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A Real-World Clinical Study of First-Time User of OC-01 (Varenicline Nasal Spray- Tyrvaya) For Dry Eye Disease-The Compliance and Acceptability

Purpose: To investigate the compliance and acceptance of first time using nasal spray OC-01 (Tyrvaya) for dry eye in order to study the potential strategy to improve the usage. Method: Twenty patients with DED either having resistance to eye drops therapy or having difficulty applying eye drops were included from January 2023 to July 4, 2023. A sample of one bottle of Varenicline was given to patients to spray both nasal cavities two times a day for two weeks. Detailed instructions and possible side effects were given according to the pharmaceutical pamphlets. The second bottle was given to those patients who stopped for the first bottle for the second chance to try. Questionnaire consisted of the following questions: 1) In two weeks did you stop the treatment? If you did stop and cannot continue, what was the reason? 2) were your dry eye symptoms being less and you can accept this treatment and continue? 3) How did the second bottle work? Result: Out of 20 patients, 18 responded (90%). 56% had good response with either mild side effect or can tolerate well and experience improvement in dry eye. 44% had poor response with sneezing, cough, nasal irritation resulting in abandoning the nasal spray. The second bottle improved the discontinue rate to 17%and good response rate to 83%. There was 1.1% lost follow up. Conclusion: The first-time successful rate of using nasal spray of Tyrvaya is about 56%. The discontinuation rate was about 44%. Second bottle with further education had better successful rate. The discontinuation rate improved to 17% and the successful rate to 83%. Education and reinforcement may increase the acceptance and compliance for patients who are indicated for the medication.

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The Lived Experience of Nurses Applying with Postmortem Care: A Qualitative Evidence Synthesis

COVID‐19 is an ongoing pandemic and alarming public health issue throughout the globe. Nursing staff encounter patient deaths many times throughout their careers. The death of a patient is one of the most common stressors associated with their clinical duties. Failing to address these issues mystifies the experience and leads to nurses suppressing their emotions out of fear and discomfort. These barriers hold nurses back from reflecting and prevent them from effectively coping with patient deaths, which negatively impacts their physical and mental health .A qualitative evidence synthesis was conducted to assess the experience of nursing staff with patient deaths and during postmortem care. The databases were searched for qualitative studies published after 2009. The search resulted in a total of 802 articles that were screened for eligibility. Duplicate studies were excluded. After eligibility screening, four qualitative studies on nurses’ experience of patient deaths and postmortem care were identified and included in the analysis. An integrated analysis was conducted on the four qualitative studies. The studies were based in the United States, South Africa, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom. A total of 30 nursing staff reported their experiences of postmortem care. Three themes were identified: concerns associated with postmortem care, anxiety associated with death, and emotional alienation.

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