77,889 results
Search Results
202. Research Paper. Evidence for morphological alterations in prefrontal white matter glia in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
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Hercher, Christa, Chopra, Vikramjit, and Beasley, Clare L.
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BRAIN physiology , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *ANALYSIS of variance , *STATISTICAL correlation , *DEAD , *IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY , *BIPOLAR disorder , *RESEARCH funding , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *CASE-control method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Brain imaging studies suggest that volume reductions and compromised white matter integrity occur in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder (BD). However, the cellular correlates have not yet been identified. To address this issue we assessed oligodendrocyte, astrocyte and microglial populations in postmortem white matter from schizophrenia, BD and nonpsychiatric control samples. Methods: The density, areal fraction and spatial distribution of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-expressing astrocytes and ionized calciumbinding adaptor molecule-1 (IBA-1)-expressing microglia as well as the density, nuclear size and spatial distribution of Nissl-stained oligodendrocytes were quantified in postmortem white matter adjacent to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (Brodmann area 9) in schizophrenia, BD and control samples (n = 20). In addition, the oligodendrocyte-associated proteins myelin basic protein and 2′,3′-cyclic-nucleotide 3′-phosphodiesterase (CNPase) were quantified in the same samples by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and immunoblotting. Results: Oligodendrocyte density (p = 0.012) and CNPase protein levels (p = 0.038) differed between groups, being increased in BD compared with control samples. The GFAP area fraction (p = 0.05) and astrocyte spatial distribution (p = 0.040) also differed between groups, reflecting decreased area fraction and increased cell clustering in both schizophrenia and BD samples. Limitations: Oligodendrocytes were identified using morphological criteria. Conclusion: This study provides evidence for glial pathology in prefrontal white matter in schizophrenia and BD. Changes in oligodendrocyte and astrocyte populations in white matter in the major psychiatric disorders may reflect disruptions in structural or metabolic support of axons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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203. Research Paper. Investigation of the involvement of MIR185 and its target genes in the development of schizophrenia.
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Forstner, Andreas J., Basmanav, F. Buket, Mattheisen, Manuel, Böhmer, Anne C., Hollegaard, Mads V., Janson, Esther, Strengman, Eric, Priebe, Lutz, Degenhardt, Franziska, Hoffmann, Per, Herms, Stefan, Maier, Wolfgang, Mössner, Rainald, Rujescu, Dan, Ophoff, Roel A., Moebus, Susanne, Mortensen, Preben B., Børglum, Anders D., Hougaard, David M., and Frank, Josef
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GENETICS of schizophrenia , *ANIMAL experimentation , *GENE expression , *GENES , *MICE , *RESEARCH funding , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *CASE-control method , *SEQUENCE analysis , *GENOTYPES - Abstract
Background: Schizophrenia is a complex neuropsychiatric disorder of unclear etiology. The strongest known genetic risk factor is the 22q11.2 microdeletion. Research has yet to confirm which genes within the deletion region are implicated in schizophrenia. The minimal 1.5 megabase deletion contains MIR185, which encodes microRNA 185. Methods: We determined miR-185 expression in embryonic and adult mouse brains. Common and rare variants at this locus were then investigated using a human genetics approach. First, we performed gene-based analyses for MIR185 common variants and target genes using Psychiatric Genomics Consortium genome-wide association data. Second, MIR185 was resequenced in German patients (n = 1000) and controls (n = 500). We followed up promising variants by genotyping an additional European sample (patients, n = 3598; controls, n = 4082). Results: In situ hybridization in mice revealed miR-185 expression in brain regions implicated in schizophrenia. Gene-based tests revealed association between common variants in 3 MIR185 target genes (ATAT1, SH3PXD2A, NTRK3) and schizophrenia. Further analyses in mice revealed overlapping expression patterns for these target genes and miR185. Resequencing identified 2 rare patient-specific novel variants flanking MIR185. However, follow-up genotyping provided no further evidence of their involvement in schizophrenia. Limitations: Power to detect rare variant associations was limited. Conclusion: Human genetic analyses generated no evidence of the involvement of MIR185 in schizophrenia. However, the expression patterns of miR-185 and its target genes in mice, and the genetic association results for the 3 target genes, suggest that further research into the involvement of miR-185 and its downstream pathways in schizophrenia is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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204. Research Paper. Disruption of brain white matter microstructure in women with anorexia nervosa.
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Via, Esther, Zalesky, Andrew, Sánchez, Isabel, Forcano, Laura, Harrison, Ben J., Pujol, Jesús, Fernández-Aranda, Fernando, Menchón, José Manuel, Soriano-Mas, Carles, Cardoner, Narcís, and Fornito, Alex
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BRAIN physiology , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *RESEARCH funding , *CASE-control method , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: The etiology of anorexia nervosa is still unknown. Multiple and distributed brain regions have been implicated in its pathophysiology, implying a dysfunction of connected neural circuits. Despite these findings, the role of white matter in anorexia nervosa has been rarely assessed. In this study, we used diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to characterize alterations of white matter microstructure in a clinically homogeneous sample of patients with anorexia nervosa. Methods: Women with anorexia nervosa (restricting subtype) and healthy controls underwent brain DTI. We used tract-based spatial statistics to compare fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) maps between the groups. Furthermore, axial (AD) and radial diffusivity (RD) measures were extracted from regions showing group differences in either FA or MD. Results: We enrolled 19 women with anorexia nervosa and 19 healthy controls in our study. Patients with anorexia nervosa showed significant FA decreases in the parietal part of the left superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF; pFWE < 0.05), with increased MD and RD but no differences in AD. Patients with anorexia nervosa also showed significantly increased MD in the fornix (pFWE < 0.05), accompanied by decreased FA and increased RD and AD. Limitations: Limitations include our modest sample size and cross-sectional design. Conclusion: Our findings support the presence of white matter pathology in patients with anorexia nervosa. Alterations in the SLF and fornix might be relevant to key symptoms of anorexia nervosa, such as body image distortion or impairments in body-energy-balance and reward processes. The differences found in both areas replicate those found in previous DTI studies and support a role for white matter pathology of specific neural circuits in individuals with anorexia nervosa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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205. Research Paper. Metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR2/3 and mGluR5 binding in the anterior cingulate cortex in psychotic and nonpsychotic depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia: implications for novel mGluR-based therapeutics.
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Matosin, Natalie, Fernandez-Enright, Francesca, Frank, Elisabeth, Chao Deng, Wong, Jenny, Xu-Feng Huang, and Newell, Kelly A.
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BRAIN physiology , *GLUTAMIC acid metabolism , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CELL receptors , *STATISTICAL correlation , *DEAD , *MENTAL depression , *LONGITUDINAL method , *BIPOLAR disorder , *PSYCHOSES , *RESEARCH funding , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *CASE-control method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Metabotropic glutamate receptors 2/3 (mGluR2/3) and 5 (mGluR5) are novel therapeutic targets for major depression (MD), bipolar disorder (BD) and schizophrenia. We aimed to determine whether mGluR2/3 and mGluR5 binding in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), a brain region essential for the regulation of mood, cognition and emotion, were differentially altered in these pathologies. Methods: Using postmortem human brains derived from 2 cohorts, [3H]LY341495 binding to mGluR2/3 and [3H]MPEP binding to mGluR5 were measured by receptor autoradiography in the ACC. The first cohort comprised samples from individuals who had MD with psychosis (MDP), MD without psychosis (MDNP) and matched controls (n = 11-12 per group). The second cohort comprised samples from individuals who had MDNP, BD, schizophrenia and matched controls (n = 15 per group). Results: No differences in mGluR2/3 or mGluR5 binding were observed in the MDP, MDNP, BD or schizophrenia groups compared with the control group (all p > 0.05). Importantly, there were also no differences in binding densities between the psychiatric disorders (p > 0.05). We did, however, observe age-related effects, with consistent negative associations between mGluR2/3 and age in the control group (r < -0.575, p < 0.025) and the psychotic disorder groups (MDP and schizophrenia: r = -0.765 to -0.515, p < 0.05), but not in the mood disorder groups (MDNP, BD). Limitations: Replication in larger independent cohorts and medication-naive individuals would strengthen these findings. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that mGluRs are unaltered in the ACC; however, the presence of altered receptor function cannot be discounted and requires further investigation. Taken together with previous studies, which report differential changes in mGluR2, 3 and 5 across these disorders, we suggest mGluRs may be affected in a brain region-specific manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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206. Trends in finance research: Analyzing publication data of leading financial journals.
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Desai, Asha and Anil kumar, H.
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RESEARCH funding ,FINANCIAL research ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,FINANCIAL economics ,CORPORATE finance ,QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
The present study is a bibliometric analysis of the papers published in the top five finance-related journals as listed in the Financial Times (FT50 Journals). The journals included in the study are the Journal of Finance (JF), Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis (JFQA), Journal of Financial Economics (JFE), Review of Finance (RF), and Review of Financial Studies (RFS). The study analyses the publication trend, identifying the most prolific and influential authors, most productive countries, institutes, and journals during the twenty years from 1999 to 2018. The study further analyses the keywords related to the papers published in the five journals to identify the hot topics during the study period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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207. The role of mentoring in the schooling of children in residential care.
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Garcia-Molsosa, Marta, Collet-Sabé, Jordi, and Montserrat, Carme
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ACADEMIC achievement ,CAREGIVERS ,FOCUS groups ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,MENTORING ,REPORT writing ,RESEARCH funding ,ROLE models ,TEACHERS ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL capital ,PILOT projects ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESIDENTIAL care ,UNDERGRADUATES ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Social Work is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2021
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208. Reviewing Machine Learning and Image Processing Based Decision-Making Systems for Breast Cancer Imaging.
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Zerouaoui, Hasnae and Idri, Ali
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BREAST tumor diagnosis ,ALGORITHMS ,MAMMOGRAMS ,BREAST tumors ,DECISION support systems ,DECISION trees ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,DIGITAL image processing ,MACHINE learning ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MEDLINE ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,ONLINE information services ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RESEARCH bias ,SUPPORT vector machines ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMPUTER-aided diagnosis ,DEEP learning - Abstract
Breast cancer (BC) is the leading cause of death among women worldwide. It affects in general women older than 40 years old. Medical images analysis is one of the most promising research areas since it provides facilities for diagnosis and decision-making of several diseases such as BC. This paper conducts a Structured Literature Review (SLR) of the use of Machine Learning (ML) and Image Processing (IP) techniques to deal with BC imaging. A set of 530 papers published between 2000 and August 2019 were selected and analyzed according to ten criteria: year and publication channel, empirical type, research type, medical task, machine learning techniques, datasets used, validation methods, performance measures and image processing techniques which include image pre-processing, segmentation, feature extraction and feature selection. Results showed that diagnosis was the most used medical task and that Deep Learning techniques (DL) were largely used to perform classification. Furthermore, we found out that classification was the most ML objective investigated followed by prediction and clustering. Most of the selected studies used Mammograms as imaging modalities rather than Ultrasound or Magnetic Resonance Imaging with the use of public or private datasets with MIAS as the most frequently investigated public dataset. As for image processing techniques, the majority of the selected studies pre-process their input images by reducing the noise and normalizing the colors, and some of them use segmentation to extract the region of interest with the thresholding method. For feature extraction, we note that researchers extracted the relevant features using classical feature extraction techniques (e.g. Texture features, Shape features, etc.) or DL techniques (e. g. VGG16, VGG19, ResNet, etc.), and finally few papers used feature selection techniques in particular the filter methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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209. Open-source Software Sustainability Models: Initial White Paper From the Informatics Technology for Cancer Research Sustainability and Industry Partnership Working Group.
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Ye, Ye, Barapatre, Seemran, Davis, Michael K, Elliston, Keith O, Davatzikos, Christos, Fedorov, Andrey, Fillion-Robin, Jean-Christophe, Foster, Ian, Gilbertson, John R, Lasso, Andras, Miller, James V, Morgan, Martin, Pieper, Steve, Raumann, Brigitte E, Sarachan, Brion D, Savova, Guergana, Silverstein, Jonathan C, Taylor, Donald P, Zelnis, Joyce B, and Zhang, Guo-Qiang
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STRATEGIC alliances (Business) ,TEAMS in the workplace ,MEDICAL informatics ,CANCER research ,SUSTAINABILITY ,PRODUCT management ,TUMOR treatment ,COMPUTER software ,RESEARCH ,COMPUTER science ,APACHE (Disease classification system) ,INFORMATION science ,RESEARCH funding ,TECHNOLOGY ,BIOTIC communities - Abstract
Background: The National Cancer Institute Informatics Technology for Cancer Research (ITCR) program provides a series of funding mechanisms to create an ecosystem of open-source software (OSS) that serves the needs of cancer research. As the ITCR ecosystem substantially grows, it faces the challenge of the long-term sustainability of the software being developed by ITCR grantees. To address this challenge, the ITCR sustainability and industry partnership working group (SIP-WG) was convened in 2019.Objective: The charter of the SIP-WG is to investigate options to enhance the long-term sustainability of the OSS being developed by ITCR, in part by developing a collection of business model archetypes that can serve as sustainability plans for ITCR OSS development initiatives. The working group assembled models from the ITCR program, from other studies, and from the engagement of its extensive network of relationships with other organizations (eg, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Open Source Initiative, and Software Sustainability Institute) in support of this objective.Methods: This paper reviews the existing sustainability models and describes 10 OSS use cases disseminated by the SIP-WG and others, including 3D Slicer, Bioconductor, Cytoscape, Globus, i2b2 (Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside) and tranSMART, Insight Toolkit, Linux, Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics tools, R, and REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture), in 10 sustainability aspects: governance, documentation, code quality, support, ecosystem collaboration, security, legal, finance, marketing, and dependency hygiene.Results: Information available to the public reveals that all 10 OSS have effective governance, comprehensive documentation, high code quality, reliable dependency hygiene, strong user and developer support, and active marketing. These OSS include a variety of licensing models (eg, general public license version 2, general public license version 3, Berkeley Software Distribution, and Apache 3) and financial models (eg, federal research funding, industry and membership support, and commercial support). However, detailed information on ecosystem collaboration and security is not publicly provided by most OSS.Conclusions: We recommend 6 essential attributes for research software: alignment with unmet scientific needs, a dedicated development team, a vibrant user community, a feasible licensing model, a sustainable financial model, and effective product management. We also stress important actions to be considered in future ITCR activities that involve the discussion of the sustainability and licensing models for ITCR OSS, the establishment of a central library, the allocation of consulting resources to code quality control, ecosystem collaboration, security, and dependency hygiene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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210. Mobilising or standing still? A narrative review of Surgical Safety Checklist knowledge as developed in 25 highly cited papers from 2009 to 2016.
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Mitchell, Bethan, Cristancho, Sayra, Nyhof, Bryanna B., and Lingard, Lorelei A.
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INTELLECT ,PATIENT safety ,PROFESSIONS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,OPERATIVE surgery ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEMATIC analysis - Published
- 2017
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211. Preliminary Screening of Per- and Polyfiuoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in Philippine Fast Food Packaging using Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS).
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ENCARNACION, ELYSON KEITH PONCE, ALCANTARA, ANNE CARDOZA, ARMARIO, HAROLD ESPLANA, ALEJANDRO, WINNIE PAGADUAN, ZHAOQI ZHAN, ZHE SUN, and NG LIN
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RISK assessment ,LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry ,ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring ,RESTAURANTS ,RESEARCH funding ,CONVENIENCE foods ,FOOD packaging ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,POLLUTANTS ,ENVIRONMENTAL exposure ,DATA analysis software ,FLUOROCARBONS - Abstract
Per- and polyfiuoroalkyl substances (PFAS) on paper packaging resist water and oil to effectively contain food and beverages. However, previous studies have established correlations between PFAS and several diseases including COVID-19, cancers, and obesity. The goal of this collaborative research between the Philippines and Singapore is to set a baseline for PFAS levels in local packaging with the intended outcome of further increasing awareness on these contaminants in Southeast Asia, providing a starting point for migration experiments and risk assessments on PFAS in commercially-available food contact materials and articles, and initiating policy developments on these substances in the Philippines. In this study, 15 different types of PFAS were analyzed in selected paper packaging used by major quick service restaurants (QSRs) in Metro Manila. Using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), PFAS was detected in 100% of the samples with a total PFAS concentration range of 8.20-97.7 ng PFAS/100 cm². The highest amount of PFAS compound measured across all samples was PF-3,7-DMOA (89.8 ng/100 cm²). PFAS compounds regulated in European packaging such as PFHpA, PFOA, PFNA and PFDA were also detected in all samples but at trace levels. Paper wrappers for rice and small burgers were found to have the highest total PFAS of 97.7 ng PFAS/100 cm². This value translates to approximately 65.1 ng F/100 cm² which is way below 10,000 ng F/100 cm², the currently existing limit for PFAS in packaging set by the Danish Ministry of Environment and Food. While each packaging may be deemed safe compared to regulation, the compounded effects brought by use of multiple packaging, and high frequency and long-term exposures require further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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212. Electronic adaptation and danish cross-cultural translation of PEmb-QoL and VEINES-QoL/Sym for patients with venous thromboembolism.
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Lindegaard, Stine Foged, Højen, Anette Arbjerg, and Rolving, Nanna
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FIELD research ,PULMONARY embolism ,HUMAN research subjects ,AGE distribution ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,HEALTH surveys ,INTERVIEWING ,VENOUS thrombosis ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,SEX distribution ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,JUDGMENT sampling - Abstract
Purpose: Most patient-reported outcome (PROs) used in thrombosis research and clinical practice are delivered using technology like online questionnaires. However, only few have undergone formal electronic adaptation from paper to digital versions, threatening the validity and reliability of the PROs. The present study aimed to perform an electronic adaption and cross-cultural translation of two PROs measuring health-related quality of life in a Danish cohort of patients with venous thrombosis (VTE), specifically the VEINES-QoL/Sym questionnaire and the PEmb-QoL questionnaire. Methods: The electronic adaption and cross-cultural translation processes followed the international guidelines recommended by ISPOR. The migration of the questionnaires from paper to electronic versions was conducted in the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap). Following approval of the electronically adapted and translated versions, a pretest of the questionnaires was performed by cognitive interviewing patients with VTE recruited from a hospital setting. Results: Nine men and ten women between the age of 19 and 73 years participated in cognitive interviews. The questionnaires were successfully adapted from paper to electronic versions, and during the migration process only a few modifications to the content and format were made. Most comments were related to technicalities, e.g. touch functions and checkboxes. The cross-cultural translation of both questionnaires was satisfactory, as only minor rephrasing was required. Conclusions: The original and Danish version of VEINES-QoL/Sym and PEmb-QoL were successfully adapted into electronic versions and are ready to share for REDCap users. Furthermore, the Danish versions of the two questionnaires have shown satisfactory face validity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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213. Concept Papers for the Identification Of The Sustainable Charcoal Management Research Grant
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Research funding ,Grants-in-aid ,Business, international ,United Nations. Development Programme - Abstract
Tenders are invited for Concept Papers for the Identification Of The Sustainable Charcoal Management Research Grant Funded by: UN System - UN System Deadline: Proposal due on 15 Apr 2016 [...]
- Published
- 2016
214. Understanding relationships between general self‐efficacy and the healthy ageing of older people: An integrative review.
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Remm, Sarah, Halcomb, Elizabeth, Hatcher, Deborah, Frost, Steve A., and Peters, Kath
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WELL-being ,CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ACTIVE aging ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SELF-efficacy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDLINE ,HEALTH promotion ,OLD age - Abstract
Aims and objectives: The aim of this integrative review was to investigate current literature exploring relationships between general self‐efficacy and the healthy ageing of older people. Background: Enhancing the health and well‐being of older adults, while mitigating consequences of illness and frailty are important priorities in healthy ageing. General self‐efficacy is closely associated with human behaviour and has been linked with improved health and well‐being. Design: An integrative review using the five‐stage method described by Whittemore and Knafl (Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2005, 52, 546). Methods: Academic databases CINAHL, MEDLINE and APA PsycInfo were searched between 2010 and 2020 for original, peer‐reviewed papers, published in English that investigated general self‐efficacy and factors associated with the healthy ageing of older people. Included papers were critically appraised using the Appraisal tool for Cross‐Sectional Studies (AXIS tool) and Critical Appraisal Skills Programme, and underwent data abstraction and synthesis via a constant comparative method. This review was also evaluated using the PRISMA checklist. Results: Twenty‐one papers were included in this review. Two main themes emerged. The first highlights positive relationships between general self‐efficacy and health and ageing perceptions, with subsequent influence on health behaviours. The second includes two sub‐themes, which explores general self‐efficacy's role in maintaining well‐being through its effects on psychological health and overcoming physical decline through adaption to changing physical and health conditions. Conclusions: Promoting general self‐efficacy has potential benefits for the healthy ageing of older people through positive effects on ageing and health perceptions, health behaviours, psychological health and overcoming physical decline. Relevance to clinical practice: Understanding how general self‐efficacy facilitates healthy ageing can guide nursing practices that reduce or mitigate consequences of illness and physical decline on the health and well‐being of older people. Strategies aimed at increasing older people's general self‐efficacy can help to facilitate subsequent positive effects on factors that promote healthy ageing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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215. Shared responsibility for decision-making in NICU: A scoping review.
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Pellikka, Hanna-Kaisa, Axelin, Anna, Sankilampi, Ulla, and Kangasniemi, Mari
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CINAHL database ,ONLINE information services ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,PARENT attitudes ,NEONATAL intensive care ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL personnel ,NEONATAL intensive care units ,PATIENTS' families ,FAMILY-centered care ,RESPONSIBILITY ,DECISION making ,RESEARCH funding ,COMMUNICATION ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Background: Shared responsibility is an essential part of family-centred care and it characterizes the relationship between parents and healthcare professionals. Despite this, little is known about their shared responsibility for decision-making in neonatal intensive care units. Aim: The aim of this scoping review was to identify previous studies on the subject and to summarize the knowledge that has been published so far. Method: The review was conducted using electronic searches in the CINAHL, PubMed, Scopus and PsycINFO databases and manual searches of the reference lists of the selected papers. The searches were limited to peer-reviewed papers that had been published in English from 2010 to September 2021. The data were selected based on inclusion and exclusion criteria and the findings were inductively summarized. We identified eight papers that met the inclusion criteria. Ethical considerations: The scoping review was conducted according to good scientific practice by respecting authorship and reporting the study processes accurately, honestly and transparently. Results: The results showed that shared responsibility for decision-making was based on the parents' intentions, but the degree to which they were willing to take responsibility varied. The facilitating and inhibiting factors for shared responsibility for decision-making were related to the communication between parents and professionals. The impact was related to the parents' emotions. Conclusion: It is essential that parents and professionals negotiate how both parties will contribute to their shared responsibility for decision-making. This will enable them to reach a mutual understanding of what is in the infants' best interests and to mitigate the emotional burden of decisions in neonatal intensive care units. More research is needed to clarify the concept of shared responsibility for decision-making in this intensive care context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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216. What's the 'Problem' with Workplace Accommodation? A Disability Policy Journey Over Time.
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Vedeler, Janikke Solstad and Anvik, Cecilie Høj
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WORK environment ,EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities ,DISABILITY evaluation ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,EMPLOYEE selection ,GOVERNMENT policy ,RESEARCH funding ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,EMPLOYEE retention ,INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
To level the playing field in employment, the Convention of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities require state parties to ensure the provision of reasonable accommodation in the workplace. The international literature shows that barriers to workplace accommodation (WA) provision arise during recruitment, hiring, and retention. In this paper, we complement prior research by examining how WA is represented in policy documents targeting disability and employment in Norway over the past 50 years. Bacchi's policy analysis framework inspired the analysis and discussion. The analysis reveals a pattern over three time periods: 1) segregation, including the state applying a holistic approach and responsibility for WA; 2) integration, including an activation approach stimulating employer responsibility; and 3) inclusion, including holding employers more responsible. The results lead us to ask whether too much financial responsibility and work-inclusion efforts to increase employment among disabled people are currently left up to employers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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217. The prevalence of common mental and substance use disorders in general practice: a literature review and discussion paper.
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Klimas, Jan, Neary, Anna, McNicholas, Claire, Meagher, David, and Cullen, Walter
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ALCOHOLISM risk factors , *MENTAL illness risk factors , *PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *MEDLINE , *PRIMARY health care , *RESEARCH funding , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *DISEASE prevalence ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Enhanced primary care management of common mental and substance use disorders is a key healthcare target. Though primary care may be well placed to achieve this target, a greater understanding of the prevalence and profile of common mental and substance use disorders in primary care settings is needed. We searched the MEDLINE database (2002–2012) to provide an update on biomedical literature describing the prevalence of common mental and substance use disorders in European general practice. Following “PRISMA” guidelines, 17 studies were kept for qualitative synthesis. Prevalence, profile, screening instruments, associated co-morbidities, and gender distribution were tabulated. Depending on the screening method, the prevalence of common mental and substance use disorders ranged from 10.4% (Luxemburg) to 53.6% (Spain). Mood disorders were the most common. High co-morbidity with anxiety and somatisation hindered early identification and management. The continuing burden of common mental and substance use disorders, coupled with poor identification described in the updated EU biomedical literature, suggests that the unmet need for health care – identified by the World Health Organization a decade ago – remains unmet. Understanding the prevalence of common mental and substance use disorders, associated morbidity, and the extent to which general practice represents an important catchment mechanism can enhance their management at this level. General practitioners should be trained in accurate screening. Short screening instruments for general practitioners should be unified and promoted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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218. Measuring academic influence: Not all citations are equal.
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Zhu, Xiaodan, Turney, Peter, Lemire, Daniel, and Vellino, André
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ACADEMIC achievement ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,STATISTICAL correlation ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,RESEARCH personnel ,CITATION analysis - Published
- 2015
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219. Does the use of alternative predictor methods reduce subgroup differences? It depends on the construct.
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Arthur, Winfred, Keiser, Nathanael L., Atoba, Olabisi A., Cho, Inchul, and Edwards, Bryan D.
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PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,META-analysis ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CONSONANTS ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL models ,WHITE people ,PERSONNEL management ,AFRICAN Americans ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) - Abstract
Using a bare‐bones meta‐analysis, the present study examined the effectiveness of the use of commonly considered alternative predictor methods as a means to reduce subgroup differences (i.e., the method‐change approach), taking into account the constructs assessed. With a focus on assessment centers, interviews, situational judgment tests, and work samples as alternative methods, the results indicated that consonant with the construct/method distinction, the effectiveness of a method in reducing subgroup differences is a function of the constructs assessed. Specifically, there are larger White‐African American subgroup differences that favor Whites for cognitive constructs on paper‐and‐pencil tests compared to the alternative methods; and most notably, the opposite result was obtained for noncognitive constructs such that, compared to paper‐and‐pencil assessments, substantially larger White‐African American subgroup differences were observed for alternative methods. A similar pattern of results was obtained for White‐Hispanic comparisons, albeit based on a smaller number of data points. In summary, the study's results indicate that the ubiquitously asserted effectiveness of the method‐change approach for reducing subgroup differences is overstated, with said effectiveness depending on the construct assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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220. Mobile Triage Applications: A Systematic Review in Literature and Play Store.
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Montano, Isabel Herrera, de la Torre Díez, Isabel, López-Izquierdo, Raúl, Villamor, Miguel A. Castro, and Martín-Rodríguez, Francisco
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ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL triage ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MOBILE apps ,MEDICAL emergencies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDLINE ,PAIN catastrophizing ,ODDS ratio ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to review and analysis of the state of the art regarding triage applications (apps) for health emergencies. This research is based on a systematic review of the literature in scientific databases from 2010 to early 2021, following a prism methodology. In addition, a Google Play Store search of the triage apps found in the literature was performed for further evaluation. A total of 26 relevant papers were obtained for this study, of which 13 apps were identified. After searching for each of these apps in the Google Play Store platform, only 2 of them were obtained, and these were subsequently evaluated together with another app obtained from the link provided in the corresponding paper. In the analysis carried out, it was detected that from 2019 onwards there has been an increase in research interest in this area, since the papers obtained from this year onwards represent 38.5% of the relevant papers. This increase may be caused by the need for early selection of the most serious patients in such difficult times for the health service. According to the review carried out, an increase in mobile app research focused on Emergency Triage and a decrease in app studies for triage catastrophe have been identified. In this study it was also observed that despite the existence of many researches in this sense, only 3 apps contained in them are accessible. "TRIAGIST" does not allow the entry of an unidentified user, "Major Trauma Triage Tool" presents negative comments from users who have used it and "ESITriage" lacks updates to improve its performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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221. Is a mobile emergency severity index (ESI) triage better than the paper ESI?
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Savatmongkorngul, Sorravit, Yuksen, Chaiyaporn, Suwattanasilp, Chanakarn, Sawanyawisuth, Kittisak, and Sittichanbuncha, Yuwares
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EMERGENCY medicine ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL triage ,SOFTWARE architecture ,SEVERITY of illness index ,MOBILE apps ,STANDARDS - Abstract
This study aims to evaluate the mobile emergency severity index (ESI) tool in terms of validity compared with the original ESI triage. The original ESI and mobile ESI were used with patients at the Department of Emergency Medicine, Ramathibodi Hospital, Thailand. Eligible patients were evaluated by sixth-year medical students/emergency physicians using either the original or mobile ESI. The ESI results for each patient were compared with the standard ESI. Concordance and kappa statistics were calculated for pairs of the evaluators. There were 486 patients enrolled in the study; 235 patients (48.4%) were assessed using the mobile ESI, and 251 patients (51.6%) were in the original ESI group. The baseline characteristics of patients in both groups were mostly comparable except for the ED visit time. The percentages of concordance and kappa statistics in the original ESI group were lower than in the mobile group in all three comparisons (medical students vs gold standard, emergency physicians vs gold standard, and medical students vs emergency physicians). The highest kappa in the original ESI group is 0.69, comparing emergency physicians vs gold standard, while the lowest kappa in the application group is 0.84 comparing the medical students vs gold standard. Both medical students and emergency physicians are more confident with the mobile ESI application triage. In conclusion, the mobile ESI has better inter-rater reliability, and is more user-friendly than the original paper form. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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222. Assessing collaborative efforts of making care fit for each patient: A systematic review.
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Kunneman, Marleen, Gravholt, Derek, Hartasanchez, Sandra A., Gionfriddo, Michael R., Paskins, Zoe, Prokop, Larry J., Stiggelbout, Anne M., and Montori, Victor M.
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MEDICAL databases ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PATIENT participation ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,HUMAN comfort ,MEDICAL protocols ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,DECISION making ,RESEARCH funding ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,MEDLINE ,PRAISE - Abstract
Introduction: For too many people, their care plans are designed without fully accounting for who they are, the lives they live, what matters to them or what they aspire to achieve. We aimed to summarize instruments capable of measuring dimensions of patient–clinician collaboration to make care fit. Methods: We systematically searched several databases (Medline, Embase, Cochrane, Scopus and Web of Science) from inception to September 2021 for studies using quantitative measures to assess, evaluate or rate the work of making care fit by any participant in real‐life clinical encounters. Eligibility was assessed in duplicate. After extracting all items from relevant instruments, we coded them deductively on dimensions relevant to making care fit (as presented in a recent Making Care Fit Manifesto), and inductively on the main action described. Results: We included 189 papers, mostly from North America (N = 83, 44%) and in the context of primary care (N = 54, 29%). Half of the papers (N = 88, 47%) were published in the last 5 years. We found 1243 relevant items to assess efforts of making care fit, included within 151 instruments. Most items related to the dimensions 'Patient‐clinician collaboration: content' (N = 396, 32%) and 'Patient‐clinician collaboration: manner' (N = 382, 31%) and the least related to 'Ongoing and iterative process' (N = 22, 2%) and in 'Minimally disruptive of patient lives' (N = 29, 2%). The items referred to 27 specific actions. Most items referred to 'Informing' (N = 308, 25%) and 'Exploring' (N = 93, 8%), the fewest items referred to 'Following up', 'Comforting' and 'Praising' (each N = 3, 0.2%). Discussion: Measures of the work that patients and clinicians do together to make care fit focus heavily on the content of their collaborations, particularly on exchanging information. Other dimensions and actions previously identified as crucial to making care fit are assessed infrequently or not at all. The breadth of extant measures of making care fit and the lack of appropriate measures of this key construct limit both the assessment and the successful implementation of efforts to improve patient care. Patient Contribution: Patients and caregivers from the 'Making care fit Collaborative' were involved in drafting the dimensions relevant to patient–clinician collaboration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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223. Long‐term static stretching can decrease muscle stiffness: A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
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Takeuchi, Kosuke, Nakamura, Masatoshi, Konrad, Andreas, and Mizuno, Takamasa
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STRETCH (Physiology) ,ONLINE information services ,META-analysis ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EXERCISE physiology ,TREATMENT duration ,SPASTICITY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Stretch training increases the range of motion of a joint. However, to date, the mechanisms behind such a stretching effect are not well understood. An earlier meta‐analysis on several studies reported no changes in the passive properties of a muscle (i.e., muscle stiffness) following long‐term stretch training with various types of stretching (static, dynamic, and proprioceptive neuromuscular stretching). However, in recent years, an increasing number of papers have reported the effects of long‐term static stretching on muscle stiffness. The purpose of the present study was to examine the long‐term (≥2 weeks) effect of static stretching training on muscle stiffness. PubMed, Web of Science, and EBSCO published before December 28, 2022, were searched and 10 papers met the inclusion criteria for meta‐analysis. By applying a mixed‐effect model, subgroup analyses, which included comparisons of sex (male vs. mixed sex) and type of muscle stiffness assessment (calculated from the muscle‐tendon junction vs. shear modulus), were performed. Furthermore, a meta‐regression was conducted to examine the effect of total stretching duration on muscle stiffness. The result of the meta‐analysis showed a moderate decrease in muscle stiffness after 3–12 weeks of static stretch training compared to a control condition (effect size = −0.749, p < 0.001, I2 = 56.245). Subgroup analyses revealed no significant differences between sex (p = 0.131) and type of muscle stiffness assessment (p = 0.813). Moreover, there was no significant relationship between total stretching duration and muscle stiffness (p = 0.881). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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224. Fabrication of paper-based enzyme immobilized microarray by 3D-printing technique for screening α-glucosidase inhibitors in mulberry leaves and lotus leaves.
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Guo, Shangxin, Lin, Xiaotong, Wang, Yi, and Gong, Xingchu
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COLORIMETRY ,ENZYME inhibitors ,GLYCOSIDASES ,LEAVES ,LIGANDS (Biochemistry) ,LIQUID chromatography ,MASS spectrometry ,RED clover ,RESEARCH funding ,PLANT extracts ,THREE-dimensional printing ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHEMICAL inhibitors - Abstract
Background: The discovery of bioactive compounds in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) has become an important field in TCM modernization. Ligand fishing is a suitable method for discovery of bioactive compounds in complex mixtures such as TCM with high selectivity. Because of unique advantage of low cost and convenience, paper-based microdevices can be good carriers for enzyme immobilized ligand fishing. Methods: As an important enzyme for glucose metabolism, α-glucosidase was immobilized on polycaprolactone–chitosan-modified paper to prepare the microdevice with unique microfluid structure generated by 3D printing technology, which can be easily applied to screen active compounds in herbal extracts. The preparation conditions of the paper microarray were optimized. The activity of immobilized α-glucosidase was verified by colorimetric reactions which can be easily monitored by cellphone. The paper microarray with α-glucosidase immobilized was used to screen active compounds in the water extracts of mulberry leaves and lotus leaves. Results: Several key parameters including Na
2 CO3 solution concentration, Na2 CO3 solution volume, glutaraldehyde concentration, crosslinking time of glutaraldehyde and time of α-glucosidase immobilization were optimized. The proposed paper-based microarray was successfully applied in screening active compounds in two herbal extracts. Four compounds including chlorogenic acid, quercetin-3-O-glucuronide, isoquercetin, and quercetin were identified as α-glucosidase inhibitors. The compounds with significant non-specific adsorption caused by chitosan, such as isoquercitrin, astragalin, quercetin, were also found to be active compounds. Conclusions: An enzyme immobilized paper microarray was designed and fabricated in this work. Polycaprolactone and chitosan were used to modify filter paper to prepare paper microarrays. Parameters of paper device preparation were optimized. Our findings suggested that 3D-printing paper-based microarrays can be a simple and low-cost approach for discovery of active compounds of TCM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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225. Idox Publishes International Research Funding Paper
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Research funding ,Business - Abstract
Manchester, United Kingdom, July 10, 2015 --(PR.com)-- Idox is pleased to announce the release of its latest research paper, considering the different ways of identifying and maximising on alternative sources [...]
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- 2015
226. The elements of end-of-life care provision in paediatric intensive care units: a systematic integrative review.
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Adistie, Fanny, Neilson, Susan, Shaw, Karen L., Bay, Betul, and Efstathiou, Nikolaos
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MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,GREY literature ,RESEARCH funding ,CINAHL database ,DECISION making ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PEDIATRICS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,INTENSIVE care units ,TERMINAL care ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
Background: Deaths in paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) are not uncommon. End-of-life care in PICUs is generally considered more challenging than other settings since it is framed within a context where care is focused on curative or life-sustaining treatments for children who are seriously ill. This review aimed to identify and synthesise literature related to the essential elements in the provision of end-of-life care in the PICU from the perspectives of both healthcare professionals (HCPs) and families. Methods: A systematic integrative review was conducted by searching EMBASE, CINAHL, MEDLINE, Nursing and Allied Health Database, PsycINFO, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases. Grey literature was searched via Electronic Theses Online Service (EthOS), OpenGrey, Grey literature report. Additionally, hand searches were performed by checking the reference lists of all included papers. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were used to screen retrieved papers by two reviewers independently. The findings were analysed using a constant comparative method. Results: Twenty-one studies met the inclusion criteria. Three elements in end-of-life care provision for children in the PICUs were identified: 1) Assessment of entering the end-of-life stage; 2) Discussion with parents and decision making; 3) End of life care processes, including care provided during the dying phase, care provided at the time of death, and care provided after death. Conclusion: The focus of end-of-life care in PICUs varies depending on HCPs' and families' preferences, at different stages such as during the dying phase, at the time of death, and after the child died. Tailoring end-of-life care to families' beliefs and rituals was acknowledged as important by PICU HCPs. This review also emphasises the importance of HCPs collaborating to provide the optimum end-of-life care in the PICU and involving a palliative care team in end-of-life care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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227. Identification of methodological issues regarding direct impact indicators of COVID-19: a rapid scoping review on morbidity, severity and mortality.
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Garriga, Cesar, Valero-Gaspar, Teresa, Rodriguez-Blazquez, Carmen, Diaz, Asuncion, Bezzegh, Péter, Daňková, Šárka, Unim, Brigid, Palmieri, Luigi, Thiβen, Martin, Pentz, Richard, Cilović-Lagarija, Šeila, Jogunčić, Anes, Feteira-Santos, Rodrigo, Vuković, Jakov, Idavain, Jane, Curta, Anda, Sandu, Petru, Vinko, Matej, and Forjaz, Maria João
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MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,HEALTH status indicators ,RESEARCH funding ,POPULATION health ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,MEDICAL research ,LITERATURE reviews ,ONLINE information services ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background During the first epidemic wave, COVID-19 surveillance focused on quantifying the magnitude and the escalation of a growing global health crisis. The scientific community first assessed risk through basic indicators, such as the number of cases or rates of new cases and deaths, and later began using other direct impact indicators to conduct more detailed analyses. We aimed at synthesizing the scientific community's contribution to assessing the direct impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on population health through indicators reported in research papers. Methods We conducted a rapid scoping review to identify and describe health indicators included in articles published between January 2020 and June 2021, using one strategy to search PubMed, EMBASE and WHO COVID-19 databases. Sixteen experts from European public health institutions screened papers and retrieved indicator characteristics. We also asked in an online survey how the health indicators were added to and used in policy documents in Europe. Results After reviewing 3891 records, we selected a final sample of 67 articles and 233 indicators. We identified 52 (22.3%) morbidity indicators from 33 articles, 105 severity indicators (45.1%, 27 articles) and 68 mortality indicators (29.2%, 51). Respondents from 22 countries completed 31 questionnaires, and the majority reported morbidity indicators (29, 93.5%), followed by mortality indicators (26, 83.9%). Conclusions The indicators collated here might be useful to assess the impact of future pandemics. Therefore, their measurement should be standardized to allow for comparisons between settings, countries and different populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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228. Reflexive professionalisation in social work practice development, research, and education: the vital challenge of democratic citizen participation.
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Van Beveren, Laura, Feryn, Nele, Tourne, Juno, Lorenz, Walter, Roose, Rudi, Åberg, Isabella, Blomberg, Helena, Butler, Philomena, Čajko Eibicht, Monika, Caklová, Kateřina, Campbell, Jim, Donnelly, Sarah, Gallagher, Bláíthín, Havrdova, Zuzana, Kroll, Christian, Lindroos, Sanni, Machado, Idalina, Margarido, Helena, Melo, Sara, and Moreira, Andreia
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OCCUPATIONS ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL services ,CONTENT analysis ,SOCIAL work education ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,SOCIAL work research ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH ,CASE studies ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH equity ,PATIENT participation ,POVERTY - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Social Work is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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229. Coding Diagnoses from the Electronic Death Certificate with the 11th Revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems: An Exploratory Study from Germany.
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Stausberg, Jürgen and Vogel, Ulrich
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RESEARCH funding ,CAUSES of death ,DEATH certificates ,MEDICAL coding ,RESEARCH ,SEMANTICS ,NOSOLOGY - Abstract
The 11th Revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of Death (ICD-11) will replace its predecessor as international standard for cause-of death-statistics. The digitization of healthcare is a main motivation for its introduction. In parallel, the replacement of the paper-based death certificate with an electronic format is under evaluation. At the moment, the death certificate is used in paper-based format with ICD-10 for coding in Germany. To be prepared for the switch to ICD-11, the compatibility between ICD-11 and the electronic certificate should be assured. Objectives were to check the appropriateness of diagnosis-related information found on death certificates for an ICD-11 coding and to describe enhancements to the certificate's structure needed to fully utilize the strengths of ICD-11. As part of an exploratory test of a respective application, information from 453 electronic death certificates were provided by one local health authority. From a sample of 200 certificates, 433 diagnosis texts were coded into the German version of ICD-11. The appropriateness of the results as well as the further requirements of ICD-11, particularly with regard to post-coordination, were checked. For 430 diagnosis texts, 649 ICD-11 codes were used. Three hundred and sixty two diagnosis texts were rated as appropriately represented through the coding result. Almost all certificates contained diagnosis texts that lacked details required by ICD-11 for a precise coding. The distribution of diseases was very similar between ICD-10 and ICD-11 coding. A few gaps in ICD-11 were identified. Information requested by ICD-11 for a mandatory post-coordination were almost entirely absent from the death certificates. The structure and content of the death certificate are currently not well prepared for an ICD-11 coding. Necessary information was frequently missing. The line-oriented structure of death certificates has to be supplemented with a more flexible approach. Then, the semantic knowledge base of ICD-11 should better guide the content related input fields of a future electronic death certificate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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230. How Do Patients Use Self‐Care to Manage Nonspecific Symptoms Prior to a Cancer Diagnosis? A Rapid Review to Inform Future Interventions to Reduce Delays in Presentation to Primary Care.
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Wilson, Georgia, Brewer, Hannah R., Flanagan, James M., von Wagner, Christian, Hirst, Yasemin, and Cao, Canhui
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TUMOR diagnosis ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,BEHAVIOR modification ,TRADITIONAL medicine ,RESEARCH funding ,PRIMARY health care ,HELP-seeking behavior ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,HEALTH behavior ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,TUMORS ,DELAYED diagnosis ,CANCER patient psychology ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,TIME ,NONPRESCRIPTION drugs ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background. A timely diagnosis of cancer is important for patient outcomes. The delay in the patient interval (time from symptom interpretation to seeking help) is often the longest throughout the cancer patient pathway. Factors extending this interval include vague symptom profiles increasing the difficulty of symptom appraisal and individual demographics influencing help‐seeking behaviours. An underexplored and potential source of delay in cancer diagnosis is associated with managing symptoms using self‐care activities prior to presentation to healthcare. Methods. This study aimed to characterise the use of self‐care activities in the context of managing nonspecific symptoms, prior to cancer diagnosis and their effect on the length of the patient interval. Eligible publications were identified using a rapid systematic review, and their qualitative self‐care data were extracted and analysed using thematic synthesis. Results. Forty‐five qualitative research papers between 2009 and 2024 were included in the final review. Self‐care was used as part of an iterative process, often resulting in delayed presentation to healthcare, if methods were effective in managing nonspecific symptoms. Across the literature, varying types of self‐care activities were reported across all cancers with nonspecific symptoms, including the use of over‐the‐counter or alternative medications, lifestyle changes, and watchful waiting. The individual's decision to self‐care was either prompted externally by a healthcare professional (HCP) (e.g., community pharmacists) or prompted by the individual depending on the availability of home remedies and medication. Patients used self‐care when there was a low perceived need to seek healthcare, to determine whether healthcare was required, or to avoid the use of healthcare. However, across the literature, there is limited evidence to understand the variation by cancer type, symptoms, and individual characteristics. Conclusions. The findings of this rapid review demonstrate that self‐care activities could hinder prompt help‐seeking and delay cancer diagnosis among people who are experiencing nonspecific cancer symptoms. However, more evidence is needed to understand which individual factors facilitate the adoption of self‐care behaviours over prompt help‐seeking for nonspecific cancer symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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231. Clinical Validation of Digital Healthcare Solutions: State of the Art, Challenges and Opportunities.
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Gomis-Pastor, Mar, Berdún, Jesús, Borrás-Santos, Alicia, De Dios López, Anna, Fernández-Montells Rama, Beatriz, García-Esquirol, Óscar, Gratacòs, Mònica, Ontiveros Rodríguez, Gerardo D., Pelegrín Cruz, Rebeca, Real, Jordi, Bachs i Ferrer, Jordi, and Comella, Adrià
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DIGITAL technology ,ACCREDITATION ,CLINICAL medicine ,SAFETY ,ART ,MEDICAL informatics ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,NATURE ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,DATABASE management ,DIGITAL health ,EMPIRICAL research ,EVALUATION of medical care ,PATIENT care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BUSINESS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,TELEMEDICINE ,RESEARCH methodology ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,QUALITY assurance ,ONLINE information services ,DATA analysis software ,ADOPTION ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) - Abstract
Digital health technologies (DHTs) at the intersection of health, medical informatics, and business aim to enhance patient care through personalised digital approaches. Ensuring the efficacy and reliability of these innovations demands rigorous clinical validation. A PubMed literature review (January 2006 to July 2023) identified 1250 papers, highlighting growing academic interest. A focused narrative review (January 2018 to July 2023) delved into challenges, highlighting issues such as diverse regulatory landscapes, adoption issues in complex healthcare systems, and a plethora of evaluation frameworks lacking pragmatic guidance. Existing frameworks often omit crucial criteria, neglect empirical evidence, and clinical effectiveness is rarely included as a criterion for DHT quality. The paper underscores the urgency of addressing challenges in accreditation, adoption, business models, and integration to safeguard the quality, efficacy, and safety of DHTs. A pivotal illustration of collaborative efforts to address these challenges is exemplified by the Digital Health Validation Center, dedicated to generating clinical evidence of innovative healthcare technologies and facilitating seamless technology transfer. In conclusion, it is necessary to harmonise evaluation approaches and frameworks, improve regulatory clarity, and commit to collaboration to integrate rigorous clinical validation and empirical evidence throughout the DHT life cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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232. Embedding Public Involvement in a PhD Research Project With People Affected by Advanced Liver Disease.
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Beresford, Cathy J., Rahman, Mahabuba, Gray, Yvonne, Ramshaw, Sandra, Gelling, Leslie, Baron, Sue, and Dominey, Jackie
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LIVER disease treatment ,SOCIAL media ,PATIENT selection ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,DATA analysis ,DOCTORAL programs ,PATIENT psychology ,HUMAN research subjects ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DECISION making ,MEDICAL research ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,ACQUISITION of data ,GROUNDED theory ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,PATIENT participation ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,CAREGIVER attitudes - Abstract
Background: Liver disease is an increasing cause of morbidity and mortality in the United Kingdom and can be challenging to live with in the advanced stages. There has been little research exploring the healthcare experiences of UK individuals with decompensated disease when the liver cannot carry out its functions properly. A PhD research project was developed with people who have liver disease to explore care experiences in decompensated advanced liver disease. Public involvement (PI) is an essential aspect of meaningful health research, and this paper reports on the progression of our PI approach in this ongoing study. Objective: To embed PI throughout the research project to ensure that the study is meaningful to individuals with liver disease and the people who support them. Methods: The research adopts a Constructivist Grounded Theory methodology to develop a theory of care experience. Various PI approaches were considered in developing the PI strategy for this qualitative study. Initially, Embedded consultation was the preferred model, which has evolved to include aspects of collaboration and coproduction. A PI group was set up to oversee the project through the national public engagement website VOICE, and reflections on PI from three members of the group are included in this paper to illuminate the PI process. Results: Six individuals with liver disease and three carers from across the United Kingdom are part of an ongoing PI group. Their role includes commenting on the findings of the systematic literature review for this project and contributing to decisions about recruitment, data collection and data analysis. Additionally, they had a direct impact on changing the focus of the research. The PI group will continue involvement until the completion of the project. Conclusion: Successfully embedding PI into doctoral research, as demonstrated in this project, requires commitment, planning and dedication to reciprocal working for the benefit of PI contributors as well as the research. This approach could be adopted by other postgraduate researchers. Patient or Public Contribution: This project is overseen by the PI group, whose contribution is described throughout, including reflections from three PI group members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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233. Disability Tax in the Welfare State: Uncertainty and Resentment about Disability Services in Finland.
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Katsui, Hisayo
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HEALTH services accessibility ,IMMIGRANTS ,RESEARCH funding ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,ANGER ,MEDICAL care for people with disabilities ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,UNCERTAINTY ,CITIZENSHIP ,TAXATION ,SURVEYS ,HUMAN rights ,EXPERIENCE ,PUBLIC welfare ,PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
This paper focuses on the uncertainty and resentment that many persons with disabilities feel concerning their disability services in the welfare state of Finland. This paper elaborates on the theme through the lived citizenship of persons with disabilities using the key theory of disability tax as an analytical tool. The empirical data were collected through an online survey (n = 541) and six group interviews (n = 41) of persons with disabilities in 2023. The disability tax experiences are elaborated through four aspects: (1) rejected applications, (2) uncertain realisation, (3) laborious complaint mechanisms, and (4) the psycho–emotional effect. The findings of this study establish collective experiences of multi-layered disability tax throughout the disability services process. It concludes that disability services, which were originally planned to specifically ensure equal opportunities to participate in society for persons with disabilities, are increasingly becoming the very sources of burden as austerity has silently grown deeper over recent years and has become the clear policy of the current government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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234. Intelligent Stroke Disease Prediction Model Using Deep Learning Approaches.
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Gao, Chunhua, Wang, Hui, and Mezzapesa, Domenico Maria
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STROKE diagnosis ,RISK assessment ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,PREDICTION models ,DATABASE management ,RESEARCH funding ,SYMPTOMS ,SUPPORT vector machines ,DEEP learning ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,STROKE ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MACHINE learning ,DECISION trees ,REGRESSION analysis ,ALGORITHMS ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Stroke is a high morbidity and mortality disease that poses a serious threat to people's health. Early recognition of the various warning signs of stroke is necessary so that timely clinical intervention can help reduce the severity of stroke. Deep neural networks have powerful feature representation capabilities and can automatically learn discriminant features from large amounts of data. This paper uses a range of physiological characteristic parameters and collaborates with deep neural networks, such as the Wasserstein generative adversarial networks with gradient penalty and regression network, to construct a stroke prediction model. Firstly, to address the problem of imbalance between positive and negative samples in the stroke public data set, we performed positive sample data augmentation and utilized WGAN‐GP to generate stroke data with high fidelity and used it for the training of the prediction network model. Then, the relationship between observable physiological characteristic parameters and the predicted risk of suffering a stroke was modeled as a nonlinear mapping transformation, and a stroke prediction model based on a deep regression network was designed. Finally, the proposed method is compared with commonly used machine learning‐based classification algorithms such as decision tree, random forest, support vector machine, and artificial neural networks. The prediction results of the proposed method are optimal in the comprehensive measurement index F. Further ablation experiments also show that the designed prediction model has certain robustness and can effectively predict stroke diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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235. Pregnant racialised migrants and the ubiquitous border: The hostile environment as a technology of stratified reproduction.
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LONERGAN, GWYNETH
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IMMIGRATION law ,CHILDBIRTH & psychology ,ATTITUDES toward pregnancy ,ECOLOGY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MATERNAL health services ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,INTERVIEWING ,PREGNANT women ,CITIZENSHIP ,RACISM ,EXPERIENCE ,THEMATIC analysis ,MIGRANT labor ,HUMAN reproduction ,RESEARCH methodology ,HOUSING ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,SOCIAL classes ,HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
This article explores the impact of the 'hostile environment' on racialised migrant women's experiences of pregnancy and childbirth in England, arguing that the 'hostile environment' functions as a technology of 'stratified reproduction.' First coined by Shellee Colen, the concept of stratified reproduction describes the dynamic by which some individuals and groups may be supported in their reproductive activities, while others are disempowered and discouraged. This paper locates the stratified reproduction produced by the 'hostile environment' as intertwined with wider gendered and racialised discourses around British citizenship which have been 'designed to fail' racialised residents of the UK. Drawing on interviews with racialised migrant mothers in the north of England, this paper analyses how the proliferation and intensification of immigration controls interacts with gender, race, class, and other social regimes to differentially allocate the resources necessary for a safe and healthy pregnancy and childbirth, and how this is experienced materially by pregnant migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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236. Predicting coauthorship using bibliographic network embedding.
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Zhu, Yongjun, Quan, Lihong, Chen, Pei‐Ying, Kim, Meen Chul, and Che, Chao
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DECISION trees ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,COMPUTER science ,MACHINE learning ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,INFORMATION science ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,PREDICTION models ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,AUTHORSHIP - Abstract
Coauthorship prediction applies predictive analytics to bibliographic data to predict authors who are highly likely to be coauthors. In this study, we propose an approach for coauthorship prediction based on bibliographic network embedding through a graph‐based bibliographic data model that can be used to model common bibliographic data, including papers, terms, sources, authors, departments, research interests, universities, and countries. A real‐world dataset released by AMiner that includes more than 2 million papers, 8 million citations, and 1.7 million authors were integrated into a large bibliographic network using the proposed bibliographic data model. Translation‐based methods were applied to the entities and relationships to generate their low‐dimensional embeddings while preserving their connectivity information in the original bibliographic network. We applied machine learning algorithms to embeddings that represent the coauthorship relationships of the two authors and achieved high prediction results. The reference model, which is the combination of a network embedding size of 100, the most basic translation‐based method, and a gradient boosting method achieved an F1 score of 0.9 and even higher scores are obtainable with different embedding sizes and more advanced embedding methods. Thus, the strengths of the proposed approach lie in its customizable components under a unified framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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237. Emerging professional practices focusing on reducing inequity in speech-language therapy and audiology: a scoping review.
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Abrahams, Kristen, Mallick, Rizwana, Hohlfeld, Ameer S-J, Pillay, Thiani, Sulaiman, Tamzyn, and Kathard, Harsha
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ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL databases ,SPEECH therapy ,HEALTH services accessibility ,AUDIOLOGY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RACE ,WORLD health ,COMMUNICATION ,CULTURAL competence ,RESEARCH funding ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,PATIENT-professional relations ,HEALTH equity ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Background: For the professions of audiology and speech-language therapy (A/SLT), there continues be a dire need for more equitable services. Therefore there is a need to develop emerging practices which have a specific focus on equity as a driving force in shifting practices. This scoping review aimed to synthesise the characteristics of emerging practices in A/SLT clinical practice in relation to equity with an emphasis on communication professions. Methods: This scoping review followed the Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines and aimed to map the emerging practices in A/SLT to identify the ways in which the professions are developing equitable practices. Papers were included if they addressed equity, focused on clinical practice and were situated within A/SLT literature. There were no time or language restrictions. The review included all sources of evidence across PubMed, Scopus, EbscoHost, The Cochrane Library and Dissertation Abstracts International, Education Resource Information Centre from their inception. The review uses PRISMA Extension for scoping reviews and PRISMA-Equity Extension reporting guidelines. Results: The 20 included studies ranged from 1997–2020, spanning over 20 years. There were a variety of papers including empirical studies, commentaries, reviews and research. The results demonstrated that the professions were increasingly considering addressing equity through their practice. However, there was a prominent focus around culturally and linguistically diverse populations, with limited engagement around other intersections of marginalisation. The results also showed that while the majority of contributions to theorising equity are from the Global North with a small cluster from the Global South offering critical contributions considering social categories such as race and class. Collectively the contributions from the Global South remain a very small minority of the professional discourse which have a focus on equity. Conclusion: Over the last eight years, the A/SLT professions are increasingly developing emerging practices to advance equity by engaging with marginalised communities. However, the professions have a long way to go to achieve equitable practice. The decolonial lens acknowledges the impact and influence of colonisation and coloniality in shaping inequity. Using this lens, we argue for the need to consider communication as a key aspect of health necessary to achieve health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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238. Academic reading under a semantic enhancement environment: An empirical study on users' cognitive load and reading effect.
- Author
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Song, Ningyuan, Chen, Kejun, Jin, Xiufang, and Zhao, Yuehua
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SEMANTICS ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ECOLOGY ,COGNITION ,INTERVIEWING ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SURVEYS ,RESEARCH funding ,HYPOTHESIS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,EMPIRICAL research ,MOLECULAR structure ,DATA analysis software ,READING ,PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Background: In the digital environment, users' academic reading behaviour has changed, working with many articles simultaneously to search, filter, scan, link, annotate and analyse content fragments. The semantic enhancement environment has been widely set with semantic technologies to offer additional and handy support for users and thus facilitate the reading process. Despite many efforts devoted to developing a semantic enhancement environment, less attention has been paid to its actual effects. Objectives: This study aims to explore the effects of a semantic enhancement environment. Methods: Elaborating on cognitive load theory and focusing on academic reading, this study compared users' cognitive load and reading effect under the semantic enhancement environment and plain text environment and verified the three hypotheses. Results and conclusions: Through experiments and statistical analysis, this study found that, under a semantic enhancement environment, users had their cognitive load reduced and their reading effect improved. Consequently, a semantic enhancement environment promotes academic reading. Takeaways: This study adds to previous literature on semantic publishing by empirically corroborating the conducive effects of semantic enhancement environment in academic reading. Additionally, it justifies semantic publishing and provides a reference for the future design of semantically enhanced reading environments. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic?: The effects of a semantic enhancement environment are open to discuss.Academic reading is fundamental to researches and hence needs promotion.Limited studies investigated the effects of a semantic enhancement environment on academic reading.Publishers require effective reading environment designs. What this paper adds?: This study constructed a semantic enhancement reading environment to conduct a reading experiment.The experiment tested cognitive load, by using WP scale, and reading effects, by answer time and answer score.Semantic enhancement environment reduces users' cognitive load, promotes users' reading effects, and bolsters users' understanding of academic reading materials, especially in microstructure content.The design of semantic enhancement reading environments needs to fully consider the features of reading materials and give users a controllable way of interaction. The implications of study findings for practitioners: Compared to plain text environment, semantic enhancement environment is preferred in academic reading.Publishers are encouraged to add semantic enhancements to their publications.This study discussed how to design an effective learning and reading environment from the perspectives of reading resources, media forms of resources, and interaction modes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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239. Early identification of intellectual structure based on co-word analysis from research grants.
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Chen, Xiuwen, Li, Jianping, Sun, Xiaolei, and Wu, Dengsheng
- Abstract
From the initial idea, writing, submitting, and reviewing to the online presentation of a research paper takes a long time. The identified intellectual structure of a research paper may have a certain time lag. In view of this problem, scholars have suggested that research grants may be an alternative way to identify intellectual structure as early as possible. However, these comments are mentioned qualitatively. Few researchers have verified the research grant by early identification of the intellectual structure of a field with a quantitative method. Therefore, this paper proposes a new method framework to confirm the lead-lag relationship quantitatively between intellectual structures identified by the research grant and the research paper. In empirical analysis, Operations Research and Management Science in China was selected as a specific research area. The results show that the intellectual structure identified by the research grant leads the intellectual structure of a research paper by approximately 1–2 years. These discoveries, to some extent, confirm the early identification of intellectual structure based on the research grant. In addition, the results also indicate that there is high similarity between intellectual structure identified by the research grant and that in the research paper in the previous year. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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240. Citation Network Analysis of Nurse Staffing Research from the Past Two Decades: 2000–2022.
- Author
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Morioka, Noriko, Ochi, Masanao, Okubo, Suguru, Moriwaki, Mutsuko, Hayashida, Kenshi, Sakata, Ichiro, and Kashiwagi, Masayo
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RESEARCH ,ONLINE information services ,HEALTH facilities ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,NURSING services administration ,CITATION analysis ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,RESEARCH funding ,WORKING hours ,ELECTRONIC publications ,MEDLINE ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Studies have indicated that higher numbers of nurses regarding staffing ensure patient safety and a better practice environment. Using citation analysis, this study visualizes the landscape of nurse staffing research over the last two decades to show the overall publication trends, major contributors, and main research topics. We extracted bibliometric information from PubMed from January 2000 to September 2022. After clustering the network, we analyzed each cluster's characteristics by keyword. A total of 2167 papers were considered for analysis, and 14 clusters were created. The analysis showed that the number of papers published per year has been increasing. Researchers from the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, and Belgium have led this field. As the main clusters in nurse staffing research during the past two decades, the following five research settings were identified: nurse outcome and patient outcome research in acute care hospitals, nurse staffing mandate evaluation research, nursing home research, and school nurse research. The first three clusters accounted for more than 80% of the total number of published papers, and this ratio has not changed in the past 20 years. To further develop nurse staffing research globally, evidence from other geographic areas, such as African and Asian countries, and from long-term care or community settings is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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241. Involvement of people who use alcohol and other drug services in the development of patient‐reported measures of experience: A scoping review.
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van der Sterren, Anke E., Nathan, Sally, Rawstorne, Patrick, Yarbakhsh, Elisabeth, Gough, Chris, and Bowles, Devin
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ONLINE information services ,CINAHL database ,TREATMENT programs ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PRIVATE sector ,SATISFACTION ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HARM reduction ,REHABILITATION of people with alcoholism ,RESEARCH funding ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Introduction: Patient‐reported measures that assess satisfaction and experience are increasingly utilised in healthcare sectors, including the alcohol and other drug (AOD) sector. This scoping review identifies how and to what extent people accessing AOD services have been involved in the development of satisfaction and experience measures to date. Methods: PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Scopus, ProQuest, Google and Google Scholar were searched. Included papers described the development and/or implementation of a multiple‐item measure of patient‐reported experience or satisfaction specifically for people accessing AOD treatment and/or harm reduction programmes. If there was more than one paper, key papers were chosen that described each measure. The method of development, including service user involvement, was assessed against a framework generated for this review. Two reviewers were involved at each stage. Results: Thirty measures—23 satisfaction and 7 experience—were identified. Sixteen measures reported some level of involvement by people accessing AOD services in their development, although, for most measures, at a relatively low level. This involvement increased over the time span of the review becoming more frequent in later years. Only four measures were developed for use in harm reduction‐specific settings, and fewer than half reported undertaking analysis of underlying scale structure and constructs. Conclusion: Several gaps could be addressed to enhance the measurement of patient‐centred care in the AOD sector, including: developing experience measures for use in harm reduction settings and across various AOD settings in a service system; improved reporting of psychometric properties of these measures and increasing commitment to the meaningful involvement of AOD service users in measure development. Patient or Public Contribution: This scoping review is part of a broader codesign project that involves a partnership between the peak organisation for AOD services and the peer‐based AOD consumer organisation in the Australian Capital Territory, Australia. These organisations are working closely together to engage with AOD service users, service providers and policy makers in this codesign project. As such, the Executive Director of the peer‐based AOD consumer organisation is involved as a co‐author of this scoping review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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242. Pioneering management buy-out and entrepreneurial finance research: Mike Wright's research legacy.
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Sannajust, Aurélie and Groh, Alexander
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BUYOUTS ,FINANCIAL research ,RESEARCH funding ,ECONOMIC indicators ,FINANCIAL performance ,VENTURE capital - Abstract
This paper reviews Professor Mike Wright's contributions to the management buy-out and entrepreneurial finance literature. It documents the development and variety of his academic work over time. We begin by describing Mike's research impact, before analyzing his bibliometric records and providing definitions of his favorite research topics. We then discuss his individual papers starting with the emergence of buy-outs, agency costs, and corporate governance issues. After this, we move to internationalization, boom and bust, Mike's acknowledgement of the arrival of active investors, emerging markets, deal structuring, syndication, new venture finance, financial and economic performance, and recent developments. We document the legacy of an abundant scholar and, thanks to his outstanding academic impact, provide guidance through the evolution of management buy-out and entrepreneurial finance research since its inception. Plain English Summary: A Tribute to Mike Wright: The Research Legacy of a Prolific Management Buy-out and Entrepreneurial Finance Scholar. Mike Wright was a prolific scholar with an incredibly long and diverse publication list. He pioneered management buy-out and entrepreneurial finance research. This academic niche emerged with the appearance of the first leveraged buy-out transactions in the USA in the late 1970s. Mike accompanied this development since its inception and surveyed international buy-out markets like no other researcher. The academic discipline, and Mike's research, diversified into financing relationships with innovative entrepreneurial ventures and new methods of raising entrepreneurial capital. This tribute describes the development of management buy-out and entrepreneurial finance literature and practice by reviewing Mike's original research output in the field. The review may also serve as a compendium for young scholars venturing into management buy-out and entrepreneurial finance research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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243. Use of twitter for health communication: a systematic review.
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Díaz-Campo, Jesús, Cambronero-Saiz, Belén, and Chaparro-Domínguez, María-Ángeles
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MEDICAL quality control ,ONLINE information services ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SOCIAL media ,PUBLIC health ,SURVEYS ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDLINE ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Espanola de Comunicacion en Salud is the property of Asociacion Espanola de Comunicacion Sanitaria and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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244. Systematic review and citation content analysis of the CHIME framework for mental health recovery processes: recommendations for developing influential conceptual frameworks.
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Hare-Duke, Laurie, Charles, Ashleigh, Slade, Mike, Rennick-Egglestone, Stefan, Dys, Ada, and Bijdevaate, Daan
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MENTAL illness treatment ,CONVALESCENCE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CITATION analysis ,SELF-efficacy ,HOPE ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH care teams ,CONTENT analysis ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
Objectives To identify design features of the CHIME conceptual framework of mental health recovery which are associated with high rates of citation. Research Design and Methods Systematic review of all citations of the Connectedness, Hope, Identity, Meaning, and Empowerment (CHIME) framework of mental health recovery. Papers citing CHIME were screened and extracted from three citation databases. Citation content analysis was used to investigate associations between nine CHIME design features. Citations were investigated across six forms of visibility: all citations; Anglophone vs non-Anglophone; academic vs non-academic; academic discipline; professional group; and clinical population. Results There were 915 eligible documents identified. Six CHIME framework design features met predefined thresholds for high levels of influence: (i) using a systematic review methodology for development, (ii) adopting a memorable acronym, (iii) having disaggregable components, and being unaligned to a (iv) particular discipline (i.e., transdisciplinary), (v) professional group, or (vi) diagnostic population. Documents from Anglophone countries were more likely to cite CHIME with reference to transprofessional (X2=3.96, df=1, p=0.05) and ethnicity sub-group analysis (p=0.039) design features than non-Anglophone documents. Non-academic documents were more likely to cite the acronym design feature than academic papers (X2=5.73, df=1, p=0.01). Public Health-related publications were more likely to cite CHIME within a trans-diagnostic framework (X2=16.39, df=1, p<0.001) than other disciplines. Conclusions The influence and impact of conceptual frameworks for recovery are increased when the framework is underpinned by a systematic review, includes disaggregable components which can be summarized using a memorable acronym, and when the framework is transdisciplinary, trans-professional, and trans-diagnostic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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245. A snapshot of public finance research from immediately prior to the pandemic: IIPF 2020.
- Author
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Agrawal, David R., Davies, Ronald B., LaLumia, Sara, Riedel, Nadine, and Scharf, Kimberley
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PUBLIC finance ,COVID-19 pandemic ,FINANCIAL policy ,RESEARCH funding ,FINANCIAL research - Abstract
As the COVID-19 pandemic has shaped public policies and government finances, it has also influenced the topics that public finance economists are researching. Because the 2020 International Institute of Public Finance Congress featured papers that were submitted prior to the start of the pandemic, the Congress allows us to reflect on the state of research prior to the pandemic's shock to both fiscal policies and our worldview. In this article, the Editors of International Tax and Public Finance reflect on interesting papers that were presented at this internationally representative conference in public economics. The exercise provides insight on where the field of public economics was heading prior to the pandemic and will provide a yardstick to see how the field evolves in the coming years afterward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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246. Exploiting heterogeneous scientific literature networks to combat ranking bias: Evidence from the computational linguistics area.
- Author
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Jiang, Xiaorui, Sun, Xiaoping, Yang, Zhe, Zhuge, Hai, and Yao, Jianmin
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ALGORITHMS ,LINGUISTICS ,NATURAL language processing ,RESEARCH funding ,CITATION analysis ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
It is important to help researchers find valuable papers from a large literature collection. To this end, many graph-based ranking algorithms have been proposed. However, most of these algorithms suffer from the problem of ranking bias. Ranking bias hurts the usefulness of a ranking algorithm because it returns a ranking list with an undesirable time distribution. This paper is a focused study on how to alleviate ranking bias by leveraging the heterogeneous network structure of the literature collection. We propose a new graph-based ranking algorithm, Mutual Rank, that integrates mutual reinforcement relationships among networks of papers, researchers, and venues to achieve a more synthetic, accurate, and less-biased ranking than previous methods. Mutual Rank provides a unified model that involves both intra- and inter-network information for ranking papers, researchers, and venues simultaneously. We use the ACL Anthology Network as the benchmark data set and construct the gold standard from computer linguistics course websites of well-known universities and two well-known textbooks. The experimental results show that Mutual Rank greatly outperforms the state-of-the-art competitors, including Page Rank, HITS, Co Rank, Future Rank, and P- Rank, in ranking papers in both improving ranking effectiveness and alleviating ranking bias. Rankings of researchers and venues by Mutual Rank are also quite reasonable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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247. Differences in Patient Health Questionnaire and Aachen Depression Item Bank scores between tablet versus paper-and-pencil administration.
- Author
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Spangenberg, Lena, Glaesmer, Heide, Boecker, Maren, and Forkmann, Thomas
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CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MENTAL depression ,RESEARCH methodology ,POCKET computers ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Purpose: To extend knowledge about measurement equivalence of depression measures assessed by tablet and paper-pencil administration, the present study evaluated the effect of mode of administration (MoA) on scale and item level for the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the Aachen Depression Item Bank (ADIB) in elderly patients.Methods: Primary care patients (N = 193, ≥60 years) were assessed following a crossover design in Leipzig, Germany. All participants filled out the PHQ-9 and the ADIB in both MoAs under study. Effects of MoA were analyzed by intra-class correlation, mixed-effects regression, and differential item functioning (DIF). Additionally, detection rates between both MoAs were compared using receiver operating characteristics analysis compared to a diagnostic interview (SCID-I, N = 163).Results: No effect of MoA was found in the PHQ-9 on scale score or item level. Two ADIB items showed DIF according to MoA. In terms of discriminatory power, MoA did not influence detection rates of both instruments.Conclusions: In summary, our findings suggest that no severe effect of mode of administration on self-report assessments of depression should be expected. It can be concluded that tablets provide a valid way to electronically assess depressive symptoms in elderly patients. Yet changes in item presentation can influence the psychometric properties and require equivalence testing using sophisticated analyses on item level such as DIF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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248. A systematic review and narrative synthesis of inclusive health and social care research with people with intellectual disabilities: How are co‐researchers involved and what are their experiences?
- Author
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Hewitt, Olivia, Langdon, Peter E., Tapp, Katherine, and Larkin, Michael
- Subjects
TEAMS in the workplace ,CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,WORK ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL care research ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDLINE ,SOCIAL case work ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities - Abstract
Background: Using inclusive research methods with people with intellectual disabilities is increasingly common. A recent consensus statement identified key elements when conducting and reporting inclusive research with people with intellectual disabilities. This review identifies the range of health and social care research topics using inclusive research methodologies, systematically appraises the involvement of researchers with intellectual disabilities, and identifies facilitators and barriers to inclusive research. Researchers' experiences of engaging with inclusive research are synthesised. Method: Seventeen empirical studies focused upon inclusive health and social care research were identified. The associated inclusive research methodologies employed, and the stages in which researchers with intellectual disabilities were involved, along with the experiences of researchers with and without intellectual disabilities were synthesised. Results: Papers focused on a broad range of health and social care topics and largely employed qualitative or mixed‐methods designs. Researchers with intellectual disabilities were frequently involved with data collection, analysis and dissemination. Facilitators of inclusive research comprised sharing power, team working, having sufficient resources and making research methodologies accessible. Conclusions: Researchers with intellectual disabilities are involved in a wide range of methodologies and research tasks. How the added value of inclusive research is measured and its impact on outcomes, require consideration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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249. Bibliometric Analysis: Six Decades of Scientific Production from a Nationwide Institution: Instituto de Seguridad y Servicios Sociales de los Trabajadores del Estado (ISSSTE) from Mexico.
- Author
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Pacheco Aispuro, Gerónimo, Rojas Jácome, Ileana Belén, Martínez Zamora, Carlos Alejandro, Gil-Ortiz Mejía, Cuauhtémoc, Mader, Christopher, Castillo Rangel, Carlos, Monroy Sosa, Alejandro, Flores-Vázquez, Mario, Arroyo Zavala, Octavio Jesús, Ramos-Zúñiga, Rodrigo, González Garibay, Guillermo, Ángel Alavez, Gerson, and Lee, Ángel
- Subjects
PUBLISHING ,LABOR productivity ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,ENDOWMENT of research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INFORMATION science ,METABOLIC syndrome ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,MEDICAL research ,AUTHORSHIP ,MEDICAL literature ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: This study employed bibliometric analysis to ascertain the research focus areas among a group of Mexican physicians affiliated with the Instituto de Seguridad y Servicios Sociales de los Trabajadores del Estado (ISSSTE). ISSSTE, a healthcare institution catering to a diverse range of diseases, offers a distinctive perspective on the investigated specialties within the realm of health. The primary objective was to identify knowledge gaps in medical care disciplines through a comprehensive examination of scholarly publications. Methods: We retrieved Scopus papers affiliated with "ISSSTE" and saved them as.CSV files. Subsequently, we employed VOSviewer, biblioshiny, and bibliometrix for bibliometric analysis. This enabled us to identify prominent institutions, prolific authors, highly cited researchers, and their respective affiliations. Results: Our analysis identified 2063 publications; the specialty internal medicine accounted for the greatest proportion with 831 publications. Original papers accounted for 82% of the total, with 52% of them being written in Spanish. The majority of scientific output, 92%, originated from Mexico City. The annual production has steadily increased since 2010, peaking in 2021 with over 200 publications. However, papers on prevalent conditions, such as metabolic syndrome, received limited citations, and the L0 index (percentage of uncited items) for all papers is close to 60%. Scopus mislabeled one affiliation, and some cases show a low paper-to-author ratio of 0.5 Discussion: Additional concerns, such as honorary authorship due to excessive authors per paper, and the underlying causes of low citation rates in Mexican publications, warrant further examination. Moreover, our research emphasizes the urgency of bolstering research and development funding, which was consistently below 0.5% of GDP for the past four decades, falling short of legal mandates and international benchmarks. We endorse the establishment of robust research collectives in Latin America to address these challenges, foster regional scientific output, and transition from knowledge consumers to knowledge producers, thereby reducing dependence on foreign technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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250. Urinary incontinence in women 55 years and older: A scoping review to understand prevalence, incidence, and mortality of urinary incontinence during secondary care admission.
- Author
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McMillan, Isobel, Hill, Lyndsay, McCarthy, Robyn, Haas-Eckersley, Ruth, Russell, Margaret, Wood, Julie, Doxford-Hook, Liz, Fu, Yu, McGowan, Linda, and Iles-Smith, Heather
- Subjects
CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,CARDIOLOGY ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL databases ,FRAIL elderly ,NEUROLOGY ,STROKE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PATIENTS ,DISEASES ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,HEALTH literacy ,EXPERIENCE ,URINARY incontinence ,QUALITY of life ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) ,LITERATURE reviews ,ORTHOPEDICS ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Background: Up to 40% of older women living in the community experience urinary incontinence. In community settings, urinary incontinence impacts the quality of life, morbidity, and mortality rates. However, little is known about urinary incontinence and its impact on older women admitted to hospitals. Objectives: This scoping review aims to establish the current knowledge of urinary incontinence during hospital admission for women (⩾ 55 years of age) with three key objectives: (a) What is the prevalence/incidence of urinary incontinence? (b) What health conditions are associated with urinary incontinence? (c) Is there an association between urinary incontinence and mortality? Eligibility criteria: Empirical studies were included in assessing the incidence/prevalence of urinary incontinence during hospital admissions and its related morbidities and mortality rates. Studies which only included men or younger women (< 55 years of age) were excluded. Only articles written in English and conducted between 2015 and 2021 were included. Sources of evidence: A search strategy was developed, and CINAHL, MEDLINE, and Cochrane databases were searched. Charting methods: Data from each article meeting the criteria were pulled into a table, including study design, study population, and setting, aims, methods, outcome measures, and significant findings. A second researcher then reviewed the populated data extraction table. Results: Overall, 383 papers were found: 7 met inclusion/exclusion criteria. Prevalence rates ranged from 22% to 80% depending on the study cohort. Several conditions were associated with urinary incontinence, including frailty, orthopaedics, stroke, palliative care, neurology, and cardiology. There was a potential positive association between mortality and urinary incontinence, although only two papers reviewed reported mortality. Conclusion: A dearth of literature determined the prevalence, incidence, and mortality rates for older women admitted to hospitals. Limited consensus on associated conditions was found. Further research is needed to fully explore urinary incontinence in older women during hospital admissions, particularly concerning prevalence/incidence and its association with mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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