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- Institut für Community Medicine (16) (remove)
An already existing shortage of nurses was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Inactive (former) nurses were regarded as a so-called silent reserve and were called upon by various agencies to volunteer for nursing. The question arose as to what factors might encourage or hinder such volunteering and facilitate deployment.
First, inactive nurses were asked via an online survey whether they had registered for deployment or not and what the reasons were for this decision. Further information on professional background was collected, including the reason for having left the profession in the first place. Based on the results of the online survey, focus group discussions were conducted with registered and unregistered inactive nurses, with nurses who had returned to the profession permanently, and with care home managers.
Only one third of the participants in the online survey said they had registered for a temporary assignment during the pandemic. The main reasons for registering were that inactive nurses ‘wanted to do their bit’ to manage the crisis, felt it was their duty and/or felt a sense of belonging to the nursing profession. The main reasons given for not having registered was that respondents ‘could not see a reason at the moment’, had health concerns, and ‘other relevant job commitments’. The majority of respondents still had jobs related to health, care or nursing.
The topics covered in the focus group discussions included the following: perception of the pandemic as a crisis, identity as a nurse and sense of professional commitment, role of current occupation in the decision to register, winning over inactive nurses with a very negative attitude towards returning to care during a crisis situation, support measures and offers regarding a deployment in nursing.
Both in the online survey and in the focus group discussions, a sense of belonging to the nursing profession was evident among many participants. However, this identity does not necessarily lead to a willingness to return to nursing during a crisis situation. Weighing up the risk of deployment against the positive or negative experiences gained during the active period can influence willingness. However, the possibility of taking a break from current work and returning to nursing at short notice is not always given. Many inactive nurses continue to work in the health sector and fulfil equally important tasks during a crisis situation which render them unavailable for deployment.
Different kinds of support for those willing to return to nursing during a crisis situation and communication on conditions of deployments need to be implemented and continuously improved to offer the inactive nurses the greatest possible security and to enable a largely unbureaucratic deployment.
Our study examined whether potentially critical indications from depression questionnaires, interviews, and single items on suicidal ideation among partici-pants in a large prospective population-based study are related to short-term sui-cides within one year. For this purpose, we studied the association between (a) the severity of depressive symptoms according to the M-CIDI and the PHQ-9, BDI-II, and CID-S depression screening and (b) elevated scores on single sui-cidal ideation items and mortality according to claims databases.
In the baseline cohort, the frequency of depressive symptoms measured by CID-S was 12.90% (SHIP-START-0). The frequency for “Moderate” to “Severe de-pression” measured by the PHQ-9 (≥ 10 points) and BDI-II (≥ 20 points) ques-tionnaires ranged from 5.40% (SHIP-LEGENDE) to 8.80% (SHIP-TREND Morbid-ity follow-up). The 1-month prevalence of unipolar depression, measured by the M-CIDI in SHIP LEGENDE, was 2.31%.
Between 5.90% (SHIP-TREND Morbidity follow-up) and 6.60% (SHIP-LEGENDE) of respondents showed a certain degree of suicidal ideation in the two weeks preceding the assessment, according to BDI-II and PHQ-9.
Our results show the high frequency of depressive symptoms in the study region, with women being affected more frequently than men, especially in the higher categories. Furthermore, women were more frequently affected by suicidal idea-tion, although this difference was not evident in the highest categories.
There was one potential suicide in the year after a SHIP examination.
From our results, we cannot conclude that severe self-reported symptoms from depression questionnaires should be reported back to participants of an obser-vational population-based study to prevent suicide deaths within one year.
Background & Aim: Person-Centered-Care (PCC) requires knowledge about patient preferences. Among People living with Dementia (PlwD) only limited evidence about patient preferences, more specifically quantitative preferences, is available. Additionally, data on congruence of patient preferences with physicians’ judgements are missing. Information on patient preferences and their congruence with physicians’ judgements is expected to support Shared Decision-Making and respectively support the implementation of PCC in dementia. The aim of this dissertation was to analyze patient preferences and physicians’ judgements for PCC, including an assessment of their congruence, based on data from the mixed-methods PreDemCare-study. (Funding: Doctoral Scholarship from the Hans & Ilse Breuer-Stiftung.)
Methods: Development and conduct of a cross-sectional Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) survey with n=50 PlwD and n=25 physicians. Individual AHP-weights were calculated with the principal right eigenvector method and aggregated per group by Aggregation of Individual Priorities (AIP) mode. Individual consistency ratios (CRs) were calculated and aggregated per group. Group differences were analyzed descriptively by AIP-derived means and standard deviations of AHP-weights, resulting ranks, and boxplots. Additionally, differences between groups were investigated with independent paired t-tests or Mann Whitney-U tests. The sensitivity of AHP-results at the level of criteria was tested by an exclusion of inconsistent respondents in both groups, with an accepted threshold of the individual CR at ≤ 0.3 for PlwD and ≤ 0.2 for physicians.
Results: Contrary to expectation, PlwD’s and physician’s ranking of AHP-elements did not differ meaningfully. Memory Exercises was the only AHP-criterion, for which a significant difference in AHP-weights could be identified (p-value = 0.01). After inconsistent participants had been excluded, no rank reversals occurred. At the level of criteria, the mean CR for PlwD was 0.261 and 0.181 for physicians, id est (i.e.) below the
defined threshold.
Conclusion: In the selected study setting of the PreDemCare-study, patient preferences and physicians’ judgements for elements of PCC in dementia aligned well, contrary to expectations. Subject to restrictions by small sample sizes, the findings may form a basis to guide the implementation of preference-based, person-centered dementia care.
Liver dysfunctions are commonly associated with diabetes and mortality in the general
population. However, previous studies lack to define these disorders with hepatic markers from
MRI, which have been shown to be more accurate and sensitive than hepatic ultrasound and
laboratory markers. Further, previous studies defining different categories of prediabetes by oral
glucose tolerance states revealed controversial findings. Hence, this dissertation contributed to
understand the associations of liver dysfunctions with glucose intolerance states and all-cause
mortality in the general population.
In the first part of the dissertation, the associations of MRI-related hepatic steatosis and hepatic
iron overload with prediabetes were investigated. Prediabetes was categorized into IFG, IGT,
(alone or in combination) or previously unknown type 2 diabetes mellitus using OGGT data, as
suggested by the ADA. For analyses, we included 1632 subjects with MRI who participated in
an OGTT and reported no type 2 diabetes mellitus. We found that hepatic steatosis was
positively associated with continuous markers of glucose metabolism. Similarly, subjects with
hepatic steatosis as defined by MRI had a higher relative risk ratio to be in the prediabetes
groups (i-IFG, i-IGT and IFG + IGT) or having undiagnosed diabetes than individuals without
this condition. The observed associations were more obvious for MRI-derived hepatic steatosis
compared to ultrasound. In comparison to hepatic steatosis, we found that MRI-assessed hepatic
iron overload was positively associated only with both 2-hour plasma glucose and the combined
IFG + IGT category. There were no significant associations between hepatic iron overload and
other glucose tolerance states or biomarkers of glucose metabolism, regardless of possible
confounding factors.
In the second part, the associations of liver volume and other markers of hepatic steatosis with
all-cause mortality in the general population were investigated. We included 2769 middle-aged
German subjects with a median follow-up of 8.9 years (23,898 person-years). Serum liver
enzymes and FIB-4 score were used as quantitative markers, while MRI measurements of liver
fat content and total liver volume included as qualitative markers of hepatic steatosis. Compared
to other markers of hepatic steatosis, larger liver volumes were significantly associated with a
nearly three-fold increase in the long-term risk of all-cause mortality. Furthermore, this
association was consistent across all subgroups considered (men vs. women; presence or absence
of metabolic syndrome or type 2 diabetes at baseline). A positive association between FIB-4
score and all-cause mortality was found both in the entire cohort and in women. Likewise,
positive associations of higher serum AST and GGT levels with all-cause mortality were found
in the entire cohort and in men.
To conclude, this dissertation acknowledges the fact that prevention and early intervention of
liver dysfunction has major impact to reduce the burden of public health problems. Thus, our
findings suggest that hepatic markers contributes to an increased risk of prediabetes and all-cause
mortality, which might be helpful to identify high risk groups who need closer attention with
respect to prevention of liver disorders and diabetes.
Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is likely to be the second-most common cause of dementia in individuals under 65 years of age. Pathognomonic changes in personality, behavior and motivation are known to lead to high caregiver stress and burden, with little support being available. The aim of this work is to present the current state of knowledge on the characteristics, challenges and unmet needs of caregivers as well as on possible interventions.
Two scoping reviews on caregiver burden using the PRISMA checklist for scoping reviews were conducted using PubMed, Web of Science and ScienceDirect in April 2017 and November 2019, respectively. A total of 107 articles were considered eligible and were analyzed qualitatively and summarized.
Our results show that caregivers of patients with FTLD are often female, spouses of the PwD, younger in age, have underage children and provide care at home. Behavioral and motivational disturbances in the PwD are perceived to be the most burdensome aspects of caregiving. Those caring for an individual with the bvFTD subtype thus report higher levels of burden than caregivers of an individual with a form of PPA. With rising dementia severity, caregivers report higher levels of burden. Many caregivers experience a decline in their own physical and mental health as well as a significant financial burden resulting from care duties. The deterioration of the relationship between the PwD and their caregivers is a main burdensome aspect. Only few interventions were conducted so far, and none of those that were identified were designed as an RCT. The most efficacious interventions were those aimed directly at caregivers, whereas interventions aiming at the amelioration of symptoms in the PwD showed little effect.
Further research should reproduce and validate efficacious interventions and establish new interventional approaches. Another focus should be set on the situation of underage children of individuals with FTLD and relatives of a person with hereditary FTD. More research from non-Western countries is needed in order to identify culture-specific factors of caregiver burden. Along those lines, support structures for FTLD caregivers should be assessed on a local basis and extended accordingly. So far, no study has assessed the relationship between caregiver burden and possible consequences for the quality of care provided to the PwD in FTLD specifically. Awareness both in the wider population and among healthcare professionals is an urgent need for the future since FTLD is often misdiagnosed, leading to a delay in obtaining the correct diagnosis and access to suitable support.
Literature shows that people with a migration background (PwM) with dementia are an especially vulnerable group. Data on the number of PwM with dementia in Germany is scarce meaning the healthcare system faces a challenge of an unknown magnitude. They are mostly not part of the healthcare landscape and lack knowledge about dementia and healthcare services. Healthcare professionals and services do not seem to be culturally sensitive enough and not adequately equipped to take care of PwM with dementia. Therefore, this work focuses on a) estimating the number of PwM with dementia broken down by country of origin and federal state; b) exploring the caregiving experience, barriers of healthcare utilisation and measures to increase utilisation; and c) determining the scope of culturally sensitive information and healthcare services as well as projects on dementia and migration in Germany. A combination of quantitative and qualitative research methods as well as a scoping review are applied to examine the research focus.
Calculations show that an estimated 96,500 PwM have dementia, presumably mostly originating from Poland, Italy, Turkey, Romania, and the Russian Federation. The majority of affected PwM live in North Rhine-Westphalia, Baden-Württemberg, and Bavaria. Family members experience similar challenges and consequences as non-migrants in the care of a person with dementia. PwM lack sufficient knowledge of dementia and information regarding the available healthcare services. These are only two of the reasons why the healthcare system is not utilised. To increase utilisation, services should be culturally sensitive and information easily accessible. In addition, easier navigation and the expansion of existing healthcare structures is needed. The scoping review identified 48 culturally sensitive healthcare and information services and projects for PwM with dementia. The majority are located in North Rhine-Westphalia, Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, and Hesse, which mirrors the distribution of PwM with dementia in Germany. For the most part, these services offer counselling in different languages. These results confirm that PwM (with dementia) and healthcare professionals need in-depth education on this topic. There should be a focus on the design of information and healthcare services that are tailored in a culturally sensitive way. This dissertation further indicates that culturally sensitive healthcare services, personalised for individual situations on site, should be expanded and also facilitated by not only healthcare professionals and service providers but also by law- and decision-makers. Furthermore, there is a need for cooperation between researchers, healthcare professionals, service providers, healthcare systems, law-makers, and other stakeholders in the field on a national and an international level.
Background: A large body of research indicates that the cognitions individuals have
about their own age and aging, so called self-perceptions of aging (SPA), predict health and
wellbeing in later life. However, much less is known about associations of SPA with
developmental correlates such as personality. Some initial studies have found cross-sectional
and longitudinal associations of the Big Five traits (openness to experience,
conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism) with SPA. Building on these
findings, this thesis aimed at advancing knowledge on associations of personality with SPA.
To this end, cross-sectional associations of the meta-traits of agency, i.e., a focus on the self,
and communion, i.e., a focus on others, with SPA were examined in study 1, and longitudinal
associations of agentic and communal personal values with SPA were examined in study 2.
Study 3 aimed at expanding findings of previous studies on associations of SPA with selfreported
physical function to an objective indicator of physical function, namely, gait pattern.
In all studies, SPA were treated as a multidimensional construct comprising gains and losses.
Methods: Study 1 was based on data of 154 adults aged 75 and older that were
recruited in hospital. Data was collected one month after recruitment. In regression analyses,
associations of agentic and communal traits with SPA beyond health were examined. Study 2
was based on data of 6,089 adults aged 40 and older enrolled in the German Ageing Survey
(DEAS). Multiple regression analyses were used to test whether personal value priority
predicted change in SPA over three years beyond age stereotypes. For study 3, latent profile
analysis was employed to detect gait patterns based on data of 150 adults aged 70 and older
collected via an automated walkway at participants’ regular speed and individual maximum
speed. In a next step, associations of SPA with gait patterns beyond personality traits were
investigated in binary logistic regressions.
Results: Agentic and communal personality traits were associated with gain-, but not
loss-related SPA when controlling for health (study 1). In study 2, the value priority of
openness to change (self-direction, stimulation) predicted more gain-related SPA three years
later, while the value priority of conservation (tradition, security) was negatively associated
with gain-related SPA. The value priority of self-enhancement (achievement, power) was
associated with more loss-related SPA three years later. Finally, the value priority of selftranscendence
(universalism, benevolence), i.e. a concern for the well-being of others, was
associated with more gain- and less loss-related SPA at follow-up. In study 3, latent profile
analyses distinguished two groups with different gait patterns in both gait speed conditions.
One group exhibited a slower and less well-coordinated gait pattern, which reflected
functional limitations. The other group exhibited a faster and well-coordinated gait pattern,
which reflected better physical function. More loss-, but not gain-related SPA were associated
with higher likelihood to exhibit a functionally limited gait pattern at regular speed.
Conversely, gain- but not loss-related SPA were associated with higher likelihood to exhibit a
fit gait pattern at individual maximum speed.
Conclusion: Results of this thesis have three main implications for research on SPA.
First, agency and communion may constitute useful dimensions for further investigating SPA
domains, as both were associated with SPA in study 1. Second, findings of study 2 point to
the role of motivation for SPA that needs to be further explored. Third, findings of study 3
indicate that SPA are not only associated with self-reported, but also objectively measured
physical function, which stresses the importance of SPA for health in later life. As a practical
implication, the findings presented here suggest that interventions on SPA should consider
participants’ personality, both on the level of traits and values.
Frequency of biopsies after the disclosure of incidental findings from whole-body research MRI
(2021)
Large-scale, population-based cohort studies gather a range of data from participants over extended periods of time with the goal of providing researchers with information regarding the health status, prevalence of disease, and risk factors in a regional population. Examinations conducted in the context of population-based studies include imaging and laboratory testing and may yield abnormal results, also called incidental findings. According to predetermined disclosure policies, incidental findings may be disclosed to study participants. Evidence shows that the disclosure of incidental findings results in medical follow-up as research participants and their physicians seek to clarify the significance of findings.
This work examined the effect of disclosing incidental findings from whole-body MRI (wb-MRI) on the frequency and organ system of biopsies in participants in the Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP), a population-based cohort study in Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. As most of the incidental wb-MRI findings involved unclear masses and lesions, we hypothesized that the disclosure of wb-MRI findings would lead to an increase in diagnostic biopsies. Based on current data showing that the outcomes of incidental imaging findings are frequently clinically irrelevant, we further hypothesized that an increase in biopsies would not translate to a clinically relevant increase in diagnoses of malignancies. We also took disclosed laboratory findings into account, as they were disclosed to all SHIP participants and may play a role in the decision to pursue a biopsy.
We found that the rate of biopsies increased after participation in SHIP and disclosure of incidental MRI and laboratory findings. Overall, most biopsies showed nonmalignant findings, indicating likely overdiagnosis and overtesting resulting from the disclosure of incidental findings in our cohort. However, subgroups of participants with disclosed MRI findings had a higher proportion of biopsies revealing premalignant or malignant diagnoses after SHIP, indicating that the applied decision rules for disclosure of MRI findings led to the identification of individuals with an elevated risk for premalignant or malignant diagnoses. The clinical relevance of these diagnoses is unclear and overdiagnosis cannot be ruled out.
In summary, we recommend more restrictive disclosure policies for incidental imaging findings in research to protect research participants from overtesting and to reduce bias. Further studies regarding the long-term morbidity and mortality of participants are needed to better understand the therapeutic impact of the disclosure of incidental wb-MRI findings in the research setting.
Due to demographic changes, medical and nursing care in Germany faces new challenges. Combined with the aging of the population, an increase in age-associated diseases, including dementia, is to be expected. In addition to the increase in the number of persons with certain age-specific diseases, the aging of the German population also results in an increase in the number of persons with multiple diseases. The coexistence of dementia and comorbidity in people with dementia creates complex challenges for ambulatory and clinical care. The existence of comorbidity also leads to significantly higher medical costs.
Implementing new collaborative care programs and redistributing the responsibilities among outpatient care providers in the ambulatory care of patients may be one approach to ensure and improve the life and care situation of people with dementia. Collaborative Dementia Care Management, with the concept of support of general practitioners by specific qualified nurses demonstrated an adequate and effective approach for the compensation of supply deficits of PwD in the primary care sector. The aim of the dissertation is the health economic analysis of comorbidities in dementia and the evaluated Dementia Care Management of the DelpHi-MV study as an innovative approach for care and treatment of comorbidities in people with dementia. It is assumed that the cost of care for PwD varies depending on comorbidity and socio-demographic and clinical characteristics. Therefore, the health care costs of people with dementia are calculated and the association between these care costs and comorbidity and socio-demographic and clinical factors of PwD was analyzed. In addition, we aimed to detect important subgroups (e.g. PwD with low, high or very high comorbidity) who benefit most from the DCM intervention and for whom a significant effect on costs, Quality-adjusted Life Years (QALY) and on the individual cost-effectiveness could be achieved, considering different sociodemographic and clinical characteristics like comorbidity.
In the sample of PwD comorbidity was highly prevalent. 47% of PwD had a very high, 37% a high and only 16% a low comorbidity in addition to dementia. The most prevalent co-existing comorbidity were diabetes mellitus (42%), peripheral vascular disease (28%) and cerebrovascular disease (25%). Total costs significantly increased by 528 € (SE=214, CI 95%=109-947, p=0.014) with each further comorbidity, especially due to significantly higher cost for medication and medical aids. Compared with a low comorbidity, a very high comorbidity was significantly associated with 818 € (SE=168, CI 95%= 489-1147, p<0.001) higher medication costs and 336 € (SE=161, CI 95%=20-652, p=0.037) higher cost for medical aids. There was no significant association between a higher comorbidity and cost for formal care services. The probability of DCM being cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay of 40,000€/QALY was higher especially in PwD having a high comorbidity (96% vs. 26% for patients with a low comorbidity), in females (96% vs. 16% for males), in those living alone (96% vs. 26% for those living not alone) and in those being moderately to severely cognitively (100% vs. 3% for patients without cognitive impairment) and functionally impaired (97% vs. 16% for patients without functional impairment).
Comorbidity in PwD represents a substantial financial burden on healthcare payer’s and is a challenge for patients, healthcare providers and the health system. Innovative approaches are needed to achieve a patient-oriented management of treatment and care in comorbid PwD to reduce long-term costs. Collaborative dementia care management is one approach to solve these problems in dementia care. Thereby, patients characteristics significantly affect the cost-effectiveness of collaborative care. Female patients, patients living alone, and those with a high comorbidity as well as those being moderately cognitively and functionally impaired benefit most from DCM. For those subgroups of patients, healthcare payers could gain the highest cost savings and the highest effects on QALYs when the DCM approach will be implemented.
Obesity and diabetes have reached epidemic proportions and have emerged as massive public health problems globally. The etiology of both obesity and diabetes are related, multifactorial, highly complex, and involves interplay of genetic, environmental, socio-economic and physiological factors, which calls for a more extensive research in understanding the risk factors and biological pathways. Hence, this dissertation contributed in part to understanding the role of iron markers in the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus and the role of intrauterine hyperglycemia in influencing the risk of offspring obesity along with investigating potential pathways.
In the first part of my dissertation, the associations of iron markers (ferritin and transferrin) with type 2 diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome were investigated using the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania. The present analyses were based on 3,232 participants aged 20-81 years with a follow-up time of nearly 11 years. The results suggest that serum ferritin concentrations were associated with a higher prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome in the total population as well as in men. However, the effects of serum ferritin on incident type 2 diabetes mellitus were observed only in women, while the effects on incident metabolic syndrome were seen in the total population. Serum ferritin is also known to reflect systemic inflammation or hepatic dysfunction in addition to increased iron stores. Hence, upon further analyses, the associations were found to be attenuated after adjustment for hepatic enzymes but not after adjustment for inflammation. Transferrin was not associated with any of the outcomes. Thus, our study provides evidence for a link between the iron marker ferritin and type 2 diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome, although the association seemed to vary by sex. Moreover, hepatic dysfunction seems likely to be in the pathway between ferritin and type 2 diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome.
In the second part of my dissertation, the association between maternal hyperglycemia and the risk of offspring overweight and obesity were investigated using three different cohorts: TEDDY, TEENDIAB and BABYDIAB/BABYDIET. The present analyses were based on a total of 8,103 children who were followed until 6 years of age in TEDDY study and until 18 years of age in TEENDIAB and BABYDIAB/BABYDIET studies. The dissertation revealed that maternal hyperglycemia in general may be associated with increased risk for childhood overweight and obesity, and that the association gets stronger as children grow older, with the risk being clearly evident at late childhood and adolescence. Moreover, this dissertation adds that this association can be driven by different pathways based on the type of maternal diabetes to which the offspring was exposed. The association of maternal gestational diabetes mellitus with offspring overweight can be largely explained by the confounding influence of maternal BMI, whereas the association of maternal type 1 diabetes mellitus with offspring overweight can be substantially explained by birthweight in all three studies. In our attempt to understand biological pathways at a cellular level, we found that the offspring metabolome was unlikely to be in the causal pathway between maternal type 1 diabetes mellitus and overweight, because this association could not be explained by any of the potentially relevant metabolites.
To conclude, this dissertation acknowledges the fact that prevention and early intervention of obesity and diabetes is of paramount importance to lessen the impact of these public health problems. Thus, our findings of the role of ferritin in increasing the risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus/ metabolic syndrome and the role of intrauterine hyperglycemia in increasing the risk of offspring overweight helped to identify particular risk groups who may need closer attention with respect to prevention of obesity and diabetes.