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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Analysis of reasons and countermeasures for cancellation of oral and maxillofacial day surgery

Shanghai Kou Qiang Yi Xue. 2023 Jun;32(3):328-331.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To analyze the reasons for cancellation of oral and maxillofacial day surgery on the same day, and to propose countermeasures, so as to provide reference for improving the work efficiency and medical quality of day surgery ward.

METHODS: The number of oral and maxillofacial day surgery cancellation cases in Shanghai Ninth People’s Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine from June 1, 2021, to December 31, 2021 was calculated and then the relevant causes were analyzed.

RESULTS: During the statistical period, a total of 3134 patients underwent oral and maxillofacial day surgery. Among them, 72 (2.30%) cases were canceled of day surgery on the same day. Cancellation of oral and maxillofacial day surgery was as followed: patient-related factors(31, 43.05%), disease-related factors (28, 38.89%), epidemic of Covid 19-related(10, 13.89%), and hospital-related factors(3, 4.17%). The top three departments of oral and maxillofacial day surgery cancellation were Department of Preventive Dentistry(7, 7.37%), Department of Oral Surgery(22, 6.56%) and Department of Oral and Craniomaxillofacial Surgery(18,2.77%).

CONCLUSIONS: The cancellation rate of oral and maxillofacial day surgery can be reduced by strengthening screening in anesthesia assessment at outpatient clinic, strengthening doctor-patient communication, strengthening health education and epidemic prevention and control in day outpatient management center.

PMID:37803993

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Evaluation of the effect of 3D printing resin splint based on the retention effect of orthodontic treatment in patients with periodontal disease

Shanghai Kou Qiang Yi Xue. 2023 Jun;32(3):323-327.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate the difference in the retention effect of 3D printing resin splint and Hawley retainer combined with lingual retention wire in periodontal disease patients after orthodontic treatment.

METHODS: Forty patients who finished orthodontic treatment for periodontal disease from January 2021 to February 2022 were selected and divided into experimental group and control group according to the random number table method, with 20 patients in each group. Patients in the experimental group used 3D printing resin splint for retention, while patients in the control group used Hawley retainer combined with a lingual retention wire for retention. The chair-side operation time of the retainers was recorded for both groups. The maxillary and mandibular cuspid width, molar width, overjet, overbite and irregularity index were measured at 1 month and 6 months after orthodontic treatment in both groups. Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS 12.0 software package.

RESULTS: The mean time for chair-side manipulation of experimental group and control group was 8.23, 11.17 min, respectively. The difference between the two groups was statistically significant (P<0.05) when comparing the width of the maxillary and mandibular cusps, the width of the molars, overjet, overbite and the irregularity index after 1 month and 6 months of wear of the retainers, which were significantly greater in the experimental group than in the control group at 6 months(P<0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: 3D printing resin splint, with short chair-side manipulation time, was more effective than Hawley retainer combined with a lingual retention wire, and the efficacy of both groups was otherwise generally consistent.

PMID:37803992

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

The clinical value of multislice CT for measuring the anatomical position of the mandibular nerve canal

Shanghai Kou Qiang Yi Xue. 2023 Jun;32(3):314-317.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate the clinical value of multislice CT(MSCT) for measuring the anatomical position of the mandibular nerve canal during implantation in the posterior mandibular regions.

METHODS: A total of 109 patients with mandibular posterior dental implants were included,and the linear distance between the alveolar ridge and the mandibular nerve canal in the posterior mandibular region to be implanted was measured by MSCT and CBCT before implantation. All 109 patients were divided into the MSCT navigation group and CBCT navigation group, and the imaging data from both groups were imported into the dynamic real-time navigation system for implant design, in parallel and in real time. The patients in both groups underwent MSCT or CBCT to measure the deviation of the actual position of the implant from the preoperative design position, including the deviation of the cervical centrum and apical part of the implant and the deviation of the distance between the implant and the mandibular nerve canal, and to assess their clinical results after treatment. The data were statistically analyzed with SPSS 21.0 software package.

RESULTS: The deviations from the linear spacing between the top of the alveolar ridge and the upper arm of the mandibular nerve canal of the different dental implants in the area to be implanted were detected by MSCT as well as CBCT methods with no significant difference. In addition, there was no significant difference in the cervical deviation, tip deviation, depth deviation, angular deviation and deviation of the spacing between the implant and the mandibular nerve canal in the postoperative implant position in MSCT navigation group compared to the preoperative implant design position in CBCT navigation group. There was also no significant difference in the incidence of functional impairment of the inferior alveolar nerve between CBCT-guided and MSCT-guided group of patients.

CONCLUSIONS: MSCT can achieve precise localization of the anatomical structures of the mandibular nerve canal, and the operation according to MSCT navigation during dynamic real-time guided dental implant surgery can avoid damage to the inferior alveolar nerve.

PMID:37803990

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Evaluation of red and white aesthetic effects of porcelain veneers in the restoration of developmental anterior dental gaps

Shanghai Kou Qiang Yi Xue. 2023 Jun;32(3):276-279.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate the red and white aesthetic effect of porcelain veneer in the restoration of developmental anterior interdental spaces.

METHODS: A total of 152 anterior teeth in 64 patients with developmental anterior dental gaps were restored using porcelain veneers, the aesthetic effects before and after restoration were evaluated by pink aesthetic index (PES) and white aesthetic index(WES), the aesthetic effect of gingival papilla filling and reconstruction was evaluated by interdental gingival papilla index (PIS), and visual analogue score (VAS) was used to compare the satisfaction of patients before and after restoration. SPSS 203.0 software package was used for statistical analysis.

RESULTS: The overall mean scores of PES before and after restoration of 152 developmental anterior interdental teeth were 9.63±2.23 and 13.64±0.88, respectively. The average scores of WES before and after restoration were 6.85±1.87 and 9.81±0.58, respectively. There were significant differences of PES and WES scores before and after restoration(P<0.01). According to the requirements of “near” perfect restoration(PES≥13 points, WES≥9 points), the red and white aesthetic effect after restoration was near the standard. The scores of PIS before and after restoration were 1.86±0.67 and 2.97±0.18, the interdental gingival papilla was completely filled with space, and the shape was ideal, there were significant statistical differences before and after restoration(P<0.01). Patients were more satisfied with the smile curve and morphology of the restored anterior teeth than other parameters.

CONCLUSIONS: The aesthetic effect of using porcelain veneers to repair developmental anterior interdental gaps is ideal, among which the filling of the papillae between the teeth can meet the expectations of patients, and the aesthetic effect evaluation of PIS and PES/WES applied to porcelain veneers to repair developmental anterior interdental spaces has practical guiding significance in clinical practice.

PMID:37803983

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

The Turkish version of Caries Impacts and Experiences Questionnaire for Children: Translation, reliability, and validity

Int J Paediatr Dent. 2023 Oct 6. doi: 10.1111/ipd.13128. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Caries Impacts and Experiences Questionnaire for Children (CARIES-QC) has been developed to assess the oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) associated with caries.

AIM: This study aimed to evaluate the validity and reliability of the CARIES-QC in the Turkish-speaking population following its translation and adaptation into Turkish (CARIES-QC/T).

DESIGN: Two hundred and fifty children between the ages of 5 and 16 years who have active dental caries were included in the study and answered the Turkish-translated and cross-culturally adapted final version of CARIES-QC/T. Test-retest reliability and internal consistency were used to examine the reliability of the CARIES-QC/T. Factor structure of CARIES-QC/T was analyzed using exploratory factor analysis (EFA), and convergent validity was determined.

RESULTS: Cronbach’s alpha and McDonald’s ômega values were 0.907 and 0.908, respectively. For the CARIES-QC/T scale, the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) value was 0.933, and polychoric correlations ranged from 0.390 to 0.794. The convergent validity of the items revealed a statistically significant correlation with the global question (rs = 0.821, p < .001). The EFA results of CARIES-QC/T suggested a one-factor solution and explained 59.7% of the total variance.

CONCLUSION: The findings provided supporting evidence that the CARIES-QC/T could be used as a tool for measuring OHRQoL in healthy Turkish-speaking children aged 5-16 years with active caries.

PMID:37803497 | DOI:10.1111/ipd.13128

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Quasi-experimental study finding no localised gun crime or call reduction after gun buybacks in Philadelphia

Inj Prev. 2023 Oct 6:ip-2023-044948. doi: 10.1136/ip-2023-044948. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Gun buyback programmes have been popular in the USA since the 1970s. Studies show that they have no effect on citywide gun crime rates, but more microlevel examinations around gun buyback locations have not been conducted. This study tests for local effects of 34 Philadelphia, PA buyback events at 30 locations between 2019 and 2021.

METHODS: We analysed all gun-related crime events and gun-related calls for service attended by the police from 2019 to 2021. Multilevel models with an autoregressive residual structure were estimated on weekly gun crime and call event intensity (inverse distance weighted) totals across a range of distances (4000-8000 feet). Impacts of a gun buyback event were estimated for 1-4 weeks postevent.

RESULTS: Statistically significant weekly increases in gun event intensity are associated with seasonality and after the murder of George Floyd. Gun event intensity was not significantly affected by gun buybacks. Across 20 sensitivity tests of different distances and time periods (4000-8000 feet and between 1 and 4 weeks), gun buybacks were not statistically associated with any localised reduction in the intensity of gun crimes and calls.

CONCLUSIONS: Extant research has failed to uncover any effect of gun buybacks on citywide gun crime rates. The current results now contribute a lack of evidence at the local level to this literature. While gun buybacks remain popular with politicians and the public, this study adds to the ongoing question of whether buyback funds could be better spent more effectively.

PMID:37802644 | DOI:10.1136/ip-2023-044948

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Temporal trends in mortality location in patients with anal cancer in the USA: an analysis of the National Center for Health Statistics mortality data

BMJ Support Palliat Care. 2023 Oct 6:spcare-2023-004571. doi: 10.1136/spcare-2023-004571. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Investigate trends in where patients died of anal cancer in the USA.

METHODS: Retrospective cohort study using the US National Center for Health Statistics Wide-Ranging ONline Data for Epidemiologic Research platform from 2003 to 2020; all patients with death certificates listing anal cancer as the underlying cause of death in the USA. Main outcome measure of location of patient death: inpatient facility, home, hospice, nursing home/long-term care facility and other.

RESULTS: There were a total of 16 296 deaths with anal cancer as the underlying diagnosis during the study period. The crude rate increased from 0.191 per 100 000 deaths in 2003 to 0.453 per 100 000 deaths in 2020. Over the study period, 22.4% of patient deaths occurred in inpatient facilities, 44.9% at home, 12.2% at hospice facilities and 13.1% at nursing homes/long-term care facilities. The percentage of deaths occurring in hospice facilities increased from 1.0% to 13.3% during the study period. Deaths at home also increased from 42.7% in 2003 to 55.8% in 2020. Meanwhile, inpatient deaths decreased from 33.5% in 2003 to 14.4% in 2020.

CONCLUSIONS: There has been a significant increase in the proportion of patients with anal cancer dying at home or hospice from 2003 to 2020.

PMID:37802636 | DOI:10.1136/spcare-2023-004571

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

iVY: protocol for a randomised clinical trial to test the effect of a technology-based intervention to improve virological suppression among young adults with HIV in the USA

BMJ Open. 2023 Oct 6;13(10):e077676. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-077676.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Young adults with HIV (YWH) experience worse clinical outcomes than adults and have high rates of substance use (SU) and mental illness that impact their engagement in care and adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART). The intervention for Virologic Suppression in Youth (iVY) aims to address treatment engagement/adherence, mental health (MH) and SU in a tailored manner using a differentiated care approach that is youth friendly. Findings will provide information about the impact of iVY on HIV virological suppression, MH and SU among YWH who are disproportionately impacted by HIV and at elevated risk for poor health outcomes.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The iVY study will test the effect of a technology-based intervention with differing levels of resource requirements (ie, financial and personnel time) in a randomised clinical trial with an adaptive treatment strategy among 200 YWH (18-29 years old). The primary outcome is HIV virological suppression measured via dried blood spot. This piloted and protocolised intervention combines: (1) brief weekly sessions with a counsellor via a video-chat platform (video-counselling) to discuss MH, SU, HIV care engagement/adherence and other barriers to care; and (2) a mobile health app to address barriers such as ART forgetfulness, and social isolation. iVY has the potential to address important, distinct and changing barriers to HIV care engagement (eg, MH, SU) to increase virological suppression among YWH at elevated risk for poor health outcomes.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study and its protocols have been approved by the University of California, San Francisco Institutional Review Board. Study staff will work with a Youth Advisory Panel to disseminate results to YWH, participants and the academic community.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05877729.

PMID:37802624 | DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-077676

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Health service needs and perspectives of a rainforest conserving community in Papua New Guinea’s Ramu lowlands: a combined clinical and rapid anthropological assessment with parallel treatment of urgent cases

BMJ Open. 2023 Oct 6;13(10):e075946. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-075946.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Determine community needs and perspectives as part of planning health service incorporation into Wanang Conservation Area, in support of locally driven sustainable development.

DESIGN: Clinical and rapid anthropological assessment (individual primary care assessments, key informant (KI) interviews, focus groups (FGs), ethnography) with treatment of urgent cases.

SETTING: Wanang (pop. c189), a rainforest community in Madang province, Papua New Guinea.

PARTICIPANTS: 129 villagers provided medical histories (54 females (f), 75 males (m); median 19 years, range 1 month to 73 years), 113 had clinical assessments (51f, 62m; median 18 years, range 1 month to 73 years). 26 ≥18 years participated in sex-stratified and age-stratified FGs (f<40 years; m<40 years; f>40 years; m>40 years). Five KIs were interviewed (1f, 4m). Daily ethnographic fieldnotes were recorded.

RESULTS: Of 113 examined, 11 were ‘well’ (a clinical impression based on declarations of no current illness, medical histories, conversation, no observed disease signs), 62 (30f, 32m) were treated urgently, 31 referred (15f, 16m), indicating considerable unmet need. FGs top-4 ranked health issues concorded with KI views, medical histories and clinical examinations. For example, ethnoclassifications of three ((A) ‘malaria‘, (B) ‘sotwin‘, (C) ‘grile‘) translated to the five biomedical conditions diagnosed most ((A) malaria, 9 villagers; (B) upper respiratory infection, 25; lower respiratory infection, 10; tuberculosis, 9; (C) tinea imbricata, 15) and were highly represented in declared medical histories ((A) 75 participants, (B) 23, (C) 35). However, 29.2% of diagnoses (49/168) were limited to one or two people. Treatment approaches included plant medicines, stored pharmaceuticals, occasionally rituals. Travel to hospital/pharmacy was sometimes undertaken for severe/refractory disease. Service barriers included: no health patrols/accessible aid post, remote hospital, unfamiliarity with institutions and medicine costs. Service introduction priorities were: aid post, vaccinations, transport, perinatal/birth care and family planning.

CONCLUSIONS: This study enabled service planning and demonstrated a need sufficient to acquire funding to establish primary care. In doing so, it aided Wanang’s community to develop sustainably, without sacrificing their forest home.

PMID:37802618 | DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-075946

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Understanding the burden of mental and physical health disorders on families: findings from the Saudi National Mental Health Survey

BMJ Open. 2023 Oct 6;13(10):e072115. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072115.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess prevalence and correlation of factors of family burden associated with mental and physical disorders in the general population of Saudi Arabia.

SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: A secondary analysis of data from the Saudi National Mental Health Survey (SNMHS).

OUTCOME MEASURES: Mental and physical health disorders of first-degree relatives and objective (time, financial) and subjective (distress, embarrassment) family burden.

RESULTS: We found significant caregiver burden for family members with mental health disorders. Around one-third of the sample was providing care for a family member with a health issue. Within this group, 40% had a mental health diagnosis. 73% of the study population reported experiencing some form of burden as a result of the care they are obligated to provide for their family members. We found the highest burden on male caregivers, in providing care for family members with serious memory disorders, mental retardation, schizophrenia or psychosis, followed by, alcohol and drug disorders, anxiety, depression or manic depression.

CONCLUSION: Our findings for family burden were statistically significant, indicating potential negative impact on caregiver coping ability with the demands of caring for family members with health issues. A comprehensive review of national mental health policies is required to integrate aspects of community mental health promotion, scale-up prevention, screening interventions and social support to protect against the difficulties of mental illness and reduce the burden on caregivers, the family, society, health system and the economy.

PMID:37802615 | DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072115