200 results
Search Results
2. Feedback-guided exercises performed on a tablet touchscreen improve return to work, function, strength and healthcare usage more than an exercise program prescribed on paper for people with wrist, hand or finger injuries: a randomised trial.
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Blanquero, Jesús, Cortés-Vega, María-Dolores, Rodríguez-Sánchez-Laulhé, Pablo, Corrales-Serra, Berta-Pilar, Gómez-Patricio, Elena, Díaz-Matas, Noemi, and Suero-Pineda, Alejandro
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COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTER input-output equipment ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EMPLOYEES ,EMPLOYMENT reentry ,EXERCISE therapy ,FINGER injuries ,BONE fractures ,HAND injuries ,HOME care services ,WORK-related injuries ,LIFE skills ,MEDICAL care ,MUSCLE strength ,PORTABLE computers ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REHABILITATION ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,SOFT tissue injuries ,TELEMEDICINE ,THERAPEUTICS ,WRIST injuries ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,MOBILE apps ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
In people with bone and soft tissue injuries of the wrist, hand and/or fingers, do feedback-guided exercises performed on a tablet touchscreen hasten return to work, reduce healthcare usage and improve clinical recovery more than a home exercise program prescribed on paper? Randomised, parallel-group trial with concealed allocation, assessor blinding and intention-to-treat analysis. Seventy-four workers with limited functional ability due to bone and soft tissue injuries of the wrist, hand and/or fingers. Participants in the experimental and control groups received the same in-patient physiotherapy and occupational therapy. Participants in the experimental group received a home exercise program using the ReHand tablet application, which guides exercises performed on a tablet touchscreen with feedback, monitoring and progression. Participants in the control group were prescribed an evidence-based home exercise program on paper. The primary outcome was the time taken to return to work. Secondary outcomes included: healthcare usage (number of clinical appointments); and functional ability, pain intensity, and grip and pinch strength 2 and 4 weeks after randomisation. Compared with the control group, the experimental group: returned to work sooner (MD –18 days, 95% CI –33 to –3); required fewer physiotherapy sessions (MD –7.4, 95% CI –13.1 to –1.6), rehabilitation consultations (MD –1.9, 95% CI –3.6 to 0.3) and plastic surgery consultations (MD –3.6, 95% CI –6.3 to –0.9); and had better short-term recovery of functional ability and pinch strength. In people with bone and soft-tissue injuries of the wrist, hand and/or fingers, prescribing a feedback-guided home exercise program using a tablet-based application instead of a conventional program on paper hastened return to work and improved the short-term recovery of functional ability and pinch strength, while reducing the number of required healthcare appointments. ACTRN12619000344190 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. Exercises using a touchscreen tablet application improved functional ability more than an exercise program prescribed on paper in people after surgical carpal tunnel release: a randomised trial.
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Blanquero, Jesús, Cortés-Vega, María Dolores, García-Frasquet, María Ángeles, Sánchez-Laulhé, Pablo Rodríguez, Nieto Díaz de los Bernardos, María Isabel, and Suero-Pineda, Alejandro
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,CARPAL tunnel syndrome ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EXERCISE equipment ,EXERCISE tests ,EXERCISE therapy ,GRIP strength ,MOTOR ability ,MUSCLE contraction ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,VISUAL analog scale ,MOBILE apps ,DATA analysis software ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Abstract Question In people who have undergone surgical carpal tunnel release, do sensorimotor-based exercises performed on the touchscreen of a tablet device improve outcomes more than a conventional home exercise program prescribed on paper? Design Randomised, parallel-group trial with concealed allocation, assessor blinding, and intention-to-treat analysis. Participants Fifty participants within 10 days of surgical carpal tunnel release. Intervention Each participant was prescribed a 4-week home exercise program. Participants in the experimental group received the ReHand tablet application, which administered and monitored exercises via the touchscreen. The control group was prescribed a home exercise program on paper, as is usual practice in the public hospital system. Outcome measures The primary outcome was functional ability of the hand, reported using the shortened form of the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (QuickDASH) questionnaire. Secondary outcomes were grip strength, pain intensity measured on a 10-cm visual analogue scale, and dexterity measured with the Nine-Hole Peg Test. Outcomes were measured by a blinded assessor at baseline and at the end of the 4-week intervention period. Results At Week 4, functional ability improved significantly more in the experimental group than the control group (MD –21, 95% CI –33 to –9) on the QuickDASH score (0 to 100). Although the mean estimates of effect on the secondary outcome also all favoured the experimental group, none reached statistical significance: grip strength (MD 5.6 kg, 95% CI –0.5 to 11.7), pain (MD –1.4 cm, 95% CI –2.9 to 0.1), and dexterity (MD –1.3 seconds, 95% CI –3.7 to 1.1). Conclusion Use of the ReHand tablet application for early rehabilitation after carpal tunnel release is more effective in the recovery of functional ability than a conventional home exercise program. It remains unclear whether there are any benefits in grip strength, pain or dexterity. Trial registration ACTRN12618001887268. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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4. WIC Participants' Perspectives of Facilitators and Barriers to Shopping With eWIC Compared With Paper Vouchers.
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Zimmer, Meghan C., Beaird, Jacob, and Steeves, Elizabeth Anderson
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CUSTOMER satisfaction , *CONSUMER attitudes , *DIETARY supplements , *FOOD relief , *FOOD supply , *GROUNDED theory , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *NUTRITION policy , *SHOPPING , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
(1) To describe facilitators and barriers to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) food shopping via electronic benefits transfer (eWIC) compared with paper vouchers. (2) To explore suggestions that WIC participants had for modifying the program to enhance their overall WIC experience. Qualitative, semistructured, in-depth interviews. WIC participants in East Tennessee. Twenty-four primary food shoppers of WIC-participating households aged at least 18 years were recruited using a purposive sampling strategy. Perceived facilitators and barriers to use of eWIC as compared with paper vouchers. Interview transcripts were analyzed using a grounded theory approach to identify emergent themes. Participants identified several ways eWIC has improved their food shopping experience, including ad hoc redemption of WIC benefits and a quicker, more discrete checkout. Participants' chief complaint about eWIC was transaction errors at checkout. Participants identified other barriers to shopping for WIC foods that cannot be addressed by the card alone, such as difficulty identifying WIC items in-store. Participants reported changes to their benefit tracking behaviors and provided suggestions to improve WIC further. The transition to eWIC was viewed favorably among WIC participants, although participants identified a need for additional support in addressing transaction errors. This finding presents an opportunity to modify messages delivered to WIC participants by WIC nutrition educators and enhance collaboration between WIC agencies, retailers, and e-commerce technology providers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Self-Monitoring of Dietary Intake by Young Women: Online Food Records Completed on Computer or Smartphone Are as Accurate as Paper-Based Food Records but More Acceptable.
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Hutchesson, Melinda J., Rollo, Megan E., Callister, Robin, and Collins, Clare E.
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ANTHROPOMETRY , *CALORIMETRY , *CROSSOVER trials , *ENERGY metabolism , *INGESTION , *POCKET computers , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *CELL phones , *SELF-evaluation , *BODY mass index , *ACCELEROMETRY , *FOOD diaries , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Adherence and accuracy of self-monitoring of dietary intake influences success in weight management interventions. Information technologies such as computers and smartphones have the potential to improve adherence and accuracy by reducing the burden associated with monitoring dietary intake using traditional paper-based food records. We evaluated the acceptability and accuracy of three different 7-day food record methods (online accessed via computer, online accessed via smartphone, and paper-based). Young women (N=18; aged 23.4±2.9 years; body mass index 24.0±2.2) completed the three 7-day food records in random order with 7-day washout periods between each method. Total energy expenditure (TEE) was derived from resting energy expenditure (REE) measured by indirect calorimetry and physical activity level (PAL) derived from accelerometers (TEE=REE×PAL). Accuracy of the three methods was assessed by calculating absolute (energy intake [EI]–TEE) and percentage difference (EI/TEE×100) between self-reported EI and TEE. Acceptability was assessed via questionnaire. Mean±standard deviation TEE was 2,185±302 kcal/day and EI was 1,729±249 kcal/day, 1,675±287kcal/day, and 1,682±352 kcal/day for computer, smartphone, and paper records, respectively. There were no significant differences between absolute and percentage differences between EI and TEE for the three methods: computer, –510±389 kcal/day (78%); smartphone, –456±372 kcal/day (80%); and paper, –503±513 kcal/day (79%). Half of participants (n=9) preferred computer recording, 44.4% preferred smartphone, and 5.6% preferred paper-based records. Most participants (89%) least preferred the paper-based record. Because online food records completed on either computer or smartphone were as accurate as paper-based records but more acceptable to young women, they should be considered when self-monitoring of intake is recommended to young women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Implementation of the Nutrition Care Process and International Dietetics and Nutrition Terminology in a Single-Center Hemodialysis Unit: Comparing Paper vs Electronic Records.
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Rossi, Megan, Campbell, Katrina Louise, and Ferguson, Maree
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DIET therapy , *DIETETICS , *MEDICAL records , *BODY weight , *CHI-squared test , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEMODIALYSIS , *HOSPITAL wards , *INGESTION , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EVALUATION of medical care , *NUTRITIONAL assessment , *QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *U-statistics , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *NUTRITIONAL status , *STANDARDS ,ELECTRONIC health record standards - Abstract
Abstract: There is little doubt surrounding the benefits of the Nutrition Care Process and International Dietetics and Nutrition Terminology (IDNT) to dietetics practice; however, evidence to support the most efficient method of incorporating these into practice is lacking. The main objective of our study was to compare the efficiency and effectiveness of an electronic and a manual paper-based system for capturing the Nutrition Care Process and IDNT in a single in-center hemodialysis unit. A cohort of 56 adult patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis were followed for 12 months. During the first 6 months, patients received the usual standard care, with documentation via a manual paper-based system. During the following 6-month period (Months 7 to 12), nutrition care was documented by an electronic system. Workload efficiency, number of IDNT codes used related to nutrition-related diagnoses, interventions, monitoring and evaluation using IDNT, nutritional status using the scored Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment Tool of Quality of Life were the main outcome measures. Compared with paper-based documentation of nutrition care, our study demonstrated that an electronic system improved the efficiency of total time spent by the dietitian by 13 minutes per consultation. There were also a greater number of nutrition-related diagnoses resolved using the electronic system compared with the paper-based documentation (P<0.001). In conclusion, the implementation of an electronic system compared with a paper-based system in a population receiving hemodialysis resulted in significant improvements in the efficiency of nutrition care and effectiveness related to patient outcomes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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7. On measurements and their quality: Paper 2: Random measurement error and the power of statistical tests.
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Beckstead, Jason W.
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EXPERIMENTAL design , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STATISTICAL hypothesis testing , *T-test (Statistics) , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *MEASUREMENT errors , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *DATA analysis software , *NULL hypothesis - Abstract
This is the second in a short series of papers on measurement theory and practice with particular relevance to intervention research in nursing, midwifery, and healthcare. This paper begins with an illustration of how random measurement error decreases the power of statistical tests and a review of the roles of sample size and effect size in hypothesis testing. A simple formula is presented and discussed for calculating sample size during the planning stages of intervention studies. Finally, an approach for incorporating reliability estimates into a priori power analyses is introduced and illustrated with a practical example. The approach permits researchers to compare alternative study designs, in terms of their statistical power. An SPSS program is provided to facilitate this approach and to assist researchers in making optimal decisions when choosing among alternative study designs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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8. From Paper to Practice: Barriers to Adopting Nutrition Guidelines in Schools.
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Downs, Shauna M., Farmer, Anna, Quintanilha, Maira, Berry, Tanya R., Mager, Diana R., Willows, Noreen D., and McCargar, Linda J.
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SCHOOL administration , *CHILDREN'S health , *CHILD nutrition , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DIET , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *ELEMENTARY schools , *EXECUTIVES , *FOOD preferences , *HIGH schools , *MEDICAL protocols , *NUTRITION policy , *POPULATION geography , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SURVEYS , *ADOLESCENT health , *TELEPHONES , *ADOLESCENT nutrition , *QUALITATIVE research , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *QUANTITATIVE research , *THEMATIC analysis , *PARENT attitudes , *CROSS-sectional method , *HEALTH literacy , *DATA analysis software , *MEDICAL coding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Objective: To explore the barriers associated with the adoption of the Alberta Nutrition Guidelines for Children and Youth in schools according to characteristics of the innovation (guidelines) and the organization (schools). Design: Cross-sectional telephone survey. Setting and Participants: Schools in Alberta, Canada. Principals from 357 schools. Main Outcome Measure: Barriers to adopting the nutrition guidelines. Analysis: A 19-question telephone survey, including open- and closed-ended questions, was used to obtain information regarding schools' characteristics and barriers to adopting the guidelines. Qualitative data were coded according to common themes a priori, based on constructs from the Diffusion of Innovations framework. Results: Schools reported many barriers related to the relative advantage, compatibility, and complexity of adopting the guidelines. Parents' resistance to change and cost were the key reported barriers. Lack of knowledge, student preferences, the physical location of the school, and barriers related to the provision of healthful food were also reported. Conclusions and Implications: Disseminating guidelines without providing adequate support for their implementation may not promote change within the school setting. School nutrition initiatives need to involve the parents and have access to sufficient financial and human resource support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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9. Growing propensity of internet addiction among Asian college students: meta-analysis of pooled prevalence from 39 studies with over 50,000 participants.
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Duc, Tran Quang, Chi, Vu Thi Quynh, Huyen, Nguyen Thi Hoa, Quang, Phan Ngoc, Thuy, Bui Thi, and Nguyen Di, Khanh
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COLLEGE students , *ONLINE information services , *CINAHL database , *META-analysis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *INTERNET addiction , *MEDLINE , *DATA analysis software , *COMPULSIVE behavior - Abstract
Rapid internet penetration and technological advancements have facilitated accessibility to internet-enabled devices globally. Since Asia lacks comprehensive data on internet addiction among college students, this review aims to estimate its pooled prevalence. This was a systematic review and meta-analysis. Searches were conducted in PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, and MEDLINE from their inception through August 2022 using terms appropriate to internet addiction and Asian countries/territorial for publications in English peer-reviewed journals. The studies included those done on current college students and provided unambiguous indicators of the threshold of internet addiction. The pooled prevalence was calculated through a random-effects meta-analysis by RStudio software, and I 2 statistic was used to assess heterogeneity. The Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal checklist was used for quality assessment. Overall, between 2007 and 2021, 39 papers comprising 45 effect sizes and totaling 58,058 participants met the inclusion criteria. The pooled prevalence of internet addiction among Asian college students was 24.3% (95% confidence interval: 19.8%–29.5%, Q = 6234, df = 44, τ2 = 0.79, I 2 = 99.29%), and strikingly, this percentage increased over time. A high degree of heterogeneity was seen, and no publication bias was found. To our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive review report on Asian college students, which found that one-fifth suffer from internet addiction. The findings emphasize the significance of multidisciplinary prevention and management strategies to mitigate the harmful effects of internet addiction. Further research is warranted to develop a standardized diagnostic tool for a more precise estimation of internet addiction among this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. The social and health consequences of the war for Ukrainian children and adolescents: a rapid systematic review.
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Badanta, Bárbara, Márquez De la Plata-Blasco, María, Lucchetti, Giancarlo, and González-Cano-Caballero, María
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ONLINE information services , *CINAHL database , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *HEALTH policy , *HUMAN rights , *SOCIAL support , *WAR , *HEALTH status indicators , *MENTAL health , *UKRAINIANS , *PUBLIC administration , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL attitudes , *DATA analysis software , *MEDLINE , *POLICY sciences - Abstract
Despite the growing interest on the Russian-Ukrainian war and its repercussion on the children's health, there is no previous systematic review compiling the current evidence on this topic. This study conducted a rapid systematic review to investigate the current findings concerning the impact of the Ukraine war on the social and health aspects of the Ukrainian pediatric population. A rapid systematic review was conducted. PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Web of Science, and Virtual Health Library (BVS Spain) were searched between February and April 2023. In addition, high-impact journals and institutions focused on pediatric health and human rights were also consulted. All relevant original articles, letters, editorials, and policy papers assessing the health and social repercussions of the war on Ukrainian children were included. From 134 publications matching the search criteria, 23 were included. These publications were categorized into three distinct domains: 'Public health challenges for the physical and mental health of children and adolescents', 'Lack of Healthcare resources and initiatives to mitigate suffering', and 'Policies, Government, and Children's rights'. Our findings revealed that the war is seriously impacting the life and the health of Ukrainian children, resulting in worse physical and mental health outcomes and perpetrating a deprived situation. To overcome such problems, several initiatives have been proposed by European and non-European countries, relying mostly on receiving refugees, providing mental health support, complementing lack of resources, and establishing policies to improve health care. It could help health professionals, policy makers, and governments to plan preventive, promotive, and therapeutic strategies for Ukrainian children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. effects of SCFAs on glycemic control in humans: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Cherta-Murillo, Anna, Pugh, Jennifer E, Alaraj-Alshehhi, Sumayya, Hajjar, Dana, Chambers, Edward S, and Frost, Gary S
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ONLINE information services ,MEDICAL databases ,META-analysis ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,GLYCEMIC control ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PROPIONATES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,MEDLINE ,SHORT-chain fatty acids ,BUTYRIC acid - Abstract
Background Noncommunicable disease development is related to impairments in glycemic and insulinemic responses, which can be modulated by fiber intake. Fiber's beneficial effects upon metabolic health can be partially attributed to the production of SCFAs via microbial fermentation of fiber in the gastrointestinal tract. Objectives We aimed to determine the effects of SCFAs, acetate, propionate, and butyrate on glycemic control in humans. Methods The CENTRAL, Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were searched from inception to 7 December 2021. Papers were included if they reported a randomized controlled trial measuring glucose and/or insulin compared to a placebo in adults. Studies were categorized by the type of SCFA and intervention duration. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed for glucose and insulin for those subject categories with ≥3 studies, or a narrative review was performed. Results We identified 43 eligible papers, with 46 studies within those records (n = 913), and 44 studies were included in the meta-analysis. Vinegar intake decreased the acute glucose response [standard mean difference (SMD), −0.53; 95% CI, −0.92 to −0.14; n = 67] in individuals with impaired glucose tolerance or type 2 diabetes and in healthy volunteers (SMD, −0.27; 95% CI, −0.54 to 0.00; n = 186). The meta-analyses for acute acetate, as well as acute and chronic propionate studies, showed no significant effect. Conclusions Vinegar decreased the glucose response acutely in healthy and metabolically unhealthy individuals. Acetate, propionate, butyrate, and mixed SCFAs had no effect on blood glucose and insulin in humans. Significant heterogeneity, risks of bias, and publication biases were identified in several study categories, including the acute vinegar glucose response. As evidence was very uncertain, caution is urged when interpreting these results. Further high-quality research is required to determine the effects of SCFAs on glycemic control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Associations Between Sleep Duration and Positive Mental Health Screens During Adolescent Preventive Visits in Primary Care.
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Anan, Yomna H., Kahn, Nicole F., Garrison, Michelle M., McCarty, Carolyn A., and Richardson, Laura P.
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,MENTAL status examination ,MENTAL health ,SLEEP duration ,PRIMARY health care ,PREVENTIVE health services ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,ODDS ratio ,DATA analysis software ,SECONDARY analysis ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this paper was to understand associations between low sleep duration (< 8 hours) and positive mental health screens among adolescents (ages 13-18) seen for preventive visits in primary care. METHODS: Data were from two randomized controlled trials testing the efficacy of an electronic health risk behavior screening and feedback tool for adolescent preventive visits. Participants (n = 601) completed screeners at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months which included sleep duration in hours and the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 and Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 screeners for depression and anxiety, respectively. Main analyses included adjusted logistic regressions testing associations between low sleep duration and positive mental health screens. RESULTS: Adjusted models showed that low sleep duration was associated with significantly greater odds of a positive depression screen (OR = 1.58, 95% CI: 1.06-2.37) but not with a positive anxiety screen or co-occurring positive depression and anxiety screens. However, follow-up analyses indicated an interaction between sleep duration and anxiety in the association with a positive depression screen, such that the association between low sleep and a positive depression screen was driven by those who did not screen positive for anxiety. CONCLUSIONS: As pediatric primary care guidelines for sleep continue to evolve, further research, training, and support for sleep screening are warranted to ensure effective early intervention for sleep and mental health problems during adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Breastfeeding Outcomes Associated With the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children: A Systematic Review.
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Gross, Susan M., Lerman, Jennifer L., Hurley, Kristen M., Venkataramani, Maya, Sharma, Ritu, Ogunwole, S. Michelle, Zhang, Allen, Bennett, Wendy L., Bass, Eric B., and Caulfield, Laura E.
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MOTHERS ,ONLINE information services ,CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,FOOD relief ,PATIENT participation ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CHILD nutrition ,BREASTFEEDING promotion ,GOVERNMENT programs ,INFANT nutrition ,BREASTFEEDING ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,POVERTY ,DATA analysis software ,MEDLINE ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) promotes and supports breastfeeding for low-income women and children. A prior review reported negative associations of WIC with breastfeeding outcomes. WIC food package changes in 2009 increased breastfeeding support. OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this systematic review were to 1) evaluate evidence on WIC participation and breastfeeding outcomes and 2) evaluate breastfeeding outcomes of WIC participants before versus after the 2009 food package. DATA SOURCES: PubMed, Embase®, CINAHL, ERIC, SCOPUS, PsycINFO, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials for papers published January 2009 to April 2022. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Included studies compared breastfeeding outcomes (initiation, duration, exclusivity, early introduction of solid foods) of WIC participants with WIC-eligible nonparticipants, or among WIC participants before versus after the 2009 package change. STUDY APPRAISAL METHODS: Two independent reviewers evaluated each study and assessed risk of bias using EHPHP assessment. RESULTS: From 13 observational studies we found: 1) moderate strength of evidence (SOE) of no difference in initiation associated with WIC participation; 2) insufficient evidence regarding WIC participation and breastfeeding duration or exclusivity; 3) low SOE that the 2009 food package change is associated with greater breastfeeding exclusivity; 4) low SOE that WIC breastfeeding support services are positively associated with initiation and duration. LIMITATIONS: Only observational studies, with substantial risk of bias and heterogeneity in outcomes and exposures. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS OF KEY FINDINGS: WIC participation is not associated with a difference in breastfeeding initiation compared to WIC-eligible nonparticipants, but the 2009 food package change may have improved breastfeeding exclusivity among WIC participants and receipt of breastfeeding support services may have improved breastfeeding initiation and duration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Impact of telehealth on the current and future practice of lipidology: a scoping review.
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Schubert, Tyler J., Clegg, Katarina, Karalis, Dean, Desai, Nihar R., Marrs, Joel C., McNeal, Catherine, Mintz, Guy L., Romagnoli, Katrina M., and Jones, Laney K.
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HYPERCHOLESTEREMIA prevention ,ONLINE information services ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENT-centered care ,MEDICAL care costs ,HYPERLIPIDEMIA ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH care teams ,DATA analysis software ,MEDLINE ,LITERATURE reviews ,TELEMEDICINE - Abstract
• The utility of telehealth services for lipid management remains understudied. • Telehealth has had a positive to neutral impact on improving lipid metrics. • Facilitators to telehealth include multidisciplinary care and patient-centeredness. • Technology dexterity and clinician reimbursement remain major barriers to telehealth. • Future interventions should emphasize a hybrid model of patient-centered care. Telehealth services have been implemented to deliver care for patients living with many chronic conditions and have expanded greatly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Little is known about the current or future impacts of telehealth on lipid management practices. The PubMed database was searched from inception to June 25, 2021, with the keywords "lipids or cholesterol" and "telehealth," which yielded 376 published articles. Telehealth was defined as a synchronous visit between a patient and clinician that replaced an in-office appointment. Studies that solely used remote monitoring, mobile health technologies, or callbacks of results, were excluded. Articles must have measured lipid values. Review articles and protocol papers were not included. After evaluation, 128 abstracts were included for full text evaluation, with 55 full-text articles eventually included. Of the articles, 29 were randomized clinical trials, 15 were pre-post evaluations, and 11 were other study designs. Telehealth had positive to neutral impacts on lipid management. Reported facilitators include easier implementation of multidisciplinary approaches to care, and utilization of patient-centered programs. Reported barriers to telehealth services include technological barriers, such as various skill levels with technology; systems barriers, such as cost and reimbursement; patient-related barriers, including patient non-adherence; and clinician-related barriers, such as difficulty standardizing care. Clinicians reported improved satisfaction among patients but had mixed feelings regarding their ability to deliver quality care. Telemedicine use to provide care for individuals with lipid conditions has expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic, but more research is needed to determine its potential as a sustainable tool for lipid management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Client preferences and perceptions regarding a written home exercise program or video self-modeling: A cross-sectional study.
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Ouegnin, Adele and Valdes, Kristin
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EXERCISE therapy ,HOME care services ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,PATIENT compliance ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,HEALTH self-care ,TELEMEDICINE ,THEMATIC analysis ,HUMAN research subjects ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This was a cross-sectional study. Home exercise programs (HEPs) are frequently prescribed to maximize a patient's recovery and ensure maintenance of therapeutic gains produced during supervised treatment. Improved understanding of patient preferences and incorporation of simple mobile health technologies may be beneficial strategies for improving patient HEP adherence. The purpose of this study was to determine client's preferred mode of home exercise program delivery when offered a choice between a cellular video and paper handout. A convenience sample was recruited from clients receiving services at an upper extremity rehabilitation facility. Participants were provided a paper handout with written instructions and an audiovisual recording of themselves performing the exercises. A questionnaire was developed to compare clients' preferences and perceptions. Quantitative data regarding patient preference were gathered and analyzed with descriptive statistics. Collected qualitative data were themed to determine the characteristics of home exercise programs (HEPs) perceived by patients. A total of 30 patients participated in the study. Of the 29 responses regarding patient preference of HEP mode, 20 (69%) patients preferred a video, 4 (14%) patients preferred a paper handout, and 5 (17%) patients preferred both paper and video HEP. Patients with preference to a paper HEP reported the handout was helpful to be accessed in a simple manner and could be displayed as a visual reminder to perform the exercises. Those who preferred the cellular video reported increased understanding and confidence with accurate performance of exercises using audiovisual instructions. HEP adherence enhancement techniques include improved understanding of patient preferences in order to facilitate customized client-centered treatment. The majority of participants in this study preferred a mobile-based video HEP. Participants perceived the video as visually appealing and a more effective mode of instruction than paper handouts. • This survey asked patients their preferred mode of delivery for home exercise programs. • Most patients prefer video home program delivery. • Patients reports video home exercise programs have more visual appeal and provide effective directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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16. Description of low back pain clinical trials in physical therapy: a cross sectional study.
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Nascimento, Dafne Port, Gonzalez, Gabrielle Zoldan, Araujo, Amanda Costa, and Costa, Leonardo Oliveira Pena
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CLINICAL trials , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL databases , *RESEARCH methodology , *PHYSICAL therapy , *PUBLISHING , *SERIAL publications , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *OPEN access publishing , *PERIODICAL articles , *IMPACT factor (Citation analysis) , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *LUMBAR pain - Abstract
• Low back pain trials are published in a variety of healthcare journals. • The methodological quality of low back pain trials is moderate. • 55.5% of low back pain trials endorsed the CONSORT statement recommendations. • Reporting guidelines should be strictly followed. To describe the main characteristics of low back pain randomized controlled trials on the Physiotherapy Evidence Database, and to rank the journals where these trials were published according to their Impact Factor. This is a cross sectional study based on a collection of randomized controlled trials. A random sample of 200 low back pain trials published between 2010 and 2015 were selected from Physiotherapy Evidence Database in February 2016. We collected the following main characteristics of trials: 2015 journal Impact Factor; if the paper was published as open access; CONSORT recommendations endorsement by the journal; methodological quality and statistical reporting measured by the 0–10 items Physiotherapy Evidence Database scale. Data was analyzed descriptively. Trials were published in journals with a mean Impact Factor of 2.5 (SD 2.5), from which 55.5% endorsed the CONSORT recommendations. The methodological quality was moderate with 5.8 points (SD 1.6). The top 3 journals according to Impact Factor were: (1) British Medical Journal ; (2) Annals of Internal Medicine ; and (3) BMC Medicine. Only 6 out of 97 journals publishing low back pain trials combined the following factors: journal Impact Factor higher than 2.0, mean trial methodological quality higher than 6.0 points, endorse CONSORT recommendations and offering papers as open access. Clinicians interested in low back pain trials must look for a wide variety of healthcare journals. A substantial number of low back pain randomized controlled trials did not follow adequate reporting and methodological recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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17. Evidence-Based Practice: a survey of Brazilian physical therapists from the dermatology subdiscipline.
- Author
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Claudino, Renato, de Pietro Simoes, Naudimar, and da Silva, Tatiane
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ABILITY , *DERMATOLOGY , *PHYSICAL therapists , *PROFESSIONS , *SELF-evaluation , *SURVEYS , *EMAIL , *TRAINING , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PATIENT decision making - Abstract
• Physical therapists from dermatology report having knowledge to be able to implement EBP. • Physical therapists from dermatology believe having skills to be able to implement EBP. • There were inconsistencies on some answers about knowledge and skills related to EBP. Dermatology is a relatively new subdiscipline of physical therapy with growth potential. Therefore, it is important to identify whether professionals from this area have the knowledge and skills required to offer the best available service based on evidence-based practice. To describe the self-reported behavior, knowledge, skills, opinion, and barriers related to the evidence-based practice of Brazilian physical therapists from the dermatology subdiscipline. An adapted electronic questionnaire was sent by the Brazilian Association of Dermatology Physical Therapy via email to all registered members. The data were analyzed descriptively. The response rate was 40.4% (101/250). Brazilian physical therapists from the dermatology subdiscipline reported that they update themselves equally through scientific papers and courses, and access preferentially databases that offer scientific papers in the Portuguese language. Respondents believe they have sufficient knowledge to use evidence-based practice, inform patients about treatment options and consider their choices in the decision-making process. However, there were inconsistencies in responses regarding the experience with evidence-based practice during undergraduate or postgraduate degree, as well as having discussions about evidence-based practice in the workplace. The barriers most frequently reported were difficulty to obtain full-text papers, lack of quality of the scientific papers, applicability of the findings into clinical practice, lack of evidence-based practice training and difficulty to understand the statistics. Brazilian physical therapists from the dermatology subdiscipline have positive perceived behavior, believe that they have sufficient knowledge and skills, and have favorable opinion related to evidence-based practice. However, there are inconsistencies related to some aspects of knowledge and skills set. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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18. Effects of Nonpharmaceutical Treatments on Symptom Management in Adults With Mild or Moderate Multiple Sclerosis: A Meta-analysis.
- Author
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Byrnes, Keira Leigh and Whillier, Stephney
- Subjects
MULTIPLE sclerosis treatment ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,CINAHL database ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,MEDICAL technology ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,MULTIPLE sclerosis ,ONLINE information services ,PHYSICAL therapy ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SEVERITY of illness index ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESISTANCE training - Abstract
The aim of this study was to conduct a meta-analysis of clinical trials on the effect of nonpharmaceutical treatments on outcomes for multiple sclerosis (MS). The CINAHL, Mantis, Medline, PEDro, PubMed, and Scopus databases were searched. Final papers meeting inclusion criteria were scored with the Physiotherapy Evidence Database for quality and included in a meta-analysis. Forty papers in the meta-analysis totaled 1673 participants. The interventions were grouped into 6 subcategories: physical activity, technology, rehabilitation, alternative, resistance training, and psychological. The combined effect of interventions produced a large overall effect size for the outcome fatigue; medium effect sizes for functionality, balance, and quality of life; and no effect on pain or spasticity. Physical activity had the greatest effect, improving fatigue, function, and balance. Rehabilitation and resistance training had a large effect on functionality. Comparatively, psychological approaches had only a small effect on improving quality of life. Sample sizes of included papers tended to be small with large variability in design. Therefore, results should be interpreted cautiously. Our results suggest there may be effective nonpharmaceutical treatment options available that can improve the symptoms of fatigue, poor functionality, balance, and quality of life. We found that physical activity, alternative approaches, rehabilitation, and resistance training were effective for improving the management of a number of MS symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The impact of curriculum on nursing students' attitudes, perceptions and preparedness to work in primary health care: An integrative review.
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Calma, Kaara Ray B., Halcomb, Elizabeth, and Stephens, Moira
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CURRICULUM evaluation ,CINAHL database ,INTENTION ,MEDLINE ,NURSING students ,PRIMARY health care ,PROFESSIONS ,RESEARCH funding ,STUDENT attitudes ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,UNDERGRADUATES ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The ageing population and growing burden of chronic disease has increased demands for primary health care services, necessitating growth of this nursing workforce. Studies have explored strategies in retaining nurses, employment conditions in primary health care, and transitioning of acute care nurses to primary health care employment. Few studies have explored how undergraduate nursing students perceive and are prepared to work in this sector. This review synthesises evidence on the impact of undergraduate curriculum on nursing students' attitudes, perceptions and preparedness to work in primary health care. An integrative literature review guided the synthesis of evidence. Scopus, ScienceDirect, CINAHL and MEDLINE were searched for relevant studies published between 2008 and 2018. 491 studies were identified from the database searches. Following the removal of duplicates, review of abstracts and keywords against the inclusion and exclusion criteria, 39 papers were subjected to full-text review. Twelve papers, including one thesis, met the inclusion criteria. Using an appraisal system, no paper was excluded based on methodological quality. Three themes were identified, namely: impact of curricula; knowledge and attitudes to primary health care; and students' intention to work in primary health care. The preparation of undergraduate nursing students to work in this area is inconsistent as curricula remain acute-care focussed. Negative perceptions about the primary health care nursing role impact intentions of nursing students to work in primary health care. This review highlights a need to implement strategies to improve the understanding of undergraduate nurses around the primary health care nursing role. In particular, providing students with skills, knowledge and an understanding of working in this area through curriculum content and structure may provide undergraduates with the desire and confidence to seek employment in primary health care following graduation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Safe medication administration: Perspectives from an appreciative inquiry of the practice of registered nurses in regional Australia.
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Martyn, Julie-Anne and Paliadelis, Penny
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CLINICAL competence ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CRITICAL thinking ,DRUG administration ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSES ,PATIENT safety ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,WORK ,QUALITATIVE research ,NARRATIVES ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Abstract Registered Nurses (RNs) are regulated health professionals who are educated and accountable for safe medication administration (MA). Binding their practice are standards, policies, procedure and legislation. MA competence is taught and assessed during professional pre-registration education programs. However, different philosophies, theories and models are used by education providers making curriculum content disparate and competency frameworks diverse. Additionally, healthcare contexts are increasingly complex and clinical environments unpredictable. Competency models must respect contemporary practice. This paper focusses on the outcomes of Australian PhD research that combined Appreciative Inquiry (AI) principles with a qualitative study to identify MA safety strategies. In this 2-phase descriptive study, twenty RNs were observed then interviewed about their MA experiences. This paper discusses the interview findings. The participants explained how they assessed patient's needs and implemented strategies to administer medications safely. They presented their actions as being underpinned by a desire to do 'the right thing for the patient' despite their practice going beyond traditional procedural frameworks and not reflecting organisational protocols. Instead, they developed common strategies to enhance safe MA. The participants' described using clinical reasoning and patient-centredness during MA. This study contributes to the knowledge needed for future practice development by highlighting what works. Highlights • Nurses apply professional knowledge, skills and attitudes that go beyond organisational protocols. • Nurses use clinical reasoning to facilitate safe MA. • Nurses practice person-centred care throughout all phases of MA. • The 5-rights framework that is ubiquitous in nursing programs does not reflect authentic practice. • Best practice models should be informed by what works well in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Refugees’ admission to mental health institutions in Norway: Is there an ethnic density effect?
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Finnvold, Jon Erik and Ugreninov, Elisabeth
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MENTAL illness risk factors , *ETHNIC groups , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *IMMIGRANTS , *EVALUATION of medical care , *MENTAL health , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PATIENTS , *POLICY sciences , *REFUGEES , *AT-risk people , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Some recent European research claims that immigrants settle in urban areas with low scores on level-of-living conditions and a high prevalence of health-risk factors, and that these settlement patterns adversely affect their health. Other studies question the association between immigrant segregation and area deprivation on one hand, and negative health outcomes on the other hand, and identify possible beneficial effects of segregation, specifically the ethnic density effect . This paper aims to explore the possible ethnic density effect among refugees, a sub-population that often appears relatively vulnerable compared with immigrants in general. The data comprise 30 871 individuals, aged 20–69, with an (post-1989) officially registered refugee status from six major countries, including Vietnam, Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Sri Lanka and Bosnia. Two outcomes are analysed, covering the 2008–2011 period – the probability of being admitted at least once to a mental health institution and the number of bed days during that period. The results show that all immigrant clusters have relatively high concentrations of negative level-of-living conditions. Despite this finding, refugees living in clusters tend to have less use of mental healthcare services. The results suggest that for most refugee groups, living in clusters has positive health outcomes. Many countries use settlement policies to direct the inflow of refugees away from immigrant-dense areas. Norway's settlement policy is no exception, aiming at a geographic dispersal of refugees to avoid the emergence of socially segregated urban ethnic communities. This paper discusses the relevance of such a policy for refugees' overall integration and level-of-living conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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22. Work and family transitions and the self-rated health of young women in South Africa.
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Bennett, Rachel and Waterhouse, Philippa
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- *
HEALTH status indicators , *SELF-evaluation , *TEENAGE mothers , *WOMEN , *WORK environment , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *WORK-life balance , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Understanding the transition to adulthood has important implications for supporting young adults and understanding the roots of diversity in wellbeing later in life. In South Africa, the end of Apartheid means today's youth are experiencing their transition to adulthood in a changed social and political context which offers opportunities compared to the past but also threats. This paper presents the first national level analysis of the patterning of key transitions (completion of education, entry into the labour force, motherhood and marriage or cohabitation), and the association between the different pathways and health amongst young women. With the use of longitudinal data from the South African National Income Dynamics Study (2008–2015), this paper employs sequence analysis to identify common pathways to adulthood amongst women aged 15–17 years at baseline (n = 429) and logistic regression modelling to examine the association between these pathways and self-rated health. The sequence analysis identified five pathways: 1. ‘ Non-activity commonly followed by motherhood’, 2. ‘Pathway from school, motherhood then work’, 3. ‘Motherhood combined with schooling’, 4. ‘Motherhood after schooling’ , and 5. ‘Schooling to non-activity’ . After controlling for baseline socio-economic and demographic characteristics and health, the regression results show young women who followed pathways characterised by early motherhood and economic inactivity (1, 3 and 4) had poorer self-rated health compared to women whose pathways were characterised by combining motherhood and economic activity (2) and young women who were yet to become economically active or mothers (5). Therefore, policies should seek to prevent adolescent childbearing, support young mothers to continue their educational careers and enable mothers in work and seeking work to balance their work and care responsibilities. Further, the findings highlight the value of taking a holistic approach to health and provide further evidence for the need to consider work-family balance in the development agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Single loop detector data validation and imputation of missing data.
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Maghrour Zefreh, Mohammad and Torok, Adam
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- *
TRAFFIC monitoring equipment , *DATA analysis software , *ERROR detection (Information theory) , *ELECTRONIC surveillance , *TRANSPORTATION management - Abstract
The data derived from loop detectors are of great importance in terms of traffic monitoring and analysis. These data may contain many holes or incorrect values due to equipment malfunctions and communication faults that may produce unreliable results. These holes (missing samples) or incorrect values (bad samples) might be problematic for any algorithm that uses the data for analysis. In this paper, a method is described that detects bad data samples gathered by the loop detectors and imputes the best available samples in order to fill the holes caused by the bad declared samples. The diagnostics algorithm proposed in this paper is based on the statistical analysis. Unlike the previous approaches, this algorithm considers the time series of many samples, rather than basing decisions on single samples. The imputation algorithm proposed in this paper uses the “good” declared samples from the historical data of the investigated loop detector to fill the holes caused by the bad declared samples. This detection and imputation process allows the algorithms that use loop data to perform analysis without requiring them to compensate for missing or incorrect data samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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24. Podcasting to the undergraduate medical radiation student.
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Nelson, Tarni and Bilton, Natalia
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SCIENTIFIC observation ,HEALTH occupations students ,RADIOLOGIC technologists ,ALLIED health education ,STREAMING media ,LEARNING strategies ,EXPERIENCE ,STUDENTS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Medical Imaging & Radiation Sciences is the property of Elsevier B.V. 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
- 2021
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25. Does social trust increase willingness to pay taxes to improve public healthcare? Cross-sectional cross-country instrumental variable analysis.
- Author
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Habibov, Nazim, Cheung, Alex, and Auchynnikava, Alena
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health & economics , *BEHAVIOR , *COMMUNITIES , *ENDOWMENTS , *HONESTY , *MEDICAL care , *POLICY sciences , *TAXATION , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effect of social trust on the willingness to pay more taxes to improve public healthcare in post-communist countries. The well-documented association between higher levels of social trust and better health has traditionally been assumed to reflect the notion that social trust is positively associated with support for public healthcare system through its encouragement of cooperative behaviour, social cohesion, social solidarity, and collective action. Hence, in this paper, we have explicitly tested the notion that social trust contributes to an increase in willingness to financially support public healthcare. We use micro data from the 2010 Life-in-Transition survey (N = 29,526). Classic binomial probit and instrumental variables ivprobit regressions are estimated to model the relationship between social trust and paying more taxes to improve public healthcare. We found that an increase in social trust is associated with a greater willingness to pay more taxes to improve public healthcare. From the perspective of policy-making, healthcare administrators, policy-makers, and international donors should be aware that social trust is an important factor in determining the willingness of the population to provide much-needed financial resources to supporting public healthcare. From a theoretical perspective, we found that estimating the effect of trust on support for healthcare without taking confounding and measurement error problems into consideration will likely lead to an underestimation of the true effect of trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Care-leavers and their children placed for adoption.
- Author
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Roberts, Louise, Meakings, Sarah, Forrester, Donald, Smith, Audra, and Shelton, Katherine
- Subjects
- *
ADOPTION & psychology , *ORPHANAGES , *PSYCHOLOGY of adult child abuse victims , *BIRTHPARENTS , *MENTAL illness , *ORPHANS , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Young people in and leaving state care are more likely than the general population to become parents at a young age. Relatively little is known about the experiences and progress of care leaver parents and their children, but emerging evidence suggests an increased risk of intergenerational state intervention. Drawing on data from the Wales Adoption Study, this paper examines the prevalence and profiles of care leavers amongst birth parents whose children were placed for adoption. Findings showed that more than a quarter (27%) of birth mothers and a fifth (19%) of birth fathers with children placed for adoption were themselves care leavers. There were no significant differences between care leaver and non-care leaver birth parents in terms of involvement in crime or substance misuse, but carer leaver birth parents were distinguishable from other birth parents by their own experiences of abuse and neglect. Care leaver birth mothers were also more likely than their non-care leaver counterparts to have diagnosed mental health problems and were less likely to appeal the adoption plan. The profiles of children placed for adoption between care leaver and non-care leaver birth parents were similar. The findings presented in this paper strengthen the moral imperative to address the over-representation of care leavers amongst birth parents whose children are placed for adoption. There is an urgent need to revise how children and young people in state care are prepared for parenthood and supported as parents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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27. Asset building policies to lift the resource curse: child development accounts in oil-and-gas-rich countries.
- Author
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Huseynli, Aytakin
- Subjects
- *
CONSERVATION of natural resources , *MIDDLE-income countries , *ASSETS (Accounting) , *CHILD development , *POWER resources , *INTERVIEWING , *ACQUISITION of data , *POLICY science research , *LOW-income countries , *GOVERNMENT policy , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *MEDICAL records , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Of the approximately 70 low-to-middle-income (LMI) oil-and-gas-rich countries, almost all are victims of the resource curse or paradox of plenty, which conceptualizes the development patterns with petroleum and mineral resources. Lifting the resource curse can positively change the trajectory of global development. After the failure of the implementation of natural reserve funds in most oil-and-gas-rich LMI countries, scholars suggested the direct distribution of natural resource revenues to the population to escape the resource curse. The paper suggests an evidence-based asset-building policy, child development accounts (CDA), linked to oil and gas revenues being directly distributed to the population. CDAs are saving accounts specifically targeting children, started in the late 1980s, to help families to fulfill life goals for their children such as postsecondary education, homeownership, business development, and retirement security. The elements of the recommended policy are based on the findings of three qualitative studies carried out in Azerbaijan in 2017 and 2018, and in six post-Soviet countries in 2019 and 2020. Primary data were collected through in-depth interviews with key informants (N = 94), such as ministers, deputy ministers, representatives of the oil funds, academicians, financial institutions, and local and international nonprofit organizations. Secondary data came from archival records, such as governmental reports, publications from national and international agencies, published research, and statistics from relevant government agencies. Purposive sampling techniques were used. The inclusion criteria were being a senior policy-maker, having a deep understanding of the policy-making process, and having deep knowledge of social protection and child well-being systems in Azerbaijan. The data were analyzed by NVivo. The paper used 10 CDA design elements recommended by Michael Sherraden and his colleagues as well as national CDA policy models from across the globe. Azerbaijan, an oil-and-gas-rich LMI country was chosen as a case study for the recommended policy design [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Intervention development to improve foster youth mental health by targeting coping self-efficacy and help-seeking.
- Author
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Blakeslee, Jennifer E., Kothari, Brianne H., and Miller, Rebecca A.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *HELP-seeking behavior , *HUMAN services programs , *SELF-efficacy , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY of foster children , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *DATA analysis software , *NEEDS assessment , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
• Describes the development of a new intervention for transition-age foster youth. • Model focuses on improving coping self-efficacy and help-seeking orientation. • Model is designed for implementation within Independent Living (IL) programs. • Iterative approach includes pre-testing of initial program aims and strategies. • Next steps will evaluate impact on key mechanisms prior to effectiveness testing. This study articulates the iterative development of an intervention called Strengthening Youth Networks and Coping (SYNC), which is designed to target coping self-efficacy and help-seeking intentions and behaviors among youth in foster care. The overarching goal is to design an intervention that will be a feasible and acceptable enhancement to existing child welfare services, and that will address modifiable determinants among adolescents involved in child welfare system that are related to elevated risk for mental health challenges, limited support network capacity, and service disengagement after exiting foster care. In this paper, we describe our initial needs assessment, explain how we selected proximal intervention mechanisms (i.e., intermediate outcomes) to target, and outline the preliminary intervention development process, including ongoing insights we received from a research advisory group including members with lived experience. Next, we report and discuss the initial acceptability pre-testing data collected from youth (N = 30) as well as feasibility data collected from providers (N = 82), results from which were used to refine the SYNC intervention framework prior to robust efficacy testing. Findings highlight the need and importance of targeting youth coping and help-seeking, integrating programming within existing transition services, delivering this content in a group-based format that includes near-peer mentors and facilitators with lived experience, and developing options that work for the heterogeneous population of young people in foster care. The results also highlight the key objective of capturing youth's interests prior to enrolling in the program (e.g., language used in recruitment materials), holding their interest throughout the program (e.g., creating opportunities for youth to engage with other youth with similar experiences), and suggestions to encourage youth's engagement and participation. This paper articulates the value of this intervention development approach, and the sequential phases of this intervention development process as well as the results, which may be useful to applied researchers and practitioners working with youth in foster care and other priority populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Friendship networks of the foreign students in schools of Barcelona: impact of class grouping on intercultural relationships.
- Author
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González Motos, Sheila
- Subjects
ACCULTURATION ,ADOLESCENT friendships ,IMMIGRANTS ,CULTURAL pluralism ,SCHOOL environment ,SOCIAL adjustment ,SOCIAL networks ,FOREIGN students ,AFFINITY groups ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper account for the relational dynamics that take place in high schools: the interculturality level in the networks of foreign students. Relational networks are characterized by their composition based on origin, identifying those exclusively consisting of native students, those in which only foreign students interact, and the intercultural networks themselves, where native and foreign students coexist. At this stage, I analyse the organizational factors that impede the integration of immigrant students in relational networks with presence of native students, as well as other factors that support the establishment of such networks. Specifically, the analysis focuses on how the organization of school classrooms impact the establishment of more or less intercultural relational networks. In short, there is one concern that motivate this paper: the existence of school dynamics that enhance ethnic ghettoization within schools and, therefore, impede social integration. This research includes the analysis of all students enrolled in the last year of compulsory education (16 years-old) of eight high schools in the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona (for a total of 664 students from 28 classes). The analytical exploitation is based on a quantitative approach and network analysis (UCINET and Netdraw). Main findings show that the identification of the classrooms with certain ability levels seems to imply a greater barrier between classrooms, which can lead to a greater or lower relational cohesion within the class, according to school organitzation. By contrast, ability levels do not have a direct impact on the degree of intercultural contact; although they do exert a significant influence, defining the possibilities of contact between groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Learning and adaptation with regard to complementary medicine in a foreign context: Intercultural experiences of medical students from different cultural backgrounds.
- Author
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Templeman, Kate, Robinson, Anske, and McKenna, Lisa
- Subjects
LEARNING assessment ,ACCULTURATION ,ALTERNATIVE medicine ,INTERVIEWING ,PSYCHOLOGY of medical students ,SOCIAL skills ,STUDENT attitudes ,FOREIGN students ,QUALITATIVE research ,CULTURAL values ,CULTURAL competence ,DATA analysis software ,OCCUPATIONAL adaptation ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Little is known about challenges and transition that medical students from different cultural backgrounds face with regard to complementary medicine (CM). This paper explores such students’ experiences and perspectives of socio-cultural and academic difference with regard to CM and experiences of intercultural relations. Using a constructivist grounded theory approach, 30 in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with medical students across 10 Australian medical schools. The data were rigorously analysed through a systematic process of coding, categorisation and theoretical development. The findings indicate that students adapted considerably to the host culture. Students with Western backgrounds integrated better socio-culturally and academically compared to students with non-Western backgrounds. Although nationality represented cultural identity, students’ construction of cultural difference was informed by their perception of diverging value systems within the specific educational environment. These values were, in turn, reflected in students’ reported behaviours, attitudes, and levels of engagement in socio-cultural and academic aspects of university life. Adaptation employed by students was evidenced largely due to their conflicting sense of responsibility towards familial culture regarding CM and focus on fitting in. While students’ tendency to gravitate towards cultural peers was evident, most students adapted to their host environment regarding CM to fit into normal intercultural encounters during medical school. In conclusion, students’ intercultural contact with regard to CM was both complex and problematic. At a time of significant diversification within the higher education student body, this paper highlights the role medical education institutions can play in fostering intercultural and academic guidance and support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Ethnic networks in neighborhoods affect mental health: Evidence from a quasi-random assignment of applicants in the public social housing system.
- Author
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Boje-Kovacs, Bence, Greve, Jane, and Weatherall, Cecilie D.
- Subjects
- *
COMPETENCY assessment (Law) , *PUBLIC housing , *IMMIGRANTS , *STATISTICAL sampling , *AT-risk people , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL networks , *RESEARCH methodology , *DATA analysis software , *NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of residence-based ethnic networks on mental health; such networks are defined as the concentration of residents from the same country of origin in a neighborhood. To estimate the effect, we utilize administrative registry data, together with data on quasi-random assignment of apartments to non-Western households with housing needs to various neighborhoods. After controlling for individual characteristics, time-invariant neighborhood characteristics, and general practitioners (GP) fixed effects, we find that a 1–percentage-point increase in the concentration of residence-based co-ethnics (RBCEs) increases the probability of being treated with psychiatric medications by 0.7-percentage point over a 5-year period after the assignment. With 19% of the population being treated with psychiatric medications the year before assignment, the result translates into an effect size of 3.7%. The results indicate that relatively high concentrations of co-ethnics treated with psychiatric medications increase the probability of being treated with psychiatric medications. The positive impact on treatment with psychiatric medication reflects an increase in the demand for these drugs when moving into a neighborhood with neighbors of the same ethnicity. If new residents are in good mental health condition when moving, these results suggest that moving into a neighborhood with a high co-ethic concentration worsens mental health status. However, as the population in this study is a vulnerable group an increase in treatment with psychiatric medications likely reflects that untreated mental health problems are treated, and the mental health status improved. The group of non-Western immigrants in this study differs significantly from the population in general, thus, results may not be generalized to all non-Western immigrants. • We study the impact of residence-based ethnic networks on mental health. • We utilize quasi-random assignment of immigrants in urgent housing needs. • Residence-based ethnic networks increase the use of psychiatric medication. • The characteristics of co-ethnic neighbors impact significantly mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Unveiling the Dark Nexus: A systematic review on the interplay of mental health, substance abuse, and socio-cultural factors in femicide.
- Author
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Caroppo, Emanuele, Sapienza, Martina, Mazza, Marianna, Sannella, Alessandra, Cecchi, Rossana, Marano, Giuseppe, Kondo, Toshikazu, Calabrese, Carmela, and De Lellis, Pietro
- Subjects
- *
RISK of violence , *HOMICIDE , *CULTURE , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *MENTAL health , *GENDER , *RISK assessment , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *MENTAL illness , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
• Socio- cultural aspects should be considered for adequate prevention of femicide. • The cause of femicides is not to be attributed to mental disorder factors but to socio-culturally oriented aspects. • A shared definition of femicide will allow a further systematically homogeneous investigation of this phenomenon. • Further quantitative research is warranted to disentangle the root causes of femicide. • It is important create international policy strategies to contrast violence in relationships. A shared definition of femicide would help to distinguish it from the murder of a woman and understand its root causes favoring prevention. We conducted a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) to assess how (and if) femicide cases were related to mental disorders. Articles papers that explicitly define or discuss femicides or articles that, albeit not expressly mention femicides, thoroughly compare generic homicides and homicides with female victims. We analyse 3546 articles were retrieved from the databases, and 75 studies fulfilled the eligibility criteria and were included in the SLR. Many forms of femicide emerge worldwide as people's values, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviours evolve (intimate partner femicide, femicide-suicide, religious femicide, honour, revolt femicide) and state of vulnerability. A tiny percentage of femicides occur at the hands of subjects with diagnosed mental disorders, and controversies exist regarding the possible link between femicide and the use of drugs and/or alcohol and other factors. The complex problem of violence against women must be addressed with a transdisciplinary approach and targeted interventions for both the victims and the perpetrators. The present SLR shows that it is not possible to link femicides to mental disorders and that socio and cultural factors appear to be more relevant. Further quantitative research is warranted to disentangle the root causes of this heinous phenomenon plaguing our times. Our studies show that using the proposed definition of feminicide would help to delimit and adequately recognise violence in courtrooms, promote the culture of equality, and identify adequate policy strategies for prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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33. Waiting for inpatient detoxification: A qualitative analysis of patient experiences.
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Neale, Joanne, Cairns, Beth, Gardiner, Kevin, Livingston, Wulf, McCarthy, Trevor, and Perkins, Andrew
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THERAPEUTICS , *HEALTH policy , *TREATMENT programs , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *RESEARCH methodology , *TELEPHONES , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *CONTENT mining , *QUALITATIVE research , *REHABILITATION of people with alcoholism , *HOSPITAL care , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
There is limited provision of inpatient detoxification relative to other treatments for alcohol and other drug (AOD) use. This means people often need to wait prior to detoxifying. However, waiting for healthcare is generally perceived as negative and stressful. This paper aims to understand patients' experiences of waiting for inpatient AOD detoxification to ascertain whether and how service-level policies and practices might be improved. Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with 32 people (20 males, 12 females; aged 25–67 years) who were waiting for inpatient detoxification. Data collection was part of a wider evaluation of a policy initiative started in 2021 to increase detoxification service capacity in England, UK. Interviews were professionally transcribed and data on waiting experiences were coded using qualitative software. Analyses were informed by new materialist thinking and undertaken via Iterative Categorisation. We found that waiting was constituted through five dimensions: i. duration; ii. support; iii. information; iv. preparations; and v. emotions. These five dimensions were multi-faceted and operated in and through wider interacting social, material, and affective forces (e.g., professional judgements, formal and informal relationships, the availability of beds and funding, bureaucratic procedures, the utility and relevance of information, and participants' diverse feelings, including desperation for treatment). Not all accounts of waiting were negative. The experience was complex, non-uniform and variable over time. Moreover, it affected how people felt and how they behaved. Changes to service-level policies and practices can potentially minimise the stress of waiting for inpatient AOD detoxification. The negative impact of waiting may be reduced if professionals more consistently engage patients in a wider range of constructive pre-treatment activities, offer regular 'check-ins' to mitigate any anxiety, explain changes in wait duration to help with planning and demonstrate fairness, and facilitate contact between those waiting to lessen feelings of isolation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. A global perspective on risk factors for social isolation in community-dwelling older adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Chen, Meiqian, Cao, Xiang, Wang, Afeng, Zhu, Yi, Lu, Guanzhen, Zhang, Li, and Shen, Lijuan
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META-analysis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CROSS-sectional method , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL isolation , *INDEPENDENT living , *DATA analysis software , *ODDS ratio , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
• It is a systematic review with a global perspective. • Social isolation of elder in the global community has multidimensional factors. • The factors that lead to elder's social isolation in the community vary by area. Older people's physical and mental health are now significantly impacted by social isolation, a major threat to public health. Our goal was to identify the connections between risk factors and social isolation among this population across various geographic areas. Seven databases were thoroughly searched, from their inception until April 2023. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were used to choose the studies. For the included cross-sectional studies, we used the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to assess the probability of bias, and the Newcastle-Ottawa scale for the cohort studies. The statistical analysis was performed using STATA 15 to calculate pooled odds ratios (OR) and 95% CI. All 3043 papers were carefully examined, and 42 satisfied the criteria for inclusion. The results indicated that multi-domain risk factors and social isolation among older persons worldwide are significantly correlated. These multi-domain risk factors included biological factors, socioeconomic factors, and psychological and behavioral factors. It is also important to note that these factors may vary from region to region. Many domain factors were linked to social isolation in older individuals living in communities throughout the world. To develop effective strategies for controlling social isolation, it is crucial to conduct assessments of social isolation risk factors in local communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Cultural health capital and patient partner recruitment into healthcare improvement work.
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Woolf, Becky and Vinson, Alexandra H.
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CULTURE , *MEDICAL quality control , *STAKEHOLDER analysis , *SOCIAL capital , *MEDICAL care , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUALITY assurance , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
A rising emphasis on patient involvement in clinical research and healthcare improvement has led to the steady incorporation of patients and caregivers into this work. However, interactional factors shaping recruitment processes are not well understood. In this paper, we present a qualitative analysis of interviews with twenty-six patients, family members, engagement staff and healthcare providers who are engaged in healthcare improvement work in the United States. We focus on how stakeholders account for recruitment decisions to participate in healthcare improvement work. We find that expressions of and judgments about patients' and caregivers' cultural health capital shape providers' decisions to extend invitations to participate in healthcare improvement work. These findings extend current conceptualizations of cultural health capital beyond the clinical encounter to reveal factors shaping patient recruitment into healthcare improvement work. In theorizing how cultural health capital shapes action in this new setting, we found that healthcare providers, engagement staff, and patients/caregivers attended to different aspects of cultural health capital when accounting for why they extended or received a recruitment pitch. We further found that participating in healthcare improvement work led to a boost in cultural health capital for patients and caregivers, which they could use to develop transmissible forms of cultural health capital for less centrally involved patients and caregivers. Finally, we describe how participants in healthcare improvement collaboratives account for a lack of diversity among partners. These findings help us hypothesize the consequences of recruitment processes that rely on displays and judgments of cultural health capital and identify possibilities for change. Using the case of healthcare improvement work in Collaborative Learning Health Systems, our findings advance past work on cultural health capital in medical sociology by theorizing the role of cultural health capital in recruitment processes. • Providers recruit patients for healthcare improvement work with subjective criteria. • Providers often recruit high-resourced, privileged patients that they "vibe" with. • Partners build cultural health capital from doing healthcare improvement work. • Recruiting for cultural health capital may exclude patients from diverse backgrounds. • The role of recruitment should be considered to improve partner representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. Educational inequality during the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam: Implications for disadvantaged children.
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Thanh, Pham Tien, Tram, Nguyen Hoang Mai, and Tung, Le Thanh
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ONLINE education , *MIDDLE-income countries , *LOW-income countries , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *COVID-19 pandemic , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *ALTERNATIVE education - Abstract
• A large proportion of children (16.7 %) dropped out during school closure. • Disadvantaged children were less inclined to engage in learning activities during school closure. • Drop-out children during school closure were less likely to return to school upon re-opening. • Disadvantaged children faced limited access to online or digital learning during school closure. School closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic shifted education from traditional face-to-face classrooms to online learning settings. This abrupt change interrupted learning, worsening the existing inequality in education. This paper aims to provide empirical evidence on educational inequality in a low- and middle-income country by using nationally representative data of 4,920 children in Vietnam. In particular, we examine whether there were educational inequalities between disadvantaged and advantaged children (i.e., rural and urban, poor and non-poor, or having many and few young dependents in a family) during the pandemic. Our results reveal that during school closure, disadvantaged children were less likely to engage in learning activities, indicating their higher likelihood of dropping out relative to advantaged children. These disadvantaged children also had fewer learning days and fewer chances to access online learning. Additionally, drop-out children during school closure were less likely to return to school upon re-opening. Accordingly, we discuss some implications to tackle or mitigate educational inequality during and after the pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. A survey of nurses' knowledge, attitudes, and practice of sarcopenia: A cross-sectional study.
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Ji, Mengchen, Hang, Ling, Wang, Tian, Luo, Huamin, Wu, Xinyan, and Gu, Danfeng
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NURSING audit ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,HOSPITALS ,NURSES' attitudes ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CROSS-sectional method ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,WORK ,SARCOPENIA ,MEDICAL screening ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,SURVEYS ,T-test (Statistics) ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,HEALTH behavior ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
This paper aims to assess the current knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of nursing staff regarding sarcopenia and explore associating factors that influence them. Sarcopenia has an insidious onset and is easily overlooked. However, it is has become very common in older people, seriously jeopardizing the quality of life in patients. The present situation of nurses in China is inadequate, even though they are the primary professionals tasked with screening for sarcopenia, the ability to recognize and effectively manage the disease, and the critical role they play in preventing and controlling sarcopenia in patients. We conducted a cross-sectional design of nurses. Facilitated sampling was used in seven hospitals in Jiangsu Province, China. A total of 409 hospital nursing staff participated in the survey from December 2022 to March 2023. The main survey instruments were the nursing staff about the knowledge of sarcopenia, beliefs, a behavior questionnaire, and a self-designed general information questionnaire. Descriptive of general data, t-test, and ANOVA for influencing factors of three dimensions, whereas multiple linear regression analyses were performed using SPSS23.0 software. Questionnaires were distributed to 460 nurses, and of the 426 (92.6%) questionnaires returned, 409 (96.0%) were valid. The total mean score of nurses' knowledge, beliefs, and behavior about sarcopenia was 125.42 (SD 18.97), the mean score of knowledge latitude was 29.09 (SD 7.80), the mean score of attitude dimension was 57.53 (SD 7.63), and the mean score of behavior latitude was 38.80 (SD 10.71). Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that the nurse's position, Knowledge of sarcopenia, whether or not they were specialist nurses and years of experience in the workplace were the most significant factors correlated with the level of knowledge, belief, and practice (P < 0.05). In China, nurses have little knowledge about sarcopenia, but their attitude towards sarcopenia care is positive. However, there is potential for improvement in nursing behavior toward sarcopenia management. Managers are advised to develop targeted training programs for nurses. Further, it improves their screening and diagnosing abilities, allowing them to prevent and control sarcopenia more effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. The social management of biomedical novelty: Facilitating translation in regenerative medicine.
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Gardner, John and Webster, Andrew
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- *
BIOTECHNOLOGY , *CELLULAR therapy , *INTERVIEWING , *REGENERATION (Biology) , *SOCIAL sciences , *STEM cells , *RULES , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Regenerative medicine (RM) is championed as a potential source of curative treatments for a variety of illnesses, and as a generator of economic wealth and prosperity. Alongside this optimism, however, is a sense of concern that the translation of basic science into useful RM therapies will be laboriously slow due to a range of challenges relating to live tissue handling and manufacturing, regulation, reimbursement and commissioning, and clinical adoption. This paper explores the attempts of stakeholders to overcome these innovation challenges and thus facilitate the emergence of useful RM therapies. The paper uses the notion of innovation niches as an analytical frame. Innovation niches are collectively constructed socio-technical spaces in which a novel technology can be tested and further developed, with the intention of enabling wider adoption. Drawing on primary and secondary data, we explore the motivation for, and the attempted construction of, niches in three domains which are central to the adoption of innovative technologies: the regulatory, the health economic, and the clinical. We illustrate that these niches are collectively constructed via both formal and informal initiatives, and we argue that they reflect wider socio-political trends in the social management of biomedical novelty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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39. The relationship between metacognitive experiences and learning: Is there a difference between digital and non-digital study media?
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Norman, Elisabeth and Furnes, Bjarte
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COGNITION , *PATIENT monitoring , *READING , *TECHNOLOGY , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,WRITING - Abstract
Technological development has influenced the ways in which learning and reading takes place, and a variety of technological tools now supplement and partly replace paper books. Previous studies have suggested that digital study media impair metacognitive monitoring and regulation (Ackerman & Goldsmith, 2011; Ackerman & Lauterman, 2012; Lauterman & Ackerman 2014 ). The aim of the current study was to explore the relationship between metacognitive experiences and learning for digital versus non-digital texts in a test situation where metacognitive experiences were assessed more broadly compared to previous studies, and where a larger number of potentially confounding factors were controlled for. Experiment 1 ( N = 100) addressed the extent to which metacognitive monitoring accuracy for 4 factual texts was influenced by whether texts were presented on a paper sheet, a PC, an iPad, or a Kindle. Metacognitive experiences were measured by Predictions of Performance (PoP), Judgements of Learning (JoL), and Confidence Ratings (CR), and learning outcome was measured by recognition performance. Experiment 2 ( N = 50) applied the same basic procedure, comparing a paper condition with a PC condition with the opportunity to take notes and highlight text. In both experiments, study media had no consistent effect on metacognitive calibration or resolution. The results give little support to previous claims that digital learning impairs metacognitive regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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40. Mapping the field of military nursing research 1990-2013: A bibliometric review.
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Currie, Jane and Chipps, Jennifer
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AUTHORSHIP , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *HEALTH care teams , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *LABOR productivity , *MILITARY nursing , *NURSING research , *POPULATION geography , *WAR , *MILITARY service , *DATA analysis software , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Background: Over the past 20 years, military forces worldwide have been engaged in a number of conflicts and humanitarian operations and the impact of this on the field of military nursing research is unknown. The aim of this bibliometric review was to investigate the research field of military nursing in the main databases with the purpose to describe trends in military nursing research since 1990. Objectives: To identify military nursing papers in the main databases and to describe the field of military nursing research for the period 1990-2013 in terms of research productivity, trends in topic focus, trends in authorship and country of publication. Method: Bibliometric review of published military nursing research papers was undertaken in March 2014 and data was extracted and coded and trends were analyzed using SPSSv21. Results: In total 237 articles were included in the review. The majority of publications emanating from America (n = 175, 73.8%) and the quantity of papers has increased significantly since the commencement of the second Gulf War in Iraq from 2003 onwards (n = 156, 65.8%). This has been accompanied by a shift in topic focus from professional (n = 16, 20.3%) and occupational issues (n = 17, 21.5%) pre 2003, to clinical (n = 48, 30.4%) and an increase in multidisciplinary research from 4% in 1990-94 to 29% in 2010-13. The mean citations were 10.6 (sd 17.0) and the mean references per paper post 2003 showed a marked increase from 23.5 to 25.4. Conclusion: The military nursing research field appears stronger than it has been in the past twenty years and has demonstrated increased transferability to other fields. To maintain this momentum and further develop the field of military nursing research, military forces worldwide need to devise focused nursing research strategies that involve international and multidisciplinary collaboration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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41. Informal m-health: How are young people using mobile phones to bridge healthcare gaps in Sub-Saharan Africa?
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Hampshire, Kate, Porter, Gina, Owusu, Samuel Asiedu, Mariwah, Simon, Abane, Albert, Robson, Elsbeth, Munthali, Alister, DeLannoy, Ariane, Bango, Andisiwe, Gunguluza, Nwabisa, and Milner, James
- Subjects
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CREATIVE ability , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH status indicators , *MEDICAL care use , *SOCIAL networks , *TELEMEDICINE , *MOBILE apps , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The African communications ‘revolution’ has generated optimism that mobile phones might help overcome infrastructural barriers to healthcare provision in resource-poor contexts. However, while formal m-health programmes remain limited in coverage and scope, young people are using mobile phones creatively and strategically in an attempt to secure effective healthcare. Drawing on qualitative and quantitative data collected in 2012–2014 from over 4500 young people (aged 8–25 y) in Ghana, Malawi and South Africa, this paper documents these practices and the new therapeutic opportunities they create, alongside the constraints, contingencies and risks. We argue that young people are endeavouring to lay claim to a digitally-mediated form of therapeutic citizenship, but that a lack of appropriate resources, social networks and skills (‘digital capital’), combined with ongoing shortcomings in healthcare delivery, can compromise their ability to do this effectively. The paper concludes by offering tentative suggestions for remedying this situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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42. MammographyOnline: An evaluation of an online mammography education program for radiographers.
- Author
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Kiegaldie, Debra and Shaw, Louise
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MAMMOGRAMS ,CONFIDENCE ,HEALTH occupations students ,INTERVIEWING ,LEARNING strategies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL informatics ,ALLIED health education ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RADIOLOGIC technologists ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SUPERVISION of employees ,ONLINE education ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,COURSE evaluation (Education) ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMPUTER-aided diagnosis - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Medical Imaging & Radiation Sciences is the property of Elsevier B.V. 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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- 2020
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43. Humility and Bridging Differences: A Systematic Literature Review of Humility in Relation to Diversity.
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AlSheddi, Mona
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PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,CULTURAL pluralism ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CULTURAL competence ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Psychologists' interest in humility has increased in recent years. This paper provides the first review on the role of humility in the context of diversity. The results of the nine studies reviewed here, which were identified through a systematic literature search, show a lack of agreement among researchers on the conceptualisation of humility and how it can be measured. Additionally, humility has been found to be associated with less prejudice towards Syrian refuges, sexual minorities and religious groups. It also seems to play a positive role in the context of religious conflicts, disagreements and conflicting views. These promising findings on humility in relation to various domains of diversity are discussed, and the limitations of this review and recommendations for future research are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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44. Domesticating cleaner cookstoves for improved respiratory health: Using approaches from the sanitation sector to explore the adoption and sustained use of improved cooking technologies in Nepal.
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Jewitt, Sarah, Smallman-Raynor, Matthew, K C, Binaya, Robinson, Benjamin, Adhikari, Puspanjali, Evans, Catrin, Karmacharya, Biraj Man, Bolton, Charlotte E., and Hall, Ian P.
- Subjects
- *
RESPIRATORY disease prevention , *INDOOR air pollution prevention , *HOUSEHOLD supplies , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *COOKING , *INTERVIEWING , *WATER , *SANITATION , *HYGIENE , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TECHNOLOGY , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Drawing on village-based data from Nepal, this paper explores the transferability of the Integrated Behavioural Model for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (IBM-WASH) to the clean cooking sector and its potential to elucidate how barriers to improved cookstove adoption and sustained use intersect at different scales. The paper also explores the potential of IBM-WASH, behaviour settings theory and domestication analysis to collectively inform effective behaviour change techniques and interventions that promote both adoption and sustained use of health-promoting technologies. Information on cookstove use in the community since 2012 enables valuable insights to be gained on how kitchen settings and associated cooking behaviour were re-configured as homes and stoves were re-built following the April 2015 earthquake. The methodological approach comprised of semi-structured interviews, focus group discussions, direct observation and household surveys. The findings indicated that the IBM-WASH framework translated well to the improved cookstove sector, capturing key influences on clean cooking transitions across the model's three dimensions (context, psychosocial and technology) at all five levels. Understandings gained from utilising IBM-WASH were enhanced – especially at the individual and habitual levels – by domestication analysis and settings theory which elucidated how different cooking technologies were incorporated (or not) within physical structures, everyday lives and routine behaviour. The paper concludes that this combination of approaches has potential applicability for initiatives seeking to promote improved environmental health at community-wide scales. • Transferability of IBM-WASH to the cookstove sector is explored for the first time. • Data from post-earthquake Nepal is used to test this transferability. • We demonstrate that the framework translates well to the cookstove sector. • Findings from IBM-WASH are enhanced by domestication analysis and settings theory. • This combination of approaches has broader applicability for health initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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45. Effect of online review sentiment on product sales: The moderating role of review credibility perception.
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Wang, Qiang, Zhang, Wen, Li, Jian, Mai, Feng, and Ma, Zhenzhong
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- *
SALES personnel , *ELECTRONIC commerce , *INTERNET , *CONSUMER attitudes , *SHOPPING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DECISION making , *EMPIRICAL research , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Online reviews are of great importance in supporting the purchasing decision making of online consumers. With the prospering of e-commerce, increasingly fraudulent reviews are appearing on e-commerce platforms to mislead consumers, and an increasing number of consumers are worrying about being deceived in online shopping. However, little research effort has been invested in studying the impact of review credibility perception caused by online review fraud on product sales. To fill this research gap, this paper conducts empirical research on the moderating effect of consumers' credibility perception of online reviews. Here, review credibility perception, or consumers' credibility perception of online reviews, refers to the credibility or trust that consumers have in the reviews they are reading. Building on dual-process theory, this paper develops two hypotheses to understand why and how review credibility perception influence consumer decision-making behaviors. The empirical studies in this paper demonstrate that consumers' credibility perception of online reviews moderate the effect of review sentiment on product sales. This work also found that consumers' credibility perception of online reviews have a heterogeneous effect on product sales. The effect shifts the relationship between review sentiment and product sales from an inverted U-shape relationship to a monotonous positive relationship with the improvement of consumers' credibility perception of online reviews. This study has great managerial implications for platforms and vendors to improve online review management. • Effect of fraudulent reviews on product sales is explored. • How review fraud influences consumers' decision making is interpreted. • Moderating effect of review credibility perception is verified. • Review credibility perception has a heterogeneous effect on product sales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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46. Evidence-Based Practice: a survey regarding behavior, knowledge, skills, resources, opinions and perceived barriers of Brazilian physical therapists from São Paulo state.
- Author
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Silva, Tatiane M., Costa, Lucíola C. M., and Costa, Leonardo O. P.
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CHI-squared test , *HEALTH behavior , *HEALTH services accessibility , *RESEARCH methodology , *PHYSICAL therapists , *POSTAL service , *PROFESSIONS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *TELEPHONES , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *SECONDARY analysis , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *PHYSICAL therapists' attitudes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) has been widely used by health professionals. However, no study in Brazil has investigated the data regarding the knowledge and difficulties related to EBP from a representative sample of physical therapists. Objective: To identify behavior, knowledge, skills, resources, opinions and perceived barriers of Brazilian physical therapists from the state of São Paulo regarding EBP. Method: A customized questionnaire about behavior, knowledge, skills, resources, opinions and perceived barriers regarding EBP was sent by email to a sample of 490 physical therapists registered by the Registration Board of São Paulo, Brazil. Physical therapists who did not respond to the questionnaire were contacted by telephone and/or letter. The data were analyzed descriptively. Results: The final response rate was 64.4% (316/490). Because 60 physical therapists were no longer practicing, 256 answers were analyzed. The physical therapists reported that they routinely read scientific papers (89.5%) as a resource for professional development, followed by continuing education courses (88.3%) and books (86.3%). Approximately 35% of the respondents reported a clear understanding of the implementation of research findings in their practice; approximately 37% reported no difficulties in critically appraising scientific papers; and 67.2% strongly agreed that EBP is important for their practice. The most commonly reported barriers were related to difficulties in obtaining full-text papers (80.1%), using EBP may represent higher cost (80.1%) and the language of publication of the papers (70.3%). Conclusion: Physical therapists from São Paulo state believe that they have knowledge and skills to use EBP. Although they have favorable opinions regarding its implementation, they still encounter difficulties in implementing EBP successfully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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47. Effects of cryolipolysis on lower abdomen fat thickness of healthy women and patient satisfaction: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Falster, Mariana, Schardong, Jociane, Santos, Débora Piassarollo dos, Machado, Bruna Coimbra, Peres, Alessandra, Rosa, Patrícia Viana da, and Plentz, Rodrigo Della Méa
- Subjects
- *
ADIPOSE tissues , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *COLD therapy , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PATIENT satisfaction , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *STATISTICS , *WOMEN'S health , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *DATA analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ABDOMINAL adipose tissue - Abstract
• A single cryolipolysis session has no effect on abdominal adipose tissue in healthy women. • Randomized controlled trial with blind assessor. • Ultrassonography was used as a method of evaluating the outcome. To analyze the effects of cryolipolysis on the fat thickness of the lower abdomen of healthy women and patient's satisfaction. Design and setting : a randomized controlled trial, with concealed allocation and blinded assessor. Participants: 34 healthy women between 18 and 48 years, skinfold in the lower abdomen ≥3 cm, BMI between 18.5 and 27 kg/m2, low level of physical activity, and no contraindication to cryolipolysis were allocated to intervention group (IG, n = 17) or control group (CG, n = 17). Interventions: The IG received one session of cryolipolysis with −10 °C of temperature for 50 min. The CG was not submitted to any kind of intervention. Both groups did the evaluation protocols at baseline, 30, 60 and 90 days after the intervention. Main outcome measures: fat thickness was measured by ultrasonography (US), skinfold (SF) and abdominal circumference (AC1 and AC2). No significant differences between the IG and CG were demonstrated at any evaluation at any time of follow up for the variables US (30 days: 0.05 cm (95%CI: −0.12; 0.22), 60 days: 0.05 cm (95%CI: −0.11; 0.20) and 90 days: 0.04 cm (95%CI: −0.7; 0.25)), SF (30 days: −0.09 cm (95%CI: −0.25; 0.08), 60 days: −0.14 cm (95%CI: −0.36; 0.09) and 90 days: −0.001 cm (95%CI: −0.237; 0.234)), AC1 (30 days: 0.42 cm (95%CI: −1.1; 1.9), 60 days: −0.1 cm (95%CI: −1.74; 1.54) and 90 days: −0.007 cm (−1.9; 1.9)) and AC2 (30 days: 0.183 cm (95%CI: −0.84; 1.20), 60 days: −0.13 cm (95%CI: −1.61; 1.35) and 90 days: −0.31 cm (95%CI: −1.61; 1.00)). The current study showed that a single application of the utilized protocol of cryolipolysis does not produce any significant effect on fat thickness of the lower abdomen of healthy women. Clinical Trial Registration number: NCT03160976 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03160976). Contribution of the Paper : the study is one of the first studies in the literature with methodological rigor to report an unfavorable result for localized abdominal fat treatment with a single session of cryolipolysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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48. Use of Survival Analysis to Predict Attrition Among Women Participating in Longitudinal Community-Based Nutrition Research.
- Author
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Nikolaus, Cassandra J., Loehmer, Emily, Jones, Alicia, An, Ruopeng, Khan, Naiman A., and McCaffrey, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
CONFIDENCE intervals , *FOOD relief , *INCOME , *INGESTION , *LONGITUDINAL method , *NUTRITION education , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *PATIENT participation , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *HUMAN research subjects , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *PATIENT selection , *PHYSICAL activity , *FOOD security , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
To identify participant characteristics and study methodology that influenced the completion of a 15-month community-based longitudinal study evaluating the impact of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education and Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program. Observational longitudinal 15-month study across 12 data collection timepoints. Sociodemographic characteristics were collected with a paper-based survey at baseline. Five counties across central and southern Illinois. Women, aged 18 to 65 years (n = 297), recruited at sites likely to serve families eligible for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education and Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (housing departments, child care centers, etc). Predictors of participant attrition during the study duration. Cox proportional hazard models. Ninety-seven participants were retained across the full study. In unadjusted models, greater income and education levels were significantly related to lower attrition; however, this relationship did not persist in a multivariate model. When adjusted for other characteristics, larger household size was the only measured variable significantly related to greater odds of attrition (odds ratio = 1.09; 95% confidence interval = 1.02, 1.17). Several characteristics predicting attrition in other settings were not significant in this study. Future attrition analyses that evaluate social support, transportation capacity, and type of phone in longitudinal nutrition education studies are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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49. Length and sentiment analysis of reviews about top-level video game genres on the steam platform.
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Guzsvinecz, Tibor and Szűcs, Judit
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SENTIMENT analysis , *NATURAL language processing , *SOFTWARE architecture , *VIDEO games , *EMOTIONS , *DATA analysis software , *WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
During game development, a common uncertainty revolves around the emotional reactions players might exhibit when experiencing newly released games. Understanding emotions and experiences of video game players is complex. As a first step, players can share their experiences of video games by writing reviews. By investigating these reviews, the emotions, experiences, concerns, and opinions of players can be understood. The goal of this study is to provide a deeper insight for video game developers to understand the players' emotional reactions regarding the top-level genres. Besides, as subgoals, it can be observed whether a connection exists between word numbers and review type (positive/negative); whether there is a difference between the type of emotions in the case of different genres; or whether the emotional valence changes during writing a review. In this paper, overall 35, 983, 481 reviews of 11 top-level video game genres are studied using natural language processing methods with the NRC Emotion Lexicon in the statistical program package R. The results show that people write negative reviews earlier than positive ones and no correlation exists between the time at review and their word number. A connection can also be observed between word numbers and whether a review is positive or negative: the median review length is 40 words in case of negative reviews, while it is 19 words in case of positive ones. Regarding emotions, the emotional valence as well as sentiments' number and percentage differ between the top-level genres. Each has its unique emotional valence and evokes various emotions. • 35, 983, 481 Steam reviews were analyzed to understand players' experience and emotions in 11 top-level video game genres • The word numbers in reviews significantly differ among the top-level genres, and among the review types • Positive reviews are written much later than negative ones in every top-level genre • The average number of emotions per review is significantly different among the top-level genres • As People write reviews, they experience negative emotions, decreasing the emotional valence through narrative time [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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50. European trends in ovarian cancer mortality, 1990–2020 and predictions to 2025.
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Wojtyła, Cezary, Bertuccio, Paola, Giermaziak, Wojciech, Santucci, Claudia, Odone, Anna, Ciebiera, Michał, Negri, Eva, Wojtyła, Andrzej, and La Vecchia, Carlo
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OVARIAN tumors , *MORTALITY , *REGRESSION analysis , *POPULATION geography , *CANCER patients , *ORAL contraceptives , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Over the last decades, ovarian cancer mortality in Europe has been decreasing, but disparities in trends were observed. In this paper, we analysed ovarian cancer mortality trends in Europe over the period 1990–2020 and predicted the number of deaths and rates by 2025. We extracted population and death certification data from ovarian cancer in women for 31 European countries, between 1990 and 2020 from the World Health Organization database. We computed age-standardised mortality rates (ASMR) per 100,000 women-years, based on the world standard population. We also obtained predictions for 2025 using a joinpoint regression model and calculated the number of avoided deaths over the period 1994–2025. Over the observed period, mortality from ovarian cancer showed a favourable pattern in most countries. In the EU-27, rates declined by 5.9% from 2010–2014 to 2015–2019, reaching an ASMR of 4.66/100,000. During the same period, the decline in ovarian cancer mortality was more pronounced in the EU-14 countries (−7.0%) compared to Transitional countries (−2.1%). Declines were also observed in the United Kingdom, to reach an ASMR of 5.29. Decreases in mortality from ovarian cancer are predicted until 2025, to 4.17/100,000 for the EU-27. Favourable trends in ovarian cancer mortality are expected to persist in Europe and can be mainly attributed to the increased use of oral contraceptives in subsequent generations of European women. Decreased use of menopausal Hormone Replacement Therapy and improved diagnosis and management may also have played a role. • Ovarian cancer mortality decreased over the last decade in most European countries. • Favourable trends will continue in the next 5 years. • Less favourable epidemiological situation was observed in Transitional countries. • The largest decrease of mortality in 2025 is predicted to be in Germany. • Until 2025 nearly 131,000 deaths from ovarian cancer would be avoided in EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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