Browsing by Author "Coelho, P"
Now showing 1 - 10 of 11
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Aortic Valve Replacement Surgery Improves the Quality of Life of Octogenarians with Severe Aortic StenosisPublication . Bento, D; Coelho, P; Lopes, J; Fragata, J
- A Cirurgia de Substituição Valvular Aórtica Melhora a Qualidade de Vida dos Doentes?Publication . Coelho, P; Ferreira, L; Vital, C; Fragata, JIntrodução: O objetivo da cirurgia de substituição valvular aórtica é o aumento da esperança de vida e a melhoria da qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde. Existem vários estudos que evidenciam melhoria da qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde nestes doentes, mas não aplicados à população portuguesa. O objetivo deste estudo é avaliar a qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde pós-implantação de prótese aórtica e comparar com a qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde pré-operatória e da população em geral. Material e Métodos: Foi feito um estudo retrospetivo de doentes eletivos submetidos a implantação de prótese aórtica entre agosto de 2011 e abril de 2016. A qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde foi avaliada com o Short Form 36 Health Survey Instrument e com o Short Form 6 Health Survey Instrument no pré-operatório e aos 3, 6 e 12 meses pós-cirurgia. Foram realizadas análises descritivas e inferenciais para analisar globalmente a amostra e para comparar a qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde pré-operatória com a pós-operatória e com as normas da população portuguesa. Resultados: Foram incluídos 506 doentes, com idade média de 70,6 anos, sendo 53,6% do sexo masculino. Os resultados do pósoperatório evidenciam uma melhoria estatisticamente significativa quando comparados com o pré-operatório nas oito dimensões do Short Form 36 Health Survey Instrument. Comparando com a população Portuguesa em geral, a qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde dos doentes é inferior no pré-operatório, melhorando no pós-operatório, atingindo níveis de qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde superiores nalguns subgrupos de doentes e em algumas dimensões. Os resultados do Short Form 6 Health Survey Instrument revelam maior intensidade de problemas no pré-operatório quando comparados com a população em geral, aproximando-se dos valores população em geral ao final de um ano pós-cirurgia. Discussão: Este é o primeiro estudo realizado em Portugal que compara a qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde, usando uma escala validada, antes e depois da cirurgia de implantação de prótese aórtica. Os resultados demonstram a existência de uma melhoria significativa em todas as dimensões, o que não acontece consistentemente noutros estudos publicados. Conclusão: A implantação de prótese aórtica melhora a qualidade de vida relacionada com a saúde dos doentes, permitindo que esta se aproxime dos resultados da população em geral.
- A Cirurgia de Substituição Valvular Aórtica Melhora a Qualidade de Vida dos Octogenários com Estenose Aórtica SeveraPublication . Bento, D; Coelho, P; Lopes, J; Fragata, JIntroduction: Aortic stenosis (AS) is the most common valvular disease in the elderly, affecting around 8.1% by the age of 85, with a negative impact on quality of life. Objective: To determine the impact of surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) on quality of life in octogenarians. Methods: In a single-center retrospective study of octogenarians undergoing isolated SAVR for symptomatic AS between 2011 and 2015, quality of life was assessed using the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form (SF-36) at baseline and at three, six and 12 months after surgery. Scores for the eight domains and two components of the SF-36 were compared at baseline and in the postoperative period by one-way analysis of variance. Results: Over a five-year period, 163 octogenarians underwent SAVR, of whom 3.1% died in the hospital. Deceased patients and those who did not complete the SF-36 were excluded. A total of 81 patients were included, mean age 83±2 years, 63% female, 60.5% in NYHA class II or higher and 19.7% with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. The mean logistic EuroSCORE was 10.7±5.1%. In the hospital, 1.2% suffered stroke, 1.2% received a permanent implantable pacemaker and 23.5% presented atrial fibrillation. In the assessment of quality of life, improvement was seen in all SF-36 domains (p<0.002) and in the physical component (p<0.001) at three, six and 12 months compared to baseline. The mental component also showed improvement, which was significant at six months (p=0.011). Conclusion: SAVR improved the physical and mental health status of octogenarians with severe AS. This improvement was evident at three months and consistent at six and 12 months.
- Developing and Validating High-Value Patient Digital Follow-Up Services: a Pilot Study in Cardiac SurgeryPublication . Londral, A; Azevedo, S; Dias, P; Ramos, C; Santos, J; Martins, F; Silva, R; Semedo, H; Vital, C; Gualdino, A; Falcão, J; Lapão, LV; Coelho, P; Fragata, JBackground: The existing digital healthcare solutions demand a service development approach that assesses needs, experience, and outcomes, to develop high-value digital healthcare services. The objective of this study was to develop a digital transformation of the patients' follow-up service after cardiac surgery, based on a remote patient monitoring service that would respond to the real context challenges. Methods: The study followed the Design Science Research methodology framework and incorporated concepts from the Lean startup method to start designing a minimal viable product (MVP) from the available resources. The service was implemented in a pilot study with 29 patients in 4 iterative develop-test-learn cycles, with the engagement of developers, researchers, clinical teams, and patients. Results: Patients reported outcomes daily for 30 days after surgery through Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices and a mobile app. The service's evaluation considered experience, feasibility, and effectiveness. It generated high satisfaction and high adherence among users, fewer readmissions, with an average of 7 ± 4.5 clinical actions per patient, primarily due to abnormal systolic blood pressure or wound-related issues. Conclusions: We propose a 6-step methodology to design and validate a high-value digital health care service based on collaborative learning, real-time development, iterative testing, and value assessment.
- Do Prices Reflect the Costs of Cardiac Surgery in the Elderly?Publication . Coelho, P; Rodrigues, V; Miranda, L; Fragata, J; Pita Barros, PINTRODUCTION: Payment for cardiac surgery in Portugal is based on a contract agreement between hospitals and the health ministry. Our aim was to compare the prices paid according to this contract agreement with calculated costs in a population of patients aged ≥65 years undergoing cardiac surgery in one hospital department. METHODS: Data on 250 patients operated between September 2011 and September 2012 were prospectively collected. The procedures studied were coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) (n=67), valve surgery (n=156) and combined CABG and valve surgery (n=27). Costs were calculated by two methods: micro-costing when feasible and mean length of stay otherwise. Price information was provided by the hospital administration and calculated using the hospital's mean case-mix. RESULTS: Thirty-day mortality was 3.2%. Mean EuroSCORE I was 5.97 (standard deviation [SD] 4.5%), significantly lower for CABG (p<0.01). Mean intensive care unit stay was 3.27 days (SD 4.7) and mean hospital stay was 9.92 days (SD 6.30), both significantly shorter for CABG. Calculated costs for CABG were €6539.17 (SD 3990.26), for valve surgery €8289.72 (SD 3319.93) and for combined CABG and valve surgery €11 498.24 (SD 10 470.57). The payment for each patient was €4732.38 in 2011 and €4678.66 in 2012 based on the case-mix index of the hospital group, which was 2.06 in 2011 and 2.21 in 2012; however, the case-mix in our sample was 6.48 in 2011 and 6.26 in 2012. CONCLUSION: The price paid for each patient was lower than the calculated costs. Prices would be higher than costs if the case-mix of the sample had been used. Costs were significantly lower for CABG.
- Lung Adenocarcinoma: The Diagnostic Importance of EchocardiographyPublication . Ferreira Neves, I; Garcia Brás, P; Coelho, P; Calvinho, P; Branco, L
- Predicting Post-Discharge Complications in Cardiothoracic Surgery: a Clinical Decision Support System to Optimize Remote Patient Monitoring ResourcesPublication . Santos, R; Ribeiro, B; Sousa, I; Santos, J; Guede-Fernández, F; Dias, P; Carreiro, A; Gamboa, H; Coelho, P; Fragata, J; Londral, ACardiac surgery patients are highly prone to severe complications post-discharge. Close follow-up through remote patient monitoring can help detect adverse outcomes earlier or prevent them, closing the gap between hospital and home care. However, equipment is limited due to economic and human resource constraints. This issue raises the need for efficient risk estimation to provide clinicians with insights into the potential benefit of remote monitoring for each patient. Standard models, such as the EuroSCORE, predict the mortality risk before the surgery. While these are used and validated in real settings, the models lack information collected during or following the surgery, determinant to predict adverse outcomes occurring further in the future. This paper proposes a Clinical Decision Support System based on Machine Learning to estimate the risk of severe complications within 90 days following cardiothoracic surgery discharge, an innovative objective underexplored in the literature. Health records from a cardiothoracic surgery department regarding 5 045 patients (60.8% male) collected throughout ten years were used to train predictive models. Clinicians' insights contributed to improving data preparation and extending traditional pipeline optimization techniques, addressing medical Artificial Intelligence requirements. Two separate test sets were used to evaluate the generalizability, one derived from a patient-grouped 70/30 split and another including all surgeries from the last available year. The achieved Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve on these test sets was 69.5% and 65.3%, respectively. Also, additional testing was implemented to simulate a real-world use case considering the weekly distribution of remote patient monitoring resources post-discharge. Compared to the random resource allocation, the selection of patients with respect to the outputs of the proposed model was proven beneficial, as it led to a higher number of high-risk patients receiving remote monitoring equipment.
- Profissão: Técnico de RadiologiaPublication . Santos, A; Marra, C; Santa Bárbara, L; Valentim, M; Coelho, P; Esteves, R; Roios, S
- Quality of Life After Elective Cardiac Surgery in Elderly PatientsPublication . Coelho, P; Miranda, L; Barros, P; Fragata, JOBJECTIVES: Cardiac surgery has little effect on life expectancy in elderly patients. Thus, improving the quality of life should be the main factor affecting therapeutic decisions. Most studies on quality of life in elderly patients undergoing cardiac surgery report improvement but have limitations. Consequently, we assessed improvements in the quality of life of elderly patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery, identified influencing variables and established patterns of mental and physical health variations in the first year postoperatively. METHODS: We conducted a prospective study of patients aged 65 or older who underwent elective cardiac surgery between September 2011 and August 2013. The 36-item Short Form (SF-36) surveys were obtained preoperatively and at 3, 6 and 12 months postoperatively. RESULTS: The 430 preoperative patients with a mean age of 74 years (SD 5.5 years) comprised 220 men. Most physical health improvements occurred within 3 months and continued to improve significantly until 12 months. Predictive variables for patients showing less improvement were poor preoperative physical health, female sex, older age and longer length of hospital stay. Mental health improved significantly through the third postoperative month. The negative predictive variables were poor preoperative mental health and longer intensive care unit stay. CONCLUSIONS: Most patients improved both physically and mentally after surgery, and most of the improvement occurred within 3 months post-surgery. These improvement patterns should be taken into account when creating rehabilitation programmes, and patients should be counselled on what improvements can be expected during the first 12 months after surgery.
- Scaling-Up Digital Follow-Up Care Services: Collaborative Development and Implementation of Remote Patient Monitoring Pilot Initiatives to Increase Access to Follow-Up CarePublication . Azevedo, S; Guede-Fernández, F; Hafe, F; Dias, P; Lopes, I; Cardoso, N; Coelho, P; Santos, J; Fragata, J; Vital, C; Semedo, H; Gualdino, A; Londral, ABackground: COVID-19 increased the demand for Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) services as a rapid solution for safe patient follow-up in a lockdown context. Time and resource constraints resulted in unplanned scaled-up RPM pilot initiatives posing risks to the access and quality of care. Scalability and rapid implementation of RPM services require social change and active collaboration between stakeholders. Therefore, a participatory action research (PAR) approach is needed to support the collaborative development of the technological component while simultaneously implementing and evaluating the RPM service through critical action-reflection cycles. Objective: This study aims to demonstrate how PAR can be used to guide the scalability design of RPM pilot initiatives and the implementation of RPM-based follow-up services. Methods: Using a case study strategy, we described the PAR team's (nurses, physicians, developers, and researchers) activities within and across the four phases of the research process (problem definition, planning, action, and reflection). Team meetings were analyzed through content analysis and descriptive statistics. The PAR team selected ex-ante pilot initiatives to reflect upon features feedback and participatory level assessment. Pilot initiatives were investigated using semi-structured interviews transcribed and coded into themes following the principles of grounded theory and pilot meetings minutes and reports through content analysis. The PAR team used the MoSCoW prioritization method to define the set of features and descriptive statistics to reflect on the performance of the PAR approach. Results: The approach involved two action-reflection cycles. From the 15 features identified, the team classified 11 as must-haves in the scaled-up version. The participation was similar among researchers (52.9%), developers (47.5%), and physicians (46.7%), who focused on suggesting and planning actions. Nurses with the lowest participation (5.8%) focused on knowledge sharing and generation. The top three meeting outcomes were: improved research and development system (35.0%), socio-technical-economic constraints characterization (25.2%), and understanding of end-user technology utilization (22.0%). Conclusion: The scalability and implementation of RPM services must consider contextual factors, such as individuals' and organizations' interests and needs. The PAR approach supports simultaneously designing, developing, testing, and evaluating the RPM technological features, in a real-world context, with the participation of healthcare professionals, developers, and researchers.