2011
DOI: 10.1002/14651858.cd007578.pub2
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Notification and support for people exposed to the risk of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) (or other prion diseases) through medical treatment (iatrogenically)

Abstract: There is insufficient rigorous evidence to determine the effects of interventions to notify people at CJD or vCJD risk and to support them subsequently, or to identify the best approach to communication in these situations. The thematic synthesis can be used to inform policy and practice decisions for communicating with people at risk in the absence of rigorous evaluative studies.

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Cited by 11 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Clinical discussion of CJD often refers to three main types; sporadic or classical CJD being the most common form, accounting for about 80-90% of all cases (Rentz 2008, Ryan et al 2011. What triggers sporadic CJD is unknown, but it is not thought to be inherited or otherwise transmitted interpersonally.…”
Section: Creutzfeldt-jakob Disease (Cjd): Defining the Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Clinical discussion of CJD often refers to three main types; sporadic or classical CJD being the most common form, accounting for about 80-90% of all cases (Rentz 2008, Ryan et al 2011. What triggers sporadic CJD is unknown, but it is not thought to be inherited or otherwise transmitted interpersonally.…”
Section: Creutzfeldt-jakob Disease (Cjd): Defining the Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the UK Alzheimer's Society (2015) notes, CJD is one of the rarer causes of dementia and there is increasing interest in responding to the different forms of dementia and not seeing its experiences as being homogeneous. Overall, within wider health services, a recent Cochrane Review on the notification and support for people exposed to the risk of CJD commissioned in Australia (Ryan et al 2011) noted that:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are also a number of ongoing reviews registered through the Campbell, and Cochrane Collaborations also adopt a similar approach, including a review on interventions to prevent female genital mutilation and a review of the impact of farmer field schools in low-and middle-income countries (Denison et al 2011, Leiknes et al 2011, Lins et al 2011, Ryan et al 2011, Waddington et al 2011. Within the area of international development an ongoing review of the evidence on the impact of farmer field schools in lowand middle-income countries (Waddington et al 2011) aims to assess the barriers and facilitators of intervention effectiveness and sustainability by including a broader range of evidence in a second review component.…”
Section: Effectiveness Plus With Parallel Review Modulesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A Cochrane review by Ryan et al (Ryan, Hill et al 2011) discusses the ethical implications of post-prion exposure notification, especially in light of the fact that this disease cannot currently be screened for. Using previous studies on communicating bad news to cancer patients, as well as to individuals infected with HIV or Hepatitis C, they conclude that “the balance between precautionary public health priorities, the individual's rights, and the potential harms of notification of CJD or vCJD risk exposure […] remain contentious” (Ryan, Hill et al 2011). They noted that uncertainty of acquired risk for possible future disease in many forms of CJD would be a reason for non-disclosure, but that there is a trend toward more openness with patients and families about facts surrounding potential adverse events.…”
Section: 0 Ethical Issues In Prion Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%