1.Application of meticulous management in safety construction of intravenous infusion
Yanmei DENG ; Meizhu DING ; Qihua HUANG ; Lijuan LUO ; Jingyue FAN ; Dansi MO ; Caimei KUANG ; Qiuting ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Education Research 2018;17(7):718-722
For the safety problems of internal medicine intravenous infusion,we carry out meticulous management,establish quality control system of intravenous infusion safety management,and formulate quality control plan.We collect and analyse the potential unsafety factors in the various departments of internal medicine.We have revised the intravenous infusion system and procedures,formulated standards for safety inspection of intravenous fluids,and standardized the admission system for nurses.We carry out training on intravenous infusion related knowledge for nursing staff,carry out meticulous management of venous transfusion links,and actively carry out learning and communication.All these measures have greatly enhanced the safety awareness of the nursing staff.The safety index of intravenous infusion for liver diseases was preliminarily summarized.The use rate of the safe indwelling needle was increased from 30.60% to 92.30%,the rate of appropriate rate of drop speed increased from 68.45% to 93.20%,the three sign standard rate rose from 75.20% to 95.10%,and the patient's satisfaction with infusion increased from 85.60% to 96.82%.Meticulous management can improve the safety of the internal medicine intravenous infusion as a whole.
2.Milk consumption behavior and its impact on bone mineral density among 696 pupils in Hainan Province
Chinese Journal of School Health 2023;44(11):1631-1635
Objective:
To investigate the milk drinking behavior and bone mineral density level of pupils in Hainan Province, and to explore the correlation between bone mineral density and milk drinking behavior, in order to provide scientific basis for promoting the healthy development of bones in children and adolescents.
Methods:
In November 2021, a cross sectional survey including demographic characteristics, milk intake, unhealthy eating behavior, physical activity and sleep was conducted among 696 students from grades 3 to 5 in Sanya and Baisha, Hainan by stratified cluster random sampling, and bone mineral density at the distal 1/3 of the right forearm was measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry. t-test was used to compare the differences in bone mineral density among different milk drinking behaviors of pupils, and multiple linear regression was used to analyze the correlation between milk consumption and bone mineral density.
Results:
About 25.3% students consumed milk daily and 13.9% consumed ≥ 300 g of milk daily. The mean bone mineral density at the distal 1/3 of the right forearm was (0.237±0.041)g/cm 2. The bone mineral density was greater in the group with daily milk intake than in the group without daily milk intake [(0.250± 0.037 )(0.204±0.034) g/cm 2 , t=15.00, P <0.01], and the bone mineral density was greater in the group with daily average milk intake ≥300 g than in the group with daily average milk intake <300 g [(0.284±0.036)(0.229±0.037)g/cm 2, t=13.48, P < 0.01 ]. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that daily average milk intake was positively correlated with bone mineral density, with a correlation coefficient ( β=0.020, t=21.46, P <0.01).
Conclusion
Milk consumption among pupils is inadequate, and milk drinking behavior has a positive impact on bone mineral density, so effective milk drinking intervention should be carried out to promote children s bone development.
3.A genome sequence of novel SARS-CoV isolates: the genotype, GD-Ins29, leads to a hypothesis of viral transmission in South China.
E'de QIN ; Xionglei HE ; Wei TIAN ; Yong LIU ; Wei LI ; Jie WEN ; Jingqiang WANG ; Baochang FAN ; Qingfa WU ; Guohui CHANG ; Wuchun CAO ; Zuyuan XU ; Ruifu YANG ; Jing WANG ; Man YU ; Yan LI ; Jing XU ; Bingyin SI ; Yongwu HU ; Wenming PENG ; Lin TANG ; Tao JIANG ; Jianping SHI ; Jia JI ; Yu ZHANG ; Jia YE ; Cui'e WANG ; Yujun HAN ; Jun ZHOU ; Yajun DENG ; Xiaoyu LI ; Jianfei HU ; Caiping WANG ; Chunxia YAN ; Qingrun ZHANG ; Jingyue BAO ; Guoqing LI ; Weijun CHEN ; Lin FANG ; Changfeng LI ; Meng LEI ; Dawei LI ; Wei TONG ; Xiangjun TIAN ; Jin WANG ; Bo ZHANG ; Haiqing ZHANG ; Yilin ZHANG ; Hui ZHAO ; Xiaowei ZHANG ; Shuangli LI ; Xiaojie CHENG ; Xiuqing ZHANG ; Bin LIU ; Changqing ZENG ; Songgang LI ; Xuehai TAN ; Siqi LIU ; Wei DONG ; Jun WANG ; Gane Ka-Shu WONG ; Jun YU ; Jian WANG ; Qingyu ZHU ; Huanming YANG
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2003;1(2):101-107
We report a complete genomic sequence of rare isolates (minor genotype) of the SARS-CoV from SARS patients in Guangdong, China, where the first few cases emerged. The most striking discovery from the isolate is an extra 29-nucleotide sequence located at the nucleotide positions between 27,863 and 27,864 (referred to the complete sequence of BJ01) within an overlapped region composed of BGI-PUP5 (BGI-postulated uncharacterized protein 5) and BGI-PUP6 upstream of the N (nucleocapsid) protein. The discovery of this minor genotype, GD-Ins29, suggests a significant genetic event and differentiates it from the previously reported genotype, the dominant form among all sequenced SARS-CoV isolates. A 17-nt segment of this extra sequence is identical to a segment of the same size in two human mRNA sequences that may interfere with viral replication and transcription in the cytosol of the infected cells. It provides a new avenue for the exploration of the virus-host interaction in viral evolution, host pathogenesis, and vaccine development.
Base Sequence
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China
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Cluster Analysis
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Gene Components
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Genetic Variation
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Genome, Viral
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Genotype
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Phylogeny
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Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
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SARS Virus
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genetics
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
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Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
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genetics