16 results
Search Results
2. Elements of intensive care bereavement follow‐up services: A European survey.
- Author
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Egerod, Ingrid, Kaldan, Gudrun, Albarran, John, Coombs, Maureen, Mitchell, Marion, and Latour, Jos M.
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BEREAVEMENT ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONTENT analysis ,INTENSIVE care nursing ,INTENSIVE care units ,LABOR supply ,MATHEMATICAL models ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,THEORY ,QUANTITATIVE research ,SOCIAL support ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Despite technological innovations and continuous improvement in evidence‐based treatments, mortality in the intensive care unit (ICU) remains high. Consequently, a large group of family members may be in need of, and could benefit from, bereavement follow‐up support. Aims and Objectives: To explore the elements, organization, and evaluation of ICU bereavement services in European countries. Specific objectives were to investigate: (a) the model of bereavement follow‐up services (elements of support), (b) the workforce model (organization of staff), and (c) the evaluation model (evaluation strategies). Design: This was a cross‐sectional survey of conference delegates. Methods: A paper‐and‐pen questionnaire, including a cover letter assuring the respondents of anonymity and confidentiality, was distributed to 250 delegates during the opening ceremony of the 2017 European federation of Critical Care Nurses associations Congress in Belfast. The questionnaire was developed from a previously validated tool describing bereavement care practices in ICUs, including questions about the content and organization of bereavement follow‐up services. Frequencies were calculated using yes/no questions, and content analysis was applied in additional free‐text comments. Results: We received 85 responses from publicly employed nurses, mainly in mixed adult ICUs. Respondents were 48 (56.5%) bedside nurses, and the remaining respondents represented clinical nurse specialists, researchers, managers, or academic nurses. Bereavement follow up had existed for about 1 to 15 years. Important follow‐up elements were: viewing the deceased in the unit, 77 (90.6%); providing follow‐up information, 67 (79.8%); sending a letter of sympathy, 17 (20%); and calling the family to arrange a meeting, 27 (31%). Conclusions: Bereavement follow up is common but variable in European ICUs. We recommend the development, implementation, and evaluation of evidence‐based, but culture‐specific, bereavement follow‐up guidelines for European ICUs. Relevance to Clinical Practice: More critical care nurses are realizing the need for bereavement follow‐up guidelines. This paper provides an overview of common elements that might be considered. WHAT IS KNOWN ABOUT THIS TOPICMany families experience the death of a loved one in intensive care unit (ICU).Bereavement services are offered at some ICUs.WHAT THIS PAPER ADDSBereavement services are not systematically offered in European ICUs.Culture‐specific guidelines are needed for bereavement follow up in ICUs.Common elements of bereavement services have been identified, for example, viewing the deceased in the unit, providing follow‐up information, sending a letter of sympathy, and calling the family to arrange a meeting.Consequences of bereavement in ICU have been discussed, for example, prolonged or complicated grief and lack of closure in the bereaved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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3. Euroguidelines in Central and Eastern Europe (ECEE) conference and the Warsaw Declaration -- a comprehensive meeting report.
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Kowalska, JD, Oprea, C, Witt, S, Pozniak, A, Gökengin, D, Youle, M, Lundgren, JD, Horban, A, Balayan, T., Bednarska, A., Begovac, J., Bolokadze, N., Bukovinowa, P., Burkacka, E., Caplinskas, S., Cholewińska‐Szymańska, G., De Wit, S., Dragovic, G., Harxhi, A., and Higersberger, J.
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HIV prevention ,HIV infection epidemiology ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEETINGS ,NONPROFIT organizations ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to summarize the outcomes of the Euroguidelines in Central and Eastern Europe (ECEE) conference held in Warsaw in February 2016. The main aim of this conference was to facilitate a discussion on European AIDS Clinical Society (EACS) guidelines implementation across the region and neighbouring countries and to present the current obstacles in benchmarking HIV care in Europe. Methods During a 2-day meeting, there were country-based presentations using a predefined template so as to make the data comparable and focus the discussion. Areas covered were country epidemiology, surveillance, national strategy for treatment and prevention, standards of care, access to care and treatment availability. Each participant filled in a questionnaire investigating HIV guidelines usage per country. Results In total, 16 Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) and neighbouring countries were represented at the conference: Albania, Armenia, Belarus, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Hungary, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia and Turkey. EACS guidelines version 7.1 were used in 14 (87%) countries. In 11 (69%) countries, national guidelines were available, of which eight had been recently updated. Half of the countries declared that they use World Health Organization (WHO) and Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) guidelines, over one-third the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) HIV testing guidelines and one in five the International Antiviral Society USA (IAS-USA) Panel guidelines from 2012. Conclusions Participants declared their will to promote the widespread use of EACS guidelines for HIV infection in the CEE region and neighbouring countries by signing the Warsaw Declaration. They also emphasized the need to increase publishing of data from national cohorts in that region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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4. 2014 President's plenary international psycho-oncology society: moving toward cancer care for the whole patient.
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Bultz, Barry D., Travado, Luzia, Jacobsen, Paul B., Turner, Jane, Borras, Josep M., and Ullrich, Andreas W.H.
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PSYCHO-oncology ,CANCER treatment ,CANCER patients ,QUALITY of life ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,CANCER diagnosis ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,TUMOR treatment ,TUMORS & psychology ,MEDICAL societies ,ONCOLOGY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
The International Psycho-oncology Society (IPOS) has just celebrated its 30th anniversary. The growth of psychosocial oncology has been exponential, and this relatively new field is becoming a core service that focuses on prevention, reducing the burden of cancer, and enhancing the quality of life from time of diagnosis, through treatment, survivorship, and palliative care. Looking back over the past 30 years, we see that cancer care globally has evolved to a new and higher standard. Today, 'cancer care for the whole patient' is being accomplished with an evidence-based model that addresses psychosocial needs and integrates psycho-oncology into the treatment and care of patients. The President's Plenary Session in Lisbon, Portugal, highlighted the IPOS Mission of promoting global excellence in psychosocial care of people affected by cancer through our research, public policy, advocacy, and education. The internationally endorsed IPOS Standard of Quality Cancer Care, for example, clearly states the necessity of integrating the psychosocial domain into routine care, and that distress should be measured as the sixth vital sign after temperature, blood pressure, pulse, respiratory rate, and pain. The plenary paper also discussed the global progress being made in Europe, North America, and Australia in providing quality cancer care for the whole patient. Collaborative partnerships between IPOS and organizations such as the European Partnership Action Against Cancer and the World Health Organization are essential in building capacity for the delivery of high-quality psycho-oncology services in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Disciplinarity and sport science in Europe: A statistical and sociological study of ECSS conference abstracts.
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Champely, Stéphane, Fargier, Patrick, and Camy, Jean
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ABSTRACTING ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH ,SPORTS sciences - Abstract
Abstracts of European College of Sports Science conferences (1995–2014) are studied. The number of abstracts has been increasing regularly (+90 per year). This rise is in recent years largely due to extra-European countries. The magnitude and accumulation of the different topics of discussion are examined. An operational criterion determines four stages of evolution of a topic: social network, cluster, specialty, and discipline. The scientific production can, therefore, be classified as disciplinary or non-disciplinary. The disciplinary part is more important but has been less dynamic recently. The cognitive content of sport science is then explored through a multidimensional scaling of the topics based on the keywords used in the abstracts. Three areas are visible: social sciences and humanities, sports medicine and physiology, and biomechanics and neurophysiology. According to the field theory of Bourdieu (1975), three scientific habitus are distinguished. The logic of academic disciplinary excellence is the consequence of the autonomy of this scientific field, its closure, peer-review process, and barriers to entry. The distribution of scientific capital and professional capital is unequal across the three areas. Basically, conservation strategies of academic disciplinary excellence are predicted in biomechanics and neurophysiology, subversion strategies of interdisciplinarity based on professional concerns can appear in the sports medicine and physiology area, and critical strategies of interdisciplinarity based on social utility in social sciences and humanities. Moreover, additional tensions within these areas are depicted. Lastly methods based on co-citations of disciplines and boundary objects are proposed to find tangible patterns of multidisciplinarity confirming these strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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6. Posters.
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PREVENTION of alcoholism ,ALCOHOLISM ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTERNATIONAL agencies - Published
- 2022
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7. News and Notes.
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MORTALITY of people with alcoholism ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,AWARDS ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,COCAINE ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,PACKAGING ,TOBACCO products ,LAW - Abstract
The article offers news briefs related to addiction as of 2016. The unregulated cannabidiol (CBD) market in Great Britain has been halted by the UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). The public is supporting minimum unit pricing (MUP) for alcohol products in Great Britain. A World Health Organization (WHO) report has found that the alcohol-attributable mortality burden has increased slightly in Europe since 1990.
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- 2016
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8. Solving problems is smart, preventing them is wise: Lessons learned from the 2nd International DKFZ Conference on Cancer Prevention.
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Gillmann, Clarissa, Pajor, Gabor, Ramadori, Pierluigi, Albers, Peter, Mons, Ute, Steindorf, Karen, Kentner, Susan, and Baumann, Michael
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PROBLEM solving ,CANCER prevention ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,MEDICAL personnel ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,LECTURE method in teaching ,CANCER education - Abstract
The 2nd International DKFZ Conference on Cancer Prevention (CCP2020) organized by the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) was held as a virtual event on 17‐18 September 2020. The event gathered experts on cancer prevention from around the world with the aim of generating a stimulating interchange of opinions between clinicians and basic researchers working in the field. The talks and posters of the conference fueled exciting discussions and debates about the state of the art of cancer prevention and provided a comprehensive outlook on the many aspects of the field. The program was divided into three main sessions, illustrating the most recent methodological approaches and interventions in primary, secondary and tertiary prevention, enriched by introductory lectures depicting the most relevant aspects of each session. The key concepts covered in this meeting were risk factors, early detection, improving life after cancer, cancer prevention in Europe and personalized prevention. The importance of the latter was expressly highlighted, many presentations emphasizing that in the era of personalized medicine, prevention also needs to be based on the unique genetic, epigenetic, social and behavioral characteristics of the individual to achieve maximal efficacy. In this article, we summarize the key messages emerging from each section, with particular attention on the most important challenges yet to be met in the field of cancer prevention. What's new Cancer is expected to reach a global incidence of 30 million cases per year by 2040, and the number of people living with and surviving cancer has been steadily rising. The 2nd International Conference on Cancer Prevention organized by the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) covered risk factors, early detection, improving life after cancer, cancer prevention in Europe, and personalized prevention. One key take‐home message was that precision prevention and early detection interventions could be developed in the context of genetically‐susceptible populations and preneoplasia settings, but windows of opportunity with the highest benefit and smallest collateral damage must be identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. FVE must continue to be active, says outgoing president.
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VETERINARIANS ,ANIMAL health laws ,VETERINARY medicine ,AQUACULTURE ,ANTIBIOTICS ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article offers information on the Federation of Veterinarians of Europe (FVE) and its general assembly held on June 5 and 6, 2015 in Romania. Topics include the proposed European regulations on animal health and veterinary medicines, the availability of medicines for aquaculture, and the use of metaphylactic antibiotics. It also discusses the demographic survey report of FVE and undergraduate and postgraduate education.
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- 2015
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10. European Tissue Repair Society Annual Meeting — 2019 Isarforum Munich, Germany September 11th – September 13th, 2019 "Tissue regeneration: From basic science to clinical translation" On the processes of fibrosis, wound care and scar management
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CONFERENCES & conventions ,MEDICAL societies ,TISSUES - Published
- 2020
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11. Structure and dynamics of European sports science textual contents: Analysis of ECSS abstracts (1996–2014).
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Hristovski, Robert, Aceski, Aleksandar, Balague, Natalia, Seifert, Ludovic, Tufekcievski, Aleksandar, and Cecilia, Aguirre
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ABSTRACTING ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONTENT analysis ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH ,SPORTS sciences - Abstract
The article discusses general structure and dynamics of the sports science research content as obtained from the analysis of 21998 European College of Sport Science abstracts belonging to 12 science topics. The structural analysis showed intertwined multidisciplinary and unifying tendencies structured along horizontal (scope) and vertical (level) axes. Methodological (instrumental and mode of inquiry) integrative tendencies are dominant. Theoretical integrative tendencies are much less detectable along both horizontal and vertical axes. The dynamic analysis of written abstracts text content over the 19 years reveals the contextualizing and guiding role of thematic skeletons of each sports science topic in forming more detailed contingent research ideas and the role of the latter in stabilizing and procreating the former. This circular causality between both hierarchical levels and functioning on separate characteristic time scales is crucial for understanding how stable research traditions self-maintain and self-procreate through innovative contingencies. The structure of sports science continuously rebuilds itself through use and re-use of contingent research ideas. The thematic skeleton ensures its identity and the contingent conceptual sets its flexibility and adaptability to different research or applicative problems. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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12. News and Notes.
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SMOKING laws ,CORPORATION law ,LABELING laws ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG control ,PSYCHIATRIC drug laws ,TAX laws ,NALOXONE ,CORPORATIONS ,TAXATION ,AGE distribution ,CHRONIC pain ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,COURTS ,DRUG monitoring ,DRUG utilization ,DRUGS ,DRUG overdose ,DRUG prescribing ,HEROIN ,MEDICAL protocols ,NARCOTICS ,TOBACCO ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,THERAPEUTICS ,PREVENTION - Abstract
This section offers news briefs on relating to addiction as of June 2016. It announces the implementation of the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products (Packaging and Labelling) Amendment Rules 2014 in India. It reports the prescription drug monitoring to be introduced in Victoria to prevent overdoses, as well as the ruling by the Texas Supreme Court upholding a state Supreme Court decision to impose a special tax on cigarette makers.
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- 2016
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13. Poster.
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CONFERENCES & conventions ,PERIODONTAL disease - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of periodontology-related research, including the abstracts "Entamoeba gingivalis key aggressive predator in periodontal disease" by M. Bonner, "The effect of alcohol consumption on periodontitis in older Danes" by M. Hach and others, and "TBX21 polymorphism (rs4794067) increases T-bet expression and correlates with red complex bacteria detection in chronic periodontitis patients" by F. Cavella and others.
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- 2015
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14. Euchems-Newsletter.
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CHEMISTS ,CHEMISTRY associations ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The article presents updates on the European Association for Chemical and Molecular Sciences (EuCheMS) as of May 2015. Topics covered include the cooperation between the EuCheMS and the European Chemistry Thematic Network Association, highlights of the November 2014 conference titled Chemistry for the Future of Europe--Energy, Food and Environment, and a preview of the 6th EuCheMS Chemistry Congress.
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- 2015
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15. Haemophilia care in Central and Eastern Europe: challenges and ways forward from clinicians' perspective.
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Nemes, L., Blatny, J., Klukowska, A., Spasova, M., Trakymiene, S. Saulyte, and Serban, M.
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HEMOPHILIA ,HEMOPHILIACS ,HEMOPHILIA treatment ,IMMUNOLOGICAL tolerance ,MEDICAL care ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article offers information on the first Central European Haemophilia Interactive Forum for Opinion Leaders in Haemophilia, held in Budapest, Hungary in May 2013 to discuss improving access to quality care for haemophilia patients. Topics discussed include improving professional education of specialists about haemophilia, assessment of haemophilia care in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) countries, and immune tolerance induction (ITI) therapy.
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- 2015
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16. The 16th European Conference on Applications of Surface and Interface Analysis.
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PHYSICAL scientists ,SURFACE chemistry ,TECHNOLOGY ,BIOLOGICAL interfaces ,BIOCHEMISTRY ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Information on the highlights of "The 16th European Conference on Applications of Surface and Interface Analysis, ECASIA'15," which was held at the Granada Congress and Exhibition Center in Granada, Spain from September 28-October 1, 2015, is presented. Some of the invited speakers include British professor Jas Pal S. Badyal and American professor Claude Lechene. Other topics discussed include high performance functional coatings, origin of life and applied medical studies.
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- 2016
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