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The covid-19 crisis has repercussions on student nurses' training. Many have found themselves on the frontline, confronted with complex and difficult situations to manage, without always having the right support. They have therefore had to learn the palliative care approach on the job, day-to-day, working with the patients.The brutal collective ordeal of the pandemic and lockdown has disrupted the activities and settings of home nurses. The impossible accompaniment at the end of their loved one's life in the hospital, led the family of M. P. to ask for his return to the home. With in-home support, the nursing team, accompanied by the family, provided non-invasive end-of-life care while respecting the patient's wishes.In the palliative care day hospital of Marie-Galène health centre in Bordeaux, care is provided in two different ways through the interdisciplinary individual day hospital and the collective day hospital in the form of group days. In both cases, the palliative approach guides the team's reflection regarding the anticipation of complex situations and quality of life. The health crisis has had a significant impact on the activity of this service.Patients with cancer are more at risk of quickly developing lethal forms of covid-19. Hospitals have therefore had to organise themselves to continue to receive patients while respecting the health measures. It was necessary to think about the best way of maintaining visits, as well as a means of adapting a specific space for palliative care and team thinking for patients cared for in identified palliative care beds.The unprecedented covid-19 health crisis required emergency measures to be put in place. The main aim was to prevent the pandemic from spreading within care homeof Côte Fleurie (14), while limiting the negative effects of the lockdown. It was also necessary to anticipate the support needed by residents receiving palliative care in a new and unique context.What risks does coronavirus pose to people not infected with covid in palliative care? Between certain death and uncertain covid, how can caregivers support what helps patients live while protecting them from what could make them die? It is important to be aware of what is vital to protect, but also examine the advantages and limitations of the digitalisation of care.Faced with the covid-19 epidemic, palliative care professionals, working at home, in nursing homes or hospitals, have played an essential role. They have demonstrated their creativity and ability to adapt in order to change their organisation and continue their missions of supporting, training and guiding patients, their families and professionals in the field.The health crisis, by transforming the physical contact with the patient, has radically changed the way care is delivered in palliative care units. Healthcare workers have had to be able to adapt and address ethical issues to continue to give meaning to patient support while respecting the health measures imposed to limit the spread of the pandemic.The su rge of COVID-1 9 has been an unprecedented cataclysm requiring all health professionals to mobilise themselves in the face of a lethal risk threatening everyone. End-of-life issues have become relevant to all medical specialities, which have suddenly had to face up to a new, improvised clinical approach where deaths have become inevitable and frequent.The covid-19 epidemic and the resulting lockdown measures have undoubtedly led people who are ill, as well as those at risk of becoming ill, to contemplate the notions of risk, uncertainty and death. What effects has this confrontation with the question of death had and what impact will it continue to have on the palliative care approach and the decisions to withhold and withdraw treatment in certain circumstances?The palliative care approach concerns all healthcare professionals involved in patient care and support. In the current context of health crisis, collaboration between medical and non-medical teams, particularly nurses, and the use of anticipatory tools must be developed and particular attention paid to care home residents and their families. Global reflection is required, to give back meaning to care and ensure the human and relational aspects are taken into consideration.The condition of women has vastly improved over recent decades respect of equality, better salary conditions and health status. Although women, like men, are living longer, certain differences in care are emerging. This survey studies the characteristics of women's cardiovascular health, especially in terms of treatment and follow-up.Healthcare workers who refuse to get vaccinated are often accused of exposing their patients to a fatal contamination. Unjust, unproven and decontextualised remarks which the facts refute. Healthcare workers' ethics of responsibility and their generosity have been consistently apparent from the very beginning of this crisis. Should they be forced to have the vaccine? Mandatory vaccination is seen as being in the public interest, but vaccination by consent makes for a more conciliatory approach.

To investigate the magnitude and distribution of concurrent overweight/obesity and anaemia among adult women, adolescent girls and children living in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC).

We selected the most recent Demographic and Health Surveys with anthropometric and Hb level measures. Prevalence estimates and 95 % CI of concurrent overweight/obesity and anaemia were calculated for every country, overall and stratified by household wealth quintile, education level, area of residence and sex (for children only). Regional and overall pooled prevalences were estimated using a random-effects model. DOTAP chloride cell line We measured gaps, expressed in percentage points, to display inequalities in the distribution of the double burden of malnutrition (DBM).

Nationally representative surveys from fifty-two LMIC.

Adult women (n 825 769) aged 20-49 years, adolescent girls (n 192 631) aged 15-19 years and children (n 391 963) aged 6-59 months.

The pooled prevalence of concurrent overweight/obesity and anaemia was 12·4 % (95 % CI 11·1, 13·7) among adult women, 4·5 % (95 % CI 4·0, 5·0) among adolescent girls and 3·0 % (95 % CI 2·7, 3·3) among children.

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