1.Novel autosomal dominant syndromic hearing loss caused by COL4A2 -related basement membrane dysfunction of cochlear capillaries and microcirculation disturbance.
Jinyuan YANG ; Ying MA ; Xue GAO ; Shiwei QIU ; Xiaoge LI ; Weihao ZHAO ; Yijin CHEN ; Guojie DONG ; Rongfeng LIN ; Gege WEI ; Huiyi NIE ; Haifeng FENG ; Xiaoning GU ; Bo GAO ; Pu DAI ; Yongyi YUAN
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(15):1888-1890
2.Exploration and Reflection on the Construction of Pre-admission Processes in Public Hospitals
Guojie ZHANG ; Hongmei ZHANG ; Qinghua BAI ; Liluan YOU ; Wei ZHANG ; Xueqin SUN ; Jinjin GAO ; Zheng CHEN ; Weiguo ZHU ; Qing CHANG
Medical Journal of Peking Union Medical College Hospital 2025;16(5):1185-1192
Pre-admission is a critical initiative to optimize medical service processes and alleviate the challenge of "difficult access to healthcare. "However, there is currently a lack of standardized protocols for pre-admission procedures. This study aims to systematically analyze key nodes and risk factors in pre-admission process design and propose optimization strategies, providing a foundation for policy formulation and hospital practices. By constructing a "forward-reverse" dual-process model of pre-admission and identifying risk points based on stakeholder theory (patients, hospitals, healthcare administration, and insurance), the study reveals that while pre-admission can reduce the average length of stay, improve bed turnover rates, and enhance patient satisfaction, it also presents risks such as cross-period financial settlement, challenges in insurance policy adaptability, demands for information system integration, and the need for defining medical safety boundaries. To optimize the pre-admission process and mitigate these risks, this study explores framework improvements in areas including eligibility criteria, mode selection, cost settlement, transition between pre-admission and inpatient status, and cancellation of pre-admission, offering practical guidance for public hospitals. The authors argue that pre-admission requires tripartite collaboration among hospitals, insurers, and healthcare administrations: hospitals should establish top-level design, continuously refine processes, and implement dynamic risk assessment mechanisms; insurance providers should support cross-period settlement policies; and healthcare administrations should issue guiding policies or standardized protocols. Through multi-department coordination and collaborative efforts, the optimization and innovation of pre-admission processes can be advanced, ultimately delivering more efficient and convenient healthcare experiences for patients.
3.Construction and application of medical safety system in Xidan Campus of Peking Union Medical College Hospital
Pengyu ZHAO ; Ligen YU ; Chen WANG ; Qiao LI ; Yi GAO ; Guojie ZHANG ; Qing CHANG
Chinese Journal of Hospital Administration 2025;41(6):426-431
The construction of a medical safety system based on the medical core quality and safty systems is the foundation of the hospital. Multi-campus operation coordinated development is key to the high-quality development of public hospitals and the balanced distribution of high-quality medical resources. Building a medical safety system that comfoms to the specialized layout and operation of branch districts is very important the construction of multi-campus hospitals. In January 2023, Xidan Campus of Peking Union Medical College Hospital established a medical safety system that was compatible with its development, based on the construction of the medical core quality and safty system. The system covered four dimensions: early identification, early assessment, early intervention, and fast response. It included high-risk surgical evaluation and filing, early warning of nursing rooms, periodic medical safety rounds, and rapid response teams and cross hospital transportation of critical care rapid response teams. As of June 2024, the hospital had recorded 570 high-risk surgeries with no unplanned secondary surgeries or unplanned readmissions; Reported nursing warnings 68 times, initiated 93 emergency treatments and cross hospital transfers. All emergency patients received early warning assessments and completed graded and classified transfers and management, effectively ensuring patient safety. This practice could provide references for other multi-campus hospitals to promote the construction and development of medical safety systems.
4.Research on the influencing factors of intertemporal health decision-making based on an interpretive structural model
Caixia LIU ; Xueqin GAO ; Ping LIN ; Zhenjuan ZHAO ; Guojie LIU
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(3):353-358
Objective:To identify the key individual factors influencing intertemporal health decision-making and construct an interpretive structural model to analyze the logical relationships between these factors, providing intervention targets for making health-related intertemporal decisions.Methods:Through literature review and expert discussion, individual factors influencing health intertemporal decision-making were identified. The interpretive structural model and cross-impact matrix multiplication method were used to analyze the hierarchical relationships and category distribution among these factors.Results:A hierarchical structural model consisting of three levels and eight elements was established, with category distribution including independent, associated, and dependent groups. Education level and economic status were identified as fundamental factors at the bottom level, influencing each other and belonging to the independent group. Health cognition, health status, self-control, and emotional state were middle-level indirect factors. Self-control was influenced by health status and also affected emotional state and health cognition, while health cognition, in turn, influenced health status, placing these factors in the associated group. Future time perception and future situational expectations were direct factors at the top level, influencing each other and belonging to the dependent group.Conclusions:Education level, economic status, health cognition, health status, self-control, emotional state, future time perception, and future situational expectations are individual factors influencing intertemporal health decision-making, with an inherent relationship from bottom to top. Clarifying the pathways between these factors will help to provide targeted interventions based on individual conditions, promoting correct health intertemporal decision-making.
5.Association between dietary diversity and the risk of MACE after PCI in patients with coronary heart disease
Menglei WANG ; Xueqin GAO ; Ping LIN ; Yini WANG ; Zhenjuan ZHAO ; Xinrui MA ; Ling LI ; Huixia HUANG ; Guojie LIU
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(17):2289-2294
Objective:To investigate the association between dietary diversity and the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) .Methods:A total of 553 patients diagnosed with CHD and undergoing PCI in the Department of Cardiology at the Second Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University between May and November 2023 were enrolled using a convenience sampling method. A Semi-Quantitative Food Frequency Questionnaire was used to assess patients' dietary intake after PCI, and the Dietary Diversity Score (DDS) was calculated. Patients were followed up for one year to determine the incidence of MACE.Results:History of hypertension, history of hyperlipidemia, body mass index, use of antiplatelet agents, use of diuretics, triglycerides, smoking index and DDS were identified as factors influencing the occurrence of MACE after PCI ( P<0.05) . Among these, higher dietary diversity had a protective effect against MACE. Conclusions:After PCI, patients with lower DDS experienced MACE more frequently than those with higher scores. Increased dietary diversity can effectively help prevent MACE in patients after PCI.
6.Research on the influencing factors of intertemporal health decision-making based on an interpretive structural model
Caixia LIU ; Xueqin GAO ; Ping LIN ; Zhenjuan ZHAO ; Guojie LIU
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(3):353-358
Objective:To identify the key individual factors influencing intertemporal health decision-making and construct an interpretive structural model to analyze the logical relationships between these factors, providing intervention targets for making health-related intertemporal decisions.Methods:Through literature review and expert discussion, individual factors influencing health intertemporal decision-making were identified. The interpretive structural model and cross-impact matrix multiplication method were used to analyze the hierarchical relationships and category distribution among these factors.Results:A hierarchical structural model consisting of three levels and eight elements was established, with category distribution including independent, associated, and dependent groups. Education level and economic status were identified as fundamental factors at the bottom level, influencing each other and belonging to the independent group. Health cognition, health status, self-control, and emotional state were middle-level indirect factors. Self-control was influenced by health status and also affected emotional state and health cognition, while health cognition, in turn, influenced health status, placing these factors in the associated group. Future time perception and future situational expectations were direct factors at the top level, influencing each other and belonging to the dependent group.Conclusions:Education level, economic status, health cognition, health status, self-control, emotional state, future time perception, and future situational expectations are individual factors influencing intertemporal health decision-making, with an inherent relationship from bottom to top. Clarifying the pathways between these factors will help to provide targeted interventions based on individual conditions, promoting correct health intertemporal decision-making.
7.Association between dietary diversity and the risk of MACE after PCI in patients with coronary heart disease
Menglei WANG ; Xueqin GAO ; Ping LIN ; Yini WANG ; Zhenjuan ZHAO ; Xinrui MA ; Ling LI ; Huixia HUANG ; Guojie LIU
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(17):2289-2294
Objective:To investigate the association between dietary diversity and the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) .Methods:A total of 553 patients diagnosed with CHD and undergoing PCI in the Department of Cardiology at the Second Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University between May and November 2023 were enrolled using a convenience sampling method. A Semi-Quantitative Food Frequency Questionnaire was used to assess patients' dietary intake after PCI, and the Dietary Diversity Score (DDS) was calculated. Patients were followed up for one year to determine the incidence of MACE.Results:History of hypertension, history of hyperlipidemia, body mass index, use of antiplatelet agents, use of diuretics, triglycerides, smoking index and DDS were identified as factors influencing the occurrence of MACE after PCI ( P<0.05) . Among these, higher dietary diversity had a protective effect against MACE. Conclusions:After PCI, patients with lower DDS experienced MACE more frequently than those with higher scores. Increased dietary diversity can effectively help prevent MACE in patients after PCI.
8.Construction and application of medical safety system in Xidan Campus of Peking Union Medical College Hospital
Pengyu ZHAO ; Ligen YU ; Chen WANG ; Qiao LI ; Yi GAO ; Guojie ZHANG ; Qing CHANG
Chinese Journal of Hospital Administration 2025;41(6):426-431
The construction of a medical safety system based on the medical core quality and safty systems is the foundation of the hospital. Multi-campus operation coordinated development is key to the high-quality development of public hospitals and the balanced distribution of high-quality medical resources. Building a medical safety system that comfoms to the specialized layout and operation of branch districts is very important the construction of multi-campus hospitals. In January 2023, Xidan Campus of Peking Union Medical College Hospital established a medical safety system that was compatible with its development, based on the construction of the medical core quality and safty system. The system covered four dimensions: early identification, early assessment, early intervention, and fast response. It included high-risk surgical evaluation and filing, early warning of nursing rooms, periodic medical safety rounds, and rapid response teams and cross hospital transportation of critical care rapid response teams. As of June 2024, the hospital had recorded 570 high-risk surgeries with no unplanned secondary surgeries or unplanned readmissions; Reported nursing warnings 68 times, initiated 93 emergency treatments and cross hospital transfers. All emergency patients received early warning assessments and completed graded and classified transfers and management, effectively ensuring patient safety. This practice could provide references for other multi-campus hospitals to promote the construction and development of medical safety systems.
9.Effect of sorafenib induced apoptosis and autophagy on drug resistance in HeLa cells
Kaifei YANG ; Jingge ZHU ; Yangyang ZHANG ; Junguo ZHAO ; Yuyue GAO ; Huanhuan HU ; Guojie JI
Basic & Clinical Medicine 2024;44(4):467-473
Objective To explore the effect of sorafenib on HeLa cell proliferation by inducing cell apoptosis and autophagy and its impact on drug resistance.Methods The drug-resistant cell strains were constructed through in-termittent induction method,with concentrations of 0,2.5,5.0,7.5,10.0,15.0,20.0 μmol/L.HeLa cells were incubated with increasing concentrations of sorafenib with each concentration for 1 week.The drug-resistant cell strains with stable passages were collected.MTT assay was used to detect the effect of sorafenib on cell prolifer-ation.Cell cycle distribution was analyzed by flow cytometry.The change in the expression of drug-resistant and ap-optotic genes in the parents and drug-resistant cell strains under different drug concentrations was examined by semi-quantitative PCR.The changes of apoptotic related marker proteins LC3-Ⅰ and LC3-Ⅱ were detected by Westernblot.Results Stable drug-resistant strains were successfully obtained;Drug-treated cells were more blocked in the G1 phase.In drug-resistant cells,the expression of apoptosis suppressor gene Bcl-2 was significantly decreased and the apoptotic gene Bax as well as the drug-resistant genes were all significantly increased(P<0.05).The LC3-Ⅱ/LC3-Ⅰ ratio of drug-resistant cells was significantly higher than that of parent cells(P<0.05).Conclusions Sorafenib may block the cell cycle,suppress malignant cell proliferation and promote autophage.On one hand,autophagy participates in the development of cell drug resistance and promotes cell survival.On the other hand,drug-induced autophagy may activate some of apoptotic signaling pathway in drug-resistant cells and promote the reversal of cell drug resistance.
10.Status quo and influencing factors of the somatization of depressive emotions among college students
Zhenjuan ZHAO ; Xueqin GAO ; Xinrui MA ; Guojie LIU ; Yini WANG ; Rui WANG ; Ling LI ; Ping LIN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2024;30(16):2207-2211
Objective:To investigate the status quo and influencing factors of the somatization of depressive emotions among college students, in order to provide a theoretical basis for the reform of mental health education and the formulation of operable mental health counseling for college students.Methods:Totally 297 college students from two institutions of higher education in Heilongjiang Province were selected by convenience sampling and investigated with the College Student Depressive Emotion Somatization Questionnaire, Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale-Short Form (ATSPPH-SF), and the Type D Personality Scale (DS14) .Results:The total score for the College Student Depressive Emotion Somatization Questionnaire among the 297 students was (28.49±8.07), and the total score for the ATSPPH-SF was (21.98±2.73). Multiple linear regression analysis showed that the influencing factors for the somatization of depressive emotions in college students were professional psychological help-seeking attitudes and whether they had a Type D personality ( P < 0.05) . Conclusions:During university education, there should be a focus on students' personality traits and the positivity of their attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help in order to mitigate the occurrence of adverse psychological issues such as symptoms of depressive somatization.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail