1.Construction and validation of the pain management nursing competency evaluation index system for surgical nurses
Yunxia LI ; Zihao XUE ; Xiaowen FAN ; Minjun LIU ; Hongying PAN
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing 2025;41(11):824-831
Objective:To develop a Pain Management Nursing Competency Evaluation Index System for surgical nurses, providing a framework for assessing their pain management competency and guiding in-service training programs.Methods:From December 2023 to July 2024, a research team employed literature analysis, semi-structured interviews, expert consultations, and the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) to determine the content and weight of the competency evaluation index system. A cross-sectional survey was subsequently conducted using convenience sampling on 788 surgical nurses to test the internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and content validity of the index system.Results:The response rates for the two rounds of expert consultations were both 100% (46/46), with an expert authority coefficient of 0.921; the Kendall′s coefficients of expert opinions for the primary indicators were 0.106 and 0.245, respectively. The final index system included seven primary indicators (routine pain assessment, assessment and management of active and unexpected pain, pharmacological pain management, patient-controlled analgesia nursing, non-pharmacological pain management, pain related education for patients and their families, and professional development), 23 secondary indicators, and 78 tertiary indicators. The overall Cronbach α was 0.991, the test-retest reliability was 0.493, the item-level content validity index ranged from 0.96 to 1.00, and the scale-level content validity index was 0.98.Conclusions:The pain management nursing competency evaluation index system for surgical nurses is scientifically valid, reliable, and practical. It offers a solid foundation for evaluating the pain management competencies of surgical nurses and designing targeted in-service training programs.
2.Construction and validation of the pain management nursing competency evaluation index system for surgical nurses
Yunxia LI ; Zihao XUE ; Xiaowen FAN ; Minjun LIU ; Hongying PAN
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing 2025;41(11):824-831
Objective:To develop a Pain Management Nursing Competency Evaluation Index System for surgical nurses, providing a framework for assessing their pain management competency and guiding in-service training programs.Methods:From December 2023 to July 2024, a research team employed literature analysis, semi-structured interviews, expert consultations, and the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) to determine the content and weight of the competency evaluation index system. A cross-sectional survey was subsequently conducted using convenience sampling on 788 surgical nurses to test the internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and content validity of the index system.Results:The response rates for the two rounds of expert consultations were both 100% (46/46), with an expert authority coefficient of 0.921; the Kendall′s coefficients of expert opinions for the primary indicators were 0.106 and 0.245, respectively. The final index system included seven primary indicators (routine pain assessment, assessment and management of active and unexpected pain, pharmacological pain management, patient-controlled analgesia nursing, non-pharmacological pain management, pain related education for patients and their families, and professional development), 23 secondary indicators, and 78 tertiary indicators. The overall Cronbach α was 0.991, the test-retest reliability was 0.493, the item-level content validity index ranged from 0.96 to 1.00, and the scale-level content validity index was 0.98.Conclusions:The pain management nursing competency evaluation index system for surgical nurses is scientifically valid, reliable, and practical. It offers a solid foundation for evaluating the pain management competencies of surgical nurses and designing targeted in-service training programs.
3.Analysis of the current situation and related factors in physical exercise behaviors among high school students in Taizhou City
ZHANG Yan, DING Hairong, XUE Hao, QIU Dayong, ZHANG Zihao
Chinese Journal of School Health 2024;45(7):965-968
Objective:
To analyze the current situation and related factors of physical exercise behavior among high school students, so as to provide theoretical basis for improving their health level.
Methods:
In May 2022, a stratified cluster random sampling method was used to select 17 high schools in the jurisdiction of Taizhou City. A total of 3 402 high school students were selected by class to conduct a survey on the prevalence and related factors of physical exercise behavior by Chinese Sports Activity Level Scale. And binary Logistic regression analysis was conducted to analyze the influencing factors.
Results:
Among the surveyed high school students, the rate of poor physical exercise behavior reached 53.4%. The rates of poor physical exercise behavior varied within the group in terms of gender, urban and rural areas, whether they were only children, maternal education, parental emotions, parental exercise habits, parenting styles, family income and academic performance were statistically significant (χ2=12.38, 11.73, 742.71, 28.86, 24.38, 39.98, 71.92, 33.34, 176.97, P<0.01). High school students of grade 3, female students, parents with low education, parents who occasionally and never exercise, intergenerational discipline, low family income, and average academic performance were the tendency factors for poor physical exercise behavior(OR=1.39, 1.18, 1.62, 1.30, 1.36, 2.21, 1.53, 1.46, 1.52, P<0.05).
Conclusions
The rate of poor physical exercise behavior among high school students in Taizhou City is relatively high and is affected by various factors such as age, gender, academic performance, and family background. It should actively reduce the impact of unfavorable factors, promote high school students to participate in physical exercise, and improve the health level of high school students.
4.Reactivation of cytomegalovirus and its influencing factors in patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy after CAR-T cell therapy
Zihao WANG ; Linghao LI ; Shengli XUE ; Ziling ZHU ; Jie XU ; Tianyu LU ; Ying WANG ; Huiying QIU ; Yue HAN ; Suning CHEN ; Xiaowen TANG ; Zhengming JIN ; Caixia LI ; Aining SUN ; Depei WU
Chinese Journal of Hematology 2024;45(11):1005-1009
Objective:This study aimed to analyze cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and its influencing factors in patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy who received chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell therapy.Methods:This study retrospectively reviewed patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy who received CAR-T cell therapy in the First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University from January 2021 to December 2023. The data of patients who underwent CMV-DNA detection and/or pathogen metagenomic sequencing twice or more within 100 days after CAR-T cell therapy were analyzed. The clinical characteristics of the CMV reactivation and non-activation groups were compared. The factors related to CMV reactivation were analyzed with the Chi-square test and nonparametric rank sum test, and the risk factors were examined with Logistic regression.Results:This study included 86 patients, among whom 18 (20.9%) had CMV reactivation, and the median time of reactivation was 20 (1-95) days. All of the 18 patients had CMV viremia, and no CMV disease was observed. Seven patients turned to the latent state after continuing acyclovir antiviral therapy, and 11 patients returned to the latent state after upgrading the antiviral therapy to first-line drugs, including ganciclovir and foscarnet sodium. Six or more courses of anti-tumor treatment before CAR-T cell therapy, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within 2 years before CAR-T cell therapy, non-remission before treatment, and the use of high-dose glucocorticoids and/or tocilizumab were related to CMV reactivation, among which allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within 2 years pre-treatment and the use of high-dose glucocorticoids and/or tocilizumab treatment were independent risk factors for CMV reactivation.Conclusion:Patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy who received CAR-T cell therapy have the risk of CMV reactivation, especially for those who received allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within 2 years pre-treatment and those who received high-dose glucocorticoids and/or tocilizumab treatment.
5.Impact of hospital health literacy environment on patients′ postoperative pain self-management behaviors
Xiang PAN ; Yingge TONG ; Ke NI ; Zihao XUE ; Jing FENG ; Yingqiao LOU ; Danfei JIN ; Yeling WEI ; Miaoling WANG
Chinese Journal of Hospital Administration 2024;40(9):701-707
Objective:To explore the impact of the hospital health literacy environment on patients′ postoperative pain self-management behaviors, aiming to provide insights for hospitals to implement the Comprehensive Pain Management Pilot Work Program in hospitals and to promote self-health management among patients with other diseases or symptoms. Methods:From November to December 2023, a convenience sampling method was used to select postoperative patients from three grade A tertiary general hospitals in Zhejiang Province for an on-site questionnaire survey. The Chinese version of brief health literacy screen (BHLS), short-form health literacy environment scale (SF-HLES) and postoperative pain self-management behavior questionnaire (PPSMB) were used as survey tools to investigate the health literacy level of patients, the health literacy environment of the hospital, and the postoperative pain management behaviors of patients. Two-way ANOVA was used to compare the impact of different dimensions of the hospital health literacy environment on postoperative pain management behaviors among patients with different levels of health literacy. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to explore the relationship between the hospital health literacy environment, individual health literacy, and patients′ postoperative pain self-management behaviors, and to discuss the impact of individual health literacy on patients′ postoperative pain self-management behaviors under different hospital health literacy environments.Results:341 valid questionnaires were collected. The average score of the hospitals′ SF-HLES was (73.62±19.54) points. The average score of the patients′ BHLS was (9.65±2.88) points. The average score of the patients′ PPSMB was (25.99±6.35) points. Two-way ANOVA results showed that the interaction between individual health literacy and the clinical dimension ( F=5.463, P=0.020) and structural dimension ( F=6.470, P=0.011) of the hospital health literacy environment had a statistically significant impact on patients′ postoperative pain self-management behaviors, while the interaction with the interpersonal dimension ( F=0, P=0.984) had no statistically significant impact on pain self-management behaviors. Simple effect analysis indicated that only in the high health literacy environment of the clinical and structural dimensions did the difference in pain self-management behaviors between patients with good health literacy and those with limited health literacy had statistical significance ( P<0.001). Multiple linear regression analysis results showed that for each 1-point increase in the patients′ BHLS score, their PPSMB score increased by 3.74 points ( β1=0.832, P<0.001); for each 1-point increase in the hospital′s SF-HLES score, the patients′ PPSMB score could increase by 0.198 points ( β2=0.610, P<0.001). In a low health literacy environment, individual health literacy did not affect pain self-management behaviors ( P>0.05); however, in a high health literacy environment, for each 1-point increase in the patients′ BHLS score, their PPSMB score correspondingly increased by 4.037 points ( β4=0.317, P<0.001). Conclusions:The positive impact of individual health literacy on pain self-management is contingent upon a high-quality hospital health literacy environment. This suggests that optimizing the hospital health literacy environment is a necessary precondition for implementing the relevant content of the Comprehensive Pain Management Pilot Work Program and can provide a reference for promote self-health management among patients with pain and other diseases or symptoms.
6.Reactivation of cytomegalovirus and its influencing factors in patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy after CAR-T cell therapy
Zihao WANG ; Linghao LI ; Shengli XUE ; Ziling ZHU ; Jie XU ; Tianyu LU ; Ying WANG ; Huiying QIU ; Yue HAN ; Suning CHEN ; Xiaowen TANG ; Zhengming JIN ; Caixia LI ; Aining SUN ; Depei WU
Chinese Journal of Hematology 2024;45(11):1005-1009
Objective:This study aimed to analyze cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and its influencing factors in patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy who received chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell therapy.Methods:This study retrospectively reviewed patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy who received CAR-T cell therapy in the First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University from January 2021 to December 2023. The data of patients who underwent CMV-DNA detection and/or pathogen metagenomic sequencing twice or more within 100 days after CAR-T cell therapy were analyzed. The clinical characteristics of the CMV reactivation and non-activation groups were compared. The factors related to CMV reactivation were analyzed with the Chi-square test and nonparametric rank sum test, and the risk factors were examined with Logistic regression.Results:This study included 86 patients, among whom 18 (20.9%) had CMV reactivation, and the median time of reactivation was 20 (1-95) days. All of the 18 patients had CMV viremia, and no CMV disease was observed. Seven patients turned to the latent state after continuing acyclovir antiviral therapy, and 11 patients returned to the latent state after upgrading the antiviral therapy to first-line drugs, including ganciclovir and foscarnet sodium. Six or more courses of anti-tumor treatment before CAR-T cell therapy, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within 2 years before CAR-T cell therapy, non-remission before treatment, and the use of high-dose glucocorticoids and/or tocilizumab were related to CMV reactivation, among which allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within 2 years pre-treatment and the use of high-dose glucocorticoids and/or tocilizumab treatment were independent risk factors for CMV reactivation.Conclusion:Patients with B-lymphocyte malignancy who received CAR-T cell therapy have the risk of CMV reactivation, especially for those who received allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation within 2 years pre-treatment and those who received high-dose glucocorticoids and/or tocilizumab treatment.
7.Application Analysis of Animal Models of Urticaria Based on Bibliometrics
Peiwen XUE ; Haiyan QIN ; Di QIN ; Zihao ZOU ; Juan LI ; Yunzhou SHI ; Rongjiang JIN ; Ying LI ; Xianjun XIAO
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae 2023;29(19):203-210
ObjectiveTo summarize the modeling methods, test indicators, and evaluation methods of the animal models of urticaria and provide a basis for the subsequent research on urticaria models. MethodWith the keywords of "urticaria" and "animal model" and the time interval from inception to July 13, 2022, relevant articles were retrieved from CNKI, Wanfang Data, VIP, CBM, Web of Science, Embase, and PubMed. Two evaluators independently screened the articles and extracted the publishing time, sources, animal conditions, modeling methods, modeling time, and test indicators from the articles meeting the inclusion criteria to establish a data library for quantitative statistics and analysis. ResultA total of 116 articles were included, involving 129 animal experiments (102 in Chinese and 27 in English) of urticaria. In the last three years, the studies about the animal models of urticaria presented an obvious upward trend, and the articles were dominated by dissertations. KM mice and SD rats of both females and males were mainly used for the modeling of urticaria, and the models were mainly established by passive sensitization of skin for 14-16 days. The models were mainly evaluated based on apparent indicators such as blue-stained lesion area and ear swelling, supplemented by the pathological indicators of the skin and serum. ConclusionAlthough the experimental studies of urticaria are increasing, the modeling methods lack unified modeling standards and have low coincidence with clinical symptoms. Therefore, this paper analyzed the modeling elements and evaluation criteria of urticaria animal models, and proposed that both male and female KM mice (6-8 weeks old) or SD rats (8-10 weeks old) of SPF grade should be preferentially selected for modeling. Active and passive sensitization can be combined for the modeling, and the specific modeling elements such as modeling time and sensitization times need to be further explored. The model evaluation should include four aspects of behavior, appearance, pathology, and immunity.
8.Reprogrammed siTNFα/neutrophil cytopharmaceuticals targeting inflamed joints for rheumatoid arthritis therapy.
Yijun CHEN ; Kaiming LI ; Mengying JIAO ; Yingshuang HUANG ; Zihao ZHANG ; Lingjing XUE ; Caoyun JU ; Can ZHANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2023;13(2):787-803
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by severe synovial inflammation and cartilage damage. Despite great progress in RA therapy, there still lacks the drugs to completely cure RA patients. Herein, we propose a reprogrammed neutrophil cytopharmaceuticals loading with TNFα-targeting-siRNA (siTNFα) as an alternative anti-inflammatory approach for RA treatment. The loaded siTNFα act as not only the gene therapeutics to inhibit TNFα production by macrophages in inflamed synovium, but also the editors to reprogram neutrophils to anti-inflammatory phenotypes. Leveraging the active tendency of neutrophils to inflammation, the reprogrammed siTNFα/neutrophil cytopharmaceuticals (siTNFα/TP/NEs) can rapidly migrate to the inflamed synovium, transfer the loaded siTNFα to macrophages followed by the significant reduction of TNFα expression, and circumvent the pro-inflammatory activity of neutrophils, thus leading to the alleviated synovial inflammation and improved cartilage protection. Our work provides a promising cytopharmaceutical for RA treatment, and puts forward a living neutrophil-based gene delivery platform.
9.Research on the concept of hospital health literacy based on proceduralised grounded theory
Yingge TONG ; Yixue WU ; Zhiqing HAN ; Miaoling WANG ; Zihao XUE ; Siyi CHEN ; Lihui GU ; Yun XIA ; Lan YAO
Chinese Journal of Hospital Administration 2022;38(10):772-779
Objective:To construct the concept and its conceptual framework of hospital health literacy(HHL) for exploring the HHL promotion mechanism in the country.Methods:Based on the proceduralised grounded theory, twelve middle or senior managers of hospitals were selected for in-depth interviews and three hospitals were selected for field research from July 2021 to February 2022. Open coding, axial coding, and selective coding were used in data analysis, establishing the concept of HHL and its conceptual framework in China.Results:The conceptual framework of HHL was composed of an internal driver mechanism(hospitals improve their health literacy promotion management system, staff-led health literacy promotion, health literacy promoting physical environment construction), and an external driver mechanism(cooperate with external organizations and institutions to conduct health literacy promotion). The concept of HHL in China was derived as follows: the combination of supportive environments and human resources that health care organizations have in place can improve access and understandability of health information and simplify healthcare services to help patients of different health literacy levels more easily obtain, process, and understand health information as well as to make the most of medical services.Conclusions:Hospital health literacy promotion mechanism in China is a synergy between internal and external driver mechanisms.
10.Scoping review of health promotion and health education in medical and health institutions in China from 2000 to 2021
Siyi CHEN ; Yingge TONG ; Yixue WU ; Zihao XUE ; Zhiqing HAN ; Hangyan DU ; Lihui GU ; Yun XIA ; Lan YAO
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2022;28(34):4827-4833
Objective:To describe the current situation of health promotion and education in medical and health institutions in China, propose targeted improvement strategies and provide inspiration for medical and health institutions to implement the relevant content of the Health China Action.Methods:We searched China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) , WanFang Data, VIP China Science and Technology Journal Database, PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library and so on. The retrieval time limit was from January 1, 2000 to December 30, 2021. The search content was the research on the theme of "health promotion and education in medical and health institutions".Results:A total of 20 articles were included. In the research on health promotion and education of medical and health institutions, the studies involved in "organization management" and "health education" were the most ( n=20) . There were 7 studies (35%) related to "smoke-free hospitals", 4 studies (20%) related to "work effect evaluation", and the studies on "healthy environment" was the least (15%, 3/20) . Conclusions:The work experience of attaching importance to organization management and health education, vigorously promoting the construction of smoke-free hospitals and institutions' health environment, and strengthening the effectiveness evaluation of health promotion and education can provide reference for medical and health institutions to implement the relevant content of health promotion in the Health China Action (2019-2030) .


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