38 results on '"van den Borne, B."'
Search Results
2. SATLAS2: An update to the package for analysis of counting data
- Author
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Gins, W., van den Borne, B., de Groote, R.P., and Neyens, G.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Precision spectroscopy and laser-cooling scheme of a radium-containing molecule
- Author
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics, Udrescu, S. M., Wilkins, S. G., Breier, A. A., Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis, M., Garcia Ruiz, R. F., Au, M., Belošević, I., Berger, R., Bissell, M. L., Binnersley, C. L., Brinson, A. J., Chrysalidis, K., Cocolios, T. E., de Groote, R. P., Dorne, A., Flanagan, K. T., Franchoo, S., Gaul, K., Geldhof, S., Giesen, T. F., Hanstorp, D., Heinke, R., Koszorús, Á., Kujanpää, S., Lalanne, L., Neyens, G., Nichols, M., Perrett, H. A., Reilly, J. R., Rothe, S., van den Borne, B., Vernon, A. R., Wang, Q., Wessolek, J., Yang, X. F., Zülch, C., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics, Udrescu, S. M., Wilkins, S. G., Breier, A. A., Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis, M., Garcia Ruiz, R. F., Au, M., Belošević, I., Berger, R., Bissell, M. L., Binnersley, C. L., Brinson, A. J., Chrysalidis, K., Cocolios, T. E., de Groote, R. P., Dorne, A., Flanagan, K. T., Franchoo, S., Gaul, K., Geldhof, S., Giesen, T. F., Hanstorp, D., Heinke, R., Koszorús, Á., Kujanpää, S., Lalanne, L., Neyens, G., Nichols, M., Perrett, H. A., Reilly, J. R., Rothe, S., van den Borne, B., Vernon, A. R., Wang, Q., Wessolek, J., Yang, X. F., and Zülch, C.
- Abstract
Molecules containing heavy radioactive nuclei are predicted to be extremely sensitive to violations of the fundamental symmetries of nature. The nuclear octupole deformation of certain radium isotopes massively boosts the sensitivity of radium monofluoride molecules to symmetry-violating nuclear properties. Moreover, these molecules are predicted to be laser coolable. Here we report measurements of the rovibronic structure of radium monofluoride molecules, which allow the determination of their laser cooling scheme. We demonstrate an improvement in resolution of more than two orders of magnitude compared to the state of the art. Our developments allowed measurements of minuscule amounts of hot molecules, with only a few hundred per second produced in a particular rotational state. The combined precision and sensitivity achieved in this work offer opportunities for studies of radioactive molecules of interest in fundamental physics, chemistry and astrophysics.
- Published
- 2024
4. Measurements of binding energies and electromagnetic moments of silver isotopes - A complementary benchmark of density functional theory
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de Groote, R.P., primary, Nesterenko, D.A., additional, Kankainen, A., additional, Bissell, M.L., additional, Beliuskina, O., additional, Bonnard, J., additional, Campbell, P., additional, Canete, L., additional, Cheal, B., additional, Delafosse, C., additional, de Roubin, A., additional, Devlin, C.S., additional, Dobaczewski, J., additional, Eronen, T., additional, Garcia Ruiz, R.F., additional, Geldhof, S., additional, Gins, W., additional, Hukkanen, M., additional, Imgram, P., additional, Mathieson, R., additional, Koszorús, Á., additional, Moore, I.D., additional, Pohjalainen, I., additional, Reponen, M., additional, van den Borne, B., additional, Vilén, M., additional, and Zadvornaya, S., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Benchmark evaluation of a single frequency continuous wave OPO seeded pulsed dye amplifier for high-resolution laser spectroscopy
- Author
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Urquiza-González, M., primary, Au, M., additional, Bernerd, C., additional, Bissell, M. L., additional, van den Borne, B., additional, Chrysalidis, K., additional, Cocolios, Thomas E., additional, Fedosseev, V., additional, Flanagan, K. T., additional, Garcia Ruiz, R. F., additional, Geldhof, Sarina, additional, de Groote, R. P., additional, Koszorús, Á., additional, Hanstorp, D., additional, Heines, M., additional, Heinke, R., additional, Hens, K., additional, Khwairakpam, O. S., additional, Kujanpää, S., additional, Lalanne, L., additional, Marsh, B. A., additional, Neyens, G., additional, Nichols, M., additional, Perrett, H. A., additional, Pitman-Weymouth, D., additional, Reilly, J. R., additional, Sonnenschein, V., additional, Wendt, K., additional, Wessolek, J., additional, Wilkins, S. G., additional, and Yang, X. F., additional
- Published
- 2023
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6. Trajectories of emotional functioning and experienced care of relatives in the last year of life of patients with advanced cancer: A longitudinal analysis of the eQuiPe study
- Author
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Ham, L., Fransen, H.P., Raijmakers, N.J.H., van den Beuken‐van Everdingen, M.H.J., van den Borne, B., Creemers, Geert jan, De graeff, Alexander, Hendriks, Mathijs p., De jong, Wouter k., Van laarhoven, Hanneke, Van leeuwen, Lobke, Van der padt ‐ pruijsten, Annemieke, Smilde, Tineke j., Stellingwerf, Margriet, Van zuylen, Lia, van de Poll ‐ Franse, L.V., Ham, L., Fransen, H.P., Raijmakers, N.J.H., van den Beuken‐van Everdingen, M.H.J., van den Borne, B., Creemers, Geert jan, De graeff, Alexander, Hendriks, Mathijs p., De jong, Wouter k., Van laarhoven, Hanneke, Van leeuwen, Lobke, Van der padt ‐ pruijsten, Annemieke, Smilde, Tineke j., Stellingwerf, Margriet, Van zuylen, Lia, and van de Poll ‐ Franse, L.V.
- Abstract
Objective Advanced cancer has a major impact on both patients and their relatives. To allow for personalized support, it is important to recognize which relatives will experience a decline in emotional functioning during the patient's last year of life, when this decline will occur, and what factors are associated with it. This study aimed to examine the trajectory of emotional functioning of relatives during that time and the characteristics associated with changes in this trajectory. Methods A prospective, longitudinal, multicenter, observational study in patients with advanced cancer and their relatives was conducted (eQuiPe). We analyzed relatives' changes in emotional functioning in the patient's last year using the EORTC QLQ-C30 and assessed associations with sociodemographic and care characteristics using multivariable mixed-effects analysis. Results 409 relatives completed >= 1 questionnaires during the patient's last year of life. Mean age was 64 years, 61% were female and 75% were the patient's partner. During this year, mean emotional functioning declined significantly over time from 73.9 to 64.6 (p = 0.023, effect size = 0.43). The type of relationship between relatives and patients (p = 0.002), patient' sleep problems (p = 0.033), and continuity of care (p = 0.002) were significantly associated with changes in emotional functioning. Conclusions Relatives' emotional functioning declined during the patient's last year of life. Support for them, especially partners and relatives of patients with sleep problems, is important. Relatives who experienced more continuity of care had a less steep decline in emotional functioning.
- Published
- 2023
7. 31P The IOpener study: Tyrosine kinase activity profiling to predict response to immune checkpoint inhibitors in patients with advanced stage non-small cell lung cancer
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Joode, K.D., primary, Groen, H.J.M., additional, van den Heuvel, M., additional, Kloover, J.S., additional, van der Meer, F., additional, Stigt, J.A., additional, van der Leest, C.H., additional, Van Den Borne, B., additional, de Wijn, R., additional, Hurkmans, D.P., additional, van den Heuvel, D.M.A., additional, van Doorn, T., additional, Pinedo, B., additional, Kapiteijn, E., additional, Debets, R., additional, Verdegaal, E., additional, van der Burg, S.H., additional, Groten, J.P., additional, Aerts, J.G., additional, and Mathijssen, R.H., additional
- Published
- 2022
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8. Measuring the electron affinity of polonium
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Nichols, M, Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis, M, Balasmeh, Y, Borschevsky, A, Cocolios, T E, Crosa-Rossa, R, de Groote, R P, Fajordo-Zambrano, C, Flanagan, K T, Garcia Ruiz, R F, Hanstorp, D, Koszorús, Á, Lalanne, l, Leimbach, D, Liu, Y C, Liu, Y S, Lynch, K M, McGlone, A, Neyens, G, Pastrana, F, Reilly, J, Rothe, S, Trujillo, J, van den Borne, B, Wilkins, S G, and Yang, X F
- Subjects
Detectors and Experimental Techniques - Published
- 2023
9. Diagnosing non-small cell lung cancer by exhaled-breath profiling using an electronic nose: a multicentre validation study.
- Author
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Kort, S, primary, Brusse - Keizer, M, additional, Schouwink, H, additional, Citgez, E, additional, De Jongh, F, additional, Van Putten, J, additional, Van Den Borne, B, additional, Kastelijn, L, additional, Stolz, D, additional, Schuurbiers, M, additional, Van Den Heuvel, M, additional, Van Geffen, W, additional, and Van Der Palen, J, additional
- Published
- 2022
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10. Does radiomics have added value in predicting the development of brain metastases in patients with radically treated stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)?
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Hendriks, L., Keek, S. A., Chatterjee, A., Belderbos, J., Bootsma, G., van den Borne, B., Dingemans, A-M. C., Gietema, H., Groen, H. J. M., Herder, G., Pitz, C., Praag, J., De Ruysscher, D., Schoenmaekers, J., Smit, H. J. M., Stigt, J., Westenend, M., Zeng, H., Woodruff, H., Lambin, P., Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS), and Damage and Repair in Cancer Development and Cancer Treatment (DARE)
- Published
- 2022
11. Life-prolonging treatment restrictions and outcomes in patients with cancer and COVID-19: an update from the Dutch Oncology COVID-19 Consortium
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MS Medische Oncologie, Infection & Immunity, Cancer, Longziekten, de Joode, Karlijn, Tol, Jolien, Hamberg, Paul, Cloos, Marissa, Kastelijn, Elisabeth A., Borgers, Jessica S.W., Nuij, Veerle J.A.A., Klaver, Yarne, Herder, Gerarda J.M., Mutsaers, Pim G.N.J., Dumoulin, Daphne W., Oomen-de Hoop, Esther, van Diemen, Nico G.J., Libourel, Eduard J., Geraedts, Erica J., Bootsma, Gerben P., van der Leest, Cor H., Peerdeman, Anne L., Herbschleb, Karin H., Visser, Otto J., Bloemendal, Haiko J., van Laarhoven, Hanneke W.M., de Vries, Elisabeth G.E., Hendriks, Lizza E.L., Beerepoot, Laurens V., Westgeest, Hans M., van den Berkmortel, Franchette W.P.J., Haanen, John B.A.G., Dingemans, Anne Marie C., van der Veldt, Astrid A.M., Becker-Commissaris, A., Terheggen, F., van den Borne, B. E.E.M., van Warmerdam, L. J.C., van Leeuwen, L., van der Meer, F. S., Tiemessen, M. A., van Diepen, D. M., Strobbe, L., Koekkoek, J. A.F., Brocken, P., Drooger, J. C., de Groot, J. W.B., Aarts, M. J.B., Cirkel, G. A., Claessens, N. J.M., Jalving, M., Suijkerbuijk, K. P.M., van Lindert, A. S.R., Bakker, S. D., MS Medische Oncologie, Infection & Immunity, Cancer, Longziekten, de Joode, Karlijn, Tol, Jolien, Hamberg, Paul, Cloos, Marissa, Kastelijn, Elisabeth A., Borgers, Jessica S.W., Nuij, Veerle J.A.A., Klaver, Yarne, Herder, Gerarda J.M., Mutsaers, Pim G.N.J., Dumoulin, Daphne W., Oomen-de Hoop, Esther, van Diemen, Nico G.J., Libourel, Eduard J., Geraedts, Erica J., Bootsma, Gerben P., van der Leest, Cor H., Peerdeman, Anne L., Herbschleb, Karin H., Visser, Otto J., Bloemendal, Haiko J., van Laarhoven, Hanneke W.M., de Vries, Elisabeth G.E., Hendriks, Lizza E.L., Beerepoot, Laurens V., Westgeest, Hans M., van den Berkmortel, Franchette W.P.J., Haanen, John B.A.G., Dingemans, Anne Marie C., van der Veldt, Astrid A.M., Becker-Commissaris, A., Terheggen, F., van den Borne, B. E.E.M., van Warmerdam, L. J.C., van Leeuwen, L., van der Meer, F. S., Tiemessen, M. A., van Diepen, D. M., Strobbe, L., Koekkoek, J. A.F., Brocken, P., Drooger, J. C., de Groot, J. W.B., Aarts, M. J.B., Cirkel, G. A., Claessens, N. J.M., Jalving, M., Suijkerbuijk, K. P.M., van Lindert, A. S.R., and Bakker, S. D.
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- 2022
12. Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis in Food Safety Risk Management: The Case of Dioxins in Baltic Fish
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Ali, Beshir M., primary, Andersson, M. G., additional, van den Borne, B. H. P., additional, Focker, M., additional, and van der Fels-Klerx, H. J., additional
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- 2022
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13. 127P Does radiomics have added value in predicting the development of brain metastases in patients with radically treated stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)?
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Hendriks, L., primary, Keek, S.A., additional, Chatterjee, A., additional, Belderbos, J., additional, Bootsma, G., additional, van den Borne, B., additional, Dingemans, A-M.C., additional, Gietema, H., additional, Groen, H.J.M., additional, Herder, G., additional, Pitz, C., additional, Praag, J., additional, De Ruysscher, D., additional, Schoenmaekers, J., additional, Smit, H.J.M., additional, Stigt, J., additional, Westenend, M., additional, Zeng, H., additional, Woodruff, H., additional, and Lambin, P., additional
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- 2022
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14. Benchmark evaluation for a single frequency continuous wave OPO seeded pulsed dye amplifier for high-resolution laser spectroscopy
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Clarkson, W. Andrew, Shori, Ramesh K., Urquiza-González, M., Au, M., Bernerd, C., Bissell, M., van den Borne, B., Chrysalidis, K., Cocolios, T. E., Fedosseev, V. N., Flanagan, K. T., Garcia Ruiz, R. G., Geldhof, S., de Groote, R. P., Koszorús, Á., Hanstorp, D., Heines, M., Heinke, R., Hens, K., Khwairakpam, O. S., Kujanpää, S., Lalanne, L., Marsh, B. A., Neyens, G., Nichols, M., Perrett, H., Pitman-Weymouth, D., Reilly, J., Sonnenschein, V., Wendt, K., Wessolek, J., Wilkins, S. G., and Yang, X. F.
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- 2023
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15. Benchmark evaluation for a single frequency continuous wave OPO seeded pulsed dye amplifier for high-resolution laser spectroscopy.
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Urquiza-González, M., Au, M., Bernerd, C., Bissell, M., van den Borne, B., Chrysalidis, K., Cocolios, T. E., Fedosseev, V. N., Flanagan, K. T., Garcia Ruiz, R. G., Geldhof, S., de Groote, R. P., Koszorús, Á., Hanstorp, D., Heines, M., Heinke, R., Hens, K., Khwairakpam, O. S., Kujanpää, S., and Lalanne, L.
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- 2023
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16. Invited review: Quantifying multiple burdens of dairy cattle production diseases and reproductive inefficiency-Current knowledge and proposed metrics.
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Steeneveld W, van den Borne BHP, Kok A, Rodenburg TB, and Hogeveen H
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- Animals, Cattle, Female, Dairying economics, Cattle Diseases economics, Reproduction, Animal Welfare
- Abstract
The economic burden of diseases and reproductive inefficiency in dairy cattle is evident and has been quantified. Dairy diseases and reproductive inefficiency are however associated with other issues as well, including animal welfare, environmental pressure, and public health risks. Quantifying these other issues is becoming important to help farmers make decisions. Quantification of the noneconomic burdens of diseases and reproductive inefficiency is rare and lacks an overview of approaches and metrics. The first aim of this paper is to provide trends for associating diseases and reproductive inefficiency with economic and noneconomic burdens of disease. The second aim is to provide a review of approaches and metrics used to quantify the noneconomic burdens of disease and reproductive inefficiency. For the economic burden of diseases and reproductive performance, only an overview of the approaches used to quantify the burden is provided. The final aim is to propose approaches and metrics for future quantification of noneconomic burdens caused by individual diseases. A literature search was conducted in Web of Science to identify scientific articles on mastitis, lameness, metabolic disorders, and reproductive inefficiency in dairy cows. The search was restricted to articles published between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2022 and resulted in 7,565 articles. The total number of articles that mentioned the economic, animal welfare, public health, and environmental burden was 1,253, 428, 291, and 77, respectively. An increase in the percentage of articles mentioning the economic, animal welfare, and public health burden was observed between 2010 and 2022. Despite the 2,049 articles that mentioned one of the burdens, the results showed that approximately 10% of the articles quantified one or more of these burdens. The economic burden of diseases and reproductive inefficiency has been quantified in 154 articles and very few articles quantified the noneconomic burdens (9 articles for environment, 29 articles for public health, and 2 articles for animal welfare). Eleven articles were identified that quantified multiple burdens, and in all these studies the economic burden was combined with a noneconomic burden through a modeling approach (mainly simulation). We propose to link the noneconomic burdens to biological simulation models, and thus develop bioburden simulation models. Well-established approaches and metrics can be used to quantify economic, environmental, and public health burdens. For the economic impact, costs per cow per year can be assessed. A life cycle assessment can be performed for environmental impact and the public health impact can be assessed by a defined daily dose for antimicrobial use and disability-adjusted life years for zoonotic diseases. Regarding animal welfare, approaches and metrics to quantify the welfare impact of a diseased animal are not well established. For animal welfare, we propose a welfare-adjusted life years approach. The mentioned approaches and metrics are a proposal, and it is up to the scientific community to use them or, based on empirics and research experience, propose changes so that we will end up with robust approaches and metrics that enable us to compare research results and provide more evidence for animal health decision makers., (The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).)
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- 2024
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17. Development and Portability of a Text Mining Algorithm for Capturing Disease Progression in Electronic Health Records of Patients With Stage IV Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.
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Verschueren MV, Abedian Kalkhoran H, Deenen M, van den Borne BEEM, Zwaveling J, Visser LE, Bloem LT, Peters BJM, and van de Garde EMW
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Electronic Health Records, Data Mining methods, Algorithms, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms therapy, Lung Neoplasms mortality, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Disease Progression, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung mortality, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung therapy, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung diagnosis, Neoplasm Staging
- Abstract
Purpose: The objective was to develop and evaluate the portability of a text mining algorithm for prospectively capturing disease progression in electronic health record (EHR) data of patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (mNSCLC) treated with immunochemotherapy., Methods: This study used EHR data from patients with mNSCLC receiving immunochemotherapy (between October 1, 2018, and December 31, 2022) in four Dutch hospitals. A text mining algorithm for capturing disease progression was developed in hospitals 1 and 2 and then transferred to hospitals 3 and 4 to evaluate portability. Performance metrics were calculated by comparing its outcomes with manual chart review. In addition, data were simulated to come available over time to assess performance in real-time applications. Median progression-free survival (PFS) was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method to compare text mining with manual chart review., Results: During development and portability, the text mining algorithm performed well in capturing disease progression, with all performance scores >90%. When real-time performance was simulated, the performance scores in all four hospitals exceeded 90% from week 15 after the start of follow-up. Although the exact progression dates varied in 46 patients of 157 patients with progressive disease, the number of patients labeled with progression too early (n = 24) and too late (n = 22) was well balanced with discrepancies ranging from -116 to 384 days. Nevertheless, the PFS curves constructed with text mining and manual chart review were highly similar for each hospital., Conclusion: In this study, an accurate text mining algorithm for capturing disease progression in the EHR data of patients with mNSCLC was developed. The algorithm was portable across different hospitals, and the performance over time was good, making this an interesting approach for prospective follow-up of multicenter cohorts.
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- 2024
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18. The economic effect of cow-based reproductive management programs with a systematic use of reproductive hormones.
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Wicaksono A, Edwardes F, Steeneveld W, van den Borne BHP, Pinho P, Randi F, and Hogeveen H
- Abstract
Hormone-based reproductive management programs can be beneficial to improve dairy cow's reproductive performance. This study aimed to compare the economic impact of reproductive management programs using systematic hormonal treatments to individual cows with a specific DIM range with a reproductive management program using cow-specific hormonal treatment based on a veterinary diagnosis of ovarian dysfunction during a fertility check. An existing individual cow-based, dynamic, and stochastic bio-economic simulation model, mimicking the production dynamics of a 200 cow-herd in daily time steps, was extended with ovarian dysfunction and fertility inputs. Four hormone-based reproductive management programs were modeled. In the default reproductive management program, reflecting the current reproductive management of Dutch herds, lactating dairy cows are inseminated based on detection of estrus and non-cyclic dairy cows are treated with hormones based on a veterinary diagnosis of ovarian dysfunction during a fertility check. Hormone treatments prescribed by the veterinarian for anestrus, cystic, and sub-estrus cows were an 8-d progesterone-releasing intravaginal device (PRID)-Synch protocol (PRIDsynch), an Ovsynch protocol, and a PGF2⍺ treatment, respectively. The 3 other reproductive management programs reflected systematic hormonal treatments to cows at specific DIM and included a 1) Double-Ovsynch protocol for TAI with nonpregnant cows submitted to a resynchronization protocol (FTAI), 2) Double-Ovsynch protocol for TAI with nonpregnant cows detected in estrus or submitted to a resynchronization protocol (FTAI+ED), and 3) detection of estrus with cows not detected submitted to a PRIDsynch protocol (ED+TAI). All nonpregnant cows were submitted to a resynchronization protocol based on the absence (PRIDsynch) or presence (Ovsynch protocol) of a corpus luteum (CL). The annual mean net economic return (NER) was calculated for all reproductive management programs. Compared with the default reproductive management program, the highest NER was observed for the FTAI+ED reproductive management program with €23,764 higher net revenues, followed by the FTAI and the ED+TAI reproductive management programs with €19,550 and €14,314 higher net revenues, respectively. Overall, systematic hormone-based reproductive management programs gave higher costs due to more hormones administered and higher calving and feed costs due to more pregnant cows. Nevertheless, the additional revenues of milk and calves in the systematic hormone-based reproductive management programs outweighed the total cost. For instance, the FTAI+ED reproductive management program gave €8,953 higher total cost per year compared with the default but with €32,654 higher revenues. In summary, reproductive management programs where hormones were systematically used gave economic advantages over the current default reproductive management program in which hormones are administered to individual cows based on a veterinary diagnosis of ovarian dysfunction during a fertility check., (The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).)
- Published
- 2024
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19. Measuring quality of vision including negative dysphotopsia.
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Makhotkina NY, Nijkamp MD, Berendschot TTJM, van den Borne B, Aelen-van Kruchten M, van Vught L, Beenakker JM, Krijgh E, Aslam T, Pesudovs K, and Nuijts RMMA
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Aged, Adult, Netherlands, Aged, 80 and over, Cataract Extraction, Cataract physiopathology, Cataract complications, Young Adult, Visual Acuity physiology, Quality of Life, Psychometrics methods, Vision Disorders physiopathology, Vision Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: To adapt the Quality of Vision Questionnaire (QoV) for measuring negative dysphotopsia and to validate the original and modified versions in the Dutch population., Methods: The QoV was translated into Dutch according to standardized methodology. Negative dysphotopsia items were constructed based on focus group interviews, literature review and clinical data. The questionnaire was completed by 404 subjects, including contact lens wearers, patients with cataract and after cataract surgery (95.5% with a monofocal, 4.5% with a multifocal intraocular lens). Rasch analysis was applied for evaluation of reliability and validity of the original QoV and modified version, Negative Dysphotopsia QoV (ND-QoV)., Results: The frequency, severity and bothersome scales of the QoV and ND-QoV demonstrated good measurement precision, good fit statistics for all but one item, but significant mistargeting of more than one logit. Item estimations were stable across the study groups and scales were unidimensional with more than 50% of variance explained by the measurements. There was a positive correlation between questionnaire scores and best corrected visual acuity (r = 0.3, p < 0.01). The quality of vision measured by all three scales was significantly poorer (p < 0.01) in patients with negative dysphotopsia compared to asymptomatic pseudophakic patients., Conclusion: The Dutch version of the QoV questionnaire has shown good psychometric properties comparable to the native version as well as good reliability and validity. The addition of negative dysphotopsia items is a valuable modification for the reliable assessment of quality of vision in pseudophakic patients., (© 2023 The Authors. Acta Ophthalmologica published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation.)
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- 2024
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20. Trajectories of emotional functioning and experienced care of relatives in the last year of life of patients with advanced cancer: A longitudinal analysis of the eQuiPe study.
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Ham L, Fransen HP, Raijmakers NJH, van den Beuken-van Everdingen MHJ, van den Borne B, Creemers GJ, de Graeff A, Hendriks MP, de Jong WK, van Laarhoven H, van Leeuwen L, van der Padt-Pruijsten A, Smilde TJ, Stellingwerf M, van Zuylen L, and van de Poll-Franse LV
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Emotions, Surveys and Questionnaires, Neoplasms therapy, Sleep Wake Disorders
- Abstract
Objective: Advanced cancer has a major impact on both patients and their relatives. To allow for personalized support, it is important to recognize which relatives will experience a decline in emotional functioning during the patient's last year of life, when this decline will occur, and what factors are associated with it. This study aimed to examine the trajectory of emotional functioning of relatives during that time and the characteristics associated with changes in this trajectory., Methods: A prospective, longitudinal, multicenter, observational study in patients with advanced cancer and their relatives was conducted (eQuiPe). We analyzed relatives' changes in emotional functioning in the patient's last year using the EORTC QLQ-C30 and assessed associations with sociodemographic and care characteristics using multivariable mixed-effects analysis., Results: 409 relatives completed ≥1 questionnaires during the patient's last year of life. Mean age was 64 years, 61% were female and 75% were the patient's partner. During this year, mean emotional functioning declined significantly over time from 73.9 to 64.6 (p = 0.023, effect size = 0.43). The type of relationship between relatives and patients (p = 0.002), patient' sleep problems (p = 0.033), and continuity of care (p = 0.002) were significantly associated with changes in emotional functioning., Conclusions: Relatives' emotional functioning declined during the patient's last year of life. Support for them, especially partners and relatives of patients with sleep problems, is important. Relatives who experienced more continuity of care had a less steep decline in emotional functioning., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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21. The ISAC Paradigm to Tame Oral Cancer in Saudi Arabia: A Quasi-experimental Study.
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Jafer M, Moafa I, Hoving C, Candel M, Kaabi AA, and Van Den Borne B
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- Humans, Saudi Arabia, Risk Factors, Early Detection of Cancer, Self Report, Mouth Neoplasms diagnosis, Mouth Neoplasms prevention & control
- Abstract
Late detection of oral cancer (OC) cases in Saudi Arabia is concerning. It reduces survival rate and complicates treatment. The ISAC intervention was developed to bridge the gaps observed in dentists' practice of OC examination and patient education. The ISAC stands for I, informing patients of OC screenings; S, screening for OC; A, advising high-risk patients to quit risk factors; and C, connecting patients to advanced services. This study tested the potential effect of the ISAC in influencing dentists' cognitive and behavioral skills, to enhance early detection and prevention of OC. A quasi-experimental study was conducted among dental interns (DIs) at dental setting to test the effect on comprehensive oral cancer examination score (COCE), awareness, self-efficacy, descriptive-norms, and self-reported behavior. Data were collected through triangulation of methods pre and post the intervention at two-months. Multiple linear mixed effects regression models were utilized for data analysis. Between October 2020 and April 2021, 47 DIs participated in the study. The final model showed the significant effects of time (ISAC) on COCE (95% CI = 25.12-29.42, P < .001). DIs had a significant improvement in awareness, self-efficacy, descriptive norms, and self-reported behavior. The findings showed promising effects of the intervention toward the early detection and prevention of OC. Dentists, dental organizations, and policymakers in areas with a high risk of OC could benefit from the current intervention which contributes to capacity building and improved community health. A pragmatic study with a robust design is needed to test the effectiveness of the intervention on a wider scale., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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22. Using Intervention Mapping to Develop ISAC, a Comprehensive Intervention for Early Detection and Prevention of Oral Cancer in Saudi Arabia.
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Jafer M, Moafa I, Crutzen R, and van den Borne B
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- Humans, Saudi Arabia, Prospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Delivery of Health Care, Mouth Neoplasms diagnosis, Mouth Neoplasms prevention & control
- Abstract
Oral cancer forms a major public health issue. In Saudi Arabia, Jazan region has the highest rate of oral cancer; > 35% of total cases. Furthermore, dentists' engagement in oral cancer screening and patient education in Jazan region is limited. This paper aimed to describe the process used to develop a comprehensive oral cancer (OC) practice intervention to be implemented in dental clinics. The intervention was informed by the six steps of intervention mapping (IM). Steps 1-3 included mixed methods approach of reviewing relevant existing literature, focus group discussions, observations, one-on-one interviews, and questionnaires utilizing the community participatory approach. Step 4 used information form steps 1-3 to develop the intervention components and its associated tools to facilitate its delivery. Steps 5 and 6 specified the prospective plans for implementation and evaluation. ISAC is the developed intervention that comprises the following: Informing dental patients about performing routine OC screenings, Screenings for OC, Advising patients, and Connecting patients to the required services. ISAC practical applications were clustered into two components: (a) didactical session covering aspects related to OC practices and introducing ISAC and (b) practical session that included a step-by-step modeling of the intervention. Using IM facilitated the systematic planning of the ISAC intervention that covers the main issues revealed by the need's assessments. Working towards developing the ISAC required extensive work in assessing dental public health issues in a specific context with limited data - and this constituted a great challenge. The development of the ISAC was a lesson that casts light on the advantages of engaging multidisciplinary expertise to tackle serious public health issue like OC., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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23. Diagnosing Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer by Exhaled Breath Profiling Using an Electronic Nose: A Multicenter Validation Study.
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Kort S, Brusse-Keizer M, Schouwink H, Citgez E, de Jongh FH, van Putten JWG, van den Borne B, Kastelijn EA, Stolz D, Schuurbiers M, van den Heuvel MM, van Geffen WH, and van der Palen J
- Subjects
- Humans, Electronic Nose, Predictive Value of Tests, Exhalation, Breath Tests methods, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung diagnosis, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Volatile Organic Compounds analysis
- Abstract
Background: Despite the potential of exhaled breath analysis of volatile organic compounds to diagnose lung cancer, clinical implementation has not been realized, partly due to the lack of validation studies., Research Question: This study addressed two questions. First, can we simultaneously train and validate a prediction model to distinguish patients with non-small cell lung cancer from non-lung cancer subjects based on exhaled breath patterns? Second, does addition of clinical variables to exhaled breath data improve the diagnosis of lung cancer?, Study Design and Methods: In this multicenter study, subjects with non-small cell lung cancer and control subjects performed 5 min of tidal breathing through the aeoNose, a handheld electronic nose device. A training cohort was used for developing a prediction model based on breath data, and a blinded cohort was used for validation. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed, including breath data and clinical variables, in which the formula and cutoff value for the probability of lung cancer were applied to the validation data., Results: A total of 376 subjects formed the training set, and 199 subjects formed the validation set. The full training model (including exhaled breath data and clinical parameters from the training set) were combined in a multivariable logistic regression analysis, maintaining a cut off of 16% probability of lung cancer, resulting in a sensitivity of 95%, a specificity of 51%, and a negative predictive value of 94%; the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve was 0.87. Performance of the prediction model on the validation cohort showed corresponding results with a sensitivity of 95%, a specificity of 49%, a negative predictive value of 94%, and an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of 0.86., Interpretation: Combining exhaled breath data and clinical variables in a multicenter, multi-device validation study can adequately distinguish patients with lung cancer from subjects without lung cancer in a noninvasive manner. This study paves the way to implement exhaled breath analysis in the daily practice of diagnosing lung cancer., Clinical Trial Registration: The Netherlands Trial Register; No.: NL7025; URL: https://trialregister.nl/trial/7025., (Copyright © 2022 American College of Chest Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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24. Are gastrointestinal problems, nutritional care, and nutritional care needs associated with quality of life in patients with advanced cancer? Results of the observational eQuiPe study.
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Paschos S, Lize N, Eussen S, van der Padt-Pruijsten A, van den Beuken-van Everdingen M, van Laarhoven H, den Boer M, de Graeff A, van den Borne B, Ten Have H, Kennis M, Beijer S, Raijmakers NJH, and van de Poll-Franse L
- Subjects
- Humans, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Nutritional Support, Prospective Studies, Neoplasms therapy, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Purpose: To assess the association of gastrointestinal problems, received nutritional care, and nutritional care needs with quality of life (QoL) in patients with advanced cancer., Methods: A cross-sectional analysis within the observational prospective eQuiPe cohort study on experienced quality of care and QoL in patients with advanced cancer was performed. QoL and gastrointestinal problems were measured using the European Organization for the Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ)-C30. Received nutritional care (yes/no) and nutritional care needs (yes/a little bit/no) were measured by two questions. Gastrointestinal problems were categorized as clinically important based on the Giesinger thresholds. Univariable and multivariable linear regression analyses adjusted for age, gender, and treatment were used to analyze the association of gastrointestinal problems, received nutritional care, and nutritional care needs with QoL., Results: Half of the 1080 patients with advanced cancer had clinically important gastrointestinal problems, 17% experienced nutritional care needs, and 14% received nutritional care. Multivariable analyses revealed that the presence of clinically important gastrointestinal problems (β (95% CI): -13.0 (-15.6; -10.4)), received nutritional care (β (95% CI): -5.1 (-8.5; -1.7)), and nutritional care needs (β (95% CI): -8.7 (-11.9; -5.5)) were associated with a low QoL., Conclusion: Many patients with advanced cancer experience gastrointestinal problems, while only few patients receive nutritional care. These gastrointestinal problems, nutritional care needs, and nutritional care are associated with lower QoL, probably due to reversed causality or the irreversible nature of these problems in the palliative phase. More research on the relation of nutritional care, gastrointestinal problems, and QoL is needed to optimize nutritional support in end-of-life care., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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25. The association of body mass index with safety and effectiveness of first-line carboplatin-based chemotherapy in patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer.
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Kicken MP, Kilinc HD, Cramer-van der Welle CM, Houterman S, van den Borne BEEM, Smit AAJ, van de Garde EMW, and Deenen MJ
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- Humans, Carboplatin adverse effects, Body Mass Index, Overweight chemically induced, Overweight complications, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Obesity complications, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung drug therapy, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung complications, Lung Neoplasms complications, Thrombocytopenia chemically induced
- Abstract
Introduction: Carboplatin is an anticancer drug used for treatment of various types of cancer including non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Dosing is based on estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) using the Cockcroft-Gault formula. In overweight patients, the GFR is more likely overestimated, resulting in a potentially overdose of carboplatin affecting treatment response. This study investigated the association of body mass index (BMI) on overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) in stage-IV NSCLC patients treated with first-line carboplatin-based chemotherapy. Secondary safety endpoints were thrombocytopenia and toxicity-related hospitalizations., Materials and Methods: This was a retrospective multicenter cohort study. Patients were categorized according to BMI<25.0 kg/m
2 (normal weight and reference), 25.0-29.9 kg/m2 (overweight) or ≥30.0 kg/m2 (obese). For survival analyses adjusted hazard ratios [aHR] were calculated using multivariate Cox regression analysis. Secondary outcomes were analyzed using multivariate logistic regression providing adjusted odd ratios [aOR]., Results: Overweight patients (n=174) had a significantly better OS (aHR=0.72, 95%-CI:0.59-0.89) and PFS (aHR=0.74, 95%-CI:0.61-0.90) compared to normal weight patients (n=268). OS nor PFS were different in obese (n=51) compared to normal weight patients. However, obesity was associated with significantly higher incidences of thrombocytopenia grade ≥3 (aOR=3.47, 95%-CI:1.75-6.90)., Conclusion: This study shows a significantly longer survival for overweight compared to normal weight patients. Obese patients have an increased risk for grade ≥3 thrombocytopenia without a difference in survival following carboplatin-based chemotherapy. The implications for clinical practice are to use the Cockcroft-Gault formula with caution in patients with BMI≥30.0 kg/m2 , and to verify calculated dosing of carboplatin for appropriateness., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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26. Emotional functioning during bereavement after the death of patients with advanced cancer and associated factors.
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Ham L, Fransen HP, van Roij J, van den Borne B, Creemers GJ, Hendriks MP, Kuip E, van Laarhoven HWM, van Leeuwen L, van der Padt-Pruijsten A, Smilde T, Stellingwerf M, van Zuylen L, van de Poll-Franse L, and Raijmakers NJH
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- Family psychology, Female, Grief, Humans, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Bereavement, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Objective: The death of a loved one is considered to be the most stressful of all life events. However, the impact of bereavement on quality of life varies between individuals. The aim of our study was to assess emotional functioning (EF), which is a domain of quality of life, of bereaved relatives after the death of their loved one and its associated factors., Method: A prospective, longitudinal, multicenter, observational study on quality of care and quality of life of patients with advanced cancer and their relatives was conducted (eQuiPe). The association between EF of relatives during bereavement and the following factors was investigated: gender, type of relationship, educational level, pre-bereavement emotional and social functioning and global quality of life, social support pre- and during bereavement, anticipatory complicated grief, support of healthcare professionals during bereavement, age of patient and bereaved relative and duration of survival after primary cancer diagnosis., Results: 150 bereaved relatives completed the bereavement questionnaire. In 41% of the bereaved relatives EF was ≤71, indicating clinically relevant low EF. Multivariable logistic regression showed that females experienced more often emotional problems (OR = 2.82). Emotional functioning pre-bereavement (OR = 0.96) and social support during bereavement (OR = 0.97) were associated with low EF during bereavement., Conclusions: Almost half of the bereaved relatives of patients with advanced cancer experienced low EF and this was associated with low EF pre-bereavement and low social support during bereavement. Support for relatives should be initiated before the patient's death. Future research is needed to investigate the impact of such support on relatives' wellbeing during bereavement., (© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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27. Investigation of the added value of CT-based radiomics in predicting the development of brain metastases in patients with radically treated stage III NSCLC.
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Keek SA, Kayan E, Chatterjee A, Belderbos JSA, Bootsma G, van den Borne B, Dingemans AC, Gietema HA, Groen HJM, Herder J, Pitz C, Praag J, De Ruysscher D, Schoenmaekers J, Smit HJM, Stigt J, Westenend M, Zeng H, Woodruff HC, Lambin P, and Hendriks L
- Abstract
Introduction: Despite radical intent therapy for patients with stage III non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), cumulative incidence of brain metastases (BM) reaches 30%. Current risk stratification methods fail to accurately identify these patients. As radiomics features have been shown to have predictive value, this study aims to develop a model combining clinical risk factors with radiomics features for BM development in patients with radically treated stage III NSCLC., Methods: Retrospective analysis of two prospective multicentre studies. Inclusion criteria: adequately staged [
18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography-computed tomography (18-FDG-PET-CT), contrast-enhanced chest CT, contrast-enhanced brain magnetic resonance imaging/CT] and radically treated stage III NSCLC, exclusion criteria: second primary within 2 years of NSCLC diagnosis and prior prophylactic cranial irradiation. Primary endpoint was BM development any time during follow-up (FU). CT-based radiomics features ( N = 530) were extracted from the primary lung tumour on 18-FDG-PET-CT images, and a list of clinical features ( N = 8) was collected. Univariate feature selection based on the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristic was performed to identify relevant features. Generalized linear models were trained using the selected features, and multivariate predictive performance was assessed through the AUC., Results: In total, 219 patients were eligible for analysis. Median FU was 59.4 months for the training cohort and 67.3 months for the validation cohort; 21 (15%) and 17 (22%) patients developed BM in the training and validation cohort, respectively. Two relevant clinical features (age and adenocarcinoma histology) and four relevant radiomics features were identified as predictive. The clinical model yielded the highest AUC value of 0.71 (95% CI: 0.58-0.84), better than radiomics or a combination of clinical parameters and radiomics (both an AUC of 0.62, 95% CIs of 0.47-076 and 0.48-0.76, respectively)., Conclusion: CT-based radiomics features of primary NSCLC in the current setup could not improve on a model based on clinical predictors (age and adenocarcinoma histology) of BM development in radically treated stage III NSCLC patients., Competing Interests: Competing interests: P.L. reports, within and outside the submitted work, grants/sponsored research agreements from Radiomics SA, ptTheragnostic/DNAmito, Health Innovation Ventures. He received an advisor/presenter fee and/or reimbursement of travel costs/consultancy fee and/or in kind manpower contribution from Radiomics SA, BHV, Merck, Varian, Elekta, ptTheragnostic, BMS, and Convert pharmaceuticals. Dr Lambin has minority shares in the company Radiomics SA, Convert pharmaceuticals, Comunicare Solutions, and LivingMed Biotech, he is a co-inventor of two issued patents with royalties on radiomics (PCT/NL2014/050248, PCT/NL2014/050728) licensed to Radiomics SA and one issued patent on mtDNA (PCT/EP2014/059089) licensed to ptTheragnostic/DNAmito, one non-issued patent on LSRT (PCT/ P126537PC00) licensed to Varian Medical, three non-patented invention (softwares) licensed to ptTheragnostic/DNAmito, Radiomics SA and Health Innovation Ventures and three non-issues, non-licensed patents on Deep & handcrafted Radiomics (US P125078US00, PCT/NL/2020/050794, n° N2028271). He confirms that none of the above entities or funding was involved in the preparation of this paper. LH: none related to current manuscript, outside of current manuscript: research funding Roche Genentech, Boehringer Ingelheim, AstraZeneca (all institution, furthermore Takeda and Beigene in negotiation [institution]); advisory board: BMS, Eli Lilly, Roche Genentech, Pfizer, Takeda, MSD, Boehringer Ingelheim, Amgen, Janssen (all institution, Roche one time self); speaker: MSD (institution); travel/conference reimbursement: Roche Genentech (self); mentorship program with key opinion leaders: funded by AstraZeneca; fees for educational webinars: Benecke, Medtalks, VJOncology (self), high5oncology (institution); interview sessions funded by Roche Genentech, Bayer (institution); local PI of clinical trials: AstraZeneca, Novartis, BMS, MSD /Merck, GSK, Takeda, Blueprint Medicines, Roche Genentech, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Mirati. DdR: none related to current manuscript, outside of current manuscript: grants from BMS, AstraZeneca, Seat tle Genetics, Philips, Olink, BeiGene. Advisory board (no personal fees: AstraZeneca, Philips. HW: has minority shares in the company Radiomics SA. H.G: Advisory board (no personal fees): Roche, Astra-Zeneca, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Lilly, Novartis., (© The Author(s), 2022.)- Published
- 2022
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28. Dentists Behavioral Factors Influencing Early Detection of Oral Cancer: Direct Clinical Observational Study.
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Jafer M, Crutzen R, Halboub E, Moafa I, van den Borne B, Bajonaid A, Jafer A, and Hedad I
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- Clinical Competence, Dentists, Early Detection of Cancer, Humans, Practice Patterns, Dentists', Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude of Health Personnel, Mouth Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the possible factors affecting dentists' behavior relating to performing oral cancer examinations as part of routine clinical examination. A total of 95 direct clinical observation sessions-utilizing an instrument consisting of 19 evidence-based observational criteria for oral cancer examinations-were observed by four calibrated dentists. Thirty-two final-year students, 32 interns, and 31 faculty members of Jazan Dental School were examined between April 9 and May 4, 2017. A descriptive analysis was conducted to investigate the frequencies/percentages of the performed observing criteria by all examiners. ANOVA and Tukey tests were carried out to investigate the difference between the examiner groups. A total number of 32 patients participated in the study, whereby each patient was examined by three different examiners from each group, as well as by the attending observer/s. Fewer than 50% of the examiners performed the clinical steps necessary for an oral cancer examination-for example, taking into account past medical history, as well as extra and intra-oral examinations. More than 90% of the examiners examined hard tissue, whereas fewer than 30% of them educated their patients about possible risk factors. A significant difference between examiner groups was found in favor of faculty members. A gap between knowledge and actual practice of oral cancer examinations was evident: majority of participants failed to perform the necessary steps for an oral cancer examination. Previous experience and confidence in performing oral cancer examination are possible explanations for the dentist's behavior toward oral cancer examination., (© 2020. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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29. Rural-Urban Migration, Childbearing Decision-Making, Fertility and Contraceptive Perspectives of Street Adolescents and Youth in Kampala, Uganda.
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Bwambale MF, Moyer CA, Bukuluki P, and van den Borne B
- Abstract
Introduction: This paper aims to describe and assess social demographic factors associated with childbearing decision-making, fertility and contraceptive intentions among street adolescents and youth in Kampala, Uganda while considering rural-urban migration as an explanatory factor., Materials and Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 513 adolescents and youth aged 12-24 years self-identifying as street adolescents and youth were interviewed with a structured questionnaire in 2019. Street adolescents and youth who migrated from other rural districts to Kampala were compared with those from the city. Logistic regression was performed to assess associations between the independent factors and personal childbearing decision-making, fertility and contraceptive intentions., Results: Overall, 80.31% of the street adolescents and youth had a rural-urban migration experience. Fifty six percent (56.32%) of the street adolescents and youth made personal childbearing decisions, 94.15% expressed intentions to have children in the future and 42.88% expressed intentions to use contraceptives in the future. Intentions to use contraceptives were significantly higher among males (58.75%) than females (20.00%), and higher among migrants (65.91%) compared to non-migrants (34.09%). Contraceptive intentions were positively associated with self-perceived permanent residential status (aOR = 10.26, 2.70-39.08), intra-urban mobility (aOR = 4.99, 95%CI 1.50-6.59) and intentions to migrate to other towns within the country (aOR = 5.33, 95%CI 1.59-17.80). Being married (aOR = 0.13, 95%CI 0.02-0.85), a large shelter population size (aOR = 0.13, 95%CI 0.03-0.63) and having repeat migrations between the city and home district (aOR = 0.23, 95%CI 0.05-0.94), including migration-associated challenges reduced the odds of street youth's personal childbearing decision-making, while belonging to a social support group increased the odds of childbearing decision-making. We found no significant association between social demographic characteristics and fertility intentions., Discussion: Factors that influenced personal childbearing decision-making and contraceptive intentions among street adolescents and youth in Kampala operate mainly at the interpersonal and community levels, with marital status, shelter population size, rural-urban migration and its associated challenges associated with childbearing decision-making. Interventions to promote childbearing decision-making and contraceptive use among street adolescents and youth should take into consideration their migration and intra-urban mobility patterns., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Bwambale, Moyer, Bukuluki and van den Borne.)
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- 2022
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30. Process Evaluation of a Comprehensive Intervention for the Early Detection and Prevention of Oral Cancer: A Mixed Methods Study.
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Moafa I, Jafer M, Van Den Borne B, and Hoving C
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- Humans, Process Assessment, Health Care, Saudi Arabia, Counseling, Mouth Neoplasms diagnosis, Mouth Neoplasms prevention & control
- Abstract
Process evaluations help to understand and refine health interventions. The "ISAC" intervention targeted the enhancement of early detection and prevention of oral cancer (OC) through tobacco-cessation counseling, patient communications, and ISAC role-modeling. Over six months, throughout ISAC implementation in the Jazan region of Saudi Arabia, Linnan and Steckler's process evaluation framework's specified indicators were assessed, by mixed methods, on context, reach, dose delivered, dose received, fidelity, recruitment, and participant's satisfaction. Findings showed that 47 of 80 (58.75%) eligible dentists were reached and received all components. Thirty-six (76.6%) participants reported reading all intervention materials, visited the ISAC website, scored high on the perceived quality of provided information (M = 4.62 ± 0.63), and provided support (M = 4.67 ± 0.57). The fidelity was scored high across all intervention components. Role-modeling of the ISAC had the highest satisfaction score (M = 9.77 ± 0.58 out of 10). High perceived-effects were reported in relation to feeling confident in performing OC examination and training patients on OC self-examination (3.95 ± 0.22). The intervention attained high implementation levels for dose delivered, dose received, and fidelity. The intervention delivery was associated with high satisfaction and perceived effects. Using multiple data sources enhanced the understanding of the implementation process and strengthened the validity of the study's findings.
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- 2022
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31. Migration, personal physical safety and economic survival: drivers of risky sexual behaviour among rural-urban migrant street youth in Kampala, Uganda.
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Bwambale MF, Birungi D, Moyer CA, Bukuluki P, and van den Borne B
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Sexual Behavior, Uganda, HIV Infections, Homeless Youth, Transients and Migrants
- Abstract
Background: Despite the vulnerabilities associated with the youth migration process, knowledge on the drivers of risky sexual behaviour among migrant street youth is limited. This study sought to explore the pathways driving risky sexual behaviour among rural-urban migrant street youth in Kampala, Uganda., Methods: We conducted 11 focus-group discussions composed of 8-10 participants each, and 15 in-depth interviews with urban street adolescents and youth aged 12-24 years. We purposively recruited street youth who had migrated from other districts to Kampala, Uganda, and who identified themselves as street youth. Data were analysed thematically using an inductive approach facilitated by Dedoose software., Results: The migration journey acted as a catalyst for risky sexual behaviour among the adolescents and youth moving from rural districts to Kampala. Three primary pathways were found to drive risky sexual behaviour of street youth: 1) rural-urban migration itself, through sexual exploitation of and violence toward street youth especially young girls during movement, 2) economic survival through engaging in casual jobs and sex work upon arrival in the city, and 3) personal physical safety through friendships and networks, which consequently lead to having multiple sexual partners and unprotected sex. Engagement in risky sexual behaviour, especially sex work, was found to be an adaptation to the challenging and complex street life within the city., Conclusions: This study highlights the migration process, personal physical safety and economic survival as major pathways driving risky sexual behaviour among rural-urban street youth in Kampala. Interventions to improve sexual health, physical safety and protection of street youth during the migration process and within the city spaces should be prioritised., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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32. Community-Based Control of Malaria Vectors Using Bacillus thuringiensis var. Israelensis ( Bti ) in Rwanda.
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Hakizimana E, Ingabire CM, Rulisa A, Kateera F, van den Borne B, Muvunyi CM, van Vugt M, Mutesa L, Bron GM, Takken W, and Koenraadt CJM
- Subjects
- Animals, Larva, Mosquito Control, Mosquito Vectors, Pest Control, Biological, Pupa, Rwanda, Anopheles, Bacillus thuringiensis, Malaria prevention & control, Oryza
- Abstract
Larval source management (LSM) programs for control of malaria vectors are often vertically organized, while there is much potential for involving local communities in program implementation. To address this, we evaluated the entomological impact of community-based application of Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis ( Bti ) in a rice irrigation scheme in Ruhuha, Rwanda. A non-randomized trial with control compared a Bti implementation program that was supervised by the project team (ES) with a program that was led and carried out by local rice farming communities (CB). One other area served as a control to assess mosquito populations without Bti application. Entomological surveys were carried out every two weeks and assessed the presence and abundance of the larval, pupal, and adult stages of Anopheles mosquitoes. In ES, the per round reduction in Anopheles larval habitats was estimated at 49%. This reduction was less in CB (28%) and control (22%) although the per round reduction in CB was still significantly higher than in control. Pupal production was almost completely prevented from round 5 (out of 10) onwards in both CB (average habitat occupancy 0.43%) and ES intervention arms (average habitat occupancy 0.27%), whereas pupal occupancy rates were on average 12.8% from round 5 onwards in the control. Emergence of adult mosquitoes from rice fields was thus prevented although this was not directly noticeable in adult An. gambiae populations in houses nearby the rice fields. Together with our earlier work on the willingness to financially contribute to the LSM program and the high perceived safety and acceptance of the Bti product, the current study demonstrates that, in an environment with limited resources, communities could become more engaged in LSM program implementation and contribute directly to malaria vector control in their environment.
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- 2022
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33. Towards a better understanding of the psychosocial determinants associated with adults' use of smokeless tobacco in the Jazan Region of Saudi Arabia: a qualitative study.
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Moafa I, Crutzen R, van den Borne B, Jafer M, Shabi M, Al-Khaldi A, Abu-Zawah A, Al-Jabri H, and Hedad I
- Subjects
- Adult, Catha, Humans, Saudi Arabia epidemiology, Tobacco Use epidemiology, Toothache, Tobacco, Smokeless
- Abstract
Background: Most diagnosed oral cancer cases in Saudi Arabia are in the Jazan region. A common type of smokeless tobacco "Shammah" is prevalent in this region. This study aimed to gain an in-depth understanding of the possible psychosocial determinants of Shammah consumption among adult Shammah users in Jazan region., Methods: A qualitative study was conducted by means of one-on-one interviews among thirty adult Shammah users. Participants were recruited by means of a purposive sampling technique. Data were collected using a semi-structured interview guide utilizing face-to-face and phone-call interviews. Thematic analysis with hybrid approach was used to analyze the dataset., Results: Twenty-four sub-codes within four overarching themes were generated. Participants revealed uncertainty related to Shammah composition, how to quit knowledge and Shammah prevention/cessation programs. Shammah use identified as a normal phenomenon in society. Its use was frequently reported in participants' close network but most users faced family and peers' disapproval. Some users expressed joy, happiness and focused when using Shammah. Others were disgusted or neutral. Many users believed Shammah causes cancer and tears oral tissues. Others believed it relieves toothache or has no effect. Majority of users were confident to quit and recalled some quitting aids. Toothache, craving, drinking tea and chewing Khat (leaves of Catha edulis plant that causes moderate euphoria) perceived to be triggers to use Shammah. Availability of Shammah, withdrawal symptoms, stress, lack of support, seeing others using Shammah, losing part of routine and toothache were barriers to quit., Conclusions: Shammah use was associated with uncertainty about Shammah composition and quitting knowledge, social acceptability, influence from family/friends, a range of positive and negative attitudinal beliefs toward its use and high quitting efficacy beliefs. Future interventions targeting Shammah should address the acknowledged triggers and barriers in the present study including the dual use of Shammah and Khat., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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34. Quality of life and quality of care as experienced by patients with advanced cancer and their relatives: A multicentre observational cohort study (eQuiPe).
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van Roij J, Raijmakers N, Ham L, van den Beuken-van Everdingen M, van den Borne B, Creemers GJ, Cornelis Hunting J, Kuip E, van Leeuwen L, van Laarhoven H, Mandigers C, Nieboer P, van der Velden LA, Zuylen LV, Gelissen J, Zijlstra M, Brom L, Fransen HP, and van de Poll-Franse L
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Humans, Prospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Neoplasms complications, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Aim: This study aims to assess the quality of life and quality of care as experienced by patients with advanced cancer and their relatives while taking their interdependency into account., Methods: A prospective multicentre observational study (eQuiPe study) was conducted. Quality of life scores (EORTC QLQ-C30) was compared to a matched normative population and logistic regression analyses were conducted to assess the relation between high emotional functioning (EF, measured with the EORTC QLQ-C30) and experienced quality of care (IN-PATSAT32, CQ-index PC)., Results: In total, 1103 (65%) patients and 831 (71%) relatives completed the baseline questionnaire, including 699 unique patient-relative couples. Patients experienced lower EF than the normative population (78 versus 87, p < .001). Compared to patients, relatives reported clinically relevantly lower EF (69 versus 78, p < .001). Being more satisfied with care in general (p < .05) and clarity about the key health-care provider (p < .05) was positively associated with high EF in patients. For relatives, experienced continuity of care (p < .01) and information for the patient (p < .05) were positively associated with high EF. The EF of patients (p < .001) and relatives (p < .001) were positively associated with each other and continuity of care as perceived by relatives was positively associated with high EF in patients (p < .01)., Conclusions: Patients with advanced cancer reported low levels of EF but their relatives reported even lower levels of EF. Experienced integrated organisation and satisfaction with care were positively related to EF. The interdependent relation between patients' and relatives' EF and their care experiences suggests that a family-centred approach can optimise palliative cancer care., Trial Registration: The eQuiPe study is registered as NTR6584 in the Netherlands Trial Register., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest statement The authors have declared no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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35. Dentists' perceptions and usability testing toward the implementation of the ISAC, a comprehensive oral cancer intervention in dental practices: a qualitative study in Jazan region, Saudi Arabia.
- Author
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Moafa I, Hoving C, van den Borne B, and Jafer M
- Subjects
- Attitude of Health Personnel, Dentists, Humans, Saudi Arabia, User-Computer Interface, Mouth Neoplasms diagnosis, Mouth Neoplasms prevention & control, User-Centered Design
- Abstract
Objective: We aimed to explore dentists' perceptions toward the implementation of a comprehensive intervention (ISAC) for the early detection and prevention of oral cancer in a dental clinic., Methods: The ISAC intervention was presented to ten purposefully sampled dentists in Jazan Dental School (JDS). Participating dental interns were asked to practice the ISAC intervention whilst thinking aloud. A semi-structured interview technique was used to allow free expression of participants' perceptions related to the ISAC intervention and to control the flow of topics. Fleuren's framework theory informed the analysis. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using the deductive-inductive framework analysis., Results: Practicing the ISAC intervention was perceived to enhance the early detection and prevention of oral cancer. Serving community needs and engaging community groups were perceived to be related to a high relevance and compatibility of the ISAC intervention. Being a comprehensive intervention with well-defined objectives and being built on relevant data from the participants' community and having dentists as a target group were the perceived relative advantages of the ISAC intervention compared to other programs. A supportive environment, gender-concordance, use of regional trainers, standard examination form and collaboration with other sectors were perceived to be the facilitators. Competition with clinical time, use of different examination forms and low organizational leader interests were perceived as impeding factors against effective implementation in a real-world context. Reward, easy to practice, feeling confidence and satisfaction, advertisement as well as use of a role model approach were perceived to be motivating factors., Conclusions: Integrating data from representers of different participant groups during intervention conceptualization and development are critical for the intervention compatibility and acceptability. The study findings showed the opportunities of intertwining the intrinsic motivators of satisfaction and altruism existing in the target group and the extrinsic motivator of official diagnostic skill, certification that may boost and sustain the behavior change. Intervention features that influence perceived relevance, compatibility, relative advantage and motivation may be of great importance for intervention practice., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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36. Vaccine Hesitancy among Parents and Its Association with the Uptake of Measles Vaccine in Urban Settings in Khartoum State, Sudan.
- Author
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Sabahelzain MM, Moukhyer M, van den Borne B, and Bosma H
- Abstract
Vaccine uptake is one of the indicators that has been used to guide immunization programs. This study aimed to evaluate whether measles vaccine uptake is predicted by measles vaccine hesitancy. A community-based cross-sectional study was conducted in urban districts in Khartoum state in February 2019. Measles vaccine uptake among children was measured as either fully vaccinated or partially/not vaccinated. The Parent Attitudes about Childhood Vaccines (PACV) scale was used to measure measles vaccine hesitancy. Multivariate logistic regression was run to identify the predictors of measles vaccination uptake, controlling for sociodemographic variables, and the adjusted odds ratios (aORs) with 95% CI were calculated. The receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve was created, and the area under the curve (AUC) for the PACV was computed. Data were collected from 495 participants. We found that measles vaccine hesitancy (PACV scores) predicts the uptake of measles vaccine after controlling for other potential social confounders, such as the mother's age and the number of children (aOR 1.055; 95% CI 1.028-1.028). Additionally, the ROC for the PACV yielded an area under the curve (AUC 0.686 (95% CI 0.620-0.751; p < 0.001)). Our findings show that measles vaccine hesitancy in Sudan directly influences the uptake of the measles vaccine. Addressing the determinants of vaccine hesitancy through communication strategies will improve vaccine uptake.
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- 2022
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37. Determinants of Measles Vaccine Hesitancy among Sudanese Parents in Khartoum State, Sudan: A Cross-Sectional Study.
- Author
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Sabahelzain MM, Moukhyer M, Bosma H, and van den Borne B
- Abstract
Determinants of vaccine hesitancy are not yet well understood. This study aims to assess measles vaccine hesitancy and characterize its determinants among Sudanese parents in Omdurman in Khartoum State. A community-based cross-sectional quantitative study was conducted in Khartoum State in February 2019. The Parent Attitudes about Childhood Vaccination (PACV) was used to measure measles vaccine hesitancy. Questions about the sociodemographic characteristics of the family, the perception of the parents about the measles vaccine, and the parental exposure to information were asked. Proportions of vaccine hesitancy and coefficients of linear regression were computed. Five hundred parents were recruited for the study. We found that a significant proportion of participants (about 1 in 5 parents) had hesitations regarding the measles vaccine. Significant predictors of measles vaccine hesitancy were parental exposure to anti-vaccination information or materials (β = -0.478, p -value < 0.001), the parents' perception of the effectiveness of measles vaccines (β = 0.093, p -value = 0.020), the age of the mother (β = 0.112, p -value = 0.017), the birth rank of the child (β = -0.116, p -value = 0.015), and the total number of the children in the family (β = 0.098, p -value = 0.013). Vaccination access issues were the common justification for parental vaccination hesitancy. Our findings indicate that investment in vaccine communication as well as addressing access issues might be an effective intervention for improving measles vaccine acceptance and, ultimately, measles vaccine coverage.
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- 2021
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38. Willingness to Contribute to Bio-Larviciding in the Fight against Malaria: A Contingent Valuation Study among Rice Farmers in Rwanda.
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Rulisa A, van Kempen L, Mutesa L, Hakizimana E, Ingabire CM, Kateera F, Koenraadt CJM, van Vugt M, and van den Borne B
- Subjects
- Animals, Farmers, Humans, Plant Breeding, Rwanda, Malaria prevention & control, Oryza
- Abstract
There is broad consensus that successful and sustained larval source management (LSM) interventions, including bio-larviciding campaigns, require embeddedness in local community institutions. Ideally, these community structures should also be capable of mobilizing local resources to (co-)finance interventions. To date, farmer cooperatives, especially cooperatives of rice growers whose economic activity facilitates mosquito breeding, have remained under the radar in designing community-based bio-larviciding campaigns. This study explores the potential of rice farmer cooperatives in Bugesera district, Rwanda, to take up the aforementioned roles. To this purpose, we surveyed 320 randomly selected rice farmers who belonged to one of four rice cooperatives in the area and elicited their willingness-to-pay (WTP) for application of Bti, a popular bio-larvicide, in their rice paddies. Results from a (non-incentivized) bidding game procedure, which tested two alternative contribution schemes showed that financial contributions would be significantly different from zero and sufficient to carry a co-financing share of 15-25 per cent. A strong heterogeneity in mean WTP is revealed across cooperatives, in addition to variation among individual farmers, which needs to be anticipated when engaging farmer cooperatives in LSM.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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