16 results on '"Wilson DR"'
Search Results
2. An exploration of teacher and school-based nurse perceptions of current HPV education offered to students 15–16 years old in post-primary schools in Northern Ireland, UK.
- Author
-
Flood, Terri, McLaughlin, Dr. Marian, Wilson, Dr. Iseult, and Hughes, Ciara M.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN papillomavirus , *NURSES' attitudes , *HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines , *VACCINE hesitancy , *MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
Introduction: Human papillomavirus virus (HPV) is highest among young adults 15–24 years old. High-risk strains are responsible for the development of cancers including cervical, vaginal, vulvar, anal, oropharyngeal and penile. Despite HPV school-based vaccination programmes in the UK, HPV vaccination uptake rates continue to fluctuate due to misinformation and vaccine hesitancy post COVID-19. The aim of this study is to explore perceptions of post-primary school teachers and nurses regarding the current HPV education provision and the need to provide HPV education to students 15–17 years old when they are most likely to be becoming sexually active. Methods: A qualitative study was conducted using online semi-structured interviews between February-August 2022 with post-primary teachers and nurses in Northern Ireland, UK. Stratified random sampling was used to contact schools to recruit participants. Recruitment continued until data saturation was reached. Braun & Clarke's six-phase framework for reflexive thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. Results: Twelve teachers and six nurses participated in the study. Four themes arose based on the analysis including 1) the importance of HPV education 2) self-consent to the HPV vaccine 3) design of the HPV education and 4) delivery of the HPV education. Identified barriers to implementation of HPV education included lack of parental education, religion and the conservative culture of Northern Ireland. Discussion: Participants perceived HPV education to be poor or non-existent in their schools but placed high importance on this education. They indicated that a non-judgemental health professional would be the ideal person to deliver interactive HPV education as part of a mandated spiral curriculum. Conclusion: HPV education at 15–17 years old provides students with an opportunity to learn about their HPV risk, their HPV vaccination status and an opportunity to self-consent to the HPV vaccine. The Education Authority and Department of Health should support health professionals to deliver consistent robust HPV health information to students of this age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Book reviews. Psychic assaults and frightened clinicians: countertransference in forensic settings.
- Author
-
Wilson DR and Biley FC
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Book reviews.
- Author
-
Lombardo S, Wilson DR, Bruyere MGA, Quinlan C, Dizazzo-Miller R, and Bien A
- Published
- 2010
5. As Time Goes by: Boomerang Marriages, Serial Spouses, Throwback Couples, and Other Romantic Adventures in an Age of Longevity.
- Author
-
Wilson DR and Parsons L
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. What's Normal?
- Author
-
Wilson, Dr Jeni and Shrimpton, Bradley
- Subjects
- *
TOURETTE syndrome , *SELF-esteem , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *JUVENILE diseases - Abstract
Focuses on the nature of Tourette Syndrome (TS). Effects of TS on the self-esteem of a person; Reference to a research on the self-management of TS; Challenges faced by educators in managing children with TS.
- Published
- 2002
7. The Mail.
- Author
-
Cairns, William, Howarth, John B., Wilson, Dr. Don, Parsons, Bronwen, McInnes, Pam, Nutley, Lisa, Mah, Eric, Mackintosh, Anne, Gilson, Marissa, Balan, Ben, Benedetti, Paul, Spencley, Michael Allan, Ray, Ron, Moss, Lori, Dainard, Bill, King, Christopher, and Buikema, Wilma
- Subjects
- *
LETTERS to the editor , *CHRISTIANITY , *INCOME tax , *TAX exemption , *RESPECT for persons - Abstract
Presents letters to the editor. Praise for Maclean's positive report on Christianity; Criticism over Katherine Macklem's complaint that she could not write-off her nanny; Call on parents to tech politeness to their children; Other letters.
- Published
- 2004
8. Localized cartilage assessment with three-dimensional dGEMRIC in asymptomatic hips with normal morphology and cam deformity.
- Author
-
Pollard TC, McNally EG, Wilson DC, Wilson DR, Mädler B, Watson M, Gill HS, Carr AJ, Pollard, T C B, McNally, E G, Wilson, D C, Wilson, D R, Mädler, B, Watson, M, Gill, H S, and Carr, A J
- Abstract
Background: Cam deformities cause femoroacetabular impingement and damage the acetabular labral-chondral complex. The aims of this study were to investigate the potential of delayed gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of cartilage (dGEMRIC) to detect cartilage disease in asymptomatic hips with cam deformities compared with morphologically normal hips, establish whether dGEMRIC could identify advanced disease in hips with positive clinical findings, and establish whether cartilage damage correlated with the severity of the cam deformity.Methods: Subjects were recruited from a prospective study of individuals with a family history of osteoarthritis and their spouses who served as control subjects. Their symptoms and impingement test results were recorded. Asymptomatic hips with normal radiographic joint-space width were placed in a subgroup according to the presence of a cam deformity and the impingement test result. dGEMRIC was performed on a 3-T system, studying two regions of interest: the anterosuperior aspect of the acetabular cartilage (T1(acet)) and the total femoral and acetabular cartilage (T1(total)). The ratio T1(acet)/T1(total) gave the relative glycosaminoglycan content in the anterosuperior aspect of the acetabular cartilage. The cohort was placed in subgroups by joint morphology, impingement test status, and genetic predisposition; the mean T1 scores were compared, and the alpha angle and T1 were correlated.Results: Of thirty-two subjects (mean age, fifty-two years), nineteen had cam deformities. Hips with a cam deformity had reduced acetabular glycosaminoglycan content compared with normal hips (mean T1(acet)/T1(total), 0.949 and 1.093, respectively; p = 0.0008). Hips with a positive impingement test result had global depletion of glycosaminoglycan compared with hips with a negative result (mean T1(total), 625 ms versus 710 ms; p = 0.0152). T1(acet) inversely correlated with the magnitude of the alpha angle (r = -0.483, p = 0.0038), suggesting that the severity of cartilage damage correlates with the magnitude of the cam deformity. All of these differences occurred irrespective of genetic predisposition.Conclusions: The dGEMRIC technique can detect cartilage damage in asymptomatic hips with cam deformities and no radiographic evidence of joint space narrowing. This damage correlates with cam deformity severity. Further study of the application of dGEMRIC as an imaging biomarker of early osteoarthritis is justified to validate its prognostic accuracy, identify subjects for clinical trials, and evaluate the effectiveness of surgical procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The role of complex emotions in inconsistent diagnoses of schizophrenia.
- Author
-
Gara MA, Vega WA, Lesser I, Escamilla M, Lawson WB, Wilson DR, Fleck DE, and Strakowski SM
- Abstract
In the case of large-scale epidemiological studies, there is evidence of substantial disagreement when lay diagnoses of schizophrenia based on structured interviews are compared with expert diagnoses of the same patients. Reasons for this level of disagreement are investigated in the current study, which made use of advances in text-mining techniques and associated structural representations of language expressions. Specifically, the current study examined whether content analyses of transcribed diagnostic interviews obtained from 150 persons with serious psychiatric disorders yielded any discernable patterns that correlated with diagnostic inconsistencies of schizophrenia. In summary, it was found that the patterning or structure of spontaneous self-reports of emotion states in the diagnostic interview was associated with diagnostic inconsistencies of schizophrenia, irrespective of confounders; i.e., age of patient, gender, or ethnicity. In particular, complex emotion patterns were associated with greater disagreement between experts and trained lay interviewers than were simpler patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Book reviews.
- Author
-
Cheeks JM, Greenawalt JA, Gray-Graves A, Ghesquiere A, Wilson DR, Wilson WA, and Keller MJ
- Published
- 2010
11. Relationship between varus-valgus alignment and patellar kinematics in individuals with knee osteoarthritis.
- Author
-
McWalter EJ, Cibere J, MacIntyre NJ, Nicolaou S, Schulzer M, Wilson DR, McWalter, Emily J, Cibere, Jolanda, MacIntyre, Norma J, Nicolaou, Savvas, Schulzer, Michael, and Wilson, David R
- Abstract
Background: Abnormal varus-valgus alignment is a risk factor for patellofemoral osteoarthritis, but tibiofemoral alignment alone does not explain compartmental patellofemoral osteoarthritis progression. Other mechanical factors, such as patellar kinematics, probably play a role in the initiation and progression of the disease. The objective of this study was to determine which three-dimensional patellar kinematic parameters (patellar flexion, spin, and tilt and patellar proximal, lateral, and anterior translation) are associated with varus and valgus alignment in subjects with osteoarthritis.Methods: Ten individuals with knee osteoarthritis and varus (five subjects) or valgus (five subjects) knee alignment underwent assessment of three-dimensional patellar kinematics. We used a validated magnetic resonance imaging-based method to measure three-dimensional patellar kinematics in knee flexion while the subjects pushed against a pedal with constant load (80 N). A linear random-effects model was used to test the null hypothesis that there was no difference in the relationship between tibiofemoral flexion and patellar kinematics between the varus and valgus groups.Results: Patellar spin was significantly different between groups (p = 0.0096), with the varus group having 2 degrees of constant internal spin and the valgus group having 4.5 degrees of constant external spin. In the varus group, the patellae tracked with a constant medial tilt of 9.6 degrees with flexion, which was significantly different (p = 0.0056) from the increasing medial tilt (at a rate of 1.8 degrees per 10 degrees of increasing knee flexion) in the valgus group. The patellae of the valgus group were 7.5 degrees more extended (p = 0.0093) and positioned 8.8 mm more proximally (p = 0.0155) than the varus group through the range of flexion that was studied. The pattern of anterior translation differed between the groups (p = 0.0011).Conclusions: Our results suggest that authors of future large-scale studies of the relationships between knee mechanics and patellofemoral osteoarthritis should not rely solely on measurements of tibiofemoral alignment and should assess three-dimensional patellar kinematics directly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
12. Book reviews.
- Author
-
Brassard A, Brescia W, Jacobs BJ, and Wilson DR
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Biomechanical evaluation of the Total Facet Arthroplasty System: 3-dimensional kinematics.
- Author
-
Zhu Q, Larson CR, Sjovold SG, Rosler DM, Keynan O, Wilson DR, Cripton PA, and Oxland TR
- Abstract
STUDY DESIGN: An in vitro biomechanical study to quantify 3-dimensional kinematics of the lumbar spine following facet arthroplasty. OBJECTIVES: To compare the multidirectional flexibility properties and helical axis of motion of the Total Facet Arthroplasty System (TFAS) (Archus Orthopedics, Redmond, WA) to the intact condition and to posterior pedicle screw fixation. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Facet arthroplasty in the lumbar spine is a new concept in the field of spinal surgery. The kinematic behavior of any complete facet arthroplasty device in the lumbar spine has not been reported previously. METHODS: Flexibility tests were conducted on 13 cadaveric specimens in an intact and injury model, and after stabilization with the TFAS and posterior pedicle screw fixation at the L4-L5 level. A pure moment of +/-10 Nm with a compressive follower preload of 600 N was applied to the specimen in flexion-extension, axial rotation, and lateral bending. Range of motion (ROM), neutral zone, and helical axis of motion were calculated for the L4-L5 segment. RESULTS: ROM with the TFAS was 81% of intact in flexion (P = 0.035), 68% in extension (P = 0.079), 88% in lateral bending (P = 0.042), and 128% in axial rotation (P = 0.013). The only significant change in neutral zone with TFAS compared to the intact was an increase in axial rotation (P = 0.011). The only significant difference in helical axis of motion location or orientation between the TFAS and intact condition was an anterior shift of the helical axis of motion in axial rotation (P = 0.013). CONCLUSIONS: The TFAS allowed considerable motion in all directions tested, with ROM being less than the intact in flexion and lateral bending, and greater than the intact in axial rotation. The helical axis of motion with the TFAS was not different from intact in flexion-extension and lateral bending, but it was shifted anteriorly in axial rotation. The kinematics of the TFAS were more similar to the intact spine than were the kinematics of the posterior fixation when applied to a destabilized lumbar spine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Patellofemoral joint kinematics in individuals with and without patellofemoral pain syndrome.
- Author
-
MacIntyre NJ, Hill NA, Fellows RA, Ellis RE, Wilson DR, MacIntyre, N J, Hill, N A, Fellows, R A, Ellis, R E, and Wilson, D R
- Abstract
Background: Patellofemoral pain syndrome is a prevalent condition in young people. While it is widely believed that abnormal patellar tracking plays a role in the development of patellofemoral pain syndrome, this link has not been established. The purpose of this cross-sectional case-control study was to test the hypothesis that patterns of patellar spin, tilt, and lateral translation make it possible to distinguish individuals with patellofemoral pain syndrome and clinical evidence of patellar malalignment from those with patellofemoral pain syndrome and no clinical evidence of malalignment and from individuals with no knee problems.Methods: Three-dimensional patellofemoral joint kinematics in one knee of each of sixty volunteers (twenty in each group described above) were assessed with use of a new, validated magnetic resonance imaging-based method. Static low-resolution scans of the loaded knee were acquired at five different angles of knee flexion (ranging between -4 degrees and 60 degrees). High-resolution geometric models of the patella, femur, and tibia and associated coordinate axes were registered to the bone positions on the low-resolution scans to determine the patellar motion as a function of knee flexion angle. Hierarchical modeling was used to identify group differences in patterns of patellar spin, tilt, and lateral translation.Results: No differences in the overall pattern of patellar motion were observed among groups (p>0.08 for all global maximum likelihood ratio tests). Features of patellar spin and tilt patterns varied greatly between subjects across all three groups, and no significant group differences were detected. At 19 degrees of knee flexion, the patellae in the group with patellofemoral pain and clinical evidence of malalignment were positioned an average of 2.25 mm more laterally than the patellae in the control group, and this difference was marginally significant (p=0.049). Other features of the pattern of lateral translation did not differ, and large overlaps in values were observed across all groups.Conclusions: It cannot be determined from our cross-sectional study whether the more lateral position of the patella in the group with clinical evidence of malalignment preceded or followed the onset of symptoms. It is clear from the data that an individual with patellofemoral pain syndrome cannot be distinguished from a control subject by examining patterns of spin, tilt, or lateral translation of the patella, even when clinical evidence of mechanical abnormality was observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
15. The effects of medialization and anteromedialization of the tibial tubercle on patellofemoral mechanics and kinematics.
- Author
-
Ramappa AJ, Apreleva M, Harrold FR, Fitzgibbons PG, Wilson DR, and Gill TJ
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medialization and anteromedialization of the tibial tubercle are used to correct patellar subluxation in adults. PURPOSE: To compare the effects of the 2 osteotomies on patellofemoral joint contact pressures and kinematics. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: Tibial tubercle osteotomies were performed on 10 cadaveric human knees. The knees were tested between 0 degrees and 90 degrees of flexion while dynamic patellofemoral joint contact pressure and kinematic data were simultaneously obtained. Four conditions were tested: normal knee alignment, simulated increased Q angle, postmedialization of the tibial tubercle, and postanteromedialization of the tubercle. RESULTS: An increased Q angle laterally translated the patella, shifted force to the lateral facet, and increased patella contact pressures. Both medialization and anteromedialization partially corrected the abnormal contact pressures. Medialization partially corrected the shift of force to the lateral facet induced by an increased Q angle, whereas the anteromedialization could not. Both medialization and anteromedialization corrected the patella maltracking. CONCLUSION: Medialization and anteromedialization are equivalent in their ability to correct abnormal patellar mechanics and kinematics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Validation of a novel minimally invasive intervertebral disc pressure sensor utilizing in-fiber Bragg gratings in a porcine model: an ex vivo study.
- Author
-
Dennison CR, Wild PM, Dvorak MF, Wilson DR, and Cripton PA
- Abstract
STUDY DESIGN: Nucleus pressure was measured within porcine intervertebral discs (IVDs) with a novel in-fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensor (0.4 mm diameter) and a strain gauge (SG) sensor (2.45 mm). OBJECTIVE: To validate the accuracy of a new FBG pressure sensor designed for minimally invasive measurements of nucleus pressure. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Although its clinical utility is controversial, it is possible that the predictive accuracy of discography can be improved with IVD pressure measurements. These measurements are typically obtained using needle-mounted SG sensors inserted into the nucleus. However, by virtue of their size, SG sensors alter disc mechanics, injure anulus fibers, and can potentially initiate or accelerate degenerative changes thereby limiting their utility particularly clinically. METHODS: Six functional spinal units were loaded in compression from 0 N to 500 N and back to 0 N; nucleus pressure was measured using the FBG and SG sensors at various locations along anterior and anterolateral axes. RESULTS: On average maximum IVD pressures measured using the FBG and SG sensors were within 9.39% of each other. However, differences between maximum measured pressures from the FBG and SG sensors were larger (22.2%) when the SG sensor interfered with vertebral endplates (P < 0.05). The insertion of the FBG sensor did not result in visible damage to the anulus, whereas insertion of the SG sensor resulted in large perforations in the anulus through which nucleus material was visible. CONCLUSION: The new FBG sensor is smaller and less invasive than any previously reported disc pressure sensor and gave results consistent with previous disc pressure studies and the SG sensor. There is significant potential to use this sensor during discography while avoiding the controversy associated with disc injury as a result of sensor insertion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.