No previous study has raised the effects of RIF on lung function data of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. The objective of the present study was to assess the effects of RIF on spirometric data measured in male patients with a stable COPD. Sixteen patients with stable COPD (mean ± SD of age: 64 ± 7 years) who fasted during Ramadan volunteered to the study. Three sessions (Before-R, End-R, and After-R) were selected for spirometry tests that were consistently performed 2.5–4.5 hr before fasting break. Assessment sessions comprised: forced vital capacity (FVC), 1st s forced expiratory volume (FEV1), FEV1/FVC, peak expiratory flow (PEF), maximal mid-expiratory flow (MMEF), and forced expiratory flow rate at the x% of FVC to be exhaled (FEFx%). A reversibility test was performed only during the Before-Ramadan session. Spirometric data were expressed in percentages of local reference values. Findings were analyzed by applying repeated measures analysis of variance. The mean ± SD of the postbronchodilator FEV1/FVC ratio and the FEV1 were, respectively, 0.52 ± 0.14 and 48 ± 19%. The mean ± SD of FEV1 (Before-R: 47 ± 19, End-R: 45 ± 18, After-R: 44 ± 19%), FVC (Before-R: 73 ± 18, End-R: 71 ± 16, After-R: 69 ± 17%), FEV1/FVC (Before-R: 67 ± 16, End-R: 66 ± 16, After-R: 65 ± 16%), PEF (Before-R: 46 ± 19, End-R: 47 ± 22, After-R: 45 ± 21%), MMEF (Before-R: 19 ± 10, End-R: 18 ± 8, After-R: 18 ± 9%), FEF25% (Before-R: 16 ± 6, End-R: 16 ± 5, After-R: 15 ± 5%), FEF50% (Before-R: 21 ± 14, End-R: 20 ± 12, After-R: 20 ± 12%) and FEF75% (Before-R: 27 ± 19, End-R: 27 ± 19, After-R: 27 ± 19%) were not significantly influenced by RIF. RIF did not bring about any significant changes in the spirometric data of stable COPD male patients fasting the 2016 holy month of Ramadan.
IntroductionHealthcare safety has become a public health priority in developed world. Development of safety culture care is fundamental pillar to any strategy for improving quality and safety care. The objective of this study is to measure level of patients’ safety culture among healthcare professionals at university hospital, center Farhat Hached Sousse (Tunisia).MethodsWe conducted, in 2013, a descriptive study among all licensed physicians (n= 116) and a representative sample of paramedical staff (n= 203) exercising at university hospital center Farhat Hached Sousse (Tunisia). Measuring instrument used is a valid questionnaire containing ten safety care dimensions. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 19.ResultsThe response rates were 74.1% for physicians and 100% for paramedical staff. Overall score of different dimensions varies between 32.7% and 68.8%. Dimension having most developed score (68.8%) was perception of “Frequency and reporting adverse events”. Dimension with lowest score (32.7%) was “Management support for safety care”.ConclusionOur study has allowed us to conclude that all dimensions of patients’ safety culture need to be improved among our establishment’s professionals. Therefore, more efforts are necessary in order to develop a security culture based on confidence, learning, communication and team work and rejecting sanction, blame, criminalization and punitive reporting.
Introduction Aucune étude antérieure n’a élaboré le profil des patients Algériens hospitalisés pour COVID-19. L’objectif de cette étude était de déterminer le profil clinique, biologique et tomodensitométrique des patients Algériens hospitalisés pour COVID-19. Méthodes Une étude prospective était menée auprès des patients hospitalisés pour COVID-19 (période: 19 mars-30 avril 2020). Les données cliniques, biologiques et radiologiques, le type de traitement reçu et la durée de l’hospitalisation étaient notés. Résultats Le profil clinique des 86 patients atteints de COVID-19 était un homme non-fumeur, âgé de 53 ans, qui était dans 42% des cas en contact avec un cas suspect/confirmé de COVID-19 et ayant une comorbidité dans 70% des cas (hypertension artérielle, diabète sucré, pathologie respiratoire chronique et allergie, cardiopathie). Les plaintes cliniques étaient dominées par la triade «asthénie-fièvre-toux» dans plus de 70% des cas. Les anomalies biologiques les plus fréquentes étaient: syndrome inflammatoire biologique (90,1%), basocytémie (70,8%), lymphopénie (53,3%), augmentation de la lactico-deshydrogénase (52,2%), anémie (38,7%), augmentation de la phosphokinase (28,8%) et cytolyse hépatique (27,6%). Les signes tomodensitométriques les plus fréquents étaient: verre dépoli (91,8%), condensations alvéolaires (61,2%), verre dépoli en plage (60,0%), et verre dépoli nodulaire (55,3%). Un traitement à base de «chloroquine, azithromycine, zinc, vitamine C, enoxaparine, double antibiothérapie et ± corticoïdes» était prescrit chez 34,9% des patients. La moyenne de la durée d’hospitalisation était de 7±3 jours. Conclusion La connaissance des profils des formes modérées et sévères du COVID-19 contribuerait à faire progresser les stratégies de contrôle de l’infection en Algérie.
Background: Mortality rates and causes of death of the detainees are hence different from those of the general population and there also vary according to regions and countries. Aims: To study the peculiarities of death among individuals detained in the region of Sousse in Tunisia and to suggest preventive measures. Material and methods: This is a descriptive retrospective study of all deaths in detention collated in the Forensic Medicine department of Farhat Hached teaching hospital in Sousse, Tunisia during a 10-year period 2006 to 2015. Results: 26 deaths were collected. All the victims were males. The mean age was 39.5 years. The deaths occurred inside the prison in 42.3% and 57.7% in a hospital. The deaths were of natural causes in 69.2%. The most common natural causes were cancer (6 cases, 33.3%) and infections (5 cases,27.8%). Violent death accounted for 31.8% of deaths with 08 victims. Suicide and homicide were the violent death causes most incriminated each with 11.5% (3 cases). The suicide means was hanging in all cases. The death was accidental in 2 cases (7.7%). Conclusion: This study shows that a large proportion of deaths among prisoners are preventable. Prevention is, on the one side, by improving the prison health coverage and on the other side by training the prison staff on the identification of suicidal crises and on controlling the technical devices facilitating the transition to the suicidal act, in particular the hanging cases.
This study measured the level of awareness of patient safety among physicians at Farhat Hached university hospital. The results obtained will be used to guide safety-promoting actions.
Introduction: In developed countries, authors have reported variations over time in the seat and histological type of gastric adenocarcinomas, which were explained by Helicobacter pylori infection (HPI) incidence changes. In North-African countries and the Arabic world, epidemiological changes in gastric adenocarcinomas are still unknown. Our study aims to explore and to describe those changes in central Tunisia. Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective observational and descriptive study including 876 cases based on the National Central Tunisian Register of Cancers over a period of 21 years. Two groups were formed and compared (group A: 337 patients from 1995 to 2005; group B: 539 patients from 2006 to 2015). Results: HPI decreased from 32.6% in group A to 11.2% in group B (p < 0.05). Signet ring cell carcinomas increased in 2 decades from 14% in group A to 36% in group B (p < 0.05). Proximal cancers were 16.61% in group A and increased to 19.66% in group B (p = 0.3). Total gastrectomy rate was 10.4% in group A versus 23.2% in group B (p < 0.05). Conclusion: This study has shown a significant increase of signet ring cell carcinomas with a simultaneous decrease in HPI in the last decade in central Tunisia.
Studies evaluating the metabolic profiles of ENSs are scarce and presented controversial conclusions. This study aimed to compare the metabolic profiles of ENSs’ and AHNSs’ groups. Males aged 25–45 years and free from a known history of metabolic and/or cardiovascular diseases were included. According to the smoking status, two groups of ENSs and AHNSs were identified. Body mass index (BMI, kg/m 2 ), waist circumference (WC, cm), systolic and diastolic blood pressures (SBP, DBP, mmHg), fasting blood data in mmol/L (blood glycemia [FBG], triglycerides [TG], total cholesterol [TC], high- and low- density lipoprotein cholesterol [HDL-C, LDL-C]) and obesity status were evaluated. The metabolic syndrome (MetS) was defined according to the 2006 International Diabetes Federation (IDF) recommendations. Data were expressed as mean ± standard deviation ( SD ) or percentages. Compared to the AHNSs’ group ( n = 29), the ENSs’ one ( n = 29) had (a) higher values of BMI (26.5 ± 2.3 vs. 28.2 ± 3.6), WC (95 ± 7 vs. 100 ± 10), and TG (1.22 ± 0.40 vs. 1.87 ± 0.85); and (b) included a lower percentage of males having low HDL-C (82.7% vs. 62.0%), and higher percentages of males having obesity (6.9% vs. 37.9%) or hypertriglyceridemia (10.7% vs. 51.7%). Both the ENSs’ and AHNSs’ groups: (a) had similar values of FBG (5.38 ± 0.58 vs. 5.60 ± 0.37), TC (4.87 ± 1.16 vs. 4.36 ± 0.74), HDL-C (0.92 ± 0.30 vs. 0.82 ± 0.21), LDL-C (3.09 ± 0.98 vs. 2.92 ± 0.77), SBP (117 ± 9 vs. 115 ± 8), and DBP (76 ± 6 vs. 73 ± 7); and (b) included similar percentages of males having normal weight (17.2% vs. 31.0%); overweight (44.8% vs. 62.1%); android obesity (79.3% vs. 59.6%), hypertension (10.3% vs. 10.3%), hyperglycemia (37.9% vs. 48.2%), and MetS (51.7% vs. 34.5%). There is a need to monitor narghile use among male metabolic patients since it alters some components of the MetS.
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