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Dive into the research topics where Roland Sambuc is active.

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Featured researches published by Roland Sambuc.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2011

ED patients: how nonurgent are they? Systematic review of the emergency medicine literature

Anne-Claire Durand; Stéphanie Gentile; B. Devictor; Sylvie Palazzolo; Pascal Vignally; Patrick Gerbeaux; Roland Sambuc

Nonurgent visits to emergency departments (ED) are a controversial issue; they have been negatively associated with crowding and costs. We have conducted a critical review of the literature regarding methods for categorizing ED visits into urgent or nonurgent and analyzed the proportions of nonurgent ED visits. We found 51 methods of categorization. Seventeen categorizations conducted prospectively in triage areas were based on somatic complaint and/or vital sign collection. Categorizations conducted retrospectively (n = 34) were based on the diagnosis, the results of tests obtained during the ED visit, and hospital admission. The proportions of nonurgent ED visits varied considerably: 4.8% to 90%, with a median of 32%. Comparisons of methods of categorization in the same population showed variability in levels of agreement. Our review has highlighted the lack of reliability and reproducibility.


The Lancet | 2008

Iatrogenic events in admitted neonates: a prospective cohort study

Isabelle Ligi; Frédérique Arnaud; Elisabeth Jouve; Sophie Tardieu; Roland Sambuc; Umberto Simeoni

BACKGROUND Iatrogenic events are increasingly recognised as an important problem in all people admitted to hospital. However, few epidemiological data are available for iatrogenic events in neonatal high-risk units. We aimed to assess the incidence, nature, preventability, and severity of iatrogenic events in a neonatal centre and to establish the association of patient characteristics with the occurrence of iatrogenic events in neonates. METHODS We undertook an observational, prospective study from Jan 1, 2005, to Sept 1, 2005, including all neonates admitted in the Division of Neonatology of an academic, tertiary neonatal centre in southern France. Iatrogenic events were defined as any event that compromised the safety margin for the patient, in the presence or absence of harm. The report of an iatrogenic event was voluntary, anonymous, and non-punitive. The primary outcome was the rate of iatrogenic events per 1000 patient days. FINDINGS A total of 388 patients were studied during 10 436 patient days. We recorded 267 iatrogenic events in 116 patients. The incidence of iatrogenic events was 25.6 per 1000 patient days. 92 (34%) were preventable and 78 (29%) were severe. Two iatrogenic events (1%) were fatal, but neither was preventable. The most severe iatrogenic events were nosocomial infections (49/62 [79%]) and respiratory events (nine of 26 [35%]). Cutaneous injuries were frequent (n=94) but generally minor (89 [95%]), as were medication errors (15/19 [76%]). Most medication errors occurred during administration stage (12/19 [63%]) and were ten-fold errors (nine of 19 [47%]). The major risk factors were low birthweight and gestational age (both p<0.0001), length of stay (p<0.0001), a central venous line (p<0.0001), mechanical ventilation (p=0.0021), and support with continuous positive airwary pressure (p=0.0076). INTERPRETATION Iatrogenic events occur frequently and are often serious in neonates, especially in infants of low birthweight. Improved knowledge of the incidence and characteristics of iatrogenic events, and continuous monitoring could help to improve quality of health care for this vulnerable population.


BMC Research Notes | 2012

Nonurgent patients in emergency departments: rational or irresponsible consumers? Perceptions of professionals and patients

Anne Claire Durand; Sylvie Palazzolo; Nicolas Tanti-Hardouin; Patrick Gerbeaux; Roland Sambuc; Stéphanie Gentile

BackgroundFor several decades, overcrowding in emergency departments (EDs) has been intensifying due to the increased number of patients seeking care in EDs. Demand growth is partly due to misuse of EDs by patients who seek care for nonurgent problems. This study explores the reasons why people with nonurgent complaints choose to come to EDs, and how ED health professionals perceive the phenomenon of “nonurgency”.ResultsSemi-structured interviews were conducted in 10 EDs with 87 nonurgent patients and 34 health professionals. Interviews of patients revealed three themes: (1) fulfilled health care needs, (2) barriers to primary care providers (PCPs), and (3) convenience. Patients chose EDs as discerning health consumers: they preferred EDs because they had difficulties obtaining a rapid appointment. Access to technical facilities in EDs spares the patient from being overwhelmed with appointments with various specialists. Four themes were identified from the interviews of health professionals: (1) the problem of defining a nonurgent visit, (2) explanations for patients’ use of EDs for nonurgent complaints, (3) consequences of nonurgent visits, and (4) solutions to counter this tendency.ConclusionsStudies on the underlying reasons patients opt for the ED, as well as on their decision-making process, are lacking. The present study highlighted discrepancies between the perceptions of ED patients and those of health professionals, with a special focus on patient behaviour. To explain the use of ED, health professionals based themselves on the acuity and urgency of medical problems, while patients focused on rational reasons to initiate care in the ED (accessibility to health care resources, and the context in which the medical problem occurred). In spite of some limitations due to the slightly outdated nature of our data, as well as the difficulty of categorizing nonurgent situations, our findings show the importance of conducting a detailed analysis of the demand for health care. Understanding it is crucial, as it is the main determining factor in the utilization of health care resources, and provides promising insights into the phenomenon of ED usage increase. For reforms to be successful, the process of decision-making for unscheduled patients will have to be thoroughly investigated.


Pediatrics | 2010

Iatrogenic Events in Neonates: Beneficial Effects of Prevention Strategies and Continuous Monitoring

Isabelle Ligi; Véronique Millet; Catherine Sartor; Elisabeth Jouve; Sophie Tardieu; Roland Sambuc; Umberto Simeoni

OBJECTIVES: To assess the impact of continuous incident reporting and subsequent prevention strategies on the incidence of severe iatrogenic events and targeted priorities in admitted neonates. METHODS: We performed preintervention (January 1 to September 1, 2005) and postintervention (January 1, 2008, to January 1, 2009) prospective investigations based on continuous incident reporting. Patient-safety initiatives were implemented for a period of 2 years. The main outcome was a reduction in the incidence of severe iatrogenic events. Secondary outcomes were improvements in 5 targeted priorities: catheter-related infections; invasive procedures; unplanned extubations; 10-fold drug infusion-rate errors; and severe cutaneous injuries. RESULTS: The first and second study periods included totals of 388 and 645 patients (median gestational ages: 34 and 35 weeks, respectively; P = .015). In the second period the incidence of severe iatrogenic events was significantly reduced from 7.6 to 4.8 per 1000 patient-days (P = .005). Infections related to central catheters decreased significantly from 13.9 to 8.2 per 1000 catheter-days (P < .0001), as did exposure to central catheters, which decreased from 359 to 239 days per 1000 patient-days (P < .0001). Tenfold drug-dosing errors were reduced significantly (P = .022). However, the number of unplanned extubations increased significantly from 5.6 to 15.5 per 1000 ventilation-days (P = .03). CONCLUSIONS: Prospective, continuous incident reporting followed by the implementation of prevention strategies are complementary procedures that constitute an effective system to improve the quality of care and patient safety.


BMC Emergency Medicine | 2011

Be careful with triage in emergency departments: interobserver agreement on 1,578 patients in France

Anne-Claire Durand; Stéphanie Gentile; Patrick Gerbeaux; Marc Alazia; Pierre Kiegel; Stephane Luigi; Eric Lindenmeyer; Philippe Olivier; Marie-Annick Hidoux; Roland Sambuc

BackgroundFor several decades, emergency departments (EDs) utilization has increased, inducing ED overcrowding in many countries. This phenomenon is related partly to an excessive number of nonurgent patients. To resolve ED overcrowding and to decrease nonurgent visits, the most common solution has been to triage the ED patients to identify potentially nonurgent patients, i.e. which could have been dealt with by general practitioner. The objective of this study was to measure agreement among ED health professionals on the urgency of an ED visit, and to determine if the level of agreement is consistent among different sub-groups based on following explicit criteria: age, medical status, type of referral to the ED, investigations performed in the ED, and the discharge from the ED.MethodsWe conducted a multicentric cross-sectional study to compare agreement between nurses and physicians on categorization of ED visits into urgent or nonurgent. Subgroups stratified by criteria characterizing the ED visit were analyzed in relation to the outcome of the visit.ResultsOf 1,928 ED patients, 350 were excluded because data were lacking. The overall nurse-physician agreement on categorization was moderate (kappa = 0.43). The levels of agreement within all subgroups were variable and low. The highest agreement concerned three subgroups of complaints: cranial injury (kappa = 0.61), gynaecological (kappa = 0.66) and toxicology complaints (kappa = 1.00). The lowest agreement concerned two subgroups: urinary-nephrology (kappa = 0.09) and hospitalization (kappa = 0.20). When categorization of ED visits into urgent or nonurgent cases was compared to hospitalization, ED physicians had higher sensitivity and specificity than nurses (respectively 94.9% versus 89.5%, and 43.1% versus 30.9%).ConclusionsThe lack of physician-nurse agreement and the inability to predict hospitalization have important implications for patient safety. When urgency screening is used to determine treatment priority, disagreement might not matter because all patients in the ED are seen and treated. But using assessments as the basis for refusal of care to potential nonurgent patients raises legal, ethical, and safety issues. Managed care organizations should be cautious when applying such criteria to restrict access to EDs.


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2008

Development and validation of a French patient-based health-related quality of life instrument in kidney transplant: the ReTransQoL

Stéphanie Gentile; Elisabeth Jouve; Bertrand Dussol; Valérie Moal; Yvon Berland; Roland Sambuc

BackgroundIn the absence of a French health-related quality of life (QOL) instrument for renal transplant recipients (RTR), we developed a self-administered questionnaire: the ReTransQol (RTQ).MethodsThis questionnaire was developed using classical methodology in the following three phases over a two-year period: Item Generation phase, identifying all possible items having adverse impact on the QOL of RTR, Item Reduction phase, selecting the most pertinent items related to QOL, and Validation phase, analyzing the psychometric properties. All RTR involved in these phases were over 18 and were randomly selected from a transplant registry.ResultsItem generation was conducted through 24 interviews of RTR. The first version of RTQ (85 items) was sent to 225 randomized RTR, and 40 items were eliminated at the end of the item reduction phase. The second version of RTQ (45 items) was validated from 130 RTR, resulting in the RTQ final version. The factor analysis identified a structure of five factors: Physical Health (PH), Mental Health (MH), Medical Care (MC), Fear of losing the Graft (FG) and Treatment (TR). The psychometric properties of RTQ were satisfactory. Comparison between known groups from the literature confirmed the construct validity: patients without employment or living alone have lower QOL scores, and women have lower QOL scores than men. RTQ was more responsive than SF36 to detect changes in the QOL of RTR who were hospitalized secondary to their renal disease in the 4 weeks preceding their inclusion.ConclusionAccording to French public health priorities, RTQ appears to be a reliable and valid questionnaire.


Neurophysiologie Clinique-clinical Neurophysiology | 2003

Évaluation psychocomportementale de l'administration de faible dose de kétamine chez le sujet sain

J. Micallef; Sophie Tardieu; S. Gentile; E. Fakra; Elisabeth Jouve; Roland Sambuc; Olivier Blin

Schizophrenic patients suffer from positive (delusions, hallucinations) and negative signs (social withdrawal) as well as emotional disturbance that included quantitative (blunted affect) and qualitative impairments (discordance of emotional level). Ketamine, a phencyclidine derivative, is a non competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor antagonist. In healthy subjects its administration induces some positive symptoms (perceptual distortions...), negative symptoms (emotional deficit, apathy, social withdrawal) and cognitive changes (memory impairments and perseverations) that resemble some aspects of the symptoms of schizophrenia. A double blind cross over, placebo controlled was performed in 12 normal subjects with 2 sessions separated by one week of wash-out to determine ketamine-induced effects on behavioral and emotional responses. During each session, subjects received either ketamine or placebo (saline) infusion. A subanesthetic dose of ketamine (0,5 mg/kg) was administered by constant perfusion over 60 min. Behavioral and cognitive responses were assessed using positive and negative symptoms scales (BPRS, items from SAPS and SANS), vigilance and mood visual analog scale, subjective feelings using the Addiction Research Center Inventory (ARCI) and the Profile of Mood States (POMS). Using Philippot’s method, emotions were elicited by films segments which induce a diversity of predictable emotions (fear, anger, sadness, joy, disgust and neutral state) and emotional responses were assessed by the Differential Emotions Scale (DES Izard). Low dose of ketamine induced significant effects on 7-items BPRS score (positive and negative items) and significant effects on positive and negative symptoms from SANS and SAPS. This was associated with emotional blunting of visually-induced responses that resemble aspects of schizophrenic emotional impairments. Ketamine impaired ARCI subscales (benzedrine subscale, pentobarbital–chlorpromazine subscale and LSD subscale). The recent findings of ketamine’s pharmacology and imaging studies allow to draw several hypothesis related to neurotransmitter systems (glutamate, dopamine, serotonin interactions) and cerebral areas (particularly prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus) underlying some of these ketamine-induced effects.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2014

Are Infectious Disease Doctors Better at Caring for Infectious Diseases Than Other Specialists

Philippe Brouqui; Elisabeth Jouve; Fanny Romain; Roland Sambuc; Didier Raoult

TO THE EDITOR—We read with interest the article of Schmitt et al reporting that infectious disease (ID) specialist intervention is associated with decreased mortality and lower healthcare costs [1]. As the result of an order of our institution, the second largest in France, we analyzed, using the French diagnosis related group (DRG) 2007–2008 database, the distribution , length of stay (LOS), readmission ratio, and mortality of patients with an ID who were cared for by ID physicians in the ID department (IDD) ward vs other medical units [2]. The hospital stay is codified based on the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision into a DRG which includes associated co-morbidity. We first compared mean LOS between IDD and other medical units by an analysis of variance with the type of medical unit as the principal factor, DRG as a cofactor, and their interaction and age of patients as covariates. Then, we compared LOS between types of medical units by DRG class using test of effect sliced based on least squares means. The number of saved days of care was converted to save DRGs and to cost, according to the French national database 2007. The readmission of patient for the same DRG within 30 days of discharge and the mortality in the DRG within the time of care were analyzed by using logistic model with type of medical unit and age as effects. Age-adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were calculated. Of the 4188 hospital stays, 1059 were provided by the IDD and 3129 by other medical units, indicating that the IDD cared for 25% of the ID DRGs (Figure 1). Despite Figure 1. Proportion of the most prevalent diagnosis related group related to infectious diseases cared for in the infectious disease department, compared with other medical units of the hospital (%). Abbreviations: ACM, associated comorbidity; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus. the fact that age and the DRG significantly influenced the LOS (P < .0001), the mean LOS was still significantly shorter in IDD than in other medical units (8.5 ± 7.5 days vs 10.3 ± 10.3 days, respectively; P = .037). The LOS of pneumonia without associated comorbidity was significantly shorter when patients were cared for in IDD than in the pneumology or the internal medicine department (mean, 6.5 ± 4.4 days/7.7 ± 5.4 days/9.8 ± 7.9 days, respectively; P = .0052 by analysis of variance). The mortality …


BMJ Open | 2016

Improving access and continuity of care for homeless people: how could general practitioners effectively contribute? Results from a mixed study

Maeva Jego; Dominique Grassineau; Hubert Balique; Anderson Loundou; Roland Sambuc; Alexandre Daguzan; Gaëtan Gentile; Stéphanie Gentile

Objectives To analyse the views of general practitioners (GPs) about how they can provide care to homeless people (HP) and to explore which measures could influence their views. Design Mixed-methods design (qualitative –> quantitative (cross-sectional observational) → qualitative). Qualitative data were collected through semistructured interviews and through questionnaires with closed questions. Quantitative data were analysed with descriptive statistical analyses on SPPS; a content analysis was applied on qualitative data. Setting Primary care; views of urban GPs working in a deprived area in Marseille were explored by questionnaires and/or semistructured interview. Participants 19 GPs involved in HPs healthcare were recruited for phase 1 (qualitative); for phase 2 (quantitative), 150 GPs who provide routine healthcare (‘standard’ GPs) were randomised, 144 met the inclusion criteria and 105 responded to the questionnaire; for phase 3 (qualitative), data were explored on 14 ‘standard’ GPs. Results In the quantitative phase, 79% of the 105 GPs already treated HP. Most of the difficulties they encountered while treating HP concerned social matters (mean level of perceived difficulties=3.95/5, IC 95 (3.74 to 4.17)), lack of medical information (mn=3.78/5, IC 95 (3.55 to 4.01)) patients compliance (mn=3.67/5, IC 95 (3.45 to 3.89)), loneliness in practice (mn=3.45/5, IC 95 (3.18 to 3.72)) and time required for the doctor (mn=3.25, IC 95 (3 to 3.5)). From qualitative analysis we understood that maintaining a stable follow-up was a major condition for GPs to contribute effectively to the care of HP. Acting on health system organisation, developing a medical and psychosocial approach with closer relation with social workers and enhancing the collaboration between tailored and non-tailored programmes were also other key answers. Conclusions If we adapt the conditions of GPs practice, they could contribute to the improvement of HPs health. These results will enable the construction of a new model of primary care organisation aiming to improve access to healthcare for HP.


Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2017

Longitudinal growth of French singleton children born after in vitro fertilization and intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Body mass index up to 5 years of age

L. Meddeb; V. Pauly; P. Boyer; D. Montjean; B. Devictor; L. Curel; P. Seng; Roland Sambuc; M. Gervoise Boyer

BACKGROUND The literature presents conflicting results on the epigenetic effect of in vitro fertilization (IVF) on the short-term and mid-term growth of children. These contradictory results may be related to the use of heterogeneous methodologies and non-longitudinal data. The goal of this study was to compare the body mass index (BMI) of children conceived via IVF and spontaneous conception (SC) children, using longitudinal data from birth to 5 years. METHODS This study compared 118 singleton children born after in vitro fertilization, with or without intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), selected from a pre-existing single-center cohort to 320 SC children from the same geographic area. BMI and its evolution were analyzed using the mixed-effect model during three periods: before standing acquisition (from birth to 1 year of age), during standing acquisition, and the following period from 2 to 5 years of age. RESULTS BMI means were not significantly different between groups regardless of the period, when adjusting for confounding factors related to parents, pregnancy, and childrens characteristics and lifestyle. Nevertheless, during the standing acquisition period, children born after IVF-ICSI presented a less significant decrease in BMI (P<0.05). In addition, for each period we identified influencing factors (maternal BMI, level of wealth indicator) associated with BMI. CONCLUSION In the study population, the suspected epigenetic influence of IVF reported in the literature was not observed for BMI from birth to 5 years of age. Further investigations need to be conducted to determine if the suspected influence of IVF on adiposity could be expressed through other parameters.

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Sophie Tardieu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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B. Devictor

Aix-Marseille University

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Yvon Berland

Aix-Marseille University

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