Articles: pandemics.
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Multicenter Study
A cross-sectional multicenter survey on the future of dental education in the era of COVID-19: Alternatives and implications.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has significantly challenged dental education. This study investigated the procedures outlined by dental faculty members to maintain quality dental education in a safe bioenvironment and adequately control the risk of cross-infection METHOD: Dental educators from dental schools around the world were invited to join an online survey considering different demographic factors. The survey consisted of 31 questions that were classified into separate sections, including academic characteristics, college size and facilities, action taken after announcement of the COVID-19 pandemic, perception of the pandemic, opinion regarding teaching, patient flow, possible facilities to implement for short- and long-term plans, and actions suggested to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic RESULTS: Two hundred-twelve responses were received. ⋯ Special attention was raised by the majority of respondents regarding dental aerosolizing procedures, preferring to postpone their training to a postpandemic/later phase. Coinciding opinions suggested adopting a future dynamic hybrid strategy analysis that combines online distant learning, virtual simulation, and haptic labs together with traditional direct clinical training on real patients CONCLUSION: The future of dental education will have far-reaching changes in strategies and tools to cope with COVID-19 pandemic and the postpandemic requirements of an effective, yet safe, dental learning environment. Dental colleges need to invest in infection precautions and in modern virtual education and training facilities.
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Scand J Trauma Resus · Mar 2021
Multicenter Study Observational StudyImpact of the SARS-COV-2 outbreak on epidemiology and management of major traumain France: a registry-based study (the COVITRAUMA study).
Emerging evidence suggests that the reallocation of health care resources during the COVID-19 pandemic negatively impacts health care system. This study describes the epidemiology and the outcome of major trauma patients admitted to centers in France during the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak. ⋯ During this first wave of COVID-19 in France, and more specifically during lockdown there was a significant reduction of patients admitted to designated trauma centers. Despite the reallocation and reorganization of medical resources this reduction prevented the saturation of the trauma rescue chain and has allowed maintaining a high quality of care for trauma patients.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Mar 2021
Multicenter StudyTrends in Intensive Care for Patients with COVID-19 in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Rationale: By describing trends in intensive care for patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19) we aim to support clinical learning, service planning, and hypothesis generation. Objectives: To describe variation in ICU admission rates over time and by geography during the first wave of the epidemic in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland; to describe trends in patient characteristics on admission to ICU, first-24-hours physiology in ICU, processes of care in ICU and patient outcomes; and to explore deviations in trends during the peak period. Methods: A cohort of 10,741 patients with COVID-19 in the Case Mix Program national clinical audit from February 1 to July 31, 2020, was used. ⋯ Many variables exhibited u-shaped or n-shaped curves during the peak. Conclusions: The population of patients with COVID-19 admitted to ICUs, and the processes of care in ICUs, changed over the first wave of the epidemic. After adjustment for important risk factors, there was a substantial improvement in patient outcomes.
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Annals of hematology · Mar 2021
Letter Multicenter Study Comparative StudyCOVID-19 infection in patients with multiple myeloma: a German-Chinese experience from Würzburg and Wuhan.
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Mayo Clinic proceedings · Mar 2021
Multicenter StudyOutcomes of COVID-19 With the Mayo Clinic Model of Care and Research.
To report the Mayo Clinic experience with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) related to patient outcomes. ⋯ Mayo Clinic outcomes of patients with COVID-19 infection in the ICU, hospital, and community compare favorably with those reported nationally. This likely reflects the impact of interprofessional multidisciplinary team evaluation, effective leveraging of clinical trials and available treatments, deployment of remote monitoring tools, and maintenance of adequate operating capacity to not require surge adjustments. These best practices can help guide other health care systems with the continuing response to the COVID-19 pandemic.