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This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contact
Medicine --- Neurology & clinical neurophysiology --- intracranial atherosclerosis --- endovascular treatment --- large vessel occlusion --- preventive treatment --- ischemic stroke --- intracranial atherosclerosis --- endovascular treatment --- large vessel occlusion --- preventive treatment --- ischemic stroke
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This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contact
Medicine --- Neurology & clinical neurophysiology --- intracranial atherosclerosis --- endovascular treatment --- large vessel occlusion --- preventive treatment --- ischemic stroke
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This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contact
intracranial atherosclerosis --- endovascular treatment --- large vessel occlusion --- preventive treatment --- ischemic stroke
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Les dernières technologies dans le traitement des AVC demandent une reconnaissance précoce des symptômes et une prise en charge rapide (‘’Time is brain’’). Le paysage hospitalier en Belgique se situe dans un changement majeur où la création de « Réseaux Hospitaliers » va influencer certaines compétences dans les hôpitaux. Tous les centres hospitaliers ne sont pas en mesure de prendre en charge des AVC ischémiques nécessitant un traitement par radiologie interventionnelle (thrombectomie). Il semble alors judicieux de mettre en place un outil capable de prédire efficacement le degré de gravité des AVC afin de pouvoir orienter les patients vers le centre hospitalier adéquat. L’échelle « Rapid Artérial oCclusion Evaluation Scale » (RACE) semblerait être un outil intéressant pour prédire la présence ou non d’une occlusion proximale au niveau des artères cérébrales. Afin d’évaluer la fiabilité de l’échelle RACE, une étude prospective sur un échantillon de 72 patients a été réalisée au sein du service des urgences de l’ancienne clinique Saint-Joseph. Le personnel infirmier a complété l’échelle RACE chaque fois qu’un patient présentant des signes d’AVC, arrivait aux urgences. Le « score RACE > ou = 5 » a été mis en relation avec la « présence » ou « l’absence » d’occlusion proximale visible à l’imagerie médicale. Les valeurs de sensibilité, spécificité, valeur prédictive positive et valeur prédictive négative ont pu être calculées afin d’évaluer la fiabilité de l’échelle RACE. Sur les 72 patients de l’échantillon prospectif, 29 échelles avec un « score RACE > ou = 5 » présentaient réellement une occlusion proximale (80.6%). Le « score RACE < 5 » dans cette étude a une valeur prédictive positive de 76.32% et une valeur prédictive négative de 79.41% (sensibilité de 80.56% et spécificité de 75%). The latest technologies in stroke treatment require early recognition of symptoms and rapid management (“Time is brain”). The hospital landscape in Belgium is undergoing a major change where the creation of "Hospital Networks" will influence certain skills in hospitals. Not all hospitals are able to manage ischemic stroke requiring interventional radiology treatment (thrombectomy). It therefore seems wise to set up a tool capable of effectively predicting the degree of severity of a stroke in order to be able to refer patients to the appropriate hospital center. The Rapid Arterial oCclusion Evaluation (RACE) Scale seems to be an interesting tool to predict the presence or not of large vessel occlusion in the cerebral arteries. In order to assess the reliability of the RACE scale, a prospective study on a sample of 72 patients was carried out in the emergency department of the former Saint-Joseph clinic. Nurses completed the RACE scale each time a patient with signs of stroke came to the emergency room. The “RACE score > of = 5” has been linked to the "presence" or "absence" of large vessel occlusion, visible on medical imaging. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value could be calculated to assess the reliability of the RACE scale. Of the 72 patients in the prospective sample, 29 scales with a “RACE score > of 5” had large vessel occlusion (80.6%). The “RACE score < 5” in this study has a positive predictive value of 76.32% and a negative predictive value of 79.41% (sensitivity of 80.56% and specificity of 75%). Conclusion: The RACE scale would be an interesting tool to properly orient the price charged for suspected stroke.
Stroke --- Large Vessel Occlusion --- Race scale --- AVC --- Occlusion proximale --- score RACE --- Sciences de la santé humaine > Santé publique, services médicaux & soins de santé
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Social media has the potential to provide rapid insights into unfolding public health emergencies such as infectious disease outbreaks. They can also be drawn upon for rapid, survey-based insights into various health topics. Social media has also been utilised by medical professionals for the purposes of sharing scholarly works, international collaboration, and engaging in policy debates. One benefit of using social media platforms to gain insight into health is that they have the ability to capture unfiltered public opinion in large volumes, avoiding the potential biases introduced by surveys or interviews. Social media platforms can also be utilised to pilot surveys, for instance, though the use of Twitter polls. Social media data have also been drawn upon in medical emergencies and crisis situations as a public health surveillance tool. A number of software and online tools also exist, developed specifically to aide public health research utilising social media data. In recent years, ethical issues regarding the retrieval and analysis of data have also arisen.
Public health & preventive medicine --- social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q& --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission
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Social media has the potential to provide rapid insights into unfolding public health emergencies such as infectious disease outbreaks. They can also be drawn upon for rapid, survey-based insights into various health topics. Social media has also been utilised by medical professionals for the purposes of sharing scholarly works, international collaboration, and engaging in policy debates. One benefit of using social media platforms to gain insight into health is that they have the ability to capture unfiltered public opinion in large volumes, avoiding the potential biases introduced by surveys or interviews. Social media platforms can also be utilised to pilot surveys, for instance, though the use of Twitter polls. Social media data have also been drawn upon in medical emergencies and crisis situations as a public health surveillance tool. A number of software and online tools also exist, developed specifically to aide public health research utilising social media data. In recent years, ethical issues regarding the retrieval and analysis of data have also arisen.
social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q& --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission
Choose an application
Social media has the potential to provide rapid insights into unfolding public health emergencies such as infectious disease outbreaks. They can also be drawn upon for rapid, survey-based insights into various health topics. Social media has also been utilised by medical professionals for the purposes of sharing scholarly works, international collaboration, and engaging in policy debates. One benefit of using social media platforms to gain insight into health is that they have the ability to capture unfiltered public opinion in large volumes, avoiding the potential biases introduced by surveys or interviews. Social media platforms can also be utilised to pilot surveys, for instance, though the use of Twitter polls. Social media data have also been drawn upon in medical emergencies and crisis situations as a public health surveillance tool. A number of software and online tools also exist, developed specifically to aide public health research utilising social media data. In recent years, ethical issues regarding the retrieval and analysis of data have also arisen.
Public health & preventive medicine --- social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q& --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission --- social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q& --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission
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