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    HONOLULU — Heart failure and sleep apnea-related mortality significantly increased over the last 2 decades, with greater risks among the elderly, men and Black individuals, according to data presented at the CHEST Annual Meeting.This finding may be related to the increasing prevalence of sleep apnea as a comorbidity among individuals with heart failure in the U.S., according to the

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    • Presented at #CHEST2023: Heart failure and sleep apnea-related #mortality significantly increased 📈 over the last 2 decades, with greater risks among the elderly, men and Black individuals. @CardiologyToday https://t.co/YVbPpgc4Rc

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    A new ventilatory burden measure offers a potentially more effective alternative to AHI in assessing severity in sleep apnea patients.

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    • In a new study by @MountSinaiNYC, the automated measure of ventilatory burden during #sleep effectively assessed the severity of #OSA, was stable night to night, and predicted #mortality linked with #cardiovasculardiseases in #osa patients https://t.co/kb9IKuz6ur

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    HONOLULU — Patients with pulmonary hypertension who also had diabetes showed increased likelihood for mortality compared with patients without diabetes, according to a systemic review presented at the CHEST Annual Meeting.“To our knowledge, we believe that this is the first ever systematic review and meta-analysis conducted on this topic,” Smitesh S. Padte, MBBS, research

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    • Presented at #CHEST2023: Patients with pulmonary hypertension (#PH) who also had #diabetes showed an increased 📈 likelihood for #mortality compared with patients without diabetes. Read more 👇 https://t.co/Fgb4EOmzrQ

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    HONOLULU — A higher comorbidity burden increases the odds for in-hospital mortality among adults with pulmonary embolism, according to a poster presented at the CHEST Annual Meeting.The chances for sepsis, shock and mechanical ventilation also went up with a greater measure of underlying disease burden, according to researchers.

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    • 🗨️#CHEST2023: "It was impactful to see the degree by which #mortality climbs with increasing #comorbidities in a large population [of adults hospitalized with #PE] reflective of the entire United States,” Andrew Ho, MD, at @TempleHealth, told Healio. https://t.co/RgnMvV6n9E

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    HONOLULU — A higher comorbidity burden increases the odds for in-hospital mortality among adults with pulmonary embolism, according to a poster presented at the CHEST Annual Meeting.The chances for sepsis, shock and mechanical ventilation also went up with a greater measure of underlying disease burden, according to researchers.

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    • 🔑 takeaways from a #CHEST2023 poster: ➡️Likelihood for in-hospital #mortality in patients with pulmonary #embolism (#PE) went up with increasing Charlson Comorbidity Index scores. ➡️High scores also meant elevated odds for #sepsis and other outcomes. https://t.co/RgnMvV6n9E

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    Improvements in unintentional carbon monoxide poisoning mortality rates have been inconsistent across regions and over time since 2000. Given that unintentional carbon monoxide poisoning is almost entirely preventable, policy-level interventions that lower the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning events should be prioritised, such as those that increase access to improved heating and cooking devices, reduce carbon monoxide emissions from generators, and mandate use of carbon monoxide alarms.

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    • .@TheLancet: Unintentional carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning is a largely preventable cause of death. Chart shows country-specific, age-standardized #mortality rate due to unintentional CO poisoning in 2021 (A), and percentage change from 2000 to 2021 (B). https://t.co/keRW2TDOym https://t.co/xQtq1niERS

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    Deaths in hospital represent a vital learning opportunity for both individual clinicians and the wider healthcare system. Many deaths are reviewed and discussed in morbidity and mortality meetings, with the Royal College of Physicians promoting Structured Judgement Review (SJR) methodology to support this discussion. An analysis of 1 year of SJRs in one hospital was undertaken, generating a toolkit to support junior doctors in evaluating in-hospital deaths. Here, the opportunities and limitations of this analysis are discussed, with consideration of ways to improve the uptake of SJR across the hospital team. These reviews exemplify one way of maximising learning from in-hospital deaths.

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    • RT @drol007: @zachary_tait it’s live and in beautiful pdf https://t.co/wHczEcOfto @Clin_Med @lumpyeggbass #SJR #mortality #palliativecare