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OBJECTIVES: We sought to characterize atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk and metrics of cardiovascular health in persons with HIV (PWH) eligible for primary prevention of ASCVD. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study of PWH 40âyears and older without documented ASCVD who received care at three HIV clinics in San Francisco from 2019 to 2022. METHODS: We used ICD-10 codes and electronic health record data to assess ASCVD risk and cardiovascular health, as defined by the American Heart Association's Life's Essential 8 (LE8) metrics for nicotine exposure, BMI, lipids, glucose, and blood pressure (BP). RESULTS: Among 2567 PWH eligible for primary prevention of ASCVD, the median age was 55âyears, 14% were women, and 95% were on antiretroviral therapy. Seventy-seven percent had undergone complete assessment of ASCVD risk factors, and 50% of these patients had intermediate-high ASCVD risk (≥7.5%). Of those with hypertension, 39% were prescribed an antihypertensive. Among those eligible, 43% were prescribed a statin. The mean LE8 cardiovascular health score [0--100 (best health)] was 55.1 for nicotine exposure, 71.3 for BMI, 70.4 for lipids, 81.2 for blood glucose, 56.0 for BP, with an average score of 66.2 across the five metrics. Patients with Medicare insurance, black patients, and those with sleep apnea and chronic kidney disease had on average lower cardiovascular health scores; patients with undetectable viral loads had higher cardiovascular health scores. CONCLUSION: We highlight opportunities for improving primary prevention of ASCVD among PWH, especially in the areas of guideline-based therapy, nicotine exposure, and BP control.
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Aterosclerose , Doenças Cardiovasculares , Infecções por HIV , Inibidores de Hidroximetilglutaril-CoA Redutases , Idoso , Humanos , Feminino , Estados Unidos/epidemiologia , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Masculino , Doenças Cardiovasculares/epidemiologia , Doenças Cardiovasculares/induzido quimicamente , Estudos Transversais , Nicotina , Medição de Risco , Infecções por HIV/complicações , Infecções por HIV/tratamento farmacológico , Medicare , Inibidores de Hidroximetilglutaril-CoA Redutases/efeitos adversos , Aterosclerose/complicações , Aterosclerose/epidemiologia , Fatores de Risco , LipídeosRESUMO
PDZ domains are key players in signalling pathways. These modular domains generally recognize short linear C-terminal stretches of sequences in proteins that organize the formation of complex multi-component assemblies. The development of new methodologies for the characterization of the molecular principles governing these interactions is critical to fully understand the functional diversity of the family and to elucidate biological functions for family members. Here, we applied an in vitro evolution strategy to explore comprehensively the capacity of PDZ domains for specific recognition of different amino acids at a key position in C-terminal peptide ligands. We constructed a phage-displayed library of the Erbin PDZ domain by randomizing the binding site-2 and adjacent residues, which are all contained in helix α2, and we selected for variants binding to a panel of peptides representing all possible position-2 residues. This approach generated insights into the basis for the common natural class I and II specificities, demonstrated an alternative basis for a rare natural class III specificity for Asp-2, and revealed a novel specificity for Arg-2 that has not been reported in natural PDZ domains. A structure of a PDZ-peptide complex explained the minimum requirement for switching specificity from class I ligands containing Thr/Ser-2 to class II ligands containing hydrophobic residues at position-2. A second structure explained the molecular basis for the specificity for ligands containing Arg-2. Overall, the evolved PDZ variants greatly expand our understanding of site-2 specificities and the variants themselves may prove useful as building blocks for synthetic biology.
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Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/metabolismo , Domínios PDZ , Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/química , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Sítios de Ligação , Cristalografia por Raios X , Humanos , Ligantes , Modelos Moleculares , Biblioteca de Peptídeos , Ligação Proteica , Conformação Proteica , Homologia de Sequência , Especificidade por SubstratoRESUMO
It is currently estimated that 67% of malaria deaths occur in children under-five years (WHO, 2020). To improve the identification of children at clinical risk for malaria, the WHO developed community (iCCM) and clinic-based (IMCI) protocols for frontline health workers using paper-based forms or digital mobile health (mHealth) platforms. To investigate improving the accuracy of these point-of-care clinical risk assessment protocols for malaria in febrile children, we embedded a malaria rapid diagnostic test (mRDT) workflow into THINKMD's (IMCI) mHealth clinical risk assessment platform. This allowed us to perform a comparative analysis of THINKMD-generated malaria risk assessments with mRDT truth data to guide modification of THINKMD algorithms, as well as develop new supervised machine learning (ML) malaria risk algorithms. We utilized paired clinical data and malaria risk assessments acquired from over 555 children presenting to five health clinics in Kano, Nigeria to train ML algorithms to identify malaria cases using symptom and location data, as well as confirmatory mRDT results. Supervised ML random forest algorithms were generated using 80% of our field-based data as the ML training set and 20% to test our new ML logic. New ML-based malaria algorithms showed an increased sensitivity and specificity of 60 and 79%, and PPV and NPV of 76 and 65%, respectively over THINKD initial IMCI-based algorithms. These results demonstrate that combining mRDT "truth" data with digital mHealth platform clinical assessments and clinical data can improve identification of children with malaria/non-malaria attributable febrile illnesses.
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Approximately 3 million children younger than 5 years living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) die each year from treatable clinical conditions such as pneumonia, dehydration secondary to diarrhea, and malaria. A majority of these deaths could be prevented with early clinical assessments and appropriate therapeutic intervention. In this study, we describe the development and initial validation testing of a mobile health (mHealth) platform, MEDSINC®, designed for frontline health workers (FLWs) to perform clinical risk assessments of children aged 2-60 months. MEDSINC is a web browser-based clinical severity assessment, triage, treatment, and follow-up recommendation platform developed with physician-based Bayesian pattern recognition logic. Initial validation, usability, and acceptability testing were performed on 861 children aged between 2 and 60 months by 49 FLWs in Burkina Faso, Ecuador, and Bangladesh. MEDSINC-based clinical assessments by FLWs were independently and blindly correlated with clinical assessments by 22 local health-care professionals (LHPs). Results demonstrate that clinical assessments by FLWs using MEDSINC had a specificity correlation between 84% and 99% to LHPs, except for two outlier assessments (63% and 75%) at one study site, in which local survey prevalence data indicated that MEDSINC outperformed LHPs. In addition, MEDSINC triage recommendation distributions were highly correlated with those of LHPs, whereas usability and feasibility responses from LHP/FLW were collectively positive for ease of use, learning, and job performance. These results indicate that the MEDSINC platform could significantly increase pediatric health-care capacity in LMICs by improving FLWs' ability to accurately assess health status and triage of children, facilitating early life-saving therapeutic interventions.
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Serviços de Saúde da Criança , Agentes Comunitários de Saúde , Atenção à Saúde , Sistemas de Informação em Saúde , Serviços de Saúde Rural , Algoritmos , Bangladesh , Burkina Faso , Pré-Escolar , Equador , Humanos , Lactente , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , TelemedicinaRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To better understand the origins, manifestations and current policy responses to patient-physician mistrust in China. DESIGN: Qualitative study using in-depth interviews focused on personal experiences of patient-physician mistrust and trust. SETTING: Guangdong Province, China. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred and sixty patients, patient family members, physicians, nurses and hospital administrators at seven hospitals varying in type, geography and stages of achieving goals of health reform. These interviews included purposive selection of individuals who had experienced both trustful and mistrustful patient-physician relationships. RESULTS: One of the most prominent forces driving patient-physician mistrust was a patient perception of injustice within the medical sphere, related to profit mongering, knowledge imbalances and physician conflicts of interest. Individual physicians, departments and hospitals were explicitly incentivised to generate revenue without evaluation of caregiving. Physicians did not receive training in negotiating medical disputes or humanistic principles that underpin caregiving. Patient-physician mistrust precipitated medical disputes leading to the following outcomes: non-resolution with patient resentment towards physicians; violent resolution such as physical and verbal attacks against physicians; and non-violent resolution such as hospital-mediated dispute resolution. Policy responses to violence included increased hospital security forces, which inadvertently fuelled mistrust. Instead of encouraging communication that facilitated resolution, medical disputes sometimes ignited a vicious cycle leading to mob violence. However, patient-physician interactions at one hospital that has implemented a primary care model embodying health reform goals showed improved patient-physician trust. CONCLUSIONS: The blind pursuit of financial profits at a systems level has eroded patient-physician trust in China. Restructuring incentives, reforming medical education and promoting caregiving are pathways towards restoring trust. Assessing and valuing the quality of caregiving is essential for transitioning away from entrenched profit-focused models. Moral, in addition to regulatory and legal, responses are urgently needed to restore trust.
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Relações Médico-Paciente , Médicos/legislação & jurisprudência , Preconceito , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Violência/estatística & dados numéricos , China , Feminino , Reforma dos Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , MasculinoRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Patient trust in physicians is a critical determinant of health seeking behaviors, medication adherence, and health outcomes. A crisis of interpersonal trust exists in China, extending throughout multiple social spheres, including the healthcare system. At the same time, with increased migration from Africa to China in the last two decades, Chinese physicians must establish mutual trust with an increasingly diverse patient population. We undertook a qualitative study to identify factors affecting African migrants' trust in Chinese physicians and to identify potential mechanisms for promoting trust. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted semi-structured, in-depth interviews with 40 African migrants in Guangzhou, China. A modified version of the social ecological model was used as a theoretical framework. At the patient-physician level, interpersonal treatment, technical competence, perceived commitment and motive, and language concordance were associated with enhanced trust. At the health system level, two primary factors influenced African migrants' trust in their physicians: the fee-for-service payment system and lack of continuity with any one physician. Patients' social networks and the broader socio-cultural context of interactions between African migrants and Chinese locals also influenced patients' trust of their physicians. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate the importance of factors beyond the immediate patient-physician interaction and suggest opportunities to promote trust through health system interventions.
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Relações Médico-Paciente , Migrantes/psicologia , Confiança , Adulto , População Negra/psicologia , China , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Fatores SocioeconômicosRESUMO
Global health has become an increasingly prominent component of foreign policy in the last decade. The term health diplomacy has been used to describe this growing interface between foreign policy and global health, and it encompasses both the concept of using health to further foreign policy objectives as well as the idea that diplomatic tools can be helpful for attaining public health goals. The Chinese presence in Africa has grown in the last 15 years, generating increased interest in Sino-African relations. While much has been written in recent years about the Chinese presence in Africa, the growing numbers of Africans in China have attracted considerably less attention. Many are small-scale traders and might be expected to face many of the health challenges common among foreign migrants, but their health needs have been largely unrecognised. In this paper, we consider how a health diplomacy approach could be applied to African migrants in China, and the potential advantages and limitations of this strategy. We identify areas of overlap between public health, trade and foreign policy goals that can be emphasised to generate support for improved services for African migrants in China and to engage partners from a diversity of sectors.
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Atenção à Saúde/organização & administração , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde , Necessidades e Demandas de Serviços de Saúde , Internacionalidade , Saúde Pública , Melhoria de Qualidade , Migrantes , África/etnologia , China , Feminino , Política de Saúde , Humanos , MasculinoRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Although it is now widely recognized that reductions in maternal mortality and improvements in women's health cannot be achieved through simple, vertical strategies, few programs have provided successful models for how to integrate services into a comprehensive program for maternal health. We report our experience in rural Lesotho, where Partners In Health (PIH) in partnership with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare implemented a program that provides comprehensive care of pregnant women from the community to the clinic level. METHODS: Between May and July 2009, PIH trained 100 women, many of whom were former traditional birth attendants, to serve as clinic-affiliated maternal health workers. They received performance-based incentives for accompanying pregnant women during antenatal care (ANC) visits and facility-based delivery. A nurse-midwife provided ANC and delivery care and supervised the maternal health workers. To overcome geographic barriers to delivering at the clinic, women who lived far from the clinic stayed at a maternal lying-in house prior to their expected delivery dates. We analyzed data routinely collected from delivery and ANC registers to compare service utilization before and after implementation of the program. RESULTS: After the establishment of the program, the average number first ANC visits increased from 20 to 31 per month. The clinic recorded 178 deliveries in the first year of the program and 216 in the second year, compared to 46 in the year preceding the program. During the first two years of the program, 49 women with complications were successfully transported to the district hospital, and no maternal deaths occurred among the women served by the program. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate that it is possible to achieve dramatic improvements in the utilization of maternal health services and facility-based delivery by strengthening human resource capacity, implementing active follow-up in the community, and de-incentivizing home births.