411 results on '"McKinlay A"'
Search Results
2. Thresholds for adding degraded tropical forest to the conservation estate
- Author
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Ewers, Robert M., Orme, C. David L., Pearse, William D., Zulkifli, Nursyamin, Yvon-Durocher, Genevieve, Yusah, Kalsum M., Yoh, Natalie, Yeo, Darren C. J., Wong, Anna, Williamson, Joseph, Wilkinson, Clare L., Wiederkehr, Fabienne, Webber, Bruce L., Wearn, Oliver R., Wai, Leona, Vollans, Maisie, Twining, Joshua P., Turner, Edgar C., Tobias, Joseph A., Thorley, Jack, Telford, Elizabeth M., Teh, Yit Arn, Tan, Heok Hui, Swinfield, Tom, Svátek, Martin, Struebig, Matthew, Stork, Nigel, Sleutel, Jani, Slade, Eleanor M., Sharp, Adam, Shabrani, Adi, Sethi, Sarab S., Seaman, Dave J. I., Sawang, Anati, Roxby, Gabrielle Briana, Rowcliffe, J. Marcus, Rossiter, Stephen J., Riutta, Terhi, Rahman, Homathevi, Qie, Lan, Psomas, Elizabeth, Prairie, Aaron, Poznansky, Frederica, Pillay, Rajeev, Picinali, Lorenzo, Pianzin, Annabel, Pfeifer, Marion, Parrett, Jonathan M., Noble, Ciar D., Nilus, Reuben, Mustaffa, Nazirah, Mullin, Katherine E., Mitchell, Simon, Mckinlay, Amelia R., Maunsell, Sarah, Matula, Radim, Massam, Michael, Martin, Stephanie, Malhi, Yadvinder, Majalap, Noreen, Maclean, Catherine S., Mackintosh, Emma, Luke, Sarah H., Lewis, Owen T., Layfield, Harry J., Lane-Shaw, Isolde, Kueh, Boon Hee, Kratina, Pavel, Konopik, Oliver, Kitching, Roger, Kinneen, Lois, Kemp, Victoria A., Jotan, Palasiah, Jones, Nick, Jebrail, Evyen W., Hroneš, Michal, Heon, Sui Peng, Hemprich-Bennett, David R., Haysom, Jessica K., Harianja, Martina F., Hardwick, Jane, Gregory, Nichar, Gray, Ryan, Gray, Ross E. J., Granville, Natasha, Gill, Richard, Fraser, Adam, Foster, William A., Folkard-Tapp, Hollie, Fletcher, Robert J., Fikri, Arman Hadi, Fayle, Tom M., Faruk, Aisyah, Eggleton, Paul, Edwards, David P., Drinkwater, Rosie, Dow, R.A. (Rory), Döbert, Timm F., Didham, Raphael K., Dickinson, Katharine J. M., Deere, Nicolas J., de Lorm, Tijmen, Dawood, Mahadimenakbar M., Davison, Charles W., Davies, Zoe G., Davies, Richard G., Dančák, Martin, Cusack, Jeremy, Clare, Elizabeth L., Chung, Arthur, Chey, Vun Khen, Chapman, Philip M., Cator, Lauren, Carpenter, Daniel, Carbone, Chris, Calloway, Kerry, Bush, Emma R., Burslem, David F. R. P., Brown, Keiron D., Brooks, Stephen J., Brasington, Ella, Brant, Hayley, Boyle, Michael J. W., Both, Sabine, Blackman, Joshua, Bishop, Tom R., Bicknell, Jake E., Bernard, Henry, Basrur, Saloni, Barclay, Maxwell V. L., Barclay, Holly, Atton, Georgina, Ancrenaz, Marc, Aldridge, David C., Daniel, Olivia Z., Reynolds, Glen, Banks-Leite, Cristina, Ewers, Robert M., Orme, C. David L., Pearse, William D., Zulkifli, Nursyamin, Yvon-Durocher, Genevieve, Yusah, Kalsum M., Yoh, Natalie, Yeo, Darren C. J., Wong, Anna, Williamson, Joseph, Wilkinson, Clare L., Wiederkehr, Fabienne, Webber, Bruce L., Wearn, Oliver R., Wai, Leona, Vollans, Maisie, Twining, Joshua P., Turner, Edgar C., Tobias, Joseph A., Thorley, Jack, Telford, Elizabeth M., Teh, Yit Arn, Tan, Heok Hui, Swinfield, Tom, Svátek, Martin, Struebig, Matthew, Stork, Nigel, Sleutel, Jani, Slade, Eleanor M., Sharp, Adam, Shabrani, Adi, Sethi, Sarab S., Seaman, Dave J. I., Sawang, Anati, Roxby, Gabrielle Briana, Rowcliffe, J. Marcus, Rossiter, Stephen J., Riutta, Terhi, Rahman, Homathevi, Qie, Lan, Psomas, Elizabeth, Prairie, Aaron, Poznansky, Frederica, Pillay, Rajeev, Picinali, Lorenzo, Pianzin, Annabel, Pfeifer, Marion, Parrett, Jonathan M., Noble, Ciar D., Nilus, Reuben, Mustaffa, Nazirah, Mullin, Katherine E., Mitchell, Simon, Mckinlay, Amelia R., Maunsell, Sarah, Matula, Radim, Massam, Michael, Martin, Stephanie, Malhi, Yadvinder, Majalap, Noreen, Maclean, Catherine S., Mackintosh, Emma, Luke, Sarah H., Lewis, Owen T., Layfield, Harry J., Lane-Shaw, Isolde, Kueh, Boon Hee, Kratina, Pavel, Konopik, Oliver, Kitching, Roger, Kinneen, Lois, Kemp, Victoria A., Jotan, Palasiah, Jones, Nick, Jebrail, Evyen W., Hroneš, Michal, Heon, Sui Peng, Hemprich-Bennett, David R., Haysom, Jessica K., Harianja, Martina F., Hardwick, Jane, Gregory, Nichar, Gray, Ryan, Gray, Ross E. J., Granville, Natasha, Gill, Richard, Fraser, Adam, Foster, William A., Folkard-Tapp, Hollie, Fletcher, Robert J., Fikri, Arman Hadi, Fayle, Tom M., Faruk, Aisyah, Eggleton, Paul, Edwards, David P., Drinkwater, Rosie, Dow, R.A. (Rory), Döbert, Timm F., Didham, Raphael K., Dickinson, Katharine J. M., Deere, Nicolas J., de Lorm, Tijmen, Dawood, Mahadimenakbar M., Davison, Charles W., Davies, Zoe G., Davies, Richard G., Dančák, Martin, Cusack, Jeremy, Clare, Elizabeth L., Chung, Arthur, Chey, Vun Khen, Chapman, Philip M., Cator, Lauren, Carpenter, Daniel, Carbone, Chris, Calloway, Kerry, Bush, Emma R., Burslem, David F. R. P., Brown, Keiron D., Brooks, Stephen J., Brasington, Ella, Brant, Hayley, Boyle, Michael J. W., Both, Sabine, Blackman, Joshua, Bishop, Tom R., Bicknell, Jake E., Bernard, Henry, Basrur, Saloni, Barclay, Maxwell V. L., Barclay, Holly, Atton, Georgina, Ancrenaz, Marc, Aldridge, David C., Daniel, Olivia Z., Reynolds, Glen, and Banks-Leite, Cristina
- Abstract
Logged and disturbed forests are often viewed as degraded and depauperate environments compared with primary forest. However, they are dynamic ecosystems(1) that provide refugia for large amounts of biodiversity2,3, so we cannot afford to underestimate their conservation value4. Here we present empirically defined thresholds for categorizing the conservation value of logged forests, using one of the most comprehensive assessments of taxon responses to habitat degradation in any tropical forest environment. We analysed the impact of logging intensity on the individual occurrence patterns of 1,681 taxa belonging to 86 taxonomic orders and 126 functional groups in Sabah, Malaysia. Our results demonstrate the existence of two conservation-relevant thresholds. First, lightly logged forests (<29% biomass removal) retain high conservation value and a largely intact functional composition, and are therefore likely to recover their pre-logging values if allowed to undergo natural regeneration. Second, the most extreme impacts occur in heavily degraded forests with more than two-thirds (>68%) of their biomass removed, and these are likely to require more expensive measures to recover their biodiversity value. Overall, our data confirm that primary forests are irreplaceable5, but they also reinforce the message that logged forests retain considerable conservation value that should not be overlooked.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pathophysiology from preconception, during pregnancy, and beyond
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Hivert, Marie-France, Backman, Helena, Benhalima, Katrien, Catalano, Patrick, Desoye, Gernot, Immanuel, Jincy, McKinlay, Christopher J. D., Meek, Claire L., Nolan, Christopher J., Ram, Uma, Sweeting, Arianne, Simmons, David, Jawerbaum, Alicia, Hivert, Marie-France, Backman, Helena, Benhalima, Katrien, Catalano, Patrick, Desoye, Gernot, Immanuel, Jincy, McKinlay, Christopher J. D., Meek, Claire L., Nolan, Christopher J., Ram, Uma, Sweeting, Arianne, Simmons, David, and Jawerbaum, Alicia
- Abstract
Gestational diabetes is the most common medical complication in pregnancy. Historically, gestational diabetes was considered a pregnancy complication involving treatment of rising glycaemia late in the second trimester. However, recent evidence challenges this view. Pre-pregnancy and pregnancy-specific factors influence gestational glycaemia, with open questions regarding roles of non-glycaemic factors in the aetiology and consequences of gestational diabetes. Varying patterns of insulin secretion and resistance in early and late pregnancy underlie a heterogeneity of gestational diabetes in the timing and pathophysiological subtypes with clinical implications: early gestational diabetes and insulin resistant gestational diabetes subtypes are associated with a higher risk of pregnancy complications. Metabolic perturbations of early gestational diabetes can affect early placental development, affecting maternal metabolism and fetal development. Fetal hyperinsulinaemia can affect the development of multiple fetal tissues, with short-term and long-term consequences. Pregnancy complications are prevented by managing glycaemia in early and late pregnancy in some, but not all women with gestational diabetes. A better understanding of the pathophysiology and heterogeneity of gestational diabetes will help to develop novel management approaches with focus on improved prevention of maternal and offspring short-term and long-term complications, from pre-conception, throughout pregnancy, and beyond.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Intratracheal budesonide mixed with surfactant to increase survival free of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in extremely preterm infants: statistical analysis plan for the international, multicenter, randomized PLUSS trial
- Author
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Francis, KL, McKinlay, CJD, Kamlin, COF, Cheong, JLY, Dargaville, PA, Dawson, JA, Doyle, LW, Jacobs, SE, Davis, PG, Donath, SM, Manley, BJ, Francis, KL, McKinlay, CJD, Kamlin, COF, Cheong, JLY, Dargaville, PA, Dawson, JA, Doyle, LW, Jacobs, SE, Davis, PG, Donath, SM, and Manley, BJ
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), an inflammatory-mediated chronic lung disease, is common in extremely preterm infants born before 28 weeks' gestation and is associated with an increased risk of adverse neurodevelopmental and respiratory outcomes in childhood. Effective and safe prophylactic therapies for BPD are urgently required. Systemic corticosteroids reduce rates of BPD in the short term but are associated with poorer neurodevelopmental outcomes if given to ventilated infants in the first week after birth. Intratracheal administration of corticosteroid admixed with exogenous surfactant could overcome these concerns by minimizing systemic sequelae. Several small, randomized trials have found intratracheal budesonide in a surfactant vehicle to be a promising therapy to increase survival free of BPD. The primary objective of the PLUSS trial is to determine whether intratracheal budesonide mixed with surfactant increases survival free of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) at 36 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA) in extremely preterm infants born before 28 weeks' gestation. METHODS: An international, multicenter, double-blinded, randomized trial of intratracheal budesonide (a corticosteroid) mixed with surfactant for extremely preterm infants to increase survival free of BPD at 36 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA; primary outcome). Extremely preterm infants aged < 48 h after birth are eligible if (1) they are mechanically ventilated, or (2) they are receiving non-invasive respiratory support and there is a clinical decision to treat with surfactant. The intervention is budesonide (0.25 mg/kg) mixed with poractant alfa (200 mg/kg first intervention, 100 mg/kg if second intervention), administered intratracheally via an endotracheal tube or thin catheter. The comparator is poractant alfa alone (at the same doses). Secondary outcomes include the components of the primary outcome (death, BPD prior to or at 36 weeks' PMA), and potential systemic side effects of cort
- Published
- 2023
5. Intratracheal budesonide mixed with surfactant to increase survival free of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in extremely preterm infants: study protocol for the international, multicenter, randomized PLUSS trial
- Author
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Manley, BJ, Kamlin, COF, Donath, S, Huang, L, Birch, P, Cheong, JLY, Dargaville, PA, Dawson, JA, Doyle, LW, Jacobs, SE, Wilson, R, Davis, PG, McKinlay, CJD, Manley, BJ, Kamlin, COF, Donath, S, Huang, L, Birch, P, Cheong, JLY, Dargaville, PA, Dawson, JA, Doyle, LW, Jacobs, SE, Wilson, R, Davis, PG, and McKinlay, CJD
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), an inflammatory-mediated chronic lung disease, is common in extremely preterm infants born before 28 weeks' gestation and is associated with an increased risk of adverse neurodevelopmental and respiratory outcomes in childhood. Effective and safe prophylactic therapies for BPD are urgently required. Systemic corticosteroids reduce rates of BPD in the short-term but are associated with poorer neurodevelopmental outcomes if given to ventilated infants in the first week after birth. Intratracheal administration of corticosteroid admixed with exogenous surfactant could overcome these concerns by minimizing systemic sequelae. Several small, randomized trials have found intratracheal budesonide in a surfactant vehicle to be a promising therapy to increase survival free of BPD. METHODS: An international, multicenter, double-blinded, randomized trial of intratracheal budesonide (a corticosteroid) mixed with surfactant for extremely preterm infants to increase survival free of BPD at 36 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA; primary outcome). Extremely preterm infants aged < 48 h after birth are eligible if: (1) they are mechanically ventilated, or (2) they are receiving non-invasive respiratory support and there is a clinical decision to treat with surfactant. The intervention is budesonide (0.25 mg/kg) mixed with poractant alfa (200 mg/kg first intervention, 100 mg/kg if second intervention), administered intratracheally via an endotracheal tube or thin catheter. The comparator is poractant alfa alone (at the same doses). Secondary outcomes include the components of the primary outcome (death, BPD prior to or at 36 weeks' PMA), potential systemic side effects of corticosteroids, cost-effectiveness, early childhood health until 2 years of age, and neurodevelopmental outcomes at 2 years of age (corrected for prematurity). DISCUSSION: Combining budesonide with surfactant for intratracheal administration is a simple intervention that may r
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- 2023
6. Lower Versus Higher Glycemic Criteria for Diagnosis of Gestational Diabetes
- Author
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Crowther, CA, Samuel, D, Mccowan, LME, Edlin, R, Tran, T, Mckinlay, CJ, Crowther, CA, Samuel, D, Mccowan, LME, Edlin, R, Tran, T, and Mckinlay, CJ
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- 2023
7. Fetal movements : A framework for antenatal conversations
- Author
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Bradford, Billie F, Cronin, Robin S, Warland, Jane, Akselsson, Anna, Rådestad, Ingela, Heazell, Alexander Ep, McKinlay, Christopher J D, Stacey, Tomasina, Thompson, John M D, McCowan, Lesley M E, Bradford, Billie F, Cronin, Robin S, Warland, Jane, Akselsson, Anna, Rådestad, Ingela, Heazell, Alexander Ep, McKinlay, Christopher J D, Stacey, Tomasina, Thompson, John M D, and McCowan, Lesley M E
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Presentations for decreased fetal movements comprise a significant proportion of acute antenatal assessments. Decreased fetal movements are associated with increased likelihood of adverse pregnancy outcomes including stillbirth. Consensus-based guidelines recommend pregnant women routinely receive information about fetal movements, but practice is inconsistent, and the information shared is frequently not evidence-based. There are also knowledge gaps about the assessment and management of fetal movement concerns. Women have indicated that they would like more accurate information about what to expect regarding fetal movements. DISCUSSION: Historically, fetal movement information has focussed on movement counts. This is problematic, as the number of fetal movements perceived varies widely between pregnant women, and no set number of movements has been established as a reliable indicator of fetal wellbeing. Of late, maternity care providers have also advised women to observe their baby's movement pattern, and promptly present if they notice a change. However, normal fetal movement patterns are rarely defined. Recently, a body of research has emerged relating to maternal perception of fetal movement features such as strength, presence of hiccups, and diurnal pattern as indicators of fetal wellbeing in addition to frequency. CONCLUSION: Sharing comprehensive and gestation-appropriate information about fetal movements may be more satisfying for women, empowering women to identify for themselves when their baby is doing well, and importantly when additional assessment is needed. We propose a conversational approach to fetal movement information sharing, focusing on fetal movement strength, frequency, circadian pattern, and changes with normal fetal development, tailored to the individual.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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8. Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum Vol. LXXIII. Ambrosius, Explanatio symboli, De sacramentis, De mysteriis, De paentientia, De excessu fratris, De obitu Valentiniani, De obitu Theodosii
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McKinlay, Arturi Patch and McKinlay, Arturi Patch
- Published
- 2023
9. 2023 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Pediatric Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; and First Aid Task Forces
- Author
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Berg, K. M., Bray, J. E., Ng, K. -C., Liley, H. G., Greif, R., Carlson, J. N., Morley, P. T., Drennan, I. R., Smyth, M., Scholefield, B. R., Weiner, G. M., Cheng, A., Djarv, T., Abelairas-Gomez, C., Acworth, J., Andersen, L. W., Atkins, D. L., Berry, D. C., Bhanji, F., Bierens, J., Couto, T. B., Borra, V., Bottiger, B. W., Bradley, R. N., Breckwoldt, J., Cassan, P., Chang, W. -T., Charlton, N. P., Chung, S. P., Considine, J., Costa-Nobre, D. T., Couper, K., Dainty, K. N., Dassanayake, V., Davis, P. G., Dawson, J. A., de Almeida, M. F., De Caen, A. R., Deakin, C. D., Dicker, B., Douma, M. J., Eastwood, K., El-Naggar, W., Fabres, J. G., Fawke, J., Fijacko, N., Finn, J. C., Flores, G. E., Foglia, E. E., Folke, F., Gilfoyle, E., Goolsby, C. A., Granfeldt, A., Guerguerian, A. -M., Guinsburg, R., Hatanaka, T., Hirsch, K. G., Holmberg, M. J., Hosono, S., Hsieh, M. -J., Hsu, C. H., Ikeyama, T., Isayama, T., Johnson, N. J., Kapadia, V. S., Kawakami, M. D., Kim, H. -S., Kleinman, M. E., Kloeck, D. A., Kudenchuk, P., Kule, A., Kurosawa, H., Lagina, A. T., Lauridsen, K. G., Lavonas, E. J., Lee, H. C., Lin, Y., Lockey, A. S., Macneil, F., Maconochie, I. K., Madar, R. J., Hansen, C. M., Masterson, S., Matsuyama, T., Mckinlay, C. J. D., Meyran, D., Monnelly, V., Nadkarni, V., Nakwa, F. L., Nation, K. J., Nehme, Z., Nemeth, M., Neumar, R. W., Nicholson, T., Nikolaou, N., Nishiyama, C., Norii, T., Nuthall, G. A., Ohshimo, S., Olasveengen, T. M., Ong, Y. -K. G., Orkin, A. M., Parr, M. J., Patocka, C., Perkins, G. D., Perlman, J. M., Rabi, Y., Raitt, J., Ramachandran, S., Ramaswamy, V. V., Raymond, T. T., Reis, A. G., Reynolds, J. C., Ristagno, G., Rodriguez-Nunez, A., Roehr, C. C., Rudiger, M., Sakamoto, T., Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, T. L., Schexnayder, S. M., Schmolzer, G. M., Schnaubelt, S., Semeraro, F., Singletary, E. M., Skrifvars, M. B., Smith, C. M., Soar, J., Stassen, W., Sugiura, T., Tijssen, J. A., Topjian, A. A., Trevisanuto, D., Vaillancourt, C., Wyckoff, M. H., Wyllie, J. P., Yang, C. -W., Yeung, J., Zelop, C. M., Zideman, D. A., Nolan, J. P., Barcala-Furelos, R., Beerman, S. B., Bruckner, M., Castren, M., Chong, S., Claesson, A., Dunne, C. L., Finan, E., Fukuda, T., Ganesan, S. L., Gately, C., Gois, A., Gray, S., Halamek, L. P., Hoover, A. V., Hurst, C., Josephsen, J., Kollander, L., Kamlin, C. O., Kool, M., Li, L., Mecrow, T. S., Montgomery, W., Ristau, P., Jayashree, M., Schmidt, A., Scquizzato, T. -M., Seesink, J., Sempsrott, J., Solevag, A. L., Strand, M. L., Szpilman, D., Szyld, E., Thom, O., Tobin, J. M., Trang, J., Webber, J., Webster, H. K., Wellsford, M., Sandroni C. (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611), Berg, K. M., Bray, J. E., Ng, K. -C., Liley, H. G., Greif, R., Carlson, J. N., Morley, P. T., Drennan, I. R., Smyth, M., Scholefield, B. R., Weiner, G. M., Cheng, A., Djarv, T., Abelairas-Gomez, C., Acworth, J., Andersen, L. W., Atkins, D. L., Berry, D. C., Bhanji, F., Bierens, J., Couto, T. B., Borra, V., Bottiger, B. W., Bradley, R. N., Breckwoldt, J., Cassan, P., Chang, W. -T., Charlton, N. P., Chung, S. P., Considine, J., Costa-Nobre, D. T., Couper, K., Dainty, K. N., Dassanayake, V., Davis, P. G., Dawson, J. A., de Almeida, M. F., De Caen, A. R., Deakin, C. D., Dicker, B., Douma, M. J., Eastwood, K., El-Naggar, W., Fabres, J. G., Fawke, J., Fijacko, N., Finn, J. C., Flores, G. E., Foglia, E. E., Folke, F., Gilfoyle, E., Goolsby, C. A., Granfeldt, A., Guerguerian, A. -M., Guinsburg, R., Hatanaka, T., Hirsch, K. G., Holmberg, M. J., Hosono, S., Hsieh, M. -J., Hsu, C. H., Ikeyama, T., Isayama, T., Johnson, N. J., Kapadia, V. S., Kawakami, M. D., Kim, H. -S., Kleinman, M. E., Kloeck, D. A., Kudenchuk, P., Kule, A., Kurosawa, H., Lagina, A. T., Lauridsen, K. G., Lavonas, E. J., Lee, H. C., Lin, Y., Lockey, A. S., Macneil, F., Maconochie, I. K., Madar, R. J., Hansen, C. M., Masterson, S., Matsuyama, T., Mckinlay, C. J. D., Meyran, D., Monnelly, V., Nadkarni, V., Nakwa, F. L., Nation, K. J., Nehme, Z., Nemeth, M., Neumar, R. W., Nicholson, T., Nikolaou, N., Nishiyama, C., Norii, T., Nuthall, G. A., Ohshimo, S., Olasveengen, T. M., Ong, Y. -K. G., Orkin, A. M., Parr, M. J., Patocka, C., Perkins, G. D., Perlman, J. M., Rabi, Y., Raitt, J., Ramachandran, S., Ramaswamy, V. V., Raymond, T. T., Reis, A. G., Reynolds, J. C., Ristagno, G., Rodriguez-Nunez, A., Roehr, C. C., Rudiger, M., Sakamoto, T., Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, T. L., Schexnayder, S. M., Schmolzer, G. M., Schnaubelt, S., Semeraro, F., Singletary, E. M., Skrifvars, M. B., Smith, C. M., Soar, J., Stassen, W., Sugiura, T., Tijssen, J. A., Topjian, A. A., Trevisanuto, D., Vaillancourt, C., Wyckoff, M. H., Wyllie, J. P., Yang, C. -W., Yeung, J., Zelop, C. M., Zideman, D. A., Nolan, J. P., Barcala-Furelos, R., Beerman, S. B., Bruckner, M., Castren, M., Chong, S., Claesson, A., Dunne, C. L., Finan, E., Fukuda, T., Ganesan, S. L., Gately, C., Gois, A., Gray, S., Halamek, L. P., Hoover, A. V., Hurst, C., Josephsen, J., Kollander, L., Kamlin, C. O., Kool, M., Li, L., Mecrow, T. S., Montgomery, W., Ristau, P., Jayashree, M., Schmidt, A., Scquizzato, T. -M., Seesink, J., Sempsrott, J., Solevag, A. L., Strand, M. L., Szpilman, D., Szyld, E., Thom, O., Tobin, J. M., Trang, J., Webber, J., Webster, H. K., Wellsford, M., and Sandroni C. (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611)
- Abstract
The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation engages in a continuous review of new, peer-reviewed, published cardiopulmonary resuscitation and first aid science. Draft Consensus on Science With Treatment Recommendations are posted online throughout the year, and this annual summary provides more concise versions of the final Consensus on Science With Treatment Recommendations from all task forces for the year. Topics addressed by systematic reviews this year include resuscitation of cardiac arrest from drowning, extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation for adults and children, calcium during cardiac arrest, double sequential defibrillation, neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest for adults and children, maintaining normal temperature after preterm birth, heart rate monitoring methods for diagnostics in neonates, detection of exhaled carbon dioxide in neonates, family presence during resuscitation of adults, and a stepwise approach to resuscitation skills training. Members from 6 International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task forces have assessed, discussed, and debated the quality of the evidence, using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria, and their statements include consensus treatment recommendations. Insights into the deliberations of the task forces are provided in the Justification and Evidence-to-Decision Framework Highlights sections. In addition, the task forces list priority knowledge gaps for further research. Additional topics are addressed with scoping reviews and evidence updates.
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- 2023
10. 2021 International consensus on cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care science with treatment recommendations
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Wyckoff, MH, Singletary, EM, Soar, J, Olasveengen, TM, Greif, R, Liley, HG, Zideman, D, Bhanji, F, Andersen, LW, Avis, SR, Aziz, K, Bendall, JC, Berry, DC, Borra, V, Böttiger, BW, Bradley, R, Bray, JE, Breckwoldt, J, Carlson, JN, Cassan, P, Castrén, M, Chang, WT, Charlton, NP, Cheng, A, Chung, SP, Costa-Nobre, DT, Dainty, KN, Davis, PG, de Almeida, MF, de Caen, AR, de Paiva, EF, Deakin, CD, Djärv, T, Douma, MJ, Drennan, IR, Duff, JP, Eastwood, KJ, El-Naggar, W, Epstein, JL, Escalante, R, Fabres, JG, Fawke, J, Finn, JC, Foglia, EE, Folke, F, Freeman, K, Gilfoyle, E, Goolsby, CA, Grove, A, Guinsburg, R, Hatanaka, T, Hazinski, MF, Heriot, GS, Hirsch, KG, Holmberg, MJ, Hosono, S, Hsieh, MJ, Hung, KKC, Hsu, CH, Ikeyama, T, Isayama, T, Kapadia, VS, Kawakami, MD, Kim, HS, Kloeck, DA, Kudenchuk, PJ, Lagina, AT, Lauridsen, KG, Lavonas, EJ, Lockey, AS, Hansen, CM, Markenson, D, Matsuyama, T, McKinlay, CJD, Mehrabian, A, Merchant, RM, Meyran, D, Morley, PT, Morrison, LJ, Nation, KJ, Nemeth, M, Neumar, RW, Nicholson, T, Niermeyer, S, Nikolaou, N, Nishiyama, C, O’Neil, BJ, Orkin, AM, Osemeke, O, Parr, MJ, Patocka, C, Pellegrino, JL, Perkins, GD, Perlman, JM, Rabi, Y, Reynolds, JC, Ristagno, G, Roehr, CC, Sakamoto, T, Sandroni, C, Considine, Julie, Wyckoff, MH, Singletary, EM, Soar, J, Olasveengen, TM, Greif, R, Liley, HG, Zideman, D, Bhanji, F, Andersen, LW, Avis, SR, Aziz, K, Bendall, JC, Berry, DC, Borra, V, Böttiger, BW, Bradley, R, Bray, JE, Breckwoldt, J, Carlson, JN, Cassan, P, Castrén, M, Chang, WT, Charlton, NP, Cheng, A, Chung, SP, Costa-Nobre, DT, Dainty, KN, Davis, PG, de Almeida, MF, de Caen, AR, de Paiva, EF, Deakin, CD, Djärv, T, Douma, MJ, Drennan, IR, Duff, JP, Eastwood, KJ, El-Naggar, W, Epstein, JL, Escalante, R, Fabres, JG, Fawke, J, Finn, JC, Foglia, EE, Folke, F, Freeman, K, Gilfoyle, E, Goolsby, CA, Grove, A, Guinsburg, R, Hatanaka, T, Hazinski, MF, Heriot, GS, Hirsch, KG, Holmberg, MJ, Hosono, S, Hsieh, MJ, Hung, KKC, Hsu, CH, Ikeyama, T, Isayama, T, Kapadia, VS, Kawakami, MD, Kim, HS, Kloeck, DA, Kudenchuk, PJ, Lagina, AT, Lauridsen, KG, Lavonas, EJ, Lockey, AS, Hansen, CM, Markenson, D, Matsuyama, T, McKinlay, CJD, Mehrabian, A, Merchant, RM, Meyran, D, Morley, PT, Morrison, LJ, Nation, KJ, Nemeth, M, Neumar, RW, Nicholson, T, Niermeyer, S, Nikolaou, N, Nishiyama, C, O’Neil, BJ, Orkin, AM, Osemeke, O, Parr, MJ, Patocka, C, Pellegrino, JL, Perkins, GD, Perlman, JM, Rabi, Y, Reynolds, JC, Ristagno, G, Roehr, CC, Sakamoto, T, Sandroni, C, and Considine, Julie
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- 2022
11. Feasibility of a randomised controlled trial of two types of written information for people with knee osteoarthritis.
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Darlow, B, Brown, M, Hudson, B, Frew, G, Clark, J, Vincent, L, Abbott, JH, Briggs, AM, Grainger, R, Marra, C, McKinlay, E, Stanley, J, Darlow, B, Brown, M, Hudson, B, Frew, G, Clark, J, Vincent, L, Abbott, JH, Briggs, AM, Grainger, R, Marra, C, McKinlay, E, and Stanley, J
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Test the feasibility of conducting an individually randomised controlled trial recruiting people with knee osteoarthritis (OA) in community pharmacies and evaluate the impacts of a novel information booklet. DESIGN: People with knee OA were identified by pharmacy staff using clinical criteria and randomised to receive a novel information booklet (intervention) or the currently available written OA resource (active control). Mixed-methods process evaluation assessed participant recruitment, retention, and experience. Participant-reported outcome measures, assessing OA illness perceptions, OA knowledge, fear of movement, and pain when walking at baseline and 4-weeks, were analysed using linear regression models (adjusted for baseline). RESULTS: Of 72 eligible people, 64 were randomised to intervention (n = 33) or control (n = 31). The randomisation sequence was followed correctly and no protocol deviations identified. Mean recruitment rate was 2.7 participants per pharmacy per week. One-in-five participants had no educational qualifications and one-in-four had not received a knee OA diagnosis prior to the trial. Three meta-themes emerged from pharmacist and participant qualitative analysis: 'pleased to be asked'; 'easy process'; and 'successful process'. Three participants were lost to follow-up. At 4 weeks, intervention arm Knee Osteoarthritis Knowledge Scale scores improved (mean difference = 3.6, 95%CI 0.7 to 6.5). Brief Illness Perceptions Questionnaire scores were similar between groups (mean difference 0.4, 95%CI -3.7 to 4.5). CONCLUSION: It is feasible to conduct an individually randomised trial in community pharmacy, a potentially effective setting to initiate accessible OA care. A novel information booklet improved OA knowledge, but is unlikely to affect illness perceptions on its own.
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- 2022
12. Adapting Peer Researcher Facilitated Strategies to Recruit People Receiving Mental Health Services to a Tobacco Treatment Trial
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Baker, AL, McCarter, K, Brophy, L, Castle, D, Kelly, PJ, Cocks, N, McKinlay, ML, Brasier, C, Borland, R, Bonevski, B, Segan, C, Baird, DE, Turner, A, Williams, JM, Forbes, E, Hayes, L, Attia, J, Lambkin, D, Barker, D, Sweeney, R, Baker, AL, McCarter, K, Brophy, L, Castle, D, Kelly, PJ, Cocks, N, McKinlay, ML, Brasier, C, Borland, R, Bonevski, B, Segan, C, Baird, DE, Turner, A, Williams, JM, Forbes, E, Hayes, L, Attia, J, Lambkin, D, Barker, D, and Sweeney, R
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: One of the most challenging aspects of conducting intervention trials among people who experience severe mental illness (SMI) and who smoke tobacco, is recruitment. In our parent "QuitLink" randomized controlled trial (RCT), slower than expected peer researcher facilitated recruitment, along with the impact of COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, necessitated an adaptive recruitment response. The objectives of the present study were to: (i) describe adaptive peer researcher facilitated recruitment strategies; (ii) explore the effectiveness of these strategies; (iii) investigate whether recruitment strategies reached different subgroups of participants; and (iv) examine the costs and resources required for implementing these strategies. Finally, we offer experience-based lessons in a Peer Researcher Commentary. METHODS: People were included in the RCT if they smoked at least 10 cigarettes a day and were accessing mental health support from the project's two partnering mental health organizations in Victoria, Australia. The majority of people accessing these services will have been diagnosed with SMI. Recruitment occurred over 2 years. We began with peer facilitated recruitment strategies delivered face-to-face, then replaced this with direct mail postcards followed by telephone contact. In the final 4 months of the study, we began online recruitment, broadening it to people who smoked and were accessing support or treatment (including from general practitioners) for mental health and/or alcohol or other drug problems, anywhere in the state of Victoria. Differences between recruitment strategies on key participant variables were assessed. We calculated the average cost per enrolee of the different recruitment approaches. RESULTS: Only 109 people were recruited from a target of 382: 29 via face-to-face (March 2019 to April 2020), 66 from postcards (May 2020 to November 2020), and 14 from online (November to December 2020 and January to March 2021) strategies.
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- 2022
13. Improving subacute management of post concussion symptoms: a pilot study of the Melbourne Paediatric Concussion Scale parent report.
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Davis, GA, Rausa, VC, Babl, FE, Davies, K, Takagi, M, Crichton, A, McKinlay, A, Anderson, N, Hearps, SJ, Clarke, C, Pugh, R, Dunne, K, Barnett, P, Anderson, V, Davis, GA, Rausa, VC, Babl, FE, Davies, K, Takagi, M, Crichton, A, McKinlay, A, Anderson, N, Hearps, SJ, Clarke, C, Pugh, R, Dunne, K, Barnett, P, and Anderson, V
- Abstract
AIM: To pilot a modification of the Post Concussion Symptom Inventory, the Melbourne Paediatric Concussion Scale (MPCS) and examine its clinical utility. MATERIALS & METHODS: A total of 40 families of concussed children, aged 8-18 years, were recruited from the emergency department. Parent responses to the MPCS in the emergency department and 2-weeks post injury determined child symptomatic status. Association between MPCS symptom endorsement and symptomatic group status was examined. RESULTS: All additional MPCS items were endorsed by at least 25% of the parents of symptomatic children at 2 weeks. MPCS items were classified into nine symptom domains, with most falling in mood, neurological, autonomic and vestibular domains. CONCLUSION: The additional items and domain classifications in the MPCS have the potential to improve subacute diagnostic precision, monitoring of clinical recovery and identification of appropriate interventions post pediatric concussion.
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- 2022
14. The value of compassionate support to address smoking: A qualitative study with people who experience severe mental illness
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McCarter, K, McKinlay, MLL, Cocks, N, Brasier, C, Hayes, L, Baker, ALL, Castle, D, Borland, R, Bonevski, B, Segan, C, Kelly, PJJ, Turner, A, Williams, J, Attia, J, Sweeney, R, Filia, S, Baird, D, Brophy, L, McCarter, K, McKinlay, MLL, Cocks, N, Brasier, C, Hayes, L, Baker, ALL, Castle, D, Borland, R, Bonevski, B, Segan, C, Kelly, PJJ, Turner, A, Williams, J, Attia, J, Sweeney, R, Filia, S, Baird, D, and Brophy, L
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: People experiencing severe mental illness (SMI) smoke at much higher rates than the general population and require additional support. Engagement with existing evidence-based interventions such as quitlines and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) may be improved by mental health peer worker involvement and tailored support. This paper reports on a qualitative study nested within a peer researcher-facilitated tobacco treatment trial that included brief advice plus, for those in the intervention group, tailored quitline callback counseling and combination NRT. It contextualizes participant life experience and reflection on trial participation and offers insights for future interventions. METHODS: Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 29 participants in a randomized controlled trial (intervention group n = 15, control group n = 14) following their 2-month (post-recruitment) follow-up assessments, which marked the end of the "Quitlink" intervention for those in the intervention group. Interviews explored the experience of getting help to address smoking (before and during the trial), perceptions of main trial components including assistance from peer researchers and tailored quitline counseling, the role of NRT, and other support received. A general inductive approach to analysis was applied. RESULTS: We identified four main themes: (1) the long and complex journey of quitting smoking in the context of disrupted lives; (2) factors affecting quitting (desire to quit, psychological and social barriers, and facilitators and reasons for quitting); (3) the perceived benefits of a tailored approach for people with mental ill-health including the invitation to quit and practical resources; and (4) the importance of compassionate delivery of support, beginning with the peer researchers and extended by quitline counselors for intervention participants. Subthemes were identified within each of these overarching main themes. DISCUSSION: The findin
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- 2022
15. 2022 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Pediatric Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; and First Aid Task Forces
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Wyckoff, Myra H., Greif, Robert, Morley, Peter T., Ng, Kee-Chong, Olasveengen, Theresa M., Singletary, Eunice M., Soar, Jasmeet, Cheng, Adam, Drennan, Ian R., Liley, Helen G., Scholefield, Barnaby R., Smyth, Michael A., Welsford, Michelle, Zideman, David A., Acworth, Jason, Aickin, Richard, Andersen, Lars W., Atkins, Diane, Berry, David C., Bhanji, Farhan, Bierens, Joost, Borra, Vere, Bottiger, Bernd W., Bradley, Richard N., Bray, Janet E., Breckwoldt, Jan, Callaway, Clifton W., Carlson, Jestin N., Cassan, Pascal, Castren, Maaret, Chang, Wei-Tien, Charlton, Nathan P., Chung, Sung Phil, Considine, Julie, Costa-Nobre, Daniela T., Couper, Keith, Couto, Thomaz Bittencourt, Dainty, Katie N., Davis, Peter G., de Almeida, Maria Fernanda, de Caen, Allan R., Deakin, Charles D., Djarv, Therese, Donnino, Michael W., Douma, Matthew J., Duff, Jonathan P., Dunne, Cody L., Eastwood, Kathryn, El-Naggar, Walid, Fabres, Jorge G., Fawke, Joe, Finn, Judith, Foglia, Elizabeth E., Folke, Fredrik, Gilfoyle, Elaine, Goolsby, Craig A., Granfeldt, Asger, Guerguerian, Anne-Marie, Guinsburg, Ruth, Hirsch, Karen G., Holmberg, Mathias J., Hosono, Shigeharu, Hsieh, Ming-Ju, Hsu, Cindy H., Ikeyama, Takanari, Isayama, Tetsuya, Johnson, Nicholas J., Kapadia, Vishal S., Kawakami, Mandira Daripa, Kim, Han-Suk, Kleinman, Monica, Kloeck, David A., Kudenchuk, Peter J., Lagina, Anthony T., Lauridsen, Kasper G., Lavonas, Eric J., Lee, Henry C., Lin, Yiqun (Jeffrey), Lockey, Andrew S., Maconochie, Ian K., Madar, R. John, Hansen, Carolina Malta, Masterson, Siobhan, Matsuyama, Tasuku, McKinlay, Christopher J. D., Meyran, Daniel, Morgan, Patrick, Morrison, Laurie J., Nadkarni, Vinay, Nakwa, Firdose L., Nation, Kevin J., Nehme, Ziad, Nemeth, Michael, Neumar, Robert W., Nicholson, Tonia, Nikolaou, Nikolaos, Nishiyama, Chika, Norii, Tatsuya, Nuthall, Gabrielle A., O'Neill, Brian J., Ong, Yong-Kwang Gene, Orkin, Aaron M., Paiva, Edison F., Parr, Michael J., Patocka, Catherine, Pellegrino, Jeffrey L., Perkins, Gavin D., Perlman, Jeffrey M., Rabi, Yacov, Reis, Amelia G., Reynolds, Joshua C., Ristagno, Giuseppe, Rodriguez-Nunez, Antonio, Roehr, Charles C., Rudiger, Mario, Sakamoto, Tetsuya, Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, Taylor L., Schexnayder, Steve M., Schmolzer, Georg M., Schnaubelt, Sebastian, Semeraro, Federico, Skrifvars, Markus B., Smith, Christopher M., Sugiura, Takahiro, Tijssen, Janice A., Trevisanuto, Daniele, Van de Voorde, Patrick, Wang, Tzong-Luen, Weiner, Gary M., Wyllie, Jonathan P., Yang, Chih-Wei, Yeung, Joyce, Nolan, Jerry P., Berg, Katherine M., Wyckoff, Myra H., Greif, Robert, Morley, Peter T., Ng, Kee-Chong, Olasveengen, Theresa M., Singletary, Eunice M., Soar, Jasmeet, Cheng, Adam, Drennan, Ian R., Liley, Helen G., Scholefield, Barnaby R., Smyth, Michael A., Welsford, Michelle, Zideman, David A., Acworth, Jason, Aickin, Richard, Andersen, Lars W., Atkins, Diane, Berry, David C., Bhanji, Farhan, Bierens, Joost, Borra, Vere, Bottiger, Bernd W., Bradley, Richard N., Bray, Janet E., Breckwoldt, Jan, Callaway, Clifton W., Carlson, Jestin N., Cassan, Pascal, Castren, Maaret, Chang, Wei-Tien, Charlton, Nathan P., Chung, Sung Phil, Considine, Julie, Costa-Nobre, Daniela T., Couper, Keith, Couto, Thomaz Bittencourt, Dainty, Katie N., Davis, Peter G., de Almeida, Maria Fernanda, de Caen, Allan R., Deakin, Charles D., Djarv, Therese, Donnino, Michael W., Douma, Matthew J., Duff, Jonathan P., Dunne, Cody L., Eastwood, Kathryn, El-Naggar, Walid, Fabres, Jorge G., Fawke, Joe, Finn, Judith, Foglia, Elizabeth E., Folke, Fredrik, Gilfoyle, Elaine, Goolsby, Craig A., Granfeldt, Asger, Guerguerian, Anne-Marie, Guinsburg, Ruth, Hirsch, Karen G., Holmberg, Mathias J., Hosono, Shigeharu, Hsieh, Ming-Ju, Hsu, Cindy H., Ikeyama, Takanari, Isayama, Tetsuya, Johnson, Nicholas J., Kapadia, Vishal S., Kawakami, Mandira Daripa, Kim, Han-Suk, Kleinman, Monica, Kloeck, David A., Kudenchuk, Peter J., Lagina, Anthony T., Lauridsen, Kasper G., Lavonas, Eric J., Lee, Henry C., Lin, Yiqun (Jeffrey), Lockey, Andrew S., Maconochie, Ian K., Madar, R. John, Hansen, Carolina Malta, Masterson, Siobhan, Matsuyama, Tasuku, McKinlay, Christopher J. D., Meyran, Daniel, Morgan, Patrick, Morrison, Laurie J., Nadkarni, Vinay, Nakwa, Firdose L., Nation, Kevin J., Nehme, Ziad, Nemeth, Michael, Neumar, Robert W., Nicholson, Tonia, Nikolaou, Nikolaos, Nishiyama, Chika, Norii, Tatsuya, Nuthall, Gabrielle A., O'Neill, Brian J., Ong, Yong-Kwang Gene, Orkin, Aaron M., Paiva, Edison F., Parr, Michael J., Patocka, Catherine, Pellegrino, Jeffrey L., Perkins, Gavin D., Perlman, Jeffrey M., Rabi, Yacov, Reis, Amelia G., Reynolds, Joshua C., Ristagno, Giuseppe, Rodriguez-Nunez, Antonio, Roehr, Charles C., Rudiger, Mario, Sakamoto, Tetsuya, Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, Taylor L., Schexnayder, Steve M., Schmolzer, Georg M., Schnaubelt, Sebastian, Semeraro, Federico, Skrifvars, Markus B., Smith, Christopher M., Sugiura, Takahiro, Tijssen, Janice A., Trevisanuto, Daniele, Van de Voorde, Patrick, Wang, Tzong-Luen, Weiner, Gary M., Wyllie, Jonathan P., Yang, Chih-Wei, Yeung, Joyce, Nolan, Jerry P., and Berg, Katherine M.
- Abstract
This is the sixth annual summary of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations. This summary addresses the most recently published resuscitation evidence reviewed by International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation Task Force science experts. Topics covered by systematic reviews include cardiopulmonary resuscitation during transport; approach to resuscitation after drowning; passive ventilation; minimizing pauses during cardiopulmonary resuscitation; temperature management after cardiac arrest; use of diagnostic point-of-care ultrasound during cardiac arrest; use of vasopressin and corticosteroids during cardiac arrest; coronary angiography after cardiac arrest; public-access defibrillation devices for children; pediatric early warning systems; maintaining normal temperature immediately after birth; suctioning of amniotic fluid at birth; tactile stimulation for resuscitation immediately after birth; use of continuous positive airway pressure for respiratory distress at term birth; respiratory and heart rate monitoring in the delivery room; supraglottic airway use in neonates; prearrest prediction of in-hospital cardiac arrest mortality; basic life support training for likely rescuers of high-risk populations; effect of resuscitation team training; blended learning for life support training; training and recertification for resuscitation instructors; and recovery position for maintenance of breathing and prevention of cardiac arrest. Members from 6 task forces have assessed, discussed, and debated the quality of the evidence using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria and generated consensus treatment recommendations. Insights into the deliberations of the task forces are provided in the Justification and Evidence-to-Decision Framework Highlights sections, and priority knowledge gaps for futu
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- 2022
16. 2021 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; First Aid Task Forces; and the COVID-19 Working Group
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Wyckoff, Myra H., Singletary, Eunice M., Soar, Jasmeet, Olasveengen, Theresa M., Greif, Robert, Liley, Helen G., Zideman, David, Bhanji, Farhan, Andersen, Lars W., Avis, Suzanne R., Aziz, Khalid, Bendall, Jason C., Berry, David C., Borra, Vere, Boettiger, Bernd W., Bradley, Richard, Bray, Janet E., Breckwoldt, Jan, Carlson, Jestin N., Cassan, Pascal, Castren, Maaret, Chang, Wei-Tien, Charlton, Nathan P., Cheng, Adam, Chung, Sung Phil, Considine, Julie, Costa-Nobre, Daniela T., Couper, Keith, Dainty, Katie N., Davis, Peter G., de Almeida, Maria Fernanda, de Caen, Allan R., de Paiva, Edison F., Deakin, Charles D., Djarv, Therese, Douma, Matthew J., Drennan, Ian R., Duff, Jonathan P., Eastwood, Kathryn J., El-Naggar, Walid, Epstein, Jonathan L., Escalante, Raffo, Fabres, Jorge G., Fawke, Joe, Finn, Judith C., Foglia, Elizabeth E., Folke, Fredrik, Freeman, Karoline, Gilfoyle, Elaine, Goolsby, Craig A., Grove, Amy, Guinsburg, Ruth, Hatanaka, Tetsuo, Hazinski, Mary Fran, Heriot, George S., Hirsch, Karen G., Holmberg, Mathias J., Hosono, Shigeharu, Hsieh, Ming-Ju, Hung, Kevin K. C., Hsu, Cindy H., Ikeyama, Takanari, Isayama, Tetsuya, Kapadia, Vishal S., Kawakami, Mandira Daripa, Kim, Han-Suk, Kloeck, David A., Kudenchuk, Peter J., Lagina, Anthony T., Lauridsen, Kasper G., Lavonas, Eric J., Lockey, Andrew S., Hansen, Carolina Malta, Markenson, David, Matsuyama, Tasuku, McKinlay, Christopher J. D., Mehrabian, Amin, Merchant, Raina M., Meyran, Daniel, Morley, Peter T., Morrison, Laurie J., Nation, Kevin J., Nemeth, Michael, Neumar, Robert W., Nicholson, Tonia, Niermeyer, Susan, Nikolaou, Nikolaos, Nishiyama, Chika, O'Neil, Brian J., Orkin, Aaron M., Osemeke, Osokogu, Parr, Michael J., Patocka, Catherine, Pellegrino, Jeffrey L., Perkins, Gavin D., Perlman, Jeffrey M., Rabi, Yacov, Reynolds, Joshua C., Ristagno, Giuseppe, Roehr, Charles C., Sakamoto, Tetsuya, Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, Taylor, Schmolzer, Georg M., Schnaubelt, Sebastian, Semeraro, Federico, Skrifvars, Markus B., Smith, Christopher M., Smyth, Michael A., Soll, Roger F., Sugiura, Takahiro, Taylor-Phillips, Sian, Trevisanuto, Daniele, Vaillancourt, Christian, Wang, Tzong-Luen, Weiner, Gary M., Welsford, Michelle, Wigginton, Jane, Wyllie, Jonathan P., Yeung, Joyce, Nolan, Jerry P., Berg, Katherine M., Wyckoff, Myra H., Singletary, Eunice M., Soar, Jasmeet, Olasveengen, Theresa M., Greif, Robert, Liley, Helen G., Zideman, David, Bhanji, Farhan, Andersen, Lars W., Avis, Suzanne R., Aziz, Khalid, Bendall, Jason C., Berry, David C., Borra, Vere, Boettiger, Bernd W., Bradley, Richard, Bray, Janet E., Breckwoldt, Jan, Carlson, Jestin N., Cassan, Pascal, Castren, Maaret, Chang, Wei-Tien, Charlton, Nathan P., Cheng, Adam, Chung, Sung Phil, Considine, Julie, Costa-Nobre, Daniela T., Couper, Keith, Dainty, Katie N., Davis, Peter G., de Almeida, Maria Fernanda, de Caen, Allan R., de Paiva, Edison F., Deakin, Charles D., Djarv, Therese, Douma, Matthew J., Drennan, Ian R., Duff, Jonathan P., Eastwood, Kathryn J., El-Naggar, Walid, Epstein, Jonathan L., Escalante, Raffo, Fabres, Jorge G., Fawke, Joe, Finn, Judith C., Foglia, Elizabeth E., Folke, Fredrik, Freeman, Karoline, Gilfoyle, Elaine, Goolsby, Craig A., Grove, Amy, Guinsburg, Ruth, Hatanaka, Tetsuo, Hazinski, Mary Fran, Heriot, George S., Hirsch, Karen G., Holmberg, Mathias J., Hosono, Shigeharu, Hsieh, Ming-Ju, Hung, Kevin K. C., Hsu, Cindy H., Ikeyama, Takanari, Isayama, Tetsuya, Kapadia, Vishal S., Kawakami, Mandira Daripa, Kim, Han-Suk, Kloeck, David A., Kudenchuk, Peter J., Lagina, Anthony T., Lauridsen, Kasper G., Lavonas, Eric J., Lockey, Andrew S., Hansen, Carolina Malta, Markenson, David, Matsuyama, Tasuku, McKinlay, Christopher J. D., Mehrabian, Amin, Merchant, Raina M., Meyran, Daniel, Morley, Peter T., Morrison, Laurie J., Nation, Kevin J., Nemeth, Michael, Neumar, Robert W., Nicholson, Tonia, Niermeyer, Susan, Nikolaou, Nikolaos, Nishiyama, Chika, O'Neil, Brian J., Orkin, Aaron M., Osemeke, Osokogu, Parr, Michael J., Patocka, Catherine, Pellegrino, Jeffrey L., Perkins, Gavin D., Perlman, Jeffrey M., Rabi, Yacov, Reynolds, Joshua C., Ristagno, Giuseppe, Roehr, Charles C., Sakamoto, Tetsuya, Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, Taylor, Schmolzer, Georg M., Schnaubelt, Sebastian, Semeraro, Federico, Skrifvars, Markus B., Smith, Christopher M., Smyth, Michael A., Soll, Roger F., Sugiura, Takahiro, Taylor-Phillips, Sian, Trevisanuto, Daniele, Vaillancourt, Christian, Wang, Tzong-Luen, Weiner, Gary M., Welsford, Michelle, Wigginton, Jane, Wyllie, Jonathan P., Yeung, Joyce, Nolan, Jerry P., and Berg, Katherine M.
- Abstract
The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation initiated a continuous review of new, peer-reviewed published cardiopulmonary resuscitation science. This is the fifth annual summary of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations; a more comprehensive review was done in 2020. This latest summary addresses the most recently published resuscitation evidence reviewed by International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task force science experts. Topics covered by systematic reviews in this summary include resuscitation topics of video-based dispatch systems; head-up cardiopulmonary resuscitation; early coronary angiography after return of spontaneous circulation; cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the prone patient; cord management at birth for preterm and term infants; devices for administering positive-pressure ventilation at birth; family presence during neonatal resuscitation; self-directed, digitally based basic life support education and training in adults and children; coronavirus disease 2019 infection risk to rescuers from patients in cardiac arrest; and first aid topics, including cooling with water for thermal burns, oral rehydration for exertional dehydration, pediatric tourniquet use, and methods of tick removal. Members from 6 International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task forces have assessed, discussed, and debated the quality of the evidence, according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria, and their statements include consensus treatment recommendations or good practice statements. Insights into the deliberations of the task forces are provided in Justification and Evidence-to-Decision Framework Highlights sections. In addition, the task forces listed priority knowledge gaps for further research.
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- 2022
17. 2022 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science with Treatment Recommendations: Summary from the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Pediatric Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; And First Aid Task Forces
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Wyckoff, M. H., Greif, R., Morley, P. T., Ng, K. -C., Olasveengen, T. M., Singletary, E. M., Soar, J., Cheng, A., Drennan, I. R., Liley, H. G., Scholefield, B. R., Smyth, M. A., Welsford, M., Zideman, D. A., Acworth, J., Aickin, R., Andersen, L. W., Atkins, D., Berry, D. C., Bhanji, F., Bierens, J., Borra, V., Bottiger, B. W., Bradley, R. N., Bray, J. E., Breckwoldt, J., Callaway, C. W., Carlson, J. N., Cassan, P., Castren, M., Chang, W. -T., Charlton, N. P., Chung, S. P., Considine, J., Costa-Nobre, D. T., Couper, K., Couto, T. B., Dainty, K. N., Davis, P. G., De Almeida, M. F., De Caen, A. R., Deakin, C. D., Djarv, T., Donnino, M. W., Douma, M. J., Duff, J. P., Dunne, C. L., Eastwood, K., El-Naggar, W., Fabres, J. G., Fawke, J., Finn, J., Foglia, E. E., Folke, F., Gilfoyle, E., Goolsby, C. A., Granfeldt, A., Guerguerian, A. -M., Guinsburg, R., Hirsch, K. G., Holmberg, M. J., Hosono, S., Hsieh, M. -J., Hsu, C. H., Ikeyama, T., Isayama, T., Johnson, N. J., Kapadia, V. S., Kawakami, M. D., Kim, H. -S., Kleinman, M., Kloeck, D. A., Kudenchuk, P. J., Lagina, A. T., Lauridsen, K. G., Lavonas, E. J., Lee, H. C., Lin, Y. (., Lockey, A. S., Maconochie, I. K., Madar, R. J., Malta Hansen, C., Masterson, S., Matsuyama, T., Mckinlay, C. J. D., Meyran, D., Morgan, P., Morrison, L. J., Nadkarni, V., Nakwa, F. L., Nation, K. J., Nehme, Z., Nemeth, M., Neumar, R. W., Nicholson, T., Nikolaou, N., Nishiyama, C., Norii, T., Nuthall, G. A., O'Neill, B. J., Ong, Y. -K. G., Orkin, A. M., Paiva, E. F., Parr, M. J., Patocka, C., Pellegrino, J. L., Perkins, G. D., Perlman, J. M., Rabi, Y., Reis, A. G., Reynolds, J. C., Ristagno, G., Rodriguez-Nunez, A., Roehr, C. C., Rudiger, M., Sakamoto, T., Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, T. L., Schexnayder, S. M., Schmolzer, G. M., Schnaubelt, S., Semeraro, F., Skrifvars, M. B., Smith, C. M., Sugiura, T., Tijssen, J. A., Trevisanuto, D., Van De Voorde, P., Wang, T. -L., Weiner, G. M., Wyllie, J. P., Yang, C. -W., Yeung, J., Nolan, J. P., Berg, K. M., Burdick, M. C., Cartledge, S., Dawson, J. A., Elgohary, M. M., Ersdal, H. L., Finan, E., Flaatten, H. I., Flores, G. E., Fuerch, J., Garg, R., Gately, C., Goh, M., Halamek, L. P., Handley, A. J., Hatanaka, T., Hoover, A., Issa, M., Johnson, S., Kamlin, C. O., Ko, Y. -C., Kule, A., Leone, T. A., Mackenzie, E., Macneil, F., Montgomery, W., O'Dochartaigh, D., Ohshimo, S., Palazzo, F. S., Picard, C., Quek, B. H., Raitt, J., Ramaswamy, V. V., Scapigliati, Andrea, Shah, B. A., Stewart, C., Strand, M. L., Szyld, E., Thio, M., Topjian, A. A., Udaeta, E., Vaillancourt, C., Wetsch, W. A., Wigginton, J., Yamada, N. K., Yao, S., Zace, D., Zelop, C. M., Sandroni C. (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611), Scapigliati A. (ORCID:0000-0002-4044-2343), Wyckoff, M. H., Greif, R., Morley, P. T., Ng, K. -C., Olasveengen, T. M., Singletary, E. M., Soar, J., Cheng, A., Drennan, I. R., Liley, H. G., Scholefield, B. R., Smyth, M. A., Welsford, M., Zideman, D. A., Acworth, J., Aickin, R., Andersen, L. W., Atkins, D., Berry, D. C., Bhanji, F., Bierens, J., Borra, V., Bottiger, B. W., Bradley, R. N., Bray, J. E., Breckwoldt, J., Callaway, C. W., Carlson, J. N., Cassan, P., Castren, M., Chang, W. -T., Charlton, N. P., Chung, S. P., Considine, J., Costa-Nobre, D. T., Couper, K., Couto, T. B., Dainty, K. N., Davis, P. G., De Almeida, M. F., De Caen, A. R., Deakin, C. D., Djarv, T., Donnino, M. W., Douma, M. J., Duff, J. P., Dunne, C. L., Eastwood, K., El-Naggar, W., Fabres, J. G., Fawke, J., Finn, J., Foglia, E. E., Folke, F., Gilfoyle, E., Goolsby, C. A., Granfeldt, A., Guerguerian, A. -M., Guinsburg, R., Hirsch, K. G., Holmberg, M. J., Hosono, S., Hsieh, M. -J., Hsu, C. H., Ikeyama, T., Isayama, T., Johnson, N. J., Kapadia, V. S., Kawakami, M. D., Kim, H. -S., Kleinman, M., Kloeck, D. A., Kudenchuk, P. J., Lagina, A. T., Lauridsen, K. G., Lavonas, E. J., Lee, H. C., Lin, Y. (., Lockey, A. S., Maconochie, I. K., Madar, R. J., Malta Hansen, C., Masterson, S., Matsuyama, T., Mckinlay, C. J. D., Meyran, D., Morgan, P., Morrison, L. J., Nadkarni, V., Nakwa, F. L., Nation, K. J., Nehme, Z., Nemeth, M., Neumar, R. W., Nicholson, T., Nikolaou, N., Nishiyama, C., Norii, T., Nuthall, G. A., O'Neill, B. J., Ong, Y. -K. G., Orkin, A. M., Paiva, E. F., Parr, M. J., Patocka, C., Pellegrino, J. L., Perkins, G. D., Perlman, J. M., Rabi, Y., Reis, A. G., Reynolds, J. C., Ristagno, G., Rodriguez-Nunez, A., Roehr, C. C., Rudiger, M., Sakamoto, T., Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, T. L., Schexnayder, S. M., Schmolzer, G. M., Schnaubelt, S., Semeraro, F., Skrifvars, M. B., Smith, C. M., Sugiura, T., Tijssen, J. A., Trevisanuto, D., Van De Voorde, P., Wang, T. -L., Weiner, G. M., Wyllie, J. P., Yang, C. -W., Yeung, J., Nolan, J. P., Berg, K. M., Burdick, M. C., Cartledge, S., Dawson, J. A., Elgohary, M. M., Ersdal, H. L., Finan, E., Flaatten, H. I., Flores, G. E., Fuerch, J., Garg, R., Gately, C., Goh, M., Halamek, L. P., Handley, A. J., Hatanaka, T., Hoover, A., Issa, M., Johnson, S., Kamlin, C. O., Ko, Y. -C., Kule, A., Leone, T. A., Mackenzie, E., Macneil, F., Montgomery, W., O'Dochartaigh, D., Ohshimo, S., Palazzo, F. S., Picard, C., Quek, B. H., Raitt, J., Ramaswamy, V. V., Scapigliati, Andrea, Shah, B. A., Stewart, C., Strand, M. L., Szyld, E., Thio, M., Topjian, A. A., Udaeta, E., Vaillancourt, C., Wetsch, W. A., Wigginton, J., Yamada, N. K., Yao, S., Zace, D., Zelop, C. M., Sandroni C. (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611), and Scapigliati A. (ORCID:0000-0002-4044-2343)
- Abstract
This is the sixth annual summary of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations. This summary addresses the most recently published resuscitation evidence reviewed by International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation Task Force science experts. Topics covered by systematic reviews include cardiopulmonary resuscitation during transport; approach to resuscitation after drowning; passive ventilation; minimizing pauses during cardiopulmonary resuscitation; temperature management after cardiac arrest; use of diagnostic point-of-care ultrasound during cardiac arrest; use of vasopressin and corticosteroids during cardiac arrest; coronary angiography after cardiac arrest; public-access defibrillation devices for children; pediatric early warning systems; maintaining normal temperature immediately after birth; suctioning of amniotic fluid at birth; tactile stimulation for resuscitation immediately after birth; use of continuous positive airway pressure for respiratory distress at term birth; respiratory and heart rate monitoring in the delivery room; supraglottic airway use in neonates; prearrest prediction of in-hospital cardiac arrest mortality; basic life support training for likely rescuers of high-risk populations; effect of resuscitation team training; blended learning for life support training; training and recertification for resuscitation instructors; and recovery position for maintenance of breathing and prevention of cardiac arrest. Members from 6 task forces have assessed, discussed, and debated the quality of the evidence using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria and generated consensus treatment recommendations. Insights into the deliberations of the task forces are provided in the Justification and Evidence-to-Decision Framework Highlights sections, and priority knowledge gaps for futu
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- 2022
18. Lower versus Higher Glycemic Criteria for Diagnosis of Gestational Diabetes.
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Crowther, CA, Samuel, D, McCowan, LME, Edlin, R, Tran, T, McKinlay, CJ, GEMS Trial Group, Crowther, CA, Samuel, D, McCowan, LME, Edlin, R, Tran, T, McKinlay, CJ, and GEMS Trial Group
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment of gestational diabetes improves maternal and infant health, although diagnostic criteria remain unclear. METHODS: We randomly assigned women at 24 to 32 weeks' gestation in a 1:1 ratio to be evaluated for gestational diabetes with the use of lower or higher glycemic criteria for diagnosis. The lower glycemic criterion was a fasting plasma glucose level of at least 92 mg per deciliter (≥5.1 mmol per liter), a 1-hour level of at least 180 mg per deciliter (≥10.0 mmol per liter), or a 2-hour level of at least 153 mg per deciliter (≥8.5 mmol per liter). The higher glycemic criterion was a fasting plasma glucose level of at least 99 mg per deciliter (≥5.5 mmol per liter) or a 2-hour level of at least 162 mg per deciliter (≥9.0 mmol per liter). The primary outcome was the birth of an infant who was large for gestational age (defined as a birth weight above the 90th percentile according to Fenton-World Health Organization standards). Secondary outcomes were maternal and infant health. RESULTS: A total of 4061 women underwent randomization. Gestational diabetes was diagnosed in 310 of 2022 women (15.3%) in the lower-glycemic-criteria group and in 124 of 2039 women (6.1%) in the higher-glycemic-criteria group. Among 2019 infants born to women in the lower-glycemic-criteria group, 178 (8.8%) were large for gestational age, and among 2031 infants born to women in the higher-glycemic-criteria group, 181 (8.9%) were large for gestational age (adjusted relative risk, 0.98; 95% confidence interval, 0.80 to 1.19; P = 0.82). Induction of labor, use of health services, use of pharmacologic agents, and neonatal hypoglycemia were more common in the lower-glycemic-criteria group than in the higher-glycemic-criteria group. The results for the other secondary outcomes were similar in the two trial groups, and there were no substantial between-group differences in adverse events. Among the women in both groups who had glucose test results that fell between the lower
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- 2022
19. Gregarine apicomplexans – model organisms to uncover the evolutionary path to obligate intracellular parasitism?
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McKinlay, Kevin, Betts, Emma L., Tsaousis, Anastasios D., Rueckert, Sonja, McKinlay, Kevin, Betts, Emma L., Tsaousis, Anastasios D., and Rueckert, Sonja
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- 2022
20. 2021 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; First Aid Task Forces; and the COVID-19 Working Group
- Author
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Wyckoff, Mh, Singletary, Em, Soar, J, Olasveengen, Tm, Greif, R, Liley, Hg, Zideman, D, Bhanji, F, Andersen, Lw, Avis, Sr, Aziz, K, Bendall, Jc, Berry, Dc, Borra, V, Bottiger, Bw, Bradley, R, Bray, Je, Breckwoldt, J, Carlson, Jn, Cassan, P, Castren, M, Chang, Wt, Charlton, Np, Cheng, A, Chung, Sp, Considine, J, Costa-Nobre, Dt, Couper, K, Dainty, Kn, Davis, Pg, de Almeida, Mf, de Caen, Ar, de Paiva, Ef, Deakin, Cd, Djarv, T, Douma, Mj, Drennan, Ir, Duff, Jp, Eastwood, Kj, El-Naggar, W, Epstein, Jl, Escalante, R, Fabres, Jg, Fawke, J, Finn, Jc, Foglia, Ee, Folke, F, Freeman, K, Gilfoyle, E, Goolsby, Ca, Grove, A, Guinsburg, R, Hatanaka, T, Hazinski, Mf, Heriot, G, Hirsch, Kg, Holmberg, Mj, Hosono, S, Hsieh, Mj, Hung, Kkc, Hsu, Ch, Ikeyama, T, Isayama, T, Kapadia, V, Kawakami, Md, Kim, H, Kloeck, Da, Kudenchuk, Pj, Lagina, At, Lauridsen, Kg, Lavonas, Ej, Lockey, A, Hansen, Cm, Markenson, D, Matsuyama, T, McKinlay, Cjd, Mehrabian, A, Merchant, Rm, Meyran, D, Morley, Pt, Morrison, Lj, Nation, Kj, Nemeth, M, Neumar, Rw, Nicholson, T, Niermeyer, S, Nikolaou, N, Nishiyama, C, O'Neil, Bj, Orkin, Am, Osemeke, O, Parr, Mj, Patocka, C, Pellegrino, Jl, Perkins, Gd, Perlman, Jm, Rabi, Y, Reynolds, Jc, Ristagno, G, Roehr, Cc, Sakamoto, T, Sandroni, C, Sawyer, T, Schmolzer, Gm, Schnaubelt, S, Semeraro, F, Skrifvars, Mb, Smith, Cm, Smyth, Ma, Soll, Rf, Sugiura, T, Taylor-Phillips, S, Trevisanuto, D, Vaillancourt, C, Wang, Tl, Weiner, Gm, Welsford, M, Wigginton, J, Wyllie, Jp, Yeung, J, Nolan, Jp, Berg, Km, Sandroni, C (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611), Wyckoff, Mh, Singletary, Em, Soar, J, Olasveengen, Tm, Greif, R, Liley, Hg, Zideman, D, Bhanji, F, Andersen, Lw, Avis, Sr, Aziz, K, Bendall, Jc, Berry, Dc, Borra, V, Bottiger, Bw, Bradley, R, Bray, Je, Breckwoldt, J, Carlson, Jn, Cassan, P, Castren, M, Chang, Wt, Charlton, Np, Cheng, A, Chung, Sp, Considine, J, Costa-Nobre, Dt, Couper, K, Dainty, Kn, Davis, Pg, de Almeida, Mf, de Caen, Ar, de Paiva, Ef, Deakin, Cd, Djarv, T, Douma, Mj, Drennan, Ir, Duff, Jp, Eastwood, Kj, El-Naggar, W, Epstein, Jl, Escalante, R, Fabres, Jg, Fawke, J, Finn, Jc, Foglia, Ee, Folke, F, Freeman, K, Gilfoyle, E, Goolsby, Ca, Grove, A, Guinsburg, R, Hatanaka, T, Hazinski, Mf, Heriot, G, Hirsch, Kg, Holmberg, Mj, Hosono, S, Hsieh, Mj, Hung, Kkc, Hsu, Ch, Ikeyama, T, Isayama, T, Kapadia, V, Kawakami, Md, Kim, H, Kloeck, Da, Kudenchuk, Pj, Lagina, At, Lauridsen, Kg, Lavonas, Ej, Lockey, A, Hansen, Cm, Markenson, D, Matsuyama, T, McKinlay, Cjd, Mehrabian, A, Merchant, Rm, Meyran, D, Morley, Pt, Morrison, Lj, Nation, Kj, Nemeth, M, Neumar, Rw, Nicholson, T, Niermeyer, S, Nikolaou, N, Nishiyama, C, O'Neil, Bj, Orkin, Am, Osemeke, O, Parr, Mj, Patocka, C, Pellegrino, Jl, Perkins, Gd, Perlman, Jm, Rabi, Y, Reynolds, Jc, Ristagno, G, Roehr, Cc, Sakamoto, T, Sandroni, C, Sawyer, T, Schmolzer, Gm, Schnaubelt, S, Semeraro, F, Skrifvars, Mb, Smith, Cm, Smyth, Ma, Soll, Rf, Sugiura, T, Taylor-Phillips, S, Trevisanuto, D, Vaillancourt, C, Wang, Tl, Weiner, Gm, Welsford, M, Wigginton, J, Wyllie, Jp, Yeung, J, Nolan, Jp, Berg, Km, and Sandroni, C (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611)
- Abstract
The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation initiated a continuous review of new, peer-reviewed published cardiopulmonary resuscitation science. This is the fifth annual summary of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations; a more comprehensive review was done in 2020. This latest summary addresses the most recently published resuscitation evidence reviewed by International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task force science experts. Topics covered by systematic reviews in this summary include resuscitation topics of video-based dispatch systems; head-up cardiopulmonary resuscitation; early coronary angiography after return of spontaneous circulation; cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the prone patient; cord management at birth for preterm and term infants; devices for administering positive-pressure ventilation at birth; family presence during neonatal resuscitation; self-directed, digitally based basic life support education and training in adults and children; coronavirus disease 2019 infection risk to rescuers from patients in cardiac arrest; and first aid topics, including cooling with water for thermal burns, oral rehydration for exertional dehydration, pediatric tourniquet use, and methods of tick removal. Members from 6 International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task forces have assessed, discussed, and debated the quality of the evidence, according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria, and their statements include consensus treatment recommendations or good practice statements. Insights into the deliberations of the task forces are provided in Justification and Evidence-to-Decision Framework Highlights sections. In addition, the task forces listed priority knowledge gaps for further research.
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- 2022
21. Rényi Divergence Inequalities via Interpolation, with Applications to Generalised Entropic Uncertainty Relations
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McKinlay, Alexander Clyde and McKinlay, Alexander Clyde
- Abstract
We investigate quantum Rényi entropic quantities, specifically those derived from ‘sandwiched’ divergence. This divergence is one of several proposed Rényi generalisations of the quantum relative entropy. We may define Rényi generalisations of the quantum conditional entropy and mutual information in terms of this divergence, from which they inherit many desirable properties. However, these quantities lack some of the convenient structure of their Shannon and von Neumann counterparts. We attempt to bridge this gap by establishing divergence inequalities for valid combinations of Rényi order which replicate the chain and decomposition rules of Shannon and von Neumann entropies. Although weaker in general, these inequalities recover equivalence when the Rényi parameters tend to one. To this end we present Rényi mutual information decomposition rules, a new approach to the Rényi conditional entropy tripartite chain rules and a more general bipartite comparison. The derivation of these results relies on a novel complex interpolation approach for general spaces of linear operators. These new comparisons allow us to employ techniques that until now were only available for Shannon and von Neumann entropies. We can therefore directly apply them to the derivation of Rényi entropic uncertainty relations. Accordingly, we establish a family of Rényi information exclusion relations and provide further generalisations and improvements to this and other known relations, including the Rényi bipartite uncertainty relations.
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- 2021
22. Collaborative Care in Primary Care: The Influence of Practice Interior Architecture on Informal Face-to-Face Communication—An Observational Study
- Author
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Morgan, S, Pullon, S, McKinlay, E, Garrett, S, Kennedy, J, Watson, B, Morgan, S, Pullon, S, McKinlay, E, Garrett, S, Kennedy, J, and Watson, B
- Abstract
Background: Quality patient care in primary care settings, especially for patients with complex long-term health needs, is improved by interprofessional collaborative practice. Effective collaboration is achieved in large part by frequent informal face-to-face “on-the-fly” communication between team members. Research undertaken in hospitals shows that interior architecture influences informal communication and collaboration between staff. However, little is known about how the interior architecture of primary care practices might facilitate or hinder informal communication and collaboration among primary care staff. Objectives: This research explores the influence of primary care practice interior architecture on face-to-face on-the-fly communication for collaborative care. Methods: An observational study was undertaken to compare face-to-face informal interactions between staff in three primary care practices of differing interior architecture. Data collected from practices included: direct observations floor plans, photographs, interviews, and surveys. Results: Most primary care staff engaged in frequent, brief face-to-face interactions, which appeared to be key to the delivery of effective collaboration. Features of primary care practice designs that were associated with increased frequency of staff interaction included shared spaces, staff proximity/visibility, and the presence of convenient circulatory and transitional spaces where staff were able to easily engage in timely on-the-fly communication with colleagues. Conclusions: The interior architecture of primary care practices has an important impact on staff collaboration. Although more research is needed to investigate further details in more practices, close attention should nevertheless be paid to maximizing opportunities for brief face-to-face communication in well-designed shared spaces in primary care practices.
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- 2021
23. 2021 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams
- Author
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Wyckoff, MH, Singletary, EM, Soar, J, Olasveengen, TM, Greif, R, Liley, HG, Zideman, D, Bhanji, F, Andersen, LW, Avis, SR, Aziz, K, Bendall, JC, Berry, DC, Borra, V, Böttiger, BW, Bradley, R, Bray, JE, Breckwoldt, J, Carlson, JN, Cassan, P, Castrén, M, Chang, WT, Charlton, NP, Cheng, A, Chung, SP, Considine, Julie, Costa-Nobre, DT, Couper, K, Dainty, KN, Davis, PG, de Almeida, MF, de Caen, AR, de Paiva, EF, Deakin, CD, Djärv, T, Douma, MJ, Drennan, IR, Duff, JP, Eastwood, KJ, El-Naggar, W, Epstein, JL, Escalante, R, Fabres, JG, Fawke, J, Finn, JC, Foglia, EE, Folke, F, Freeman, K, Gilfoyle, E, Goolsby, CA, Grove, A, Guinsburg, R, Hatanaka, T, Hazinski, MF, Heriot, GS, Hirsch, KG, Holmberg, MJ, Hosono, S, Hsieh, MJ, Hung, KKC, Hsu, CH, Ikeyama, T, Isayama, T, Kapadia, VS, Kawakami, MD, Kim, HS, Kloeck, DA, Kudenchuk, PJ, Lagina, AT, Lauridsen, KG, Lavonas, EJ, Lockey, AS, Malta Hansen, C, Markenson, D, Matsuyama, T, McKinlay, CJD, Mehrabian, A, Merchant, RM, Meyran, D, Morley, PT, Morrison, LJ, Nation, KJ, Nemeth, M, Neumar, RW, Nicholson, T, Niermeyer, S, Nikolaou, N, Nishiyama, C, O'Neil, BJ, Orkin, AM, Osemeke, O, Parr, MJ, Patocka, C, Pellegrino, JL, Perkins, GD, Perlman, JM, Rabi, Y, Reynolds, JC, Ristagno, G, Roehr, CC, Wyckoff, MH, Singletary, EM, Soar, J, Olasveengen, TM, Greif, R, Liley, HG, Zideman, D, Bhanji, F, Andersen, LW, Avis, SR, Aziz, K, Bendall, JC, Berry, DC, Borra, V, Böttiger, BW, Bradley, R, Bray, JE, Breckwoldt, J, Carlson, JN, Cassan, P, Castrén, M, Chang, WT, Charlton, NP, Cheng, A, Chung, SP, Considine, Julie, Costa-Nobre, DT, Couper, K, Dainty, KN, Davis, PG, de Almeida, MF, de Caen, AR, de Paiva, EF, Deakin, CD, Djärv, T, Douma, MJ, Drennan, IR, Duff, JP, Eastwood, KJ, El-Naggar, W, Epstein, JL, Escalante, R, Fabres, JG, Fawke, J, Finn, JC, Foglia, EE, Folke, F, Freeman, K, Gilfoyle, E, Goolsby, CA, Grove, A, Guinsburg, R, Hatanaka, T, Hazinski, MF, Heriot, GS, Hirsch, KG, Holmberg, MJ, Hosono, S, Hsieh, MJ, Hung, KKC, Hsu, CH, Ikeyama, T, Isayama, T, Kapadia, VS, Kawakami, MD, Kim, HS, Kloeck, DA, Kudenchuk, PJ, Lagina, AT, Lauridsen, KG, Lavonas, EJ, Lockey, AS, Malta Hansen, C, Markenson, D, Matsuyama, T, McKinlay, CJD, Mehrabian, A, Merchant, RM, Meyran, D, Morley, PT, Morrison, LJ, Nation, KJ, Nemeth, M, Neumar, RW, Nicholson, T, Niermeyer, S, Nikolaou, N, Nishiyama, C, O'Neil, BJ, Orkin, AM, Osemeke, O, Parr, MJ, Patocka, C, Pellegrino, JL, Perkins, GD, Perlman, JM, Rabi, Y, Reynolds, JC, Ristagno, G, and Roehr, CC
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- 2021
24. Protocol for a randomised clinical trial of multimodal postconcussion symptom treatment and recovery: the Concussion Essentials study
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Anderson, V, Rausa, VC, Anderson, N, Parkin, G, Clarke, C, Davies, K, McKinlay, A, Crichton, A, Davis, GA, Dalziel, K, Dunne, K, Barnett, P, Hearps, SJC, Takagi, M, Babl, FE, Anderson, V, Rausa, VC, Anderson, N, Parkin, G, Clarke, C, Davies, K, McKinlay, A, Crichton, A, Davis, GA, Dalziel, K, Dunne, K, Barnett, P, Hearps, SJC, Takagi, M, and Babl, FE
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: While most children recover from a concussion shortly after injury, approximately 30% experience persistent postconcussive symptoms (pPCS) beyond 1-month postinjury. Existing research into the treatment of pPCS have evaluated unimodal approaches, despite evidence suggesting that pPCS likely represent an interaction across various symptom clusters. The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a multimodal, symptom-tailored intervention to accelerate symptom recovery and increase the proportion of children with resolved symptoms at 3 months postconcussion. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: In this open-label, assessor-blinded, randomised clinical trial, children with concussion aged 8-18 years will be recruited from The Royal Children's Hospital (The RCH) emergency department, or referred by a clinician, within 17 days of initial injury. Based on parent ratings of their child's PCS at ~10 days postinjury, symptomatic children (≥2 symptoms at least 1-point above those endorsed preinjury) will undergo a baseline assessment at 3 weeks postinjury and randomised into either Concussion Essentials (CE, n=108), a multimodal, interdisciplinary delivered, symptom-tailored treatment involving physiotherapy, psychology and education, or usual care (UC, n=108) study arms. CE participants will receive 1 hour of intervention each week, for up to 8 weeks or until pPCS resolve. A postprogramme assessment will be conducted at 3 months postinjury for all participants. Effectiveness of the CE intervention will be determined by the proportion of participants for whom pPCS have resolved at the postprogramme assessment (primary outcome) relative to the UC group. Secondary outcome analyses will examine whether children receiving CE are more likely to demonstrate resolution of pPCS, earlier return to normal activity, higher quality of life and a lower rate of utilisation of health services, compared with the UC group. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics were approved by Th
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- 2021
25. Self-Worth and Self-Knowledge in Iranian Patients Seeking Cosmetic Surgery: A Comparative Study
- Author
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Valikhani, A, Sattarian, R, Rahmanian, M, Moustafa, AA, McKinlay, A, Valikhani, A, Sattarian, R, Rahmanian, M, Moustafa, AA, and McKinlay, A
- Abstract
Prior research has reported a psychological impairment in patients seeking cosmetic surgery. However, the role of other variables such as contingencies of self-worth and self-knowledge has been ignored. Hence, the aim of this study was to examine new psychological structures, contingencies of self-worth, and self-knowledge among patients seeking cosmetic surgery. Eighty patients (47 female and 33 male; mean age = 28.98, SD = 8.32; 40 seeking cosmetic surgery and 40 seeking surgical treatment) were randomly recruited from the Shahid Motahhari clinic in Shiraz, Iran. The patients completed the Contingencies of Self-Worth Scale, Integrative Self-Knowledge Scale, Subjective Vitality Scale, and Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21. The results showed that, compared to the surgical treatment group, self-worth in patients seeking cosmetic surgery was found to depend on their appearance and the approval of others. Further, the self-knowledge in patients seeking cosmetic surgery was lower than that of patients seeking surgical treatment. In addition, there were no significant differences between the two groups in vitality, depression, anxiety, and stress. It can be concluded that patients seeking cosmetic surgery have lower self-knowledge and their self-esteem depends on their appearance and the approval of others.
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- 2021
26. Antenatal corticosteroids, maternal body mass index and infant morbidity within the ASTEROID trial.
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Hofer, OJ, McKinlay, CJD, Tran, T, Crowther, CA, Hofer, OJ, McKinlay, CJD, Tran, T, and Crowther, CA
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antenatal corticosteroids (ACSs) administered to women before preterm birth improve neonatal health. Proportionately more women are obese or overweight in current obstetric populations than those who were included in the original trials of ACSs, and it remains uncertain if higher doses are required for such women. AIM: Our aim was to assess the association between maternal body mass index (BMI) and infant morbidity after the administration of ACSs. METHODS: In the secondary analysis of the ASTEROID trial cohort, women at risk of preterm birth at <34 weeks' gestation were randomised to betamethasone or dexamethasone. Infant outcomes were compared according to whether women were of normal weight (BMI < 25 kg/m2 ), overweight (BMI 25-29.9 kg/m2 ) or obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 ). RESULTS: Of 982 women with a singleton pregnancy and BMI data, 519 (52.9%) were of normal size, 241 (24.5%) were overweight and 222 (22.6%) were obese. Compared with infants born to women of normal weight, there was little or no difference in respiratory distress syndrome in infants born to women who were overweight (odds ratio (OR) = 0.92, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.57, 1.49) or obese (OR = 1.44, 95% CI 0.90, 2.31). Similarly, there were no significant differences between infants born to women in the three BMI groups for other morbidities, including bronchopulmonary dysplasia, mechanical ventilation, intraventricular haemorrhage, retinopathy of prematurity, patent ductus arteriosus, necrotising enterocolitis, perinatal death or combined serious morbidity. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal body size is not associated with infant morbidity after ACS exposure. Dose adjustment for women with higher BMI is not required.
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- 2021
27. 2021 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations: Summary From the Basic Life Support; Advanced Life Support; Neonatal Life Support; Education, Implementation, and Teams; First Aid Task Forces; and the COVID-19 Working Group
- Author
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Wyckoff, M. H., Singletary, E. M., Soar, J., Olasveengen, T. M., Greif, R., Liley, H. G., Zideman, D., Bhanji, F., Andersen, L. W., Avis, S. R., Aziz, K., Bendall, J. C., Berry, D. C., Borra, V., Bottiger, B. W., Bradley, R., Bray, J. E., Breckwoldt, J., Carlson, J. N., Cassan, P., Castren, M., Chang, W. -T., Charlton, N. P., Cheng, A., Chung, S. P., Considine, J., Costa-Nobre, D. T., Couper, K., Dainty, K. N., Davis, P. G., de Almeida, M. F., de Caen, A. R., de Paiva, E. F., Deakin, C. D., Djarv, T., Douma, M. J., Drennan, I. R., Duff, J. P., Eastwood, K. J., El-Naggar, W., Epstein, J. L., Escalante, R., Fabres, J. G., Fawke, J., Finn, J. C., Foglia, E. E., Folke, F., Freeman, K., Gilfoyle, E., Goolsby, C. A., Grove, A., Guinsburg, R., Hatanaka, T., Hazinski, M. F., Heriot, G. S., Hirsch, K. G., Holmberg, M. J., Hosono, S., Hsieh, M. -J., Hung, K. K. C., Hsu, C. H., Ikeyama, T., Isayama, T., Kapadia, V. S., Kawakami, M. D., Kim, H. -S., Kloeck, D. A., Kudenchuk, P. J., Lagina, A. T., Lauridsen, K. G., Lavonas, E. J., Lockey, A. S., Malta Hansen, C., Markenson, D., Matsuyama, T., Mckinlay, C. J. D., Mehrabian, A., Merchant, R. M., Meyran, D., Morley, P. T., Morrison, L. J., Nation, K. J., Nemeth, M., Neumar, R. W., Nicholson, T., Niermeyer, S., Nikolaou, N., Nishiyama, C., O'Neil, B. J., Orkin, A. M., Osemeke, O., Parr, M. J., Patocka, C., Pellegrino, J. L., Perkins, G. D., Perlman, J. M., Rabi, Y., Reynolds, J. C., Ristagno, G., Roehr, C. C., Sakamoto, T., Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, T., Schmolzer, G. M., Schnaubelt, S., Semeraro, F., Skrifvars, M. B., Smith, C. M., Smyth, M. A., Soll, R. F., Sugiura, T., Taylor-Phillips, S., Trevisanuto, D., Vaillancourt, C., Wang, T. -L., Weiner, G. M., Welsford, M., Wigginton, J., Wyllie, J. P., Yeung, J., Nolan, J. P., Berg, K. M., Abelairas-Gomez, C., Barcala-Furelos, R., Beerman, S. B., Bierens, J., Cacciola, Sofia, Cellini, J., Claesson, A., Court, R., D'Arrigo, Sonia, De Brier, N., Dunne, C. L., Elsenga, H. E., Johnson, S., Kleven, G., Maconochie, I., Mecrow, T., Morgan, P., Otto, Q., Palmieri, T. L., Parnia, S., Pawar, R., Pereira, J., Rudd, S., Scapigliati, Andrea, Schmidt, A., Seesink, J., Sempsrott, J. R., Szpilman, D., Warner, D. S., Webber, J. B., West, R. L., Sandroni C. (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611), Cacciola S., D'Arrigo S. (ORCID:0000-0001-6740-3195), Scapigliati A. (ORCID:0000-0002-4044-2343), Wyckoff, M. H., Singletary, E. M., Soar, J., Olasveengen, T. M., Greif, R., Liley, H. G., Zideman, D., Bhanji, F., Andersen, L. W., Avis, S. R., Aziz, K., Bendall, J. C., Berry, D. C., Borra, V., Bottiger, B. W., Bradley, R., Bray, J. E., Breckwoldt, J., Carlson, J. N., Cassan, P., Castren, M., Chang, W. -T., Charlton, N. P., Cheng, A., Chung, S. P., Considine, J., Costa-Nobre, D. T., Couper, K., Dainty, K. N., Davis, P. G., de Almeida, M. F., de Caen, A. R., de Paiva, E. F., Deakin, C. D., Djarv, T., Douma, M. J., Drennan, I. R., Duff, J. P., Eastwood, K. J., El-Naggar, W., Epstein, J. L., Escalante, R., Fabres, J. G., Fawke, J., Finn, J. C., Foglia, E. E., Folke, F., Freeman, K., Gilfoyle, E., Goolsby, C. A., Grove, A., Guinsburg, R., Hatanaka, T., Hazinski, M. F., Heriot, G. S., Hirsch, K. G., Holmberg, M. J., Hosono, S., Hsieh, M. -J., Hung, K. K. C., Hsu, C. H., Ikeyama, T., Isayama, T., Kapadia, V. S., Kawakami, M. D., Kim, H. -S., Kloeck, D. A., Kudenchuk, P. J., Lagina, A. T., Lauridsen, K. G., Lavonas, E. J., Lockey, A. S., Malta Hansen, C., Markenson, D., Matsuyama, T., Mckinlay, C. J. D., Mehrabian, A., Merchant, R. M., Meyran, D., Morley, P. T., Morrison, L. J., Nation, K. J., Nemeth, M., Neumar, R. W., Nicholson, T., Niermeyer, S., Nikolaou, N., Nishiyama, C., O'Neil, B. J., Orkin, A. M., Osemeke, O., Parr, M. J., Patocka, C., Pellegrino, J. L., Perkins, G. D., Perlman, J. M., Rabi, Y., Reynolds, J. C., Ristagno, G., Roehr, C. C., Sakamoto, T., Sandroni, Claudio, Sawyer, T., Schmolzer, G. M., Schnaubelt, S., Semeraro, F., Skrifvars, M. B., Smith, C. M., Smyth, M. A., Soll, R. F., Sugiura, T., Taylor-Phillips, S., Trevisanuto, D., Vaillancourt, C., Wang, T. -L., Weiner, G. M., Welsford, M., Wigginton, J., Wyllie, J. P., Yeung, J., Nolan, J. P., Berg, K. M., Abelairas-Gomez, C., Barcala-Furelos, R., Beerman, S. B., Bierens, J., Cacciola, Sofia, Cellini, J., Claesson, A., Court, R., D'Arrigo, Sonia, De Brier, N., Dunne, C. L., Elsenga, H. E., Johnson, S., Kleven, G., Maconochie, I., Mecrow, T., Morgan, P., Otto, Q., Palmieri, T. L., Parnia, S., Pawar, R., Pereira, J., Rudd, S., Scapigliati, Andrea, Schmidt, A., Seesink, J., Sempsrott, J. R., Szpilman, D., Warner, D. S., Webber, J. B., West, R. L., Sandroni C. (ORCID:0000-0002-8878-2611), Cacciola S., D'Arrigo S. (ORCID:0000-0001-6740-3195), and Scapigliati A. (ORCID:0000-0002-4044-2343)
- Abstract
The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation initiated a continuous review of new, peer-reviewed published cardiopulmonary resuscitation science. This is the fifth annual summary of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science With Treatment Recommendations; a more comprehensive review was done in 2020. This latest summary addresses the most recently published resuscitation evidence reviewed by International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task force science experts. Topics covered by systematic reviews in this summary include resuscitation topics of video-based dispatch systems; head-up cardiopulmonary resuscitation; early coronary angiography after return of spontaneous circulation; cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the prone patient; cord management at birth for preterm and term infants; devices for administering positive-pressure ventilation at birth; family presence during neonatal resuscitation; self-directed, digitally based basic life support education and training in adults and children; coronavirus disease 2019 infection risk to rescuers from patients in cardiac arrest; and first aid topics, including cooling with water for thermal burns, oral rehydration for exertional dehydration, pediatric tourniquet use, and methods of tick removal. Members from 6 International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation task forces have assessed, discussed, and debated the quality of the evidence, according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria, and their statements include consensus treatment recommendations or good practice statements. Insights into the deliberations of the task forces are provided in Justification and Evidence-to-Decision Framework Highlights sections. In addition, the task forces listed priority knowledge gaps for further research.
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- 2021
28. R\'enyi divergence inequalities via interpolation, with applications to generalised entropic uncertainty relations
- Author
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McKinlay, Alexander and McKinlay, Alexander
- Abstract
We investigate quantum R\'enyi entropic quantities, specifically those derived from 'sandwiched' divergence. This divergence is one of several proposed R\'enyi generalisations of the quantum relative entropy. We may define R\'enyi generalisations of the quantum conditional entropy and mutual information in terms of this divergence, from which they inherit many desirable properties. However, these quantities lack some of the convenient structure of their Shannon and von Neumann counterparts. We attempt to bridge this gap by establishing divergence inequalities for valid combinations of R\'enyi order which replicate the chain and decomposition rules of Shannon and von Neumann entropies. Although weaker in general, these inequalities recover equivalence when the R\'enyi parameters tend to one. To this end we present R\'enyi mutual information decomposition rules, a new approach to the R\'enyi conditional entropy tripartite chain rules and a more general bipartite comparison. The derivation of these results relies on a novel complex interpolation approach for general spaces of linear operators. These new comparisons allow us to employ techniques that until now were only available for Shannon and von Neumann entropies. We can therefore directly apply them to the derivation of R\'enyi entropic uncertainty relations. Accordingly, we establish a family of R\'enyi information exclusion relations and provide further generalisations and improvements to this and other known relations, including the R\'enyi bipartite uncertainty relations.
- Published
- 2021
29. Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum Vol. LXXII. Arator, De actibus apostolorum
- Author
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McKinlay, Arturi Patch and McKinlay, Arturi Patch
- Published
- 2021
30. Preventing critical failure. Can routinely collected data be repurposed to predict avoidable patient harm? A quantitative descriptive study.
- Author
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Cox E., Cusack K., Fletcher M., Saar E., Farrell T., Anil S., McKinlay L., Wallace E.M., Nowotny B.M., Davies-Tuck M., Scott B., Stewart M., Cox E., Cusack K., Fletcher M., Saar E., Farrell T., Anil S., McKinlay L., Wallace E.M., Nowotny B.M., Davies-Tuck M., Scott B., and Stewart M.
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine whether sharing of routinely collected health service performance data could have predicted a critical safety failure at an Australian maternity service. Design(s): Observational quantitative descriptive study. Setting(s): A public hospital maternity service in Victoria, Australia. Data sources: A public health service; the Victorian state health quality and safety office-Safer Care Victoria; the Health Complaints Commission; Victorian Managed Insurance Authority; Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity; Paediatric Infant Perinatal Emergency Retrieval; Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency. Main Outcome Measure(s): Numbers and rates for events (activity, deaths, complaints, litigation, practitioner notifications). Correlation coefficients. Result(s): Between 2000 and 2014 annual birth numbers at the index hospital more than doubled with no change in bed capacity, to be significantly busier than similar services as determined using an independent samples t-test (p<0.001). There were 36 newborn deaths, 11 of which were considered avoidable. Pearson correlations revealed a weak but significant relationship between number of births per birth suite room birth and perinatal mortality (r2=0.18, p=0.003). Independent samples t-tests demonstrated that the rates of emergency neonatal and perinatal transfer were both significantly lower than similar services (both p<0.001). Direct-to-service patient complaints increased ahead of recognised excess perinatal mortality. Conclusion(s): While clinical activity data and direct-to-service patient complaints appear to offer promise as potential predictors of health service stress, complaints to regulators and medicolegal activity are less promising as predictors of system failure. Significant changes to how all data are handled would be required to progress such an approach to predicting health service failure.Copyright © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No com, Objectives To determine whether sharing of routinely collected health service performance data could have predicted a critical safety failure at an Australian maternity service. Design Observational quantitative descriptive study. Setting A public hospital maternity service in Victoria, Australia. Data sources A public health service; the Victorian state health quality and safety office - Safer Care Victoria; the Health Complaints Commission; Victorian Managed Insurance Authority; Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity; Paediatric Infant Perinatal Emergency Retrieval; Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency. Main outcome measures Numbers and rates for events (activity, deaths, complaints, litigation, practitioner notifications). Correlation coefficients. Results Between 2000 and 2014 annual birth numbers at the index hospital more than doubled with no change in bed capacity, to be significantly busier than similar services as determined using an independent samples t-test (p<0.001). There were 36 newborn deaths, 11 of which were considered avoidable. Pearson correlations revealed a weak but significant relationship between number of births per birth suite room birth and perinatal mortality (r 2 =0.18, p=0.003). Independent samples t-tests demonstrated that the rates of emergency neonatal and perinatal transfer were both significantly lower than similar services (both p<0.001). Direct-to-service patient complaints increased ahead of recognised excess perinatal mortality. Conclusion While clinical activity data and direct-to-service patient complaints appear to offer promise as potential predictors of health service stress, complaints to regulators and medicolegal activity are less promising as predictors of system failure. Significant changes to how all data are handled would be required to progress such an approach to predicting health service failure. Copyright ©
- Published
- 2020
31. Preventing critical failure. Can routinely collected data be repurposed to predict avoidable patient harm? A quantitative descriptive study.
- Author
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Cox E., Cusack K., Fletcher M., Saar E., Farrell T., Anil S., McKinlay L., Wallace E.M., Nowotny B.M., Davies-Tuck M., Scott B., Stewart M., Cox E., Cusack K., Fletcher M., Saar E., Farrell T., Anil S., McKinlay L., Wallace E.M., Nowotny B.M., Davies-Tuck M., Scott B., and Stewart M.
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine whether sharing of routinely collected health service performance data could have predicted a critical safety failure at an Australian maternity service. Design(s): Observational quantitative descriptive study. Setting(s): A public hospital maternity service in Victoria, Australia. Data sources: A public health service; the Victorian state health quality and safety office-Safer Care Victoria; the Health Complaints Commission; Victorian Managed Insurance Authority; Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity; Paediatric Infant Perinatal Emergency Retrieval; Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency. Main Outcome Measure(s): Numbers and rates for events (activity, deaths, complaints, litigation, practitioner notifications). Correlation coefficients. Result(s): Between 2000 and 2014 annual birth numbers at the index hospital more than doubled with no change in bed capacity, to be significantly busier than similar services as determined using an independent samples t-test (p<0.001). There were 36 newborn deaths, 11 of which were considered avoidable. Pearson correlations revealed a weak but significant relationship between number of births per birth suite room birth and perinatal mortality (r2=0.18, p=0.003). Independent samples t-tests demonstrated that the rates of emergency neonatal and perinatal transfer were both significantly lower than similar services (both p<0.001). Direct-to-service patient complaints increased ahead of recognised excess perinatal mortality. Conclusion(s): While clinical activity data and direct-to-service patient complaints appear to offer promise as potential predictors of health service stress, complaints to regulators and medicolegal activity are less promising as predictors of system failure. Significant changes to how all data are handled would be required to progress such an approach to predicting health service failure.Copyright © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No com, Objectives To determine whether sharing of routinely collected health service performance data could have predicted a critical safety failure at an Australian maternity service. Design Observational quantitative descriptive study. Setting A public hospital maternity service in Victoria, Australia. Data sources A public health service; the Victorian state health quality and safety office - Safer Care Victoria; the Health Complaints Commission; Victorian Managed Insurance Authority; Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity; Paediatric Infant Perinatal Emergency Retrieval; Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency. Main outcome measures Numbers and rates for events (activity, deaths, complaints, litigation, practitioner notifications). Correlation coefficients. Results Between 2000 and 2014 annual birth numbers at the index hospital more than doubled with no change in bed capacity, to be significantly busier than similar services as determined using an independent samples t-test (p<0.001). There were 36 newborn deaths, 11 of which were considered avoidable. Pearson correlations revealed a weak but significant relationship between number of births per birth suite room birth and perinatal mortality (r 2 =0.18, p=0.003). Independent samples t-tests demonstrated that the rates of emergency neonatal and perinatal transfer were both significantly lower than similar services (both p<0.001). Direct-to-service patient complaints increased ahead of recognised excess perinatal mortality. Conclusion While clinical activity data and direct-to-service patient complaints appear to offer promise as potential predictors of health service stress, complaints to regulators and medicolegal activity are less promising as predictors of system failure. Significant changes to how all data are handled would be required to progress such an approach to predicting health service failure. Copyright ©
- Published
- 2020
32. Child concussion recognition and recovery: a community delivered, evidenced-based solution
- Author
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Clarke, C, Anderson, V, Babl, FE, Rausa, VC, Davis, GA, Barnett, P, Crichton, A, Takagi, M, Hearps, SJC, Davies, K, McKinlay, A, Anderson, N, Kwan, V, Kanagalingam, S, Ceregra, G, Petris, A, Darling, S, Clifton, P, Harcourt, P, Clarke, C, Anderson, V, Babl, FE, Rausa, VC, Davis, GA, Barnett, P, Crichton, A, Takagi, M, Hearps, SJC, Davies, K, McKinlay, A, Anderson, N, Kwan, V, Kanagalingam, S, Ceregra, G, Petris, A, Darling, S, Clifton, P, and Harcourt, P
- Abstract
Pediatric concussion is a growing health concern. Concussion is generally poorly understood within the community. Many parents are unaware of the signs and varying symptoms of concussion. Despite the existence of concussion management and return to play guidelines, few parents are aware of how to manage their child's recovery and return to activities. Digital health technology can improve the way this information is communicated to the community. A multidisciplinary team of pediatric concussion researchers and clinicians translated evidence-based, gold-standard guidelines and tools into a smartphone application with recognition and recovery components. HeadCheck is a community facing digital health application developed in Australia (not associated with HeadCheck Health) for management of concussion in children aged 5-18 years. The application consists of (I) a sideline concussion check and (II) symptom monitoring and symptom-targeted psychoeducation to assist the parent manage their child's safe return to school, exercise and sport. The application was tested with target end users as part of the development process. HeadCheck provides an accessible platform for disseminating best practice evidence. It provides feedback to help recognize a concussion and symptoms of more serious injuries and assists parents guide their child's recovery.
- Published
- 2020
33. Covert Cross-Feeding Revealed by Genome-Wide Analysis of Fitness Determinants in a Synthetic Bacterial Mutualism.
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LaSarre, Breah, Julia Pettinari, M1, LaSarre, Breah, Deutschbauer, Adam M, Love, Crystal E, McKinlay, James B, LaSarre, Breah, Julia Pettinari, M1, LaSarre, Breah, Deutschbauer, Adam M, Love, Crystal E, and McKinlay, James B
- Abstract
Microbial interactions abound in natural ecosystems and shape community structure and function. Substantial attention has been given to cataloging mechanisms by which microbes interact, but there is a limited understanding of the genetic landscapes that promote or hinder microbial interactions. We previously developed a mutualistic coculture pairing Escherichia coli and Rhodopseudomonas palustris, wherein E. coli provides carbon to R. palustris in the form of glucose fermentation products and R. palustris fixes N2 gas and provides nitrogen to E. coli in the form of NH4+ The stable coexistence and reproducible trends exhibited by this coculture make it ideal for interrogating the genetic underpinnings of a cross-feeding mutualism. Here, we used random barcode transposon sequencing (RB-TnSeq) to conduct a genome-wide search for E. coli genes that influence fitness during cooperative growth with R. palustris RB-TnSeq revealed hundreds of genes that increased or decreased E. coli fitness in a mutualism-dependent manner. Some identified genes were involved in nitrogen sensing and assimilation, as expected given the coculture design. The other identified genes were involved in diverse cellular processes, including energy production and cell wall and membrane biogenesis. In addition, we discovered unexpected purine cross-feeding from R. palustris to E. coli, with coculture rescuing growth of an E. coli purine auxotroph. Our data provide insight into the genes and gene networks that can influence a cross-feeding mutualism and underscore that microbial interactions are not necessarily predictable a prioriIMPORTANCE Microbial communities impact life on Earth in profound ways, including driving global nutrient cycles and influencing human health and disease. These community functions depend on the interactions that resident microbes have with the environment and each other. Thus, identifying genes that influence these interactions will aid the management of natural communities
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- 2020
34. Enhanced nutrient uptake is sufficient to drive emergent cross-feeding between bacteria in a synthetic community.
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Fritts, Ryan K, Fritts, Ryan K, Bird, Jordan T, Behringer, Megan G, Lipzen, Anna, Martin, Joel, Lynch, Michael, McKinlay, James B, Fritts, Ryan K, Fritts, Ryan K, Bird, Jordan T, Behringer, Megan G, Lipzen, Anna, Martin, Joel, Lynch, Michael, and McKinlay, James B
- Abstract
Interactive microbial communities are ubiquitous, influencing biogeochemical cycles and host health. One widespread interaction is nutrient exchange, or cross-feeding, wherein metabolites are transferred between microbes. Some cross-fed metabolites, such as vitamins, amino acids, and ammonium (NH4+), are communally valuable and impose a cost on the producer. The mechanisms that enforce cross-feeding of communally valuable metabolites are not fully understood. Previously we engineered a cross-feeding coculture between N2-fixing Rhodopseudomonas palustris and fermentative Escherichia coli. Engineered R. palustris excretes essential nitrogen as NH4+ to E. coli, while E. coli excretes essential carbon as fermentation products to R. palustris. Here, we sought to determine whether a reciprocal cross-feeding relationship would evolve spontaneously in cocultures with wild-type R. palustris, which is not known to excrete NH4+. Indeed, we observed the emergence of NH4+ cross-feeding, but driven by adaptation of E. coli alone. A missense mutation in E. coli NtrC, a regulator of nitrogen scavenging, resulted in constitutive activation of an NH4+ transporter. This activity likely allowed E. coli to subsist on the small amount of leaked NH4+ and better reciprocate through elevated excretion of fermentation products from a larger E. coli population. Our results indicate that enhanced nutrient uptake by recipients, rather than increased excretion by producers, is an underappreciated yet possibly prevalent mechanism by which cross-feeding can emerge.
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- 2020
35. Development and Evaluation of an Automated Algorithm to Estimate the Nutrient Intake of Infants from an Electronic Complementary Food Frequency Questionnaire
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Manerkar, Komal, Harding, Jane, Conlon, Cathryn, McKinlay, Christopher, Manerkar, Komal, Harding, Jane, Conlon, Cathryn, and McKinlay, Christopher
- Abstract
Background: We previously validated a four-day complementary food frequency questionnaire (CFFQ) to estimate the nutrient intake in New Zealand infants aged 9-12 months. However, manual entry of the CFFQ data into nutritional analysis software was time-consuming. Therefore, we developed an automated algorithm and evaluated its accuracy by comparing the nutrient estimates with those obtained from the nutritional analysis software. Methods: We analysed 50 CFFQ completed at 9- and 12-months using Food Works nutritional analysis software. The automated algorithm was programmed in SAS by multiplying the average daily consumption of each food item by the nutrient content of the portion size. We considered the most common brands for commercially prepared baby foods. Intakes of energy, macronutrients, and micronutrients were compared between methods using Bland-Altman analysis. Results: The automated algorithm did not have any significant bias for estimates of energy (kJ) (MD 15, 95% CI -27, 58), carbohydrate (g) (MD -0.1, 95% CI -1.2,1.0), and fat (g) (-0.1, 95% CI -0.3,0.1), but slightly underestimated intake of protein (MD -0.4 g, 95% CI -0.7,-0.1), saturated fat, PUFA, dietary fibre, and niacin. The algorithm provided accurate estimates for other micronutrients. The limits of agreement were relatively narrow. Conclusion: This automated algorithm is an efficient tool to estimate the nutrient intakes from CFFQ accurately. The small negative bias observed for few nutrients was clinically insignificant and can be minimised. This algorithm is suitable to use in large clinical trials and cohort studies without the need for proprietary software.
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- 2020
36. One- and Two-Photon-Induced Photochemistry of Iron Pentacarbonyl [Fe(CO)(5)]: Insights from Coupled Cluster Response Theory
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Malcomson, Thomas, McKinlay, Russell G., Paterson, Martin J., Malcomson, Thomas, McKinlay, Russell G., and Paterson, Martin J.
- Abstract
We present herein the first comprehensive study of the one‐ and two‐photon absorption of Fe(CO)5 utilising a hierarchy of linear‐ and quadratic‐response coupled cluster (LR‐ and QR‐CC) methodologies to provide an in‐depth characterisation, as well as potential energy curves for axial and equatorial bond dissociations, highlighting the state crossings leading from the bright 1A2′′ state through to the dissociative 1E′ state. We have characterised a range of metal‐to‐ligand charge transfer (MLCT) and ligand field (LF) states that are in agreement with both previous studies and experiment, including the identification of a series of E′ states that present Rydberg character in the 5.9–7.2 eV region. Due to the rapid excited state dissociation of Fe(CO)5 through the low lying 1E′ and 2E′′ ligand‐field states, we have also included an LR‐CCSD analysis of the major dissociative product, Fe(CO)4. Analysis of the C2v geometry of Fe(CO)4 reveals four accessible ligand field states at 1.085, 1.684, 1.958, and 2.504 eV respectively, reinforcing the highly unstable nature of Fe(CO)4 along with a strong MLCT band between 4.300 and 5.573 eV. This band overlaps with one in the spectra of Fe(CO)5 suggesting that full fragmentation could proceed by two paths: two‐photon excitation leading to dissociation, or through sequential one‐photon absorption events, the first causing dissociation to and the second initiating further fragmentation of the complex.
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- 2019
37. High-coverage genomes to elucidate the evolution of penguins
- Author
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Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles-André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Mikkel-Holger, S. Sinding, Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa j., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Zhang, De Xing, Zhang, Guojie, Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles-André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Mikkel-Holger, S. Sinding, Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa j., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Zhang, De Xing, and Zhang, Guojie
- Abstract
Penguins (Sphenisciformes) are a remarkable order of flightless wing-propelled diving seabirds distributed widely across the southern hemisphere. They share a volant common ancestor with Procellariiformes close to the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary (66 million years ago) and subsequently lost the ability to fly but enhanced their diving capabilities. With ∼20 species among 6 genera, penguins range from the tropical Galápagos Islands to the oceanic temperate forests of New Zealand, the rocky coastlines of the sub-Antarctic islands, and the sea ice around Antarctica. To inhabit such diverse and extreme environments, penguins evolved many physiological and morphological adaptations. However, they are also highly sensitive to climate change. Therefore, penguins provide an exciting target system for understanding the evolutionary processes of speciation, adaptation, and demography. Genomic data are an emerging resource for addressing questions about such processes.
- Published
- 2019
38. High-coverage genomes to elucidate the evolution of penguins
- Author
-
Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles-André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Mikkel-Holger, S. Sinding, Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa j., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Zhang, De Xing, Zhang, Guojie, Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles-André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Mikkel-Holger, S. Sinding, Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa j., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Zhang, De Xing, and Zhang, Guojie
- Abstract
Penguins (Sphenisciformes) are a remarkable order of flightless wing-propelled diving seabirds distributed widely across the southern hemisphere. They share a volant common ancestor with Procellariiformes close to the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary (66 million years ago) and subsequently lost the ability to fly but enhanced their diving capabilities. With ∼20 species among 6 genera, penguins range from the tropical Galápagos Islands to the oceanic temperate forests of New Zealand, the rocky coastlines of the sub-Antarctic islands, and the sea ice around Antarctica. To inhabit such diverse and extreme environments, penguins evolved many physiological and morphological adaptations. However, they are also highly sensitive to climate change. Therefore, penguins provide an exciting target system for understanding the evolutionary processes of speciation, adaptation, and demography. Genomic data are an emerging resource for addressing questions about such processes.
- Published
- 2019
39. High-coverage genomes to elucidate the evolution of penguins
- Author
-
Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Ksepka, Daniel T., Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Sinding, Mikkel Holger S., Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa J., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Borboroglu, Pablo García, Zhang, De Xing, Zhang, Guojie, Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Ksepka, Daniel T., Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Sinding, Mikkel Holger S., Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa J., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Borboroglu, Pablo García, Zhang, De Xing, and Zhang, Guojie
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Penguins (Sphenisciformes) are a remarkable order of flightless wing-propelled diving seabirds distributed widely across the southern hemisphere. They share a volant common ancestor with Procellariiformes close to the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary (66 million years ago) and subsequently lost the ability to fly but enhanced their diving capabilities. With ∼20 species among 6 genera, penguins range from the tropical Galápagos Islands to the oceanic temperate forests of New Zealand, the rocky coastlines of the sub-Antarctic islands, and the sea ice around Antarctica. To inhabit such diverse and extreme environments, penguins evolved many physiological and morphological adaptations. However, they are also highly sensitive to climate change. Therefore, penguins provide an exciting target system for understanding the evolutionary processes of speciation, adaptation, and demography. Genomic data are an emerging resource for addressing questions about such processes. RESULTS: Here we present a novel dataset of 19 high-coverage genomes that, together with 2 previously published genomes, encompass all extant penguin species. We also present a well-supported phylogeny to clarify the relationships among penguins. In contrast to recent studies, our results demonstrate that the genus Aptenodytes is basal and sister to all other extant penguin genera, providing intriguing new insights into the adaptation of penguins to Antarctica. As such, our dataset provides a novel resource for understanding the evolutionary history of penguins as a clade, as well as the fine-scale relationships of individual penguin lineages. Against this background, we introduce a major consortium of international scientists dedicated to studying these genomes. Moreover, we highlight emerging issues regarding ensuring legal and respectful indigenous consultation, particularly for genomic data originating from New Zealand Taonga species. CONCLUSIONS: We believe that our dataset and project will
- Published
- 2019
40. A soul divided: The UN's misconduct over West Papua
- Author
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McKinlay King, Julian and McKinlay King, Julian
- Abstract
2019 by the author(s). The soul of the Papuan people is divided. Separated by an arbitrary line established during the early colonial period-dissecting language groups, tribal lands, gardens, and villages-the people to the west of this line are regarded as Indonesian and live under a military dictatorship described by legal scholars and human rights advocates as systemic terror and alleged genocide while those people to the east of this line enjoy freedom within the independent state of Papua New Guinea. This paper revisits the range of agreements between the United Nations, Indonesia, and the Netherlands from 1962, which include the 1969 so-called 'Act of Free Choice' that placed West Papua into the Indonesian state. It argues the West Papuan people have been denied their rightful independence through a flawed decolonsation process as a result of multiple breaches of the Charter of the United Nations covertly orchestrated by the United Nations Secretariat. It examines the UN's collusion with Indonesia's Sukarno and Suharto dictatorships, and how the people of West Papua were illegally transferred to the United Nations, and subsequently to Indonesia. It also argues that there is an opportunity to correct this historical injustice through the United Nations system, as the process through which the incorporation was executed was conducted in contravention to the UN Charter.
- Published
- 2019
41. High-coverage genomes to elucidate the evolution of penguins
- Author
-
Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Ksepka, Daniel T., Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Sinding, Mikkel Holger S., Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa J., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Borboroglu, Pablo García, Zhang, De Xing, Zhang, Guojie, Pan, Hailin, Cole, Theresa L., Bi, Xupeng, Fang, Miaoquan, Zhou, Chengran, Yang, Zhengtao, Ksepka, Daniel T., Hart, Tom, Bouzat, Juan L., Argilla, Lisa S., Bertelsen, Mads F., Boersma, P. Dee, Bost, Charles André, Cherel, Yves, Dann, Peter, Fiddaman, Steven R., Howard, Pauline, Labuschagne, Kim, Mattern, Thomas, Miller, Gary, Parker, Patricia, Phillips, Richard A., Quillfeldt, Petra, Ryan, Peter G., Taylor, Helen, Thompson, David R., Young, Melanie J., Ellegaard, Martin R., Gilbert, M. Thomas P., Sinding, Mikkel Holger S., Pacheco, George, Shepherd, Lara D., Tennyson, Alan J.D., Grosser, Stefanie, Kay, Emily, Nupen, Lisa J., Ellenberg, Ursula, Houston, David M., Reeve, Andrew Hart, Johnson, Kathryn, Masello, Juan F., Stracke, Thomas, McKinlay, Bruce, Borboroglu, Pablo García, Zhang, De Xing, and Zhang, Guojie
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Penguins (Sphenisciformes) are a remarkable order of flightless wing-propelled diving seabirds distributed widely across the southern hemisphere. They share a volant common ancestor with Procellariiformes close to the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary (66 million years ago) and subsequently lost the ability to fly but enhanced their diving capabilities. With ∼20 species among 6 genera, penguins range from the tropical Galápagos Islands to the oceanic temperate forests of New Zealand, the rocky coastlines of the sub-Antarctic islands, and the sea ice around Antarctica. To inhabit such diverse and extreme environments, penguins evolved many physiological and morphological adaptations. However, they are also highly sensitive to climate change. Therefore, penguins provide an exciting target system for understanding the evolutionary processes of speciation, adaptation, and demography. Genomic data are an emerging resource for addressing questions about such processes. RESULTS: Here we present a novel dataset of 19 high-coverage genomes that, together with 2 previously published genomes, encompass all extant penguin species. We also present a well-supported phylogeny to clarify the relationships among penguins. In contrast to recent studies, our results demonstrate that the genus Aptenodytes is basal and sister to all other extant penguin genera, providing intriguing new insights into the adaptation of penguins to Antarctica. As such, our dataset provides a novel resource for understanding the evolutionary history of penguins as a clade, as well as the fine-scale relationships of individual penguin lineages. Against this background, we introduce a major consortium of international scientists dedicated to studying these genomes. Moreover, we highlight emerging issues regarding ensuring legal and respectful indigenous consultation, particularly for genomic data originating from New Zealand Taonga species. CONCLUSIONS: We believe that our dataset and project will
- Published
- 2019
42. Multidisciplinary management of eating disorders
- Author
-
Morris, Jane, editor, McKinlay, Alastair, editor, Morris, Jane, editor, and McKinlay, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2018
43. Multidisciplinary management of eating disorders
- Author
-
Morris, Jane, editor, McKinlay, Alastair, editor, Morris, Jane, editor, and McKinlay, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2018
44. Multidisciplinary management of eating disorders
- Author
-
Morris, Jane, editor, McKinlay, Alastair, editor, Morris, Jane, editor, and McKinlay, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2018
45. What keeps early childhood teachers working in long day care? Tackling the crisis for Australia's reform agenda in early childhood education and care
- Author
-
Mckinlay, Sharon, Irvine, Susan, Farrell, Ann, Mckinlay, Sharon, Irvine, Susan, and Farrell, Ann
- Abstract
Retaining early childhood teachers in long day care (LDC) is a pressing challenge for Australia’s reform agenda in early childhood education and care (ECEC). Case study research with five early childhood teachers in LDC revealed individual and contextual factors that enabled and challenged the teachers to stay in LDC. Drawing on social constructivist approaches, the research contributes empirically based insights that support the recruitment and retention of early childhood teachers in LDC.
- Published
- 2018
46. Multidisciplinary management of eating disorders
- Author
-
Morris, Jane, editor, McKinlay, Alastair, editor, Morris, Jane, editor, and McKinlay, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2018
47. A comparison of emergency department medical records to parental self-reporting of traumatic brain injury symptoms.
- Author
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McKinlay, A, Lin, A, Than, M, McKinlay, A, Lin, A, and Than, M
- Abstract
AIM: Studies have shown Emergency Department (ED) recording of traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases to be poor. METHODS: Parents of children aged 2-12 who attended an ED with injury to the head completed a concussion checklist which was compared with medical records. RESULTS: ED medical records commonly used head injury (HI), concussion, minor-HI and mild-HI without distinction between TBI and superficial HI. Recalled symptoms included vomiting, blurred vision and headaches versus headaches, fatigue and feeling sick from parents who reported more concussive symptoms. More cases of TBI were identifiable from parental recall compared with medical records, which recorded fewer symptoms for diagnosis, prognosis and statistical reporting of TBI. CONCLUSION: Clear guidelines need to be implemented to improve retrospective diagnosis for incidence gathering and future clinical use.
- Published
- 2018
48. Multidisciplinary management of eating disorders
- Author
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Morris, Jane, editor, McKinlay, Alastair, editor, Morris, Jane, editor, and McKinlay, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2018
49. Multidisciplinary management of eating disorders
- Author
-
Morris, Jane, editor, McKinlay, Alastair, editor, Morris, Jane, editor, and McKinlay, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2018
50. STRIDER (Sildenafil TheRapy in dismal prognosis early onset fetal growth restriction): An international consortium of randomised placebo-controlled trials
- Author
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Pels, A, Kenny, LC, Alfirevic, Z, Baker, PN, von Dadelszen, P, Gluud, C, Kariya, CT, Mol, BW, Papageorghiou, A, van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, AG, Ganzevoort, W, Groom, KM, McCowan, LM, Stone, PR, Lee, A, Mackay, L, Oyston, C, Gardener, G, Khashan, A, Eustace, J, Dempsey, E, Jackson, R, Dickinson, J, Gill, A, Muller, P, Sekar, R, Reid, RA, Unterschneider, J, Welsh, A, Marlow, J, Hyett, J, Walker, S, Morris, J, Watson, D, McKinlay, C, Harris, S, Lim, KI, Lalji, S, Magee, LA, Lee, T, Li, J, Hutfield, A, Ansermino, M, Robinson, W, Singer, J, Synnes, AR, Burrows, J, Audibert, F, Bujold, E, Piedboeuf, B, Davidge, ST, Seaward, GR, Dwinnell, S, Gagnon, R, Gaudet, L, Young, C, Murphy, D, Daly, S, McAuliffe, F, Malone, F, Breathnach, F, O'Donoghue, K, Al-Nasiry, S, de Boer, MA, de Groot, CJM, Sueters, M, Derks, JB, van Drongelen, J, Duvekot, HJ, Elvan-Taspinar, A, van Eyck, J, van Laar, J, Morssink, LP, Price, L, Astor, A, Hardman, L, Sharp, A, Turner, M, Cameron, A, Draper, E, Clarke, P, Mckelvey, A, Masson, G, Aquilin, J, Johnstone, E, Bugg, G, Howe, D, Patni, S, Mousa, H, Russell, H, Hannon, T, Kilby, M, David, A, Cohen, K, Impey, L, Stock, S, Poon, L, Pasupath, D, Khalil, A, Pels, A, Kenny, LC, Alfirevic, Z, Baker, PN, von Dadelszen, P, Gluud, C, Kariya, CT, Mol, BW, Papageorghiou, A, van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, AG, Ganzevoort, W, Groom, KM, McCowan, LM, Stone, PR, Lee, A, Mackay, L, Oyston, C, Gardener, G, Khashan, A, Eustace, J, Dempsey, E, Jackson, R, Dickinson, J, Gill, A, Muller, P, Sekar, R, Reid, RA, Unterschneider, J, Welsh, A, Marlow, J, Hyett, J, Walker, S, Morris, J, Watson, D, McKinlay, C, Harris, S, Lim, KI, Lalji, S, Magee, LA, Lee, T, Li, J, Hutfield, A, Ansermino, M, Robinson, W, Singer, J, Synnes, AR, Burrows, J, Audibert, F, Bujold, E, Piedboeuf, B, Davidge, ST, Seaward, GR, Dwinnell, S, Gagnon, R, Gaudet, L, Young, C, Murphy, D, Daly, S, McAuliffe, F, Malone, F, Breathnach, F, O'Donoghue, K, Al-Nasiry, S, de Boer, MA, de Groot, CJM, Sueters, M, Derks, JB, van Drongelen, J, Duvekot, HJ, Elvan-Taspinar, A, van Eyck, J, van Laar, J, Morssink, LP, Price, L, Astor, A, Hardman, L, Sharp, A, Turner, M, Cameron, A, Draper, E, Clarke, P, Mckelvey, A, Masson, G, Aquilin, J, Johnstone, E, Bugg, G, Howe, D, Patni, S, Mousa, H, Russell, H, Hannon, T, Kilby, M, David, A, Cohen, K, Impey, L, Stock, S, Poon, L, Pasupath, D, and Khalil, A
- Abstract
Background: Severe, early-onset fetal growth restriction due to placental insufficiency is associated with a high risk of perinatal mortality and morbidity with long-lasting sequelae. Placental insufficiency is the result of abnormal formation and function of the placenta with inadequate remodelling of the maternal spiral arteries. There is currently no effective therapy available. Some evidence suggests sildenafil citrate may improve uteroplacental blood flow, fetal growth, and meaningful infant outcomes. The objective of the Sildenafil TheRapy In Dismal prognosis Early onset fetal growth Restriction (STRIDER) collaboration is to evaluate the effectiveness of sildenafil versus placebo in achieving healthy perinatal survival through the conduct of randomised clinical trials and systematic review including individual patient data meta-analysis. Methods: Five national/bi-national multicentre randomised placebo-controlled trials have been launched. Women with a singleton pregnancy between 18 and 30 weeks with severe fetal growth restriction of likely placental origin, and where the likelihood of perinatal death/severe morbidity is estimated to be significant are included. Participants will receive either sildenafil 25 mg or matching placebo tablets orally three times daily from recruitment to 32 weeks gestation. Discussion: The STRIDER trials were conceived and designed through international collaboration. Although the individual trials have different primary outcomes for reasons of sample size and feasibility, all trials will collect a standard set of outcomes including survival without severe neonatal morbidity at time of hospital discharge. This is a summary of all the STRIDER trial protocols and provides an example of a prospectively planned international clinical research collaboration. All five individual trials will contribute to a pre-planned systematic review of the topic including individual patient data meta-analysis.
- Published
- 2017
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