198 resultados para Hospitals Administration
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PURPOSE: Little is known regarding cannabis administration routes for nonmedical use-that is, its delivery methods (e.g., joints, water pipe, food). Therefore, we examined the prevalence rates of different cannabis delivery methods and assessed the relationship of the distinct administration routes with problematic drug use. Subgroups of cannabis users were also investigated (i.e., "pure" cannabis users, previously described as employing a harmless route of administration, and water pipe users, previously described as using a harmful route of administration). METHODS: As part of the Cohort Study on Substance Use Risk Factors, 1,763 cannabis users answered questions concerning their drug use (i.e., routes of administration, problematic cannabis use, other illicit drug use). Descriptive statistics, latent class analysis, correlations and t-tests were assessed. RESULTS: The main administration route was "joints with tobacco"; other routes of administration had prevalence rates from 23.99% to 38.23%. In addition, increasing the number of administration routes was associated with more problematic cannabis use, as well as heavier illicit drug use. Water pipes without tobacco were especially linked to heavy drug use patterns, whereas "pure" cannabis use seemed less harmful. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings highlighted that diversification in routes of administration can be associated with heavier illicit drug use. This was especially true for water pipe users, whereas "pure" cannabis users, who did not mix cannabis with tobacco, were an exception. Indeed, these results may be useful for future preventive programs, which may need to focus on those who have diversified routes of administration for cannabis.
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OBJECTIVE: To assess the change in non-compliant items in prescription orders following the implementation of a computerized physician order entry (CPOE) system named PreDiMed. SETTING: The department of internal medicine (39 and 38 beds) in two regional hospitals in Canton Vaud, Switzerland. METHOD: The prescription lines in 100 pre- and 100 post-implementation patients' files were classified according to three modes of administration (medicines for oral or other non-parenteral uses; medicines administered parenterally or via nasogastric tube; pro re nata (PRN), as needed) and analyzed for a number of relevant variables constitutive of medical prescriptions. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The monitored variables depended on the pharmaceutical category and included mainly name of medicine, pharmaceutical form, posology and route of administration, diluting solution, flow rate and identification of prescriber. RESULTS: In 2,099 prescription lines, the total number of non-compliant items was 2,265 before CPOE implementation, or 1.079 non-compliant items per line. Two-thirds of these were due to missing information, and the remaining third to incomplete information. In 2,074 prescription lines post-CPOE implementation, the number of non-compliant items had decreased to 221, or 0.107 non-compliant item per line, a dramatic 10-fold decrease (chi(2) = 4615; P < 10(-6)). Limitations of the computerized system were the risk for erroneous items in some non-prefilled fields and ambiguity due to a field with doses shown on commercial products. CONCLUSION: The deployment of PreDiMed in two departments of internal medicine has led to a major improvement in formal aspects of physicians' prescriptions. Some limitations of the first version of PreDiMed were unveiled and are being corrected.
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Cet article fait le point sur les réformes de la gestion publique en Suisse. Après avoir montré que ce pays est marqué par une tradition de modernisation qui le rend très réceptif aux nouvelles approches de gestion, l'article analyse en particulier le mouvement de Nouvelle Gestion Publique (NGP) à la mode helvétique. Les principales orientations de la NGP suisse, ainsi que les évaluations qui en ont été faites sous l'angle des autorités politiques, de l'administration et des citoyens, permettent d'esquisser les défis qui attendent le système suisse dans l'ère de l'après-NGP.
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Le présent mémoire traite de l'implication des hôpitaux universitaires en évaluation des technologies de la santé. Le champ d'étude est vaste : - L'évaluation des technologies de la santé est une discipline dont l'étendue fait appel aux sciences exactes (physique, statistiques, ingénierie, méthodologie de la recherche analytique, etc.) ainsi qu'aux sciences sociales (économie, éthique, etc.) - L'hôpital universitaire est une organisation des plus complexes qui soit. Le "produit final" - l'amélioration de la santé du patient - est totalement non standardisé, il n'existe pas de modèle d'hôpital universitaire type et unique (inclusion ou non d'un centre de recherche, d'une faculté de médecine, d'un comité de gestion politique, etc.) et les corps de métiers qui le composent sont des plus variés et représentés en grand nombre Ainsi, l'étendue du champ relève des domaines interdépendants tels que la technologie (elle-même incluse dans le domaine de l'innovation aujourd'hui en développement), le management (ou administration des soins, du système de santé dans lequel s'inscrit l'hôpital universitaire), le financement de l'institution (mais aussi la rémunération des professionnels) et enfin la stratégie de l'hôpital. Le présent travail ne fait qu'effleurer ce large spectre d'investigation. La thématique de l'évaluation des technologies de la santé n'est guère connue en Suisse, ou plutôt elle n'est que peu développée et reconnue comme une science interdisciplinaire destinée à porter un jugement de valeur afin d'aider la prise de décision, sens profond qui la définit dans d'autres pays tel le Canada et plus particulièrement le Québec. Enfin, il convient de souligner que le présent travail n'a pas comme objectif de comparer les systèmes de santé québécois et suisse ou de réaliser toute autre critique de l'un ou de l'autre. Le but du stage ([à l'Université de Montréal], cf. Préambule) était d'observer des structures reconnues au niveau international et nullement de juger de l'ensemble du système de santé. Si l'on peut s'inspirer des réussites ailleurs, il convient de s'en tenir à l'inspiration de celles-ci pour ensuite, éventuellement, les contextualiser dans d'autres lieux. Ainsi, à chaque fois qu'il sera fait mention du Québec par la suite, ce sera dans l'intention de démontrer l'originalité de la démarche et d'élargir le débat dans le contexte qui nous intéresse. [Auteur p. 7]
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PURPOSE: To evaluate the incidence of presumed endophthalmitis (EO) after intravitreal injection (IVI) of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor agents performed in the operating room. METHODS: Retrospective study at 2 Swiss eye hospitals between 2004 and 2012. Hospital records were used to identify patients treated with an IVI of an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor agent between 2004 and 2012 and those treated for EO, defined as any intraocular inflammation treated with intravitreal antibiotics. All IVIs were performed using standard sterile technique in a Swiss Class 1 operating room. No patient received preinjection topical antibiotics. Postinjection topical antibiotics were used only in one hospital. RESULTS: A total of 40,011 IVIs were performed at the 2 centers during the study period. Of the IVIs, ranibizumab was injected in 36,398 (91%), bevacizumab in 3,518 (9%), aflibercept in 89 (0.2%), and pegaptanib in 6 (<0.1%). Three cases of post-IVI presumed EO occurred, yielding a combined incidence of 0.0075% per injection (95% confidence interval: 0.0026-0.0220%) or 1 case per 13,337 IVIs. Two of the three cases of EO occurred in patients using post-IVI antibiotics. All three cases followed ranibizumab injection and were culture negative by anterior chamber tap or vitreous biopsy. CONCLUSION: The risk of EO after IVI performed under the sterile conditions of the operating room was very low.
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Le cannabis est l'une des drogues illégales les plus consommées au monde. Le delta-9- tétrahydrocannabinol (THC) est le composé psychoactif majeur du cannabis et est fréquemment détecté dans le sang de conducteurs impliqués dans un accident de la route, alors qu'il est actuellement interdit de conduire sous l'influence du THC en Suisse comme dans de nombreux pays européens. La détection de ce composé dans le sang est suivie d'une série de mesures pénales et administratives à l'encontre du conducteur impliqué. Cette thèse intitulée « Etude d'administration contrôlée de cannabis et profils cinétiques dans les fluides biologiques » s'inscrit dans une étude toxicologique menée au Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV). Le but de cette étude est d'évaluer les effets du cannabis sur le fonctionnement du cerveau lorsque le consommateur accompli une tâche fondamentale de la conduite automobile. Pour cela, l'imagerie médicale par résonnance magnétique fonctionnelle (IRMf) est combinée à un test informatisé simulant une tâche psychomotrice requise pour une conduite automobile sûre. Il s'agit d'un test de double tâche de poursuite d'une cible au moyen d'un curseur dirigé par un joystick, combiné à une tâche secondaire de détection de signaux routiers. Parallèlement, les profils cinétiques sanguins et salivaires des volontaires ont été déterminés grâce à des prélèvements effectués tout au long de la journée d'étude. Les objectifs principaux de ce travail de thèse sont les suivants : après une revue de la littérature existante sur les techniques d'analyse des cannabinoïdes dans les fluides biologiques, une méthode a été développée et validée pour ces composés dans la salive puis appliquée aux échantillons de l'étude. En parallèle, les échantillons sanguins et urinaires ont été analysés, en partie avec une méthode adaptée de celle développée pour la salive. Pour montrer la versatilité de cette méthode, celle-ci a été employée pour analyser des échantillons de bile qui a l'avantage de contenir des concentrations élevées de métabolites conjugués. Dans un deuxième temps, les dosages effectués sur le sang et la salive ont permis d'établir les profils cinétiques des cannabinoïdes, de déterminer leurs paramètres pharmacocinétiques et de les comparer. Les données obtenues ont montré que la concentration sanguine en acide 11-nor-9- carboxy-delta-9-tétrahydrocannabinol (THCCOOH) pouvait servir à distinguer les fumeurs occasionnels des fumeurs réguliers de cannabis, car elle est significativement plus élevée chez les consommateurs réguliers. De plus, d'autres cannabinoïdes présents dans la salive pourraient servir de marqueurs de consommation récente dans ce fluide biologique. Enfin, que ce soit dans le sang, la salive ou l'urine, des phytocannabinoïdes peuvent être utilisés comme marqueur de consommation de cannabis illégal car ils sont absents des médicaments à base de cannabis utilisant des préparations synthétiques ou purifiées du THC.
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Significant quantities of antibiotics are used in all parts of the globe to treat diseases with bacterial origins. After ingestion, antibiotics are excreted by the patient and transmitted in due course to the aquatic environment. This study examined temporal fluctuations (monthly time scale) in antibiotic sources (ambulatory sales and data from a hospital dispensary) for Lausanne, Switzerland. Source variability (i.e., antibiotic consumption, monthly data for 2006-2010) were examined in detail for nine antibiotics--azithromycin, ciprofloxacin, clarithromycin, clindamycin, metronidazole, norfloxacin, ofloxacin, sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim, from which two main conclusions were reached. First, some substances--azithromycin, clarithromycin, ciprofloxacin--displayed high seasonality in their consumption, with the winter peak being up to three times higher than the summer minimum. This seasonality in consumption resulted in seasonality in Predicted Environmental Concentrations (PECs). In addition, the seasonality in PECs was also influenced by that in the base wastewater flow. Second, the contribution of hospitals to the total load of antibiotics reaching the Lausanne Wastewater Treatment Plant (WTP) fluctuated markedly on a monthly time scale, but with no seasonal pattern detected. That is, there was no connection between fluctuations in ambulatory and hospital consumption for the substances investigated.
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BACKGROUND: In Switzerland, nurses are allowed to prescribe and administer morphine in emergency situations without a doctor. Still, nurses and other health professionals are often reluctant to prescribe and administer morphine for pain management in patients. No valid French-speaking instrument is available in Switzerland to assess the attitudes of nurses and other health professionals towards the prescription and administration of morphine. In this study, we evaluated the psychometric properties of the French version of the questionnaire "Attitudes towards morphine use". METHODS: The instrument was derived from an Italian version. Forward and back translations of the questionnaire were performed. Item analysis and construct validity were assessed between April and December 2010 in a cross sectional study including five Swiss hospitals in a sample of 588 health professionals (533 nurses, mean age 38.3 ± 10.2 years). Thirty subjects participated in test-retest reliability. RESULTS: The time to complete the instrument ranged between 12 and 15 minutes and neither floor nor ceiling effect were found. The initial 24-item instrument showed an intraclass correlation (ICC) of 0.69 (95% CI: 0.64 to 0.73, P < 0.001), and a Cronbach's α of 0.700. Factor analysis led to a six-component solution explaining 52.4% of the total variance. After excluding five items, the shortened version showed an ICC of 0.74 (95% CI, 0.70 to 0.77, P < 0.001) and a Cronbach's α of 0.741. Factor analysis led to a five-component solution explaining 54.3% of the total variance. The five components were named "risk of addiction/dependence"; "operational reasons for not using morphine"; "risk of escalation"; "other (non-dependence) risks" and "external (non-operational) reasons". In test-retest, the shortened instrument showed an ICC of 0.797 (95% CI, 0.630 to 0.911, P < 0.001) and a Cronbach's α of 0.797. CONCLUSIONS: The 19-item shortened instrument assessing attitudes towards the prescription and administration of morphine showed adequate content and construct validity.
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Post-prescription review of hospital antibiotic therapy may contribute to more appropriate use. We estimated the impact of a standardised review of intravenous antibiotic therapy three days after prescription in two internal medicine wards of a university hospital. In one ward, we assessed the charts of patients under intravenous antibiotic therapy using a standardised review process and provided feedback to the prescriber. There was no intervention in the other ward. After six months we crossed the allocation between the two wards. In all, 204 courses of antibiotic therapy were included in the intervention periods and 226 in the control periods. Post-prescription review led to proposals for modification in 46% of antibiotic courses. Time to treatment modification was 22% shorter in the intervention periods compared with the control periods (3.9+/-5.2 days vs 5.0+/-6.0 days, P=0.007). Patients included in the intervention group had lower antibiotic consumption than patients in the control group, but the intervention had no significant impact on the overall antibiotic consumption of the two wards.
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BACKGROUND: Surveillance is an essential element of surgical site infection (SSI) prevention. Few studies have evaluated the long-term effect of these programmes. AIM: To present data from a 13-year multicentre SSI surveillance programme from western and southern Switzerland. METHODS: Surveillance with post-discharge follow-up was performed according to the US National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance (NNIS) system methods. SSI rates were calculated for each surveyed type of surgery, overall and by year of participation in the programme. Risk factors for SSI and the effect of surveillance time on SSI rates were analysed by multiple logistic regression. FINDINGS: Overall SSI rates were 18.2% after 7411 colectomies, 6.4% after 6383 appendicectomies, 2.3% after 7411 cholecystectomies, 1.7% after 9933 herniorrhaphies, 1.6% after 6341 hip arthroplasties, and 1.3% after 3667 knee arthroplasties. The frequency of SSI detected after discharge varied between 21% for colectomy and 94% for knee arthroplasty. Independent risk factors for SSI differed between operations. The NNIS risk index was predictive of SSI in gastrointestinal surgery only. Laparoscopic technique was protective overall, but associated with higher rates of organ-space infections after appendicectomy. The duration of participation in the surveillance programme was not associated with a decreased SSI rate for any of the included procedure. CONCLUSION: These data confirm the effect of post-discharge surveillance on SSI rates and the protective effect of laparoscopy. There is a need to establish alternative case-mix adjustment methods. In contrast to other European programmes, no positive impact of surveillance duration on SSI rates was observed.
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Although active personal dosemeters (APDs) are not used quite often in hospital environments, the possibility to assess the dose and/or dose rate in real time is particularly interesting in interventional radiology and cardiology (IR/IC) since operators can receive relatively high doses while standing close to the primary radiation field.A study concerning the optimization of the use of APDs in IR/IC was performed in the framework of the ORAMED project, a Collaborative Project (2008-2011) supported by the European Commission within its 7th Framework Program. This paper reports on tests performed with APDs on phantoms using an X-ray facility in a hospital environment and APDs worn by interventionalists during routine practice in different European hospitals.The behaviour of the APDs is more satisfactory in hospitals than in laboratories with respect to the influence of the tube peak high voltage and pulse width, because the APDs are tested in scattered fields with dose equivalent rates generally lower than 1 Sv.h(-1).