1.The reach of Spanish-language YouTube videos on physical examinations made by undergraduate medical students.
José M RAMOS-RINCÓN ; Isabel BELINCHÓN-ROMERO ; Francisco SÁNCHEZ-FERRER ; Guillermo Martínez de la TORRE ; Meggan HARRIS ; Javier SÁNCHEZ-FERNÁNDEZ
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2017;14(1):31-
This study was conducted to evaluate the performance and reach of YouTube videos on physical examinations made by Spanish university students. We analyzed performance metrics for 4 videos on physical examinations in Spanish that were created by medical students at Miguel Hernández University (Elche, Spain) and are available on YouTube, on the following topics: the head and neck (7:30), the cardiovascular system (7:38), the respiratory system (13:54), and the abdomen (11:10). We used the Analytics application offered by the YouTube platform to analyze the reach of the videos from the upload date (February 17, 2015) to July 28, 2017 (2 years, 5 months, and 11 days). The total number of views, length of watch-time, and the mean view duration for the 4 videos were, respectively: 164,403 views (mean, 41,101 views; range, 12,389 to 94,573 views), 425,888 minutes (mean, 106,472 minutes; range, 37,889 to 172,840 minutes), and 2:56 minutes (range, 1:49 to 4:03 minutes). Mexico was the most frequent playback location, followed by Spain, Colombia, and Venezuela. Uruguay, Ecuador, Mexico, and Puerto Rico had the most views per 100,000 population. Spanish-language tutorials are an alternative tool for teaching physical examination skills to students whose first language is not English. The videos were especially popular in Uruguay, Ecuador, and Mexico.
Abdomen
;
Cardiovascular System
;
Colombia
;
Ecuador
;
Education, Medical
;
Head
;
Humans
;
Mexico
;
Neck
;
Physical Examination*
;
Puerto Rico
;
Respiratory System
;
Spain
;
Students, Medical*
;
Uruguay
;
Venezuela
;
Video Recording
2.Older Adult Patients in the Emergency Department: Which Patients should be Selected for a Different Approach?
Nere Larrea AGUIRRE ; Susana García GUTIÉRREZ ; Oscar MIRO ; Sira AGUILÓ ; Javier JACOB ; Aitor ALQUÉZAR-ARBÉ ; Guillermo BURILLO ; Cesáreo FERNANDEZ ; Pere LLORENS ; Cesar Roza ALONSO ; Ivana Tavasci LOPEZ ; Mónica CAÑETE ; Pedro Ruiz ASENSIO ; Beatriz Paderne DÍAZ ; Teresa Pablos PIZARRO ; Rigoberto Jesús del Rio NAVARRO ; Núria Perelló VIOLA ; Lourdes HERNÁNDEZ-CASTELLS ; Alejandro Cortés SOLER ; Elena SÁNCHEZ FERNÁNDEZ-LINARES ; Jesús Ángel Sánchez SERRANO ; Patxi EZPONDA ; Andrea Martínez LORENZO ; Juan Vicente Ortega LIARTE ; Susana Sánchez RAMÓN ; Asumpta Ruiz ARANDA ; Francisco Javier MARTÍN-SÁNCHEZ ; Juan González DEL CASTILLO ;
Annals of Geriatric Medicine and Research 2024;28(1):9-19
Background:
While multidimensional and interdisciplinary assessment of older adult patients improves their short-term outcomes after evaluation in the emergency department (ED), this assessment is time-consuming and ill-suited for the busy environment. Thus, identifying patients who will benefit from this strategy is challenging. Therefore, this study aimed to identify older adult patients suitable for a different ED approach as well as independent variables associated with poor short-term clinical outcomes.
Methods:
We included all patients ≥65 years attending 52 EDs in Spain over 7 days. Sociodemographic, comorbidity, and baseline functional status data were collected. The outcomes were 30-day mortality, re-presentation, hospital readmission, and the composite of all outcomes.
Results:
During the study among 96,014 patients evaluated in the ED, we included 23,338 patients ≥65 years—mean age, 78.4±8.1 years; 12,626 (54.1%) women. During follow-up, 5,776 patients (24.75%) had poor outcomes after evaluation in the ED: 1,140 (4.88%) died, 4,640 (20.51) returned to the ED, and 1,739 (7.69%) were readmitted 30 days after discharge following the index visit. A model including male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥3, and functional impairment had a C-index of 0.81 (95% confidence interval, 0.80–0.82) for 30-day mortality.
Conclusion
Male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, functional impairment, or severe comorbidity are features of patients who could benefit from approaches in the ED different from the common triage to improve the poor short-term outcomes of this population.
3.Older Adult Patients in the Emergency Department: Which Patients should be Selected for a Different Approach?
Nere Larrea AGUIRRE ; Susana García GUTIÉRREZ ; Oscar MIRO ; Sira AGUILÓ ; Javier JACOB ; Aitor ALQUÉZAR-ARBÉ ; Guillermo BURILLO ; Cesáreo FERNANDEZ ; Pere LLORENS ; Cesar Roza ALONSO ; Ivana Tavasci LOPEZ ; Mónica CAÑETE ; Pedro Ruiz ASENSIO ; Beatriz Paderne DÍAZ ; Teresa Pablos PIZARRO ; Rigoberto Jesús del Rio NAVARRO ; Núria Perelló VIOLA ; Lourdes HERNÁNDEZ-CASTELLS ; Alejandro Cortés SOLER ; Elena SÁNCHEZ FERNÁNDEZ-LINARES ; Jesús Ángel Sánchez SERRANO ; Patxi EZPONDA ; Andrea Martínez LORENZO ; Juan Vicente Ortega LIARTE ; Susana Sánchez RAMÓN ; Asumpta Ruiz ARANDA ; Francisco Javier MARTÍN-SÁNCHEZ ; Juan González DEL CASTILLO ;
Annals of Geriatric Medicine and Research 2024;28(1):9-19
Background:
While multidimensional and interdisciplinary assessment of older adult patients improves their short-term outcomes after evaluation in the emergency department (ED), this assessment is time-consuming and ill-suited for the busy environment. Thus, identifying patients who will benefit from this strategy is challenging. Therefore, this study aimed to identify older adult patients suitable for a different ED approach as well as independent variables associated with poor short-term clinical outcomes.
Methods:
We included all patients ≥65 years attending 52 EDs in Spain over 7 days. Sociodemographic, comorbidity, and baseline functional status data were collected. The outcomes were 30-day mortality, re-presentation, hospital readmission, and the composite of all outcomes.
Results:
During the study among 96,014 patients evaluated in the ED, we included 23,338 patients ≥65 years—mean age, 78.4±8.1 years; 12,626 (54.1%) women. During follow-up, 5,776 patients (24.75%) had poor outcomes after evaluation in the ED: 1,140 (4.88%) died, 4,640 (20.51) returned to the ED, and 1,739 (7.69%) were readmitted 30 days after discharge following the index visit. A model including male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥3, and functional impairment had a C-index of 0.81 (95% confidence interval, 0.80–0.82) for 30-day mortality.
Conclusion
Male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, functional impairment, or severe comorbidity are features of patients who could benefit from approaches in the ED different from the common triage to improve the poor short-term outcomes of this population.
4.Older Adult Patients in the Emergency Department: Which Patients should be Selected for a Different Approach?
Nere Larrea AGUIRRE ; Susana García GUTIÉRREZ ; Oscar MIRO ; Sira AGUILÓ ; Javier JACOB ; Aitor ALQUÉZAR-ARBÉ ; Guillermo BURILLO ; Cesáreo FERNANDEZ ; Pere LLORENS ; Cesar Roza ALONSO ; Ivana Tavasci LOPEZ ; Mónica CAÑETE ; Pedro Ruiz ASENSIO ; Beatriz Paderne DÍAZ ; Teresa Pablos PIZARRO ; Rigoberto Jesús del Rio NAVARRO ; Núria Perelló VIOLA ; Lourdes HERNÁNDEZ-CASTELLS ; Alejandro Cortés SOLER ; Elena SÁNCHEZ FERNÁNDEZ-LINARES ; Jesús Ángel Sánchez SERRANO ; Patxi EZPONDA ; Andrea Martínez LORENZO ; Juan Vicente Ortega LIARTE ; Susana Sánchez RAMÓN ; Asumpta Ruiz ARANDA ; Francisco Javier MARTÍN-SÁNCHEZ ; Juan González DEL CASTILLO ;
Annals of Geriatric Medicine and Research 2024;28(1):9-19
Background:
While multidimensional and interdisciplinary assessment of older adult patients improves their short-term outcomes after evaluation in the emergency department (ED), this assessment is time-consuming and ill-suited for the busy environment. Thus, identifying patients who will benefit from this strategy is challenging. Therefore, this study aimed to identify older adult patients suitable for a different ED approach as well as independent variables associated with poor short-term clinical outcomes.
Methods:
We included all patients ≥65 years attending 52 EDs in Spain over 7 days. Sociodemographic, comorbidity, and baseline functional status data were collected. The outcomes were 30-day mortality, re-presentation, hospital readmission, and the composite of all outcomes.
Results:
During the study among 96,014 patients evaluated in the ED, we included 23,338 patients ≥65 years—mean age, 78.4±8.1 years; 12,626 (54.1%) women. During follow-up, 5,776 patients (24.75%) had poor outcomes after evaluation in the ED: 1,140 (4.88%) died, 4,640 (20.51) returned to the ED, and 1,739 (7.69%) were readmitted 30 days after discharge following the index visit. A model including male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥3, and functional impairment had a C-index of 0.81 (95% confidence interval, 0.80–0.82) for 30-day mortality.
Conclusion
Male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, functional impairment, or severe comorbidity are features of patients who could benefit from approaches in the ED different from the common triage to improve the poor short-term outcomes of this population.
5.Older Adult Patients in the Emergency Department: Which Patients should be Selected for a Different Approach?
Nere Larrea AGUIRRE ; Susana García GUTIÉRREZ ; Oscar MIRO ; Sira AGUILÓ ; Javier JACOB ; Aitor ALQUÉZAR-ARBÉ ; Guillermo BURILLO ; Cesáreo FERNANDEZ ; Pere LLORENS ; Cesar Roza ALONSO ; Ivana Tavasci LOPEZ ; Mónica CAÑETE ; Pedro Ruiz ASENSIO ; Beatriz Paderne DÍAZ ; Teresa Pablos PIZARRO ; Rigoberto Jesús del Rio NAVARRO ; Núria Perelló VIOLA ; Lourdes HERNÁNDEZ-CASTELLS ; Alejandro Cortés SOLER ; Elena SÁNCHEZ FERNÁNDEZ-LINARES ; Jesús Ángel Sánchez SERRANO ; Patxi EZPONDA ; Andrea Martínez LORENZO ; Juan Vicente Ortega LIARTE ; Susana Sánchez RAMÓN ; Asumpta Ruiz ARANDA ; Francisco Javier MARTÍN-SÁNCHEZ ; Juan González DEL CASTILLO ;
Annals of Geriatric Medicine and Research 2024;28(1):9-19
Background:
While multidimensional and interdisciplinary assessment of older adult patients improves their short-term outcomes after evaluation in the emergency department (ED), this assessment is time-consuming and ill-suited for the busy environment. Thus, identifying patients who will benefit from this strategy is challenging. Therefore, this study aimed to identify older adult patients suitable for a different ED approach as well as independent variables associated with poor short-term clinical outcomes.
Methods:
We included all patients ≥65 years attending 52 EDs in Spain over 7 days. Sociodemographic, comorbidity, and baseline functional status data were collected. The outcomes were 30-day mortality, re-presentation, hospital readmission, and the composite of all outcomes.
Results:
During the study among 96,014 patients evaluated in the ED, we included 23,338 patients ≥65 years—mean age, 78.4±8.1 years; 12,626 (54.1%) women. During follow-up, 5,776 patients (24.75%) had poor outcomes after evaluation in the ED: 1,140 (4.88%) died, 4,640 (20.51) returned to the ED, and 1,739 (7.69%) were readmitted 30 days after discharge following the index visit. A model including male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥3, and functional impairment had a C-index of 0.81 (95% confidence interval, 0.80–0.82) for 30-day mortality.
Conclusion
Male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, functional impairment, or severe comorbidity are features of patients who could benefit from approaches in the ED different from the common triage to improve the poor short-term outcomes of this population.
6.Characteristics and in-hospital mortality of elderly patients with heart failure in Spanish hospitals.
Alberto ESTEBAN-FERNÁNDEZ ; Manuel ANGUITA-SÁNCHEZ ; Juan Luis BONILLA-PALOMAS ; María ANGUITA-GÁMEZ ; María GARCÍA ; José Luis BERNAL ; Náyade Del PRADO ; Cristina FERNÁNDEZ-PÉREZ ; Julián PÉREZ-VILLACASTIN ; Juan José GÓMEZ-DOBLAS ; Francisco Javier ELOLA
Journal of Geriatric Cardiology 2023;20(4):247-255
BACKGROUND:
The prevalence of heart failure (HF) increases with age, and it is one of the leading causes of hospitalization and death in older patients. However, there are little data on in-hospital mortality in patients with HF ≥ 75 years in Spain.
METHODS:
A retrospective analysis of the Spanish Minimum Basic Data Set was performed, including all HF episodes discharged from public hospitals in Spain between 2016 and 2019. Coding was performed using the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision. Patients ≥ 75 years with HF as the principal diagnosis were selected. We calculated: (1) the crude in-hospital mortality rate and its distribution according to age and sex; (2) the risk-standardized in-hospital mortality ratio; and (3) the association between in-hospital mortality and the availability of an intensive cardiac care unit (ICCU) in the hospital.
RESULTS:
We included 354,792 HF episodes of patients over 75 years. The mean age was 85.2 ± 5.5 years, and 59.2% of patients were women. The most frequent comorbidities were renal failure (46.1%), diabetes mellitus (35.5%), valvular disease (33.9%), cardiorespiratory failure (29.8%), and hypertension (26.9%). In-hospital mortality was 12.7%, and increased with age [odds ratio (OR) = 1.07, 95% CI: 1.07-1.07, P < 0.001] and was lower in women (OR = 0.96, 95% CI: 0.92-0.97, P < 0.001). The main predictors of mortality were the presence of cardiogenic shock (OR = 19.5, 95% CI: 16.8-22.7, P < 0.001), stroke (OR = 3.5, 95% CI: 3.0-4.0, P < 0.001) and advanced cancer (OR = 2.6, 95% CI: 2.5-2.8, P < 0.001). In hospitals with ICCU, the in-hospital risk-adjusted mortality tended to be lower (OR = 0.85, 95% CI: 0.72-1.00, P = 0.053).
CONCLUSIONS
In-hospital mortality in patients with HF ≥ 75 years between 2016 and 2019 was 12.7%, higher in males and elderly patients. The main predictors of mortality were cardiogenic shock, stroke, and advanced cancer. There was a trend toward lower mortality in centers with an ICCU.