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Background This pilot study investigated the potential impact of exposure to childhood adversity on variables known to be related to posttraumatic stress (including attachment, mental health, and perceived stress) in a clinic sample of pregnant women. Materials and Methods Participants consisted of 101 pregnant women recruited from the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System in Richmond, VA. All participants completed the Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) questionnaire, Parental Bonding Instrument, Maternal Fetal Attachment Scale, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Checklist, Symptom Checklist, and the Perceived Stress Scale. Results Increased exposure to ACEs was negatively associated with retrospective report of viewing one's mother and father as caring and involved. ACE exposure was a statistically significant predictor of viewing one's mother and father as intrusive and controlling. ACEs were positively associated with self-reported PTSD symptoms, depressive and anxious symptomatology, and perceived stress. No direct effect of adverse childhood events on maternal/fetal attachment was found. Conclusions ACE associations are discussed in terms of study methodology and needs for future research. CID755673 Providers may consider incorporating the ACE questionnaire to identify exposure to childhood adversity and events that may increase an individual's risk for toxic stress and negative health outcomes.Background This pilot study investigated the impact of a musical intervention on maternal/fetal attachment, psychiatric symptoms, and perceived stress in two centers. Materials and Methods Forty-four pregnant women participated from the Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA, and Jacobi Medical Center in Bronx, NY. Participants were assigned to a lullaby intervention or control group. The Maternal Fetal Attachment Scale, Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), and Symptom Checklist (SCL-27) were completed at baseline and follow-up. Results Although no significant differences were found in maternal/fetal attachment between control and intervention groups, there were within-group differences in both groups from baseline to follow-up. No statistically significant differences in change from baseline occurred on the SCL-27 and PSS. Conclusions Exposure to a lullaby intervention was not statistically associated with maternal/fetal attachment, mental health, and perceived stress in this pilot study. Future studies with larger samples and different outcomes are suggested.Objective The aim of this meta-synthesis was to synthesize and interpret the available qualitative studies to increase our understanding and extend knowledge about how women with endometriosis experience health care encounters. Methods The literature review was carried out using CINAHL, Psychinfo, Academic Search Premier, PubMed, and Scopus, from 2000 to 2018, and was limited to articles in English. Articles were only included if they reported original relevant research on endometriosis and women experiences. Results The meta-synthesis was based on 14 relevant studies. They included 370 women with diagnosed endometriosis, 16-78 years of age. Three fusions were identified and interpreted in this meta-synthesis. The first was Insufficiency knowledge, where the physicians could judge the symptoms to be normal menstruation without examining whether there were other underlying causes. The second fusion was Trivializing-just a women's issue, where the physicians thought that the symptoms were part of being a woman, and women's' discomfort was trivialized or completely disregarded. The third fusion was Competency promotes health, where the insufficiency of knowledge became a minor concern if women had a supportive relationship with their physician and the physician showed interest in their problems. Conclusions Women with endometriosis experience that they are treated with ignorance regarding endometriosis in nonspecialized care. They experience delays in both their diagnosis and treatment and feel that health care professionals do not take their problems seriously. In addition, it appears that increased expertise and improved attitudes among health care professionals could improve the life situation of women with endometriosis.Introduction Mammography screening has been shown to improve early breast cancer (BC) detection, by shifting the disease at diagnosis to locally confined stages, offering lighter treatments and better prognoses. BC awareness campaigns calling for annual mammography screenings have been ongoing in Lebanon since 2002. Changes in BC staging at diagnosis as a consequence of documented improvements in mammography uptake remain to be described. Materials and Methods We reviewed 2,822 BC cases identified by pathology reports in the American University of Beirut Medical Center between the years 1990 and 2015. After age stratification, we have trended the extracted stages versus time. Results were compared between the prescreening (1990-2001) and the postscreening period (2002-2015). Results During the postscreening period, stage I represented 31%, stage II 47%, stage III 14%, and stage IV 8% of the cases. Stage I cases had more than doubled whereas stage III cases showed a mirror decrease compared with the years before the implementation of awareness campaigns. The increase in stage I was significantly more prominent in women aged 40 years and older (from 14% to 32%), compared with the younger group. Shifts in staging happened in parallel with a concurrent rise in reported uptake of mammography screening. Conclusions Our findings demonstrate significant trends in earlier detection, which are likely associated with an increase in screening uptake and an awareness of BC as a public health issue. Staging data from hospitals all over Lebanon should be available for building national evidence. The Ministry of Public Health should require reporting of BC stage at diagnosis to the National Cancer Registry, as part of the annual cancer incidence reporting in Lebanon.Background We developed a 6-month educational intervention addressing menopause and management of menopausal symptoms called "My HealtheVet to Enable And Negotiate for Shared decision-making" or MEANS. MEANS is offered through secure messaging via the My HealtheVet patient portal system. Materials and Methods Women veterans aged 45-60 years registered at the Miami, West Palm Beach, and Orlando Veterans Affairs Healthcare Systems (VAHS). Intervention group women in the Miami VAHS enrolled in My HealtheVet who were sent an invitation, agreed to participate, and completed the baseline survey. Comparison group women from the Miami, West Palm Beach, and Orlando VAHS who responded to the baseline survey. Results The intervention group enrolled 269 women at Miami VAHS average age 53.2 years; 42.4% white, 43.1% black, and 24.2% Hispanic; 95.9% already used My Healthe Vet. The Comparison group had 590 women average age 53.8 years; 70.8% white, 20.7% black, and 10.2% Hispanic; 57.6% already used My Healthe Vet. Conclusions The differences between the intervention and comparison groups likely represent the regional demographic variations and the disparate recruitment techniques adopted for the two groups.
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