Background Increased medication adherence improves patient outcomes and lowers the overall cost of care by preventing disease relapse and hospital readmission. Several systematic reviews have identified that insight, therapeutic alliance, and attitude towards medication affect medication adherence in patients with schizophrenia; however, no study has examined all the aforementioned variables together nor has discussed the chains of these mediators. Purpose To examine the insight–medication adherence relationship among community-dwelling schizophrenia patients through a serial multiple mediation model of therapeutic alliance and medication attitude. Patients and Methods This study with a cross-sectional correlational design included a convenience sample of community-dwelling schizophrenia patients from Taiwan (n = 229). From January 2017 to January 2018, data were collected by trained nurses using questionnaires. The PROCESS tool was used to analyse fine-grained chains. Results In serial multiple mediation, the indirect effect of insight on medication adherence through therapeutic alliance and, subsequently, alteration of medication attitude was significant. However, the direct effect changed from significant to non-significant, indicating a complete mediating effect. Conclusion In community-dwelling schizophrenia patients, the effects of therapeutic alliance and medication attitude on medication adherence are greater than that of insight. We recommend revising the strategy of community home visits by different psychiatrists or nurses in alternating shifts. Therapeutic alliance is the first step required to promote medication adherence. Based on this alliance, altering the patients’ medication attitude may be more effective in improving medication adherence than merely enhancing insight.
In the past 2 years at our institution, 87 patients with hepatic metastasis from colorectal carcinoma have undergone surgical implantation of an arterial pump for the direct infusion of chemotherapeutic agents into the liver. We report six cases of cholangitis complicating the course of these patients.
Background: Sub-total/total gastrectomy with lymph node dissection (LND) remains an effective therapeutic strategy for resectable gastric adenocarcinomas (GACs). Despite the prognostic significance of positive lymph nodes (PLNs) defined in N-status, few have appraised the impacts of negative lymph nodes (NLNs) and the percentage of NLN (=number of NLNs/number of total lymph nodes [TLNs], %), as well as the extent of TLNs to be dissected in GACs. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 62 GAC patients (mean age of 67.1 years; 41 men) undergoing primary sub-total/total gastrectomy from a single institute. Candidate variables, including the number of NLNs (≤9 and >9) and the percentage of NLN (≤37.5, 37.5-80.6 and >80.6, %), were evaluated to determine their prognostic impacts and hazard ratios (HRs). Results: Under the multivariate Cox proportional-hazards regression model, tumor length exceeding 4 cm (p = 0.017; HR = 2.828), perineural invasion (p = 0.037; HR = 3.182), and lower percentage of NLN (p = 0.016 and p = 0.060; HRs = 1.000, 0.327, and 0.333 for subgroups ≤37.5, 37.5-80.6, and >80.6, respectively) were three independent predictors with elevated HRs for poor prognosis. GAC patients with the percentage of NLN > 80.6 were highly related to those with NLNs > 9 (p < 0.001), and GAC patients with NLNs > 9 were highly related to those with TLNs > 15 (p < 0.001). For all 62 GAC or 42 N(+) GAC patients, those who underwent LND with TLNs>15 tended to have more PLNs (p = 0.018, p = 0.003) and more NLNs (p < 0.001, p = 0.029) than did those with TLNs ≤ 15. Among the 42 GAC patients with TLNs > 15, a lower percentage of NLN (p = 0.026 and p = 0.015; HRs = 1.000, 0.272, and 0.180 for subgroups ≤37.5, 37.5-80.6, and >80.6, respectively) remained an independent predictor of poor prognosis. Conclusion: The percentage of NLN could predict the prognosis of GAC patients properly. However, an accurate percentage of NLN needs a minimal requirement of TLNs > 15 to detect an adequate number of PLNs and sufficient number of NLNs.
Objectives: To explore the influence of hospital and patient characteristics on deaths at home among inpatients facing impending death. Method: In this historical cohort study, 95,626 inpatients facing impending death from 362 hospitals in 2011 were recruited. The dependent variable was the place of death. The independent variables were the characteristics of the hospitals and the patients. A two-level hierarchical generalized linear model was used. Results: In total, 41.06% of subjects died at home. The hospital characteristics contributed to 29.25% of the total variation of the place of death. Private hospitals (odds ratio [OR] = 1.32, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.00–1.75), patients >65 years old (OR = 1.48, 95% CI. = 1.42–1.54), married (OR = 3.15, 95% CI. = 2.93–3.40) or widowed (OR = 3.39, 95% CI. = 3.12–3.67), from near-poor households (OR = 5.16, 95% CI. = 4.57–5.84), having diabetes mellitus (OR = 1.79, 95% CI. = 1.65–1.94), and living in a subcounty (OR = 2.27, 95% CI. = 2.16–2.38) were all risk factors for a death at home. Conclusion: Both hospital and patient characteristics have an effect of deaths at home among inpatients facing impending death. The value of the inpatient mortality rate as a major index of hospital accreditation should be interpreted intrinsically with the rate of deaths at home.
Accessible Summary What is known about the subject? Poor recovery will cause harm to the quality of life and well‐being of residents and that the scope of influence includes the self, family and society. No study to date has investigated empowerment and the other multiple factors associated with personal recovery among psychiatric nursing home residents. What does the paper add to existing knowledge? The factors associated with personal recovery are empowerment, social support and global functioning. This pioneer study contributes new evidence that personal recovery is mainly predicted by empowerment, social support and global function, with empowerment exhibiting the highest predictive value. What are the implications for practice? Strengthening empowerment in mental health nursing may contribute more to the personal recovery of psychiatric nursing home residents than improving global function or social support. Mental health professionals should shift to empowerment‐oriented care to improve individuals' personal recovery, such as offering more opportunities to achieve autonomy, encouraging individuals' involvement in decision‐making and promoting individuals' motivation for achieving their goals. Abstract IntroductionIndividuals diagnosed with mental illness have a need for recovery. No study to date has investigated empowerment and the other multiple factors associated with personal recovery among psychiatric nursing home residents. AimThe study aimed to identify the factors associated with personal recovery among psychiatric nursing home residents. MethodsThis was a cross‐sectional study with convenience sampling. Participants were recruited from a psychiatric nursing home in Northern Taiwan between April and June 2018. Data were collected through self‐reported, structured questionnaires with verified reliability and validity. Descriptive and hierarchical regression analyses were performed. The present study followed the STROBE guidelines. ResultsThe study included 158 participants. The factors associated with recovery according to bivariate associations were religious belief, psychotic symptoms, global function, social support and empowerment. In the hierarchical regression, empowerment, social support and global function were the main predictive factors of recovery, with the explained variation reaching 40.8%. Empowerment exhibited the highest predictive value for the recovery. Implications for clinical practiceStrengthening empowerment in mental health nursing may contribute more to the personal recovery of psychiatric nursing home residents than improving global function or social support.
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