1.Utility of eye-tracking technology for preparing medical students in Spain for the summative objective structured clinical examination.
Francisco SÁNCHEZ-FERRER ; J M RAMOS-RINCÓN ; M D GRIMA-MURCIA ; María LUISA SÁNCHEZ-FERRER ; Francisco SÁNCHEZ-DEL CAMPO ; Antonio F COMPAÑ-ROSIQUE ; Eduardo FERNÁNDEZ-JOVER
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2017;14(1):27-
No abstract available.
Humans
;
Spain*
;
Students, Medical*
2.Optimal System for Deceased Organ Donation and Procurement in Korea.
Sang Il MIN ; Sang Hyun AHN ; Won Hyun CHO ; Curie AHN ; Soon Il KIM ; Jongwon HA
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 2011;25(1):1-7
Since the first deceased donor kidney transplantation in 1979, continuous efforts have been made to increase deceased organ donation in Korea. However, a critical shortage of human organs for transplant is still a serious problem and is partly caused by the absence of a system to actively identify and properly manage deceased donors in Korea. Considering this, Korea needs to create a new national system for deceased donor identification, management, and organ procurement. There are three kinds of organ procurement systems in the world: The "Spanish model", the "United States model", and the "other European model". We reviewed each system and suggested the optimal organ procurement system for Korea. We also proposed requirements for operating an organ procurement organization and increasing deceased organ donation. Further improvements in the organ procurement system will contribute to improve the current organ shortage.
Brain Death
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Humans
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Kidney Transplantation
;
Korea
;
Spain
;
Tissue and Organ Procurement
;
Tissue Donors
;
Transplants
;
United States
3.Cost-Effectiveness of Recombinant Tissue Plasminogen Activator in the Management of Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Systematic Review.
Kee Taig JUNG ; Dong Wook SHIN ; Kyung Jin LEE ; Myungju OH
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2010;6(3):117-126
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This work was undertaken to review the current cost-effectiveness analysis data on thrombolysis by intravenous (IV) therapy with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) for acute ischemic stroke. METHODS: PubMed was searched for articles published between 1995 and 2008. The cost-effectiveness analysis data from eight eligible studies were reviewed, paying particular attention to their modeling assumptions and the quality of the source data. RESULTS: The reviewed studies were from six countries: USA (n=2), UK (n=2), Canada (n=1), Australia (n=1), Spain (n=1), and Denmark (n=1); most were performed from the healthcare-system and/or societal perspectives. IV rtPA was associated with an acceptable increase in short-term cost [range: US$ 36-236/patient; US$ 29,148-55,591/quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs)], and a net long-term cost saving that was higher from a societal perspective (range: -US$ 12,043 to -US$ 630/patient; -US$ 207,253 to -US$ 21,938/QALYs) than from a healthcare-system perspective (range: -US$ 5,811 to -US$ 5,415/patient; -US$ 41,137 to -US$ 4,662/QALYs). CONCLUSIONS: IV rtPA seems to be a cost-effective strategy for the management of acute ischemic stroke, and might reduce the associated healthcare costs as well as patients' disabilities. Further cost-effectiveness research and the development of a public health strategy are warranted to optimize the use of rtPA in Korea.
Australia
;
Canada
;
Cost Savings
;
Denmark
;
Health Care Costs
;
Korea
;
Public Health
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Spain
;
Stroke
;
Tissue Plasminogen Activator
4.Discussion on revision of exposure limits of quartz dusts in mining and quarrying industries in Spain.
Manuel FIDALGO ; Wei-hong CHEN
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2006;24(9):573-574
Dust
;
analysis
;
Humans
;
Mining
;
Occupational Exposure
;
prevention & control
;
Quartz
;
analysis
;
Spain
5.The Third Version of the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire
Hermann BURR ; Hanne BERTHELSEN ; Salvador MONCADA ; Matthias NÜBLING ; Emilie DUPRET ; Yucel DEMIRAL ; John OUDYK ; Tage S KRISTENSEN ; Clara LLORENS ; Albert NAVARRO ; Hans Joachim LINCKE ; Christine BOCÉRÉAN ; Ceyda SAHAN ; Peter SMITH ; Anne POHRT ;
Safety and Health at Work 2019;10(4):482-503
INTRODUCTION: A new third version of the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire (COPSOQ III) has been developed in response to trends in working life, theoretical concepts, and international experience. A key component of the COPSOQ III is a defined set of mandatory core items to be included in national short, middle, and long versions of the questionnaire. The aim of the present article is to present and test the reliability of the new international middle version of the COPSOQ III.METHODS: The questionnaire was tested among 23,361 employees during 2016–2017 in Canada, Spain, France, Germany, Sweden, and Turkey. A total of 26 dimensions (measured through scales or single items) of the middle version and two from the long version were tested. Psychometric properties of the dimensions were assessed regarding reliability (Cronbach α), ceiling and floor effects (fractions with extreme answers), and distinctiveness (correlations with other dimensions).RESULTS: Most international middle dimensions had satisfactory reliability in most countries, though some ceiling and floor effects were present. Dimensions with missing values were rare. Most dimensions had low to medium intercorrelations.CONCLUSIONS: The COPSOQ III offers reliable and distinct measures of a wide range of psychosocial dimensions of modern working life in different countries; although a few measures could be improved. Future testing should focus on validation of the COPSOQ items and dimensions using both qualitative and quantitative approaches. Such investigations would enhance the basis for recommendations using the COPSOQ III.
Canada
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France
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Germany
;
Psychometrics
;
Risk Assessment
;
Spain
;
Sweden
;
Turkey
;
Weights and Measures
6.Impact of socioeconomic and health-related factors on consumption of homeopathic and natural remedies in Spain in 2006, 2011 and 2017.
Jose Antonio CASTILLA-JIMENA ; Isabel RUIZ-PÉREZ ; Jesús HENARES-MONTIEL
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2022;20(1):52-56
OBJECTIVE:
Complementary and alternative medicine use and type of use may be influenced by sociodemographic and economic determinants through which we could identify characteristics of patients with greater trend to use it. This paper aims to describe the changes in the consumption of homeopathic and natural remedies in Spain for three time points in order to discern changes in rate of consumption, associated factors and whether their use has been affected by a period of economic recession.
METHODS:
This study utilized 2006, 2011 and 2017 cross-sectional data from the Spanish National Health Survey, a nationally representative survey of the population aged more than 15 years old and resident in Spain. Independent bivariate and multivariate descriptive analyses for each of the 3 years studied were performed.
RESULTS:
The rate of consumption of both homeopathic and natural remedies has decreased over the periods studied. In spite of this decrease, the consumer profile appears to remain stable over the three periods. The sociodemographic factors associated with their consumption were being female, being 30-64 years old, being separated/divorced, having higher education qualifications, being employed and belonging to a higher social class. Psychiatric morbidity, chronic health problems such as pain, mental health problems or malignant tumors, and absence of major cardiovascular events were the clinical factors associated.
CONCLUSION
It can be concluded that beyond the economic situation, the use of homeopathic and natural remedies obeys to the needs of the patients related to their state of health and the response they receive from the health system. It may be that women have different needs and expectations of the healthcare system and, given this breach of expectations, seek remedy to alleviate their needs outside the system and conventional medicine.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Female
;
Homeopathy
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Sociodemographic Factors
;
Socioeconomic Factors
;
Spain
7.Epidemiological Evolution of Lung Cancer in the South of Spain from 1990 to 2010.
Alberto CABALLERO VÁZQUEZ ; Ana Dolores ROMERO ORTIZ ; Jose Manuel GONZÁLEZ DE VEGA SAN ROMÁN ; Raimundo García DEL MORAL ; Bernardino ALCÁZAR NAVARRETE
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer 2018;21(1):32-36
BACKGROUND:
Changes in lung cancer has been characterized by the increase of cases among women and the increase in adenocarcinomas among other histological subtypes.
METHODS:
Descriptive analysis of cases diagnosed with lung cancer in Hospital Virgen de las Nieves (Spain) from 1990 to 2010, based on five variables (age, sex, smoking, histology and pathological anatomy). The study establishes associations between these variables and compares the results with the literature.
RESULTS:
2,026 patients were diagnosed with lung cancer in this period; 1,838 were males (90.7%) and 188 women (9.3%); 1,892 patients (93.4%) were smokers or ex-smokers and 134 (6.6%) had never smoked; the most frequent non-small cell histology types were squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma and it was the most frequent neoplasia in women and were associated with a lower tobacco consumption.
CONCLUSIONS
The large majority of lung cancer cases is associated with a history of smoking tobacco and there are histopathological differences according to gender and cumulative tobacco smoke load.
Female
;
Humans
;
Lung Neoplasms
;
epidemiology
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Smoking
;
epidemiology
;
Spain
;
epidemiology
8.The Characteristics of Spinal Injury in Skiing and Snowboarding Injuries.
Yong Sung CHA ; Kang Hyun LEE ; Sun Hyu KIM ; Yong Su JANG ; Hyun KIM ; Tae Yong SHIN ; Sung Oh HWANG
Journal of the Korean Society of Traumatology 2007;20(1):33-39
PURPOSE: Few studies have been done for spinal injuries after skiing and snowboarding accidents. Assuming that the riding patterns of skiing and snowboarding were different, we analyzed the differences between the mechanisms, diagnoses and levels of spinal injuries caused by them. The purpose of this study was to gain a better understanding of spinal hazards associated with skiing and snowboarding in order to educate skiers and snowboarders. METHODS: We conducted a prospective study of 96 patients who had sustained spinal injuries as a result of skiing and snowboarding accidents from January 2003 to March 2006. We used a questionnaire, radiological studies, history taking, and physical examinations. We analyzed the mechanism of injury, the level of spinal injury, the severity of spinal injury, and the Abbreviated Injury Scale scores (AIS score). We used the t-test and the chi-square test. RESULTS: The skiing and the snowboarding injury group included in 96 patients. The skiing injury group included 30 patients (31.2%), and the snowboarding injury group included the remaining 66 patients (69.8%). The primary mechanism of injury in skiing was collisions and in snowboarding was slip downs (p=0.508). The primary level of spinal injury in skiing and snowboarding was at the L-spine level (p=0.547). The most common athlete ability of the injured person was at the intermediate level (p=0.954). The injured were most commonly at the beginner or the intermediate level (p=0.302). The primary diagnosis of spinal injury in skiing and snowboarding was back spain (p=0.686). The AIS scores did not differed between the two groups (p=0.986). CONCLUSION: The most common spinal injury after skiing and snowboarding accidents was back sprain. There was no difference in the severity of spinal injury between skiing and snowboarding accidents.
Abbreviated Injury Scale
;
Athletes
;
Diagnosis
;
Humans
;
Physical Examination
;
Prospective Studies
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Skiing*
;
Spain
;
Spinal Injuries*
;
Sprains and Strains
9.Long-Term Evolution of the Electrical Stimulation Levels for Cochlear Implant Patients.
Jose Luis VARGAS ; Manuel SAINZ ; Cristina ROLDAN ; Isaac ALVAREZ ; Angel DE LA TORRE
Clinical and Experimental Otorhinolaryngology 2012;5(4):194-200
OBJECTIVES: The stimulation levels programmed in cochlear implant systems are affected by an evolution since the first switch-on of the processor. This study was designed to evaluate the changes in stimulation levels over time and the relationship between post-implantation physiological changes and with the hearing experience provided by the continuous use of the cochlear implant. METHODS: Sixty-two patients, ranging in age from 4 to 68 years at the moment of implantation participated in this study. All subjects were implanted with the 12 channels COMBI 40+ cochlear implant at San Cecilio University Hospital, Granada, Spain. Hearing loss etiology and progression characteristics varied across subjects. RESULTS: The analyzed programming maps show that the stimulation levels suffer a fast evolution during the first weeks after the first switch-on of the processor. Then, the evolution becomes slower and the programming parameters tend to be stable at about 6 months after the first switch-on. The evolution of the stimulation levels implies an increment of the electrical dynamic range, which is increased from 15.4 to 20.7 dB and improves the intensity resolution. A significant increment of the sensitivity to acoustic stimuli is also observed. For some patients, we have also observed transitory changes in the electrode impedances associated to secretory otitis media, which cause important changes in the programming maps. CONCLUSION: We have studied the long-term evolution of the stimulation levels in cochlear implant patients. Our results show the importance of systematic measurements of the electrode impedances before the revision of the programming map. This report also highlights that the evolution of the programming maps is an important factor to be considered in order to determine an adequate calendar fitting of the cochlear implant processor.
Acoustics
;
Cochlear Implants
;
Electric Impedance
;
Electric Stimulation
;
Electrodes
;
Hearing
;
Hearing Loss
;
Humans
;
Otitis Media with Effusion
;
Prosthesis Fitting
;
Spain
10.A Case of Tuberculoma in Posterior Fossa.
Kyu Man SHIN ; Chong Duck KIM ; Se Chun OH ; Ki Chan LEE ; Jung Wha CHU
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 1974;3(1):99-104
The incidence of tuberculoma of the brain in different countries varies reatly. They form a high percentage of intracrnial lesions dealt with in countries of Asia, Eastern Europe, Italy, Spain and South America. The recent introduction of the potent antituberculosis remedies, far from diminishing the incidence of tuberculoma of the brain, is more likely to increase it. This case was a 18 year old male who had increased intracranial pressure signs and characteristic signs which was suggestive lesion in posterior fossa. Conray ventriculography revealed nearly total obstruction of distal portion of aqueduct of Sylvius with displacement to the right side. Intensive antituberclous treatment then was started after removal of tuberculoma in cerebellar vermis and then discharged with fully recovery. References were reviewed as will.
Adolescent
;
Asia
;
Brain
;
Cerebral Aqueduct
;
Europe, Eastern
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Intracranial Pressure
;
Italy
;
Male
;
South America
;
Spain
;
Tuberculoma*