17 results
Search Results
2. Time lag to benefit after screening for breast and colorectal cancer: meta-analysis of survival data from the United States, Sweden, United Kingdom, and Denmark.
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Sei J. Lee, Boscardin, W. John, Stijacic-Cenzer, Irena, Conell-Price, Jessamyn, O¿brien, Sarah, and Walter, Louise C.
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BREAST tumor diagnosis ,RECTUM tumors ,COLON tumors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,META-analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SURVIVAL ,TIME ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EARLY detection of cancer ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
The article discusses that after screening for breast or colorectal cancer, what is the time lag needed before cancer deaths are seen. According to a research paper by Sei J Lee and colleagues, cancer screening does help in preventing cancer deaths in the future, the time to benefit from is unclear. The paper adds that the screening prevents one cancer death per 1000 patients screened at 10 years, and it should be carried out on patients who have a life expectancy of more than 10 years.
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- 2013
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3. Confidence in receiving medical care when seriously ill: a seven-country comparison of the impact of cost barriers.
- Author
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Wendt, Claus, Mischke, Monika, Pfeifer, Michaela, and Reibling, Nadine
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INSURANCE -- History ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,CONFIDENCE ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,MEDICAID ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICALLY uninsured persons ,MEDICARE ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,EMPIRICAL research ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective This paper examines how negative experiences with the health-care system create a lack of confidence in receiving medical care in seven countries: Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Methods The empirical analysis is based on data from the Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Survey 2007, with nationally representative samples of adults aged 18 and over. For the analysis of the experience of cost barriers and confidence in receiving medical care, we conducted pairwise comparisons of group percentages as well as country-wise multivariate logistic regression models. Results Individuals who have experienced cost barriers show a significantly lower level of confidence in receiving safe and quality medical care than those who have not. This effect is most pronounced in the United States, where people who have foregone necessary treatment because of costs are four times as likely to lack confidence as individuals without the experience of cost barriers (adjusted odds ratio 4.00). In New Zealand, Germany, and Canada, individuals with the experience of cost barriers are twice as likely to report low confidence compared with those without this experience (adjusted odds ratios of 1.95, 2.19 and 2.24, respectively). In the Netherlands and UK, cost barriers are only a marginal phenomenon. Conclusions The fact that the experience of financial barriers considerably lowers confidence indicates that financial incentives, such as private co-payments, have a negative effect on overall public support and therefore on the legitimacy of health-care systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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4. Cancer mortality after low dose exposure to ionising radiation in workers in France, the United Kingdom, and the United States (INWORKS): cohort study.
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Richardson, David B., Leuraud, Klervi, Laurier, Dominique, Gillies, Michael, Haylock, Richard, Kelly-Reif, Kaitlin, Bertke, Stephen, Daniels, Robert D., Thierry-Chef, Isabelle, Moissonnier, Monika, Kesminiene, Ausrele, and Schubauer-Berigan, Mary K.
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TUMOR risk factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CARCINOGENS ,OCCUPATIONAL exposure ,NUCLEAR energy ,RADIATION ,RISK assessment ,RADIATION doses ,RESEARCH funding ,TUMORS ,RADIATION injuries ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DISEASE complications - Published
- 2023
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5. Breastfeeding and childhood obesity: A 12‐country study.
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Ma, Jian, Qiao, Yijuan, Zhao, Pei, Li, Wei, Katzmarzyk, Peter T., Chaput, Jean‐Philippe, Fogelholm, Mikael, Kuriyan, Rebecca, Lambert, Estelle V., Maher, Carol, Maia, Jose, Matsudo, Victor, Olds, Timothy, Onywera, Vincent, Sarmiento, Olga L., Standage, Martyn, Tremblay, Mark S., Tudor‐Locke, Catrine, and Hu, Gang
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ADIPOSE tissues ,BODY weight ,BREASTFEEDING ,BREASTFEEDING promotion ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FOOD habits ,GESTATIONAL age ,CHILDHOOD obesity ,RESEARCH funding ,SLEEP ,STATURE ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,BODY mass index ,ACCELEROMETRY ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method ,SEDENTARY lifestyles ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,WAIST circumference ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,ONE-way analysis of variance - Abstract
This study aimed to examine the association between breastfeeding and childhood obesity. A multinational cross‐sectional study of 4,740 children aged 9–11 years was conducted from 12 countries. Infant breastfeeding was recalled by parents or legal guardians. Height, weight, waist circumference, and body fat were obtained using standardized methods. The overall prevalence of obesity, central obesity, and high body fat were 12.3%, 9.9%, and 8.1%, respectively. After adjustment for maternal age at delivery, body mass index (BMI), highest maternal education, history of gestational diabetes, gestational age, and child's age, sex, birth weight, unhealthy diet pattern scores, moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity, sleeping, and sedentary time, exclusive breastfeeding was associated with lower odds of obesity (odds ratio [OR] 0.76, 95% confidence interval, CI [0.57, 1.00]) and high body fat (OR 0.60, 95% CI [0.43, 0.84]) compared with exclusive formula feeding. The multivariable‐adjusted ORs based on different breastfeeding durations (none, 1–6, 6–12, and > 12 months) were 1.00, 0.74, 0.70, and 0.60 for obesity (Ptrend =.020) and 1.00, 0.64, 047, and 0.64 for high body fat (Ptrend =.012), respectively. These associations were no longer significant after adjustment for maternal BMI. Breastfeeding may be a protective factor for obesity and high body fat in 9‐ to 11‐year‐old children from 12 countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. What is the Relationship between Benefit Conditionality and Mental Health? Evidence from the United States on TANF Policies.
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DAVIS, OWEN
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WOMEN'S employment laws ,POVERTY ,MENTAL illness ,GOVERNMENT policy ,WOMEN'S employment ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,MENTAL health ,MOTHERS ,POLICY science research ,PUBLIC health ,PUBLIC welfare ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SINGLE parents ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGY ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This article provides new evidence on the relationship between benefit conditionality and mental health. Using data on Temporary Assistance for Needy Families policies (TANF) – the main form of poverty relief in the United States – it explores whether the mental health of low-educated single mothers varies according to the stringency of conditionality requirements attached to receipt of benefit. Specifically, the article combines state-level data on sanctioning practices, work requirements and welfare-to-work spending with health data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and evaluates the impact of conditionality on mental health over a fifteen-year period (2000 to 2015). It finds that states that have harsher sanctions, stricter job search requirements and higher expenditure on welfare-to-work policies, have worse mental health among low-educated single mothers. There is also evidence that between-wave increases in the stringency of conditionality requirements are associated with deteriorations in mental health among the recipient population. It is suggested that these findings may reflect an overall effect of 'intensive conditionality', rather than of the individual variables per se. The article ends by considering the wider implications for policy and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Faith Moves Mountains-Mountains Move Faith: Two Opposite Epidemiological Forces in Research on Religion and Health.
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Hvidt, N., Hvidtjørn, D., Christensen, K., Nielsen, J., and Søndergaard, J.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,AGE distribution ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COGNITIVE testing ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEALTH status indicators ,LIFE ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RELIGION ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,TWINS ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,RELATIVE medical risk ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Research suggests opposite epidemiological forces in religion and health: (1). Faith seems to move mountains in the sense that religion is associated with positive health outcomes. (2). Mountains of bad health seem to move faith. We reflected on these forces in a population of 3000 young Danish twins in which all religiosity measures were associated with severe disease. We believe the reason for this novel finding is that the sample presents as a particularly secular population-based study and that the second epidemiological force has gained the upper hand in this sample. We suggest that all cross-sectional research on religion and health should be interpreted in light of such opposite epidemiological forces potentially diluting each other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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8. Decreased Proportion of Dementia-Free Life Expectancy in Hong Kong SAR.
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Cheung, Siu-Lan Karen, Yip, Siu-Fai Paul, Branch, Laurence G., and Robine, Jean-Marie
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,DEMENTIA ,LIFE expectancy ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,CROSS-sectional method ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Background: Estimations of life expectancies (LE) in health and ill health are important for planning future health care support. This study aimed at quantifying whether an increased LE is accompanied by an increase in the duration of life with dementia (DemLE) in Hong Kong SAR. Methods: Two parameters from a logistic model were used to fit the overall trend of the weighted prevalence of dementia. Abridged age- and sex-specific life tables and Sullivan's method were used to calculate dementia-free LE (DemFLE) for 1998 and 2013. Results: In 2013, among elderly individuals in Hong Kong aged 65 years, men had lived with dementia for 1.8 years and women for 3.6 years. These values are similar to those for subjects aged ≥85 years, while the proportion of DemLE was much greater at advanced ages. Elderly female individuals tend to experience a greater number of years with dementia than males. Conclusion: Our results indicate although LE has increased for all older age groups over time, the increase in DemFLE has not been greater than the gain in LE, suggesting an absolute expansion of the burden of dementia to the community between 1998 and 2013. The results suggest that more caregiving resources and manpower will be needed in the future as the population ages. © 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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9. Adapted cognitive–behavioural therapy required for targeting negative symptoms in schizophrenia: meta-analysis and meta-regression.
- Author
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Velthorst, E., Koeter, M., van der Gaag, M., Nieman, D. H., Fett, A.-K. J., Smit, F., Staring, A. B. P., Meijer, C., and de Haan, L.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment ,PSYCHOSES ,COGNITIVE therapy ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,ONLINE information services ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DATA analysis software ,PREVENTION - Abstract
BackgroundThere is an increasing interest in cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) interventions targeting negative symptoms in schizophrenia. To date, CBT trials primarily focused on positive symptoms and investigated change in negative symptoms only as a secondary outcome. To enhance insight into factors contributing to improvement of negative symptoms, and to identify subgroups of patients that may benefit most from CBT directed at ameliorating negative symptoms, we reviewed all available evidence on these outcomes.MethodA systematic search of the literature was conducted in PsychInfo, PubMed and the Cochrane register to identify randomized controlled trials reporting on the impact of CBT interventions on negative symptoms in schizophrenia. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed on end-of-treatment, short-term and long-term changes in negative symptoms.ResultsA total of 35 publications covering 30 trials in 2312 patients, published between 1993 and 2013, were included. Our results showed studies’ pooled effect on symptom alleviation to be small [Hedges’ g = 0.093, 95% confidence interval (CI) −0.028 to 0.214, p = 0.130] and heterogeneous (Q = 73.067, degrees of freedom = 29, p < 0.001, τ2 = 0.081, I2 = 60.31) in studies with negative symptoms as a secondary outcome. Similar results were found for studies focused on negative symptom reduction (Hedges’ g = 0.157, 95% CI −0.10 to 0.409, p = 0.225). Meta-regression revealed that stronger treatment effects were associated with earlier year of publication, lower study quality and with CBT provided individually (as compared with group-based).ConclusionsThe co-occurring beneficial effect of conventional CBT on negative symptoms found in older studies was not supported by more recent studies. It is now necessary to further disentangle effective treatment ingredients of older studies in order to guide the development of future CBT interventions aimed at negative symptom reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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10. Refractory Chronic Pain Screening Tool ( RCPST): A Feasibility Study to Assess Practicality and Validity of Identifying Potential Neurostimulation Candidates.
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Baron, Ralf, Backonja, Misha M., Eldridge, Paul, Levy, Robert, Vissers, Kris, Attal, Nadine, Buchser, Eric, Cruccu, Giorgio, De Andrés, Jose, Hansson, Per, Jacobs, Marilyn, Loeser, John D., Prager, Joshua P., Stanton Hicks, Michael, Regnault, Antoine, Van den Abeele, Carine, and Taylor, Rod S.
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CHRONIC pain treatment ,CHRONIC pain ,ALGORITHMS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ELECTRIC stimulation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SPINAL cord ,STATISTICS ,PILOT projects ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Objective An international panel of pain specialists (anesthesiology, neurology, neurosurgery, and psychology) and research methodologists developed a screening tool to identify patients who may be suitable for spinal cord stimulation ( SCS)-the Refractory Chronic Pain Screening Tool ( RCPST) prototype. We describe a feasibility study to explore practicality and validity of this prototype. Design Consecutive outpatients were screened in two centers ( United Kingdom and United States). Sixty chronic pain adults without satisfactory pain relief despite treatment were assessed using RCPST (by pain specialist without expertise in neurostimulation) and then evaluated by two pain specialists experienced in SCS implantation and management to determine whether the patient should be referred for SCS. To maintain blinding, the participating physicians did not inform each other or the patient of assessment outcome. Sensitivity and specificity of the RCPST prototype were calculated using implanters' judgment as 'gold standard.' Results The average age of patients was 47.7 years; 53% were female. Fifty-seven patients completed the study (one withdrew consent, two lost to follow-up). The pain specialists agreed the prototype was easy to use and took <10 minutes to complete. Implanter agreement was moderate ( Kappa: 0.63, 95% confidence interval: 0.35-0.91). The prototype had low sensitivity (40%, 19-61%) and moderate specificity (78%, 65-92%). Using the same questionnaire with a modified decision algorithm, new prototypes were generated with range of high sensitivity (80-100%) and specificity (89-97%) values. Conclusions The RCPST aims to identify patients that should be referred for consideration for neurostimulation. The final implant decision requires appropriate neurological diagnostic workup, psychological assessment, and trial stimulation. RCPST was considered practical for routine clinical practice and contained appropriate questions. Sensitivity needs to be improved. A future study should select and validate the ideal RCPST prototype. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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11. Impact of point-of-sale tobacco display bans: findings from the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey.
- Author
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Lin Li, Borland, Ron, Fong, Geoffrey T., Thrasher, James F., Hammond, David, and Cummings, Kenneth M.
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SMOKING prevention ,MARKETING ,ADVERTISING ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,LEGAL status of sales personnel ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,TOBACCO ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This study examined the impact of point-of-sale (POS) tobacco marketing restrictions in Australia and Canada, in relation to the United Kingdom and the United States where there were no such restrictions during the study period (2006-10). The data came from the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey, a prospective multi-country cohort survey of adult smokers. In jurisdictions where POS display bans were implemented, smokers' reported exposure to tobacco marketing declined markedly. From 2006 to 2010, in Canada, the percentages noticing POS tobacco displays declined from 74.1 to 6.1% [adjusted odds ratio (OR)=0.26, P < 0.001]; and reported exposure to POS tobacco advertising decreased from 40.3 to 14.1% (adjusted OR=0.61, P<0.001). Similarly, in Australia, noticing of POS displays decreased from 73.9 to 42.9%. In contrast, exposure to POS marketing in the United States and United Kingdom remained high during this period. In parallel, there were declines in reported exposures to other forms of advertising/promotion in Canada and Australia, but again, not in the United States or United Kingdom. Impulse purchasing of cigarettes was lower in places that enacted POS display bans. These findings indicate that implementing POS tobacco display bans does result in lower exposure to tobacco marketing and less frequent impulse purchasing of cigarettes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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12. The Cross-Cultural Association Between Marital Status and Physical Aggression Between Intimate Partners.
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Bernards, Sharon and Graham, Kathryn
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AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CULTURE ,DIVORCE ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MARITAL status ,MARRIED men ,MARRIED women ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,SINGLE men ,SINGLE women ,SURVEYS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,RELATIVE medical risk ,INTIMATE partner violence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Some research suggests that the risk of physical aggression by an intimate partner is related to marital status, but this relationship may vary across cultures and by gender. In the present study, we systematically examine the relationship between marital status and physical partner aggression by gender across 19 countries. Logistic and multilevel regression confirmed previous findings of lower rates of physical aggression for legally married versus cohabiting and separated/divorced women and men across most, but notably, not all countries. Single status was associated with higher risk in some countries and lower in others reflecting possible cultural differences in risk for different marital statuses. For example, single women had significantly lower rates of victimization than did married women in India where violence against wives is often accepted. The variation in the cross-cultural findings highlights the importance of examining both men and women and considering the cultural context when interpreting the relationship between partner aggression and marital status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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13. The patient satisfaction chasm: the gap between hospital management and frontline clinicians.
- Author
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Rozenblum, Ronen, Lisby, Marianne, Hockey, Peter M., Levtzion-Korach, Osnat, Salzberg, Claudia A., Efrati, Nechama, Lipsitz, Stuart, and Bates, David W.
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QUALITY assurance ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,HEALTH facility administration ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL personnel ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PATIENT satisfaction ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,SURVEYS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,DATA analysis ,PLANNING techniques ,PATIENT-centered care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background Achieving high levels of patient satisfaction requires hospital management to be proactive in patient-centred care improvement initiatives and to engage frontline clinicians in this process. Method We developed a survey to assess the attitudes of clinicians towards hospital management activities with respect to improving patient satisfaction and surveyed clinicians in four academic hospitals located in Denmark, Israel, the UK and the USA. Results We collected 1004 questionnaires (79.9% response rate) from four hospitals in four countries on three continents. Overall, 90.4% of clinicians believed that improving patient satisfaction during hospitalisation was achievable, but only 9.2% of clinicians thought their department had a structured plan to do so, with significant differences between the countries (p<0.0001). Among responders, only 38% remembered targeted actions to improve patient satisfaction and just 34% stated having received feedback from hospital management regarding patient satisfaction status in their department during the past year. In multivariate analyses, clinicians who received feedback from hospital management and remembered targeted actions to improve patient satisfaction were more likely to state that their department had a structured plan to improve patient satisfaction. Conclusions This portrait of clinicians' attitudes highlights a chasm between hospital management and frontline clinicians with respect to improving patient satisfaction. It appears that while hospital management asserts that patientcentred care is important and invests in patient satisfaction and patient experience surveys, our findings suggest that the majority do not have a structured plan for promoting improvement of patient satisfaction and engaging clinicians in the process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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14. A Comparison of Self-Reported Analgesic Use and Detection of Urinary Ibuprofen and Acetaminophen Metabolites by Means of Metabonomics.
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Loo, Ruey Leng, Chan, Queenie, Brown, Ian J., Robertson, Claire E., Stamler, Jeremiah, Nicholson, Jeremy K., Holmes, Elaine, and Elliott, Paul
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URINALYSIS ,EPIDEMIOLOGY research methodology ,ACETAMINOPHEN ,AGE distribution ,ASIANS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTER simulation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DISCRIMINANT analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,SURVEYS ,MICRONUTRIENTS ,WORLD health ,IBUPROFEN ,SECONDARY analysis ,DISEASE prevalence ,MEMORY bias ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Information on dietary supplements, medications, and other xenobiotics in epidemiologic surveys is usually obtained from questionnaires and is subject to recall and reporting biases. The authors used metabolite data obtained from hydrogen-1 (or proton) nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) analysis of human urine specimens from the International Study of Macro-/Micro-Nutrients and Blood Pressure (INTERMAP Study) to validate self-reported analgesic use. Metabolic profiling of two 24-hour urine specimens per individual was carried out for 4,630 participants aged 40–59 years from 17 population samples in Japan, China, the United Kingdom, and the United States (data collection, 1996–1999). 1H NMR-detected acetaminophen and ibuprofen use was low (∼4%) among East Asian population samples and higher (>16%) in Western population samples. In a comparison of self-reported acetaminophen and ibuprofen use with 1H NMR-detected acetaminophen and ibuprofen metabolites among 496 participants from Chicago, Illinois, and Belfast, Northern Ireland, the overall rate of concordance was 81%–84%; the rate of underreporting was 15%–17%; and the rate of underdetection was approximately 1%. Comparison of self-reported unspecified analgesic use with 1H NMR-detected acetaminophen and ibuprofen metabolites among 2,660 Western INTERMAP participants revealed similar levels of concordance and underreporting. Screening for urinary metabolites of acetaminophen and ibuprofen improved the accuracy of exposure information. This approach has the potential to reduce recall bias and other biases in epidemiologic studies for a range of substances, including pharmaceuticals, dietary supplements, and foods. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
15. The association between exposure to point-of-sale anti-smoking warnings and smokers' interest in quitting and quit attempts: findings from the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey.
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Li, Lin, Borland, Ron, Yong, Hua‐Hie, Hitchman, Sara C., Wakefield, Melanie A., Kasza, Karin A., and Fong, Geoffrey T.
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RATING of sales personnel ,SMOKING prevention ,HEALTH promotion ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,POPULATION geography ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SMOKING cessation ,STATISTICS ,SURVEYS ,DATA analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aims This study aimed to examine the associations between reported exposure to anti-smoking warnings at the point-of-sale (POS) and smokers' interest in quitting and their subsequent quit attempts by comparing reactions in Australia where warnings are prominent to smokers in other countries. Design A prospective multi-country cohort design was employed. Setting Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. Participants A total of 21 613 adult smokers who completed at least one of the seven waves (2002-08) of the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey were included in the analysis. Measurements Reported exposure to POS anti-smoking warnings and smokers' interest in quitting at the same wave and quit attempts over the following year. Findings Compared to smokers in Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States, Australian smokers reported higher levels of awareness of POS anti-smoking warnings, and this difference was consistent over the study period. Over waves in Australia (but not in the other three countries) there was a significantly positive association between reported exposure to POS anti-smoking warnings and interest in quitting [adjusted odds ratio = 1.139, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.039-1.249, P < 0.01] and prospective quit attempts (adjusted odds ratio = 1.216, 95% CI 1.114-1.327, P < 0.001) when controlling for demographics, smoking characteristics, overall salience of anti-smoking information and awareness of anti-smoking material from channels other than POS. Conclusions Point-of-sale health warnings about tobacco are more prominent in Australia than the United Kingdom, the United States or Canada and appear to act as a prompt to quitting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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16. Family carer personal concerns in Huntington disease.
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Williams, Janet K., Skirton, Heather, Barnette, James Jackson, and Paulsen, Jane S.
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ANALYSIS of variance ,CAREGIVERS ,CHANGE ,CHI-squared test ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FACTOR analysis ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH status indicators ,HUNTINGTON disease ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL role ,SURVEYS ,T-test (Statistics) ,FAMILY relations ,NARRATIVES ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,THEMATIC analysis ,FAMILY roles ,BURDEN of care ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
williams j.k., skirton h., barnette j.j. & paulsen j.s. (2012) Family carer personal concerns in Huntington disease. Journal of Advanced Nursing 68(1), 137-146. Abstract Aim. To examine and compare the personal concerns of family members providing care for people with Huntington disease in the United Kingdom and the United States. Background. Family carers of people with Huntington disease may feel burdened by caregiving responsibilities and concerned about illness risk for relatives. Method. A mailed personal concerns survey was completed by 108 United Kingdom and 119 United States adult family carers of people with Huntington disease in 2006 and 2007. Survey responses included frequency and intensity of concerns, and narrative comments. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics of the products of frequency and intensity of reaction scores to identify a personal concerns index for items with the twelve highest combined scores. Factor analysis identified three factors, which were compared between respondents by factor and items within factors using t tests mean frequency by intensity scores. Narrative comments were thematically analysed. Results. Three main factors were labelled impact of role change, sense of isolation and concerns for children. Within the role change factor, United States family caregivers had significantly higher concerns about family finances and United Kingdom carers expressed significantly greater personal sadness. Both groups expressed concern about isolation from family. Although family carers in both countries expressed concern about their children, those of United States caregivers were significantly higher. Conclusion. Further studies are required to identify benefits of support services that are specific to carer concerns and consistent with national healthcare systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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17. The Hispanic Americans Baseline Alcohol Survey (HABLAS): Alcohol consumption and sociodemographic predictors across Hispanic national groups.
- Author
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Ramisetty-Mikler, Suhasini, Caetano, Raul, and Rodriguez, Lori A.
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ALCOHOLISM ,CHI-squared test ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,COMPUTER software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ALCOHOL drinking ,EMPLOYMENT ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,HISPANIC Americans ,INCOME ,INTERVIEWING ,MARITAL status ,NURSING assessment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SURVEYS ,DATA analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objective: To examine differences in alcohol consumption among Hispanic national groups in the United States [Puerto Ricans, Mexican, Cuban, and Dominican South Central (D/SC) Americans] and identify sociodemographic predictors of drinking and binge drinking (four drinks for women and five for men in a 2-hr period). Method: The study used a household probability sample of adult Hispanics in five metropolitan areas in the United States. Comprehensive data on alcohol consumption were collected. Analyses included bivariate and multivariate regression techniques. Results: Puerto Rican and Mexican American men reported higher drinking rates, weekly consumption, and binge drinking than D/SC and Cuban Americans. Women drank significantly less than men. Mexican American women reported the highest abstention rate (61%); Puerto Rican women drank more per week and binged more frequently compared with their counterparts in other groups. Puerto Rican origin, initiating drinking during high school years (<18), and male gender (US- or foreign-born) were significant predictors of weekly alcohol consumption. Being younger, being single, Puerto Rican or D/SC American origin, initiating drinking at <18 years, being a US- or foreign-born male and being a US-born female were significant predictors of binge drinking. Conclusions: There are considerable differences in drinking behavior across Hispanic national groups as well as between men and women. Results underscore the need to recognize heterogeneity in drinking practices while designing effective prevention interventions in the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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