Health and exposures of United Kingdom Gulf war veterans. Part II: The relation of health to exposure. (49/1557)

OBJECTIVES: To investigate whether, in personnel who served with the United Kingdom forces in the Gulf war, self reported exposures were related to symptoms in a way that was consistent, specific, and credible. METHODS: Responses to symptom and exposure questionnaires, completed 7 or more years after the war, were collected from 7971 subjects deployed in the Gulf, from two exposed cohorts, in a study with an overall response rate of 85.5%. Exposures were considered in three groups, those outside the control of the subjects, the use of prophylaxis, and indicators of susceptibility. Health indices derived from symptom questionnaires were related to reports of 14 exposures in these three groups in a series of multiple regression analyses to allow for confounding. The relation of exposure to complaints of widespread pain and to symptoms suggesting peripheral neuropathy were examined by logistic regression. RESULTS: Consistent but weak correlations between exposures and with health effects were found in independent analyses of the two (main and validation) cohorts. Three exposures outside the control of the subject, the number of inoculations, the number of days handling pesticides, and the days exposed to smoke from oil fires, were consistently and independently related to severity. The number of inoculations was also associated with higher scores on a factor weighted on symptoms associated with skin and musculoskeletal complaints. The number of days handling pesticides related particularly to scores on a neurological factor and to symptoms consistent with toxic neuropathy. CONCLUSION: The relations between exposures and ill health were generally weak. Consistent, specific, and credible relations, warranting further investigation, were found between health indices and two exposures, the reported number of inoculations and days handling pesticides.  (+info)

Case management and quality of life: assessing treatment and outcomes for clients with chronic and persistent mental illness. (50/1557)

OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of treatment setting and exposure to case management services on the quality of life of U. S. veterans with chronic and persistent mental illness. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Data were collected longitudinally on a panel of 895 clients enrolled in 14 pilot programs in Department of Veterans Affairs long-term psychiatric hospitals by the Serious Mental Illness Treatment Research and Evaluation Center during the period 1991-96. STUDY DESIGN: Data were collected using two primary survey instruments (clinician assessment and client assessment) at baseline, every six months for the first two years, and every year thereafter, for a total of four years of follow-up. Case management exposure over time and its impact on the client's quality of life represent the key variables in the study. Additional controls included a variety of sociodemographic, socioeconomic, and psychiatric characteristics. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: Hierarchical linear modeling was used to control for potential selection bias, test for the compositional effect of treatment setting, and examine the impact of case management exposure over time on the individual client's quality of life. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Increased exposure to case management results in an improved quality of life across several domains, including both objective and subjective dimensions for health, general, leisure, and social, and the subjective dimension only for housing. CONCLUSIONS: The study findings provide managers, clinicians, and policymakers a fuller understanding of how this mode of service delivery-case management-affects several domains of quality of life for clients with chronic illnesses.  (+info)

Positive predictive values of abused drug immunoassays on the Beckman Synchron in a veteran population. (51/1557)

The pressure to reduce the cost of analytic testing makes it tempting to discontinue routine confirmation of urine specimens positive for drugs of abuse by immunoassay. Beyond the economic motivation, the requirement for confirmation should be driven by the positive predictive value of the screening tests. We have quantitated positive predictive values of our screening immunoassays in a large metropolitan Veterans Affairs Medical Center. We reviewed the confirmatory rate of urine specimens positive for drugs of abuse with Beckman Synchron reagents from June 1998 to June 1999 and tabulated the false-positive screening rate. There were 175 instances of false-positive screens during the 13 months we analyzed. Positive predictive values ranged from 0% (amphetamine) to 100% (THC). We determined that the low positive predictive value of the amphetamine assay in our laboratory was primarily due to the use of ranitidine (Zantac). Urine specimens containing greater than 43 microg/mL ranitidine were positive in our amphetamine assay. This concentration is routinely exceeded in our patients taking ranitidine. In our clinical and analytic setting, the Beckman THC assay did not require confirmation. The positive predictive values of the Beckman opiate, cocaine, barbiturate, propoxyphene, and methadone immunoassays dictate routine confirmatory testing in specimens that screen positive for these substances. Finally, because of its extreme sensitivity to ranitidine, the Beckman amphetamine assay has little utility in our laboratory setting.  (+info)

Detecting improvement in quality of life and symptomatology in schizophrenia. (52/1557)

Instrument-based scores are often used as outcome measures. However, little is known about what changes in scores mean in terms of a clinical assessment of improvement or deterioration. The purpose of this report was to determine how much change in standard instrument scores represents a clinically detectable improvement or deterioration. The Veterans Affairs (VA) Cooperative Study of Clozapine in Refractory Schizophrenia evaluated 423 patients on clozapine or haloperidol. Symptoms and quality of life scales were completed at baseline; 6 weeks; and 3, 6, and 12 months. Among patients judged as "improved" by clinicians, the average percentage changes were a 21 percent decrease in Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) scores and a 26 percent increase in Quality of Life Scale (QLS) scores across all followup periods. The change in mean seven-point item scores were -0.46 (PANSS) and 0.23 (QLS). A major gain in clinically assessed improvement to "much better" was associated with a 45 percent decline in PANSS scores and 50 percent increase in QLS scores (change in mean seven-point item scores -0.88 and 0.92, respectively). Thus, modest changes in psychometric scales assessing symptoms and quality of life reflect clinically detectable improvement.  (+info)

Work rehabilitation in schizophrenia: does cognitive impairment limit improvement? (53/1557)

Cognitive impairments may be an important contributor to disability in schizophrenia and may limit the rate of improvement in work rehabilitation. Thirty-three outpatients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder who participated in a 6-month work rehabilitation program were assessed for symptom severity and administered neuropsychological testing at intake. Their work performance was evaluated biweekly using the Work Behavior Inventory. On each of five domains of work performance, 76 to 91 percent of subjects reached proficiency or improved significantly over 26 weeks. Individual differences in rate of improvement were robustly predicted by neuropsychological variables: Work Habits, r2 = 0.79; Personal Presentation, r2 = 0.73; Cooperativeness, r2 = 0.67; Work Quality, r2 = 0.56; Social Skills, r2 = 0.27; Total, r2 = 0.44. Neuropsychological measures had differential relationships to work domains. Individual differences in improvement were not predicted by symptom measures. These findings link cognitive impairment to disability and suggest that remediating or accommodating such deficits may be necessary for successful rehabilitation.  (+info)

Educating men about prostate cancer screening. A randomized trial of a mailed pamphlet. (54/1557)

CONTEXT: Although evidence-based guidelines recommend that physicians inform men about prostate cancer screening, the most efficient way to do this is not known. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether a mailed educational pamphlet affected men's knowledge about early detection of prostate cancer. DESIGN: Randomized, controlled trial. SETTING: Primary care clinic of the Minneapolis VA Medical Center. PATIENTS: 342 men at least 50 years of age who responded to a mailed survey (overall response rate, 68%) and did not report a history of prostate cancer. INTERVENTION: "Early Prostate Cancer" pamphlet mailed to patients in the intervention group 1 week before their scheduled clinic appointments. OUTCOME MEASURES: Patients' responses to a survey mailed 1 week after their clinic appointments; prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing determined from electronic medical records. RESULTS: Respondents were predominantly elderly white men (mean age, 71 years; 90% white) with chronic illnesses (48% described their health as "fair" or "poor"). Men who received the educational pamphlet were better informed than men in the usual care group, as measured by correct responses to the following three questions about prostate cancer screening: the natural history of prostate cancer (32% vs. 24%; P = 0.10), whether treatment lengthens lives of men with early prostate cancer (56% vs. 44%; P = 0.04), and accuracy of PSA testing (46% vs. 27%; P < 0.008). The overall proportion of correctly answered questions was greater in the intervention group (45% vs. 32%; P < 0.001). Testing for PSA in the year after the index clinic appointments did not differ significantly between the intervention group and the usual care group (31% vs. 37%; P > 0.2). CONCLUSIONS: Male veterans are poorly informed about the potential benefits and risks of prostate cancer screening. Although our mailed educational pamphlet enhanced knowledge only modestly, it was an inexpensive and easily implemented intervention.  (+info)

Remission from drug abuse over a 25-year period: patterns of remission and treatment use. (55/1557)

OBJECTIVES: Using an epidemiologically obtained sample, we examined patterns of illicit drug use, abuse, and remission over a 25-year period and recent treatment use. METHODS: The surviving members of the cohort (n = 841), previously surveyed in 1972 and 1974, comprised 3 subsamples of Vietnam War enlisted men and civilian controls. Retrospectively obtained year-to-year measures from the 1996-1997 survey included use and remission of sedatives, stimulants, marijuana, cocaine, and opiates, as well as substance abuse and psychiatric treatment use. RESULTS: Relatively stable patterns of frequent use in adulthood were found, with the mean duration from initiation to the last remission ranging from 9 to 14 years. A majority attempted to quit; however, most did not use traditional drug treatment in their last attempts. Fewer than 9% of the then-current drug users were treated in inpatient or outpatient settings at the time of data collection. CONCLUSIONS: Most drug abusers who had started using drugs by their early 20s appeared to gradually achieve remission. Spontaneous remission was the rule rather than the exception. Nonetheless, considerable unmet needs existed for those who had continued use into middle age.  (+info)

Reasonable charges for medical care or services. Department of Veterans Affairs. Interim final rule. (56/1557)

This document amends the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical regulations concerning "reasonable charges" for medical care or services provided or furnished by VA to a veteran: (1) For a nonservice-connected disability for which the veteran is entitled to care (or the payment of expenses of care) under a health plan contract; (2) For a nonservice-connected disability incurred incident to the veteran's employment and covered under a worker's compensation law or plan that provides reimbursement or indemnification for such care and services; or (3) For a nonservice-connected disability incurred as a result of a motor vehicle accident in a State that requires automobile accident reparations insurance. This document amends the regulations to update databases and other provisions for the purpose of providing more precise charges.  (+info)