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

New 'care bundle' achieves drop in death rate for emergency abdominal surgery patients

2014-11-12
(Press-News.org) Four UK hospitals have achieved a huge reduction in the number of patients dying following emergency abdominal surgery, after adopting a 'care bundle' devised by patient safety specialists.

The care bundle was developed at the Royal Surrey County Hospital in Guildford and implemented in the Royal United Hospital Bath, Torbay Hospital and the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital. The results were analysed by academics at the University of Bradford

Over the study period, the overall death rate for patients undergoing emergency abdominal surgery fell from 16 per cent to 10 per cent - a 38% reduction in death rate.

The study was funded by a Health Foundation Shine Grant, along with grants from the South West Strategic Health Authority and LiDCO Group. The results are published in the British Journal of Surgery on 12 November 2014.

Included in the care bundle are five elements: an initial assessment with early warning scores; delivery of early antibiotics; a maximum of six hours between the decision to operate and surgery; goal directed fluid therapy; and post-operative intensive care.

Mohammed A Mohammed, Professor of Healthcare Quality and Effectiveness at the University of Bradford, who co-authored the research, said: "Emergency abdominal operations are known to have a very high risk of death, partly due to inadequate levels of care following surgery. In healthcare we often know what measures we should take to improve outcomes for patients, but implementing these and getting them right for every patient is a key challenge.

"This care bundle has been particularly successful because it doesn't require additional resources, but simply better co-ordination of the resources that the hospitals already have."

Nial Quiney, Consultant in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine at the Royal Surrey County Hospital, says: "Although we have relatively good outcomes from elective surgery, we've known for a long time that emergency surgical admissions have poor outcomes. This is due to a range of factors, including multi-organ failure and sepsis. Often these emergency cases are elderly patients with additional pre-existing conditions.

"The quality of care following emergency surgery needs to draw level with what is offered following elective surgery. Implementing this care bundle in four hospitals goes a long way towards achieving that. The results we've achieved with this project have been remarkable: around 50,000 of these operations are carried out in the UK each year. We estimate that the improvements we've made could enable hospitals to save an additional 2-3,000 lives."

The researchers are now planning to work with other hospitals in England to implement the care bundle, with the goal of seeing it adopted as a standardised model of care in hospitals across the UK.

INFORMATION:

Notes to editors 1. "Use of a pathway quality improvement care bundle to reduce mortality after emergency laparotomy" by S Huddart MBBS FRCA, C J Peden MD FRCA, M Swart MBBS FRCA, B McCormick MBBS FRCA, M Dickinson MBBS MSc FRCA, M A Mohammed PhD, N Quiney MBBS FRCA, and the ELPQuiC Collaborator Group, is published in the British Journal of Surgery on 12 November 2014. 2. Founded in 1966, the University of Bradford is one of the UK's technology universities. It is a research-active university, with over 80 per cent of our research being rated as either 'international' or 'world-leading' in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). The University was ranked No 1 in Yorkshire for employed graduates obtaining professional & managerial level jobs.

Known for its strong emphasis on employability skills and knowledge transfer work with businesses, the University has a truly global make up, with over 20 per cent of its student population being international. The University is also a leader in sustainable development and education, and is within the top ten greenest universities in the UK, according to the Green League 2013.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mothers nurture emotions in girls over boys, new study finds

2014-11-12
A new study published today in The British Journal of Developmental Psychology has found that conversations mothers have with their daughters tend to contain more emotional words and content, than the conversations they have with their sons. The researchers from the University of Surrey also found that as mothers use more emotional words than fathers, they are also unconsciously reinforcing gender stereotypes to their children. They suggest that these findings could explain why women are generally more emotionally intelligent than men. 65 Spanish mothers and fathers ...

Scientists discover new properties of microbes that cause common eye infection

2014-11-12
BOSTON (Nov. 12, 2014) - Scientists from Massachusetts Eye and Ear/Harvard Medical School Department of Ophthalmology have used the power of new genomic technology to discover that microbes that commonly infect the eye have special, previously unknown properties. These properties are predicted to allow the bacterium -- Streptococcus pneumoniae -- to specifically stick to the surface of the eye, grow, and cause damage and inflammation. Researchers are now using this information to develop new ways to treat and prevent this bacterium, which is becoming increasingly resistant ...

Oral cancer-causing HPV may spread through oral and genital routes

2014-11-12
Oral human papillomavirus (HPV) infections were more common among men who had female partners with oral and/or genital HPV infection, suggesting that the transmission of HPV occurs via oral-oral and oral-genital routes, according to a McGill University study published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. "HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease in the world, and is a risk factor for several cancers, including cervical, vaginal, vulvar, oropharyngeal [throat/tonsil], anal, and penile cancer," ...

Psychotropic drug prescriptions: Therapeutic advances or fads?

2014-11-12
This news release is available in French. Why are psychotropic drugs such as antidepressants, psychostimulants, anxiolytics, and antipsychotics are increasingly prescribed in North America? Drawing a parallel between the dilemmas facing medicine in the nineteenth century and those that currently exist in the field of mental health, the sociologist and historian Johanne Collin, a professor at the Université de Montréal's Faculty of Pharmacy, believes this increase in prescriptions is partly explained by the therapeutic reasoning of physicians. "There is an ...

Heart attack, stroke survivors' care needs may be much greater than experts thought

2014-11-11
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- A record number of people are surviving heart attacks and stroke but those who do may experience a sharp decline in physical abilities that steadily accelerates over time, according to a new nationally-representative study led by the University of Michigan. Heart attack and stroke were associated with a rapid decline in survivors' ability to take care of themselves over the next 10 years, many requiring long-term assistance for daily activities like dressing, bathing, grocery shopping and managing finances. Stroke survivors also appeared to be at ...

How to secure the entrepreneurial future of a family business

2014-11-11
This news release is available in French. Montreal, November 11, 2014 -- Regardless of whether a business has been in the family for one year or one thousand, the person in charge typically hopes that handing the reins to a close relative will ensure security for future generations. But that's easier said than done, given that 30 per cent of firms make it to the second generation of family ownership, and only 12 per cent make it to the third. Concordia University management professor Peter Jaskiewicz believes there's hope for business owners who stay current by focusing ...

Notre Dame network physicists create model to predict traffic patterns

2014-11-11
Researchers at the University of Notre Dame have designed a simple, yet highly accurate traffic prediction model for roadway transportation networks. They have recently published their work in the journal Nature Communications. "Transportation networks and in particular the highway transportation network are like the body's circulatory system for the nation," says Zoltán Toroczkai, professor of physics at the University of Notre Dame, who co-authored the study with physics graduate student Yihui Ren and national and international collaborators. The team's model ...

Helping patients with schizophrenia and their caregivers

2014-11-11
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (November 11, 2014) -- Researchers at the University of Miami (UM) have developed a family-focused, culturally-informed treatment for schizophrenia (CIT-S). The program is one of the first to incorporate elements of the patient's cultural background as part of therapy. The findings are published online ahead of print, in the Journal of Family Psychology. The novel treatment aimed to reduce patients' symptoms and improve patient and caregiver emotional well-being, explains Amy Weisman de Mamani, Associate Professor of Psychology in the College of Arts ...

Study: Baby boomers will drive explosion in Alzheimer's-related costs in coming decades

2014-11-11
As baby boomers reach their sunset years, shifting nationwide demographics with them, the financial burden of Alzheimer's disease on the United States will skyrocket from $307 billion annually to $1.5 trillion, USC researchers announced today. Health policy researchers at the USC Leonard D. Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics used models that incorporate trends in health, health care costs, education and demographics to explore the future impact of one of humanity's costliest diseases on the nation's population. Other key findings include: From 2010 to ...

Next-gen melanoma drug, TAK-733, excels in lab tests

2014-11-11
A University of Colorado Cancer Center study published online this week in the journal Molecular Cancer Therapeutics reports anti-cancer activity in 10 out of 11 patient tumor samples grown in mice and treated with the experimental drug TAK-733, a small molecule inhibitor of MEK1/2. While the drug is conceived as a second-generation inhibitor in patients harboring the BRAF mutation, the study shows drug activity in melanoma models regardless of BRAF mutation status. Treated tumors shrunk up to 100 percent. "The importance of this molecule is that it's a next-generation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Malnutrition in children rises when economy drops

New model enables the study of how protein complex influences mitochondrial function

Device study offers hopes for spinal cord injuries

How urea forms spontaneously

Mayo Clinic’s AI tool identifies 9 dementia types, including Alzheimer’s, with one scan

Gene therapy improves blood flow in the brain in patients with sickle cell disease

Building breast tissue in the lab to better understand lactation

How gut bacteria change after exposure to pesticides

Timepoint at which developing B-cells become cancerous impacts leukemia treatment

Roberto Morandotti wins prestigious IEEE Photonics Society Quantum Electronics Award 

New urine-based tumor DNA test may help personalize bladder cancer treatment

How a faulty transport protein in the brain can trigger severe epilepsy

Study reveals uneven land sinking across New Orleans, raising flood-risk concerns

Researchers uncover novel mechanism for regulating ribosome biogenesis during brain development

RNA codon expansion via programmable pseudouridine editing and decoding

Post-diagnosis emergency department presentation and demographic factors in malignant skin cancers

A new genetic tuner for embryo development

Insurance churn and the COVID-19 pandemic

Postpartum Medicaid use in birthing parents and access to financed care

Manufacturing chemicals via orthogonal strategy, making full use of waste plastic resources in real life

Study overturns long-held belief about shape of fish schools

Precision oncology Organ Chip platform accurately and actionably predicts chemotherapy responses of patients suffering from esophageal adenocarcinoma

Verify the therapeutic effect of effective components of lycium barbarum on hepatocellular carcinoma based on molecular docking

Early intervention changes trajectory for depressed preschoolers

HonorHealth Research Institute presents ‘monumental’ increase in survivability for patients suffering ultra-low blood pressure

Mitochondrial dynamics in breast cancer metastasis: From metabolic drivers to therapeutic targets

Removing out-of-pocket fee improves access to 3D mammography

Does reducing exposure to image and video content on messaging apps reduce the impact of misinformation? Yes and no

A global microbiome preservation effort enters its growth phase

New credit card-sized TB test could close the diagnostic gap in HIV hotspots

[Press-News.org] New 'care bundle' achieves drop in death rate for emergency abdominal surgery patients