PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Women most often suffer urinary tract infections, but men more likely to be hospitalized

2013-10-09
(Press-News.org) DETROIT – While women are far more likely to suffer urinary tract infections, men are more prone to be hospitalized for treatment, according to a study by Henry Ford Hospital urologists.

The first-of-its-kind research for the most common bacterial infection in the U.S. is important in providing predictors of hospital admission at a time when the health care industry is searching for ways to reduce costs.

"We found that those patients who were hospitalized for treatment of urinary tract infections were most often older men, as well as those with serious kidney infections," says Jesse D. Sammon, D.O., a researcher at Henry Ford's Vattikuti Urology Institute and lead author of the study.

"They were also more likely to be seen at urban teaching hospitals, and/or treated in zip codes with higher median incomes."

The study is published in the September issue of World Journal of Urology and available online at http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00345-013-1167-3/fulltext.html.

Citing previous studies, the Henry Ford researchers noted that costs rise tenfold when UTI patients require hospitalization. Being able to predict who among the annual patient load for UTI are most likely to be admitted to the hospital may help contain the rising costs of their care.

The study focused on 10.8 million patients with a primary diagnosis of UTI – specifically cystitis (bladder infection) and/or pyelonephritis (kidney infection) – who were seen in American hospital emergency departments from 2006 to 2009. This data was drawn from the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample, the largest all-payer emergency department database in the U.S.

Of those 10.8 million patients, 1.8 million – or 16.7 percent – were admitted to the hospital for further treatment.

Citing data for 1997 – 10 years before the current study period – the researchers noted that urinary tracts infections accounted for fewer than one million emergency department visits resulting in 100,000 hospitalizations.

"Over the current study period, 2006 to 2009, there was an average of 2.7 million emergency department visits each year for UTI, leading to 450,136 admissions," Dr. Sammon says. "This rapid rise has exceeded all previous estimates."

In 2007 alone, the research showed, there were more than 8.6 million outpatient visits for UTI, 23 percent of which were in emergency departments, with 84 percent of them made by women.

"This translated into a direct cost of $1.6 billion per year to the U.S. health care system," says Dr. Sammons. "UTIs are especially common in women. By age 32, half of women report having had at least one."

"For men and women, the incidence of going to the emergency department with a UTI was highest among the elderly, yet women saw a 'peak' in such cases between age 15 and 25, corresponding to the onset of sexual activity."

But it was men who were most likely to be admitted for inpatient care, especially elderly men and those with acute kidney infections that required treatment with intravenous antibiotics.

While attributing a rise in the U.S. hospitalization rate for UTI in part to the country's aging population, the researchers said increasing levels of diabetes and other illnesses among the patients, and rising resistance to antibiotics, also were factors.

"Managing these high-risk patients more aggressively in the outpatient setting may prevent unnecessary hospitalizations and reduce associated health care costs," Dr. Sammons says.

INFORMATION:

Funding: Vattikuti Foundation

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Blood vessel cells can repair, regenerate organs, say Weill Cornell scientists

2013-10-09
NEW YORK (October 8, 2013) -- Damaged or diseased organs may someday be healed with an injection of blood vessel cells, eliminating the need for donated organs and transplants, according to scientists at Weill Cornell Medical College. In studies appearing in recent issues of Stem Cell Journal and Developmental Cell, the researchers show that endothelial cells -- the cells that make up the structure of blood vessels -- are powerful biological machines that drive regeneration in organ tissues by releasing beneficial, organ-specific molecules. They discovered this by ...

From slowdown to shutdown -- US leadership in biomedical research takes a blow, says ASCB

2013-10-09
WASHINGTON, DC—OCTOBER 8, 2013—A senior researcher who can't get an answer from a shutdown NIH about a proposed clinical trial on a neurodegenerative disease, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist who fears that a generation of innovators will be lost, and a young investigator wearied at the lab by endless funding cuts and frustrated at home by the halt to promising research into a genetic disorder that affects her daughter—these are the leaders and members of the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) who today told a press conference at the National Press Club that the "temporary" ...

EARTH Magazine: New subduction zone may close Atlantic Ocean

2013-10-09
Alexandria, VA –Throughout the history of Earth, supercontinents have formed and ocean basins have opened and closed over timescales of 300 million to 500 million years. But scientists haven't found direct evidence of the in-between phase — an ocean basin that was opening, starting instead to close — until now. Thanks to new high-resolution surveys of the seafloor, scientists think they have evidence of that process starting in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Portugal. If they are right, this nascent subduction zone could close the Atlantic Ocean — in roughly 200 million ...

Researchers identify screening tool for detecting intimate partner violence among women veterans

2013-10-09
(Boston)-- Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) researchers have identified a promising screening tool to detect intimate partner violence (IPV) in females in the VA Boston Healthcare System. The findings, which appear in the current issue of Journal of General Internal Medicine, accurately detected 78 percent of women identified as abused within the past year by a more comprehensive and behaviorally specific scale. IPV is a major public health issue, particularly among women receiving medical care at VA facilities. The researchers cite "lifetime reports of IPV ...

New urine test could diagnose eye disease

2013-10-09
DURHAM, N.C. -- You might not think to look to a urine test to diagnose an eye disease. But a new Duke University study says it can link what is in a patient's urine to gene mutations that cause retinitis pigmentosa, or RP, an inherited, degenerative disease that results in severe vision impairment and often blindness. The findings appear online in the Journal of Lipid Research. "My collaborators, Dr. Rong Wen and Dr. Byron Lam at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute in Florida first sought my expertise in mass spectrometry to analyze cells cultured from a family in which ...

Diamond 'super-earth' may not be quite as precious, UA graduate student finds

2013-10-09
A planet 40 light years from our solar system, believed to be the first-ever discovered planet to consist largely of diamond, may in fact be of less exquisite nature, according to new research led by University of Arizona astronomy graduate student Johanna Teske. Revisiting public data from previous telescope observations, Teske's team analyzed the available data in more detail and concluded that carbon – the chemical element diamonds are made of – appears to be less abundant in relation to oxygen in the planet's host star – and by extension, perhaps the planet – than ...

Harvard Stem Cell Institute publishes first clinical trial results

2013-10-09
Starting with a discovery in zebrafish in 2007, Harvard Stem Cell Institute (HSCI) researchers have published initial results of a Phase Ib human clinical trial of a therapeutic that has the potential to improve the success of blood stem cell transplantation. This marks the first time, just nine short years after Harvard's major commitment to stem cell biology, that investigators have carried a discovery from the lab bench to the clinic—fulfilling the promise on which HSCI was founded. The Phase 1b safety study, published in the journal Blood, included 12 adult patients ...

A better breathalyzer

2013-10-09
The portable breathalyzers preferred by roadside police use expensive electronic readouts, but these devices lack the "immediate and intuitive" color change that tells police whether the alcohol content of a suspect's breath puts them in the legal red zone, said first author Riccardo Pernice of the Università degli Studi di Palermo in Italy. Techniques that do use color change to assess the level of alcohol concentration are typically less expensive, but they cannot give a precise reading of the alcohol concentration and most are use-once-and-toss. Pernice said his team's ...

Flawed diamonds: Gems for new technology

2013-10-09
A team of researchers led by University of Arizona assistant professor Vanessa Huxter has made the first detailed observation of how energy travels through diamonds that contain nitrogen-vacancy centers – defects in which two adjacent carbon atoms in the diamond's crystal structure are replaced by a single nitrogen atom and an empty gap. These "flaws" result in unexpected and attractive properties that have put such diamonds in the spotlight as promising candidates for a variety of technological advances. The findings, published online in Nature Physics, could help ...

Where does dizziness come from?

2013-10-09
Johns Hopkins researchers say they have pinpointed a site in a highly developed area of the human brain that plays an important role in the subconscious recognition of which way is straight up and which way is down. The finding, described online in the journal Cerebral Cortex, may help account for some causes of spatial disorientation and dizziness, and offer targets for treating the feelings of unsteadiness and "floating" people experience when the brain fails to properly integrate input from the body's senses. Disabling dizziness can be a symptom of damage to the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

National Poll: Some parents say they waited too long to stop pacifier use or thumb-sucking in children

New US$35M partnership to advance blood disorder therapies

Is understanding propaganda a necessary skill for modern democracy?

Under embargo: Robots learning without us? New study cuts humans from early testing

New film highlights the hidden impact of climate change on brain health

Conservation leaders challenge global economic systems that value ‘dead’ nature over living planet

A multidimensional diagnostic approach for COPD

Wearable sensor could be used to monitor OSA treatment response

Waitlist deaths dropped under new lung transplant allocation system

Methotrexate as effective as prednisone in pulmonary sarcoidosis

Waist-to-height ratio predicts heart failure incidence

Climate change increases severity of obstructive sleep apnea

USC, UCLA team up for the world’s first-in-human bladder transplant

Two out of five patients with heart failure do not see a cardiologist even once a year and these patients are more likely to die

AI-enabled ECG algorithm performs well in the early detection of heart failure in Kenya

No cardiac safety concerns reported with a pharmaceutically manufactured cannabidiol formulation

Scientists wash away mystery behind why foams are leakier than expected

TIFRH researchers uncover a mechanism enabling glasses to self-regulate their brittleness

High energy proton accelerator on a table-top — enabled by university class lasers

Life, death and mowing – study reveals Britain’s poetic obsession with the humble lawnmower

Ochsner Transplant Institute’s kidney program achieves ELITE Status

Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes under Medicare Advantage value-based payment

Can mindfulness combat anxiety?

Could personality tests help make bipolar disorder treatment more precise?

Largest genomic study of veterans with metastatic prostate cancer reveals critical insights for precision medicine

UCF’s ‘bridge doctor’ combines imaging, neural network to efficiently evaluate concrete bridges’ safety

Scientists discover key gene impacts liver energy storage, affecting metabolic disease risk

Study finds that individual layers of synthetic materials can collaborate for greater impact

Researchers find elevated levels of mercury in Colorado mountain wetlands

Study reveals healing the ozone hole helps the Southern Ocean take up carbon

[Press-News.org] Study: Women most often suffer urinary tract infections, but men more likely to be hospitalized