| 1 |
Guideline What's new in lower-extremity arterial disease? WOCN's 2008 clinical practice guideline. 2009
Bonham PA, Flemister BG, Goldberg M, Crawford PE, Johnson JJ, Varnado MF. · Medical University of South Carolina, College of Nursing, Charleston, SC 29425, USA. · J Wound Ostomy Continence Nurs. · Pubmed #19155822 No free full text.
Abstract: Lower-extremity arterial disease (LEAD) affects 8 to 10 million people in the United States, resulting in pain, tissue loss, infection, limb loss, and an impaired quality of life. LEAD is underdiagnosed, undertreated, and often unrecognized. The purpose of this article is to provide a summary of the recommendations from the 2008 evidence-based, clinical practice guideline, Guideline for the Management of Patients With Lower-Extremity Arterial Disease, recently released from the Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society. This article presents an overview of the process used to develop the guideline, a discussion of risks for LEAD, and specific recommendations for assessment, interventions, patient education, and risk-reduction strategies.
|
| 2 |
Article Sickness absence as a prognostic marker for common chronic conditions: analysis of mortality in the GAZEL study. free! 2008
Kivimäki M, Head J, Ferrie JE, Singh-Manoux A, Westerlund H, Vahtera J, Leclerc A, Melchior M, Chevalier A, Alexanderson K, Zins M, Goldberg M. · Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK. · Occup Environ Med. · Pubmed #18611969 links to free full text
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To determine whether sickness absence is a prognostic marker in terms of mortality among people with common chronic conditions. METHODS: Prospective occupational cohort study of 13,077 men and 4871 women aged 37-51 from the National Gas and Electricity Company, France. Records of physician-certified sickness absences over a 3-year period were obtained from employers' registers. Chronic conditions were assessed in annual surveys over the same period. The main outcome measure was all-cause mortality (803 deaths, mean follow-up after assessment of sickness absence: 13.9 years). RESULTS: In Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for age, sex, socioeconomic position and co-morbidity, >28 annual sickness-absence days versus no absence days was associated with an excess mortality risk among those with cancer (hazard ratio 5.4, 95% CI 2.2 to 13.1), depression (1.7, 1.1 to 2.8), chronic bronchitis or asthma (2.7, 1.6 to 4.6) and hypertension (1.6, 1.0 to 2.6). The corresponding hazard ratios for more than five long (>14 days) sickness-absence episodes per 10 person-years versus no such episodes were 5.4 (2.2 to 13.1), 1.8 (1.3 to 2.7), 2.0 (1.3 to 3.2) and 1.8 (1.2 to 2.7), respectively. Areas under receiver operating characteristics curves for these absence measures varied between 0.56 and 0.73, indicating the potential of these measures to distinguish groups at high risk of mortality. The findings were consistent across sex, age and socioeconomic groups and in those with and without co-morbid conditions. CONCLUSION: Data on sickness absence may provide useful prognostic information for common chronic conditions at the population level.
|
| 3 |
Article Occupational mobility and risk factors in working men: selection, causality or both? Results from the GAZEL study. free! 2003
Ribet C, Zins M, Gueguen A, Bingham A, Goldberg M, Ducimetière P, Lang T. · INSERM U258, Villejuif, France. · J Epidemiol Community Health. · Pubmed #14600118 links to free full text
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To explore the relation between risk factors (RF) and occupational mobility in working men. SETTING: 20 000 volunteers working at the French National Electricity and Gas Company (GAZEL cohort). PARTICIPANTS: Men aged 43 to 53 years in 1992. DESIGN: Three designs were used for analysis. (1) The association between occupational mobility experienced before 1992 and RF reported at that date was analysed among 10 383 men. (2) The predictive role of RF on occupational mobility over 1992-1999 was studied in a subsample of 4715 men. (3) Reciprocally, occupational mobility in 1985-1992 was analysed in relation to RF changes over 1993-1999. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Self reported smoking status, excessive alcohol consumption, arterial hypertension, and overweight. Occupational mobility defined by any upward transition between senior executives and professionals/middle executives/employees, and workers. RESULTS: (1) Cross sectionally, non-mobile men as their entry into the company had a higher risk of being smokers, excessive alcohol drinkers, and overweight in 1992 than mobile men. (2) Longitudinally, smokers and excessive alcohol drinkers in 1992 had a higher risk of non-mobility than, respectively, non-smokers and non-excessive alcohol drinkers. (3) Non-mobile men in 1985-1992 had a higher risk of becoming smokers, excessive alcohol drinkers, and hypertensive in 1993-1999 than upwardly mobile men. CONCLUSION: These results suggest a complex relation between RF and occupational mobility. A high level of RF, particularly health behaviours, might account for a selection process reducing upward occupational mobility. In turn, a lack of upward occupational mobility might be associated with an increased incidence of RF.
|
| 4 |
Article Do cardiovascular risk factors in men depend on their spouses' occupational category? 2001
Ribet C, Lang T, Zins M, Bingham A, Ferrières J, Arveiler D, Amouyel P, Bonenfant S, Chastang JF, Goldberg M, Ducimetière P. · INSERM U258, Villejuif, France. · Eur J Epidemiol. · Pubmed #11767960 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To analyse the relationships between major cardiovascular risk factors in French men and their spouses' occupational category (OC), taking their own OC into account. DESIGN: A large sample of volunteers working in the French National Electricity and Gas Company (GAZEL). As a check of the robustness, the same analysis was performed in a population-based survey (French multinational MONItoring of trends and determinants in CArdiovascular disease (MONICA) registers). SETTING: Any site of the company in France. Representative sample from the population of the three registers (Lille, Strasbourg, Toulouse). PARTICIPANTS: 9486 and 534 men respectively, in working activity, living in couple and aged 40 to 50 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Self-reported arterial hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, leisure time sedentary lifestyle, smoking status, body mass index (BMI) and alcohol consumption. RESULTS: In the GAZEL study, diabetes, smoking status, and alcohol consumption in men were associated with their own OC. In contrast, spouses' OC was independently associated with men's hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, sedentary lifestyle, and BMI: men whose spouses were unoccupied or workers have higher risk factors levels. In the MONICA study, the results were mostly comparable, at least for hypercholesterolemia, sedentary lifestyle, smoking status and alcohol consumption. CONCLUSION: Spouses' OC was independently associated with several cardiovascular risk factors in men. These results might indicate that socioeconomic status of the couple, and not only individual characteristics, should be taken into account for a better understanding of cardiovascular risk.
|
|
|