Improved education on transgender issues in nursing and medical education is warranted. Healthcare professionals should be aware of how their attitudes and their level of knowledge affect the care given during the sex reassignment surgery process.
We report a prospective study of 232 consecutive patients with hip fractures. All were over 64 years of age and living independently before admission to a geriatric orthopaedic ward. We assessed the value, at admission, of predicting factors for independent living at one year after injury. The most important factors were: (1) preinjury function in activities of daily living (grade A or B on the Katz et al (1963) scale); (2) absence of other medical conditions which would impair rehabilitation; and (3) cognitive function better than 7 on the Pfeiffer (1975) mental questionnaire. The odds ratios (95% CI) for these three predictors were 3.5 (1.3 to 9.1), 2.9 (1.3 to 6.1) and 2.4 (1.9 to 4.9), respectively. When all predictors were positive at admission, 92% were living independently at one year; with one, two or three negative predictors, the percentages living independently were 76, 61 and 27, respectively. The median values of the total number of days in hospital, irrespective of diagnosis, during the first year were 12, 24, 29 and 149 days for the four groups. The mortality at one year was predictable on admission only by the number of medical conditions: with no other diagnosis than the fracture the mortality was 0%; with one or two additional conditions the mortality was 14%; and with three or more additional diagnoses it was 24%. These simple and robust predictors can be used to optimise resources for rehabilitation.
We studied the natural course of cognitive state in 256 consecutive hip fracture patients who were admitted from an independent living situation. We employed a treatment programme that focused on preventing postoperative cognitive impairment. Cognitive function was assessed with the SPSMQ screening test. The incidence of postoperative cognitive impairment among those lucid on admission was 13%, which generally was reversed before discharge. Thirty-seven percent were cognitively impaired on admission; of those, 51% reached normal test scores while in hospital. Those who recovered within the first week had as good a prognosis during the first year as those who remained lucid throughout the hospital stay. Cognitive impairment was associated with an increased complication rate, e.g. a three-fold increase of early fracture displacement and a four-fold increase of wound infection. This increased risk was present even in patients with mild/moderate cognitive impairment and could not entirely be explained by age. Our results suggest that it is possible to decrease postoperative cognitive impairment by routine monitoring of cognitive status, a high level of continuity and a reorientation programme. The routine assessment of the cognitive function is recommended in geriatric patients who are admitted for surgery.
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