PubMed COVID-19 Clinical Care
60621 - 60630 of 63288 results found
The importance of trust in the relation between COVID-19 information from social media and well-being among adolescents and young adults
Description
During the COVID-19 pandemic, young people have been exposed to distressing content about COVID-19 without knowing whether they can trust such content. This indicates a need to examine the effects of social media use on mental health and well-being
Comparison of alcohol consumption and tobacco use among Korean adolescents before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
Description
CONCLUSION: This study found that alcohol and tobacco use were reduced among Korean adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the decrease, future research on the potential effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on adolescents is warranted.
Exergaming Among Young Adults in Canada: Longitudinal Study
Description
CONCLUSIONS: Although starting and sustaining exergaming did not appear to help exergamers maintain pre-pandemic PA levels, exergaming can contribute a substantial proportion of total PA in young adults and may still represent a useful option to
Brain Leukocytes as the Potential Therapeutic Target for Post-COVID-19 Brain Fog
Description
After recovering from the acute phase of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), many patients struggle with additional symptoms of long COVID during the chronic phase. Among them, the neuropsychiatric manifestations characterized by a short-term memory
An Evaluation of a Narrative Expressive Writing Program for Nurses During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Description
CONCLUSION: Narrative expressive writing is an accessible intervention with the potential to decrease stress. This program is a flexible, personalized model that managers can offer to staff to promote healthy coping strategies.
Identifying a more severe emergent COVID-19 variant using Emergency Departments' routinely collected clinical measures
Description
CONCLUSION: The mPRIEST score was significantly higher for patients for whom the predominant circulating variant was Delta than those for whom the predominant circulating variant was Omicron. This finding is consistent with international reporting of
COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and associated factors among adult clients at public hospitals in eastern Ethiopia using the health belief model: multicentre cross-sectional study
Description
CONCLUSION: COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among the adult population was low compared to other study. Factors associated with COVID-19 vaccine acceptance were age, college and above level of education, having a chronic disease, having health insurance
SARS CoV-2 Genetic Jump to a New SARS CoV-3 Pandemic: Let's Be Prepared
Description
No abstract
The need to nurture Aotearoa New Zealand's healthcare workforce
Description
This commentary examines the ethical significance of recently published research demonstrating the extent to which healthcare workers experienced stress and increased challenges in the workplace due to inadequate access to personal protective
