1.Effectiveness of health education provided by general practice team in standardizing insulin administration and blood glucose control for diabetic patients
Shifei ZHU ; Xin HUANG ; Fayu CHEN
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners 2021;20(8):910-913
The general practice team of the Affiliated Hospital of Hangzhou Normal University and its medical consortium conducted health education for 73 diabetic patients from January to December 2019. The education was dealing with the knowledge and techniques of standardizing insulin administration, including the manipulations, rotation of injection sites and replacement of injection needles, etc. The questionnaire surveys on the knowledge of diabetic management and insulin administration were conducted before and after education. After education the number of patients who knew the injection site and skin disinfection increased from 68 and 69 to 73 and 73, respectively ( P>0.05); the number of patients who knew the injection depth and length of the needle used increased from 33 and 24 to 73 and 73, respectively ( P<0.05); the number of patients who knew pinching the skin, the angle of needle insertion increased from 30 and 44 to 73 and 73 ( P<0.05). After education the number of patients with pinch time>10 sec increased from 0 to 68 cases ( P<0.05); with needle stay>10 sec increased from 0 to 71 ( P<0.05); with rotation in the same area increased from 58 to 73 ( P<0.05); with repeated needle use decreased from 73 to 70 ( P>0.05). After education the blood glucose control of diabetic patients was improved: the glycosylated hemoglobin [(8.3±1.3)% vs. (6.8±0.5)%, t=9.00, P<0.05], fasting blood glucose [(7.7±0.8)mmol/L vs. (6.9±0.5)mmol/L, t=7.90, P<0.05] and 2-hour postprandial blood glucose[(11.4±2.1)mmol/L vs. (9.6±0.8)mmol/L, t=7.00, P<0.05] were significantly decreased. It is suggested that health education provided by the general practice team can standardize the insulin administration in diabetic patients and improve blood sugar control.
2.Possibility of women treated with fertility-sparing surgery for non-epithelial ovarian tumors to safely and successfully become pregnant-a Chinese retrospective cohort study among 148 cases.
Bin YANG ; Yan YU ; Jing CHEN ; Yan ZHANG ; Ye YIN ; Nan YU ; Ge CHEN ; Shifei ZHU ; Haiyan HUANG ; Yongqun YUAN ; Jihui AI ; Xinyu WANG ; Kezhen LI
Frontiers of Medicine 2018;12(5):509-517
This study was performed to evaluate the oncological and reproductive outcomes of childbearing-age women treated with fertility-sparing surgery (FSS) for non-epithelial ovarian tumors in China. One hundred and forty eight non-epithelial ovarian tumor women treated with FSS between January 1, 2000 and August 31, 2015 from two medical centers in China were identified. Progression-free survival (PFS) was 88.5%, whereas overall survival (OS) was 93.9%. Univariate analysis suggested that delivery after treatment is related to PFS (P = 0.023), whereas histology significantly influenced OS. Cox regression analysis suggested that only histology was associated with PFS and OS (P < 0.05). Among the 129 women who completed adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT), none developed amenorrhea. Among the 44 women who desired pregnancy, 35 (79.5%) successfully had 51 gestations including 35 live births without birth defects. Non-epithelial ovarian tumors can achieve fulfilling prognosis after FSS and chemotherapy. Histology might be the only independent prognostic factor for PFS and OS. FSS followed by ACT appeared to have little or no effect on fertility. Meanwhile, postoperative pregnancy did not increase the PFS or OS. Use of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist was not beneficial for fertility.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Chemotherapy, Adjuvant
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adverse effects
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Child
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China
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Female
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Humans
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Infertility, Female
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etiology
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prevention & control
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Neoplasm Staging
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Organ Sparing Treatments
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Ovarian Neoplasms
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drug therapy
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surgery
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Pregnancy
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Pregnancy Rate
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Prognosis
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Retrospective Studies
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Survival Analysis
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Young Adult