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Vaccination: Vaccines

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Total 141251 results found since Jan 2013.

Clinical and Laboratory Findings of 12 Children with Invasive Meningococcal Disease in Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
CONCLUSION: Mortality related to IMD is higher among children with severe meningococcemia despite early interventions in PICU. Routine use of meningococcal vaccines during childhood would be a better strategy for controlling IMD in both developing and developed countries.PMID:34527377 | PMC:PMC8435381 | DOI:10.1155/2021/9713918
Source: Critical Care Research and Practice - September 16, 2021 Category: Intensive Care Authors: Eylem Kiral Ayse Filiz Yetimakman Source Type: research

The Burden of Influenza-Associated Critical Illness Hospitalizations*
Conclusions: Extrapolating our data to the 2010 U.S. population, we estimate that about 28,000 adults are hospitalized for influenza-associated critical illness annually. Influenza in many of these critically ill patients may be undiagnosed. Critical care physicians should have a high index of suspicion for influenza in the ICU, particularly when influenza is known to be circulating in their communities.
Source: Critical Care Medicine - October 16, 2014 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Feature Articles Source Type: research

The rabies early death phenomenon: A report of ineffective administration of rabies vaccine during symptomatic disease
We reported an early death phenomenon in a 67-year-old woman who was bitten by a jackal, although receiving three dose of rabies vaccine. Results show that the immune response to rabies has a dual role, sometimes has a favorable effect on survival but sometimes amplification the disease.
Source: Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine - July 8, 2015 Category: Intensive Care Authors: Mahmoud SadeghiShams-ali Hadizadeh MoallemElham Yousefi-AbdolmalekiMohammad Montazeri Source Type: research

Failure of postexposure prophylaxis in a patient given rabies vaccine intramuscularly in the gluteus muscle, Himachal Pradesh, India
Omesh Kumar Bharti, Vivek SharmaIndian Journal of Critical Care Medicine 2018 22(3):189-190 A 48–year-old male was bitten by a dog on the forehead and on the RIGHT side of left eyebrow on November 26, 2017, at 2 pm. The patient was immediately rushed to a nearby private hospital where an MBBS doctor gave him immediate wound wash with soap and water and prescribed five doses of rabies vaccine intramuscularly (IM). Since the patient weight was 60 kg, he was also prescribed 2400 IU of equine rabies immunoglobulin (ERIG), but as eRIG was not available, it was not administered. All the four doses of rabies vaccine...
Source: Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine - March 16, 2018 Category: Intensive Care Authors: Omesh Kumar Bharti Vivek Sharma Source Type: research

Willingness to get a COVID-19 vaccine among critical care Non-medical Healthcare Workers and impact of a vaccine information session
Publication date: Available online 3 April 2021Source: Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain MedicineAuthor(s): Clement Gakuba, Alexandre Sar, Isabelle Gaborieau, Jean-Luc Hanouz, Pierre Verger
Source: Anaesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine - April 4, 2021 Category: Anesthesiology Source Type: research

Promoting Strategies to Increase HPV Vaccination in the Pediatric Primary Care Setting
Evaluation of a quality improvement project designed to improve HPV vaccine uptake in a pediatric primary care setting for young adolescents.
Source: Journal of Pediatric Health Care - February 1, 2022 Category: Pediatrics Authors: Therese A. Bernstein, Marion Broome, Jennifer Millman, Jessica Epstein, Anne Derouin Tags: Article Source Type: research

Emerging SARS-CoV-2 Variants and Intervention Approaches Emerging SARS-CoV-2 Variants and Intervention Approaches
SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve, and virus variants could impact the effect of vaccines and current drug therapies. Find out what there is to know.Critical Care
Source: Medscape Critical Care Headlines - August 24, 2021 Category: Intensive Care Tags: Critical Care Journal Article Source Type: news

No More Excuses: Having tough talks in pediatrics
“What words can be uttered? Your turn just slightly and there it is: the death of your child. It is part symbol, part devil, and in your blind spot all along, until, if you are unlucky, it is completely upon you. Then it is a fierce little country abducting you; it holds you squarely inside itself like a cellar room – the best boundaries of you are the boundaries of it.” – Shirley Jackson, from “People Like That Are the Only People Here,” in Birds of America* *             *             * “...
Source: Pallimed: A Hospice and Palliative Medicine Blog - September 24, 2013 Category: Palliative Carer Workers Authors: Emily Riegel Source Type: blogs

Nonsense-Based Health Care - in the Service of Political Ideology and Sectarian Beliefs
ConclusionSince 2016, we have seen increasing attempts to distort or ignore medical science, clinical and epidemiological research findings to support the political ideology of the ruling party and the religious beliefs of their extreme fundamentalist supporters.  As we have discussed, most recentlyhere, the Trump regime has seen fit to put ill-informed people in positions of power in health care and public health agencies.  Some of these people have put their political and/or religious agendas ahead of the public ' s health.  Our examples above show a continuing inclination by the administration, its sympat...
Source: Health Care Renewal - November 2, 2018 Category: Health Management Tags: DHHS disinformation Donald Trump ill-informed management mission-hostile management propaganda Source Type: blogs

Epidemiology of Community-Onset Severe Bacterial Infections in Children and Its Evolution: A Population-Based Study in France*
Conclusions: The incidence and mortality rate of community-onset severe bacterial infections, except for S. aureus infection, have decreased in France. N. meningitidis and S. pneumoniae continue to account for many infections, which indicates the need for better vaccination coverage and spectrum.
Source: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine - June 1, 2020 Category: Pediatrics Tags: Online Clinical Investigations Source Type: research

Chemokine (C-X-C motif) Ligand 4 is a Restrictor of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infection and an Indicator of Clinical Severity.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that CXCL4 is an RSV restriction factor which can block viral entry and serve as an indicator of clinical severity in RSV infections. PMID: 32543879 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine - June 15, 2020 Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Han Z, Rao J, Xie Z, Wang C, Xu B, Qian S, Wang Y, Zhu J, Yang B, Xu F, Lei X, Guo F, Zhao Z, Ren L, Wang J Tags: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Source Type: research

Treatment of Ebola-related critical illness
ConclusionWith advanced training and adherence to infection prevention and control practices, clinical interventions, including critical care, are feasible and safe to perform in critically ill patients. With specific anti-Ebola medications, most patients can survive Ebola virus infection.
Source: Intensive Care Medicine - February 12, 2020 Category: Intensive Care Source Type: research

Implementation of a Preventive Services Bundle in Academic Pediatric Primary Care Centers
CONCLUSIONS: Innovative redesign led to improvement in percentage of patients age 0 to 14 months who received the entire preventive services bundle. Key elements for success were multidisciplinary site-specific teams, redesigned visit flow, effective communication, and resources for data and project management.
Source: PEDIATRICS - March 1, 2016 Category: Pediatrics Authors: Samaan, Z. M., Brown, C. M., Morehous, J., Perkins, A. A., Kahn, R. S., Mansour, M. E. Tags: Administration/Practice Management, Quality Improvement, Preventive Medicine Quality Report Source Type: research

Molecular Epidemiology of Hypervirulent K. pneumoniae and Problems of Health-Care Associated Infections
The review describes virulence factors of hypervirulentK. pneumoniae (hvKp) including genes determining its virulence and discusses their role in the development of health-care associated infections. The contribution of individual virulence factors and their combination to the development of the hypervirulence and the prospects of using these factors as biomarkers and therapeutic targets are described. Virulence factors of hvKp and “classical”K. pneumoniae strains (cKp) with no hypervirulence genes were compared. The mechanisms of biofilm formation by hvKp and high incidence of its antibiotic resistance are of particul...
Source: Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine - March 30, 2022 Category: Biology Source Type: research