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The persuasiveness of different sources of information on the decision to vaccinate. A cross-sectional study in Germany during the pandemic at the turn of the year 2021/2022

by Susanne Jordan, Sarah Jane Böttger, Sabine Zinn

Health information about vaccinations is communicated via various sources of information and is crucial for vaccination decisions. Information sources such as interpersonal sources, traditional print and digital media as well as social media offer information about the risks and benefits of vaccination. During health crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic was, some information sources provide hanging or contradictory information, alongside with misinformation and disinformation. Little is known about the relationship between the reported persuasiveness of different sources of information for individual vaccination decisions and differences in this between the vaccinated and unvaccinated. Utilizing data from 10,284 participants in the “Corona-Monitoring Nationwide” survey in Germany from winter 2021/22, this study explored the relationship between the persuasiveness of information sources and vaccination decisions, considering socio-demographic and pandemic-related factors. For more than half of respondents, talks with family, friends, and acquaintances were the most convincing. Traditional media like television and radio were reported by 44%. Newspapers/magazines (online or print) and talks with physicians were each found the most convincing by around one third. About one fifth were persuaded by public authority’s flyers or websites. Less than a tenth each was convinced by social media/messenger services, brochures from pharmacies and health insurances, talks with pharmacy staff or online health portals. Significant differences emerged between vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals. Unvaccinated people were four times more likely to report social media and messenger services as convincing compared to vaccinated people. Reporting talks with doctors and flyers/websites from public authorities as very persuasive significantly reduced the likelihood of being unvaccinated. The findings suggest that in future health crises, information should be disseminated through diverse sources, using both traditional and digital media, as well as interpersonal communication. Proactive science communication on social media and messenger services is crucial to counteract misinformation and disinformation.

Association between household food insecurity and underweight status among women in flood-prone regions of Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study

Por: Lotus · S. U. · Akash · S. M. · Salsabil · N. · Hossain · M. T. · Sarker · S. · Zaman · Z. I. · Kawnine · R. · Haque · K. S. · Ahmed · M. Z. E. M. N. U. · Hossain · A.
Objectives

Bangladesh is highly prone to recurrent flooding that disrupts all four pillars of food security. This study aimed to explore the effect of household food insecurity on the underweight status of women in flood-affected areas of Bangladesh, which remains underexplored.

Design

This is a cross-sectional analysis.

Setting

This study was conducted in eight sub-districts (upazilas) across eight districts in Bangladesh that experience severe to moderate river flooding, flash floods and substantial tidal surges.

Participants

A total of 532 women participated in the study. The inclusion criteria for participation were as follows: (1) being at least 18 years of age, (2) residing in the household for at least 1 year and (3) having experienced limited food access in the 4 weeks before data collection due to flood-related constraints.

Primary outcome measures

Household food insecurity was measured using the U.S. Agency for International Development Household Food Insecurity Access Scale questionnaire. An underweight status was evaluated through anthropometric measurements of women. Adjusted prevalence ratios (aPRs) were estimated using robust log-linear models.

Results

Moderate food insecurity was the most common (58.3%) among the participants. The prevalence of underweight was the highest (52.1%) in the severely food-insecure group and decreased significantly with improved food security. Severe household food insecurity was strongly associated with a higher prevalence of underweight individuals (aPR = 4.12; 95% CI, 1.60 to 10.60). An underweight status was also prevalent in women from moderately food-insecure households (aPR = 1.75; 95% CI, 0.68 to 4.55).

Conclusion

This study reveals a significant association between household food insecurity and underweight status, highlighting the major challenges faced by women living in flood-prone areas of Bangladesh. These findings emphasise the urgent need to address household food insecurity to improve nutritional outcomes for women in vulnerable communities.

Translation, adaptation and measurement properties of the muscle-strengthening exercise questionnaire among university students in Indonesia

Por: Ashari · R. S. · Sabirin · R. M. · Pratiwi · D. A. · Tsania · M. N. · Merlinda · S. T. B. · Wibowo · R. A.
Objectives

Despite the abundant evidence showing the benefits of muscle-strengthening exercise (MSE), no epidemiological tool is available for assessing MSE among Indonesian university students. This study is the first to adapt the Muscle-Strengthening Exercise Questionnaire (MSEQ) from its original English version into another language, specifically Indonesian, incorporating cultural adaptations and to pilot test it to assess its validity and reliability among university students in Indonesia.

Design

Translation and cultural adaptation, content validity studies, concurrent validity studies and reliability studies were conducted following COnsensus-based Standards for the Selection of Health Status Measurement INstruments guidelines. Content validation, conducted with three experts and nine university students, informed the development of the MSEQ Indonesian version. The concurrent validity study compared the results of measuring MSE frequency, intensity, duration and volume with those of the 7-day diary and relative handgrip strength with 22 respondents for concurrent validity against subjective measurement and 70 respondents for concurrent validity against objective measurement. For the reliability study, 39 respondents were asked to fill the MSEQ Indonesian version twice with a time interval of 7 days.

Settings and participants

The study involved 143 participants, including experts and university students from three universities across two different islands in Indonesia.

Results

Single administration MSEQ, consecutive administration MSEQ and 7-day diary recording resulted in 0%, 33.8% and 68.5% dropout rate, respectively. Moderate-to-strong correlations were observed between the results for the weekly frequency, duration, intensity and volume of MSE and those of the 7-day diary and hand grip strength. Test–retest reliabilities were good to excellent for machine weight, holistic and overall MSE but poor for bodyweight MSE. In assessing the target muscle group, the MSEQ Indonesian version showed good test–retest reliability for machine-weight MSE but poor-to-very good test–retest reliability for bodyweight, free weight and holistic MSE.

Conclusions

Our study demonstrated the acceptable validity and reliability of the Indonesian version of the MSEQ for assessing MSE among university students in Indonesia, not only by comparing each dimension of MSE with subjective measures but also by comparing MSE volume with objective measures. To enhance the generalisability of these findings, future studies should assess the MSEQ Indonesian version in diverse adult populations by considering dropout rates found by our study, ensuring its broader applicability and sample size adequacy.

Clinically directed initiation versus routine use of amoxicillin-clavulanate and the risk of local complications among patients with haemotoxic snakebite envenomation treated at a teaching hospital in southern India: a randomised, non-inferiority trial

Por: Gautam · A. · Indu · M. B. · Bhardwaj · A. · Sabitha · P. · Deepanjali · S. · Suryanarayana · B. S. · Bammigatti · C. · Kadhiravan · T.
Objective

Amoxicillin-clavulanate is commonly used to prevent infections following snakebites despite the lack of clinical evidence. We aimed to demonstrate that clinically directed initiation of amoxicillin-clavulanate would be non-inferior to routine use in this setting.

Design

Open-label, randomised, non-inferiority trial with blinded adjudication of endpoints.

Setting

Emergency department of a teaching hospital in southern India.

Participants

Adults with local swelling following snakebites within 24 hours of bite.

Interventions

In the routine use strategy, intravenous followed by oral amoxicillin-clavulanate was administered for at least 5 days. In the clinically directed strategy, the antibiotic was only initiated for clinical failures.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Primary outcomes were protocol-defined clinical failure and total antibiotic consumption. Non-inferiority margin was prespecified as 10%. Secondary outcomes were the length of hospital stay, total antivenom consumption, new-onset organ failure, bleeding requiring transfusion, death/need for surgical intervention and drug-related adverse events.

Results

The trial was prematurely stopped due to the COVID-19 situation after randomising 66 patients—34 to clinically directed initiation and 32 to routine use arms. Russell’s viper was the most common (21 (32%)) biting snake species identified; 52 (79%) patients had evidence of haemotoxic envenomation at baseline, and 24 (36%) patients developed AKI. There were 10 clinical failures—six in the clinically directed initiation arm and four in the routine use arm. The difference in clinical failure between the two arms was 5.2% (–12.0%–21.7%; p=0.291); the upper bound of the CI exceeded the prespecified non-inferiority margin. Total antibiotic consumption, expressed in DDDs, was significantly lower in the clinically directed initiation arm (0 (0–1) vs 5.31 (4.67–6.17); p

Conclusions

We could not demonstrate the non-inferiority of clinically directed initiation compared with routine use of amoxicillin-clavulanate among patients with local swelling caused by haemotoxic snakebites. However, the frequency of clinical failures was similar, and antibiotic consumption was substantially lower with the clinically directed initiation strategy.

Trial registration number

ClinicalTrials.gov; NCT02570347.

Tuberculosis service delivery challenges and their mitigations during the COVID-19 pandemic in Tanzania: a qualitative study

Por: Pamba · D. · Sanga · E. S. · William · W. · Mvungi · H. · Omary · H. · Setebe · T. · Olomi · W. · Mangu · C. · Sabi · I. · Balama · R. · Matechi · E. · Kisonga · R. · Tarimo · A. · Ntinginya · N. E. · Maganga · L.
Objective

To describe challenges posed by COVID-19 on tuberculosis (TB) commodity supply, care cascade, active case finding and responses taken by healthcare workers (HCWs) and community health workers (CHWs) during the first year of the pandemic (March 2020 to February 2021).

Design

A qualitative descriptive study involving 25 in-depth interviews and 10 focus group discussions conducted in July 2022.

Setting

37 TB treatment facilities were purposively selected from seven regions due to high TB case notifications in 2019 and their provision of TB and COVID-19 services during the first year of the pandemic (March 2020 to February 2021).

Participants

Purposive selection of 58 HCWs and 55 CHWs who provided TB services in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results

HCWs reported unusual stockouts and delayed receipt of GeneXpert cartridges and sputum containers. TB services faced a decline in client attendance, as clients were hesitant to undergo TB screening, sputum sample collection and contact tracing due to fear of contracting or being diagnosed with COVID-19 and subsequently being quarantined. To mitigate these challenges, HCWs used alternative containers for sputum sample collection, optimised GeneXpert cartridge use by prioritising GeneXpert testing for TB risk groups and diagnosed TB by microscopy, chest X-ray and sputum pooling method. Moreover, they extended drug refill schedules to minimise the risk of contracting COVID-19 in clinics. CHWs used mobile communication for client tracing and focused household visits on TB risk groups.

Conclusion

COVID-19 disrupted TB commodity availability and TB treatment-seeking behaviour. Adaptations like multi-month drug refills and optimised GeneXpert use supported the TB healthcare system’s resilience. While these adaptations offer valuable insights for strengthening TB service delivery, their effectiveness and sustainability require further evaluation. Thus, prospective studies could clarify their long-term impact. National Tuberculosis Program could consider adapting these practices postpandemic, with appropriate modifications to suit different contexts.

Psychological and Social Factors Associated With Reporting Post‐COVID Symptoms Among German Healthcare Workers: A Cross‐Sectional Study

ABSTRACT

Background

Health care workers (HCW) with post-COVID condition (PCC) are frequently reported to suffer from mental health impairment. Given HCW above-average risk for mental health, research is necessary and risk factors need to be assessed.

Aim

To compare mental health and health of German HCW with and without PCC and to identify associated psychological and social factors.

Design

Cross-sectional study.

Method

Overall, 2816 German HCW participated (332 reported PCC). Measures were post-COVID condition symptom sum score (PCSS), symptoms of depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-2), anxiety (Generalised Anxiety Disorder-2) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms (Impact of Event Scale-6), work–family conflict (Work–Family Conflict Scale), social support (ENRICHD Social Support Inventory), sense of coherence (Sense Of Coherence-3 Scale) and working conditions. Group differences of HCW with and without PCC were investigated. Multiple linear regression analysis was performed for HCW with PCC. PCSS was the dependent variable. Independent variables were a.m. measures and age, gender, occupational group and migration background.

Results

HCW with PCC exhibited higher values, with medium effect sizes, for symptoms of depression, anxiety and PTSD. Small effect sizes were observed for work–family conflict, social support, sense of coherence and working conditions. Higher PCSS scores were associated with higher depression, anxiety, PTSD and work–family conflict levels, lower social support and sense of coherence and migration background. Being a physician was associated with lower PCSS.

Conclusion

Lower mental health, social factors and resources may play a role in reporting severe post-COVID symptoms. Further research is necessary to investigate these interactions using the biopsychosocial theory.

Implication for the Profession

This study can help to understand PCC in HCW to design adjusted treatments and protect HCW from PCC and minimise their risk of PCC.

Reporting Method

This study complies with the Journal article reporting standards for quantitative research in psychology: The APA Publications and Communications Board task force report (Data S1).

Public Contribution

Caregivers are the sample group.

Nurse judgements of hospitalized patients' safety concerns are affected by patient, nurse and event characteristics: A factorial survey experiment

Abstract

Aim

To test the influences of patient, safety event and nurse characteristics on nurse judgements of credibility, importance and intent to report patients' safety concerns.

Design

Factorial survey experiment.

Methods

A total of 240 nurses were recruited and completed an online survey including demographic information and responses to eight factorial vignettes consisting of unique combinations of eight patient and event factors. Hierarchical multivariate analysis was used to test influences of vignette factors and nurse characteristics on nurse judgements.

Results

The intraclass coefficients for nurse judgements suggest that the variation among nurses exceeded the influence of contextual vignette factors. Several significant sources of nurse variation were identified, including race/ethnicity, suggesting a complex relationship between nurses' characteristics and their potential biases, and the influence of personal and patient factors on nurses' judgements, including the decision to report safety concerns.

Conclusion

Nurses are key players in the system to manage patient safety concerns. Variation among nurses and how they respond to scenarios of patient safety concerns highlight the need for nurse-level intervention.

Implications for the Profession and Patient Care

Complex factors influence nurses' judgement, interpretation and reporting of patients' safety concerns.

Impact

Understanding nurse judgement regarding patient-expressed safety concerns is critical for designing processes and systems that promote reporting. Multiple event and patient characteristics (type of event and apparent harm, and patient gender, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and communication approach) as well as participant characteristics (race/ethnicity, gender, years of experience and primary hospital area) impacted participants' judgements of credibility, degree of concern and intent to report. These findings will help guide patient safety nurse education and training.

Reporting Method

STROBE guidelines.

Patient or Public Contribution

Members of the public, including patient advocates, were involved in content validation of the vignette scenarios, norming photographs used in the factorial survey and testing the survey functionality.

Geographical epidemiology of <i>Hyalomma anatolicum</i> and <i>Rhipicephalus microplus</i> in Pakistan: A systematic review

by Abrar Hussain, Sabir Hussain, Ao Yu, Csaba Varga, Giulio A. De Leo, Rebecca L. Smith

The livestock sector contributes almost 11% of Pakistan’s GDP and is crucial to 35 million people’s livelihoods. Ticks are a major economic threat, as over 80% of livestock, such as bovines, are tick-infested with Hyalomma and Rhipicephalus tick species. Hyalomma anatolicum and Rhipicephalus microplus are the most common tick species collected from livestock, transmitting primarily anaplasmosis, babesiosis, and theileriosis. We aimed to identify the geographical distribution of these two tick species and hot spot areas where the risk of these diseases being transmitted by these ticks is high. Following the PRISMA guideline, two authors conducted an independent review of literature sourced from various databases. We screened 326 research articles published between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2023, focused on identifying the tick species at the district level. Thirty studies from 75 districts, representing 49.3% of the country’s total area, detected at least one tick species through collection from animals. R. microplus was present in 81% (n = 61) and H. anatolicum in 82% (n = 62) of these sampled districts. We employed spatial and conventional statistical methods with Geographic Information Systems (GIS) after mapping the weighted distribution of both ticks (the number of ticks per standard unit of sampling effort). We identified northwestern and northcentral regions of the country as hotspots with the highest tick distribution, which aligned with the documented high prevalence of anaplasmosis, babesiosis, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF), and theileriosis in these regions. This underscores the urgent need for robust tick control measures in these districts to safeguard animal health and boost the livestock economy.

INFORM‐AF II—Phase 1 pilot randomised controlled trial evaluating the effect of an atrial fibrillation digital education programme: study protocol

Abstract

Aim

To evaluate the effect of a novel, co-designed, digital AF educational program, ‘INFORM-AF’, to reduce re-hospitalisation of people with AF.

The secondary aims are to examine the effect of the intervention on: (a) reducing cardiovascular-related hospitalisation, (b) increasing medication adherence, AF-related knowledge, and Atrial fibrillation (AF)-related quality of life and (c) determining the cost-effectiveness of the intervention.

Background

AF is an increasingly prevalent cardiac arrythmia that involves complex clinical management. Comprehensive education is essential for successful self-management of AF and is associated with positive health-related outcomes. There has been an increase in technology-based education for AF. However, its effects on hospitalisation, medication adherence and patient-reported outcomes are unclear.

Design

A prospective, randomised (1:1), open-label, blinded-endpoint, multicentre clinical trial.

Methods

Eligible participants are aged 18 years or above, diagnosed with AF, and own a smartphone. The study will be conducted at two metropolitan hospitals. In the intervention group, participants will receive the AF educational program delivered via Qstream®. In the control group, participants will receive the Stroke Foundation ‘Living with AF’ booklet. The primary outcome is re-hospitalisation within 12 months from an indexed presentation or hospital admission.

Conclusion

This clinical trial is part of a developing program of work that will examine mHealth educational-behavioural interventions on cardiovascular outcomes. Findings from this pilot study will inform the development of a digital educational framework for patients living with AF.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

There remain many gaps in providing high-quality patient education for patients with AF. This trial will test a new theory-driven, smartphone-based education program on important clinical outcomes, including rehospitalisation.

Impact

This study evaluates a novel, co-designed, digital AF educational program, ‘INFORM-AF’, to reduce the re-hospitalisation of people with AF. Study results are expected to be reported in 2025. Findings are expected to inform practice recommendations for AF patient education that may be included in future clinical practice guideline recommendations.

Reporting Method

SPIRIT Checklist.

Patient or Publication Contribution

JL is a consumer co-researcher on the project and provided critical input into intervention design, and feedback and input across the study duration.

Depression and anxiety among nurses during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Longitudinal results over 2 years from the multicentre VOICE–EgePan study

Abstract

Aims

To examine symptoms of depression and generalised anxiety among nurses over 2 years during the pandemic and compare them to the general population.

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a significant increase in mental stress among the population worldwide. Nursing staff have been identified as being under remarkable strain.

Design

A multicentre prospective longitudinal study.

Methods

Symptoms of depression and generalised anxiety in 507 nurses were examined at four different time points (T1: April–July 2020, T2: November 2020–January 2021, T3: May–July 2021, T4: February–May 2022). Results were compared with values of the German general population, presence of gender-specific differences was analysed and frequencies of clinically relevant levels of depression and anxiety were determined.

Results

Throughout the study (T1–T4), a significant increase in depressive and anxiety symptoms was observed. At all four measurement time points, nurses showed significantly higher prevalence for depression and anxiety compared to the German general population. No significant gender differences were found. Frequencies for probable depression and generalised anxiety disorder among nurses were: 21.6% and 18.5% (T1), 31.4% and 29.2% (T2), 29.5% and 26.2% (T3), 33.7% and 26.4% (T4).

Conclusion

During the pandemic, symptoms of depression and generalised anxiety among nurses increased significantly and remained elevated. Their symptom levels were permanently higher than in the general population. These findings strongly suggest that the circumstances of the pandemic severely affected nurses´ mental health.

Relevance to Clinical Practice

The COVID-19 pandemic caused a great mental strain on caregivers. This study was able to demonstrate the significant increase in depression and anxiety among nurses during the pandemic. It highlights the urgent need for prevention, screening and support systems in hospitals.

Implications for the Profession

Supportive programmes and preventive services should be developed, not least to prevent the growing shortage of nurses in the health care systems.

Reporting Method

The study adhered to relevant EQUATOR guidelines. The STROBE checklist for cohort study was used as the reporting method.

Patient Contribution

Five hundred and seven nurses completed the questionnaire and provided data for analysis.

Trial and Protocol Registration

The study was registered with the German Clinical Trials Register (https://drks.de/search/en) under the following ID: DRKS00021268.

Enhancing blood pressure management protocol implementation in patients with acute intracerebral haemorrhage through a nursing‐led approach: A retrospective cohort study

Abstract

Aim

To evaluate the impact of nurse care changes in implementing a blood pressure management protocol on achieving rapid, intensive and sustained blood pressure reduction in acute intracerebral haemorrhage patients.

Design

Retrospective cohort study of prospectively collected data over 6 years.

Methods

Intracerebral haemorrhage patients within 6 h and systolic blood pressure ≥ 150 mmHg followed a rapid (starting treatment at computed tomography suite with a target achievement goal of ≤60 min), intensive (target systolic blood pressure < 140 mmHg) and sustained (maintaining target stability for 24 h) blood pressure management plan. We differentiated six periods: P1, stroke nurse at computed tomography suite (baseline period); P2, antihypertensive titration by stroke nurse; P3, retraining by neurologists; P4, integration of a stroke advanced practice nurse; P5, after COVID-19 impact; and P6, retraining by stroke advanced practice nurse. Outcomes included first-hour target achievement (primary outcome), tomography-to-treatment and treatment-to-target times, first-hour maximum dose of antihypertensive treatment and 6-h and 24-h systolic blood pressure variability.

Results

Compared to P1, antihypertensive titration by stroke nurses (P2) reduced treatment-to-target time and increased the rate of first-hour target achievement, retraining of stroke nurses by neurologists (P3) maintained a higher rate of first-hour target achievement and the integration of a stroke advanced practice nurse (P4) reduced both 6-h and 24-h systolic blood pressure variability. However, 6-h systolic blood pressure variability increased from P4 to P5 following the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Finally, compared to P1, retraining of stroke nurses by stroke advanced practice nurse (P6) reduced tomography-to-treatment time and increased the first-hour maximum dose of antihypertensive treatment.

Conclusion

Changes in nursing care and continuous education can significantly enhance the time metrics and blood pressure outcomes in acute intracerebral haemorrhage patients.

Reporting Method

STROBE guidelines.

Patient and Public Contribution

No Patient or Public Contribution.

Content Validation of a Questionnaire to Measure Digital Competence of Nurses in Clinical Practice

imageClinical practice nurses need adequate digital competence to use technologies appropriately at work. Questionnaires measuring clinical practice nurses' digital competence lack content validity because attitude is not included as a measure of digital competence. The aim of the current study was to identify items for an item pool of a questionnaire to measure clinical practice nurses' digital competence and to evaluate the content validity. A normative Delphi study was conducted, and the content validity index on item and scale levels was calculated. In each round, 21 to 24 panelists (medical informatics specialists, nurse informatics specialists, digital managers, and researchers) were asked to rate the items on a 4-point Likert scale ranging from “not relevant” to “very relevant.” Within three rounds, the panelists reached high consensus and rated 26 items of the initial 37 items as relevant. The average content validity index of 0.95 (SD, 0.07) demonstrates that the item pool showed high content validity. The final item pool included items to measure knowledge, skills, and attitude. The items included represent the international recommendations of core competences for clinical nursing. Future research should conduct psychometric testing for construct validity and internal consistency of the generated item pool.

Enfermería y seguridad en la programación de la prescripción de medicamentos

Objetivos: Analizar los aplazamientos y la gravedad de las potenciales interacciones medicamentosas en las enfermerías de clínica; correlacionar con los riesgos para la seguridad del paciente. Metodología: Se caracteriza como investigación documental, descriptiva, com abordaje cuantitativo, a partir del análisis documental. Los datos fueron analizados por el programa Micromedex®, a fin de verificar las posibles interacciones medicamentosas ocurridas de acuerdo com el aplazamiento. Resultados: Se analizaron 52 prescripciones, generando 664 dosis de medicamentos. Se identificaron 37 potenciales interacciones que fueron clasificadas de acuerdo com la gravedad y riesgos a la seguridad del paciente. Conclusión: Las interacciones medicamentosas encontradas fueron significativas y necesitan ser evaluadas como factores de riesgo para la seguridad del paciente.

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