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.
A retrospective, multicentric cohort study.
Four academic hospitals in Madrid, Spain.
18 190 patients referred for a first haematologist appointment for 11 included presenting complaints.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Severe mental illness such as psychosis is among the most disabling illnesses worldwide, disproportionately affecting minoritised ethnic groups and those in socioeconomic disadvantage. In the UK, people from Black ethnic backgrounds are more likely to experience a first episode of psychosis and to be detained under the Mental Health Act than White British people. There is a clear need for mental health services to improve cultural awareness and understanding of the broader social needs of minoritised groups, as well as the need to improve mental health literacy (MHL) within Black communities to empower individuals to seek timely mental health support. This protocol describes our programme of work which aims to assess the feasibility, acceptability and cost-effectiveness of Co-STARS, which is a co-produced, culturally appropriate tiered training package.
We co-produced a culturally appropriate, place-based, tiered MHL training package (Co-STARS) to deliver within underserved Black communities and via an e-learning package implemented among staff within mental health trusts. The training will be evaluated in stages. First, a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial will assess the feasibility and acceptability (defined as participants’ perceptions of the training’s relevance, usefulness and delivery) of a lived experience-led MHL training package delivered by Black young people with experience of mental ill health, to underserved communities in Birmingham, UK. Acceptability will be quantified through participation and completion rates and explored qualitatively via focus groups and interviews. Second, a stepped-wedge cluster randomised trial will evaluate the feasibility of an e-learning training programme for mental health professionals. We will embed a process evaluation to explore change mechanisms and identify barriers and enablers for future implementation. Third, we will use realist-informed participatory systems mapping and novel epidemiological analyses to explore downstream effects (ie, improved care access for Black ethno-racial groups within the intervention areas). Last, a cost-effectiveness framework will be developed to assess whether the intervention is good value for money in future efficacy trials. In the cluster trial, eight clusters will be randomised to the intervention arm (face-to-face training in the community) and control arm (display of MHL materials) with pre- and post-assessments in 120 participants from 8 clusters, 3 weeks apart. In the stepped wedge trial, six clusters (clinical teams within NHS mental health trusts) including 120 NHS staff in total, will move from control phase to intervention phase in a stepped wedge manner, with pre-assessments and post-assessments.
This proposal was reviewed by the Research Governance of the University of Birmingham and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) grant reviewers. Ethics approval was granted by East of Scotland Research Ethics Service. The findings will be communicated in research conferences, stakeholder meetings, via social media, through publication in peer-reviewed journals and as a policy document.
To identify barriers and facilitators to implementing an electronic shared decision-making tool for managing anticoagulant-related drug-drug interactions that affect bleeding risk in routine clinical care.
Preimplementation qualitative study using semistructured interviews.
Three academic medical centres in the southeastern and western USA. Interviews were conducted between 27 March and 25 September 2024.
36 participants, including 19 clinicians involved in prescribing or managing anticoagulants and seventeen patients prescribed anticoagulants, were recruited using purposive and convenience sampling.
Participants identified multiple barriers and facilitators to tool implementation. Common barriers included limited visit time, challenges integrating the tool into existing workflows, role and scope-of-practice constraints, and variation in patient digital literacy. Facilitators included clear visualisation of bleeding risk, access to supporting evidence, familiar interface design and perceived potential to support patient engagement and shared decision-making. Several determinants functioned as both barriers and facilitators, depending on clinical context and user role.
This preimplementation qualitative study identified context-specific determinants that influence the adoption of an electronic shared decision-making tool for anticoagulant-related drug–drug interactions. Findings highlight the importance of early attention to workflow integration, role alignment and usability to support uptake in routine care. Addressing these factors during design and implementation may inform strategies to support adoption and future evaluation in real-world clinical settings.
This study aimed to investigate the association between smoking behaviours during early pregnancy and the risk and severity of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), with a particular focus on smoking status, smoking intensity and secondhand smoke exposure.
Secondary analysis of prospectively collected cohort data.
Multi-centre study conducted in South Korea (Korean Pregnancy Outcome Study) between March 2013 and January 2017.
From 4537 pregnant women initially enrolled, 3457 singleton pregnancies were included after excluding cases with transfer, loss to follow-up, twin pregnancies, miscarriages and pre-existing diabetes mellitus. All participants were women of Korean ethnicity.
Primary outcome was GDM and its subtypes (A1GDM: diet-controlled; A2GDM: insulin-requiring). Secondary outcomes were associations with active smoking (before pregnancy and during early pregnancy), smoking intensity dose–response relationships (pack-years) and secondhand smoke exposure among never-smokers.
Among 3457 participants, 231 women (6.7%) were diagnosed with GDM (198 A1GDM, 33 A2GDM). Active smoking before pregnancy (adjusted OR (aOR) 3.98, 95% CI 1.58 to 9.30) and during early pregnancy (aOR 9.90, 95% CI 2.97 to 29.45) were significantly associated with A2GDM, while no significant association was observed with A1GDM. A clear dose-response relationship was observed, with smoking intensity >4 pack-years markedly increasing A2GDM risk (aOR 20.68, 95% CI 6.75 to 59.39). Detailed pack-year analysis showed 4–6 pack-years (aOR 20.57, 95% CI 5.80 to 65.46) and >6 pack-years (aOR 25.98, 95% CI 3.21 to 146.45). Among never-smokers, secondhand smoke exposure showed a borderline association with overall GDM risk (aOR 1.33, 95% CI 0.98 to 1.81).
Maternal active smoking before and during early pregnancy, as well as higher smoking intensity, was associated with an increased risk of pharmacologically treated GDM (A2GDM). Although secondhand smoke exposure did not reach statistical significance, the trend suggested a potential association with GDM risk among never-smokers. These findings provide important evidence for public health strategies for prenatal care, as smoking cessation and environmental smoke avoidance during prenatal and early antenatal care in women reduce the risk of gestational diabetes.
This study aims to evaluate relationships between self-reported fine motor ability and quality of life (assessed by life satisfaction and life problems) from people with spinal cord injury (SCI) at T1 and above.
Observational cohort study (current analysis from a cross section)
279 individuals with SCI at T1 or above
Community members sampled from records from two Midwestern hospitals and a speciality hospital in the Southeast United States
Fine motor ability was assessed via the Spinal Cord Injury Functional Index-Short Form 9A, while two facets of quality of life, life satisfaction and life problems, were assessed by the Life Situation Questionnaire-Revised version (LSQ-R). Pearson correlations and multivariate analysis were utilised to identify cross-sectional relationships between fine motor ability, life satisfaction and life problems.
Fine motor ability was positively correlated with total life satisfaction score (r=0.16; p=0.02) and was negatively correlated with the total life problems score (r=–0.18; p=0.01), health problems factor (r=–0.24; pβ=0.25; p=0.02), fewer life problems (β=–0.40; pβ=–0.11; pβ=–0.10; p
The results identified significant, modest associations between self-reported outcomes, as better fine motor ability was related to less social isolation, fewer health problems and higher life satisfaction. Further investigation into the relationship between fine motor ability, life satisfaction and life problems is warranted.
Social connection describes how individuals connect, relate and interact with one another, and can affect quality of life (QoL) in persons with dementia. Much of the existing research on social connection does not explicitly differentiate social connection’s structure, function and quality components. Due to this, social connection is described using inconsistent terminology, making it unknown how each component is associated with health and well-being outcomes. However, for people with dementia, it is unknown which components of social connection are associated with QoL and whether factors such as gender and type of dementia influence these relationships. This scoping review will identify which components of social connection have been studied in relation to the QoL for people with dementia. This will address inconsistent definitions of social connection terminology and clarify what components of social connection are described and measured in the existing literature.
The six-stage scoping review framework developed by Arksey and O’Malley (2005), with updates from Levac et al (2010), will be used. In March 2025, a comprehensive literature search in the following databases will be conducted: MEDLINE ALL (Ovid), APA PsycInfo (Ovid), Embase Classic and Embase (Ovid), CINAHL Complete (EBSCOhost) and Scopus, from database inception. Studies will be included if they are observational studies reporting on an association between social connection and QoL in community-dwelling people with dementia. In Covidence, two reviewers will independently screen the titles and abstracts and review full-text articles based on the inclusion criteria. Data extraction will be carried out by one reviewer and cross-checked by another reviewer. A content analysis for scoping reviews will be used to analyse data and synthesise findings.
Ethical approval is not required. Dissemination activities will include peer-reviewed publications, academic presentations and lay summaries on professional websites and social media.
Glucocorticoid therapy is prescribed for a variety of inflammatory conditions and is associated with severe adverse effects. A glucocorticoid withdrawal syndrome (GWS) may occur after prolonged glucocorticoid treatment—with or without biochemical glucocorticoid-induced adrenal insufficiency (GIAI). Previously, GWS was not considered an entity, probably due to the overlap between symptoms of GWS and GIAI. The Addison’s disease-specific quality of life questionnaire (AddiQoL-30) is a validated tool for quantifying symptoms of adrenal insufficiency resembling GWS. In the present study, we test the hypothesis that patients with a low AddiQoL-30 score and/or low cortisol response to a short Synacthen test (SST), after cessation of prednisolone treatment, may benefit from low-dose hydrocortisone therapy without increasing the risk of metabolic and cardiovascular disease during prolonged cortisol exposure.
REPLACE is a multi-centre, double-blinded, placebo-controlled randomised controlled trial in patients with polymyalgia rheumatica or giant cell arteritis after cessation of prednisolone treatment. Criteria for randomisation are an AddiQoL-30 score ≤85 and/or plasma cortisol response to SST, 30-min p-cortisol >100 and 85; and (2) patients with a SST-stimulated cortisol ≤100 nmol/L.
The study is conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, registered at the Clinical Trials Information System (CTIS: 2024-513822-53-00) and Clinicaltrials.gov (NCT05193396), and publications will be in accordance with the recommendations of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. The trial is monitored by local independent Good Clinical Practice units and overseen by the Danish Data Protection Agency (journal no. 21/27119), the Regional Committees on Health Research Ethics for Southern Denmark (project ID: S-20210076), the Danish Patient Safety Authority and the Danish Medicines Agency.
To evaluate the efficacy of melatonin, a neurohormone regulating the sleep–wake cycle, in preventing delirium within 5 days of hospitalisation among older adult patients (≥65 years) admitted to general medical wards.
Single-centre, double-blinded, randomised, placebo-controlled trial.
General medical wards of a tertiary hospital in Oman.
Patients aged ≥65 years admitted within 24 hours to general medical wards were screened. Key exclusion criteria included prevalent delirium, use of vasopressors, non-invasive ventilation, intensive or high-dependency unit admission and aphasia.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive either 5 mg or 8 mg of melatonin or a placebo nightly for up to 5 days during hospitalisation or until discharge, whichever occurred first.
The primary outcome was the incidence of delirium within 5 days, assessed using the 3-Minute Diagnostic Confusion Assessment Method. Secondary outcomes included delirium treatment, average sleep duration or sleep maintained, 28-day mortality and 28-day readmission. Analyses followed the intention-to-treat (ITT) principle, with per-protocol (PP) analyses conducted for robustness.
The study was terminated early due to futility. At termination, a total of 115 participants were recruited, 109 of whom were included in the ITT analyses: 55 in the melatonin group (5 mg or 8 mg) and 54 in the placebo group. The overall incidence of delirium by day 5 was 2.75%, 3.64% in the melatonin group and 1.85% in the placebo group (p=1.000). No statistically significant differences were found in the average sleep duration (p=0.136), 28-day mortality (3.64% vs 1.85%, p=1.000) or 28-day readmission (21.82% vs 20.37%, p=0.853). PP analyses and subgroup sensitivity yielded similar findings.
In this trial, melatonin did not significantly reduce the incidence of delirium. The lower-than-expected numbers of outcome events and resultant early termination for futility limited the study’s power. As a result, the study findings should be interpreted with caution, and further research is necessary before definitive recommendations can be made.
This study aimed to examine the prevalence of suicide attempts among Korean adolescents before, during and after the COVID-19 pandemic and explore cross-sectional associations with demographic, psychological, behavioural and academic characteristics.
Cross-sectional analysis of three nationally representative survey waves.
The Korean Youth Risk Behavior Survey (KYRBS), an annual school-based nationwide survey in South Korea.
Adolescents with available data on key variables who participated in the 2017 (n=61 861), 2020 (n=54 809) and 2023 (n=52 802) KYRBS.
The primary outcome was a suicide attempt in the past 12 months. Secondary measures included age, sex, perceived socioeconomic status, sadness, perceived stress, alcohol use, tobacco use, lifetime drug use and subjective academic performance. These variables were measured using standardised single-item questions in the KYRBS, whereas associations were examined using multivariable logistic regression models adjusting for all covariates.
Several characteristics demonstrated consistent associations with suicide attempts. In 2017, suicide attempts were most strongly associated with sadness (OR 6.47, 95% CI 5.68 to 7.37), drug use (OR 5.60, 95% CI 4.34 to 7.24) and stress (OR 1.74, 95% CI 1.63 to 1.85). During the pandemic (2020), sadness (OR 6.35, 95% CI 5.39 to 7.48), drug use (OR 4.56, 95% CI 3.38 to 6.14) and stress (OR 2.10, 95% CI 1.94 to 2.28) preserved the strong association. In 2023, the associations persisted for sadness (OR 5.06, 95% CI 4.48 to 5.71), drug use (OR 5.31, 95% CI 4.42 to 6.39) and tobacco use (OR 2.53, 95% CI 2.15 to 2.98). Socioeconomic status showed no significant association in 2017 (OR 0.98, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.04) but demonstrated modest associations in 2020 (OR 0.91, 95% CI 0.85 to 0.97) and 2023 (OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.84 to 0.94). Subjective academic performance showed inverse associations in 2017 (OR 0.92, 95% CI 0.88 to 0.96) and 2020 (OR 0.92, 95% CI 0.87 to 0.97) but not in 2023 (OR 0.96, 95% CI 0.92 to 1.00).
Across three survey years, suicide attempts among Korean adolescents co-occurred with multiple emotional, behavioural and contextual characteristics. The magnitude of these associations varied before, during and after the pandemic, suggesting that broader social and educational conditions may shape patterns of distress linked with suicidal behaviour. Integrated approaches addressing overlapping emotional, behavioural and socioeconomic challenges may support youth suicide prevention efforts.
To assess human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine awareness and uptake among caregivers in rural Indigenous communities in Guatemala and to identify sociodemographic predictors of vaccine unawareness and non-uptake.
This cross-sectional survey was conducted across 12 rural Indigenous communities in Guatemala’s Central Highlands. Using a community-engaged research approach, trained multilingual health workers administered surveys in Spanish, Kaqchikel or K’iche’. Eligible participants were adults who served as primary caregivers to children. The survey assessed HPV vaccine awareness, vaccine attitudes and uptake among those with daughters aged 8 or older. Logistic regression was used to examine predictors of vaccine unawareness and bivariate analysis explored differences in vaccine uptake.
Among 602 participants (92.5% identified as Indigenous), 95% expressed willingness to vaccinate a child against cervical cancer, yet only 56% had heard of the HPV vaccine. Of the 175 participants with eligible daughters, only 33.7% reported vaccination. Indigenous identity, older age and illiteracy were significantly associated with HPV vaccine unawareness. Speaking an Indigenous language at home was associated with greater awareness. Departmental differences were significant: participants from Sololá were more likely to be unaware of the vaccine, while those from Sacatepéquez had higher awareness and uptake. Community partners noted that access to information, geographic connectivity and social desirability may influence both awareness and response accuracy.
Despite strong willingness to vaccinate, significant knowledge gaps persist among Indigenous caregivers. Tailored, community-informed education strategies—delivered through trusted channels and adapted linguistically and culturally—are urgently needed to increase awareness and uptake of the HPV vaccine in underserved Guatemalan communities.
The 2013–2016 Western African outbreak of the Ebola virus disease (EVD), the largest recorded outbreak since the discovery of Ebola virus (EBOV) in 1976, destabilised local health systems and left thousands of survivors at risk for postacute sequelae, including vision-threatening uveitis. In an EVD survivor with severe panuveitis, the detection of persistent EBOV in the aqueous humour, long after clearance of acute viremia, focused clinical and research attention on the host-EBOV interaction in the unique terrain of ocular immune privilege. Despite the recognition that uveitis is common and consequential in EVD survivors, our understanding of pathogenesis is extremely limited, including the contributions of viral persistence and ocular-specific and systemic immune responses to disease expression. In this study protocol, we outline a multifaceted approach to characterise EVD-associated intraocular inflammation, including the clinical phenotype and complications; the presence of EBOV (or EBOV RNA/antigen) in ocular fluids and tissues; and associated local ocular-specific and peripheral immune responses.
We use an observational cohort design, which includes EVD survivors and close contacts of EVD survivors (ie, no documented history of EVD), and we propose disease (clinical examination and imaging), as well as molecular, virologic and immunologic characterisation, to meet research objectives.
This study has received Institutional Review Board approval from University of Nebraska Medical Centre, Emory University and Sierra Leone Ministry of Health. Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications.
To describe the point prevalence of major ECG abnormalities, their coexistence with screen-detected cardiovascular disease (CVD) and the proportion requiring referral for cardiac work-up and interventions.
A population-based cohort study.
Primary and secondary care settings in Denmark.
Since 2014, all 67-year-old Danish men and women from Viborg municipality were invited to the ‘Viborg Screening Programme’ (VISP).
VISP includes screening for lower extremity artery disease (LEAD), carotid plaque (CP), abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), hypertension, diabetes mellitus and cardiac conditions.
A single resting 12-lead ECG was recorded and coded using the Minnesota criteria. Major ECG abnormalities were divided into rhythm and rate disorders, signs of myocardial damage and conduction disorders.
Over the first 5 years, 4612 (83.8% of those invited) were screened, with 4437 (96.4%) undergoing an ECG. We found major ECG abnormalities in 152 (3.4%), including 92 (2.1%) rhythm and rate disorders, 28 (0.6%) with signs of myocardial damage and 32 (0.7%) with conduction disorders. Fifty-nine (1.3%) had newly screen-detected ECG abnormalities, and 34 (0.8%) required intervention after cardiac consultation (32 medication adjustments and/or 11 advanced treatments). Participants with major ECG abnormalities had a higher frequency of coexisting CVD, including CP (46.4% vs 38.1%; p=0.040), LEAD (9.5% vs 5.3%; p=0.026) and AAA (2.7% vs 0.9%; p=0.032) and were also more common in men than in women (4.7% vs 2.2%; p
This study provides a detailed overview of major ECG abnormalities in a population-based cardiovascular screening context. Although the yield of ECG screening was low, ECG may still add value as a simple and low-cost tool within multimodal programmes, enabling timely detection and treatment.
Rosacea is a chronic skin condition characterised by papules, pustules, transient erythema (flushing), persistent erythema, telangiectasia and phymatous changes. Rosacea can be associated with substantial effects on quality of life. Rosacea is most commonly treated with topical therapy, but little is known about the relative efficacy of these treatment options.
Since most randomised controlled trials of topical rosacea therapies do not include active comparators (ie, head-to-head comparisons), indirect comparisons must be made to understand the relative efficacy, safety and tolerability of these treatment options. The aim of this study is to conduct a living network meta-analysis evaluating topical therapies for moderate to severe rosacea. The results of this study can guide clinical decision-making and improve patient outcomes.
Data search will be conducted in the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Ovid MEDLINE, Web of Science and Embase. Screening of titles, abstracts and full papers, as well as data extraction, will be conducted by two independent researchers in duplicate. Primary outcomes will include mean change in absolute lesion count, Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) and treatment discontinuation for adverse events or side effects. Secondary outcomes will include percentage change in lesion count, changes in quality of life, Patient Global Assessment, Clinician Erythema Assessment (CEA) and change in rosacea facial redness. For each outcome with enough qualified data, a network meta-analysis using a random-effects model will be carried out. We plan for a living review with continuous updating of the analysis as new treatments become available.
Dissemination in a peer-reviewed scientific journal is planned.
CRD420251103231.
Interstitial lung diseases (ILD) associated with an underlying connective tissue disease (CTD), also known as a systemic autoimmune rheumatic disease or SARD, are chronic conditions with a tendency to progress. CTD-ILDs are increasingly diagnosed and pose an important global health challenge. This systematic review aims to provide an overarching evaluation of their epidemiology and disease burden in Asia. In this review, the term CTD-ILD will be used to denote all major forms of ILD arising in the context of a SARD.
This systematic review will adhere to the standards of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, including a flow diagram to depict the process by four independent reviewers that will assess titles and abstracts against the following predetermined criteria. A systematic review of the literature search published from 2000 to 2024 will be conducted using five electronic databases including PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, EMBASE, Cochrane Library and Web of Science. Publications that meet the inclusion criteria of this review will be subjected to a full-text review to extract relevant data. Collated data will be analysed and organised into categories based on the expected outcome and objectives. The quality of published evidence, including heterogeneity across studies, will be checked against PRISMA checklists and assessed by Newcastle-Ottawa Scale.
Ethics approval is not applicable for this study since no original data will be collected. The findings of this review will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed publication in a scientific journal and conference communications, with the aim of contributing insights to the field by identifying research gaps and informing clinical practice.
The protocol of this systematic review is registered with the National Medical & Research Register (ID-24–03600-GUB) and International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews PROSPERO (CRD420251037095).
The Veterans Health Administration (VA) integrated mental and physical health services to better detect and treat depression. Primary care nurses conduct screening annually. Clinicians, including Primary Care Mental Health Integration (PCMHI) specialists, follow-up as needed for treatment. Depression detection and management processes are complex, involve multilevel stakeholders, and are subject to significant disruption from COVID-19 and from the resulting expansion of telehealth, aiming to preserve care access. This study aimed to examine whether the COVID-19 pandemic worsened depression-related care quality and/or patient outcomes (eg, suicide).
Given hypothesised care disruption (lowered care quality) during COVID-19, we will first assess the VA population’s trajectory from a new positive depression (and suicide risk) screen to appropriate treatment (ie, medication, therapy) in the Fiscal Year 2019–2323. We will also examine the changing mix of virtual and in-person depression care delivered. Second, we will use interrupted time series analyses to explore the extent to which psychiatric emergency visits and hospitalisations may be mitigated by clinician detection of depression. As well as compare mental health-related mortality rates between patients detected and not detected to have depression. Subanalyses will reveal where (eg, clinics with low PCMHI access) and for whom (eg, minorities) detection does not systematically occur, and downstream negative sequelae, to guide future intervention. Finally, we will interview 40 veterans, half of whom were detected and half not detected to have depression and 40 VA primary care and PCMHI providers about changes brought on by the pandemic and the expansion of virtual care across three VA facilities. In addition to contextualising disrupted care findings, qualitative data will help identify best practices on patient-to-provider and provider-to-provider interactions in hybrid in-person/telehealth depression care models.
Ethics approval was granted by the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System Institutional Review Board. Alongside journal publications, dissemination activities include briefings to our policy and operational partners, and presentations to clinical, research and policy-oriented audiences.
Many patients receive oral anticoagulation for reduced stroke risk in atrial fibrillation or as treatment or prevention of venous thromboembolism. Oral factor Xa inhibitors (oral FXaI, eg, apixaban, edoxaban or rivaroxaban) are commonly prescribed for this indication. Dabigatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor, is similarly approved. In vitro and animal model evidence suggests that dabigatran also has direct effects on Staphylococcus aureus virulence and infection. Observational data have shown that dabigatran users are less likely to develop S. aureus bacteremia (SAB), and a small randomised controlled trial showed that dabigatran has anti-S. aureus effects when compared with low molecular weight heparins during bloodstream infection. We seek to answer whether dabigatran is superior to the oral FXaIs in achieving better SAB outcomes among patients who independently require oral anticoagulation. We report the intervention-specific protocol, embedded in an adaptive platform trial.
The S. aureus Network Adaptive Platform (SNAP) trial [NCT05137119] is a pragmatic, randomised, multicentre adaptive platform trial that compares different SAB therapies for 90-day mortality rates. For this intervention (‘Dabi-SNAP’), patients receiving therapy with an oral FXaI will be randomised to continue as usual or to change to dabigatran as of the next scheduled dose. All subjects will receive standard of care antibiotics and/or antibiotics allocated through other active domains in the platform. As the choice of anticoagulant may not demonstrate large differences in mortality, a ranked composite of death and adverse outcomes (Desirability of Outcome Ranking, or DOOR) was chosen as the primary outcome.
The study is conditionally approved by the research ethics board of the McGill University Health Centre: identifier 2025-10900. Trial results will be published open access in a peer-reviewed journal and presented at a global infectious disease conference. The trial is registered at clinicaltrials.gov with the identifier NCT06650501.
Post-COVID syndrome manifests with a diverse array of symptoms for which no standard care plan currently exists. Many questions were raised by patients, which underscored the need for a validated patient-reported outcome measure (PROM). Therefore, a post-COVID module was developed to be included in the Assessment of Burden of Chronic Conditions (ABCC-) tool. The ABCC-tool evaluates and visualises the perceived physical, emotional and social burden of one or multiple chronic disease(s) using a balloon diagram and aims to facilitate person-centred care and structured discussions between patients and healthcare professionals. This study explores the patients’ perspective on the content of the ABCC-tool for post-COVID and the tool’s usability in a home-based setting.
All patients who completed the ABCC-tool for post-COVID were invited for an online semi-structured interview. We selected post-COVID patients who had used the tool in the past three months. Interviews were audio recorded and analysed using a thematic approach with Atlas.ti version 23.
Nineteen post-COVID patients (10 males, mean age 56) were interviewed between May and August 2024. The tool was regarded as user-friendly, and patients indicated they would use the tool again in the future. Patients valued the tool’s broad range of topics, some of which are often overlooked in standard healthcare consultations. The tool was comprehensible and relevant according to all patients. The balloon diagram was easy to understand, but a legend explaining the colours of the balloons was preferred. Other suggestions for improvement included adding open-text fields and periodic reminders to increase usability and adding long-term data.
The ABCC-tool is a promising instrument for post-COVID patients, offering a structured way to monitor and communicate experienced burden in addition to standard healthcare consultations. Refinements addressing usability and comprehensiveness are recommended to facilitate its integration into clinical practices.
This study aimed to understand the knowledge possessed by informal medicine vendors regarding antibiotics and antibiotic resistance, identify the perceptions held by informal medicine vendors about antibiotics and their uses and examine the practices employed by informal medicine vendors in the sale and distribution of antibiotics.
Exploratory qualitative study using semi-structured interviews and direct observations.
Markets and shops across 11 villages in the Nanoro health district, Burkina Faso.
23 informal medicine vendors, aged between 25 and 55 years and with 8–30 years of experience, were recruited through snowball sampling in the Nanoro health district of Burkina Faso.
Informal medicine vendors exhibited a limited understanding of antibiotics, often confusing them with other treatments and referring to them using local terminologies based on perceived use and effectiveness. Antibiotics were perceived as universal remedies, supported by therapeutic belief, empirical reasoning and community solidarity, with empirical diagnosis, approximate dosing and informal preparation techniques passed on through imitation. These findings emerged across themes including perceptions, symbolic attributes and sales practices.
Informal medicine vendors in rural Burkina Faso demonstrated limited understanding of antibiotics and antimicrobial resistance, with practices shaped by local beliefs and empirical experience. These findings underscore the need for context-sensitive interventions that include tailored education and regulatory engagement to improve antibiotic stewardship and mitigate the spread of resistance.
The Core Outcome Measures for Improving Dementia Care (COM-IC) project aims to develop a core outcome set for measuring the quality of care provided to people living with dementia in routine care settings. In a previous stage of the project, 17 core outcomes were identified. This study is the next step, aiming to review the literature to identify existing or recommended, validated scales for measuring the identified core outcomes.
A rapid review
Six electronic databases (PubMed, Embase (Elsevier), CINAHL Complete (EBSCOhost), APA PsycINFO (EBSCOhost), Web of Science (Clarivate) and Scopus (Elsevier) were searched. Searches were completed on 12 July 2024.
Peer-reviewed systematic reviews or original validation studies of scales measuring dignity; engagement in advance care planning; pain; quality of life; feeling safe and secure; emotional well-being; diagnosis of dementia; behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia; the importance of relationships; meaningful activities; hygiene and comfort; resource utilisation and safety incidents for people living with dementia were included. Peer-reviewed systematic reviews or original validation studies of the scales to measure informal carers’ quality of life, their educational opportunities, formal carers’ morale and dementia-specific qualifications were also included. All studies were required to have been conducted among people living with dementia or carers, as appropriate, and to have full texts available in English.
Data on the scale’s name, the number of subscales, subscales’ names, the number of items, response options, scoring, estimated time to complete the scale, recommended frequency of data collection and the setting where the scale was first validated were extracted. Findings are presented in figures, tables and narrative texts.
A total of 88 validated scales were identified. No scales measuring dignity, engagement in advance care planning, feeling safe and secure, hygiene or safety incidents were validated for people living with dementia. No scale was identified to measure the importance of relationships for people living with dementia, the formal carers’ dementia-specific qualifications or the educational opportunities for informal carers. The review also describes the 50 recommended or validated scales.
Several validated or recommended scales exist to measure core outcomes identified as important for assessing the quality of care provided to people living with dementia in routine care settings. This review offers COM-IC stakeholders and other potential users with information on the validated/recommended scales to measure these core outcomes.
The impact of anaesthesia modality on oncological outcomes in patients with high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) remains uncertain. Emerging evidence suggests that anaesthetic agents and techniques may influence tumour biology and recurrence through immunomodulatory and neuroendocrine pathways. However, prospective randomised trials comparing spinal and general anaesthesia in this population are lacking.
This single-centre, prospective, parallel-arm randomised controlled trial will enrol 370 patients with clinically suspected high-risk NMIBC undergoing transurethral resection of bladder tumour. Participants will be randomised 1:1 to receive either spinal or general anaesthesia. The primary endpoint is time to recurrence over a 104-week follow-up period. Secondary endpoints include time to progression, Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) unresponsiveness and a composite oncological event. Additional secondary outcomes include postoperative opioid consumption (morphine equivalents), obturator jerk occurrence, acute urinary retention and tolerance to immediate intravesical chemotherapy. Safety outcomes will include treatment-emergent adverse events, Clavien-Dindo graded surgical complications, haemorrhagic events and anaesthesia-related risks. Exploratory endpoints involve perioperative biomarker analyses. Data will be analysed on an intention-to-treat basis.
Recruitment has not yet started. It is expected to begin in December 2025 and to be completed by June 2029. The planned follow-up period for each participant is 104 weeks. This manuscript is based on protocol V.1.0, dated March 2025. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and conference presentations