Publicacions

Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Decision and Doubts About Vaccination in Catalonia: Online Cross-sectional Questionnaire.

Huguet-Feixa A, Artigues-Barberà E, Sol J, Godoy P and Ortega Bravo M
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.2196/41799 PMID:36877561

BACKGROUND: Hesitancy to get vaccinated during the COVID-19 pandemic may decrease vaccination coverage and facilitate the occurrence of local or global outbreaks. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to analyze the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in Catalonia on 3 aspects: the decision to get vaccinated against COVID-19, changes in opinion about vaccination in general, and the decision to get vaccinated against other diseases. METHODS: We performed an observational study with the population of Catalonia aged 18 years or over, obtaining information through a self-completed questionnaire in electronic format. Differences between groups were determined using the chi-square test, Mann-Whitney U test, or the Student t test. RESULTS: We analyzed the answers from 1188 respondents, of which 870 were women, 47.0% (558/1187) had sons or daughters under the age of 14 years, and 71.7% (852/1188) had studied at university. Regarding vaccination, 16.3% (193/1187) stated that they had refused a vaccine on some occasion, 76.3% (907/1188) totally agreed with vaccines, 1.9% (23/1188) were indifferent, and 3.5% (41/1188) and 1.2% (14/1188) slightly or totally disagreed with vaccination, respectively. As a result of the pandemic, 90.8% (1069/1177) stated that they would get vaccinated against COVID-19 when they are asked, while 9.2% (108/1177) stated the opposite. A greater intention to get vaccinated was observed among women; people older than 50 years; people without children under 15 years of age; people with beliefs, culture, or family in favor of vaccination; respondents who had not previously rejected other vaccines, were totally in favor of vaccines, or had not increased their doubts about vaccination; and respondents who had not changed their decision about vaccines as a result of the pandemic. Finally, 30.3% (359/1183) reported an increase in their doubts regarding vaccination, and 13.0% (154/1182) stated that they had changed their decision about routinely recommended vaccines as a result of the pandemic. CONCLUSIONS: The population studied was predominantly in favor of vaccination; however, the percentage of people specifically rejecting vaccination against COVID-19 was high. As a result of the pandemic, we detected an increase in doubts about vaccines. Although the final decision about vaccination did not primarily change, some of the respondents did change their opinion about routine vaccinations. This seed of doubt about vaccines may be worrisome as we aim to maintain high vaccination coverage.

Primary and Community Care Transformation in Post-COVID Era: Nationwide General Practitioner Survey

M. SOLANES-CABUS, E. PAREDES, E. LIMON, J. BASORA, I. ALARCON, I. VEGANZONES, L. CONANGLA, N. CASADO, Y. ORTEGA, J. MESTRES, J. ACEZAT, J. DENIEL, J. CABRE, D. RUIZ, M. SANCHEZ, A. ILLA, I. VINAS, J. MONTERO, F. CANTERO, A. RODRIGUEZ, F. MARTIN, M. BARE, R. RIPOLLES, M. CASTELLET, J. LOZANO and A. SISO-ALMIRALL
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.3390/ijerph20021600 PMID:36674354

  • Ans: 01/01/2023
  • FI: 4.614
  • Article

Introduction: The health emergency caused by COVID-19 has led to substantial changes in the usual working system of primary healthcare centers and in relations with users. The Catalan Society of Family and Community Medicine designed a survey that aimed to collect the opinions and facilitate the participation of its partners on what the future work model of general practitioners (GPs) should look like post-COVID-19. Methodology: Online survey of Family and Community Medicine members consisting of filiation data, 22 Likert-type multiple-choice questions grouped in five thematic axes, and a free text question. Results: The number of respondents to the questionnaire was 1051 (22.6% of all members): 83.2% said they spent excessive time on bureaucratic tasks; 91.8% were against call center systems; 66% believed that home care is the responsibility of every family doctor; 77.5% supported continuity of care as a fundamental value of patient-centered care; and >90% defended the contracting of complementary tests and first hospital visits from primary healthcare (PHC). Conclusions: The survey responses describe a strong consensus on the identity and competencies of the GP and on the needs of and the threats to the PHC system. The demand for an increase in health resources, greater professional leadership, elimination of bureaucracy, an increase in the number of health professionals, and greater management autonomy, are the axes towards which a new era in PHC should be directed.

Is There a Link between Obesity Indices and Skin Autofluorescence? A Response from the ILERVAS Project

E. SANCHEZ, M. SANCHEZ, C. LOPEZ-CANO, M. BERMUDEZ-LOPEZ, J. VALDIVIELSO, C. FARRAS-SALLES, R. PAMPLONA, G. TORRES, D. MAURICIO, E. CASTRO, E. FERNANDEZ and A. LECUBE
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.3390/nu15010203 PMID:36615860

There is controversial information about the accumulation of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) in obesity. We assessed the impact of total and abdominal adiposity on AGE levels via a cross-sectional investigation with 4254 middle-aged subjects from the ILERVAS project. Skin autofluorescence (SAF), a non-invasive assessment of subcutaneous AGEs, was measured. Total adiposity indices (BMI and Clinica Universidad de Navarra-Body Adiposity Estimator (CUN-BAE)) and abdominal adiposity (waist circumference and body roundness index (BRI)) were assessed. Lean mass was estimated using the Hume index. The area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was evaluated for each index. Different cardiovascular risk factors (smoking, prediabetes, hypertension and dyslipidemia) were evaluated. In the study population, 26.2% showed elevated SAF values. No differences in total body fat, visceral adiposity and lean body mass were detected between patients with normal and high SAF values. SAF levels showed a very slight but positive correlation with total body fat percentage (estimated by the CUN-BAE formula) and abdominal adiposity (estimated by the BRI). However, none of them had sufficient power to identify patients with high SAF levels (area under the ROC curve <0.52 in all cases). Finally, a progressive increase in SAF levels was observed in parallel with cardiovascular risk factors in the entire population and when patients with normal weight, overweight and obesity were evaluated separately. In conclusion, total obesity and visceral adiposity are not associated with a greater deposit of AGE. The elevation of AGE in obesity is related to the presence of cardiometabolic risk.

Gender differences in GPs’ strategies for coping with the stress of the COVID-19 pandemic in Catalonia: A cross-sectional study

E. ARAGONES, M. FERNANDEZ-SAN-MARTIN, M. RODRIGUEZ-BARRAGAN, F. MARTIN-LUJAN, M. SOLANES, A. BERENGUERA, A. SISO and J. BASORA
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.1080/13814788.2022.2155135 PMID:36533663

BackgroundThe Covid-19 pandemic has increased stress levels in GPs, who have resorted to different coping strategies to deal with this crisis. Gender differences in coping styles may be contributing factors in the development of psychological distress.ObjectivesTo identify differences by gender and by stress level in coping strategies of GPs during the Covid-19 pandemic.MethodsA cross-sectional, web-based survey conducted with GPs in Catalonia (Spain), in June-July 2021. via the institution’s email distribution list, all GPs members of the Catalan Society of Family and Community Medicine were invited to complete a survey assessing sociodemographic, health and work-related characteristics, experienced stress (Stress scale of the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scales-DASS 21) and the frequency of use of a range of coping strategies (Brief-COPE) classified as problem-focused, emotion-focused and avoidant strategies, some of which are adaptive and others maladaptive. We compared the scores of each strategy by gender and stress level using Student’s t-test.ResultsOf 4739 members, 522 GPs participated in the study (response rate 11%; 79.1% women; mean age = 46.9 years, SD = 10.5). Of these, 41.9% reported moderate-severe stress levels. The most common coping strategies were acceptance, active coping, planning, positive reframing and venting. More frequently than men, women resorted to emotional and instrumental support, venting, distraction and self-blame, whereas men used acceptance and humour more commonly than women. Moderate-severe stress levels were associated with non-adaptive coping, with increased use of avoidance strategies, self-blame, religion and venting, and decreased use of positive reframing and acceptance.ConclusionThe most common coping strategies were adaptive and differed by gender. However, highly stressful situations caused maladaptive strategies to emerge.

Indications and risk assessment of endoscopic examinations in elderly or frail people. Position paper of the Societat Catalana de Digestologia, the Societat Catalana de Geriatria i Gerontologia and the Societat Catalana de Medicina de Familia i Comunitaria

F. RIBA, C. GUARNER-ARGENTE, M. SOLANES, E. FRANCIA, P. GARCIA-IGLESIAS, S. MACHLAB, J. MASCORT, J. MENDIVE, J. ORTIZ and X. CALVET
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.1016/j.gastrohep.2022.03.004 PMID:35278501

Development and Validation of a Personalized, Sex-Specific Prediction Algorithm of Severe Atheromatosis in Middle-Aged Asymptomatic Individuals: The ILERVAS Study

M. BERMUDEZ-LOPEZ, M. MARTI-ANTONIO, E. CASTRO-BOQUE, M. BRETONES, C. FARRAS, G. TORRES, R. PAMPLONA, A. LECUBE, D. MAURICIO, J. VALDIVIELSO and E. FERNANDEZ
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.3389/fcvm.2022.895917 PMID:35928938

Background: Although European guidelines recommend vascular ultrasound for the assessment of cardiovascular risk in low-to-moderate risk individuals, no algorithm properly identifies patients who could benefit from it. The aim of this study is to develop a sex-specific algorithm to identify those patients, especially women who are usually underdiagnosed.
Methods: Clinical, anthropometrical, and biochemical data were combined with a 12-territory vascular ultrasound to predict severe atheromatosis (SA: >= 3 territories with plaque). A Personalized Algorithm for Severe Atheromatosis Prediction (PASAP-ILERVAS) was obtained by machine learning. Models were trained in the ILERVAS cohort (n = 8,330; 51% women) and validated in the control subpopulation of the NEFRONA cohort (n = 559; 47% women). Performance was compared to the Systematic COronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE) model.
Results :The PASAP-ILERVAS is a sex-specific, easy-to-interpret predictive model that stratifies individuals according to their risk of SA in low, intermediate, or high risk. New clinical predictors beyond traditional factors were uncovered. In low- and high-risk (L&H-risk) men, the net reclassification index (NRI) was 0.044 (95% CI: 0.020-0.068), and the integrated discrimination index (IDI) was 0.038 (95% CI: 0.029-0.048) compared to the SCORE. In L&H-risk women, PASAP-ILERVAS showed a significant increase in the area under the curve (AUC, 0.074 (95% CI: 0.062-0.087), p-value: < 0.001), an NRI of 0.193 (95% CI: 0.162-0.224), and an IDI of 0.119 (95% CI: 0.109-0.129). Conclusion: The PASAP-ILERVAS improves SA prediction, especially in women. Thus, it could reduce the number of unnecessary complementary explorations selecting patients for a further imaging study within the intermediate risk group, increasing cost-effectiveness and optimizing health resources.

Enhancing Night and Day Circadian Contrast through Sleep Education in Prediabetes and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Randomized Controlled Trial

C. GARCIA-SERRANO, J. SALUD, L. ARAN-SOLE, J. SOL, S. ORTIZ-CONGOST, E. ARTIGUES-BARBERA and M. ORTEGA-BRAVO
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.3390/biology11060893 PMID:35741413

Simple Summary Since several studies have described a relationship between sleep disturbances and abnormal glucose metabolism, improving sleeping habits in people with type 2 diabetes should improve glucose metabolism. To prove this hypothesis, we conducted an educational intervention to ameliorate sleep hygiene through nine simple recommendations in patients with prediabetes and type 2 diabetes. We then evaluated if sleep quality, levels of blood glucose and glycated haemoglobin had improved. In the intervention group, we found a significant improvement in sleep quality and diabetes control compared with the control group. Education in sleep hygiene is an important tool for improving health in people with prediabetes and diabetes. Background: Evidence supports a causal relationship between circadian disturbance and impaired glucose homeostasis. Methods: To determine the effect of an educational intervention delivered by primary care nurses to improve sleep hygiene, a parallel, open-label clinical trial in subjects aged 18 and older with impaired fasting glucose (IFG) or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) was performed. Study variables were sex, age, fasting glucose, glycated haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), sleep duration and efficiency, body mass index, antidiabetic treatment, diet and physical exercise. An individual informative educational intervention was carried out following a bidirectional feedback method. The intervention aimed to develop skills to improve sleep through nine simple tips. An analysis of covariance was performed on all the mean centred outcome variables controlling for the respective baseline scores. Results: In the intervention group, PSQI dropped, the duration and quality of sleep increased, and a decrease in fasting glucose and in HbA1c levels was observed. Conclusion: The proposed intervention is effective for improving sleep quality, length and efficiency, and for decreasing fasting glucose and HbA1c levels in only 3 months. These findings support the importance of sleep and circadian rhythm education focused on improving IFG and T2DM.

Weak Association between Skin Autofluorescence Levels and Prediabetes with an ILERVAS Cross-Sectional Study

E. SANCHEZ, M. KERKENI, M. HERNANDEZ, R. GAVALDA, F. RIUS, A. SAURET, G. TORRES, M. BERMUDEZ-LOPEZ, E. FERNANDEZ, E. CASTRO-BOQUE, F. PURROY, D. MAURICIO, C. FARRAS-SALLES, M. BUTI, P. GODOY, R. PAMPLONA and A. LECUBE
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.3390/nu14051102 PMID:35268075

A large body of evidence demonstrates a relationship between hyperglycemia and increased concentrations of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). However, there is little information about subcutaneous AGE accumulation in subjects with prediabetes, and whether or not this measurement could assist in the diagnosis of prediabetes is unclear. A cross-sectional study was conducted in 4181 middle-aged subjects without diabetes. Prediabetes (n = 1444) was defined as a glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level between 39 and 47 mmol/mol (5.7 to 6.4%), and skin autofluorescence (SAF) measurement was performed to assess AGEs. A multivariable logistic regression model and receiver operating characteristic curve were used. The cohort consisted of 50.1% women with an age of 57 [52;62] years, a BMI of 28.3 [25.4;31.6] kg/m(2), and a prevalence of prediabetes of 34.5%. Participants with prediabetes showed higher SAF than control participants (2.0 [1.7;2.2] vs. 1.9 [1.7;2.2], p < 0.001). However, HbA1c was not significantly correlated with SAF levels (r = 0.026, p = 0.090). In addition, the SAF level was not independently associated with prediabetes (OR = 1.12 (0.96 to 1.30)). Finally, there was no good cutoff point for SAF to identify patients with prediabetes (AUC = 0.52 (0.50 to 0.54), sensitivity = 0.61, and 1-specificity = 0.56). Given all of this evidence, we can conclude that although there is an increase in SAF levels in participants with prediabetes, the applicability and clinical relevance of the results is low in this population.

Adherence to treatment for hypothyroidism in pregnancy and relationship with thyrotropin control: a retrospective observational cohort study

J. SISCART, M. OROS, M. SERNA, D. PEREJON, L. GALVAN and M. ORTEGA
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.1186/s12884-022-04483-8 PMID:35232385

Background Hypothyroidism is the second most common endocrinological disease during pregnancy, with percentages that can range between 3.2 and 5.5%. A good maternal and foetal health outcome depends on thyroid hormone replacement therapy. The goal of such therapy is to maintain thyrotropin (TSH) in a range that is specific for pregnant women and varies between the trimesters of pregnancy. In our study, we wanted to analyse the adherence to hypothyroidism treatment among pregnant women and to evaluate the degree of control of the disease. Methods We performed a retrospective observational cohort study in pregnant women between 2012 and 2018 in the Lleida health region. Therapeutic adherence was analysed by the proportion of days covered (PDC). The relationship with other variables was assessed using the regression coefficients and their 95% confidence interval (CI). Results We examined a sample of 17,281 women, representing more than 92% of the pregnant women in the Lleida health region in the period analysed. Among this sample, the mean prevalence of hypothyroidism was 6.52% (0.07% clinical and 6.45% subclinical). 3.3% of the 17,281 pregnant women were treated. Among them, the mean adherence score was 79.6 +/- 22.2. Of these, 54% presented high adherence. The latter had a higher mean age and better TSH control, in comparison to the ones showing low adherence. Conclusions Half of the treated patients had good adherence to treatment and a better TSH control, in comparison to the others. Most of them achieved a good control at the third trimester of pregnancy.

Prediabetes Is Associated with Increased Prevalence of Sleep-Disordered Breathing

E. SANCHEZ, E. SAPINA-BELTRAN, R. GAVALDA, F. BARBE, G. TORRES, A. SAURET, M. DALMASES, C. LOPEZ-CANO, L. GUTIERREZ-CARRASQUILLA, M. BERMUDEZ-LOPEZ, E. FERNANDEZ, F. PURROY, E. CASTRO-BOQUE, C. FARRAS-SALLES, R. PAMPLONA, D. MAURICIO, C. HERNANDEZ, R. SIMO, A. LECUBE and Collaborators
Aten Primaria.2022 Aug; 54(9):102437.doi:10.3390/jcm11051413 PMID:35268504

Type 2 diabetes leads to severe nocturnal hypoxemia, with an increase in apnea events and daytime sleepiness. Hence, we assessed sleep breathing parameters in the prediabetes stage. A cross-sectional study conducted on 966 middle-aged subjects without known pulmonary disease (311 patients with prediabetes and 655 controls with normal glucose metabolism) was conducted. Prediabetes was defined by glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), and a nonattended overnight home sleep study was performed. Participants with prediabetes (n = 311) displayed a higher apnea-hypopnea index (AHI: 12.7 (6.1;24.3) vs. 9.5 (4.2;19.6) events/h, p < 0.001) and hypopnea index (HI: 8.4 (4.0;14.9) vs. 6.0 (2.7;12.6) events/h, p < 0.001) than controls, without differences in the apnea index. Altogether, the prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea was higher in subjects with prediabetes than in controls (78.1 vs. 69.9%, p = 0.007). Additionally, subjects with prediabetes presented impaired measurements of the median and minimum nocturnal oxygen saturation, the percentage of time spent with oxygen saturations below 90%, and the 4% oxygen desaturation index in comparison with individuals without prediabetes (p < 0.001 for all). After adjusting for age, sex, and the presence of obesity, HbA1c correlated with the HI in the entire population (r = 0.141, p < 0.001), and the presence of prediabetes was independently associated with the AHI (B = 2.20 (0.10 to 4.31), p = 0.040) as well as the HI (B = 1.87 (0.61 to 3.14), p = 0.004) in the multiple linear regression model. We conclude that prediabetes is an independent risk factor for an increased AHI after adjusting for age, sex, and obesity. The enhanced AHI is mainly associated with increments in the hypopnea events.

Patronat

Col·laboradors

Acreditacions