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Upper limb amputations in Germany: a nationwide retrospective study of incidence, aetiologies and revision patterns from 2019 to 2023

Por: Abdo · B. · Lips · K. S. · Walter · N. · El Khassawna · T. · Biehl · C. · Heiss · C. · Rupp · M. · Knapp · G.
Objectives

To provide a nationwide epidemiological assessment of upper limb amputations (ULAs) in Germany, including incidence trends, underlying aetiologies, amputation levels and revision patterns, with a comparative analysis between 2019 and 2023.

Design

Nationwide retrospective cross-sectional analysis of routinely collected inpatient hospital data.

Setting

All acute-care hospitals in Germany reporting to the national Diagnosis-Related Groups and Operation and Procedure Classification System (OPS) from 2019 to 2023.

Participants

All patients undergoing ULA procedures (OPS 5-862 and 5-863) or revision procedures (OPS 5-866) within the study period. No exclusion criteria were applied.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Primary measures were annual incidence of ULAs, the distribution of amputation levels and underlying medical aetiologies. Secondary measures included the incidence of revision procedures and revision aetiologies stratified by anatomical level.

Result

A total of 5427 ULAs were performed in 2023, representing a 7.3% decrease compared with 2019 (5,852). Distal amputations remained most frequent, though proximal amputations increased proportionally over time. Above-wrist amputations were predominantly associated with malignancy (40.3%) and vascular disease (23.7%), whereas distal amputations were mainly trauma-related (43.6%). Infection-related distal amputations increased from 23.4% in 2019 to 30.4% in 2023. Revision procedures occurred in 32.4% of proximal amputations and 6.1% of distal amputations in 2023. Infection was the most common indication for distal revisions (53.3%), while infection and neuroma formation each accounted for 29.4% of proximal revisions.

Conclusions

This nationwide analysis provides a comprehensive epidemiological overview of ULAs in Germany, demonstrating stable overall incidence but clear level-specific differences in underlying aetiologies. Proximal amputations were mainly associated with malignant and vascular disease, whereas trauma predominated at distal levels. High rates of infection-related and neuroma-related revisions, particularly after proximal amputations, highlight the complexity of surgical management and the need for level-specific perioperative and follow-up strategies.

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
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.

Co‐Designing Storyboards for Multimedia Resources With Informal Carers to Support Hospital‐to‐Home Transitions for Older Adults From Culturally Diverse Backgrounds

ABSTRACT

Aim

To co-develop storyboards and scripts for multimedia resources to support the information needs of informal carers (carers) of older adults from Greek, Italian and Chinese (Cantonese- and Mandarin-speaking) Australian backgrounds during hospital-to-home transitions.

Methodology

A modified experience-based co-design methodology was used to co-develop four storyboards and scripts with Greek, Italian and Chinese Australian carers and advocates from multicultural community-aged care organisations. To promote relevance, a Carer Advisory Group guided the research. The Carer Advisory Group, comprising 10 people, included carers and advocates from participating multicultural community-aged care organisations, a social worker from a large public health service, and policy representatives. Twenty-nine participants took part from June 2023 to April 2024. Data collection involved two rounds of co-development including 2 workshops, 9 small group interviews and 11 individual interviews. Round 1 focused on understanding participants' experiences of older adult care transitions, information needs and advice for other carers. This information was used to develop categories and example quotes to draft four storyboards reflecting participants' descriptions of the carer and patient journey during care transitions. Round 2 involved draft storyboards being presented to the same participants who advised on their acceptability. Certified interpreters and translators were used throughout data collection.

Findings

The co-developed categories, four storyboards and scripts are presented. Participants and the Carer Advisory Group agreed that the findings would be used to develop multimedia resources to support the information needs of carers and older adults from Greek, Italian and Chinese Australian backgrounds in care transitions.

Conclusions and Implications

The storyboards and scripts for multimedia resources are expected to improve access to information and services for carers and older adults from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. The storyboards and scripts are examples to guide policymakers and leaders in improving transitional care in Australia and internationally.

Reporting Method

The reporting of the study has adhered to the COREQ guidelines.

Patient or Public Contribution

Informal carers were involved in the Carer Advisory Group which provided guidance and consultation to each phase of the project. Their contributions included reviewing the ethics application prior to submission for ethical review, and reviewing storyboards and scripts to optimise the relevance for informal carers and older adults.

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