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Featured researches published by Adolfo Muñoz.


BMC Family Practice | 2013

Comorbidity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in family practice: a cross sectional study

Luis García-Olmos; Ángel Alberquilla; Victoria Ayala; Pilar García-Sagredo; Leticia Morales; Montserrat Carmona; María J. de Tena-Dávila; Mario Pascual; Adolfo Muñoz; Carlos H. Salvador; José Luis Monteagudo

BackgroundChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is frequent and often coexists with other diseases. The aim of this study was to quantify the prevalence of COPD and related chronic comorbidity among patients aged over 40 years visiting family practices in an area of Madrid.MethodsAn observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study was conducted in a health area of the Madrid Autonomous Region (Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid). The practice population totalled 198,670 persons attended by 129 Family Physicians (FPs), and the study population was made up of persons over the age of 40 years drawn from this practice population. Patients were deemed to have COPD if this diagnosis appeared on their clinical histories. Prevalence of COPD; prevalence of a further 25 chronic diseases in patients with COPD; and standardised prevalence ratios, were calculated.ResultsPrevalence of COPD in family medicine was 3.2% (95% CI 3.0–3.3) overall, 5.3% among men and 1.4% among women; 90% of patients presented with comorbidity, with a mean of 4 ± 2.04 chronic diseases per patient, with the most prevalent related diseases being arterial hypertension (52%), disorders of lipid metabolism (34%), obesity (25%), diabetes (20%) and arrhythmia (15%). After controlling for age and sex, the observed prevalence of the following ten chronic diseases was higher than expected: heart failure; chronic liver disease; asthma; generalised artherosclerosis; osteoporosis; ischaemic heart disease; thyroid disease; anxiety/depression; arrhythmia; and obesity.ConclusionsPatients with COPD, who are frequent in family practice, have a complex profile and pose a clinical and organisational challenge to FPs.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Comorbidity Patterns in Patients with Chronic Diseases in General Practice

Luis García-Olmos; Carlos H. Salvador; Ángel Alberquilla; David Lora; Montserrat Carmona; Pilar García-Sagredo; Mario Pascual; Adolfo Muñoz; José Luis Monteagudo; Fernando García-López

Introduction Healthcare management is oriented toward single diseases, yet multimorbidity is nevertheless the rule and there is a tendency for certain diseases to occur in clusters. This study sought to identify comorbidity patterns in patients with chronic diseases, by reference to number of comorbidities, age and sex, in a population receiving medical care from 129 general practitioners in Spain, in 2007. Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted in a health-area setting of the Madrid Autonomous Region (Comunidad Autónoma), covering a population of 198,670 individuals aged over 14 years. Multiple correspondences were analyzed to identify the clustering patterns of the conditions targeted. Results Forty-two percent (95% confidence interval [CI]: 41.8–42.2) of the registered population had at least one chronic condition. In all, 24.5% (95% CI: 24.3–24.6) of the population presented with multimorbidity. In the correspondence analysis, 98.3% of the total information was accounted for by three dimensions. The following four, age- and sex-related comorbidity patterns were identified: pattern B, showing a high comorbidity rate; pattern C, showing a low comorbidity rate; and two patterns, A and D, showing intermediate comorbidity rates. Conclusions Four comorbidity patterns could be identified which grouped diseases as follows: one showing diseases with a high comorbidity burden; one showing diseases with a low comorbidity burden; and two showing diseases with an intermediate comorbidity burden.


Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention | 2012

Evaluation of a Telemedicine Service for the Secondary Prevention of Coronary Artery Disease

Ana Blasco; Montserrat Carmona; Ignacio Fernández-Lozano; Carlos H. Salvador; Mario Pascual; Pilar García Sagredo; Roberto Somolinos; Adolfo Muñoz; Fernando García-López; Juan Manuel Escudier; Susana Mingo; Jorge Toquero; Vanessa Moñivas; Miguel A. González; Juan A. Fragua; Fernando López-Rodríguez; José Luis Monteagudo; Luis Alonso-Pulpón

PURPOSE: Efficient ways are needed to implement the secondary prevention (SP) of coronary heart disease. Because few studies have investigated Web-based SP programs, our aim was to determine the usefulness of a new Web-based telemonitoring system, connecting patients provided with self-measurement devices and care managers via mobile phone text messages, as a tool for SP. METHODS: A single-blind, randomized controlled, clinical trial of 203 acute coronary syndrome (ACS) survivors, was conducted at a hospital in Madrid, Spain. All patients received lifestyle counseling and usual-care treatment. Patients in the telemonitoring group (TMG) sent, through mobile phones, weight, heart rate, and blood pressure (BP) weekly, and capillary plasma lipid profile and glucose monthly. A cardiologist accessed these data through a Web interface and sent recommendations via short message service. Main outcome measures were BP, body mass index (BMI), smoking status, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-c), and glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c). RESULTS: At 12-month followup, TMG patients were more likely (RR = 1.4; 95% CI = 1.1−1.7) to experience improvement in cardiovascular risk factors profile than control patients (69.6% vs 50.5%, P = .010). More TMG patients achieved treatment goals for BP (62.1% vs 42.9%, P = .012) and HbA1c (86.4% vs 54.2%, P = .018), with no differences in smoking cessation or LDL-c. Body mass index was significantly lower in TMG (−0.77 kg/m2 vs +0.29 kg/m2, P = .005). CONCLUSIONS: A telemonitoring program, via mobile phone messages, appears to be useful for improving the risk profile in ACS survivors and can be an effective tool for secondary prevention, especially for overweight patients.


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2007

Proof-of-concept Design and Development of an EN13606-based Electronic Health Care Record Service

Adolfo Muñoz; Roberto Somolinos; Mario Pascual; Juan A. Fragua; Miguel A. González; José Luis Monteagudo; Carlos H. Salvador

OBJECTIVE The authors present an Electronic Healthcare Record (EHR) server, designed and developed as a proof of concept of the revised prEN13606:2005 European standard concerning EHR communications. METHODS The development of the server includes five modules: the libraries for the management of the standard reference model, for the demographic package and for the data types; the permanent storage module, built on a relational database; two communication interfaces through which the clients can send information or make queries; the XML (eXtensible Markup Language) process module; and the tools for the validation of the extracts managed, implemented on a defined XML-Schema. RESULTS The server was subjected to four phases of trials, the first three with ad hoc test data and processes to ensure that each of the modules complied with its specifications and that the interaction between them provided the expected functionalities. The fourth used real extracts generated by other research groups for the additional purpose of testing the validity of the standard in real-world scenarios. CONCLUSION The acceptable performance of the server has made it possible to include it as a middleware service in a platform for the out-of-hospital follow-up and monitoring of patients with chronic heart disease which, at the present time, supports pilot projects and clinical trials for the evaluation of eHealth services.


Journal of Healthcare Engineering | 2011

The ISO/EN 13606 Standard for the Interoperable Exchange of Electronic Health Records

Pilar Muñoz; Jesús D. Trigo; Ignacio Martínez; Adolfo Muñoz; J. Escayola; José García

The standardization of Electronic Health Records (EHR) is a crucial factor for ensuring interoperable sharing of health data. During recent decades, a plethora of initiatives – driven by international organizations – has emerged to define the required models describing the exchange of information between EHRs. These models cover different essential characteristics for building interoperable EHRs, such as architecture, methodology, communication, safety or terminology, among others. In this context, the European reference frame for the standardized exchange of EHR is the recently approved ISO/EN 13606 standard. This multi-part standard provides the syntactic and semantic capabilities (through a dual model approach) as well as terminology, security and interface considerations for the standardized exchange of EHR. This paper provides (a) an introduction to the different standardization efforts related to the interoperable exchange of EHR around the world, and (b) a description of how the ISO/EN 13606 standard provides interoperable sharing of clinical information.


Family Practice | 2011

Heart failure in the family practice: a study of the prevalence and co-morbidity

Montserrat Carmona; Luis García-Olmos; Ángel Alberquilla; Adolfo Muñoz; Pilar García-Sagredo; Roberto Somolinos; Mario Pascual-Carrasco; Carlos H. Salvador; José Luis Monteagudo

BACKGROUND Heart failure (HF) is a health problem that particularly affects the elderly population. Its onset is associated with other chronic diseases, a circumstance that makes it a challenge for health care services. The aim of this study is to quantify the prevalence of HF in family medicine offices and describe the chronic co-morbidity associated with it. METHODS A cross-sectional, observational descriptive study set in a health area of the Community of Madrid, Spain. The study was carried out in a population of 198,670 individuals over 14 years of age, attended to by 129 specialists in family medicine. The patient was considered to have HF when this diagnosis (ICPC code K77) appeared in his or her electronic medical record. The prevalence of HF was quantified and its association with another 25 chronic diseases was analysed. RESULTS The prevalence of HF was 6.9‰, 7.9‰ among women and 5.9‰ among men. Patients with HF had a high rate of chronic co-morbidity, with an average of 5.2 + 2.1 chronic diseases. Only 3% of the patients present with isolated HF and >60% have four or more additional chronic problems. Hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, hyperlipidaemia, obesity and diabetes mellitus are the chronic diseases most frequently detected in HF patients. CONCLUSION Patients with HF frequently visit the offices of family physicians, presenting with a high rate of cardiac and non-cardiac co-morbidity that proves to be a challenge on the clinical level and in terms of the organization of health care services.


Telemedicine Journal and E-health | 2010

Seamless Integration of ISO/IEEE11073 Personal Health Devices and ISO/EN13606 Electronic Health Records into an End-to-End Interoperable Solution

Ignacio Martíez; J. Escayola; Miguel Martínez-Espronceda; Pilar Muñoz; Jesús D. Trigo; Adolfo Muñoz; Santiago Led; L. Serrano; José García

The new paradigm of personal health demands open standards and middleware components that permit transparent integration and end-to-end interoperability from new personal health devices to healthcare information system. The use of standards seems to be the internationally accepted way to face this challenge. In this article, the implementation of an end-to-end standard-based personal health solution is presented. It integrates the ISO/IEEE11073 standard for the interoperability of personal health devices in the patient environment and the ISO/EN13606 standard for the interoperable exchange of electronic healthcare records and proposes a new approach for the end-to-end ISO/IEEE11073-ISO/EN13606 communication. The design strictly fulfills all the technical requirements of the most recent versions of both standards. An entire prototype has been designed, developed, and tested as a proof-of-concept of a personal health solution.


Family Practice | 2013

Heart failure in primary care: co-morbidity and utilization of health care resources

Montserrat Carmona; Luis García-Olmos; Pilar García-Sagredo; Ángel Alberquilla; Fernando López-Rodríguez; Mario Pascual; Adolfo Muñoz; Carlos H. Salvador; José Luis Monteagudo; Angel Otero-Puime

Background. In order to ensure proper management of primary care (PC) services, the efficiency of the health professionals tasked with such services must be known. Patients with heart failure (HF) are characterized by advanced age, high co-morbidity and high resource utilization. Objective. To ascertain PC resource utilization by HF patients and variability in the management of such patients by GPs. Methods. Descriptive, cross-sectional study targeting a population attended by 129 GPs over the course of 1 year. All patients with diagnosis of HF in their clinical histories were included, classified using the Adjusted Clinical Group system and then grouped into six resource utilization bands (RUBs). Resource utilization and Efficiency Index were both calculated. Results. One hundred per cent of patients with HF were ranked in RUBs 3, 4 and 5. The highest GP visit rate was 20 and the lowest in excess of 10 visits per year. Prescription drug costs for these patients ranged from €885 to €1422 per patient per year. Health professional efficiency varied notably, even after adjustment for co-morbidity (Efficiency Index Variation Ratio of 28.27 for visits and 404.29 for prescription drug cost). Conclusions. Patients with HF register a high utilization of resources, and there is great variability in the management of such patients by health professionals, which cannot be accounted for by the degree of case complexity.


Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2007

Web-based personal health records: the personal electronic health record (pEHR) multicentred trial:

George E. Karagiannis; Vasileios G. Stamatopoulos; Michael Rigby; Takis Kotis; Elisa Negroni; Adolfo Muñoz; Loannis Mathes

A multicentre trial of a Web-based personal electronic health record (pEHR) service was conducted in three different European hospitals. A total of 150 patients and 22 health-care professionals were involved. The service was customised according to the needs of three groups of patients who had congenital heart disease, Parkinsons disease and type 2 diabetes. Two structured questionnaires, one for patients and one for health-care professionals, were used to collect their views on the pEHR service. The questions were about usability and user friendliness, safety and trustworthiness, reliability, functionality, satisfaction and the potential revenue model of the service in the case of future deployment. Patients perceived the service as very motivating and felt that it could help them in managing their clinical information. Health-care professionals showed a very positive attitude towards the use of the service and its potential for future large-scale deployment. They were also keen to recommend the service to their patients. Both study groups were unwilling to pay for the service and preferred it to be sponsored by a third party (e.g. the National Health Service).


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2013

ccML, a new mark-up language to improve ISO/EN 13606-based electronic health record extracts practical edition

Ricardo Sánchez-de-Madariaga; Adolfo Muñoz; Jesús Cáceres; Roberto Somolinos; Mario Pascual; Ignacio Martínez; Carlos H. Salvador; José Luis Monteagudo

Objective The objective of this paper is to introduce a new language called ccML, designed to provide convenient pragmatic information to applications using the ISO/EN13606 reference model (RM), such as electronic health record (EHR) extracts editors. EHR extracts are presently built using the syntactic and semantic information provided in the RM and constrained by archetypes. The ccML extra information enables the automation of the medico-legal context information edition, which is over 70% of the total in an extract, without modifying the RM information. Materials and Methods ccML is defined using a W3C XML schema file. Valid ccML files complement the RM with additional pragmatics information. The ccML language grammar is defined using formal language theory as a single-type tree grammar. The new language is tested using an EHR extracts editor application as proof-of-concept system. Results Seven ccML PVCodes (predefined value codes) are introduced in this grammar to cope with different realistic EHR edition situations. These seven PVCodes have different interpretation strategies, from direct look up in the ccML file itself, to more complex searches in archetypes or system precomputation. Discussion The possibility to declare generic types in ccML gives rise to ambiguity during interpretation. The criterion used to overcome ambiguity is that specificity should prevail over generality. The opposite would make the individual specific element declarations useless. Conclusion A new mark-up language ccML is introduced that opens up the possibility of providing applications using the ISO/EN13606 RM with the necessary pragmatics information to be practical and realistic.

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Mario Pascual

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Carlos H. Salvador

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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José Luis Monteagudo

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Montserrat Carmona

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Pilar García-Sagredo

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Luis García-Olmos

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Antonio L Castro

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Jesús Cáceres

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Oscar Moreno

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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