activity, substance use, stress management, social support, restorative sleep, environment and sedentary behaviour) over 3.5 years. Participants of 69 universities from 28 countries (300 per site) will be assessed at university admission in the 2023 and/or the 2024 academic year and followed up for 1, 2 and 3.5 years.

Ethics and dissemination

The study was first approved at a national level in Brazil (CAE:63025822.8.1001.5346). Study sites outside Brazil obtained additional ethics approval from their institutions using the main approval. Results from the UNILIFE-M cohort will be disseminated through scientific publications, presentations at scientific meetings, press releases, the general media and social media.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Optimising time-limited trials in acute respiratory failure: a multicentre focused ethnography protocol

Por: Kruser · J. M. · Wiegmann · D. A. · Nadig · N. R. · Secunda · K. E. · Hanlon · B. M. · Moy · J. X. · Ahmad · A. · Campbell · E. G. · Donnelly · H. K. · Martinez · F. J. · Polley · M. · Orhan · C. · Korth · E. · Stalter · L. N. · Rowe · T. J. · Wu · A. L. · Viglianti · E. M. · Eisinger · E — Diciembre 15th 2025 at 06:41
Introduction

The ‘time-limited trial’ for patients with critical illness is a collaborative plan made by clinicians, patients and families to use life-sustaining therapies for a defined duration. After this period, the patient’s response to therapy informs decisions about continuing recovery-focused care or transitioning to comfort-focused care. The promise of time-limited trials to help navigate the uncertain limits and benefits of life-sustaining therapies has been extensively discussed in the palliative and critical care literature, leading to their dissemination into clinical practice. However, we have little evidence to guide clinicians in how to conduct time-limited trials, leading to substantial variation in how and why they are currently used. The overall purpose of this study is to characterise the features of an optimal time-limited trial through a rich understanding of how they are currently shaping critical care delivery.

Methods and analysis

We are conducting an observational, multicentre, focused ethnography of time-limited trials in patients with acute respiratory failure receiving invasive mechanical ventilation in six intensive care units (ICUs) within five hospitals across the US. Study participants include patients, their surrogate decision makers and ICU clinicians. We are pursuing two complementary analyses of this rich data set using the open-ended, inductive approach of constructivist grounded theory and, in parallel, the structured, deductive methods of systems engineering. This cross-disciplinary, tailored approach intentionally preserves the tension between time-limited trials’ conceptual formulation and their heterogeneous, real-world use.

Ethics and dissemination

This study has been reviewed and approved by the University of Wisconsin Institutional Review Board (IRB) as the single IRB (ID: 2022-1681; initial approval date 23 January 2023). Our findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publication, conference presentations, and summaries for the public.

Trial registration number

NCT06042621.

☐ ☆ ✇ PLOS ONE Medicine&Health

“This needs to be told to everyone”: Content analysis of written immediate responses from an online experiment examining health warning messages about alcohol consumption and breast cancer risk

Por: Allison Anbari · Zachary Massey · Abigail Adediran · Na Wang · LaRissa Lawrie · Priscilla Martinez · Denis McCarthy — Diciembre 12th 2025 at 15:00

by Allison Anbari, Zachary Massey, Abigail Adediran, Na Wang, LaRissa Lawrie, Priscilla Martinez, Denis McCarthy

Alcohol consumption increases breast cancer risk. We evaluated the responses of 748 United States female participants ages 21–29 to health warning messages addressing the relationship between alcohol consumption and increased breast cancer risk. In an online experiment, participants were randomly assigned to view standalone health warning messages about alcohol, breast cancer, and breast cancer health effects with varying picture and text attributes. Participants then completed post-message exposure assessments that included an immediate open-ended response to the message prompt. We conducted a qualitative content analysis of the responses and coded deductively based on constructs from the Message Impact Framework including message reactions, attitudes and beliefs, and behavioral intentions. These constructs and corresponding variables were present in participants’ responses. Response type did not vary by participants’ demographics or the attributes of the health warning message they viewed. The code new information was applied to 20% of the responses, indicating that those participants had no prior knowledge of alcohol and breast cancer risk. Alcohol and breast cancer messaging could impact drinking behaviors. Given the frequency of responses indicating a lack of awareness, more work in cancer prevention and population health messaging is warranted.
☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Health impact of alcohol use in the USA: a protocol of a systematic review and modelling study

Por: Shield · K. · Keyes · K. · Martinez · P. · Milam · A. J. · Rehm · J. · George · S. · Naimi · T. S. — Noviembre 27th 2025 at 03:23
Introduction

Alcohol is consumed by an estimated 137.4 million people in the USA 12 years of age and older and, as a result, is estimated to have caused about 140 thousand deaths among people 20 to 64 years of age each year from 2015 up to and including 2019.

Methods

The proposed review of the evidence on alcohol’s impact on health aims to produce conclusions to inform the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2026–2030. A multi-method approach will be utilised to formulate conclusions on (i) weekly (ie, average) thresholds to minimise long-term and short-term risks of morbidity and mortality, (ii) daily thresholds to minimise the short-term risk of injury or acute illness due to per occasion drinking, (iii) alcohol use among vulnerable populations (eg, pregnant women) and (iv) situations and circumstances that are hazardous for alcohol use. To inform expert decisions, this project will also include a systematic review of existing low-risk drinking guidelines, a systematic review of meta-analyses which examine alcohol’s impact on key attributable disease and mortality outcomes, and of estimates of the lifetime absolute risk of alcohol-attributable mortality and morbidity based on a person’s sex and average level of alcohol use. The systematic reviews were designed in accordance with the preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P). The preliminary conclusions produced as a result of this project will undergo public consultation, and data from these consultations will be qualitatively analysed. The results of the public consultations will be used to further revise and refine the project’s conclusions.

Ethics and registration

The study was granted an ethics exemption as only secondary data sources and unidentifiable public consultation will be utilised. Systematic reviews are pre-registered with PROSPERO (registration numbers CRD42024584924 and CRD42024584948).

Dissemination

This project will establish a scientific consensus concerning alcohol’s impact on health. This consensus is imperative for informing the upcoming Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2026–2030, and for better informing individuals about the health risks associated with alcohol use.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Individualised dosimetry for holmium-166 RE in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma; a multi-centre, interventional, non-randomised, non-comparative, open label, phase II study: RHEPaiR

Por: Qurashi · M. · Martinez · M. · Ward · C. · Wyard · C. · Izadi · H. · Bowen · C. · Khan · S. R. · Tait · P. · Smits · M. · de Bruijne · J. · Thomas · R. · Lam · M. G. E. H. · Sharma · R. — Noviembre 20th 2025 at 07:42
Introduction

Radioembolisation (RE) is gaining traction as a robust treatment option for patients with hepatocellular cancer (HCC) across all cancer stages. RE allows the delivery of targeted high-dose radiation directly to tumours, with relative sparing of the surrounding liver tissue. Traditionally, radiation has been delivered using 90Yttrium ([90Y]Y)-labelled microspheres, either glass or resin. The success of RE is dependent on the dose delivered to the tumour. When using [90Y]Y microspheres, dose prediction is calculated through a 99mTechnitium ([99mTc]Tc)-macroaggregated albumin (MAA) scan, which allows the calculation of the dose to be administered to the tumour. However, [99mTc]Tc-MAA is not a true surrogate of [90Y]Y microspheres, and this will impact on the final dose delivered. [166Ho]Ho, like [90Y]Y, is a beta emitter but unlike [90Y]Y also emits gamma-radiation, allowing for quantitative nuclear imaging. The primary aim of this pilot study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of dosimetry-based individualised 166Holmium ([166Ho]Ho-RE) in patients with HCC.

Methods and analysis

15 eligible participants will be recruited to receive [166Ho]Ho-RE. The primary objective is to establish the toxicity profile of dosimetry-based individualised [166Ho]Ho-RE. The secondary objective is to assess efficacy as measured by modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumours (mRECIST) and Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumours (RECIST) 1.1 criteria. Additional exploratory objectives include quality of life assessment and identification of a radiomic signature of response. The results from this study will be combined with the prospective iHEPAR study to form a larger analysis.

Ethics and dissemination

The study has received approval from the East Midlands—Nottingham 1 Research Ethics Committee—approval number 23/EM/0239. The study will be performed in compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki and the principles of Good Clinical Practice. Signed informed consent will be obtained from each patient before study entry. The results will be disseminated through publication in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.

Trial registration number

Clinicaltrials.gov NCT06302400.

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