789 results on '"Hibbert P"'
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2. Developing Interdisciplinary Learning: Spanning Disciplinary and Organizational Boundaries
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Peter Smith, Lisa Jane Callagher, Paul Hibbert, Elisabeth Krull, and John Hosking
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Based on a study of a postgraduate course, we show how--through the processes associated with applying a strategic tool--students developed the understandings that allowed them to span disciplinary and organizational boundaries. We reveal how the students, working in groups and acting as consultants to industry clients, developed specific boundary-spanning skills learned through observation and practice (mimesis), and reflection. Namely, (1) working with others with different disciplines to establish roles and processes to operate successfully as a group, (2) establishing productive communication with other groups of diverse disciplines as part of project processes, (3) eliciting information from other groups of diverse specialists, and (4) managing an inclusive discussion process among other groups of diverse specialists for agreement. We discuss how these insights about mimesis and reflection add to pedagogic debates about instruction for interdisciplinary and inter-organizational learning and the implications for management education and development practice.
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- 2024
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3. Satellite cell-derived TRIM28 is pivotal for mechanical load- and injury-induced myogenesis
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Lin, Kuan-Hung, Hibbert, Jamie E, Flynn, Corey GK, Lemens, Jake L, Torbey, Melissa M, Steinert, Nathaniel D, Flejsierowicz, Philip M, Melka, Kiley M, Lindley, Garrison T, Lares, Marcos, Setaluri, Vijayasaradhi, Wagers, Amy J, and Hornberger, Troy A
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- 2024
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4. Efficacy of stellate ganglion block in treatment of electrical storm: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Motazedian, Pouya, Quinn, Nicholas, Wells, George A., Beauregard, Nickolas, Lam, Eric, Mathieu, Marie-Eve, Knoll, William, Prosperi-Porta, Graeme, Ly, Valentina, Parlow, Simon, Di Santo, Pietro, Abdel-Razek, Omar, Jung, Richard, Simard, Trevor, Jentzer, Jacob C., Mathew, Rebecca, Ramirez, F. Daniel, and Hibbert, Benjamin
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- 2024
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5. Linking the reversal of gestational insulin resistance to postpartum depression
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Abeysekera, Minoli Vinoda, Ni, Duan, Gilbert, Leah, Hibbert, Emily, and Nanan, Ralph
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- 2024
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6. Radiology of fibrosis part III: genitourinary system
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Tarchi, Sofia Maria, Salvatore, Mary, Lichtenstein, Philip, Sekar, Thillai, Capaccione, Kathleen, Luk, Lyndon, Shaish, Hiram, Makkar, Jasnit, Desperito, Elise, Leb, Jay, Navot, Benjamin, Goldstein, Jonathan, Laifer, Sherelle, Beylergil, Volkan, Ma, Hong, Jambawalikar, Sachin, Aberle, Dwight, D’Souza, Belinda, Bentley-Hibbert, Stuart, and Marin, Monica Pernia
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- 2024
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7. Radiology of fibrosis. Part I: Thoracic organs
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Tarchi, Sofia Maria, Salvatore, Mary, Lichtenstein, Philip, Sekar, Thillai, Capaccione, Kathleen, Luk, Lyndon, Shaish, Hiram, Makkar, Jasnit, Desperito, Elise, Leb, Jay, Navot, Benjamin, Goldstein, Jonathan, Laifer, Sherelle, Beylergil, Volkan, Ma, Hong, Jambawalikar, Sachin, Aberle, Dwight, D’Souza, Belinda, Bentley-Hibbert, Stuart, and Marin, Monica Pernia
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- 2024
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8. Radiology of fibrosis part II: abdominal organs
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Tarchi, Sofia Maria, Salvatore, Mary, Lichtenstein, Philip, Sekar, Thillai, Capaccione, Kathleen, Luk, Lyndon, Shaish, Hiram, Makkar, Jasnit, Desperito, Elise, Leb, Jay, Navot, Benjamin, Goldstein, Jonathan, Laifer, Sherelle, Beylergil, Volkan, Ma, Hong, Jambawalikar, Sachin, Aberle, Dwight, D’Souza, Belinda, Bentley-Hibbert, Stuart, and Marin, Monica Pernia
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- 2024
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9. Evaluation of a culture change program to reduce unprofessional behaviours by hospital co-workers in Australian hospitals
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Westbrook, Johanna I., Urwin, Rachel, McMullan, Ryan, Badgery-Parker, Tim, Pavithra, Antoinette, Churruca, Kate, Cunningham, Neil, Loh, Erwin, Hibbert, Peter, Maddern, Guy, Braithwaite, Jeffrey, and Li, Ling
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- 2024
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10. Angiogenesis-associated pathways play critical roles in neonatal sepsis outcomes
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Fidanza, Mario, Hibbert, Julie, Acton, Erica, Harbeson, Danny, Schoeman, Elizna, Skut, Patrycja, Woodman, Tabitha, Eynaud, Adrien, Hartnell, Lucy, Brook, Byron, Cai, Bing, Lo, Mandy, Falsafi, Reza, Hancock, Robert E. W., Chiume-Kayuni, Msandeni, Lufesi, Norman, Popescu, Constantin R., Lavoie, Pascal M., Strunk, Tobias, Currie, Andrew J., Kollmann, Tobias R., Amenyogbe, Nelly, and Lee, Amy H.
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- 2024
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11. Patient characteristics of, and remedial interventions for, complaints and medico-legal claims against doctors: a rapid review of the literature
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Schultz, Timothy J., Zhou, Michael, Gray, Jodi, Roseleur, Jackie, Clark, Richard, Mordaunt, Dylan A., Hibbert, Peter D., Haysom, Georgie, and Wright, Michael
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- 2024
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12. Is it possible to make ‘living’ guidelines? An evaluation of the Australian Living Stroke Guidelines
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Wiles, Louise, Hibbert, Peter D, Zurynski, Yvonne, Smith, Carolynn L., Arnolda, Gaston, Ellis, Louise A., Lake, Rebecca, Easpaig, Brona Nic Giolla, Molloy, Charlotte, Middleton, Sandy, Braithwaite, Jeffrey, Hill, Kelvin, and Turner, Tari
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- 2024
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13. Implementation of large, multi-site hospital interventions: a realist evaluation of strategies for developing capability
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Long, Janet C, Roberts, Natalie, Francis-Auton, Emilie, Sarkies, Mitchell N, Nguyen, Hoa Mi, Westbrook, Johanna I, Levesque, Jean-Frederic, Watson, Diane E, Hardwick, Rebecca, Churruca, Kate, Hibbert, Peter, and Braithwaite, Jeffrey
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- 2024
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14. Strategies to improve care for older adults who present to the emergency department: a systematic review
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Testa, Luke, Richardson, Lieke, Cheek, Colleen, Hensel, Theresa, Austin, Elizabeth, Safi, Mariam, Ransolin, Natália, Carrigan, Ann, Long, Janet, Hutchinson, Karen, Goirand, Magali, Bierbaum, Mia, Bleckly, Felicity, Hibbert, Peter, Churruca, Kate, and Clay-Williams, Robyn
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- 2024
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15. The quality of care delivered to residents in long-term care in Australia: an indicator-based review of resident records (CareTrack Aged study)
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Hibbert, Peter D., Molloy, Charlotte J., Cameron, Ian D., Gray, Leonard C., Reed, Richard L., Wiles, Louise K., Westbrook, Johanna, Arnolda, Gaston, Bilton, Rebecca, Ash, Ruby, Georgiou, Andrew, Kitson, Alison, Hughes, Clifford F., Gordon, Susan J., Mitchell, Rebecca J., Rapport, Frances, Estabrooks, Carole, Alexander, Gregory L., Vincent, Charles, Edwards, Adrian, Carson-Stevens, Andrew, Wagner, Cordula, McCormack, Brendan, and Braithwaite, Jeffrey
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- 2024
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16. Efficacy of stellate ganglion block in treatment of electrical storm: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Pouya Motazedian, Nicholas Quinn, George A. Wells, Nickolas Beauregard, Eric Lam, Marie-Eve Mathieu, William Knoll, Graeme Prosperi-Porta, Valentina Ly, Simon Parlow, Pietro Di Santo, Omar Abdel-Razek, Richard Jung, Trevor Simard, Jacob C. Jentzer, Rebecca Mathew, F. Daniel Ramirez, and Benjamin Hibbert
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Electrical storm ,Ventricular arrhythmia ,Stellate ganglion block ,Ventricular Electrical Storm ,Systematic Review ,Meta-analysis ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Electrical storm (ES) is a life-threatening condition of recurrent ventricular arrhythmias (VA) in a short period of time. Percutaneous stellate ganglion blockade (SGB) is frequently used – however the efficacy is undefined. The objective of our systematic review was to determine the efficacy of SGB in reducing VA events and mortality among patients with ES. A search of Medline, EMBASE, Scopus, CINAHL and CENTRAL was performed on February 29, 2024 to include studies with adult patients (≥ 18 years) with ES treated with SGB. Our outcomes of interest were VA burden pre- and post-SGB, and in-hospital/30-day mortality. A total of 553 ES episodes in 542 patients from 15 observational studies were included. Treated VAs pre- and post-SGB were pooled from eight studies including 383 patients and demonstrated a decrease from 3.5 (IQR 2.25–7.25) to 0 (IQR 0–0) events (p = 0.008). Complete resolution after SGB occurred in 190 of 294 patients (64.6%). Despite this, in-hospital or 30-day mortality remained high occurring in 140 of 527 patients (random effects prevalence 22%). Repeat SGB for recurrent VAs was performed in 132 of 490 patients (random effects prevalence 21%). In conclusion, observational data suggests SGB may be effective in reducing VAs in ES. Definitive studies for SGB in VA management are needed. Study protocol: PROSPERO - registration number CRD42023430031.
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- 2024
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17. Linking the reversal of gestational insulin resistance to postpartum depression
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Minoli Vinoda Abeysekera, Duan Ni, Leah Gilbert, Emily Hibbert, and Ralph Nanan
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Insulin resistance (IR) ,Postpartum depression (PPD) ,Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) ,Pregnancy ,Insulin ,Glucose ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Postpartum depression (PPD) constitutes a significant mental health disorder affecting almost one fifth of pregnancies globally. Despite extensive research, the precise etiological mechanisms underlying PPD remain elusive. However, several risk factors like genetic predisposition, hormonal fluctuations, and stress-related environmental and psychosocial triggers have been found to be implicated in its development. Main Recently, an increased risk of PPD has been reported to be associated with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), which is characterized by the disruption of glucose metabolism, primarily attributed to the emergence of insulin resistance (IR). While IR during pregnancy seems to be an evolutionary adaptative mechanism to handle the profound metabolic alterations during pregnancy, its subsequent resolution following delivery necessitates a reconfiguration of the metabolic landscape in both peripheral tissues and the central nervous system (CNS). Considering the pivotal roles of energy metabolism, particularly glucose metabolism, in CNS functions, we propose a novel model that such pronounced changes in IR and the associated glucose metabolism seen postpartum might account for PPD development. This concept is based on the profound influences from insulin and glucose metabolism on brain functions, potentially via modulating neurotransmitter actions of dopamine and serotonin. Their sudden postpartum disruption is likely to be linked to mood changes, as observed in PPD. Conclusions The detailed pathogenesis of PPD might be multifactorial and still remains to be fully elucidated. Nevertheless, our hypothesis might account in part for an additional etiological factor to PPD development. If our concept is validated, it can provide guidance for future PPD prevention, diagnosis, and intervention.
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- 2024
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18. Australians with osteoarthritis: satisfaction with health care providers and the perceived helpfulness of treatments and information sources
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Basedow M, Hibbert P, Hooper T, Runciman W, and Esterman A
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Osteoarthritis ,multidisciplinary care ,beliefs ,attitudes ,satisfaction. ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Martin Basedow,1 Peter Hibbert,1 Tamara Hooper,1 William Runciman,1 Adrian Esterman,2 1School of Psychology, Social Work and Social Policy, 2School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the satisfaction of Australian patients who suffer from osteoarthritis (OA) with their health care providers and the perceived helpfulness of treatments and information sources. Methods: A self-administered questionnaire was conducted with a sample of 560 Australian patients who suffer from OA with questions about satisfaction with health care providers and the helpfulness of different treatment options and information sources. Logistic regression models were used to assess potential predictors of satisfaction. Thematic analysis was undertaken for attitudinal factors associated with satisfaction. Results: A total of 435 participants returned questionnaires (response rate 78%). Most respondents were highly satisfied with the care provided by their general practitioner (GP) (84%), communication with their GP (88%), time spent with their GP (84%), and their ability to talk freely with their GP about their medical problem (93%), but less satisfied with their ability to talk freely about associated emotional problems (77%). Satisfaction with pharmacists (80%), rheumatologists (76%), and orthopedic surgeons (72%) was high. Joint replacement surgery (91%), prescription anti-inflammatory medications (66%), aids and assistive devices (65%), intra-articular injections (63%), and prescription painkiller medications (62%) were perceived as effective treatments. Less highly rated treatments were exercise (48%), physiotherapy (43%), and complementary medicines (29%). A majority of patients were satisfied with the information to manage their OA (65%). From the multivariable logistic regression analysis, four GP satisfaction factors were found to be predictors of overall satisfaction with GP care: the amount of time that the GP spends with the patient (P=0.005), the information the GP provides about what to expect (P
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- 2016
19. Mental health sequelae in survivors of cardiogenic shock complicating myocardial infarction. A population-based cohort study
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Fernando, Shannon M., Qureshi, Danial, Talarico, Robert, Vigod, Simone N., McIsaac, Daniel I., Sterling, Lee H., van Diepen, Sean, Price, Susanna, Di Santo, Pietro, Kyeremanteng, Kwadwo, Fan, Eddy, Needham, Dale M., Brodie, Daniel, Bienvenu, Oscar Joseph, Combes, Alain, Slutsky, Arthur S., Scales, Damon C., Herridge, Margaret S., Thiele, Holger, Hibbert, Benjamin, Tanuseputro, Peter, and Mathew, Rebecca
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- 2024
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20. Update on Percutaneous Ablation for Sarcoma
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Parvinian, Ahmad, Thompson, Scott M., Schmitz, John J., Welch, Brian T., Hibbert, Rebecca, Adamo, Daniel A., and Kurup, A. Nicholas
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- 2024
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21. Evaluation of a multiparametric renal CT algorithm for diagnosis of clear-cell renal cell carcinoma among small (≤ 4 cm) solid renal masses
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Eldihimi, Fatma, Walsh, Cynthia, Hibbert, Rebecca M., Nasibi, Khalid Al, Pickovsky, Jana Sheinis, and Schieda, Nicola
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- 2024
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22. Radiology of fibrosis. Part I: Thoracic organs
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Sofia Maria Tarchi, Mary Salvatore, Philip Lichtenstein, Thillai Sekar, Kathleen Capaccione, Lyndon Luk, Hiram Shaish, Jasnit Makkar, Elise Desperito, Jay Leb, Benjamin Navot, Jonathan Goldstein, Sherelle Laifer, Volkan Beylergil, Hong Ma, Sachin Jambawalikar, Dwight Aberle, Belinda D’Souza, Stuart Bentley-Hibbert, and Monica Pernia Marin
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Fibrosis ,Thoracic organs ,Imaging ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Sustained injury from factors such as hypoxia, infection, or physical damage may provoke improper tissue repair and the anomalous deposition of connective tissue that causes fibrosis. This phenomenon may take place in any organ, ultimately leading to their dysfunction and eventual failure. Tissue fibrosis has also been found to be central in both the process of carcinogenesis and cancer progression. Thus, its prompt diagnosis and regular monitoring is necessary for implementing effective disease-modifying interventions aiming to reduce mortality and improve overall quality of life. While significant research has been conducted on these subjects, a comprehensive understanding of how their relationship manifests through modern imaging techniques remains to be established. This work intends to provide a comprehensive overview of imaging technologies relevant to the detection of fibrosis affecting thoracic organs as well as to explore potential future advancements in this field.
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- 2024
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23. Radiology of fibrosis part III: genitourinary system
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Sofia Maria Tarchi, Mary Salvatore, Philip Lichtenstein, Thillai Sekar, Kathleen Capaccione, Lyndon Luk, Hiram Shaish, Jasnit Makkar, Elise Desperito, Jay Leb, Benjamin Navot, Jonathan Goldstein, Sherelle Laifer, Volkan Beylergil, Hong Ma, Sachin Jambawalikar, Dwight Aberle, Belinda D’Souza, Stuart Bentley-Hibbert, and Monica Pernia Marin
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Fibrosis ,Thoracic organs ,Imaging ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Fibrosis is a pathological process involving the abnormal deposition of connective tissue, resulting from improper tissue repair in response to sustained injury caused by hypoxia, infection, or physical damage. It can impact any organ, leading to their dysfunction and eventual failure. Additionally, tissue fibrosis plays an important role in carcinogenesis and the progression of cancer. Early and accurate diagnosis of organ fibrosis, coupled with regular surveillance, is essential for timely disease-modifying interventions, ultimately reducing mortality and enhancing quality of life. While extensive research has already been carried out on the topics of aberrant wound healing and fibrogenesis, we lack a thorough understanding of how their relationship reveals itself through modern imaging techniques. This paper focuses on fibrosis of the genito-urinary system, detailing relevant imaging technologies used for its detection and exploring future directions.
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- 2024
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24. Radiology of fibrosis part II: abdominal organs
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Sofia Maria Tarchi, Mary Salvatore, Philip Lichtenstein, Thillai Sekar, Kathleen Capaccione, Lyndon Luk, Hiram Shaish, Jasnit Makkar, Elise Desperito, Jay Leb, Benjamin Navot, Jonathan Goldstein, Sherelle Laifer, Volkan Beylergil, Hong Ma, Sachin Jambawalikar, Dwight Aberle, Belinda D’Souza, Stuart Bentley-Hibbert, and Monica Pernia Marin
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Fibrosis ,Abdominal organs ,Imaging ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Fibrosis is the aberrant process of connective tissue deposition from abnormal tissue repair in response to sustained tissue injury caused by hypoxia, infection, or physical damage. It can affect almost all organs in the body causing dysfunction and ultimate organ failure. Tissue fibrosis also plays a vital role in carcinogenesis and cancer progression. The early and accurate diagnosis of organ fibrosis along with adequate surveillance are helpful to implement early disease-modifying interventions, important to reduce mortality and improve quality of life. While extensive research has already been carried out on the topic, a thorough understanding of how this relationship reveals itself using modern imaging techniques has yet to be established. This work outlines the ways in which fibrosis shows up in abdominal organs and has listed the most relevant imaging technologies employed for its detection. New imaging technologies and developments are discussed along with their promising applications in the early detection of organ fibrosis.
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- 2024
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25. Watercress yield and quality vary depending on both genotype and environment: Results from highly contrasting growing systems of California and UK
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Qian, Yufei, Hibbert, Lauren E, Katz, Ella, Smith, Hazel K, Kliebenstein, Daniel J, and Taylor, Gail
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Nutrition ,Phytochemical ,Plant breeding ,Leafy green ,Chemoprevention ,Aquatic crop ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Horticultural Production ,Horticulture - Abstract
Watercress (Nasturtium officinale R. Br.; Brassicaceae) is a highly nutritious leafy green vegetable consumed globally, with a rich health-related phytonutrient profile that includes the secondary plant metabolites glucosinolates (GLS), especially gluconasturtiin and its hydrolysis product phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC). The peppery taste and pungency of watercress comes from these mustard oils, and they are known to help reduce inflammation and chronic damage in cells and have been shown to have a role in cancer prevention in vitro and in vivo. We explored how both genotype and highly contrasting environments of California (CA) and the United Kingdom (UK) alter phenotypic traits for a set of F2:4 genotypes created from a unique bi-parental cross, chosen for their extreme phenotypes for yield, leaf and branch morphology, antioxidant capacity, and glucosinolate content in two contrasting field locations. Although both genotype and environment had a significant impact on plant morphology, nutritional quality, and yield, overall, the highly contrasting environments of California and the UK, had a much stronger effect. Plants grown in CA had higher biomass, thicker main stem and more branches, and a higher concentration of aromatic GLS, whilst plants grown in the UK had larger leaves with longer stems, suggesting a better harvestable product, at least for a salad and not a soup crop. Significant G x E interactions were observed for multiple traits, suggesting significant phenotypic plasticity of watercress and variation between genotypes that will enable the selection of ideotypes suitable for these highly contrasting growth environments, that can be considered as the ‘extremes’ of an environmental gradient where the crop might be grown, from the warm and dry soil-grown conditions of California to the relatively cool and wet aquatic growing system of the UK.
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- 2023
26. Stratified analyses refine association between TLR7 rare variants and severe COVID-19
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Jannik Boos, Caspar I. van der Made, Gayatri Ramakrishnan, Eamon Coughlan, Rosanna Asselta, Britt-Sabina Löscher, Luca V.C. Valenti, Rafael de Cid, Luis Bujanda, Antonio Julià, Erola Pairo-Castineira, J. Kenneth Baillie, Sandra May, Berina Zametica, Julia Heggemann, Agustín Albillos, Jesus M. Banales, Jordi Barretina, Natalia Blay, Paolo Bonfanti, Maria Buti, Javier Fernandez, Sara Marsal, Daniele Prati, Luisa Ronzoni, Nicoletta Sacchi, Joachim L. Schultze, Olaf Riess, Andre Franke, Konrad Rawlik, David Ellinghaus, Alexander Hoischen, Axel Schmidt, Kerstin U. Ludwig, Valeria Rimoldi, Elvezia M. Paraboschi, Alessandra Bandera, Flora Peyvandi, Giacomo Grasselli, Francesco Blasi, Francesco Malvestiti, Serena Pelusi, Cristiana Bianco, Lorenzo Miano, Angela Lombardi, Pietro Invernizzi, Alessio Gerussi, Giuseppe Citerio, Andrea Biondi, Maria Grazia Valsecchi, Marina Elena Cazzaniga, Giuseppe Foti, Ilaria Beretta, Mariella D'Angiò, Laura Rachele Bettini, Xavier Farré, Susana Iraola-Guzmán, Manolis Kogevinas, Gemma Castaño-Vinyals, Koldo Garcia-Etxebarria, Beatriz Nafria, Mauro D'Amato, Adriana Palom, Colin Begg, Sara Clohisey, Charles Hinds, Peter Horby, Julian Knight, Lowell Ling, David Maslove, Danny McAuley, Johnny Millar, Hugh Montgomery, Alistair Nichol, Peter J.M. Openshaw, Alexandre C. Pereira, Chris P. Ponting, Kathy Rowan, Malcolm G. Semple, Manu Shankar-Hari, Charlotte Summers, Timothy Walsh, Latha Aravindan, Ruth Armstrong, Heather Biggs, Ceilia Boz, Adam Brown, Richard Clark, Audrey Coutts, Judy Coyle, Louise Cullum, Sukamal Das, Nicky Day, Lorna Donnelly, Esther Duncan, Angie Fawkes, Paul Fineran, Max Head Fourman, Anita Furlong, James Furniss, Bernadette Gallagher, Tammy Gilchrist, Ailsa Golightly, Fiona Griffiths, Katarzyna Hafezi, Debbie Hamilton, Ross Hendry, Andy Law, Dawn Law, Rachel Law, Sarah Law, Rebecca Lidstone-Scott, Louise Macgillivray, Alan Maclean, Hanning Mal, Sarah McCafferty, Ellie Mcmaster, Jen Meikle, Shona C. Moore, Kirstie Morrice, Lee Murphy, Sheena Murphy, Mybaya Hellen, Wilna Oosthuyzen, Chenqing Zheng, Jiantao Chen, Nick Parkinson, Trevor Paterson, Katherine Schon, Andrew Stenhouse, Mihaela Das, Maaike Swets, Helen Szoor-McElhinney, Filip Taneski, Lance Turtle, Tony Wackett, Mairi Ward, Jane Weaver, Nicola Wrobel, Marie Zechner, Gill Arbane, Aneta Bociek, Sara Campos, Neus Grau, Tim Owen Jones, Rosario Lim, Martina Marotti, Marlies Ostermann, Christopher Whitton, Zoe Alldis, Raine Astin-Chamberlain, Fatima Bibi, Jack Biddle, Sarah Blow, Matthew Bolton, Catherine Borra, Ruth Bowles, Maudrian Burton, Yasmin Choudhury, David Collier, Amber Cox, Amy Easthope, Patrizia Ebano, Stavros Fotiadis, Jana Gurasashvili, Rosslyn Halls, Pippa Hartridge, Delordson Kallon, Jamila Kassam, Ivone Lancoma-Malcolm, Maninderpal Matharu, Peter May, Oliver Mitchelmore, Tabitha Newman, Mital Patel, Jane Pheby, Irene Pinzuti, Zoe Prime, Oleksandra Prysyazhna, Julian Shiel, Melanie Taylor, Carey Tierney, Suzanne Wood, Anne Zak, Olivier Zongo, Stephen Bonner, Keith Hugill, Jessica Jones, Steven Liggett, Evie Headlam, Nageswar Bandla, Minnie Gellamucho, Michelle Davies, Christopher Thompson, Marwa Abdelrazik, Dhanalakshmi Bakthavatsalam, Munzir Elhassan, Arunkumar Ganesan, Anne Haldeos, Jeronimo Moreno-Cuesta, Dharam Purohit, Rachel Vincent, Kugan Xavier, Kumar Rohit, Frater Alasdair, Malik Saleem, Carter David, Jenkins Samuel, Zoe Lamond, Wall Alanna, Jaime Fernandez-Roman, David O. Hamilton, Emily Johnson, Brian Johnston, Maria Lopez Martinez, Suleman Mulla, David Shaw, Alicia A.C. Waite, Victoria Waugh, Ingeborg D. Welters, Karen Williams, Anna Cavazza, Maeve Cockrell, Eleanor Corcoran, Maria Depante, Clare Finney, Ellen Jerome, Mark McPhail, Monalisa Nayak, Harriet Noble, Kevin O'Reilly, Evita Pappa, Rohit Saha, Sian Saha, John Smith, Abigail Knighton, David Antcliffe, Dorota Banach, Stephen Brett, Phoebe Coghlan, Ziortza Fernandez, Anthony Gordon, Roceld Rojo, Sonia Sousa Arias, Maie Templeton, Megan Meredith, Lucy Morris, Lucy Ryan, Amy Clark, Julia Sampson, Cecilia Peters, Martin Dent, Margaret Langley, Saima Ashraf, Shuying Wei, Angela Andrew, Archana Bashyal, Neil Davidson, Paula Hutton, Stuart McKechnie, Jean Wilson, David Baptista, Rebecca Crowe, Rita Fernandes, Rosaleen Herdman-Grant, Anna Joseph, Denise O'Connor, Meryem Allen, Adam Loveridge, India McKenley, Eriko Morino, Andres Naranjo, Richard Simms, Kathryn Sollesta, Andrew Swain, Harish Venkatesh, Jacyntha Khera, Jonathan Fox, Gillian Andrew, Lucy Barclay, Marie Callaghan, Rachael Campbell, Sarah Clark, Dave Hope, Lucy Marshall, Corrienne McCulloch, Kate Briton, Jo Singleton, Sohphie Birch, Lutece Brimfield, Zoe Daly, David Pogson, Steve Rose, Ceri Battle, Elaine Brinkworth, Rachel Harford, Carl Murphy, Luke Newey, Tabitha Rees, Marie Williams, Sophie Arnold, Petra Polgarova, Katerina Stroud, Eoghan Meaney, Megan Jones, Anthony Ng, Shruti Agrawal, Nazima Pathan, Deborah White, Esther Daubney, Kay Elston, Lina Grauslyte, Musarat Hussain, Mandeep Phull, Tatiana Pogreban, Lace Rosaroso, Erika Salciute, George Franke, Joanna Wong, Aparna George, Laura Ortiz-Ruiz de Gordoa, Emily Peasgood, Claire Phillips, Michelle Bates, Jo Dasgin, Jaspret Gill, Annette Nilsson, James Scriven, Carlos Castro Delgado, Deborah Dawson, Lijun Ding, Georgia Durrant, Obiageri Ezeobu, Sarah Farnell-Ward, Abiola Harrison, Rebecca Kanu, Susannah Leaver, Elena Maccacari, Soumendu Manna, Romina Pepermans Saluzzio, Joana Queiroz, Tinashe Samakomva, Christine Sicat, Joana Texeira, Edna Fernandes Da Gloria, Ana Lisboa, John Rawlins, Jisha Mathew, Ashley Kinch, William James Hurt, Nirav Shah, Victoria Clark, Maria Thanasi, Nikki Yun, Kamal Patel, Sara Bennett, Emma Goodwin, Matthew Jackson, Alissa Kent, Clare Tibke, Wiesia Woodyatt, Ahmed Zaki, Azmerelda Abraheem, Peter Bamford, Kathryn Cawley, Charlie Dunmore, Maria Faulkner, Rumanah Girach, Helen Jeffrey, Rhianna Jones, Emily London, Imrun Nagra, Farah Nasir, Hannah Sainsbury, Clare Smedley, Tahera Patel, Matthew Smith, Srikanth Chukkambotla, Aayesha Kazi, Janice Hartley, Joseph Dykes, Muhammad Hijazi, Sarah Keith, Meherunnisa Khan, Janet Ryan-Smith, Philippa Springle, Jacqueline Thomas, Nick Truman, Samuel Saad, Dabheoc Coleman, Christopher Fine, Roseanna Matt, Bethan Gay, Jack Dalziel, Syamlan Ali, Drew Goodchild, Rhiannan Harling, Ravi Bhatterjee, Wendy Goddard, Chloe Davison, Stephen Duberly, Jeanette Hargreaves, Rachel Bolton, Miriam Davey, David Golden, Rebecca Seaman, Shiney Cherian, Sean Cutler, Anne Emma Heron, Anna Roynon-Reed, Tamas Szakmany, Gemma Williams, Owen Richards, Yusuf Cheema, Hollie Brooke, Sarah Buckley, Jose Cebrian Suarez, Ruth Charlesworth, Karen Hansson, John Norris, Alice Poole, Alastair Rose, Rajdeep Sandhu, Brendan Sloan, Elizabeth Smithson, Muthu Thirumaran, Veronica Wagstaff, Alexandra Metcalfe, Mark Brunton, Jess Caterson, Holly Coles, Matthew Frise, Sabi Gurung Rai, Nicola Jacques, Liza Keating, Emma Tilney, Shauna Bartley, Parminder Bhuie, Sian Gibson, Amanda Lyle, Fiona McNeela, Jayachandran Radhakrishnan, Alistair Hughes, Bryan Yates, Jessica Reynolds, Helen Campbell, Maria Thompsom, Steve Dodds, Stacey Duffy, Sandra Greer, Karen Shuker, Ascanio Tridente, Reena Khade, Ashok Sundar, George Tsinaslanidis, Isobel Birkinshaw, Joseph Carter, Kate Howard, Joanne Ingham, Rosie Joy, Harriet Pearson, Samantha Roche, Zoe Scott, Hollie Bancroft, Mary Bellamy, Margaret Carmody, Jacqueline Daglish, Faye Moore, Joanne Rhodes, Mirriam Sangombe, Salma Kadiri, Maria Croft, Ian White, Victoria Frost, Maia Aquino, Rajeev Jha, Vinodh Krishnamurthy, Lai Lim, Li Lim, Edward Combes, Teishel Joefield, Sonja Monnery, Valerie Beech, Sallyanne Trotman, Christine Almaden-Boyle, Pauline Austin, Louise Cabrelli, Stephen Cole, Matt Casey, Susan Chapman, Clare Whyte, Yolanda Baird, Aaron Butler, Indra Chadbourn, Linda Folkes, Heather Fox, Amy Gardner, Raquel Gomez, Gillian Hobden, Luke Hodgson, Kirsten King, Michael Margarson, Tim Martindale, Emma Meadows, Dana Raynard, Yvette Thirlwall, David Helm, Jordi Margalef, Kristine Criste, Rebecca Cusack, Kim Golder, Hannah Golding, Oliver Jones, Samantha Leggett, Michelle Male, Martyna Marani, Kirsty Prager, Toran Williams, Belinda Roberts, Karen Salmon, Peter Anderson, Katie Archer, Karen Austin, Caroline Davis, Alison Durie, Olivia Kelsall, Jessica Thrush, Charlie Vigurs, Laura Wild, Hannah-Louise Wood, Helen Tranter, Alison Harrison, Nicholas Cowley, Michael McAlindon, Andrew Burtenshaw, Stephen Digby, Emma Low, Aled Morgan, Naiara Cother, Tobias Rankin, Sarah Clayton, Alex McCurdy, Cecilia Ahmed, Balvinder Baines, Sarah Clamp, Julie Colley, Risna Haq, Anne Hayes, Jonathan Hulme, Samia Hussain, Sibet Joseph, Rita Kumar, Zahira Maqsood, Manjit Purewal, Leonie Benham, Zena Bradshaw, Joanna Brown, Melanie Caswell, Jason Cupitt, Sarah Melling, Stephen Preston, Nicola Slawson, Emma Stoddard, Scott Warden, Bethan Deacon, Ceri Lynch, Carla Pothecary, Lisa Roche, Gwenllian Sera Howe, Jayaprakash Singh, Keri Turner, Hannah Ellis, Natalie Stroud, Jodie Hunt, Joy Dearden, Emma Dobson, Andy Drummond, Michelle Mulcahy, Sheila Munt, Grainne O'Connor, Jennifer Philbin, Chloe Rishton, Redmond Tully, Sarah Winnard, Susanne Cathcart, Katharine Duffy, Alex Puxty, Kathryn Puxty, Lynne Turner, Jane Ireland, Gary Semple, Kate Long, Simon Whiteley, Elizabeth Wilby, Bethan Ogg, Amanda Cowton, Andrea Kay, Melanie Kent, Kathryn Potts, Ami Wilkinson, Suzanne Campbell, Ellen Brown, Julie Melville, Jay Naisbitt, Rosane Joseph, Maria Lazo, Olivia Walton, Alan Neal, Peter Alexander, Schvearn Allen, Joanne Bradley-Potts, Craig Brantwood, Jasmine Egan, Timothy Felton, Grace Padden, Luke Ward, Stuart Moss, Susannah Glasgow, Lynn Abel, Michael Brett, Brian Digby, Lisa Gemmell, James Hornsby, Patrick MacGoey, Pauline O'Neil, Richard Price, Natalie Rodden, Kevin Rooney, Radha Sundaram, Nicola Thomson, Bridget Hopkins, Laura Thrasyvoulou, Heather Willis, Martyn Clark, Martina Coulding, Edward Jude, Jacqueline McCormick, Oliver Mercer, Darsh Potla, Hafiz Rehman, Heather Savill, Victoria Turner, Charlotte Downes, Kathleen Holding, Katie Riches, Mary Hilton, Mel Hayman, Deepak Subramanian, Priya Daniel, Oluronke Adanini, Nikhil Bhatia, Maines Msiska, Rebecca Collins, Ian Clement, Bijal Patel, A. Gulati, Carole Hays, K. Webster, Anne Hudson, Andrea Webster, Elaine Stephenson, Louise McCormack, Victoria Slater, Rachel Nixon, Helen Hanson, Maggie Fearby, Sinead Kelly, Victoria Bridgett, Philip Robinson, Julie Camsooksai, Charlotte Humphrey, Sarah Jenkins, Henrik Reschreiter, Beverley Wadams, Yasmin Death, Victoria Bastion, Daphene Clarke, Beena David, Harriet Kent, Rachel Lorusso, Gamu Lubimbi, Sophie Murdoch, Melchizedek Penacerrada, Alastair Thomas, Jennifer Valentine, Ana Vochin, Retno Wulandari, Brice Djeugam, Gillian Bell, Katy English, Amro Katary, Louise Wilcox, Michelle Bruce, Karen Connolly, Tracy Duncan, Helen T-Michael, Gabriella Lindergard, Samuel Hey, Claire Fox, Jordan Alfonso, Laura Jayne Durrans, Jacinta Guerin, Bethan Blackledge, Jade Harris, Martin Hruska, Ayaa Eltayeb, Thomas Lamb, Tracey Hodgkiss, Lisa Cooper, Joanne Rothwell, Angela Allan, Felicity Anderson, Callum Kaye, Jade Liew, Jasmine Medhora, Teresa Scott, Erin Trumper, Adriana Botello, Liana Lankester, Nikitas Nikitas, Colin Wells, Bethan Stowe, Kayleigh Spencer, Craig Brandwood, Lara Smith, Katie Birchall, Laurel Kolakaluri, Deborah Baines, Anila Sukumaran, Elena Apetri, Cathrine Basikolo, Laura Catlow, Bethan Charles, Paul Dark, Reece Doonan, Alice Harvey, Daniel Horner, Karen Knowles, Stephanie Lee, Diane Lomas, Chloe Lyons, Tracy Marsden, Danielle McLaughlan, Liam McMorrow, Jessica Pendlebury, Jane Perez, Maria Poulaka, Nicola Proudfoot, Melanie Slaughter, Kathryn Slevin, Vicky Thomas, Danielle Walker, Angiy Michael, Matthew Collis, Tracey Cosier, Gemma Millen, Neil Richardson, Natasha Schumacher, Heather Weston, James Rand, Nicola Baxter, Steven Henderson, Sophie Kennedy-Hay, Christopher McParland, Laura Rooney, Malcolm Sim, Gordan McCreath, Louise Akeroyd, Shereen Bano, Matt Bromley, Lucy Gurr, Tom Lawton, James Morgan, Kirsten Sellick, Deborah Warren, Brian Wilkinson, Janet McGowan, Camilla Ledgard, Amelia Stacey, Kate Pye, Ruth Bellwood, Michael Bentley, Jeremy Bewley, Zoe Garland, Lisa Grimmer, Bethany Gumbrill, Rebekah Johnson, Katie Sweet, Denise Webster, Georgia Efford, Karen Convery, Deirdre Fottrell-Gould, Lisa Hudig, Jocelyn Keshet-Price, Georgina Randell, Katie Stammers, Maria Bokhari, Vanessa Linnett, Rachael Lucas, Wendy McCormick, Jenny Ritzema, Amanda Sanderson, Helen Wild, Anthony Rostron, Alistair Roy, Lindsey Woods, Sarah Cornell, Fiona Wakinshaw, Kimberley Rogerson, Jordan Jarmain, Robert Parker, Amie Reddy, Ian Turner-Bone, Laura Wilding, Peter Harding, Caroline Abernathy, Louise Foster, Andrew Gratrix, Vicky Martinson, Priyai Parkinson, Elizabeth Stones, Llucia Carbral-Ortega, Georgia Bercades, David Brealey, Ingrid Hass, Niall MacCallum, Gladys Martir, Eamon Raith, Anna Reyes, Deborah Smyth, Letizia Zitter, Sarah Benyon, Suzie Marriott, Linda Park, Samantha Keenan, Elizabeth Gordon, Helen Quinn, Kizzy Baines, Lenka Cagova, Adama Fofano, Lucie Garner, Helen Holcombe, Sue Mepham, Alice Michael Mitchell, Lucy Mwaura, Krithivasan Praman, Alain Vuylsteke, Julie Zamikula, Bally Purewal, Vanessa Rivers, Stephanie Bell, Hayley Blakemore, Borislava Borislavova, Beverley Faulkner, Emma Gendall, Elizabeth Goff, Kati Hayes, Matt Thomas, Ruth Worner, Kerry Smith, Deanna Stephens, Louise Mew, Esther Mwaura, Richard Stewart, Felicity Williams, Lynn Wren, Sara-Beth Sutherland, Emily Bevan, Jane Martin, Dawn Trodd, Geoff Watson, Caroline Wrey Brown, Amy Collins, Waqas Khaliq, Estefania Treus Gude, Olugbenga Akinkugbe, Alasdair Bamford, Emily Beech, Holly Belfield, Michael Bell, Charlene Davies, Gareth A.L. Jones, Tara McHugh, Hamza Meghari, Lauran O'Neill, Mark J. Peters, Samiran Ray, Ana Luisa Tomas, Iona Burn, Geraldine Hambrook, Katarina Manso, Ruth Penn, Pradeep Shanmugasundaram, Julie Tebbutt, Danielle Thornton, Jade Cole, Rhys Davies, Donna Duffin, Helen Hill, Ben Player, Emma Thomas, Angharad Williams, Denise Griffin, Nycola Muchenje, Mcdonald Mupudzi, Richard Partridge, Jo-Anna Conyngham, Rachel Thomas, Mary Wright, Maria Alvarez Corral, Reni Jacob, Cathy Jones, Craig Denmade, Sarah Beavis, Katie Dale, Rachel Gascoyne, Joanne Hawes, Kelly Pritchard, Lesley Stevenson, Amanda Whileman, Patricia Doble, Joanne Hutter, Corinne Pawley, Charmaine Shovelton, Marius Vaida, Deborah Butcher, Susie O'Sullivan, Nicola Butterworth-Cowin, Norfaizan Ahmad, Joann Barker, Kris Bauchmuller, Sarah Bird, Kay Cawthron, Kate Harrington, Yvonne Jackson, Faith Kibutu, Becky Lenagh, Shamiso Masuko, Gary H. Mills, Ajay Raithatha, Matthew Wiles, Jayne Willson, Helen Newell, Alison Lye, Lorenza Nwafor, Claire Jarman, Sarah Rowland-Jones, David Foote, Joby Cole, Roger Thompson, James Watson, Lisa Hesseldon, Irene Macharia, Luke Chetam, Jacqui Smith, Amber Ford, Samantha Anderson, Kathryn Birchall, Kay Housley, Sara Walker, Leanne Milner, Helena Hanratty, Helen Trower, Patrick Phillips, Simon Oxspring, Ben Donne, Catherine Jardine, Dewi Williams, Alasdair Hay, Rebecca Flanagan, Gareth Hughes, Scott Latham, Emma McKenna, Jennifer Anderson, Robert Hull, Kat Rhead, Carina Cruz, Natalie Pattison, Rob Charnock, Denise McFarland, Denise Cosgrove, Ashar Ahmed, Anna Morris, Srinivas Jakkula, Asifa Ali, Megan Brady, Sam Dale, Annalisa Dance, Lisa Gledhill, Jill Greig, Kathryn Hanson, Kelly Holdroyd, Marie Home, Diane Kelly, Ross Kitson, Lear Matapure, Deborah Melia, Samantha Mellor, Tonicha Nortcliffe, Jez Pinnell, Matthew Robinson, Lisa Shaw, Ryan Shaw, Lesley Thomis, Alison Wilson, Tracy Wood, Lee-Ann Bayo, Ekta Merwaha, Tahira Ishaq, Sarah Hanley, Meg Hibbert, Dariusz Tetla, Chrsitopher Woodford, Latha Durga, Gareth Kennard-Holden, Debbie Branney, Jordan Frankham, Sally Pitts, Nigel White, Shondipon Laha, Mark Verlander, Alexandra Williams, Abdelhakim Altabaibeh, Ana Alvaro, Kayleigh Gilbert, Louise Ma, Loreta Mostoles, Chetan Parmar, Kathryn Simpson, Champa Jetha, Lauren Booker, Anezka Pratley, Colene Adams, Anita Agasou, Tracie Arden, Amy Bowes, Pauline Boyle, Mandy Beekes, Heather Button, Nigel Capps, Mandy Carnahan, Anne Carter, Danielle Childs, Denise Donaldson, Kelly Hard, Fran Hurford, Yasmin Hussain, Ayesha Javaid, James Jones, Sanal Jose, Michael Leigh, Terry Martin, Helen Millward, Nichola Motherwell, Rachel Rikunenko, Jo Stickley, Julie Summers, Louise Ting, Helen Tivenan, Louise Tonks, Rebecca Wilcox, Maureen Holland, Natalie Keenan, Marc Lyons, Helen Wassall, Chris Marsh, Mervin Mahenthran, Emma Carter, Thomas Kong, Helen Blackman, Ben Creagh-Brown, Sinead Donlon, Natalia Michalak-Glinska, Sheila Mtuwa, Veronika Pristopan, Armorel Salberg, Eleanor Smith, Sarah Stone, Charles Piercy, Jerik Verula, Dorota Burda, Rugia Montaser, Lesley Harden, Irving Mayangao, Cheryl Marriott, Paul Bradley, Celia Harris, Susan Anderson, Eleanor Andrews, Janine Birch, Emma Collins, Kate Hammerton, Ryan O'Leary, Michele Clark, Sarah Purvis, Russell Barber, Claire Hewitt, Annette Hilldrith, Karen Jackson-Lawrence, Sarah Shepardson, Maryanne Wills, Susan Butler, Silvia Tavares, Amy Cunningham, Julia Hindale, Sarwat Arif, Sarah Bean, Karen Burt, Michael Spivey, Carrie Demetriou, Charlotte Eckbad, Sarah Hierons, Lucy Howie, Sarah Mitchard, Lidia Ramos, Alfredo Serrano-Ruiz, Katie White, Fiona Kelly, Daniele Cristiano, Natalie Dormand, Zohreh Farzad, Mahitha Gummadi, Kamal Liyanage, Brijesh Patel, Sara Salmi, Geraldine Sloane, Vicky Thwaites, Mathew Varghese, Anelise C. Zborowski, John Allan, Tim Geary, Gordon Houston, Alistair Meikle, Peter O'Brien, Miranda Forsey, Agilan Kaliappan, Anne Nicholson, Joanne Riches, Mark Vertue, Elizabeth Allan, Kate Darlington, Ffyon Davies, Jack Easton, Sumit Kumar, Richard Lean, Daniel Menzies, Richard Pugh, Xinyi Qiu, Llinos Davies, Hannah Williams, Jeremy Scanlon, Gwyneth Davies, Callum Mackay, Joannne Lewis, Stephanie Rees, Metod Oblak, Monica Popescu, Mini Thankachen, Andrew Higham, Kerry Simpson, Jayne Craig, Rosie Baruah, Sheila Morris, Susie Ferguson, Amy Shepherd, Luke Stephen Prockter Moore, Marcela Paola Vizcaychipi, Laura Gomes de Almeida Martins, Jaime Carungcong, Inthakab Ali Mohamed Ali, Karen Beaumont, Mark Blunt, Zoe Coton, Hollie Curgenven, Mohamed Elsaadany, Kay Fernandes, Sameena Mohamed Ally, Harini Rangarajan, Varun Sarathy, Sivarupan Selvanayagam, Dave Vedage, Matthew White, Mandy Gill, Paul Paul, Valli Ratnam, Sarah Shelton, Inez Wynter, Siobhain Carmody, Valerie Joan Page, Claire Marie Beith, Karen Black, Suzanne Clements, Alan Morrison, Dominic Strachan, Margaret Taylor, Michelle Clarkson, Stuart D'Sylva, Kathryn Norman, Fiona Auld, Joanne Donnachie, Ian Edmond, Lynn Prentice, Nikole Runciman, Dario Salutous, Lesley Symon, Anne Todd, Patricia Turner, Abigail Short, Laura Sweeney, Euan Murdoch, Dhaneesha Senaratne, Michaela Hill, Thogulava Kannan, Wild Laura, Rikki Crawley, Abigail Crew, Mishell Cunningham, Allison Daniels, Laura Harrison, Susan Hope, Ken Inweregbu, Sian Jones, Nicola Lancaster, Jamie Matthews, Alice Nicholson, Gemma Wray, Helen Langton, Rachel Prout, Malcolm Watters, Catherine Novis, Anthony Barron, Ciara Collins, Sundeep Kaul, Heather Passmore, Claire Prendergast, Anna Reed, Paula Rogers, Rajvinder Shokkar, Meriel Woodruff, Hayley Middleton, Oliver Polgar, Claire Nolan, Kanta Mahay, Dawn Collier, Anil Hormis, Victoria Maynard, Cheryl Graham, Rachel Walker, Ellen Knights, Alicia Price, Alice Thomas, Chris Thorpe, Teresa Behan, Caroline Burnett, Jonathan Hatton, Elaine Heeney, Atideb Mitra, Maria Newton, Rachel Pollard, Rachael Stead, Vishal Amin, Elena Anastasescu, Vikram Anumakonda, Komala Karthik, Rizwana Kausar, Karen Reid, Jacqueline Smith, Janet Imeson-Wood, Denise Skinner, Jane Gaylard, Dee Mullan, Julie Newman, Alison Brown, Vikki Crickmore, Gabor Debreceni, Joy Wilkins, Liz Nicol, Rosie Reece-Anthony, Mark Birt, Alison Ghosh, Emma Williams, Louise Allen, Eva Beranova, Nikki Crisp, Joanne Deery, Tracy Hazelton, Alicia Knight, Carly Price, Sorrell Tilbey, Salah Turki, Sharon Turney, Joshua Cooper, Cheryl Finch, Sarah Liderth, Alison Quinn, Natalia Waddington, Tina Coventry, Susan Fowler, Michael MacMahon, Amanda McGregor, Anne Cowley, Judith Highgate, Jane Gregory, Susan O'Connell, Tim Smith, Luigi Barberis, Shameer Gopal, Nichola Harris, Victoria Lake, Stella Metherell, Elizabeth Radford, Amelia Daniel, Joanne Finn, Rajnish Saha, Nikki White, Phil Donnison, Fiona Trim, Beena Eapen, Jenny Birch, Laura Bough, Josie Goodsell, Rebecca Tutton, Patricia Williams, Sarah Williams, Barbara Winter-Goodwin, Ailstair Nichol, Kathy Brickell, Michelle Smyth, Lorna Murphy, Samantha Coetzee, Alistair Gales, Igor Otahal, Meena Raj, Craig Sell, Paula Hilltout, Jayne Evitts, Amanda Tyler, Joanne Waldron, Kate Beesley, Sarah Board, Agnieszka Kubisz-Pudelko, Alison Lewis, Jess Perry, Lucy Pippard, Di Wood, Clare Buckley, Peter Barry, Neil Flint, Patel Rekha, Dawn Hales, Lara Bunni, Claire Jennings, Monica Latif, Rebecca Marshall, Gayathri Subramanian, Peter J. McGuigan, Christopher Wasson, Stephanie Finn, Jackie Green, Erin Collins, Bernadette King, Andy Campbell, Sara Smuts, Joseph Duffield, Oliver Smith, Lewis Mallon, Watkins Claire, Liam Botfield, Joanna Butler, Catherine Dexter, Jo Fletcher, Atul Garg, Aditya Kuravi, Poonam Ranga, Emma Virgilio, Zakaula Belagodu, Bridget Fuller, Anca Gherman, Olumide Olufuwa, Remi Paramsothy, Carmel Stuart, Naomi Oakley, Charlotte Kamundi, David Tyl, Katy Collins, Pedro Silva, June Taylor, Laura King, Charlotte Coates, Maria Crowley, Phillipa Wakefield, Jane Beadle, Laura Johnson, Janet Sargeant, Madeleine Anderson, Ailbhe Brady, Rebekah Chan, Jeff Little, Shane McIvor, Helena Prady, Helen Whittle, Bijoy Mathew, Ben Attwood, Penny Parsons, Geraldine Ward, Pamela Bremmer, West Joe, Baird Tracy, Ruddy Jim, Ellie Davies, Sonia Sathe, Catherine Dennis, Alastair McGregor, Victoria Parris, Sinduya Srikaran, Anisha Sukha, Noreen Clarke, Jonathan Whiteside, Mairi Mascarenhas, Avril Donaldson, Joanna Matheson, Fiona Barrett, Marianne O'Hara, Laura Okeefe, Clare Bradley, Christine Eastgate-Jackson, Helder Filipe, Daniel Martin, Amitaa Maharajh, Sara Mingo Garcia, Glykeria Pakou, Mark De Neef, Kathy Dent, Elizabeth Horsley, Muhmmad Nauman Akhtar, Sandra Pearson, Dorota Potoczna, Sue Spencer, Melanie Clapham, Rosemary Harper, Una Poultney, Polly Rice, Rachel Mutch, Lisa Armstrong, Hayley Bates, Emma Dooks, Fiona Farquhar, Brigid Hairsine, Chantal McParland, Sophie Packham, Rehana Bi, Barney Scholefield, Lydia Ashton, Linsha George, Sophie Twiss, David Wright, Manish Chablani, Amy Kirkby, Kimberley Netherton, Kim Davies, Linda O'Brien, Zohra Omar, Emma Perkins, Tracy Lewis, Isobel Sutherland, Karen Burns, Dr Ben Chandler, Kerry Elliott, Janine Mallinson, Alison Turnbull, Prisca Gondo, Bernard Hadebe, Abdul Kayani, Bridgett Masunda, Taya Anderson, Dan Hawcutt, Laura O'Malley, Laura Rad, Naomi Rogers, Paula Saunderson, Kathryn Sian Allison, Deborah Afolabi, Jennifer Whitbread, Dawn Jones, Rachael Dore, Matthew Halkes, Pauline Mercer, Lorraine Thornton, Joy Dawson, Sweyn Garrioch, Melanie Tolson, Jonathan Aldridge, Ritoo Kapoor, David Loader, Karen Castle, Sally Humphreys, Ruth Tampsett, Katherine Mackintosh, Amanda Ayers, Wendy Harrison, Julie North, Suzanne Allibone, Roman Genetu, Vidya Kasipandian, Amit Patel, Ainhi Mac, Anthony Murphy, Parisa Mahjoob, Roonak Nazari, Lucy Worsley, Andrew Fagan, Thomas Bemand, Ethel Black, Arnold Dela Rosa, Ryan Howle, Shaman Jhanji, Ravishankar Rao Baikady, Kate Colette Tatham, Benjamin Thomas, Dina Bell, Rosalind Boyle, Katie Douglas, Lynn Glass, Emma Lee, Liz Lennon, Austin Rattray, Abigail Taylor, Rachel Anne Hughes, Helen Thomas, Alun Rees, Michaela Duskova, Janet Phipps, Suzanne Brooks, Michelle Edwards, Sheena Quaid, Ekaterina Watson, Adam Brayne, Emma Fisher, Jane Hunt, Peter Jackson, Duncan Kaye, Nicholas Love, Juliet Parkin, Victoria Tuckey, Lynne Van Koutrik, Sasha Carter, Benedict Andrew, Louise Findlay, Katie Adams, Jen Service, Alison Williams, Claire Cheyne, Anne Saunderson, Sam Moultrie, Miranda Odam, Kathryn Hall, Isheunesu Mapfunde, Charlotte Willis, Alex Lyon, Chunda Sri-Chandana, Joslan Scherewode, Lorraine Stephenson, Sarah Marsh, John Hardy, Henry Houlden, Eleanor Moncur, Ambreen Tariq, Arianna Tucci, Maria Hobrok, Ronda Loosley, Heather McGuinness, Helen Tench, Rebecca Wolf-Roberts, Val Irvine, Benjamin Shelley, Claire Gorman, Abhinav Gupta, Elizabeth Timlick, Rebecca Brady, Barry Milligan, Arianna Bellini, Jade Bryant, Anton Mayer, Amy Pickard, Nicholas Roe, Jason Sowter, Alex Howlett, Katy Fidler, Emma Tagliavini, and Kevin Donnelly
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SARS-CoV-2 ,host genetics ,toll-like receptor 7 ,targeted sequencing ,rare variants ,variant collapsing analysis ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Summary: Despite extensive global research into genetic predisposition for severe COVID-19, knowledge on the role of rare host genetic variants and their relation to other risk factors remains limited. Here, 52 genes with prior etiological evidence were sequenced in 1,772 severe COVID-19 cases and 5,347 population-based controls from Spain/Italy. Rare deleterious TLR7 variants were present in 2.4% of young (
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- 2024
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27. Performance dispersion among target date funds
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Pavlova, Ivelina and Hibbert, Ann Marie
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- 2024
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28. Evaluation of a culture change program to reduce unprofessional behaviours by hospital co-workers in Australian hospitals
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Johanna I. Westbrook, Rachel Urwin, Ryan McMullan, Tim Badgery-Parker, Antoinette Pavithra, Kate Churruca, Neil Cunningham, Erwin Loh, Peter Hibbert, Guy Maddern, Jeffrey Braithwaite, and Ling Li
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Incivility ,Bullying ,Disruptive behaviours ,Professionalism ,Speaking-up ,Workplace mistreatment ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Unprofessional behaviours between healthcare workers are highly prevalent. Evaluations of large-scale culture change programs are rare resulting in limited evidence of intervention effectiveness. We conducted a multi-method evaluation of a professional accountability and culture change program “Ethos” implemented across eight Australian hospitals. The Ethos program incorporates training for staff in speaking-up; an online system for reporting co-worker behaviours; and a tiered accountability pathway, including peer-messengers who deliver feedback to staff for ‘reflection’ or ‘recognition’. Here we report the final evaluation component which aimed to measure changes in the prevalence of unprofessional behaviours before and after Ethos. Methods A survey of staff (clinical and non-clinical) experiences of 26 unprofessional behaviours across five hospitals at baseline before (2018) and 2.5–3 years after (2021/2022) Ethos implementation. Five of the 26 behaviours were classified as ‘extreme’ (e.g., assault) and 21 as incivility/bullying (e.g., being spoken to rudely). Our analysis assessed changes in four dimensions: work-related bullying; person-related bullying; physical bullying and sexual harassment. Change in experience of incivility/bullying was compared using multivariable ordinal logistic regression. Change in extreme behaviours was assessed using multivariable binary logistic regression. All models were adjusted for respondent characteristics. Results In total, 3975 surveys were completed. Staff reporting frequent incivility/bullying significantly declined from 41.7% (n = 1064; 95% CI 39.7,43.9) at baseline to 35.5% (n = 505; 95% CI 32.8,38.3; χ2(1) = 14.3; P
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- 2024
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29. Angiogenesis-associated pathways play critical roles in neonatal sepsis outcomes
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Mario Fidanza, Julie Hibbert, Erica Acton, Danny Harbeson, Elizna Schoeman, Patrycja Skut, Tabitha Woodman, Adrien Eynaud, Lucy Hartnell, Byron Brook, Bing Cai, Mandy Lo, Reza Falsafi, Robert E. W. Hancock, Msandeni Chiume-Kayuni, Norman Lufesi, Constantin R. Popescu, Pascal M. Lavoie, Tobias Strunk, Andrew J. Currie, Tobias R. Kollmann, Nelly Amenyogbe, and Amy H. Lee
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Neonatal sepsis is a major cause of childhood mortality. Limited diagnostic tools and mechanistic insights have hampered our abilities to develop prophylactic or therapeutic interventions. Biomarkers in human neonatal sepsis have been repeatedly identified as associated with dysregulation of angiopoietin signaling and altered arachidonic acid metabolism. We here provide the mechanistic evidence in support of the relevance for these observations. Angiopoetin-1 (Ang-1), which promotes vascular integrity, was decreased in blood plasma of human and murine septic newborns. In preclinical models, administration of Ang-1 provided prophylactic protection from septic death. Arachidonic acid metabolism appears to be functionally connected to Ang-1 via reactive oxygen species (ROS) with a direct role of nitric oxide (NO). Strengthening this intersection via oral administration of arachidonic acid and/or the NO donor L-arginine provided prophylactic as well as therapeutic protection from septic death while also increasing plasma Ang-1 levels among septic newborns. Our data highlight that targeting angiogenesis-associated pathways with interventions that increase Ang-1 activity directly or indirectly through ROS/eNOS provide promising avenues to prevent and/or treat severe neonatal sepsis.
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- 2024
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30. Patient characteristics of, and remedial interventions for, complaints and medico-legal claims against doctors: a rapid review of the literature
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Timothy J. Schultz, Michael Zhou, Jodi Gray, Jackie Roseleur, Richard Clark, Dylan A. Mordaunt, Peter D. Hibbert, Georgie Haysom, and Michael Wright
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Complaints ,Medico-legal claims ,Communication and resolution program ,Risk management program ,Patient characteristics ,Patient safety ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background It is uncertain if patient’s characteristics are associated with complaints and claims against doctors. Additionally, evidence for the effectiveness of remedial interventions on rates of complaints and claims against doctors has not been synthesised. Methods We conducted a rapid review of recent literature to answer: Question 1 “What are the common characteristics and circumstances of patients who are most likely to complain or bring a claim about the care they have received from a doctor?” and Question 2 “What initiatives or interventions have been shown to be effective at reducing complaints and claims about the care patients have received from a doctor?”. We used a systematic search (most recently in July 2023) of PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science and grey literature. Studies were screened against inclusion criteria and critically appraised in duplicate using standard tools. Results were summarised using narrative synthesis. Results From 8079 search results, we reviewed the full text of 250 studies. We included 25 studies: seven for Question 1 (6 comparative studies with controls and one systematic review) and 18 studies for Question 2 (14 uncontrolled pre-post studies, 2 comparative studies with controls and 2 systematic reviews). Most studies were set in hospitals across a mix of medical specialties. Other than for patients with mental health conditions (two studies), no other patient characteristics demonstrated either a strong or consistent effect on the rate of complaints or claims against their treating doctors. Risk management programs (6 studies), and communication and resolution programs (5 studies) were the most studied of 6 intervention types. Evidence for reducing complaints and medico-legal claims, costs or premiums and more timely management was apparent for both types of programs. Only 1 to 3 studies were included for peer programs, medical remediation, shared decision-making, simulation training and continuing professional development, with few generalisable results. Conclusion Few patient characteristics can be reliably related to the likelihood of medico-legal complaints or claims. There is some evidence that interventions can reduce the number and costs of claims, the number of complaints, and the timeliness of claims. However, across both questions, the strength of the evidence is very weak and is based on only a few studies or study designs that are highly prone to bias.
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- 2024
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31. Is it possible to make ‘living’ guidelines? An evaluation of the Australian Living Stroke Guidelines
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Louise Wiles, Peter D Hibbert, Yvonne Zurynski, Carolynn L. Smith, Gaston Arnolda, Louise A. Ellis, Rebecca Lake, Brona Nic Giolla Easpaig, Charlotte Molloy, Sandy Middleton, Jeffrey Braithwaite, Kelvin Hill, and Tari Turner
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Living guidelines ,Clinical guidelines ,Guideline adherence ,Evidence based healthcare management ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Keeping best practice guidelines up-to-date with rapidly emerging research evidence is challenging. ‘Living guidelines’ approaches enable continual incorporation of new research, assisting healthcare professionals to apply the latest evidence to their clinical practice. However, information about how living guidelines are developed, maintained and applied is limited. The Stroke Foundation in Australia was one of the first organisations to apply living guideline development methods for their Living Stroke Guidelines (LSGs), presenting a unique opportunity to evaluate the process and impact of this novel approach. Methods A mixed-methods study was conducted to understand the experience of LSGs developers and end-users. We used thematic analysis of one-on-one semi-structured interview and online survey data to determine the feasibility, acceptability, and facilitators and barriers of the LSGs. Website analytics data were also reviewed to understand usage. Results Overall, the living guidelines approach was both feasible and acceptable to developers and users. Facilitators to use included collaboration with multidisciplinary clinicians and stroke survivors or carers. Increased workload for developers, workload unpredictability, and limited information sharing, and interoperability of technological platforms were identified as barriers. Users indicated increased trust in the LSGs (69%), likelihood of following the LSGs (66%), and frequency of access (58%), compared with previous static versions. Web analytics data showed individual access by 16,517 users in 2016 rising to 53,154 users in 2020, a threefold increase. There was also a fourfold increase in unique LSG pageviews from 2016 to 2020. Conclusions This study, the first evaluation of living guidelines, demonstrates that this approach to stroke guideline development is feasible and acceptable, that these approaches may add value to developers and users, and may increase guideline use. Future evaluations should be embedded along with guideline implementation to capture data prospectively.
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- 2024
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32. Making watercress (Nasturtium officinale) cropping sustainable: genomic insights into enhanced phosphorus use efficiency in an aquatic crop.
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Hibbert, Lauren, Qian, Yufei, Smith, Hazel, Milner, Suzanne, Katz, Ella, Kliebenstein, Daniel, and Taylor, Gail
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Brassica ,Nasturtium officinale ,abiotic stress ,fertilizer ,nutrition ,phosphorus ,transcriptome - Abstract
Watercress (Nasturtium officinale) is a nutrient-dense salad crop with high antioxidant capacity and glucosinolate concentration and with the potential to contribute to nutrient security as a locally grown outdoor aquatic crop in northern temperate climates. However, phosphate-based fertilizers used to support plant growth contribute to the eutrophication of aquatic habitats, often pristine chalk streams, downstream of farms, increasing pressure to minimize fertilizer use and develop a more phosphorus-use efficient (PUE) crop. Here, we grew genetically distinct watercress lines selected from a bi-parental mapping population on a commercial watercress farm either without additional phosphorus (P-) or under a commercial phosphate-based fertilizer regime (P+), to decipher effects on morphology, nutritional profile, and the transcriptome. Watercress plants sustained shoot yield in P- conditions, through enhanced root biomass, but with shorter stems and smaller leaves. Glucosinolate concentration was not affected by P- conditions, but both antioxidant capacity and the concentration of sugars and starch in shoot tissue were enhanced. We identified two watercress breeding lines, with contrasting strategies for enhanced PUE: line 60, with highly plastic root systems and increased root growth in P-, and line 102, maintaining high yield irrespective of P supply, but less plastic. RNA-seq analysis revealed a suite of genes involved in cell membrane remodeling, root development, suberization, and phosphate transport as potential future breeding targets for enhanced PUE. We identified watercress gene targets for enhanced PUE for future biotechnological and breeding approaches enabling less fertilizer inputs and reduced environmental damage from watercress cultivation.
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- 2023
33. Circulating N-lactoyl-amino acids and N-formyl-methionine reflect mitochondrial dysfunction and predict mortality in septic shock
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Rogers, Robert S., Sharma, Rohit, Shah, Hardik B., Skinner, Owen S., Guo, Xiaoyan A., Panda, Apekshya, Gupta, Rahul, Durham, Timothy J., Shaughnessy, Kelsey B., Mayers, Jared R., Hibbert, Kathryn A., Baron, Rebecca M., Thompson, B. Taylor, and Mootha, Vamsi K.
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- 2024
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34. Building a culture of safety in Australian residential aged care facilities: protocol for a longitudinal mixed methods research programme
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Jeffrey Braithwaite, Kristiana Ludlow, Peter D Hibbert, Kate Churruca, Louise A Ellis, Johanna Westbrook, Nasir Wabe, Isabelle Meulenbroeks, Rachel Urwin, Jane Graham, Jey Thanigasalam, Ingerlise Svaleng, and Jo-Ann Sardellis
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction The quality and safety of care within residential aged care facilities (RACFs) have been linked to their organisational culture. However, evidence for understanding and improving culture in this setting is limited. This research programme aims to validate a survey to measure organisational culture and determine the relationship of culture with safety and quality of care, then to evaluate an organisational culture change programme in Australian RACFs.Methods and analysis This is a longitudinal mixed methods programme of research conducted across four studies in collaboration with a national aged care provider that cares for more than 5000 residents:Study 1: Cross-sectional staff survey of organisational culture in >50 RACFs with concurrent collection of data on quality and safety of care, and staff outcomes, to explore their associations with culture.Study 2: Ethnographic fieldwork in eight RACFs sampled to achieve maximum variation. Data from interviews, observations and documents will be analysed to identify the underlying assumptions and how cultural assumptions influence the enactment of safety and quality.Study 3: Evaluation of the implementation of the Speak Up for Safety culture change programme, focusing on its contextualisation for RACFs, implementation determinants and outcomes. Data will be collected through semistructured interviews, complimented with secondary data from program training and feedback system usage.Study 4: Evaluation of the effectiveness of the culture change programme using baseline data from study 1 and a follow-up survey of organisational culture postimplementation to assess changes in organisational culture and staff behaviour.Ethics and dissemination The study has received approval from the Macquarie University Human Research Ethics Committee. Informed consent will be sought from all participants. Findings will be disseminated through journal articles, conference presentations and reports to the collaborating provider and RACFs. Survey data will be deposited into a data repository for use by others working on related research.
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- 2024
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35. Improving health system responses when patients are harmed: a protocol for a multistage mixed-methods study
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Sandy Middleton, Andrew Carson-Stevens, Jeffrey Braithwaite, Ying Wang, Peter D Hibbert, Robyn Clay-Williams, Virginia Mumford, Johanna Westbrook, Gaston Arnolda, Charlotte J Molloy, Raghu Lingam, Paul M Salmon, Siri Wiig, Carl de Wet, Bróna Nic Giolla Easpaig, Farah Magrabi, Gregory M Peterson, Kathleen Ryan, Elizabeth E Austin, Kirstine Sketcher-Baker, Louise Raggett, Mike Roberts, Patricia Bradd, Steven Bowden, Mark Zacka, Andy Phillips, Lanii Birks, Dinesh K Arya, Catherine Trevorrow, Suchit Handa, and Girish Swaminathan
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction At least 10% of hospital admissions in high-income countries, including Australia, are associated with patient safety incidents, which contribute to patient harm (‘adverse events’). When a patient is seriously harmed, an investigation or review is undertaken to reduce the risk of further incidents occurring. Despite 20 years of investigations into adverse events in healthcare, few evaluations provide evidence of their quality and effectiveness in reducing preventable harm.This study aims to develop consistent, informed and robust best practice guidance, at state and national levels, that will improve the response, learning and health system improvements arising from adverse events.Methods and analysis The setting will be healthcare organisations in Australian public health systems in the states of New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory. We will apply a multistage mixed-methods research design with evaluation and in-situ feasibility testing. This will include literature reviews (stage 1), an assessment of the quality of 300 adverse event investigation reports from participating hospitals (stage 2), and a policy/procedure document review from participating hospitals (stage 3) as well as focus groups and interviews on perspectives and experiences of investigations with healthcare staff and consumers (stage 4). After triangulating results from stages 1–4, we will then codesign tools and guidance for the conduct of investigations with staff and consumers (stage 5) and conduct feasibility testing on the guidance (stage 6). Participants will include healthcare safety systems policymakers and staff (n=120–255) who commission, undertake or review investigations and consumers (n=20–32) who have been impacted by adverse events.Ethics and dissemination Ethics approval has been granted by the Northern Sydney Local Health District Human Research Ethics Committee (2023/ETH02007 and 2023/ETH02341).The research findings will be incorporated into best practice guidance, published in international and national journals and disseminated through conferences.
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- 2024
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36. Ecological Interchangeability: Supporting Team Adaptive Expertise in Moments of Disruption
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Cristancho, Sayra, Field, Emily, Lingard, Lorelei, Taylor, Taryn, Hibbert, Kathy, Thompson, Graham, and Hibbert, William
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While undesirable, unexpected disruptions offer unique opportunities to enact adaptive expertise. For adaptive expertise to flourish, individuals and teams must embrace both efficiency and adaptation. While some industries do it readily, others continue to struggle with the tension between efficiency and adaptation, particularly when otherwise stable situations are unexpectedly disrupted. For instance, in healthcare settings, the efficiency mandate for strict compliance with scopes of practice can deter teams from using the adaptive strategy of making their members interchangeable. Yet, interchangeability has been hinted as a key capacity of today' teams that are required to navigate fluid team structures. Because interchangeability -- as an adaptive strategy -- can generate antagonistic reactions, it has not been well studied in fluid teams. Thus, in this exploratory qualitative study we sought to gain insights into how interchangeability manifests when fluid teams from five different contexts (healthcare, emergency services, orchestras, military, and business) deal with disruptive events. According to our participants, successful interchangeability was possible when people knew how to work within one's role while being aware of their teammates' roles. However, interchangeability included more than just role switching. Interchangeability took various forms and was most successful when teams capitalized on the procedural, emotional, and social dimensions of their work. To reflect this added complexity, we refer to interchangeability in fluid teams as Ecological Interchangeability. We suggest that ecological interchangeability may become a desired feature in the training of adaptive expertise in teams, if its underlying properties and enabling mechanisms are more fully understood.
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- 2022
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37. Implementation of large, multi-site hospital interventions: a realist evaluation of strategies for developing capability
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Janet C Long, Natalie Roberts, Emilie Francis-Auton, Mitchell N Sarkies, Hoa Mi Nguyen, Johanna I Westbrook, Jean-Frederic Levesque, Diane E Watson, Rebecca Hardwick, Kate Churruca, Peter Hibbert, and Jeffrey Braithwaite
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Implementation ,Change management ,Learning culture ,Capacity development ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background This study presents guidelines for implementation distilled from the findings of a realist evaluation. The setting was local health districts in New South Wales, Australia that implemented three clinical improvement initiatives as part of a state-wide program. We focussed on implementation strategies designed to develop health professionals’ capability to deliver value-based care initiatives for multisite programs. Capability, which increases implementers’ ability to cope with unexpected scenarios is key to managing change. Methods We used a mixed methods realist evaluation which tested and refined program theories elucidating the complex dynamic between context (C), mechanism (M) and outcome (O) to determine what works, for whom, under what circumstances. Data was drawn from program documents, a realist synthesis, informal discussions with implementation designers, and interviews with 10 key informants (out of 37 identified) from seven sites. Data analysis employed a retroductive approach to interrogate the causal factors identified as contributors to outcomes. Results CMO statements were refined for four initial program theories: Making it Relevant– where participation in activities was increased when targeted to the needs of the staff; Investment in Quality Improvement– where engagement in capability development was enhanced when it was valued by all levels of the organisation; Turnover and Capability Loss– where the effects of staff turnover were mitigated; and Community-Wide Priority– where there was a strategy of spanning sites. From these data five guiding principles for implementers were distilled: (1) Involve all levels of the health system to effectively implement large-scale capability development, (2) Design capability development activities in a way that supports a learning culture, (3) Plan capability development activities with staff turnover in mind, (4) Increased capability should be distributed across teams to avoid bottlenecks in workflows and the risk of losing key staff, (5) Foster cross-site collaboration to focus effort, reduce variation in practice and promote greater cohesion in patient care. Conclusions A key implementation strategy for interventions to standardise high quality practice is development of clinical capability. We illustrate how leadership support, attention to staff turnover patterns, and making activities relevant to current issues, can lead to an emergent learning culture.
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- 2024
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38. Strategies to improve care for older adults who present to the emergency department: a systematic review
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Luke Testa, Lieke Richardson, Colleen Cheek, Theresa Hensel, Elizabeth Austin, Mariam Safi, Natália Ransolin, Ann Carrigan, Janet Long, Karen Hutchinson, Magali Goirand, Mia Bierbaum, Felicity Bleckly, Peter Hibbert, Kate Churruca, and Robyn Clay-Williams
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Complex system ,Urgent healthcare ,Quality ,Patient safety ,Value-based care ,Indicators ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The aim of this systematic review was to examine the relationship between strategies to improve care delivery for older adults in ED and evaluation measures of patient outcomes, patient experience, staff experience, and system performance. Methods A systematic review of English language studies published since inception to December 2022, available from CINAHL, Embase, Medline, and Scopus was conducted. Studies were reviewed by pairs of independent reviewers and included if they met the following criteria: participant mean age of ≥ 65 years; ED setting or directly influenced provision of care in the ED; reported on improvement interventions and strategies; reported patient outcomes, patient experience, staff experience, or system performance. The methodological quality of the studies was assessed by pairs of independent reviewers using The Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal tools. Data were synthesised using a hermeneutic approach. Results Seventy-six studies were included in the review, incorporating strategies for comprehensive assessment and multi-faceted care (n = 32), targeted care such as management of falls risk, functional decline, or pain management (n = 27), medication safety (n = 5), and trauma care (n = 12). We found a misalignment between comprehensive care delivered in ED for older adults and ED performance measures oriented to rapid assessment and referral. Eight (10.4%) studies reported patient experience and five (6.5%) reported staff experience. Conclusion It is crucial that future strategies to improve care delivery in ED align the needs of older adults with the purpose of the ED system to ensure sustainable improvement effort and critical functioning of the ED as an interdependent component of the health system. Staff and patient input at the design stage may advance prioritisation of higher-impact interventions aligned with the pace of change and illuminate experience measures. More consistent reporting of interventions would inform important contextual factors and allow for replication.
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- 2024
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39. Management and Outcomes of Type I and Type II Myocardial Infarction in Cardiogenic Shock
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Cameron Stotts, BSc, Richard G. Jung, MD, PhD, Graeme Prosperi-Porta, MD, Pietro Di Santo, MD, Omar Abdel-Razek, MD, Simon Parlow, MD, F. Daniel Ramirez, MD, MSc, Trevor Simard, MD, Marino Labinaz, MD, Baylie Morgan, RN, Lisa Robinson, RN, Rebecca Mathew, MD, and Benjamin Hibbert, MD, PhD
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: Type I myocardial infarction (T1MI) or type II myocardial infarction (T2MI) have different underlying mechanisms; however, in the setting of cardiogenic shock (CS), it is not understood if patients experience resultantly different outcomes. The objective of this study was to determine clinical features, biomarker patterns, and outcomes in these subgroups. Methods: Patients from the CAPITAL-DOREMI trial presenting with acute myocardial infarction-associated CS (n = 103) were classified as T1MI (n = 61) or T2MI (n = 42). The primary endpoint was a composite of all-cause in-hospital mortality, cardiac arrest, the need for mechanical circulatory support, or initiation of renal replacement therapy at 30 days. Secondary endpoints were evaluated as individual components of the primary endpoint. Results: Patients with T1MI CS did not have a higher incidence of the primary composite endpoint compared with T2MI CS (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 1.63; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.96-2.77; P = 0.07). Cardiac biomarkers including troponin I (P < 0.001), and creatine kinase levels (P = 0.001) were elevated in patients with T1MI CS compared with T2MI. Furthermore, patients with T1MI CS presented with decreased urine output (P = 0.01) compared with T2MI. Predictors of T2MI CS included nonischemic ventricular dysfunction (P = 0.002), atrial fibrillation (P = 0.02), and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P = 0.002). Conclusions: There were no differences in adverse clinical outcomes between patients with T1MI and T2MI CS, although the events were numerically increased, and the sample size was small. Overall, this study provides a hypothesis-generating analysis regarding the clinical and biochemical outcomes in T1MI vs T2MI CS. Résumé: Introduction: L’infarctus du myocarde de type 1 (IMT1) et l’infarctus du myocarde de type 2 (IMT2) ont des mécanismes sous-jacents différents. Toutefois, dans le contexte du choc cardiogénique (CC), nous ignorons si les patients ont donc des résultats cliniques différents. Les objectifs de la présente étude étaient de déterminer les caractéristiques cliniques, les profils des biomarqueurs et les résultats cliniques dans ces sous-groupes. Méthodes: Les patients de l’essai CAPITAL-DOREMI qui présentaient un CC associé à un infarctus aigu du myocarde (n = 103) étaient classifiés dans le sous-groupe IMT1 (n = 61) ou dans le sous-groupe IMT2 (n = 42). Le critère de jugement principal était un critère composite qui regroupait la mortalité à l’hôpital toutes causes confondues, l’arrêt cardiaque, la nécessité d’une assistance circulatoire mécanique ou l’amorce d’une thérapie de remplacement rénal dans les 30 jours. Les critères secondaires étaient évalués en fonction des composantes individuelles du critère de jugement principal. Résultats: Les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT1 n’avaient pas une plus grande fréquence de survenue du critère de jugement principal composite que les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT2 (rapport de risque [RR] ajusté, 1,63 ; intervalle de confiance [IC] à 95 %, 0,96-2,77 ; P = 0,07). Les biomarqueurs cardiaques dont les concentrations de la troponine I (P < 0,001) et de la créatine kinase (P = 0,001) étaient élevées chez les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT1, mais non chez les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT2. De plus, les patients qui avaient eu un CC-IMT1 avaient une diurèse réduite (P = 0,01), mais non les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT2. Les prédicteurs du CC-IMT2 étaient la dysfonction ventriculaire non ischémique (P = 0,002), la fibrillation auriculaire (P = 0,02) et la maladie pulmonaire obstructive chronique (P = 0,002). Conclusions: Il n’y avait aucune différence dans les résultats cliniques défavorables entre les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT1 et les patients qui avaient un CC-IMT2, bien que les événements aient augmenté en nombre, et que la taille de l’échantillon était petite. Dans l’ensemble, cette étude fournit une analyse de génération d’hypothèses quant aux résultats cliniques et biochimiques du CC-IMT1 vs du CC-IMT2.
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- 2024
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40. The quality of care delivered to residents in long-term care in Australia: an indicator-based review of resident records (CareTrack Aged study)
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Peter D. Hibbert, Charlotte J. Molloy, Ian D. Cameron, Leonard C. Gray, Richard L. Reed, Louise K. Wiles, Johanna Westbrook, Gaston Arnolda, Rebecca Bilton, Ruby Ash, Andrew Georgiou, Alison Kitson, Clifford F. Hughes, Susan J. Gordon, Rebecca J. Mitchell, Frances Rapport, Carole Estabrooks, Gregory L. Alexander, Charles Vincent, Adrian Edwards, Andrew Carson-Stevens, Cordula Wagner, Brendan McCormack, and Jeffrey Braithwaite
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Quality of care ,Aged care ,Evidence-based care ,Long-term care ,Clinical audit ,Healthcare quality indicators ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background This study estimated the prevalence of evidence-based care received by a population-based sample of Australian residents in long-term care (LTC) aged ≥ 65 years in 2021, measured by adherence to clinical practice guideline (CPG) recommendations. Methods Sixteen conditions/processes of care amendable to estimating evidence-based care at a population level were identified from prevalence data and CPGs. Candidate recommendations (n = 5609) were extracted from 139 CPGs which were converted to indicators. National experts in each condition rated the indicators via the RAND-UCLA Delphi process. For the 16 conditions, 236 evidence-based care indicators were ratified. A multi-stage sampling of LTC facilities and residents was undertaken. Trained aged-care nurses then undertook manual structured record reviews of care delivered between 1 March and 31 May 2021 (our record review period) to assess adherence with the indicators. Results Care received by 294 residents with 27,585 care encounters in 25 LTC facilities was evaluated. Residents received care for one to thirteen separate clinical conditions/processes of care (median = 10, mean = 9.7). Adherence to evidence-based care indicators was estimated at 53.2% (95% CI: 48.6, 57.7) ranging from a high of 81.3% (95% CI: 75.6, 86.3) for Bladder and Bowel to a low of 12.2% (95% CI: 1.6, 36.8) for Depression. Six conditions (skin integrity, end-of-life care, infection, sleep, medication, and depression) had less than 50% adherence with indicators. Conclusions This is the first study of adherence to evidence-based care for people in LTC using multiple conditions and a standardised method. Vulnerable older people are not receiving evidence-based care for many physical problems, nor care to support their mental health nor for end-of-life care. The six conditions in which adherence with indicators was less than 50% could be the focus of improvement efforts.
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- 2024
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41. Treating persistent pain after breast cancer: practice gaps and future directions
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De Groef, An, Meeus, Mira, Heathcote, Lauren C., Wiles, Louise, Catley, Mark, Vogelzang, Anna, Olver, Ian, Runciman, William B., Hibbert, Peter, Dams, Lore, Morlion, Bart, and Moseley, G. Lorimer
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- 2023
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42. Evaluation of a Rabbit Model of Vascular Stent Healing: Application of Optical Coherence Tomography
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Simard, Trevor, Jung, Richard, Di Santo, Pietro, Sarathy, Kiran, Majeed, Kamran, Motazedian, Pouya, Short, Spencer, Dhaliwal, Shan, Labinaz, Alisha, Sarma, Dhruv, Ramirez, F. Daniel, Froeschl, Michael, Labinaz, Marino, Holmes, David R., Alkhouli, Mohamad, and Hibbert, Benjamin
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- 2023
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43. Real-world annualized relapse rates from contemporary multiple sclerosis clinics in the UK: a retrospective multicentre cohort study
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Papathanasiou, Athanasios, Hibbert, Aimee, Tallantyre, Emma, Harding, Katharine, Selvam, Adithya Panneer, Morgan, Matthew, Quainton, Charlotte, Talaei, Maryam, Arun, Tarunya, Ingram, Gillian, Law, Graham R., and Evangelou, Nikos
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- 2023
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44. A Machine Learning-Based Image Segmentation Method to Quantify In Vitro Osteoclast Culture Endpoints
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Davies, Bethan K., Hibbert, Andrew P., Roberts, Scott J., Roberts, Helen C., Tickner, Jennifer C., Holdsworth, Gill, Arnett, Timothy R., and Orriss, Isabel R.
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- 2023
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45. CTSK variant implicated in suspected pyknodysostosis in a domestic cat
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Lyraki, Maria, Hibbert, Angie, Langley-Hobbs, Sorrel, Lait, Philippa, Buckley, Reuben M, Warren, Wesley C, Lyons, Leslie A, and Consortium, 99 Lives
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Veterinary Sciences ,Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Human Genome ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Whole-exome sequencing ,hereditary ,pycnodysostosis ,pyknodysostosis ,cathepsin K ,Lives Consortium - Abstract
Case summaryA 9-month-old entire male domestic longhair cat presented with a history of pathological fractures, chronic musculoskeletal pain and poor growth. Multiple facial and skeletal abnormalities were identified on physical examination and advanced imaging (CT and radiographs). A variant in CTSK was identified in the affected cat following whole-exome sequencing (WES). The cat was managed symptomatically with diet, environmental modifications and analgesia.Relevance and novel informationThis is the first report of a cat with a similar clinical presentation and genetic variant to the hereditary human genetic disorder pyknodysostosis. In this case, WES was performed, which often facilitates the diagnosis of various hereditary disorders (ie, a conceptual framework for practicing feline genomic medicine). Despite the severe skeletal and appendicular abnormalities described, the cat was alive more than 2 years after its initial presentation.
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- 2022
46. An unusual case of persistent consolidation: Idiopathic lymphoid interstitial pneumonia
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Harriet J. Caterson, Sewon Kim, Matthew Zaborowski, Michael Harden, and Michael Hibbert
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interstitial ,lung diseases ,lymphoproliferative disorders ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia (LIP) is a rare but largely benign interstitial lung disease, most frequently associated with HIV and autoimmune conditions. It is infrequently found to be an idiopathic condition. Diagnosis is complex and can require numerous invasive tests as evidenced in the case presented. The diagnosis is made from a combination of clinical, radiological, and histological features but the unusual radiological and clinical features meant diagnosis in our case required surgical biopsy. There is minimal evidence around best treatment although largely involves targeting the underlying cause. There is a small risk of transformation to lymphoma and fibrosis. Immunosuppression with steroids is the most common therapeutic strategy however in our case the radiographic changes spontaneously resolved. We present a case of an immunocompetent male presenting with significant radiological and histopathological findings of LIP, without significant symptomatology, that spontaneously resolved without intervention suggesting a monitoring approach may be a valid management strategy.
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- 2024
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47. Exploring the relationship between calcitonin, ionized calcium, and bone turnover in cats with and without naturally occurring hypercalcemia
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Evangelia Maniaki, Carmen Pineda, Angie Hibbert, and Natalie Finch
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cat ,feline ,calcitonin ,calcium ,hypercalcemia ,idiopathic ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
ObjectivesThis case-control study aimed to evaluate calcitonin response in naturally occurring hypercalcemia in cats and assess the relationships between calcitonin and ionized calcium (iCa) and examine relationships between calcitonin, iCa and bone turnover.MethodsHypercalcemic cats (persistently increased iCa concentration [>1.40 mmol/l]) were identified retrospectively via a medical database search; additional hypercalcemic and normocalcemic cats were recruited prospectively. Data regarding routine biochemical and urine testing, diagnostic imaging and additional blood testing were obtained. Serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity was used as a marker of bone turnover. Serum calcitonin concentration was analyzed using a previously validated immunoradiometric assay. Hypercalcemic cats with an increased calcitonin concentration (>0.9 ng/L) were termed responders. Group comparisons were performed using a Mann-Whitney test for continuous variables and a χ2 test for categorical variables. Spearman’s correlation coefficient was used to examine the relationships between calcitonin, iCa and ALP.ResultsTwenty-six hypercalcemic and 25 normocalcemic cats were recruited. Only 5/26 (19.2%) of the hypercalcemic cats were identified as responders, and all were diagnosed with idiopathic hypercalcemia. There was no significant correlation between the concentrations of calcitonin and iCa (p = 0.929), calcitonin and ALP (p = 0.917) or iCa and ALP (p = 0.678) in hypercalcemic cats, however, a significant negative correlation was observed between calcitonin and ALP (p = 0.037) when normocalcemic and hypercalcemic cats with an elevated calcitonin concentration were analyzed together.DiscussionThe expected increase in calcitonin concentration was present in only a small subset of hypercalcemic cats; no correlation was found between iCa and calcitonin concentration. The inverse relationship between calcitonin and ALP in cats with increased calcitonin concentrations suggests that the ability of calcitonin to correct hypercalcemia may be related to the degree of bone turnover.
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- 2024
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48. Use of the Lung Flute ECO to assist in sputum collection for tuberculosis testing: a randomised crossover trial
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Cyrille Mbuli, Comfort Vuchas, Joceline Konso, Zourriyah Adamou Mana, Yannick Russel Ngangue, Neba Esther, Norah Nyah Ndi, Irene Adeline Goupeyou Wandji, Mercy Fundoh, Maurice Ganava, Toussaint Malama, Nsame Denis, Pride Teyim, Annie Bisso, Rian Snijders, Ellen M.H. Mitchell, Epco Hasker, Ippei Soma, Melissa Sander, Satoshi Mitarai, the Lung Flute ECO Trial Consortium, Michelle Barbara Ngono, Guy Zero Molesa, Jeanne Rachel Leslie Ngo Mode, Eldred Mabughe Chongwain, Nina Lubeka, Houpa Hibbert Cyrille, Balkissou Nyako Wadjore, Kwemu Njakoi Clinton, Olivier Elie Habaga, Angela Neh, Fuh Boris Nforbi, Frinwie Mary-Carmel Ndifor, Claudia Asanji, Pascale Sandrine, Nguifu Ngwafung Kelly, Miranda Ngumbusi Tumanjong, Liliane Keugni, Hamada Beloko, Tollo Tollo Daniel, Theo Mpaba Minkat, and Henri Manga
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Medicine - Published
- 2024
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49. Birang Daruganora: what do Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities need in a new hospital? A qualitative study
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Jeffrey Braithwaite, Peter D Hibbert, Robyn Clay-Williams, Katherine Maka, Elizabeth E Austin, Ann Carrigan, Graeme Loy, Narelle Holden, and Shai Grigg
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives To elicit the Aboriginal community’s cultural and healthcare needs and views about six prominent and emerging models of care, to inform the development of a new hospital.Design Cross-sectional qualitative study co-designed and co-implemented by Aboriginal team members.Setting Western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.Participants Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander healthcare providers (n=2) and community members (n=18) aged between 21 and 60+ years participated in yarning circles (20 participants; 14 female, 6 male).Results Handwritten notes from yarning circles were inductively analysed to synthesise the cultural and healthcare needs of providers and community members in relation to a new hospital and six models of care. Three primary themes emerged in relation to future hospitals. These were ‘culturally responsive spaces’, ‘culturally responsive systems’ and ‘culturally responsive models of care’. Strengths (eg, comfort, reduced waiting time, holistic care), barriers (eg, logistics, accessibility, literacy) and enablers (eg, patient navigator role, communication pathways, streamlined processes) were identified for each of the six models of care.Conclusions Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community members and providers are invested in the co-creation of an innovative, well-integrated hospital that meets the needs of the community. Common themes of respect and recognition, relationships and partnering, and capacity building emerged as important consumer and provider considerations when developing and evaluating care services. Participants supported a range of models citing concerns about accessibility and choice when discussing evidence-based models of care.
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- 2024
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50. Evaluation of different models of general practitioners working in or alongside emergency departments: a mixed-methods realist evaluation
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Freya Davies, Michelle Edwards, Delyth Price, Pippa Anderson, Andrew Carson-Stevens, Mazhar Choudhry, Matthew Cooke, Jeremy Dale, Liam Donaldson, Bridie Angela Evans, Barbara Harrington, Shaun Harris, Julie Hepburn, Peter Hibbert, Thomas Hughes, Faris Hussain, Saiful Islam, Rhys Pockett, Alison Porter, Aloysius Niroshan Siriwardena, Helen Snooks, Alan Watkins, Adrian Edwards, and Alison Cooper
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emergency departments ,primary health care ,realist evaluation ,patient safety ,time series analysis ,cost–consequence analysis ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background Emergency healthcare services are under intense pressure to meet increasing patient demands. Many patients presenting to emergency departments could be managed by general practitioners in general practitioner–emergency department service models. Objectives To evaluate the effectiveness, safety, patient experience and system implications of the different general practitioner–emergency department models. Design Mixed-methods realist evaluation. Methods Phase 1 (2017–8), to understand current practice: rapid realist literature review, national survey and follow-up key informant interviews, national stakeholder event and safety data analysis. Phase 2 (2018–21), to collect and analyse qualitative (observations, interviews) and quantitative data (time series analysis); cost–consequences analysis of routine data; and case site data for ‘marker condition’ analysis from a purposive sample of 13 case sites in England and Wales. Phase 3 (2021–2), to conduct mixed-methods analysis for programme theory and toolkit development. Results General practitioners commonly work in emergency departments, but delivery models vary widely in terms of the scope of the general practitioner role and the scale of the general practitioner service. We developed a taxonomy to describe general practitioner–emergency department service models (Integrated with the emergency department service, Parallel within the emergency department, Outside the emergency department on the hospital site) and present a programme theory as principal output of the study to describe how these service models were observed to operate. Routine data were of variable quality, limiting our analysis. Time series analysis demonstrated trends across intervention sites for: increased time spent in the emergency department; increased emergency department attendances and reattendances; and mixed results for hospital admissions. Evidence on patient experience was limited but broadly supportive; we identified department-level processes to optimise the safety of general practitioner–emergency department models. Limitations The quality, heterogeneity and extent of routine emergency department data collection during the study period limited the conclusions. Recruitment was limited by criteria for case sites (time series requirements) and individual patients (with ‘marker conditions’). Pandemic and other pressures limited data collection for marker condition analysis. Data collected and analysed were pre pandemic; new approaches such as ‘telephone first’ and their relevance to our findings remains unexplored. Conclusion Findings suggest that general practitioner–emergency department service models do not meet the aim of reducing the overall emergency department waiting times and improving patient flow with limited evidence of cost savings. Qualitative data indicated that general practitioners were often valued as members of the wider emergency department team. We have developed a toolkit, based on our findings, to provide guidance for implementing and delivering general practitioner–emergency department services. Future work The emergency care data set has since been introduced across England to help standardise data collection to facilitate further research. We would advocate the systematic capture of patient experience measures and patient-reported outcome measures as part of routine care. More could be done to support the development of the general practitioner in emergency department role, including a core set of competencies and governance structure, to reflect the different general practitioner–emergency department models and to evaluate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness to guide future policy. Study registration This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42017069741. Funding This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 15/145/04) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 10. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information. Plain language summary Hospital emergency departments are under huge pressure. Patients are waiting many hours to be seen, some with problems that general practitioners could deal with. To reduce waiting times and improve patient care, arrangements have been put in place for general practitioners to work in or alongside emergency departments (general practitioner–emergency department models). We studied the different ways of working to find out what works well, how and for whom. We brought together a lot of information. We reviewed existing evidence, sent out surveys to 184 emergency departments, spent time in the emergency departments observing how they operated and interviewing 106 staff in 13 hospitals and 24 patients who visited those emergency departments. We also looked at statistical information recorded by hospitals. Two public contributors were involved from the beginning, and we held two stakeholder events to ensure the relevance of our research to professionals and patients. Getting reliable figures to compare the various general practitioner–emergency department set-ups (inside, parallel to or outside the emergency department) was difficult. Our findings suggest that over time more people are coming to emergency departments and overall waiting times did not generally improve due to general practitioner–emergency department models. Evidence that general practitioners might admit fewer patients to hospital was mixed, with limited findings of cost savings. Patients were generally supportive of the care they received, although we could not speak to as many patients as we planned. The skills and experience of general practitioners were often valued as members of the wider emergency department team. We identified how the care provided was kept safe with: strong leaders, good communication between different types of staff, highly trained and experienced nurses responsible for streaming and specific training for general practitioners on how they were expected to work. We have produced a guide to help professionals develop and improve general practitioner–emergency department services and we have written easy-to-read summaries of all the articles we published. Scientific summary Background Emergency healthcare services are under intense pressure to meet the increasing patient demands. Many patients presenting to emergency departments (EDs) could be managed by general practitioners (GPs). We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness, safety, patient experience and system implications of the different models of GPs working in or alongside EDs (GP-ED). Objectives Identify which models are in place. Describe how the models work. Describe the outcomes of each model. Explain the relationships between contexts (C), mechanisms (M) and outcomes (O) to develop a programme theory to help inform service delivery in other settings. Design We conducted a mixed-methods realist evaluation to describe what works, for whom, in what circumstances and how over three phases. Phase 1: understanding current practice and which models are in place Rapid realist review Method We conducted a rapid realist review to develop initial theories about how different GP-ED models operate, supported by our co-applicants as an expert reference group. Results A total of 96 articles contributed to initial theories: how decisions on streaming patients to GP services are influenced; the role of GPs in EDs; patient satisfaction and safety concerns; the risk of provider-induced demand in highly visible services; and whether these services represent value for money. National survey and follow-up clinical director interviews Method We sent an online survey to 184 clinical directors (CDs) from Type 1 EDs in England and Wales to gather information on aims, implementation and delivering the GP-ED services. Thirty CDs who worked in services implemented since 2010 (a range of locations, models and sizes) were invited to take part in semistructured telephone interviews to explore: service operation, perceived successes and challenges. Results We received 77 responses out of 184 invitees (41.3%); 51 (66%) respondents used a GP-ED model. We interviewed 21 CDs. Findings were used to characterise and categorise GP-ED models to create a taxonomy, inform case study site selection and further theory development. National stakeholder event Method We held a National Stakeholder event in Bristol in 2018 (n = 48 attendees), to present findings from the review and survey, gather stakeholder feedback on a taxonomy of GP-ED models (in collaboration with researchers from the GP-ED team at the University of the West of England) and identify ‘marker conditions’ to guide data collection in Phase 2. Results The taxonomy included a description of the ‘form’ of the GP-ED models (inside the ED: Integrated with ED service delivery or a separate Parallel service; or Outside the ED: on or off the hospital site) and a description of how different constructs influence how the service may ‘function’ – as a traditional GP service or emergency medicine service. Five marker conditions were selected, including: child with a fever, cough/shortness of breath, abdominal pain, back pain and chest pain. (We added ‘headache’ as a further condition in Phase 2 of the study to enhance patient interview recruitment.) National patient safety data collection and analysis Method We searched Coroners’ Reports to Prevent Future Deaths (2013–8) and National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) patient safety incident reports (2005–15) relating to diagnostic errors in GP-ED services. We coded these using the Patient Safety Classification System (PISA) framework and developed initial safety theories to inform data collection in Phase 2. Results We identified 9 relevant Coroners’ Reports and 217 NRLS reports. Initial theories were developed around: difficulty with triage and streaming processes; errors in clinical decision-making; and inadequate referral pathways and communication between services. Phase 2: case study mixed-methods data collection and analysis to describe how the general practitioner–emergency department models work and outcomes Qualitative data analysis Method We selected 13 case study sites reflecting different GP-ED models (3 Integrated, 4 Parallel, 3 Outside and 3 with no GP-ED model), different locations, sizes of ED and experience delivering the service. We visited all sites (2–4 days) and conducted observations and realist interviews with staff to refine initial theories. We requested local patient safety incident reports related to the GP-ED model and invited patients presenting with marker conditions for interviews to describe their experience. We analysed data from the multiple data sources and applied knowledge from conceptual frameworks and formal theories to refine our initial theories. We then mapped context–mechanism–outcome configurations against different GP-ED models to compare across different types of service. We presented findings at a second national event on 3 December 2019 (n = 70 attendees) for stakeholder feedback. Results Across all sites, we interviewed 106 staff members, collected 14 anonymised local patient safety incident reports, invited 748 patients to take part in telephone interviews and subsequently interviewed 24 patients. Theories were refined to describe: how streaming processes were influenced by nurse experience, guidance and overall operational and strategic management; how GPs found working in EDs influenced their clinical decision-making to maintain a usual GP approach or adopt an ED clinician approach, mitigating safety risks; factors that facilitate teamwork and communication between GP-ED services and the ED; how separate, visible GP-ED services are perceived to contribute to provider-induced demand; and patients’ expectations and experiences of using services. Routine data analysis Method We obtained patient-level data relating to ED attendances and subsequent hospital admissions from hospital episode statistics accident and emergency and admitted patient care (APC) data sets, via NHS Digital for study sites located in England; and from emergency department data set and patient episode database for Wales data sets (via secure anonymised information linkage) for one study site located in Wales. We summarised the attendance-level data as time series (per site, aggregating data for each study fortnight) for the following ED variables: Attendances; Reattendances; Hospital admissions (defined by patient record appearing in the APC data set); Investigations and Treatments; Time in ED; length of stay (LOS) of hospital admission. For all variables, we used standard time series analysis methods to assess the nature and extent of linear trends and seasonality in data before and after an intervention point at intervention sites. Results Data from 1 October 2010 to 30 September 2018 were eligible for inclusion and were of variable quality, tending to decrease as the level of integration between to GP-ED model and the ED decreased. We are more confident in the interpretations made about some outcomes (attendances, reattendances, admissions, LOS) than others (investigations, treatments, average time in ED) due to data quality. In general, at the GP-ED model sites, attendances increased over time. Reattendances within 28 days in the post-intervention period increased over that in the pre-intervention period in eight of the nine sites assessed. Overall, intervention sites also demonstrated a consistent trend of increasing average time in the ED across both the pre- and post-intervention phases. A mixed picture was seen in relation to hospital admissions in the Integrated and Parallel sites, with data quality issues at the Outside sites. Average length of hospital stay showed a mixed picture over all intervention sites. Cost–consequences analysis Method We conducted a cost–consequences analysis (CCA) using the routine data described above to consider the costs and resource consequences resulting from, or associated with, the use of the GP-ED model types compared to control sites. Results Negligible incremental ED attendance cost differences were observed between the model types and the control with an extremely small increased cost [£0.70, standard error (SE) £0.07] observed when looking at all models combined over control, though a saving of £72 (SE £3.18) when looking at inpatient admissions. When looking at ED visits by individual models, the Integrated model saw a small cost saving (£8.73, SE £0.07), but small cost increases were seen in the Parallel model (£9.51, SE £0.08) and the Outside model (£16.30, SE £0.16). With respect to inpatient admissions, all models saw small cost savings [£25 (SE £4.16) to £215 (SE £9.05)] with the Outside model showing the largest saving (£215, SE £9.05). Marker condition analysis Method We used a CCA as above to evaluate the management of six marker conditions at a Parallel GP-ED model as a case study site (the only site with data available during the pandemic period). Anonymised patient-level data were used to compare proportions of patients admitted to hospital (Pearson’s chi-squared test), and times (non-parametric Mann–Whitney U-test) for ED clinicians and GPs. A backward enter stepwise approach was taken with non-statistically significant variables (p > 0.05) removed. Results Emergency department clinicians saw most patients and those patients categorised as being more severely unwell. Across all marker conditions, GPs managed patients more quickly – the main driver being the time taken from treatment to discharge. Across all marker conditions, the trend was for GPs to admit fewer patients to inpatient care, compared with ED clinicians. This trend was more evident (and for some reaching statistical significance) among those requiring the lowest levels of intervention. Reattendance rates at 7 days were equal for both GPs and ED clinicians. Phase 3: mixed-method analysis, programme theory and toolkit development Mixed-methods analyses Method We conducted mixed-methods analyses to further refine our theories through two approaches: firstly, to identify questions raised through the qualitative data analysis to support, refute or refine through quantitative data analyses; then to identify noteworthy findings from the statistical analysis and cross-check with both the qualitative and marker conditions analyses. Results Streaming The marker condition and qualitative data analysis indicated the potential for GPs to improve the flow of the least unwell patients through the ED. However, at the whole ED level examined by the routine data, the analysis demonstrated increased time in the ED for patients at most sites. Therefore, our theories related to streaming and patient flow have limited support from quantitative data. General practitioner role Marker condition data from a single Parallel case study site showed that patients spent less time in the department and were less likely to be admitted, with no difference in reattendance rates at 7 days. Data on investigation use were of poor quality and not included in the analysis. Routine data for all intervention sites and three control sites also showed poor quality of investigation data. Any influence on time in the department and hospital admissions described in the marker condition data was not seen consistently in routine data analysis. While the marker conditions analysis supports the theory that a GP approach in an ED setting can be different to an ED clinician approach, it remains unclear whether this is due to individual clinicians’ management behaviours or service level differences in ways of working. The quantitative data did not identify particular GP-ED models associated with favourable outcomes potentially attributable to facilitating the ‘GP role’. Safety The routine data indicated increasing rates of reattendance at 28 days across most intervention and control sites. This may reflect changes in levels of morbidity among the population, public behaviours or service configurations (including availability of services elsewhere, notably in-hours primary care) rather than necessarily representing a change in the quality of the care provided at the ED. The marker condition data suggested that GP care in the ED appeared to be as safe as ED clinician care using reattendances within 7 days as a proxy. We have not identified data to develop our theory about strength of communication and teamworking within the ED. Patient experience While the marker conditions analysis indicated that patients attending ED who required the fewest investigations and treatments might be more satisfied by being seen by a GP due to a shorter ED stay, we could not identify any particular GP-ED model that appeared most likely to consistently decrease department stay. Demand Our theory about provider-induced demand in distinct and visible services is not supported by the data on ED attendances over the study period, but our qualitative findings suggest that there is a perceived additional demand for primary care at an ED in services where the primary care service is visible, easily accessible and more well known in the local area. Programme theory development We developed a programme theory, as the principal out of the research, presented as the patient journey through the three GP-ED models, to highlight similarities and differences. We recognise that each site had unique characteristics, so this represents a high-level summary of key features, rather than a description of every possible variation. At Integrated models, the streaming process is less influential. The ‘invisibility’ of the GP service means its impact on patient expectations is also more limited, but it allows for GPs to take on supervision of junior ED doctors, described positively at some sites. At Outside models, the process of ensuring that the right patient saw the GP was more complex, and open to potential problems. Their high visibility and accessibility were likely to have a greater impact on patients’ expectations and experiences. At these sites, GPs often took on a supervisory role for a wider primary care team. Parallel models showed the most variation in the way services were set up and the clarity of the GP role: some more like Integrated models others, Outside models. Toolkit We worked with study co-applicants and a stakeholder group of CDs to translate the research findings and programme theory into guidance for implementing and delivering GP-ED services. Some key points include: A culture including strong clinical leadership, encouraging mutual respect, interprofessional communication and teamworking is essential. To ensure that patients are efficiently and safely streamed, nurses should be highly trained and experienced; streaming pathways/protocols must be clear with senior oversight and include quality improvement systems. Training for GPs based on the type of GP-ED model in use and their intended role. Patients need to be informed about reasons for being streamed to different clinicians to help manage expectations. Conclusion General practitioners commonly work in EDs, but delivery models vary widely in terms of the scope of the GP role and the scale of the GP service. We developed a taxonomy to describe GP-ED models (Integrated, Parallel, Outside) and present a programme theory to describe how these models were observed to operate. Routine data were heterogeneous and of variable quality limiting analysis, including verification of the proposed theories, but trends were noted across intervention sites for: increased time spent in the ED, increased ED attendances and reattendances and mixed findings for hospital admissions. Findings suggest that GP-ED service models do not meet the aim of reducing ED waiting times and improving patient flow, with limited evidence of cost savings. Qualitative data indicated that GPs were often valued as members of the wider ED team, with significant appetite to utilise their specific skillset to provide care in the ED. We developed a toolkit, based on our findings, to provide guidance for implementing and delivering GP-ED services. Study registration This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42017069741. Funding This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 15/145/04) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 10. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
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- 2024
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