Stroke, Ahead of Print. Stroke and COVID-19 are both traumatic and life-altering experiences that are marked by uncertainty, fear, and medical intervention. The devastation that stroke and COVID-19 oppress on an individual and a population is well established, and these traumas are potently magnified in the troughs of the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, stroke has been shown to be a potential complication of COVID-19 infection, and while there is global controversy regarding this finding, it is undeniable that there are patients across the world presenting with both conditions concurrently. Thus, the topic of isolated stroke and the co-occurrence of stroke and COVID-19 amidst the pandemic both warrant considerable investigation on both a basic science level and a humanistic level. This opinion article advocates for a narrative medicine approach to better explicate the intertwining of stroke and COVID-19. Interviewing patients who presented with both stroke and COVID-19 as well as patients who present with stroke during the pandemic will provide the opportunity to gather and juxtapose individual illness experiences, including encounters with the health care system, relationship with care teams and care takers, recovery, and insights into the future. Creating, analyzing, and comparing such an anthology of illness narratives of the 2 patient populations will offer a unique understanding into the experience of different, yet over-lapping, medical traumas in an unprecedented time. With this deeper appreciation of patient accounts, the health care system can better recognize how to provide for future patients who present specifically with stroke or stroke and COVID-19. However, more broadly, this study can also afford insight into how the health care system can better provide for and support patients who present with complex diagnoses in the context of a complex healthcare system, which most probably will operate under the effects of the pandemic for time to come as well as other, future complicating factors.
Risultati per: Il significato della carica virale e l’effetto del vaccino anti-COVID-19
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Correction to: Abstract 10712: Mrna COVID Vaccines Dramatically Increase Endothelial Inflammatory Markers and ACS Risk as Measured by the PULS Cardiac Test: a Warning
Circulation, Ahead of Print.
Covid: Firmata ordinanza, Marche, Liguria, Veneto e Pa Trento in area gialla
Comunicato del 17/12/2021 n°80
Flowchart decisionale: vaccinare l’adulto ai tempi del COVID-19
Stress, ansia, disturbi del sonno: i sanitari a rischio burn-out durante il Covid
L’impatto psicologico della pandemia sugli operatori sanitari è stato considerevole. Al prolungarsi della pandemia il rischio è che lo stress cronicizzi, determinando sindromi da burn-out. Azioni di tutela sono essenziali per prevenire queste problematiche.
Covid: Speranza, “Grazie a Nas per lavoro di controllo a tutela salute”
Comunicato del 03/12/2021 n°75
Covid-19, Speranza al G7: “Ora supportare concretamente vaccinazione nei Paesi più fragili”
Comunicato del 29/11/2021 n°74
Covid-19, Speranza: “Nuova ordinanza vieta ingresso in Italia da Sudafrica, Lesotho, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambico, Namibia, Eswatini”
Comunicato del 26/11/2021 n°73
Expression of Concern: Abstract 10712: Mrna COVID Vaccines Dramatically Increase Endothelial Inflammatory Markers and ACS Risk as Measured by the PULS Cardiac Test: a Warning
Circulation, Ahead of Print.
Il significato della carica virale e l’effetto del vaccino anti-COVID-19
Un po’ di chiarezza sulla risposta immunitaria al COVID-19 e vaccini anti-COVID-19
Indagine su campagna vaccinale anti COVID-19 in Abruzzo: esperienza in Medicina Generale
Il sistema immunitario e le malattie respiratorie invernali: non solo COVID‑19
Uso cronico di benzodiazepine e demenza senile: possibili alternative terapeutiche per l’interruzione di una relazione causa-effetto ormai accertata
Le linfoadenopatie vaccino COVID-19 correlate: ruolo della POCUS in Medicina Generale
Increased COVID-19 Mortality in People With Previous Cerebrovascular Disease: A Population-Based Cohort Study
Stroke, Ahead of Print. Background and Purpose:The aim of the study was to determine the association between previous stroke and mortality after coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) according to sex, age groups, and stroke subtypes.Methods:Prospective population-based cohort study including all COVID-19 positive cases between February 1 and July 31, 2020. Comorbidities and mortality were extracted using linked health administration databases. Previous stroke included transient ischemic attack, ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke, spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, and combined stroke for cases with more than one category. Other comorbidities were obesity, diabetes, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, atrial fibrillation, heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, cirrhosis, dementia, individual socioeconomic index, and deprivation index. Cases were followed up until December 31, 2020. Primary outcome was mortality of any cause after COVID-19 positivity. Cox proportional regression analysis adjusted for comorbidities was used. Stratified analyses were performed for sex and age (