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

Amsterdam UMC set to lead large-scale European study into preventing burnout due to stress among staff in and around the operating theatre

2024-07-22
(Press-News.org) On average, healthcare professionals involved in surgical procedures and care in hospitals experience more stress and burnout than other professional groups in Europe. An estimated 60% of these caregivers are showing symptoms of burnout, while up to half of nurses are considering leaving their profession. To address this, thanks to a Horizon Grant of almost 6.5 million euros, Amsterdam UMC will lead a European consortium in search of the best solutions to stress. 

"Healthcare providers involved in surgical procedures are under enormous pressure. Think of surgeons, nurses, theatre assistants, anesthesiologists. They drop out due to stress or start looking for another job. Partly because of this, we have a large and increasing shortage of healthcare personnel. Furthermore, due to understaffing, it is increasingly difficult to encourage people to come and work for us. Hospitals are facing rising costs and waiting lists are increasing. Ultimately, patients, and we as a society, will have to bear the adverse consequences of that if we don't look for solutions now that keep our people safe at work," says surgeon and research leader Marlies Schijven. 

With the Horizon grant of 6.5 million, the researchers want to develop, among other things, a digital tool that, supported by artificial intelligence, can predict which stress-reducing methods work best for individual healthcare providers.  

Stress varies from person to person  
The study, called KEEPCARING, is divided into a number of phases. First of all, the researchers will find out which stress profiles can be distinguished for each professional group, and then how best to measure stress. 

"Stress is now a catch-all term. What constitutes stress varies from person to person and also from situation to situation. I may be stressed because I suffer from a high administrative burden, which means that I can't get my work done. But someone else may experience stress in his or her private life because it is not possible to go home on time due to the high workload. Another may develop physical symptoms due to an incorrect working posture or as a result of perceived psychological pressure. That's why we're going to start by finding out what stress profiles there are and how they occur in the various occupational groups," says Schijven  

In addition, the researchers want to know how best to measure stress. They will map and use existing methods, but also develop new methods. 

Mapping solutions  
"After these initial phases, we will look for possible solutions. Here too, we are looking at existing interventions to reduce stress and want to develop new methods. For example, one healthcare provider may benefit most from sitting on a rowing machine for a short time just before an operation, while another may benefit more from structurally taking a beta-blocker. And for yet another, it helps to talk over the work with colleagues afterwards, or to relax in a personal VR environment," says Schijven. 

The next step is to determine whether and how the various interventions best fit into the daily practice of the hospital. 

"Because not every method fits the work situation. Exercising on a rowing machine may be beneficial for stress, but if it is not used because there is no time for it or because the person simply does not like it, it is of no use," adds Schijven. 

Measuring stress with a T-shirt 
Ultimately, a number of methods against stress will be tested in practice in clinical trials that will take place simultaneously in several European hospitals. At Amsterdam UMC, for example, the stress of the entire operating team will be measured with a special T-shirt that registers physical characteristics such as heart rate and sweat as a measure of stress.  

"This is how we will measure whether a certain intervention actually reduces stress. At the same time, we monitor and analyze the social interaction between team members in the operating theatre. In this way, we can trace exactly when certain stress factors occur, what that does to the people in the team, and especially whether it really helps if you apply stress-reducing interventions before an operation. In addition, we are also starting research aimed at improving collaboration between staff of different age groups in surgical nursing wards, in the participating hospitals in Copenhagen, Hamburg and Amsterdam," says Schijven. 

Useful interventions 
Ultimately, the study will lead to a portal with a variety of useful interventions against stress. These will be available to individual care providers, to care teams and to hospitals as an organization.  

"This will soon provide insight into the most important stress drivers of the employees they employ for each hospital. Based on this, with the help of artificial intelligence, among other things, the organization can determine and predict which methods against stress they need to have in-house preventively," concludes Schijven.        

The full list of participants are Amsterdam UMC, University of Limerick (IRE), Nuromedia (GER), Erasmus University (NL), ECHAlliance (IRE), Chino (IT), Region Zealand (DK), Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, National Research Council of Italy, University of Coimbra (PT), University of Tartu (EST), Healthy Mind (FR), NOVA University Lisbon (PT), University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (GER), Capital Region of Denmark, European Federation of Nurses Associations, European Hospital and Healthcare Federation, University of York and the University of Warwick (both UK) 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

National Poll: Some parents not confident their kids are wearing the right shoes

National Poll: Some parents not confident their kids are wearing the right shoes
2024-07-22
ANN ARBOR, Mich. –  As children grow, it may feel like they’re constantly outgrowing one clothing item essential for so many activities: their shoes. But many parents in a new national poll acknowledge a lack of confidence in ensuring their children are wearing properly fitting shoes – which experts say is necessary to support growth and prevent injuries. One in seven parents also say they’ve had concerns about their child’s feet or the way they walk while one in 10 parents report their child ...

Eco-friendly treatment saves squid eggs from newfound parasite

Eco-friendly treatment saves squid eggs from newfound parasite
2024-07-22
Raising squid in aquaculture has been a challenge that researchers have tried to address for many decades without meaningful success. Squid are highly sensitive to changes in water flow, are vulnerable to disease, have complex life cycles and hard-to-meet food preferences, and can become aggressive towards each other, all of which make them difficult to rear. At the same time, the population of wild squid is plummeting due to overfishing and climate change, and in Japan alone, it’s estimated ...

Quit Googling and take naps to cut dementia risk, says AI expert

2024-07-22
People can reduce their risk of age-related dementia by exercising their brains properly instead of Googling, according to a leading Canadian academic. Professor Mohamed I. Elmasry says simple daily habits such as afternoon naps, memory ‘workouts’ and not reaching for a smartphone can increase the odds of healthy aging. His new book, iMind: Artificial and Real Intelligence (with foreword by Canadian cell biologist Dr. Aileen Burford-Mason), says the focus has shifted too far away from RI (natural, or real) intelligence in favor of ...

Duke-NUS launches LIVE Ventures, a S$20 million incubator to accelerate research commercialisation

2024-07-22
New incubator aims to tap industry experts to bridge the knowledge and funding gap to enhance bench-to-bedside success LIVE Ventures provides up to $500,000 for high-potential academic research projects   Duke-NUS Medical School today launched LIVE Ventures, a S$20 million incubation programme designed to catalyse the commercialisation of innovative academic research. Focused on translating scientific breakthroughs into clinical applications, LIVE Ventures will provide Duke-NUS scientists conducting ...

Samuel Pepys’ fashion prints reveal his guilty pleasure: Fancy French clothes

Samuel Pepys’ fashion prints reveal his guilty pleasure: Fancy French clothes
2024-07-22
University of Cambridge media release UNDER STRICT EMBARGO UNTIL 00:01AM (UK TIME) ON MONDAY 22ND JULY 2024   A collection of French fashion engravings offers precious new insights into the life of Samuel Pepys years after his premature final diary entry. The prints show the tailor’s son remained fascinated by the power of fashion long after he had secured wealth and status. But they also expose Pepys’ internal conflict over French style. Most of what we know about Samuel ...

New genetic test will eliminate a form of inherited blindness in dogs

New genetic test will eliminate a form of inherited blindness in dogs
2024-07-22
Progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) is a group of inherited diseases that causes progressive degeneration of the light sensitive cells at the back of the eye. Dogs with PRA have normal sight at birth, but by the age of four or five they will be totally blind. There is no treatment. Now a team led by the University of Cambridge has identified the genetic mutation that causes PRA in English Shepherd Dogs, and developed a DNA test for it. By identifying dogs carrying the disease before their eyesight starts to fail, this provides a tool to guide breeding decisions so the disease is not passed on to puppies. Owners usually don’t realise their dog has PRA until it is ...

Cancer risk: Most Australian welders exposed to high levels of dangerous fumes

2024-07-21
New Curtin University research has revealed at least 46,000 Australian welders are exposed to high levels of dangerous, potentially cancer-causing fumes at work — and little is being done to protect them.   A joint Curtin School of Population Health and University of Sydney project funded through the Centre for Work Health and Safety, the Australian-first study was published today in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health.   The research team surveyed 634 workers and employers involved in welding from across Australia ...

Two-in-one mapping of temperature and flow around microscale convective flows

Two-in-one mapping of temperature and flow around microscale convective flows
2024-07-20
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have devised a way to measure both the temperature and velocity profiles of fluid in a convective plume at millimeter length scales in 3D. They combined near-infrared absorption imaging and image processing to separate the motion of tracer particles from snapshots of how light is absorbed, producing both a smooth velocity and temperature map. The technology promises new insights into optimizing the design of micro-heating and cooling devices.   Accurate maps of how heat and matter flow at the microscale are vital to the design of micro-heating and cooling devices. A classic example ...

Texas A&M engineers explore intelligence augmentation to improve safety

2024-07-20
Artificial intelligence (AI) has grown rapidly in the last few years, and with that increase, industries have been able to automate and improve their efficiency in operations. A feature article published in AIChE Journal identifies the challenges and benefits of using Intelligence Augmentation (IA) in process safety systems. Contributors to this work are Dr. Faisal Khan, professor and chemical engineering department head at Texas A&M University, Dr. Stratos Pistikopoulos, professor and director of the Energy Institute, Drs. Rajeevan Arunthavanathan, Tanjin Amin, and Zaman Sajid from the Mary Kay O’Connor Safety Center. Additionally, Dr. Yuhe ...

ORNL economist honored at international hydropower conference

ORNL economist honored at international hydropower conference
2024-07-19
Researcher Rocio Uria-Martinez was named one of four “Women with Hydro Vision” at this year’s  HYDROVISION International 2024 conference taking place in Denver this week. Awarded by a committee of industry peers, the honor recognizes women who use their unique talents and vision to improve and advance the worldwide hydropower industry.  Uria is an energy and environmental economist and senior R&D staff member at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Protein shakeup: Researchers uncover new function of a protein that may unlock age-related illnesses

UMD-led study could ‘pave the way’ for improved treatment of premature aging disease

How chain IVF clinics improve infertility treatment

Study shows that Rett syndrome in females is not just less severe, but different

Big data, real world, multi-state study finds RSV vaccine highly effective in protecting older adults against severe disease, hospitalization and death

Manliness concerns impede forgiveness of coworkers

Better ocean connectivity boosts reef fish populations

Two 2024 Nobel laureates are affiliates of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole

Ultra-processed foods pose unique dangers for people with type 2 diabetes

When hurricanes hit, online chatter drowns out safety messaging

Study seeks rapid, paper-based test to detect cancer cells in cerebrospinal fluid

Raising happy eaters: Unlocking the secrets of childhood appetite

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons launches two new thoracic surgery risk calculators

FAPESP and CNR plan to launch joint call for proposals in April 2025

Smaller, more specific academic journals have more sway over policy

Medicaid ACOs have not yet improved care for kids with asthma

New study sheds light on lily toxicity in cats; outpatient treatment may be viable option

A new benchmark to recognize the hardest problems in materials science

Why do we love carbs? The origins predate agriculture and maybe even our split from Neanderthals

Key protein for the biosynthesis of defense steroids in solanaceous plants discovered

Global CO2 emissions from forest fires increase by 60%

AI-assisted deliberation can help people with different views find common ground

Special Issue explores factors influencing democratic attitudes, and what’s at stake for science in the U.S. after November election

Extratropical forest fire emissions are increasing as climate changes

A new approach to capturing complex mixtures of organic chemicals in blood, evaluated in pregnant women

Gut instincts: Intestinal nutrient sensors

Catching prey with grappling hooks and cannons

Effects of chemical mixtures: Neurotoxic effects add up

Mpox in Africa was neglected during the previous outbreak, and requires urgent action and investment by leaders now to prevent global spread

A new era of treating neurological diseases at the blood-brain-immune interface

[Press-News.org] Amsterdam UMC set to lead large-scale European study into preventing burnout due to stress among staff in and around the operating theatre