2.Feasibility study of enforcing immunization certificate check before primary school or kindergarten enrollment in Guizhou Province, China.
Li SHENG ; Shu-Yan ZUO ; Jing XIE ; Ya-Li QI ; Yi-Bing TONG ; Guang-Peng TANG ; Jun ZHOU ; Da-Yong ZHANG ; Chang-Bing LONG ; Wen DU ; Zi-Jian FENG
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2007;20(5):357-365
OBJECTIVETo study the feasibility of enforcing immunization certificate check before children enroll in primary schools or kindergartens in Guizhou Province.
METHODSQuantitative and qualitative studies were conducted. The multi-stage and cluster sampling approach was adopted for the quantitative part of the study. A questionnaire was designed and 996 children and their keepers were interviewed. Principals, doctors or teachers of the primary schools, directors and child care nurses of kindergarten, and staff of immunization agencies were invited to take part in 12 focus group discussions; meanwhile, face-to-face individual in-depth interviews with 16 officials of the Health, Education and Governmental Departments at various levels were conducted.
RESULTSThe total number of subjects was 996. 16.7% of the children in the study completed all the procedures of the National Immunization Programme. 34.3% of them had immunization certificates while the remainder 44.7% registered in immunization agencies. Factors, including the migrant children, doubt about vaccine efficiency, mother's occupation and educational background, knowledge of the National Immunization Programme on targeted vaccines, played an important role in obtaining or not immunization certificates. 95% of the keepers interviewed thought the immunization certificates were useful; 94.8% of them considered the check was critical while only 3.6% of them thought it unnecessary. The first reason from those who found it unnecessary was that they feared that repeated immunization might affect their children's health. The second reason was the cost of immunization, which some of them could not afford to pay. However, the Health Department expressed a favorable attitude to the checking scheme. Though the Education Department agreed that the scheme was essential, they worried that it would affect the enrollment rate.
CONCLUSIONIn spite of the difficulty in administering immunization certificate check, the effort would be rewarding for raising the immunization coverage rate among the children in Guizhou Province.
Age Distribution ; Child, Preschool ; China ; epidemiology ; Feasibility Studies ; Female ; Humans ; Immunization ; legislation & jurisprudence ; Male ; Medical Records ; legislation & jurisprudence ; Schools ; legislation & jurisprudence ; Students ; legislation & jurisprudence ; Surveys and Questionnaires ; Transients and Migrants ; Vaccination ; legislation & jurisprudence
3.Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome with Bilateral Cryptorchidism and Seminoma in Tibet:Report of One Case.
Qian WEI ; Zhen DA ; Qu-Zhen CIREN ; Zhen HUO ; Peng ZUO
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2022;44(1):173-176
Androgen insensitivity syndrome(AIS)with bilateral testicular malignant transformation is very rare,and its diagnosis should be based on clinical manifestations,physical examination,serological findings,karyotype analysis,and pathological findings.This study reported a case of complete androgen insensitivity syndrome among Tibetan in Tibet.It took 17 years from the discovery of congenital absence of uterus to bilateral pelvic mass resection.Pathological examination confirmed that bilateral pelvic space occupying lesions were dysplastic testicular tissue with seminoma and sertoli cell adenoma-like nodules.This study summarized the clinicopathological features to deepen the understanding of the disease.
Androgen-Insensitivity Syndrome/surgery*
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Cryptorchidism
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Seminoma/pathology*
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Testicular Neoplasms/pathology*
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Tibet
4.Assessment of the Benefits of Targeted Interventions for Pandemic Control in China Based on Machine Learning Method and Web Service for COVID-19 Policy Simulation.
Jie Wen WU ; Xiao Kang JIAO ; Xin Hui DU ; Zeng Tao JIAO ; Zuo Ru LIANG ; Ming Fan PANG ; Han Ran JI ; Zhi Da CHENG ; Kang Ning CAI ; Xiao Peng QI
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2022;35(5):412-418
Taking the Chinese city of Xiamen as an example, simulation and quantitative analysis were performed on the transmissions of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) and the influence of intervention combinations to assist policymakers in the preparation of targeted response measures. A machine learning model was built to estimate the effectiveness of interventions and simulate transmission in different scenarios. The comparison was conducted between simulated and real cases in Xiamen. A web interface with adjustable parameters, including choice of intervention measures, intervention weights, vaccination, and viral variants, was designed for users to run the simulation. The total case number was set as the outcome. The cumulative number was 4,614,641 without restrictions and 78 under the strictest intervention set. Simulation with the parameters closest to the real situation of the Xiamen outbreak was performed to verify the accuracy and reliability of the model. The simulation model generated a duration of 52 days before the daily cases dropped to zero and the final cumulative case number of 200, which were 25 more days and 36 fewer cases than the real situation, respectively. Targeted interventions could benefit the prevention and control of COVID-19 outbreak while safeguarding public health and mitigating impacts on people's livelihood.
COVID-19/prevention & control*
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China/epidemiology*
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Humans
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Machine Learning
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Pandemics/prevention & control*
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Policy
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Reproducibility of Results
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SARS-CoV-2
5.Effect of Shugan Tiaoshen acupuncture combined with western medication on depression-insomnia comorbidity due to COVID-19 quarantine: a multi-central randomized controlled trial.
Lu-da YAN ; Zhong-Xian LI ; Yu ZHANG ; Xue-Song LIANG ; Jing-Jing LI ; Miao WU ; Guo-Ao SHI ; Rui-Ming CHEN ; Xiang JI ; Si-Yao ZUO ; Shi-Yun CHEN ; Peng ZHOU ; Wen-Bin FU
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2023;43(3):255-260
OBJECTIVE:
To observe the effect of Shugan Tiaoshen acupuncture (acupuncture for soothing the liver and regulating the mentality) combined with western medication on depression and sleep quality in the patients with depression-insomnia comorbidity due to COVID-19 quarantine, and investigate the potential mechanism from the perspective of cortical excitability.
METHODS:
Sixty patients with depression-insomnia comorbidity due to COVID-19 quarantine were randomly divided into an acupuncture group and a sham-acupuncture group, 30 cases in each one. The patients of both groups were treated with oral administration of sertraline hydrochloride tablets. In the acupuncture group, Shugan Tiaoshen acupuncture was supplemented. Body acupuncture was applied to Yintang (GV 24+), Baihui (GV 20), Hegu (LI 4), Zhaohai (KI 6), Qihai (CV 6), etc. The intradermal needling was used at Xin (CO15), Gan (CO12) and Shen (CO10). In the sham-acupuncture group, the sham-acupuncture was given at the same points as the acupuncture group. The compensatory treatment was provided at the end of follow-up for the patients in the sham-acupuncture group. In both groups, the treatment was given once every two days, 3 times a week, for consecutive 8 weeks. The self-rating depression scale (SDS) and insomnia severity index (ISI) scores were compared between the two groups before and after treatment and 1 month after the end of treatment (follow-up) separately. The cortical excitability indexes (resting motor threshold [rMT], motor evoked potential amplitude [MEP-A], cortical resting period [CSP]) and the level of serum 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) were measured before and after treatment in the two groups.
RESULTS:
After treatment and in follow-up, SDS and ISI scores were decreased in both groups compared with those before treatment (P<0.05), and the scores in the acupuncture group were lower than those in the sham-acupuncture group (P<0.05), and the decrease range in the acupuncture group after treatment was larger than that in the sham-acupuncture group (P<0.05). After treatment, rMT was reduced (P<0.05), while MEP-A and CSP were increased (P<0.05) in the acupuncture group compared with that before treatment. The levels of serum 5-HT in both groups were increased compared with those before treatment (P<0.05). The rMT in the acupuncture group was lower than that in the sham-acupuncture group, while MEP-A and CSP, as well as the level of serum 5-HT were higher in the acupuncture group in comparison with the sham-acupuncture group (P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
Shugan Tiaoshen acupuncture combined with western medication can relieve depression and improve sleep quality in the patients with depression-insomnia comorbidity due to COVID-19 quarantine, which is probably related to rectifying the imbalanced excitatory and inhibitory neuronal functions.
Humans
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Depression
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Quarantine
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Serotonin
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
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COVID-19
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Acupuncture Therapy
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Comorbidity