OBJECTIVE To determine if increased mortality could be detected with the administration of ceftriaxone and IV calcium in infants through an analysis of a large repository of electronic health records. METHODS Patients were split into 3 groups: 1) neonates, 2) infants, and 3) infants <1 year whose age was not specified. Deaths were classified into mutually exclusive categories based on the administration and timing of ceftriaxone and IV calcium. Crude death rates were calculated, and logistic regression modeling was used to calculate adjusted relative odds of death with associated covariates. RESULTS A total of 259,149 infants were identified. Of 79,038 neonates, the proportion of patients that received ceftriaxone and IV calcium within 48 hours who died was 3.8%, compared with 1.95% (IV calcium), 0.3% (ceftriaxone), 1.54% (IV fluids), and 2.03% (parenteral nutrition). For 102,456 infants, the proportions of deaths were 5.47% (ceftriaxone and IV calcium within 48 hours), 0.45% (IV calcium), 0.15% (ceftriaxone), 0.39% (IV fluids), and 5.5% (parenteral nutrition). Multivariate analysis showed increased odds of death in infants who received ceftriaxone and IV calcium within 48 hours, regardless of age, and propensity score–matched analysis showed a more than 2-fold increased risk for death. CONCLUSIONS The increased risk for death following ceftriaxone and IV calcium administration was noted not only in neonates, but among older infants as well.
Objectives The COVID-19 pandemic has introduced new opportunities for health communication, including an increase in the public’s use of online outlets for health-related emotions. People have turned to social media networks to share sentiments related to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. In this paper, we examine the role of social messaging shared by Persons in the Public Eye (ie, athletes, politicians, news personnel, etc) in determining overall public discourse direction. Methods We harvested approximately 13 million tweets ranging from 1 January 2020 to 1 March 2022. The sentiment was calculated for each tweet using a fine-tuned DistilRoBERTa model, which was used to compare COVID-19 vaccine-related Twitter posts (tweets) that co-occurred with mentions of People in the Public Eye. Results Our findings suggest the presence of consistent patterns of emotional content co-occurring with messaging shared by Persons in the Public Eye for the first 2 years of the COVID-19 pandemic influenced public opinion and largely stimulated online public discourse. Discussion We demonstrate that as the pandemic progressed, public sentiment shared on social networks was shaped by risk perceptions, political ideologies and health-protective behaviours shared by Persons in the Public Eye, often in a negative light. Conclusion We argue that further analysis of public response to various emotions shared by Persons in the Public Eye could provide insight into the role of social media shared sentiment in disease prevention, control and containment for COVID-19 and in response to future disease outbreaks.
Background Centralized care for patients with pancreatic cancer is associated with longer survival. We hypothesized that increased travel distance from home is associated with increased survival for pancreatic cancer patients. Methods The National Cancer Database user file for all pancreatic cancer patients was investigated from 2004 through 2015. Distance from the patients’ zip code to the treating facility was determined. Survival was investigated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Cox hazard ratios (CoxHRs) were determined based on stage of disease, distance traveled for care, and clinical factors. Results 340 780 patients were identified. In the average age of 68 ± 12 years, 51% were male and 83% were Caucasian. For all stages of cancer, longer survival was associated with traveling farther ( P < .001). The survival advantage was longer for Caucasians than African Americans (3.7 months vs. 2.6 months, P < .001) Travel was associated with a 13% decrease in risk of death ( P < .001). Even controlling for the pathologic stage, traveling farther was associated with decreased risk of death (CoxHR = .91, P < .001). Discussion Traveling for care is associated with improved survival for pancreatic cancer patients. While a selection bias may exist, the fact that all stages of patients investigated benefited suggests that this is a real phenomenon.
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