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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Urgent Care and Emergency Department Visitors: A Latent Class Analysis

Ann Emerg Med. 2026 Mar 23:S0196-0644(26)00093-4. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2026.02.010. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

STUDY OBJECTIVE: Health care researchers, policymakers, and managers have long been concerned with heavy emergency department (ED) use for low-acuity conditions that can be addressed in office-based settings. Clinically, urgent care clinics are a viable substitute. Yet, we know little about how ED use and urgent care use interact, and how their combined or separate use varies across population groups. People may cluster in groups with distinct patterns of combined health care utilization, which we consider a meaningful way to study health care use. We aimed to identify latent classes of adult health care utilization based on observed characteristics.

METHODS: We conducted a latent class analysis to identify distinct classes of health care utilization among adults (18+ years old) using publicly available, de-identified data from the 2022-2023 National Health Interview Survey (N=56,181). The latent class model included 4 indicators and 2 ordinal variables: having the last visit being a wellness visit, having a usual place of care, delaying or foregoing care due to cost, having a hospitalization, urgent care use (0, 1-2 visits, and 3+ visits), and ED use (0, 1, and 2+ visits) in the past year. We compared the fit of 2, 3, and 4-class models using Akaike’s Information Criterion and Bayesian Information Criterion statistics. We then estimated regression models of class probabilities on sociodemographic and health-related characteristics.

RESULTS: A 4-class model had the best model fit. Two classes were distinguished by low health care use: one with barriers to care (“nonusers with access barriers,” the smallest class, 6.8%) and one without (“nonusers without access barriers”; the largest class, 59.7%). The class of “heavy health care users” (15.7%) is characterized by the highest probability of ED use (mean probability of having 1 visit 0.471 and 2+ visits 0.351) and the highest probability of hospitalization (0.515) of all classes, alongside moderate urgent care use (probability of 1+ visits 0.430). The class of “urgent care users” (17.7%) is marked by the highest probability of urgent care use (zero probability of no visit, 0.786 of 1-2 visits and 0.214 of 3+ visits), alongside low probability of ED use and the lowest probability of hospitalizations (<0.01). In adjusted regression analyses, the probability of being in the “nonusers with access barriers” class was substantially higher for the uninsured and the probability of being in the “heavy health care users” class was substantially higher for Medicaid enrollees. The probability of being an “urgent care user” was higher for those with higher educational attainment and private insurance.

CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that urgent care is either complementary to the ED (in the “heavy health care users” class) or is used alongside low to no use hospital-based care and low to no barriers to care (“urgent care users” class). At the same time, our analysis did not identify a distinct class of ED users, with low to no urgent care use. Our findings can inform health system decisionmaking, especially in areas of health care delivery and improving access.

PMID:41874493 | DOI:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2026.02.010

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Standardized 2D Ultrasound Sequences for Fetal Cardiac Screening: A Platform for AI Integration

Echocardiography. 2026 Mar;43(3):e70422. doi: 10.1111/echo.70422.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The precise and consistent identification of fetal cardiac structures and functional flows is essential for the early diagnosis of congenital heart defects (CHDs), yet interobserver variability remains a significant challenge in clinical practice. Although fetal cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has emerged as a valuable adjunct in selected cases, its routine use remains limited by long acquisition times, motion artifacts, and restricted availability in many centers. This underscores the need to optimize ultrasound-based techniques that can reduce reliance on MRI while still providing comprehensive and reproducible fetal cardiac assessment. This article presents a study investigating the reliability of a layered imaging approach combined with standardized B-mode and color Doppler ultrasound protocols to improve interobserver agreement in image interpretation among experts in fetal echocardiography.

METHODS: A dataset comprising 209 B-mode and 205 color Doppler recordings acquired during midgestational anomaly scans (mean gestational age: 21.2 weeks) was systematically evaluated by five expert supervisors. Interobserver agreement was quantified using the prevalence-adjusted bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) coefficient. To evaluate consistency across anatomical layers, one-way ANOVA was employed, followed by post hoc analysis where applicable.

RESULTS: Most anatomical structures and functional features were consistently identified across observers, certain structures posed challenges, likely owing to their smaller size, lower visibility, or greater variability in presentation.

CONCLUSION: By integrating structured imaging sequences with advanced statistical methodologies, this study explored the potential of improving diagnostic accuracy and standardization in fetal cardiac assessments, offering insights into the development of more reliable protocols for clinical applications and future research.

PMID:41874471 | DOI:10.1111/echo.70422

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Estimating the public health and economic impact of increased COVID-19 annual vaccination coverage in the 60 years and older population in Spain

J Med Econ. 2026 Dec;29(1):940-956. doi: 10.1080/13696998.2026.2643130. Epub 2026 Mar 24.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: COVID-19 annual vaccination uptake in Spain remains suboptimal. This study aimed to estimate the clinical and economic impact of the 2023/2024 COVID-19 vaccination campaign in individuals aged ≥60 years (scenario A: coverage of 33.14% for ages 60-69, 53.15% for 70-79, and 65.32% for ≥80), and to compare it with a hypothetical scenario (scenario B) where coverage reaches the 75% target set by the Spanish Ministry of Health.

METHODS: A combined Markov-decision tree model adapted to the Spanish context simulated the weekly progression of the target population through six health states over one year. Infected individuals entered a decision tree reflecting different care pathways (outpatient, hospital ward, ICU with/without invasive mechanical ventilation [IMV], or death), each associated with specific health outcomes and direct costs (€2024). Clinical and economic outcomes were compared between scenarios A and B. Sensitivity analyses explored incremental increases in coverage and age-specific impacts. The analysis was conducted from the National Healthcare System (NHS) perspective.

RESULTS: Under scenario A, 378,970 symptomatic infections occurred, leading to 27,611 hospitalizations, 742 ICU admissions (47.3% requiring IMV), and 3,611 deaths. A total of 2,750 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were lost, and COVID-19-related care costs reached €240.4 million (85.7% from inpatient care). Scenario B, with 75% coverage, averted -19,409 symptomatic infections, 1,094 hospitalizations, 41 ICU admissions, and 129 deaths, 138 lost QALYs and total cost savings of about €10.5 million. Sensitivity analysis showed how the model is sensitive to sequential increases (10% by 10%) in vaccination rates and highlighted the importance of achieving high vaccination rates, especially in older age groups.

CONCLUSIONS: This analysis reveals the significant impact that increasing annual COVID-19 vaccination coverage among the Spanish population over 60 could have in preventing new infections, reducing severe disease consequences, and generating considerable cost savings for the NHS.

PMID:41874460 | DOI:10.1080/13696998.2026.2643130

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Survival After Pancreatic Resection for Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm: Supporting Selective Surgery

United European Gastroenterol J. 2026 Apr;14(3):e70199. doi: 10.1002/ueg2.70199.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Resection of intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) aims to prevent progression to invasive pancreatic cancer. However, the risks of pancreatic surgery and frequent findings of low-grade dysplasia (LGD) raise concerns about overtreatment. This EAHPBA-endorsed multinational study evaluated short- and long-term overall survival (OS) following preventive resection for IPMN (without pre-operative signs of cancer).

METHODS: Adult patients with resected IPMN showing LGD, high grade dysplasia (HGD) or T1-staged invasive carcinoma from 2008-2023 were identified from the OPTIMAL-IPMN database. Estimated OS rates at one, five and 10 years in patients undergoing preventive pancreatic resection were assessed using Kaplan-Meier analyses and predictors for mortality were evaluated using parametric survival regressions.

RESULTS: Among 2275 patients in the OPTIMAL-IPMN database, 1728 (77%) had undergone preventive pancreatic resection for IPMN. Of those were 61% resected without prior surveillance. Final pathology revealed LGD in 63%, HGD in 27% and T1a-c-staged invasive cancer in 10% (7.3% T1a-b, 2.8% T1c). Estimated 1-year OS rate was 97%. Estimated 5-year OS rates (landmark analysis at 1 year) for LGD, HGD, T1a-b, and T1c was 97%, 99%, 96% and 91% respectively. Independent predictors for long-term mortality included age ≥ 75 versus < 75 years (HR 1.97) and T1c versus LGD (HR 8.12).

CONCLUSION: This multinational study confirms excellent survival after preventive IPMN resection but reveals many upfront resections yielding LGD with unknown survival benefit. Future studies should aim to determine which patients can be followed safely with monitoring to avoid unnecessary immediate resection.

PMID:41874453 | DOI:10.1002/ueg2.70199

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Community pharmacists’ perceptions and practices regarding medication home delivery service: a cross-sectional study in the United Arab Emirates

Int J Pharm Pract. 2026 Mar 24:riag004. doi: 10.1093/ijpp/riag004. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The healthcare sector is evolving with a growing emphasis on remote services and patient-centred care. Medication Home Delivery (MHD) service has become essential in enhancing accessibility, allowing patients to receive medications at home. This study evaluates the perceptions, practices, challenges, and benefits of the MHD service among community pharmacists in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), providing insights for policy and practice improvements.

METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 403 licensed community pharmacists in the UAE. Participants completed a self-administered questionnaire assessing their awareness, perceptions, and experiences with the MHD service. Data analysis included descriptive statistics and logistic regression to identify factors influencing service provision.

KEY FINDINGS: Among respondents, 83.6% offered the MHD service, primarily through online platforms. Main factors influencing service provision included participants’ age, employment status, pharmacy type, and location (P < .05). Pharmacists raised concerns about patient counseling quality, communication, and medication security, highlighting the need for training to improve regulatory adherence. Major challenges included staffing shortages (51.6%), increased workload (36.5%), and limited time for patient counseling (41.2%). Despite these barriers, most pharmacists recognized MHD’s benefits in enhancing pharmacy efficiency (87.2%) and patient convenience (51.3%), particularly for elderly and disabled individuals (86.9%). Those not offering the MHD service cited unclear policies (24.2%) and logistical constraints as primary barriers (24.2%).

CONCLUSIONS: This study underscores both the opportunities and operational challenges of the MHD service in the UAE community pharmacies. Optimizing the service requires policy refinements, improved logistical frameworks, and targeted training programs to enhance service delivery, regulatory compliance, and patient care outcomes.

PMID:41874442 | DOI:10.1093/ijpp/riag004

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A Practical Guide to Experimental Design and Power Analysis for Metaproteomics Studies

Mol Omics. 2026 Mar 24:aaiag014. doi: 10.1093/molecular-omics/aaiag014. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Metaproteomics is an effective tool for characterizing the functional profiles of microbial communities by directly measuring protein expression. However, prospective power analysis and sample-size estimation are often overlooked at the study design stage in metaproteomics, which can result in underpowered experiments and reduced ability to detect biologically meaningful effects. In this study, we present a practical, end-to-end workflow for conducting power analysis prior to data collection. We focus on three common experimental designs: between-group comparisons, parallelized perturbation experiments, and beta diversity analyses. To tailored these experimental designs, we consider three major statistical approaches for power estimation: parametric tests (e.g., t-test, ANOVA), non-parametric tests (e.g., Wilcoxon rank-sum, Kruskal-Wallis), and distance-based multivariate methods (e.g., PERMANOVA using Bray-Curtis). By presenting detailed case studies, we provide practical guidance on how to calculate effect sizes, generate simulated datasets, and estimate statistical power across varying sample sizes. We also supply corresponding visualizations for each scenario to support sample-size determination and power assessment. This framework is intended to help researchers optimize sample size, improve experimental efficiency, and reduce costs, thereby enabling more reliable and interpretable biological insights from metaproteomic studies.

PMID:41874428 | DOI:10.1093/molecular-omics/aaiag014

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Psychological Factors Predict Response to a Low Fermentable Oligo-, di-, Monosaccharide and Polyol Dietary Intervention in Irritable Bowel Syndrome: A Prospective Cohort Study

United European Gastroenterol J. 2026 Apr;14(3):e70204. doi: 10.1002/ueg2.70204.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The low fermentable oligo-, di-, monosaccharide and polyol (FODMAP) diet (LFD) effectively manages irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but predictors of treatment response remain unknown.

OBJECTIVE: This study investigated whether psychological factors predict symptom improvement and quality of life (QoL) outcomes following a LFD intervention.

METHODS: Adults with Rome IV-defined IBS underwent a three-phase LFD over 6 months. Primary outcomes were IBS symptom severity and QoL. Validated questionnaires assessed depressive, gastrointestinal-specific anxiety (GSA), and somatic symptoms, illness perceptions, and treatment expectations. Latent class growth analysis (LCGA) and cross-lagged panel models (CLPM) were used to identify symptom trajectories and examine directional relationships between psychological factors and outcomes, respectively.

RESULTS: 112 participants (89% female, median age 30 ± 17 years) completed the study. LCGA identified distinct IBS symptom severity and QoL trajectories during the LFD. Higher baseline treatment credibility and expectancy predicted favourable symptom improvements but were unrelated to membership in the QoL trajectory. Elevated GSA, psychological distress (depression, anxiety, stress), and negative illness perceptions increased the likelihood of poorer outcomes. CLPM revealed that lower GSA and higher personal control preceded subsequent symptom reductions. Higher treatment expectancy predicted improved QoL and symptom outcomes over time, while QoL improvements reduced stress and GSA.

CONCLUSION: Lower baseline GSA anxiety and higher treatment expectations consistently predict better response to all phases of the LFD. These findings will help clinicians identify optimal candidates for dietary intervention versus alternative treatments.

PMID:41874426 | DOI:10.1002/ueg2.70204

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Interventional spine therapy for neuropathic pain in individuals with paraplegia

J Spinal Cord Med. 2026 Mar 24:1-9. doi: 10.1080/10790268.2025.2598981. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Infiltrations of the spine can be used to treat nociceptive or neuropathic pain. There is little data in the literature on the use of spinal injections in patients with paraplegia.

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to determine whether patients with spinal cord injury experienced improvement in pain and spasticity following spinal injection.

METHODS: 19 (9 female, 10 male) patients (5 patients AIS A, 5 patients AIS C, 9 patients AIS D), including 9 tetraplegic and 10 paraplegic patients, with 22 injection techniques and a follow-up of 4.2 months (1-12 months) were retrospectively examined in our spinal cord injury Center in 2022 and 2023. The pain intensity on the NRS (Numerical Rating Scale), the MAS (Modified Ashworth Scale) for the graduation of muscle tone and the Spinal Cord Independence Measurement (SCIM) were assessed before infiltration and as part of the follow-up examination.

RESULTS: Image intensifier-assisted facet and sacroiliac joint infiltrations were performed in 12 patients, CT-guided nerve root infiltrations and epidural injections in 10 patients with corresponding symptoms and image morphological correlate without complications. In all patients, a statistically significant reduction in pain on the NRS could be achieved (4.05 ± 1.84; p < 0.0001). A trend towards improvement was documented in the analysis of the MAS (0.14 ± 0.35; p = 0.08), whereas a significant improvement was statistically detected in the analysis of the SCIM (-15.59 ± 18.23; p = 0.0006).

CONCLUSION: Our study represents the first retrospective exploratory analysis (phase I-style feasibility study) after spinal injection in patients with spinal cord injury. The primary results in terms of pain intensity, muscle tone and independence are promising and, in our view, represent a further therapeutic approach in addition to pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapy options. However, further investigations are necessary for this.

PMID:41874322 | DOI:10.1080/10790268.2025.2598981

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Optimizing Colorectal Liver Metastasis Ablation through Metabolic Imaging, Margin Assessment, and Biopsy (The OPTABLATE Prospective Trial)

Radiology. 2026 Mar;318(3):e250864. doi: 10.1148/radiol.250864.

ABSTRACT

Background Real-time methods are needed for intraprocedural detection of residual tumors and incomplete thermal ablation (TA) to allow immediate retreatment and tumor eradication. Purpose To validate a TA workflow for detecting and immediately ablating residual viable colorectal liver metastases (CLMs). Materials and Methods This prospective single-center trial enrolled participants who underwent PET/CT-guided microwave CLM ablation from November 2019 to February 2023. The minimal ablation margin (MM) was calculated in all directions. Biopsies were obtained from the ablation zone (AZ) center and margin, with rapid tissue assessment for viable tumor (VT) cells using imprint cytology and fluorescent viability staining. Immediate reablation was performed if any of the following criteria were met: MM less than 5 mm at contrast-enhanced CT, residual PET-avid tumor, and/or VT cells at rapid tissue assessment. Gray-model statistics quantified the MM and VT impact on local tumor progression subdistribution hazard amid the competing risk of death. Results Seventy-seven participants (median age, 56 years [IQR, 47-64.5 years]; 39 male participants) underwent ablation in 104 CLMs. Overall, 15 of 104 (14%) CLMs underwent immediate reablation per the criteria (12 of 15, VT; seven of 15, MM <5 mm; and four of 15, residual fluorodeoxyglucose avidity). After reablation, all 12 initially VT-positive AZs underwent repeat biopsies with negative findings. Five of seven MMs less than 5 mm in AZs increased to greater than 5 mm after reablation. All four CLMs that underwent reablation due to PET/CT findings had AZs positive for VT, and one had MM less than 5 mm. MM greater than 5 mm protected against local tumor progression (LTP) (subdistribution hazard ratio, 0.12; 95% CI: 0.05, 0.30; P < .001). There was no LTP for MMs greater than 10 mm. The cumulative LTP incidence at 1, 2, and 3 years for participants with biopsy-proven completely ablated CLMs with MM greater than 5 mm was 7%, 12%, and 12%, respectively. Conclusion MM remained a critical technical factor affecting tumor control; the proposed multimodal comprehensive AZ assessment enabled immediate onsite reablation of 14% of CLMs with initially insufficient ablation treatment and improved local tumor control after thermal ablation. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04143516 © RSNA, 2026 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Georgiades in this issue.

PMID:41874299 | DOI:10.1148/radiol.250864

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Mind the gap: A call to integrate equity measures in the Trauma Quality Improvement Program

J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2026 Apr 1;100(4):595-604. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000004883. Epub 2026 Jan 9.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Equity is the “sixth domain” of health care quality but is not explicitly assessed by the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP). We sought to assess equitable outcomes within hospitals for populations that experience health disparities.

METHODS: Retrospective analysis of 2018-2020 TQIP data from Level 1/2 trauma centers (TCs). Following TQIP methodology, we applied multivariable logistic regression to calculate hospital-level risk-adjusted mortality and observed versus expected (O/E) in-hospital mortality ratios to identify low- (O/E, 95% confidence interval <1), average-, and high-mortality (O/E, 95% confidence interval >1) TCs. Using stratified analyses, we evaluated within-hospital equity by race (Black vs. Non-Hispanic White), ethnicity (Hispanic vs. Non-Hispanic White), and insurance (uninsured, Medicaid vs. commercial) by assessing concordance with advantaged reference group and presence of low-mortality gap (<5% difference).

RESULTS: We analyzed 892,583 patients at 384 TCs. A total of 192 hospitals (50%) were classified as “low-mortality” (median O/E, 0.85 [0.76-0.93]), 22 (5.7%) as average, and 170 (44.3%) as “high-mortality” (median O/E, 1.13 [1.06-1.22]). Low-mortality TCs treated a higher proportion of White patients (75% vs. 68%) and blunt injuries (95% vs. 93%), with higher Medicaid population (43% vs. 35%) relative to high-mortality hospitals. In stratified analyses among low-mortality TCs, only 4 (2.1%) of hospitals satisfied both equity criteria for their Black patients, 10 (5.2%) for Hispanic patients, 14 (7.3%) for Medicaid patients, and 6 (3.1%) for uninsured patients.

CONCLUSION: A minority of low-mortality TCs achieve equitable outcomes, with both minoritized and socioeconomically vulnerable populations affected. Such inequities are masked in quality improvement reports of total populations. Equity measures including stratified analyses should be incorporated into standard quality improvement reports to inform hospital-level initiatives and purposefully improve care for populations that experience health disparities.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic and Epidemiologic; Level III.

PMID:41874287 | DOI:10.1097/TA.0000000000004883