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1.
Drug Alcohol Depend ; 251: 110947, 2023 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37666091

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Death certificate data provide powerful and sobering records of the opioid overdose crisis. In Massachusetts, where address-level decedent data are publicly available upon request, mapping and spatial analysis of fatal overdoses can provide valuable insights to inform prevention interventions. We describe how we used this approach to support a community-level intervention to reduce opioid-involved overdose mortality. METHODS: We developed a method to clean and geocode decedent data that substituted injury locations (the likely location of fatal overdoses) for deaths recorded in hospitals. After geomasking for greater privacy protection, we created maps to visualize the spatial distribution of decedent residence addresses, alone and juxtaposed with drive and walk-time distances to opioid treatment programs (OTPs), and place of death by overdose address. We used spatial statistical analyses to identify locations with significant clusters of overdoses. RESULTS: In the 8 intervention communities, 785 individuals died from opioid-involved overdoses between 2017 and 2020. We found that 19.7% of fatal overdoses were recorded in hospitals, 50.2% occurred at the decedent's residence, and 30.1% at another location. We identified overdose hotspots in study communities. By juxtaposing decedent residence data with drive- and walk-time analyses, we highlighted actionable spatial gaps in access to OTP treatment. CONCLUSION: To better understand local fatal opioid overdose risk environments and inform the development of community-level prevention interventions, we used publicly available address-level decedent data to conduct nuanced spatial analyses. Our approach can be replicated in other jurisdictions to inform overdose prevention responses.

2.
J Fungi (Basel) ; 7(2)2021 Jan 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33499285

RESUMO

Candida bloodstream infections (CBSIs) have decreased among pediatric populations in the United States, but remain an important cause of morbidity and mortality. Species distributions and susceptibility patterns of CBSI isolates diverge widely between children and adults. The awareness of these patterns can inform clinical decision-making for empiric or pre-emptive therapy of children at risk for candidemia. CBSIs occurring from 2006-2016 among patients in a large children's hospital were analyzed for age specific trends in incidence rate, risk factors for breakthrough-CBSI, and death, as well as underlying conditions. Candida species distributions and susceptibility patterns were evaluated in addition to the anti-fungal agent use. The overall incidence rate of CBSI among this complex patient population was 1.97/1000 patient-days. About half of CBSI episodes occurred in immunocompetent children and 14% in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) patients. Anti-fungal resistance was minimal: 96.7% of isolates were fluconazole, 99% were micafungin, and all were amphotericin susceptible. Liposomal amphotericin was the most commonly prescribed anti-fungal agent included for NICU patients. Overall, CBSI-associated mortality was 13.7%; there were no deaths associated with CBSI among NICU patients after 2011. Pediatric CBSI characteristics differ substantially from those in adults. The improved management of underlying diseases and antimicrobial stewardship may further decrease morbidity and mortality from CBSI, while continuing to maintain low resistance rates among Candida isolates.

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