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Authors = Patrick Taffé

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14 pages, 4486 KiB  
Article
Performance of the Digital Dietary Assessment Tool MyFoodRepo
by Claire Zuppinger, Patrick Taffé, Gerrit Burger, Wafa Badran-Amstutz, Tapio Niemi, Clémence Cornuz, Fabiën N. Belle, Angeline Chatelan, Muriel Paclet Lafaille, Murielle Bochud and Semira Gonseth Nusslé
Nutrients 2022, 14(3), 635; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14030635 - 1 Feb 2022
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 5361
Abstract
Digital dietary assessment devices could help overcome the limitations of traditional tools to assess dietary intake in clinical and/or epidemiological studies. We evaluated the accuracy of the automated dietary app MyFoodRepo (MFR) against controlled reference values from weighted food diaries (WFD). MFR’s capability [...] Read more.
Digital dietary assessment devices could help overcome the limitations of traditional tools to assess dietary intake in clinical and/or epidemiological studies. We evaluated the accuracy of the automated dietary app MyFoodRepo (MFR) against controlled reference values from weighted food diaries (WFD). MFR’s capability to identify, classify and analyze the content of 189 different records was assessed using Cohen and uniform kappa coefficients and linear regressions. MFR identified 98.0% ± 1.5 of all edible components and was not affected by increasing numbers of ingredients. Linear regression analysis showed wide limits of agreement between MFR and WFD methods to estimate energy, carbohydrates, fat, proteins, fiber and alcohol contents of all records and a constant overestimation of proteins, likely reflecting the overestimation of portion sizes for meat, fish and seafood. The MFR mean portion size error was 9.2% ± 48.1 with individual errors ranging between −88.5% and +242.5% compared to true values. Beverages were impacted by the app’s difficulty in correctly identifying the nature of liquids (41.9% ± 17.7 of composed beverages correctly classified). Fair estimations of portion size by MFR, along with its strong segmentation and classification capabilities, resulted in a generally good agreement between MFR and WFD which would be suited for the identification of dietary patterns, eating habits and regime types. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nutrition Methodology & Assessment)
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12 pages, 685 KiB  
Article
Opiophobia in Emergency Department Healthcare Providers: A Survey in Western Switzerland
by Sarah Bertrand, Gabriel Meynet, Patrick Taffé, Vincent Della Santa, Daniel Fishman, Yvan Fournier, Vincent Frochaux, Vincent Ribordy, Olivier T. Rutschmann and Olivier Hugli
J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10(7), 1353; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10071353 - 25 Mar 2021
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 2508
Abstract
Opiophobia contributes to oligoanalgesia in the emergency department (ED), but its definition varies, and its association to healthcare providers’ personality traits has been scantly explored. Our purpose was to study the different definitions of opiophobia and their association with two personality traits of [...] Read more.
Opiophobia contributes to oligoanalgesia in the emergency department (ED), but its definition varies, and its association to healthcare providers’ personality traits has been scantly explored. Our purpose was to study the different definitions of opiophobia and their association with two personality traits of doctors and nurses working in EDs, namely the stress from uncertainty and risk-taking. We used three online questionnaires: the ‘Attitude Towards Morphine Use’ Score (ATMS), the Stress From Uncertainty Scale (SUS) and the Risk-Taking Scale (RTS). Doctors and nurses from nine hospital EDs in francophone Switzerland were invited to participate. The ATMS score was analyzed according to demographic characteristics, SUS, and RTS. The response rate was 56%, with 57% of respondents being nurses and 63% women. Doctors, less experienced and non-indigenous participants had a significantly higher ATMS (all p ≤ 0.01). The main contributors of the ATMS were the fear of side effects and of addiction. In multivariate analysis, being a doctor, less experience and non-indigenous status were predictive of the ATMS; each point of the SUS increased the ATMS by 0.24 point. The fear of side effects and of addiction were the major contributors of opiophobia among ED healthcare providers; opiophobia was also associated with their personality traits. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Emergency Medicine)
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