1.Promote the nurse diabetes health education as the core management mode
Chunrong MO ; Jianxun MO ; Shengfa TANG ; Ye YE
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing 2017;33(z1):62-64
[abstract] Objective To study the health education on diabetes nurse diabetes management mode at the core of application in the patients with follow-up effect. Methods Our hospital endocrinology in October 2015,participate in blood sugar management company research project(namely,doctors,nurses and patients ofthree Eonline and offline (O2O) integration management system).The project is the specialist education nurses,doctors and patients of organic whole,to form a closed-loop management.Use of the project with mobile tablet (PAD),SMS platform on the first base into a group of patients with type 2 diabetes insulin for 5 minutes on education and baseline data collection,and in the next 15 weeks of diabetes health education nurses via text message and phone tracking in the form of blood sugar and insulin dose data,at the same time for more than three months of education,guidance and management,to help patients with initial foundation of insulin self management knowledge and skills,promote the blood glucose control is at target. Results In 12 weeks of the completion of this project and follow-up,425 patients of FPG success rate is 82.6%. Conclusion Nurse diabetes health education as the core of diabetes management model is feasible in patients with type 2 diabetes, the effect is good,that greatly arouse the subjective initiative of patients;Improve the patients′self-management ability,improving according to the medical behavior;Improved treatment adherence to standard prompt patients FPG.
2.Investigation of the incidence of patellar tendinosis in military training
Dongfeng CHEN ; Xiaofei ZHENG ; Jianqiang HUANG ; Jianxun MO ; Weidong JIN
Chinese Journal of Tissue Engineering Research 2005;9(38):148-149
BACKGROUND: Improper practice during military training is likely to cause various training wounds, among which patellar tendinosis is the common one.OBJECTIVE: To explore the onset characteristics of patellar tendinosis caused by military training and incidence changes after the implementation of interventions.DESIGN:Sampling investigation.SETTING: Department of Orthopedics, Guangzhou General Hospital of Guangzhou Military Area Command of Chinese PLA; Department of Surgery, Hospital of Chinese PLA Garrison in Hong Kong PARTICIPANTS: Male army soldiers aged 18-24 years were recruited from a full-time training army in August 2000 (non-intervention group) and August 2001 (intervention group). The same training program was carried out among the 2,783 soldiers in non-intervention group and 5,824 soldiers in the intervention group.METHODS: The investigation group was composed of medical workers with senior and intermediate professional titles. Uniform diagnostic standard was made before the investigation, and questionnaire survey wascombined with on-the-spot inspection on soldiers who complained about knee joint pain following training. Those who conformed to the diagnosis were inquired of their training state in detail and possible causes; meanwhile knee X-ray examination was also conducted. Soldiers in the non- intervention group were subjected to the investigation of the incidence and cause of patellar tendinosis due to fulltime training without given any preventive intervention. By contrast, soldiers in the intervention group were given preventive and therapeutic interventions and then subjected to the investigation into the interventional outcomes one year later.MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The incidence of patellar tendinosis in soldiers of the two groups.RESULTS: The first and second investigations were conducted on the 2 783 soldiers and 5 824 soldiers, respectively. All of them entered the rediers of the non-intervention group (the incidence of 0.61%) as compared to 15 soldiers in the intervention group (the incidence of 0.26%) (P<0.01).tenderness. Patel1ar bone X-ray inspection on 12 of them displayed patellar ciated with run-jump training projects; 23 cases were caused by 400 mbarrier training and 7 cases by 5 km cross-country training.CONCLUSION: Patellar tendinosis during military training is mostly caused by run-jump training and can be remarkably prevented by preventive interventions.