Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: more + makes + men  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Rules Make Leads More Fragile
New York Times, United States - Nov 30, 2008
The Red Wings have allowed six goals so far this season with two men in the box. ?Heck, you don?t get six in a season most years,? Babcock said. ...

SmartAboutHealth
Gay men still make up many of new HIV cases
Daily News Tribune, MA -
But Cranston said the rate of transmission remains the same, largely because more gay men have HIV. DPH Commissioner John Auerbach said the use of condoms ...
Report: Gay/bisexual men still bear brunt of AIDS Boston Herald
all 14 news articles »
Retailers counting on men to save holidays
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA -
Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus and Macy?s say they?re carrying more men?s goods this holiday season. J. Crew this month opened its second men?s-only store ...
Shoptalk: Gurhan jewelry trunk show, Catharine Malandrino sale, more
Newsday, NY -
TOMORROW: Men's Coat Event. Meet vendor reps and take 15 percent off a scarf, hat and glove set with your coat purchase, noon-3 pm, at Bloomingdale's ...
?Paradise Lost? in Prose
New York Times, United States -
Like Milton, these poets do not make it easy for readers to move through a poem. Roadblocks, in the form of ambiguities, deliberate obscurities, ...

Los Angeles Times
At least Canada has Gretzky: Lakers 112, Raptors 99
Los Angeles Times, CA -
Such a scenario isn't necessarily considered Drew's bread and butter (nor most big men, truth be told), but Drew more than held his own. ...
Bynum starting to rise up, assert himself OCRegister
all 311 news articles »

Sydney Morning Herald
Terror Groups in India
Washington Post, United States -
"Indian society has educated young men and young women to the point where they no longer fit into traditional society, but modern society has not been able ...
AssociatedPress
Video Allegedly Shows India Terror Arrest CBS News
The aftermath of the Mumbai attacks Examiner.com
Scotsman - Asia Times Online
all 3,277 news articles »
TOMS Shoes Embarks on a Holiday Mission: Give 30000 Pairs in 30 Days!
MarketWatch -
TOMS Shoes start at $34 for kids, and $42 for men and women. For more information or to participate in the campaign, please visit http://www. ...

Current World News
Key To High HIV Infection Rates In Massachusetts Gay, Bisexual Men ...
AHN -
Assistant Professor of Sociology at U of T, Adam Isaiah Green, interviewed dozens of gay men in Toronto to find out 1) what qualities made some men more ...
NYC Reports Early Success In Bronx-Wide HIV Testing Initiative eMaxHealth.com
One man shares his story of hope, acceptance on World AIDS Day Times Daily
Residents recognize World AIDS Day Tallahassee Democrat
Gary Post Tribune - Belleville News Democrat
all 136 news articles »
RAW DATA: Obama's Remarks on National Security Team Appointments
FOXNews -
In their past service and plans for the future, these men and women represent all of those elements of American power, and the very best of the American ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: condom catheter + condom catheters + catheters  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Fourth International Consultation On Incontinence (ICI ...
Medical News Today (press release), UK - Jul 25, 2008
Data regarding different types of condom catheters, or sheaths, was also presented. All recommendations were Grade C including fewer UTIs compared to ...

Time Out Chicago
Band camp
Time Out Chicago, IL - Jul 31, 2008
... essentially a concertgoer?s catheter, so you don?t lose your sweet spot while stuck in line for the loo. It?s as easy as putting on a condom, ...
General Chiziko: Implicated in another nasty scam!
Nyasa Times, Malawi - Jul 30, 2008
These are the last kicks of catheter-totting racehorses. Marko Chiziko is not good as army commander. Not even as a guerilla fighter. ...
Innovation, Innovation, Innovation & Technology
Ghana News, Ghana - Jul 18, 2008
There are prodcust known here us uridoms (Like a condom with a firm grip to connect to the catheter bags), day catheter bags and night catheter bags for men ...
Cheap IVF treatment for Africa
The Press Association - Jul 7, 2008
Millions of pounds go into family planning projects and condom distribution to prevent pregnancies in Africa, but experts said that more than 30% of women ...

Washington Times
Fighting taboo of infertility
Washington Times, DC - Jul 16, 2008
Millions of dollars go into family-planning projects and condom distribution to prevent pregnancies in Africa, but researchers said that more than 30 ...
SeekWellness Store Improves Search and Adds Innovative Products
American Chronicle, CA - Jul 15, 2008
It's simply held against the body and gravity does the rest " Another innovative product, the GeeWhiz? condom catheter is perfect the men in our audience. ...
Source: Google News

CATHETER-ASSOCIATED URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS -
JW Warren - Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 1997 - Elsevier
... prevent catheterization itself. Several devices have been explored as options
to the urethral catheter. Condom Catheters. For men with ...

Guideline for Prevention of Catheter-associated Urinary Tract Infections -
P Room, AZ Index, CDC en Espa?ol - cdc.gov
... a. Urinary catheters should be inserted only when necessary and left ... patients, other
methods of urinary drainage such as condom catheter drainage, suprapubic ...

Do condom catheter collecting systems cause urinary tract infection? -
DD Hirsh, V Fainstein, DM Musher - JAMA, 1979 - Am Med Assoc
... Do condom catheter collecting systems cause urinary tract infection? DD
Hirsh, V. Fainstein and DM Musher. A study was undertaken ...

Preventing Catheter-Related Bacteriuria Should We? Can We? How? -
S Saint, BA Lipsky - Archives of Internal Medicine, 1999 - Am Med Assoc
... men wearing a condom catheter was approximately 12% per month. The rate was
substantially higher, however, in those who frequently manipulated their catheters. ...

Engineering out the Risk of Infection with Urinary Catheters -
DG Maki, PA Tambyah - Diabetes - cdc.gov
... condom catheters, and nosocomial urinary tract infections. Infect Control Hosp
Epidemiol 1996;17:212-14. Maki DG, Hennekens C, Bennet J. Prevention of catheter- ...
-

The Condom Catheter: Urinary Tract Infection and Other Complications. -
ET JOHNSON - Southern Medical Journal, 1983 - smajournalonline.com
... the patients with contaminated condoms did not ... tract infections?patients with condom
catheters are a ... V. Musher DM: Do condom-catheter collecting systems ...

The catheter and urinary tract infection. -
JW Warren - Med Clin North Am, 1991 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... For incontinent men, a condom catheter is a useful alternative. ... The roles of these
alternatives to urethral catheters must be defined by controlled trials. ...

Urinary catheters: what type do men and their nurses prefer? -
S Saint, BA Lipsky, PD Baker, LL McDonald, K … - J Am Geriatr Soc, 1999 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... for patient comfort, but they recognize that dislodgment and leaking are major
drawbacks of condom catheters. A more secure condom catheter would greatly ...

Urinary tract infections.
CM Kunin - Surg Clin North Am, 1980 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... should be first tried on condom catheter drainage if ... Condom drainage, however, may
lead to severe maceration ... Indwelling urethral catheters must be attached to ...

Clinical and economic consequences of nosocomial catheter-related bacteriuria. -
S Saint - AJIC: American Journal of Infection Control, 2000 - pt.wkhealth.com
... The efficacy of silver alloycoated urinary catheters in preventing urinary tract
infection ... Do condom catheter collecting systems cause urinary tract infection? ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 
 

Condom Catheter Makes Hospital Stay for Men Safer and More Pleasant

Fewer infections, happier patients, seen with external catheter

July 2, 2006 – There is great news for older men about one of the greatest dreads men have about hospitalization – the urinary catheter. The good news for men is that new research says there is a much less-unpleasant option that also happens to be much safer, with the unexplained exception of men with dementia. The new and improved solution is a painless "condom" catheter.

In a recent study, men whose urine was collected with an external condom catheter during their hospital stay had an 80 percent reduction in the risk of urinary tract infection (UTI) or death as compared with men whose urine was collected with the usual "indwelling" catheter, the research shows. The condom catheters were also far more likely to be seen as comfortable and non-painful.

In the first-ever randomized, controlled trial comparing the two types of catheters, that striking difference in infection and death risk was seen in men who didn't have dementia and didn't need an indwelling catheter for medical reasons. Other men, and all women, should continue to use indwelling catheters, the researchers say.

But since UTIs are the most common kind of infection to strike patients in the hospital and can lead to fevers and prolonged hospital stays, the results may have tremendous implications, say the researchers from the University of Michigan Health System and the VA hospitals in Seattle and Ann Arbor, Mich. They are publishing their results in the July issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

"This is one of the bread-and-butter issues that adversely affects the safety of many hospitalized patients, and that will affect more of us as the population continues to age," says lead author Sanjay Saint, M.D., M.P.H., director of the Patient Safety Enhancement Program and an associate professor of general medicine at the U-M Medical School. "It has implications for many hospitalized patients, 25 percent of whom use catheters, but also for patients in nursing homes and at home."

 

 
 
 
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Saint and his colleagues carried out the trial at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System, where it took several years to find a sufficient number of men willing to be randomly assigned to either type of catheter who also met all of the study's criteria. Saint began the project during his Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars fellowship at the University of Washington, working with senior author Benjamin Lipsky, M.D.

In all, 75 men met the study's enrollment criteria, with 41 receiving an indwelling catheter and the rest receiving one of five sizes of a silicone condom catheter. Their health status was tracked for up to 30 days, including regular testing of their urine for bacteria (a pre-UTI condition called bacteriuria) and monitoring for signs of UTI. The men completed questionnaires about discomfort and other feelings related to their catheter.

The researchers recorded medical and demographic information about the men, and nurses assessed their mental status, looking for signs of dementia or other problems with cognition. The data were analyzed in a way that allowed the researchers to assess the incidence and time until onset of bacteriuria, and a combined measure of bacteriuria, symptomatic UTI, and death, while correcting for the effects of other factors.

The study showed that there were 11 new cases of bacteriuria for every 100 days of hospitalization in patients with indwelling catheters, compared to 6 for those with condom catheters. The indwelling catheter users developed the condition faster, on average within 7 days, compared with 13 days for condom catheter users. The same differences were seen for the combined measure of bacteriuria, symptomatic UTI, or death.

A striking difference emerged when the mental status of the patient was taken into account. For patients without dementia, indwelling catheter users were 4.8 times more likely than condom catheter users to experience bacteriuria, symptomatic UTI, or death. For patients with dementia, this difference was not seen.

The impact of dementia, Saint says, might be linked to the tendency of cognitively impaired men to touch or try to remove their catheters -- which results in the nurse having to clean the area and change the device. This can disturb the bacteria in the area and lead to infection.

In addition to being associated with a lower risk of infection, the condom catheters were much better liked than the indwelling ones, the study showed. Nearly 90 percent of the condom catheter users said the device was comfortable and only 5 percent said they were painful, compared with about 58 percent and 36 percent, respectively, for indwelling catheter users.

The study did not address the cost-effectiveness of using the more expensive condom catheters, which allow for a secure fit, are less likely to fall off than other kinds of condom catheters, and can be used for 48 hours. But Saint suspects that by reducing the incidence of bacteriuria, symptomatic UTI, and death, the extra expense up front will pay for itself in the end. The condom catheters in the study were donated by their manufacturer, Mentor Corporation, along with a research grant to Lipsky, but the company had no role in designing, conducting or analyzing the results of the study.

Already, Saint says, the results of the study have affected his decisions on the inpatient floors of the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System. "This has changed my own management of patients, to the point where if a patient is cognitively intact, won't remove the catheter, and doesn't have a medical reason for an indwelling catheter, I will choose a condom catheter for him," he says. He notes that patients with urinary tract obstructions, such as prostate problems, cannot use condom catheters. Neither can patients who received certain anesthetics or those in intensive-care units who require close urine monitoring.

The study builds on previous work by Saint and his colleagues that found that silver-coated indwelling catheters were associated with fewer UTIs than conventional indwelling catheters in certain high-risk patients, and that a reminder system for doctors and nurses could reduce the time patients spend with a catheter.

"Sometimes we physicians just order a urinary catheter as a knee-jerk response, instead of thinking through whether the patient needs it," he says. "We should only use catheters when necessary, and even then we should have reminders to prompt discontinuation." Now, with the new results, he hopes that clinicians in hospitals and nursing homes will stop to consider whether a male patient can use a condom catheter rather than an indwelling one. "Even if the infection rate were the same between the two, we should err on the side of giving patients the option they would probably prefer. The only drawback is that we don't yet have an external device for women that works well," he says.

Editor's Note: In addition to Saint and Lipsky, the study's authors are Samuel R. Kaufman, M.A. and Mary A.M. Rogers, Ph.D., of U-M and the Ann Arbor VA, and Paul D. Baker, ARNP, and Kathleen Ossenkop, ARNP, of the VA Puget Sound. The study was funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the VA/U-M Patient Safety Enhancement Program (PSEP), Mentor Corp., and the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program.


 

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