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3 raisons identifiées
Plateau technique de référence
Assistance publique – Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP) — équipements et expertise pointus pour les cas complexes
Praticien-chercheur
8 articles scientifiques publiés — formation continue solide
Délais de RDV courts dans la région
136 rhumatos / 100 000 hab. — département bien doté
10 publications sur 5 ans
✨ Génération du profil synthétique IA en cours…
Données ANS publiques (Licence Ouverte 2.0) · Enrichissements MonRhumato 100 % opt-in · Toute personne référencée peut demander la suppression ou la rectification.
Indicateurs publics agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres scientifiques (OpenAlex, PubMed). Traduits ici en langage patient.
Influence scientifique
4
4 articles ont été cités au moins 4fois par d'autres chercheurs — preuve que ses travaux sont repris par la communauté médicale.
h-index
Total citations reçues
59
Nombre de fois où d'autres équipes ont mentionné ses publications dans leurs propres travaux.
Publications totales
15
Articles, revues et chapitres référencés dans les bases académiques internationales.
Articles influents
2
Publications ayant marqué leur domaine — chacune citée au moins 10 fois par d'autres chercheurs.
i10-index
Thématiques principales
Affiliations FR : Hôpital Beaujon · Assistance Publique – Hôpitaux de Paris
Source : OpenAlex (CC0, OurResearch). Indicateurs académiques agrégés sur 250 M+ d'œuvres.
Articles déposés en accès libre sur l'archive ouverte des universités françaises (HAL) — gage d'activité de recherche en France.
Effects of COVID-19 disinfection recommendations on microbial environment contamination: focus on emergency physicians’ stethoscopes and smartphones
2025ArticleInternational Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health
Assessment of real-time electrocardiogram effects on interpretation quality by emergency physicians
2023ArticleBMC Medical Education
Effects of anticipated prescription of radiography by the triage nurse on the waiting time in an emergency department
2023ArticleInternational Emergency Nursing
Source : HAL — archive ouverte CCSD/CNRS (couvre articles, chapitres EMC, communications congrès, thèses).
GHU APHP NUP SITE BEAUJON
100 BD DU GENERAL LECLERC, 92118 CLICHY CEDEX
Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).
Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).
European journal of pain (London, England) · 2002
The present study investigates the effectiveness of Erikson hypnosis and Jacobson relaxation for the reduction of osteoarthritis pain. Participants reporting pain from hip or knee osteoarthritis were randomly assigned to one of the following conditions: (a) hypnosis (i.e. standardized eight‐session hypnosis treatment); (b) relaxation (i.e. standardized eight sessions of Jacobson's relaxation treatment); (c) control (i.e. waiting list). Overall, results show that the two experimental groups had a lower level of subjective pain than the control group and that the level of subjective pain decreased with time. An interaction effect between group treatment and time measurement was also observed in which beneficial effects of treatment appeared more rapidly for the hypnosis group. Results also show that hypnosis and relaxation are effective in reducing the amount of analgesic medication taken by participants. Finally, the present results suggest that individual differences in imagery moderate the effect of the psychological treatment at the 6 month follow‐up but not at previous times of measurement (i.e. after 4 weeks of treatment, after 8 weeks of treatment and at the 3 month follow‐up). The results are interpreted in terms of psychological processes underlying hypnosis, and their implications for the psychological treatment of pain are discussed. © 2002 European Federation of Chapters of the Association for the Study of Pain
Emergency medicine journal : EMJ · 2017
BackgroundAlthough prehospital cardiac arrest (CA) remains associated with poor long-term outcome, recent studies show an improvement in the survival rate after prehospital trauma associated CA (TCA). However, data on the long-term neurological outcome of TCA, particularly from physician-staffed Emergency Medical Service (EMS), are scarce, and results reported have been inconsistent. The objective of this pilot study was to evaluate the long-term outcome of patients admitted to several trauma centres after a TCA.MethodsThis study is a retrospective database review of all patients from a multicentre prospective registry that experienced a TCA and had undergone successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) prior their admission at the trauma centre. The primary end point was neurological outcome at 6 months among patients who survived to hospital discharge.Results88 victims of TCA underwent successful CPR and were admitted to the hospital, 90% of whom were victims of blunt trauma. Of these 88 patients, 10 patients (11%; CI 95% 6% to 19%) survived to discharge: on discharge, 9 patients displayed a GCS of 15 and Cerebral Performance Categories (CPC) 1–2 and one patient had a GCS 7 and CPC of 3. Hypoxia was the most frequent cause of CA among survivors. 6-month follow-up was achieved for 9 patients of the 10 surviving patients. The 9 patients with a good outcome on hospital discharge had a CPC of 1 or 2 6 months post discharge. All returned to their premorbid family and social settings.ConclusionsAmong patients admitted to hospital after successful CPR from TCA, hypoxia as the likely aetiology of arrest carried a more favourable prognosis. Most of the patients successfully resuscitated from TCA and surviving to hospital discharge had a good neurological outcome, suggesting that prehospital resuscitation may not be futile.
Prehospital and disaster medicine · 2020
AbstractCoronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), a new respiratory disease, is spreading globally. In France, Emergency Medical Service (EMS) teams are mobile medicalized resuscitation teams composed of emergency physician, nurse or anesthesiologist nurse, ambulance driver, and resident. Four types of clinical cases are presented here because they have led these EMS teams to change practices in their management of patients suspected of COVID-19 infection: cardiac arrest, hypoxia on an acute pneumonia, acute chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation with respiratory and hemodynamic disorders, and upper function disorders in a patient in a long-term care facility. The last case raised the question of COVID-19 cases with atypical forms in elderly subjects. Providers were contaminated during the management of these patients. These cases highlighted the need to review the way these EMS teams are responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, in view of heightening potential for early identification of suspicious cases, and of reinforcing the application of staff protection equipment to limit risk of contamination.
Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).
International journal of emergency medicine · 2026 · Journal Article
Lamamri M, Holleville M, David R, Aubert S, et al.
International journal of occupational medicine and environmental health · 2025 · Journal Article
Vaittinada Ayar P, Cassagne A, Vaittinada Ayar P, Ferrao B, et al.
BMC medical education · 2023 · Journal Article
Perrichot A, Vaittinada Ayar P, Taboulet P, Choquet C, et al.
Medical education · 2021 · Journal Article
Vaittinada Ayar P, Casalino E, Curac S, Gay M
Emergency medicine journal : EMJ · 2017 · Journal Article
Duchateau FX, Hamada S, Raux M, Gay M, et al.
Prehospital and disaster medicine · 2020 · Case Reports
Ghazali DA, Ouersighni A, Gay M, Audebault V, et al.
Journal of viral hepatitis · 2025 · Journal Article
Vaittinada Ayar P, Abdelkader J, Gay M, Allali R, et al.
European journal of pain (London, England) · 2002 · Clinical Trial
Gay MC, Philippot P, Luminet O
Assessment of real-time electrocardiogram effects on interpretation quality by emergency physicians
Abstract Background Electrocardiogram (ECG) is one of the most commonly performed examinations in emergency medicine. The literature suggests that one-third of ECG interpretations contain errors and can lead to clinical
Assessment of real-time electrocardiogram effects on interpretation quality by emergency physicians
Abstract Background Electrocardiogram (ECG) is one of the most commonly performed examinations in emergency medicine. The literature suggests that one-third of ECG interpretations contain errors and can lead to clinical
Source : DataCite — DOIs pour datasets, logiciels, protocoles, registres patient. Hors articles (déjà couverts).