148 results
Search Results
2. Examining the efficacies of instructor‐designed instructional videos in flipped classrooms on student engagement and learning outcomes: An empirical study.
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Shen, Yan
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SCHOOL environment , *SELF-efficacy , *FOCUS groups , *DATA analysis , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *EMPIRICAL research , *STATISTICAL sampling , *COLLEGE teachers , *TEACHING methods , *MANN Whitney U Test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *RESEARCH methodology , *LITERATURE reviews , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *STATISTICS , *LEARNING strategies , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *STUDENT attitudes , *COMPARATIVE studies , *VIDEO recording - Abstract
Background: Instructional videos constitute a pivotal component in flipped learning. Despite their significance, there is a dearth of research specifically dedicated to instructional videos within the context of flipped classrooms. This paucity has led to an empirical void in verifying the efficacy of instructional videos in flipped learning environments. Objectives: The present study endeavours to contribute to the extant literature on flipped pedagogical practices by providing empirical evidence regarding the effectiveness of instructional videos in flipped learning environments. Methods: This study employs a convergent mixed‐methods design. Forty‐five instructional videos in three subtypes were administered in two classes over a 15‐week semester. Data, both quantitative (log data from the learning management system) and qualitative (from focus group discussions at two time points), were concurrently collected from a flipped class (n = 25) and a blended class (n = 28) with the aim of gauging student engagement and learning outcomes in the flipped class and understanding video‐viewing features typical of the flipped class. Results: Both datasets corroborated that participants in the flipped class outperformed their counterparts in the blended class in terms of video‐watching, peer interaction, knowledge retention, and transfer skills. Conclusions: The instructional videos within the flipped classroom setting serve to enhance student engagement in the learning process and improve learning outcomes. The efficacy of these instructional videos in flipped learning can be further augmented through strategic approaches in both their design and implementation. Lay Description: What is currently known about this topic: The flipping pedagogy is conducive to learning.Videos play a crucial role in flipped learning.Videos prepared students for classroom activities.However, engaging students with pre‐class videos presents a challenge. What this paper adds: This paper furnishes direct empirical evidence supporting the effectiveness of instructional videos in flipped learning.It uncovers factors affecting student engagement with videos in flipped learning.It offers insights into the design and implementation of videos in flipped learning. Implications for practice: Considering facilitating conditions and affective factors when creating videos.Acknowledging learner characteristics when designing videos.Utilizing instructional strategies when implementing videos. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Public Perceptions of the Australian Health System During COVID‐19: Findings From a 2021 Survey Compared to Four Previous Surveys.
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Ellis, Louise A., Dammery, Genevieve, Gillespie, James, Ansell, James, Wells, Leanne, Smith, Carolynn L., Wijekulasuriya, Shalini, Braithwaite, Jeffrey, and Zurynski, Yvonne
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SELF-evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH status indicators ,FAMILY medicine ,MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC opinion ,CONFIDENCE ,CHI-squared test ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SURVEYS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LABOR supply ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: This study examines the perceptions of the Australian public canvassed in 2021 during the COVID‐19 pandemic about their health system compared to four previous surveys (2008, 2010, 2012 and 2018). Methods: In 2021, a nationwide online survey was conducted with a representative sample of Australians (N = 5100) recruited via market research panels. The results were compared to previous nationwide Australian survey samples from 2018 (N = 1024), 2012 (N = 1200), 2010 (N = 1201) and 2008 (N = 1146). The survey included questions consistent with previous polls regarding self‐reported health status and overall opinions of, and confidence in, the Australian health system. Results: There was an increase in the proportion of respondents reporting positive perceptions at each survey between 2008 and 2021, with a significantly higher proportion of respondents expressing a more positive view of the Australian healthcare system in 2021 compared to previous years (χ2(8, N = 9645) = 487.63, p < 0.001). In 2021, over two‐thirds of respondents (n = 3949/5100, 77.4%) reported that following the COVID‐19 pandemic, their confidence in the Australian healthcare system had either remained the same (n = 2433/5100, 47.7%) or increased (n = 1516/5100, 29.7%). Overall, respondents living in regional or remote regions, younger Australians (< 45 years) and women held less positive views in relation to the system. In 2021, the most frequently identified area for urgent improvement was the need for more healthcare workers (n = 1350/3576, 37.8%), an area of concern particularly for Australians residing in regional or remote areas (n = 590/1385, 42.6%). Conclusions: Irrespective of disruptions to the Australian healthcare system caused by the COVID‐19 pandemic, Australians' perceptions of their healthcare system were positive in 2021. However, concerns were raised about inadequate workforce capacity and the cost of healthcare, with differences identified by age groups and geographical location. Patient or Public Contribution: Health consumer representatives from the Consumers Health Forum of Australia contributed to the co‐design, deployment, analysis and interpretation of the results of this survey. J.A. and L.W. from the Consumers Health Forum of Australia contributed to the development of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. The risk factors for silent aspiration: A retrospective case series and literature review.
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Jamróz, Barbara, Sobol, Maria, Chmielewska‐Walczak, Joanna, Milewska, Magdalena, and Niemczyk, Kazimierz
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NECK surgery , *RESPIRATORY aspiration , *HEAD surgery , *RISK assessment , *TRACHEOTOMY , *DRINKING (Physiology) , *RADIOTHERAPY , *DATA analysis , *FOOD consumption , *THYROID gland tumors , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FISHER exact test , *PARAGANGLIOMA , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHI-squared test , *INFRATENTORIAL brain tumors , *LARYNGOSCOPY , *ODDS ratio , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *MEDICAL records , *ACQUISITION of data , *STATISTICS , *CASE studies , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SALIVA , *CRANIAL nerve diseases , *PARALYSIS , *GASTROINTESTINAL diseases , *PARATHYROID gland tumors ,RISK factors - Abstract
Aim: Evidence shows that 20%–30% of patients who aspirate do so silently. Research to date has not demonstrated clear evidence to indicate which patients are at higher risk of silent aspiration. Our aim was to use univariate logistic regression analysis of retrospective case review to determine potential patterns of silent aspiration. Materials and methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 455 fiberoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing (FEES) reports. The patients were divided into four groups: G1 – neurological diseases (n = 93), G2 – head and neck surgery (n = 200), G3 – gastroenterological diseases (n = 94) and G4 – other patients (n = 68). Data included the occurrence or absence of saliva penetration or aspiration, of silent fluid/solid food penetration or aspiration, type of penetration or aspiration, occurrence of cranial nerve paresis, radiotherapy and tracheostomy. Univariate logistic regression was used to evaluate independent risk factors of silent aspiration in the study population. Three models with different independent variables were considered. Results: There is a statistically significant difference in the frequency of occurrence of silent penetration and aspiration within the groups (p < 0.001), with intraglutative being most frequent. Fluid and food penetration and aspiration correlated with saliva penetration and aspiration in all groups (p < 0.001). Cranial nerve paresis (IX and X), radiotherapy and tracheostomy correlate with saliva penetration and aspiration (p = 0.020 for cranial nerve paresis; p = 0.004 for radiotherapy; p < 0.001 for tracheostomy). One hundred and fifteen patients (45.81%) in the subgroup of patients with intraglutative aspiration had cranial nerve paresis (IX, X or IX–X). Conclusions: Patients who should be prioritised or considered to be at a higher need of instrumental swallowing evaluation are those with IX and X cranial nerve paresis, tracheostomy and those who have had radiotherapy, with saliva swallowing problems, especially after paraganglioma, thyroid and parathyroid glands and middle and posterior fossa tumour surgery. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Clinical signs of penetration or aspiration include coughing, throat clearing and voice changes, while silent penetration or aspiration patients aspirate without demonstrating any clinical symptoms. The most common consequences of silent aspiration include aspiration pneumonia, recurrent lower respiratory tract infections and respiratory failure. Additionally, malnutrition and dehydration can be indicators of silent aspiration. Patients may unknowingly reduce their oral intake and lose weight. Retrospective studies have shown that 20%–30% of patients aspirate silently (e.g. patients after stroke, acquired brain injury, head and neck cancer treatment, prolonged intubation). Clinical examination of swallowing can miss up to 50% of cases of silent aspiration. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: Currently, silent aspiration is often discussed in neurological literature, but its applications to head and neck surgery are limited. In this study, we identify head and neck surgery patients who should be prioritised or considered to be in higher need of instrumental swallowing evaluation due to a higher risk of silent aspiration. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Post‐treatment structural changes can result in lower cranial nerve paresis (IX, X, XII) and face injury, in which vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves are injured. After tracheostomy and radiotherapy, patients with problems swallowing saliva need careful clinical examination, particularly cranial nerve examination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Maternal input to 24‐month‐old children with sex chromosome trisomies.
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Zanchi, Paola, Sacco, Gaia Giulia Angela, Silibello, Gaia, Ajmone, Paola Francesca, Costantino, Maria Antonella, Vizziello, Paola Giovanna, and Zampini, Laura
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ATTITUDES of mothers , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHI-squared test , *LINGUISTICS , *COMMUNICATION , *LANGUAGE disorders , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATA analysis software , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *VIDEO recording - Abstract
Background: Maternal input plays an important role in influencing linguistic development during the first years of life, and it is evident that mothers adapt their language according to their child's characteristics. Recently, it was demonstrated that maternal input addressed to children with sex chromosome trisomies (SCTs) at 8 months of age is prosodically and functionally different from that addressed to typically developing (TD) peers. Aims: The study aimed at analysing maternal input at 24 months when the presence of a language delay could be more evident than during the preverbal stage. We were interested in examining if maternal input was influenced by a diagnosis of SCT (by comparing children with SCT and TD children) or by children's linguistic level (by comparing children with weak lexical ability versus children with typical lexical ability regardless of the presence of genetic diagnosis). Methods and Procedures: Forty‐four mother–child dyads in which the children had an SCT and 20 mother–child dyads in which the children were TD participated in the study. Of these 64 dyads, 23 children (21 with SCTs and two TD children) formed the group of children with weak lexical ability (children with a vocabulary size lower than 50 words at 24 months). Maternal utterances were collected during one video‐recorded play session and were then coded considering both the linguistic and functional features of the input. Outcomes and Results: The results showed that the input addressed to 24‐month‐old children with SCTs is as rich and complex as that addressed to TD peers. Moreover, no significant differences in the functions expressed by maternal input were found (all ps > 0.05). Comparing the children with weak lexical ability and the children with typical lexical ability in our sample, having a poor vocabulary at 24 months of age showed a significant influence on the maternal input features: the input addressed to children with weak lexical ability was characterised by a higher presence of attention getters (U = 217.00, p = 0.007) and a lower proportion of questions (U = 236.00, p = 0.017) than that of mothers of typically‐talking children. Conclusions and Implications: At 24 months of age, it seems that the presence of a language delay and not belonging to the clinical group of children with SCTs influences the functional characteristics of the maternal input. It is important to support the parents of children with SCTs during the communication process and later during their child's development, leading them to observe their children's manifested skills rather than looking for possible predicted difficulties. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Studies in the literature demonstrated how mothers can generally adapt their input to their child's characteristics. To our knowledge, only two recent studies analysed the maternal input addressed to children with SCT at 8 months of age, highlighting significant differences. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: The maternal input addressed to children with SCT at 24 months of age is not different from that addressed to TD children. At 24 months of age, the mothers adapt their input to the verbal competence shown by their child (weak lexical ability versus typically‐talking), while belonging to the clinical group does not show an influence. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: All the participants of the present study received prenatal diagnosis disclosure by an expert team of professionals, and they were all involved in a longitudinal study aimed at monitoring the children's development and supporting their parents. These results show that giving clear and complete information about possible development paths to parents of children with SCTs during diagnosis disclosure is crucial. Moreover, supporting the parents during the communication process and later during their child's development is fundamental, leading them to observe their children's manifested skills rather than looking for possible predicted difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Enhancing social–emotional functioning in adolescents with developmental language disorder or deaf or hard of hearing through a Theory of Mind intervention.
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Smit, L., Knoors, H., Rabeling, I., Verhoeven, L., and Vissers, C.
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SELF-evaluation , *COGNITIVE testing , *RESEARCH funding , *CLINICAL trials , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *EMOTIONS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *CHI-squared test , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *CONTROL groups , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *CHILD development deviations , *LANGUAGE disorders , *DEAFNESS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *INDIVIDUAL development , *DATA analysis software , *THOUGHT & thinking , *PSYCHOSOCIAL functioning , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: This study examines the effect of a Theory of Mind (ToM) intervention on ToM abilities and social–emotional functioning in adolescents with developmental language disorder (DLD) or who are deaf/hard of hearing (D/HH). It emphasizes the importance of self‐reflection and measurement for personal growth. The research design incorporates both subjective and objective measures to evaluate the intervention's efficacy. Aims: To investigate the impact of the ToM intervention on ToM abilities and social–emotional functioning in adolescents with DLD or who are D/HH. It hypothesizes that participants in the intervention groups will show improved ToM and social–emotional functioning compared with those in the control groups. Methods & Procedures: Adolescents with DLD or who are D/HH were recruited through collaboration with educational institutions. The study utilized a pre‐/post‐test design, assigning participants to either the intervention or the control group. The ToM intervention involved targeted activities to enhance ToM abilities. ToM abilities and social–emotional functioning were assessed using standardized tests and self‐report questionnaires. Statistical analyses compared outcomes between the intervention and no intervention groups. Outcomes & Results: The findings reveal subjective improvements in social–emotional functioning among the D/HH intervention group. However, no significant effects on objective ToM measures were observed. These results highlight the need for further investigation and refinement of interventions in these areas. Future research should focus on improving intervention strategies and exploring additional objective measures to gain a comprehensive understanding of the intervention's impact on ToM and social–emotional functioning in this population. Conclusions & Implications: The ToM intervention shows subjective benefits in improving social–emotional functioning among D/HH adolescents. However, it does not yield significant effects on objective ToM measures. These findings emphasize the ongoing need to refine interventions targeting ToM abilities and social–emotional functioning in this population. Future studies should explore alternative strategies and incorporate additional objective measures to enhance understanding and outcomes. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: Before this study, it was known that ToM interventions have the potential to enhance ToM abilities. However, the specific effects of such interventions on subjective and objective measures for ToM and social–emotional functioning in adolescents with DLD or who are D/HH remained unclear, necessitating further research. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: This study adds to the existing knowledge by demonstrating subjective improvements in social–emotional functioning among adolescents who are D/HH and underwent a ToM intervention. However, no significant effects on objective ToM measures were observed. These findings highlight the need for refining interventions and exploring additional measures to better understand the intervention's impact. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: The subjective improvements in social–emotional functioning observed in this study have important clinical implications. They suggest that ToM interventions can positively impact the social well‐being of adolescents who are D/HH. However, the lack of significant effects on objective ToM measures emphasizes the need for further research and intervention refinement to address specific areas of improvement in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Characteristics of drawing deficits in people with aphasia: Differences between symbolic and realistic drawn objects.
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Komori, Noriyo, Hashimoto, Ritsuo, Jinushi, Chihiro, Uechi, Momoko, Oikawa, Shou, and Hirano, Emi
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FACILITATED communication , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *DRAWING , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *APHASIA , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANALYSIS of variance , *STATISTICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *INTER-observer reliability - Abstract
Background: Pictures drawn by people with aphasia (PWA) are often more challenging to understand than those drawn by healthy people. There are two types of objects: those that tend to be drawn symbolically (symbolically drawn objects—SOs) and those that are likely to be drawn realistically (realistically drawn objects—ROs). Aims: To compare the identification rate and number of misunderstanding types between SOs and ROs drawn by PWA and healthy controls (HCs). To reveal trends in the misunderstandings of drawings by PWA, and to identify the language or cognitive abilities related to the identification rate of pictures drawn by PWA. Methods & Procedures: We designed a drawing task involving SOs and ROs. A total of 18 PWA and 30 HCs completed the task, and respondents identified the drawings. The identification rate and number of misunderstandings were analysed with two‐way analysis of variance (ANOVA) including group (PWA and HCs) and object type (SOs and ROs). The misunderstandings were divided into four categories varying in semantic and morphological similarity; these ratios were examined with a chi‐square test. The relationships of language and cognitive abilities with the identification rate were investigated with multiple regression analyses. Outcomes & Results: There was a significant effect of the interaction between group and object type on the identification rate (F(1.1387) = 3.90, Mean Squared Error (MSE) = 4139.67, p = 0.04): the identification rates for ROs were lower in the PWA than in the HCs. For the number of misunderstanding types, an interaction was observed between group and object type (F(1.56) = 8.26, MSE = 26.93, p < 0.01): the number of misunderstanding types for ROs in the PWA was greater than that in the HCs. The misunderstanding patterns differed between ROs and SOs (χ2(3) = 694.30, p < 0.001, V = 0.37). ROs were semantically related, whereas SOs were morphologically related. The identification rates of ROs and SOs were correlated only with Kanji writing scores (ROs: β = 3.66, p = 0.01; SOs: β = 6.57, p < 0.01). Conclusions & Implications: In drawings by the PWA, SOs had a higher identification rate, while ROs had a lower identification rate and a greater variety of misunderstandings. SOs may increase drawing motivation. Interventions to improve the identifiability of SOs and ROs should reflect each character. Identification rates were correlated only with Kanji writing scores. The PWA, whose native language was Japanese and had preserved Kanji writing abilities, and their communication abilities may be increased through drawing. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: PWA often have impaired drawing abilities and draw pictures that third parties misinterpret. Some objects tend to be drawn symbolically, and some are drawn realistically. However, it is not clear whether there is a difference between these types of drawings depicted by PWA in identifiability and the tendency to be misunderstood by ordinary people. In addition, the relationships between language or cognitive abilities and the identification rate of drawn pictures are not clear. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: The identification rate differed between SOs and ROs. In drawings by PWA, SOs had a higher identification rate, while ROs had a lower identification rate and the greatest variety of misunderstandings. Approximately half of the misunderstandings were related to the target object. SOs tended to be confused with morphologically related objects, while ROs tended to be confused with semantically related objects. Identification rates were correlated only with Kanji writing scores. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: To motivate PWA's drawing, it is suitable to begin with SOs. Examining drawing ability from the perspective of SOs and ROs increases the chance of identifying drawing ability. PWA whose native language is Japanese and have preserved Kanji writing abilities may be able to increase their communication abilities through drawing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Effect of online parent training in promoting language development of children with language delay in Hubei province, China.
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Tang, Lina, Zhao, Jinzhu, He, Tianyi, Xu, Lu, He, Xuejin, Huang, Shan, and Hao, Yan
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DIAGNOSIS of autism , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *PARENTS , *RESEARCH funding , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *PARENT-child relationships , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *HOME environment , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *CAREGIVERS , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *LANGUAGE disorders , *ONLINE education , *ANALYSIS of variance , *ASPERGER'S syndrome , *HEALTH promotion , *DATA analysis software , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *SPEECH therapy , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Training parents to implement language and communication intervention strategies is an effective approach to promote language development for children with language delay. Aims: This study introduces an online parent training program conducted in Hubei province, China, which was designed to help parents of language‐delayed children with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), developmental language disorder (DLD) or global developmental delay (GDD) apply language intervention strategies into daily interactions and promote their children's language development at home. Methods & Procedures: The Bethel Hearing and Speaking Training Center Family Training for Early Communication & Language Development (Bethel Family Training Program, BFT) (Bethel HSTC, 2020) was designed to improve the language and communication skills for children with language delay in a naturalistic way. The caregivers (including parents, grandparents and other main caregivers) participated in an 8‐h online program, including lectures on milestones in child language development, common misunderstandings of child language development, and three basic family language intervention strategies ('Looking together, playing together, and talking together') incorporating active learning through video analysis and discussion. Tongji Hospital in Hubei then continued with 3 months of online home intervention monitoring to all the caregivers via weekly online Q&As led by BFT certified speech therapists' team. The Gesell Developmental Schedules (GDS) was carried out before the online parent training program and after the 3‐month online home intervention monitoring. Outcomes & Results: 146 families whose children aged 12–68 months with language delay participated in the online training program. The results of the GDS assessments conducted before and after the program showed that not only did the developmental quotient (DQ) of language improve, but so did the DQ of social behaviour and adaptive behaviour (p < 0.001). There is no between‐group difference in the application of three strategies between the ASD group and the DLD or GDD group (p > 0.05). Furthermore, both caregivers' ability to apply 'looking together, playing together, talking together' strategies and the effective interaction time played important roles in improving the child's language abilities. Conclusion & Implications: The online parent training focusing on improving daily interaction with children through speech–language stimulation strategies promoted the development of language skills. It is an economic and practical approach for children with language delay who have limited access to local language intervention programs. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Parent‐implemented language intervention is an effective approach at improving children's language development. Telepractice is an appropriate model of service delivery for audiologists and speech–language therapists and may be the primary mode of service delivery or may supplement in‐person services. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: This paper explores the effectiveness of an online parent training program and provides new evidence that online training on language support strategies (looking together, playing together, talking together) followed by home intervention monitoring works for Mandarin‐speaking children and it is equally effective for children with ASD and non‐ASD diagnosis. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Developmental behavioural paediatricians and speech–language therapists in countries and areas that lack sufficient training resource for every child will have the option to deliver parent training and home intervention monitoring online, which will save time and cost considerably while offering convenience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Effectiveness of a nonweight‐based daily dosage of ready‐to‐use therapeutic food in children suffering from uncomplicated severe acute malnutrition: A nonrandomized, noninferiority analysis of programme data in Afghanistan.
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Bahwere, Paluku, Funnell, Grace, Qarizada, Ahmad Nawid, Woodhead, Sophie, Bengnwi, Wilfred, and Le, Minh Tram
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PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,MALNUTRITION ,FOOD consumption ,T-test (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,BODY weight ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,CLINICAL trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,ELEMENTAL diet ,DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,THERAPEUTICS ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) remains a major global public health problem. SAM cases are treated using ready‐to‐use therapeutic food (RUTF) at a dosage of ∼200 kcal/kg/day per the standard treatment protocol (STD). Emerging evidence on simplifications to the standard protocol, which among other adaptations, includes reducing the daily RUTF dosage, indicates that it is effective and safe for treating children with SAM. In response to a foreseen stock shortage of RUTF, the government of Afghanistan endorsed the temporary use of a modified treatment protocol in which the daily RUTF dosage was prescribed at 1000 kcal/day (irrespective of body weight) until the child achieved moderate acute malnutrition status (weight‐for‐height z‐score ≥ −3 or mid‐upper arm circumference [MUAC] ≥ 115 mm), at which point 500 kcal/day was prescribed until cured (modified treatment protocol [MTP]). In this paper, we report the results of this nonweight‐based daily RUTF dosage experience. Data of 2042 children with SAM, treated using either the STD protocol (n = 269) or the MTP protocol (n = 1773) from August 2019 to March 2021 in five provinces, were analyzed. The per‐protocol analyses confirmed noninferiority of MTP protocol when compared to STD protocol for recovery rate [93.3% vs. 90.2%; ∆ (95% confidence interval, CI) = 3.1 (−0.9; 7.2) %] and length‐of‐stay [82.6 vs. 75.6 days; ∆ (95% CI) = 6.9 (3.3; 10.5) days], considering the margin of noninferiority of −10% and +14 days, respectively. Weight gain velocity was smaller in the MTP protocol group than in the STD protocol group [3.7 (1.7) vs. 5.2 (2.9) g/kg/day; ∆ (95% CI) = −1.5 (−1.8, −1.2); p < 0.001]. The STD group had a significantly higher mean than the MTP group for absolute MUAC gain [∆ (95% CI) = 1.7 (1.0; 2.3) mm; p < 0.001] and the MUAC velocity [∆ (95% CI) = 0.29 (0.20; 0.37) mm/week; p < 0.001]. Our results confirm the noninferiority of a nonweight‐based daily dosage and support the endorsement of this modification as an alternative to the standard protocol in resource‐constrained contexts. Key messages: More evidence supporting the use of the nonweight‐based daily ready‐to‐use therapeutic food (RUTF) dosage for treating uncomplicated severe acute malnutrition (SAM), in specific contexts, is needed.Our real‐world prospective nonrandomized study showed that the fixed nonweight‐based daily RUTF dosage protocol is as effective as the standard weight‐based protocol for treating uncomplicated SAM in children <5 in the Afghanistan context.Our findings support the reflection of a nonweight‐based daily RUTF dosage in resource‐constrained contexts in national and global policies and guidelines to improve coverage of all children in need of treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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10. Assessing the Gap Between Women's Expectations and Perceptions of the Quality of Intrapartum Care in Jordan: A Two‐Stage Study Using the SERVQUAL Model.
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Hijazi, Heba, Al‐Yateem, Nabeel, Al abdi, Rabah, Baniissa, Wegdan, Alameddine, Mohamad, Al‐Sharman, Alham, AlMarzooqi, Alounoud, Subu, Muhammad Arsyad, Ahmed, Fatma Refaat, Hossain, Ahmed, Sindiani, Amer, and Hayajneh, Yaseen
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EMPATHY ,MEDICAL quality control ,EVIDENCE gaps ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL care ,RESEARCH evaluation ,STATISTICAL sampling ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,CHILDBIRTH education ,TERTIARY care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONTINUUM of care ,CHI-squared test ,MANN Whitney U Test ,INTRAPARTUM care ,HEALTH planning ,SURVEYS ,PRENATAL care ,EXPERIENCE ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH ,PAIN management ,RESEARCH methodology ,WOMEN'S health ,THEORY ,QUALITY assurance ,DATA analysis software ,FACTOR analysis ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Introduction: Although Jordan has made significant progress toward expanding the utilization of facility‐based intrapartum care, prior research highlights that poor service quality is still persistent. This study aimed to identify quality gaps between women's expectations and perceptions of the actual intrapartum care received, while exploring the contributing factors. Methods: Utilizing a pre–post design, quality gaps in intrapartum care were assessed among 959 women pre‐ and postchildbirth at a prominent tertiary hospital in northern Jordan. Data were gathered using the SERVQUAL scale, measuring service quality across reliability, responsiveness, tangibles, assurance, and empathy dimensions. Results: The overall mean gap score between women's expectations and perceptions of the quality of intrapartum care was −0.60 (±0.56). The lowest and highest mean gap scores were found to be related to tangibles and assurance dimensions, −0.24 (±0.39) and −0.88 (±0.35), respectively. Significant negative quality gaps were identified in the dimensions of assurance, empathy, and responsiveness, as well as overall service quality (p < 0.001). The MLR analyses highlighted education (β = 0.61), mode of birth (β = −0.60), admission timing (β = −0.41), continuity of midwifery care (β = −0.43), physician's gender (β = −0.62), active labour duration (β = 0.37), and pain management (β = −0.33) to be the key determinants of the overall quality gap in intrapartum care. Conclusion: Our findings underscore the importance of fostering a labour environment that prioritizes enhancing caregivers' empathetic, reassuring, and responsive skills to minimize service quality gaps and enhance the overall childbirth experience for women in Jordan. Patient or Public Contribution: This paper is a collaborative effort involving women with lived experiences of childbirth, midwives, and obstetrics and gynaecologist physicians. The original idea, conceptualization, data generation, and coproduction, including manuscript editing, were shaped by the valuable contributions of stakeholders with unique perspectives on intrapartum care in Jordan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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11. Speech disfluencies in children with developmental dyslexia: How do they differ from typical development?
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Pistono, Aurélie, Maziero, Stéphanie, Chaix, Yves, and Jucla, Mélanie
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READING disability , *DATA analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *DYSLEXIA , *STUTTERING , *AGE distribution , *CHI-squared test , *DISCOURSE analysis , *CHILD development , *SPEECH evaluation , *STATISTICS , *LANGUAGE acquisition - Abstract
Background: Disfluency is a multifactorial concept that can be linked to several of the language production levels, in both typical and atypical populations. In children, the language system is still developing and few studies have explored disfluency patterns. In typical development (TD), in particular, studies have shown discrepancies according to the language being considered. In neurodevelopmental disorders, such as developmental dyslexia (DD), it is still unclear whether the pattern of disfluency is similar to TD. Aims: To analyse the type of disfluency and their evolution in French children aged 8–12 years. Also to compare the pattern of disfluency in DD and TD, and to test whether disfluencies were correlated with reading difficulties. Methods & Procedures: A total of 25 children with DD and 21 children with TD aged 8–12.6 years produced an autobiographical narrative. Seven types of disfluencies were coded: part‐word repetitions; repetitions of monosyllabic words; other types of repetitions (words and phrases); filled pauses; revisions—substitutions; revisions—additions; and abandoned utterances. We compared the proportion of each disfluency in DD and TD. Spearman correlations were then performed between disfluencies, reading performance and age. Outcomes & Results: The results showed that both DD and TD children mainly produced filled pauses, repetitions of monosyllabic words and substitutions. Both groups displayed a high rate of disfluency (> 10%). No correlations with age were found. Correlations with reading performance were significant in the TD group only. Conclusions & Implications: The study showed that DD is not characterized by a specific pattern of disfluency. Additionally, disfluency rates were similar in children aged 8–12 years. In contrast to other languages, the current study suggests that French‐speaking children have a high rate of disfluency. The study also suggests that disfluency should be interpreted with caution in DD, given that TD children also have a high rate of disfluency. Therefore, it seems important to adapt the pathological threshold of disfluency to the language being spoken in order to avoid an overestimation of the prevalence of these deficits in French‐speaking children. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: TD children produce a high rate of disfluency, which is also influenced by the language being spoken. No study looked at the effect of DD on disfluency production. Nonetheless, problems in reading comprehension and reduced reading experience may impact lexical development and speech fluency. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: In our study, both groups (French‐speaking children) produced a substantial amount of disfluency as compared with other languages (> 10%). Additionally, the pattern of disfluency was similar in TD and DD (namely, filled pauses, prolongations repetitions of monosyllabic words and substitutions). In the DD group, disfluency production was not correlated with reading performance. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: These results indicate that it is crucial to consider the language being spoken when examining disfluency in order to avoid an overestimation of language difficulties in some languages, such as in French. Moreover, the production of disfluencies in DD should not be considered as language dysfunction since the pattern of disfluency what quite similar in TD and DD, and did not correlate with their reading difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. 'Turning up and tuning in'. Factors associated with parental non‐attendance and non‐adherence in intervention for young children with speech, language communication needs.
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Williams, Penny, Slonims, Vicky, and Weinman, John
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TREATMENT of language disorders , *PATIENTS' families , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *SELF-efficacy , *MATERNAL age , *MEDICAL personnel , *SATISFACTION , *DATA analysis , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *PARENT-child relationships , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *PARENT attitudes , *PARENTING , *FAMILY relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SELF-control , *CHI-squared test , *CONFIDENCE , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *MEDICAL records , *TELEPHONES , *RESEARCH , *MEDICAL appointments , *ELECTRONIC health records , *STATISTICS , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *NEEDS assessment , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SPEECH therapy , *PATIENT participation , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *REGRESSION analysis , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *PATIENT aftercare - Abstract
Background: When parents bring their child to appointments and then adhere to agreed speech and language therapy (SLT) recommendations, there is the potential to increase the intensity of the intervention, support generalization and improve outcomes. In SLT, however, little is known about factors that may promote attendance or adherence. Studies in other clinical areas such in medicine, psychology and physiotherapy have identified risk factors for non‐attendance or non‐adherence that are multifactorial and variable dependent on, for example, population and intervention. Aims: To identify rates of non‐attendance and non‐adherence, and to identify parent or child factors associated with parent involvement in intervention for children under 5 years of age receiving SLT. Methods: Parents completed questionnaires at two time points assessing the domains of parents' beliefs (problem perceptions, self‐efficacy), personal circumstances (socio‐demographics, family functioning), treatment experience and child factors. Predictors of parent attendance and adherence were identified through multiple regression analyses. Non‐attendance rates were identified via local health records and non‐adherence ascertained using a specific parent‐reported measure within the treatment experience domain. Results: Participants (N = 199) were predominantly mothers, and were ethnically and socio‐economically diverse, speaking a wide range of languages. Their children presented with a range of speech, language communication needs (SLCN). The rate of non‐attendance was 25% and the main predictors of non‐attendance were maternal age, education level and two factors within the parent beliefs domain. This model explained 40% of the variance in attendance. The rate of non‐adherence in this cohort was 26% with parental rating of the importance of a recommendation and self‐efficacy beliefs predicting adherence; this explained 56% of the variance in adherence to SLT recommendations at home. Conclusions & Implications: Our research has provided preliminary evidence of the influence of parents' beliefs, personal circumstances and treatment experiences on their involvement in their child's therapy. Speech and language therapists should consider factors impacting attendance and adherence to treatment and explore parental perceptions of their child's SLCN before embarking on an intervention, a foundation for collaborative practice. A possible limitation of this study is that the levels of attrition in our sample led to generally high measured rates of participation, which should be considered in future studies. Future research should explore adherence in treatments with varying doses, with different types of SLCN or interventions and in different settings. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: It is acknowledged that parent involvement in their child's therapy, such as attending and adhering to recommendations, is important but little is known about the rates of involvement and what factors may be associated with attendance and adherence in SLT. Qualitative research has explored parental involvement suggesting that beliefs about an intervention may be pertinent. Extensive research in other clinical areas suggest multiple and varied factors are influential and further exploration of particular populations and interventions is necessary. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: This study identified rates of parental non‐attendance and non‐adherence in a cohort of predominantly mothers of children under the age of 5 years. It is the first study to measure parent adherence in SLT and identify factors that are associated parental adherence to SLT recommendations. It adds to the small body of SLT specific research in understanding risk factors for non‐attendance. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: This study highlights the need for a speech and language therapist to consider and explore parents' perspectives of their child's SLCN as a part of achieving collaboration with a parent in order to achieve the best outcomes. It provides a foundation for further systematic research into parent involvement with the ultimate aim of enhancing outcomes for children with SLCN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Wound infection and healing in minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis compared with intramedullary nail for distal tibial fractures: A meta‐analysis.
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Wang, Shao‐Feng and Ji, Qin‐Long
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WOUND healing ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,FRACTURE fixation ,TIBIAL fractures ,WOUND infections ,MINIMALLY invasive procedures ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,META-analysis ,CHI-squared test ,MEDLINE ,ECONOMIC impact ,MEDICAL databases ,ONLINE information services ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
To systematically explore the effects of minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis (MIPO) versus intramedullary nail (IMN) on wound infection and wound healing in patients with distal tibia fractures. A computerised search of PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Embase, Wanfang, China Biomedical Literature Database (CBM) and China National Knowledge Infrastructure databases was performed, from their inception to October 2023, to identify relevant studies on the application of MIPO and IMN in patients with distal tibial fractures. The quality of the included literature was evaluated by two researchers based on inclusion and exclusion criteria, and basic information of the literature was collected, with wound infection, postoperative complications and wound healing time as the main indicators for analysis. Stata 17.0 software was applied for analysis. Overall, 23 papers and 2099 patients were included, including 1026 patients in the MIPO group and 1073 patients in the IMN group. The results revealed, when compared with IMN treatment, patients with distal tibia fractures who underwent MIPO treatment had a lower incidence of postoperative complications (OR = 0.33, 95% CI: 0.25–0.42, p < 0.001) and a shorter wound healing time (SMD = −1.00, 95% CI: −1.51 to −0.49, p < 0.001), but the incidence of postoperative wound infection was higher (OR = 2.01, 95% CI: 1.35–3.01, p = 0.001). Both MIPO and IMN are excellent treatments for distal tibia fractures. MIPO is effective in reducing the incidence of complications as well as shortening the time of wound healing time but increases the risk of wound infection. In clinical practice, surgeons can make individual choices based on the patient's wishes and proficiency in both techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. 'We manage, but yeah, it's challenging': A mixed‐methods study of enablers and barriers to hearing assessments for parents of children in metropolitan and regional Australia.
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Zussino, Jenna, Zupan, Barbra, and Preston, Robyn
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HEALTH services accessibility , *RURAL conditions , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *MANN Whitney U Test , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEALTH literacy , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *SURVEYS , *HEARING disorders , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *METROPOLITAN areas , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *PARENTS , *VIDEO recording , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Early identification and intervention for hearing loss is important for supporting language development. Despite this, parents are required to overcome barriers to access hearing assessments for their children. Aims: To identify the enablers and barriers to accessing hearing assessments for Australian children identified by their parents, and to compare between metropolitan, regional and rural areas. Methods & Procedures: This sequential, explanatory mixed‐methods study was undertaken online and included participants in metropolitan, regional and rural area of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory. A total of 56 participants participated in the surveys, and 10 participated in semi‐structured interviews. Outcomes & Results: Participants in metropolitan areas were more likely to have services in their area; however, access to hearing assessment was related more to individual circumstances (including health literacy skills) rather than geographical location. Many participants experienced long wait times, reduced flexibility, and a lack of audiologists experienced in working with children. Conclusions & Implications: Barriers to hearing assessments (which assist with early identification and intervention for hearing loss) should be addressed so that children have access to clear auditory information to assist with their speech and language development. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Poor audiological input can lead to poor speech, language and literacy outcomes for children. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: Although previous research indicates that people in regional and remote locations experience difficulty accessing health services within a reasonable timeframe, in this study barriers were experienced regardless of geographical location, and were dependent on individual circumstances. Many parents are unaware of the impact of hearing on speech and language. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Further research might examine how health literacy affects access to hearing assessment. Parents shared several potential solutions to these access barriers which should be considered by service providers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. 'Am I a good enough therapist?': Self‐doubt among speech and language therapists.
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Gold, Rinat and Gold, Azgad
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WORK experience (Employment) , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *STATISTICS , *SPEECH therapy , *SELF-perception , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *WORK , *SELF-evaluation , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *MEDICAL personnel , *MANN Whitney U Test , *ENTRY level employees , *CLINICAL competence , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *EMOTIONS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *MEDICAL practice , *DATA analysis , *SPEECH therapists - Abstract
Background: The therapeutic process is fraught with various feelings. This research focused on a specific type of negative feeling, namely self‐doubt (SD). Aim: To explore and characterize the nature of SD among speech and language therapists (SLTs) (the frequency of SD, situations that trigger SD, emotions and thoughts related to SD, and coping strategies) in various stages of occupational experience. Methods & Procedures: A total of 267 SLTs answered an online survey. Respondents represented SLTs in all stages of vocational experience, with varying academic degrees, from a variety of employment settings. The survey addressed situations that trigger SD, thoughts, and emotions associated with SD and the background information of the respondents. Frequency distributions of the responses of the participants were determined, and independent‐samples Kruskal–Wallis tests were conducted to examine if there were differences between groups that differed in their occupational experience on the frequency of SD, attitudes towards SD and emotions related to SD. Outcomes & Results: Differences were found between SLTs in various stages of professional development in several aspects of SD. Novice SLTs reported significantly higher levels of SD compared with experienced SLTs. In the face of SD, novice SLTs consider career abandonment significantly more than do experienced SLTs. They perceive themselves as a failure when experiencing SD to a significantly greater extent than do more experienced SLTs. In addition, SD is associated with various negative emotions. Conclusions & Implications: Self‐doubt is a natural professional feeling. It may be harmful especially in the early stages of professional development. Our findings call for support and guidance in the face of SD. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Healthcare professionals report feeling SD. This feeling may have deleterious effects on well‐being and career satisfaction and is especially harmful in young therapists. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study characterizes the nature of SD among SLTs in various stages of occupational experience. Our findings indicate that SD is reported among SLTs at all career stages, especially in novice SLTs. Self‐doubt is associated with a range of negative thoughts and emotions, and it may be triggered by various situations. Nonetheless, it is a topic that our respondents rarely learn about. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Normalising and validating SD is important to SLTs' resilience and may facilitate coping. This may be achieved by learning about the subject of SD in graduate programmes. In addition, mentors should create a safe learning culture to allow sharing SD and challenging situations, especially in the first years of occupational experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Social and temporal disorientation during the Covid‐19 pandemic: An analysis of 3306 responses to a quantitative questionnaire.
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Fernandez Velasco, Pablo, Perroy, Bastien, Gurchani, Umer, and Casati, Roberto
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BEHAVIOR disorders , *DATA analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *LONELINESS , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHI-squared test , *STAY-at-home orders , *THEMATIC analysis , *SOCIAL context , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *COGNITION disorders , *STATISTICS , *QUALITY of life , *SOCIAL skills , *RESEARCH methodology , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL problems , *SOCIAL isolation , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
The societal hallmark of the Covid‐19 pandemic was a set of mitigation measures such as lockdowns and curfews. The cognitive impact on the public of the resulting spatial, social and temporal constraints is still being investigated. While pandemic time has been extensively studied and mostly described as slowed down and elongated, opposite experimental patterns across national and social contexts leave open an important explanatory gap in order to understand which factor has been causally fundamental in determining the phenomenology of the crisis. In this paper, we use a quantitative questionnaire developed for measuring temporal and social disorientation on a sample of 3306 respondents during an acute phase of restrictions in France. We show that social disorientation greatly contributed to the temporal disruptions experienced during the pandemic. This result reinforces the importance for public authorities to address the compounding effect of feeling isolated during crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. The social support systems of mothers with problematic substance use in their infant's first year.
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Tsantefski, Menka, Briggs, Lynne, and Griffiths, Jessica
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *CHILD welfare , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *DATA analysis , *QUANTITATIVE research , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *SURVEYS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *SOCIAL networks , *RESEARCH , *COMMUNICATION , *STATISTICS , *SOCIAL support , *MOTHERHOOD , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *CUSTODY of children - Abstract
The infants of women with histories of problematic alcohol and other drug use are among the most vulnerable children known to statutory child protection services, which they enter at a younger age, and in which they remain longer. The net results include overwhelmed child protection systems and the birth of subsequent children conceived to ease women's grief at the loss their infants. Without adequate and appropriate support to the mother and her family, the pattern repeats. Obstetric services have an important role to play in the assessment of risk and protective factors in the perinatal period and in determining pathways to service provision. A comprehensive assessment considers the availability and quality of informal support prior to activation of formal systems of support, both statutory, where engagement is mandated, and non‐statutory, where support is offered on a voluntary basis. This paper uses quantitative methods to explore the social networks of women with problematic substance use in the transition to motherhood and the relationship between formal and informal support systems and infant outcomes. Surveys were held with two counsellors from the Women's Alcohol and Drug Service (WADS), a specialist obstetric clinic in Melbourne, Australia, and with 18 child protection workers. In addition, the Norbeck Social Support Questionnaire (Norbeck, 1984; Norbeck et al., 1983) was administered with 20 participating mothers to measure levels of formal and informal support, as well as the type and quality of support available to mothers over a 12‐month period, and to consider the provision of social support against known outcomes for infants. The findings demonstrate that WADS counsellors made several referrals for most women but that there was little in the way of long‐term follow‐up by non‐statutory service providers, with most women experiencing a dramatic drop in support over the 12‐month period. Women whose main informal support was from a domestically violent partner, and those who had been in out‐of‐home care in their own childhood, were particularly vulnerable to losing the care of their infant. The role of child protection varied markedly across the 12‐month period, particularly in relation to the extent that a relationship between formal and informal systems of support for mothers and their infants could be established. Overall, the study findings demonstrate that mothers experienced diminishing formal and informal support over time and that the quality of social support available to the mother was more important in terms of outcomes for women and their infants than the quantity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Gray Matter Volumes Mediate the Relationship Between Disease Duration and Balance Control Performance in Chronic Ankle Instability.
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Xu, Zhen, Xiao, Songlin, Shen, Bin, Zhang, Chuyi, Zhan, Jianglong, Li, Jun, Li, Jingjing, Zhou, Junhong, and Fu, Weijie
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BRAIN anatomy , *DISEASE duration , *RESEARCH funding , *T-test (Statistics) , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *PROBABILITY theory , *NEUROMUSCULAR system , *CHRONIC ankle instability , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *GRAY matter (Nerve tissue) , *ONE-leg resting position , *THALAMUS , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATA analysis software , *POSTURAL balance - Abstract
The relationship between structural changes in the cerebral gray matter and diminished balance control performance in patients with chronic ankle instability (CAI) has remained unclear. This paper aimed to assess the difference in gray matter volume (GMV) between participants with CAI and healthy controls (HC) and to characterize the role of GMV in the relationship between disease duration and balance performance in CAI. 42 participants with CAI and 33 HC completed the structural brain MRI scans, one‐legged standing test, and Y‐balance test. Regional GMV was measured by applying voxel‐based morphometry methods. The result showed that, compared with HC, participants with CAI exhibited lower GMV in multiple brain regions (familywise error [FWE] corrected p < 0.021). Within CAI only, but not in HC, lower GMV in the thalamus (β = −0.53, p = 0.003) and hippocampus (β = −0.57, p = 0.001) was associated with faster sway velocity of the center of pressure (CoP) in eyes closed condition (i.e., worse balance control performance). The GMV in the thalamus (percentage mediated [PM] = 32.02%; indirect effect β = 0.119, 95% CI = 0.003 to 0.282) and hippocampus (PM = 33.71%; indirect effect β = 0.122, 95% CI = 0.005 to 0.278) significantly mediated the association between the disease duration and balance performance. These findings suggest that the structural characteristics of the supraspinal elements is critical to the maintenance of balance control performance in individuals suffering from CAI, which deserve careful consideration in the management and rehabilitation programs in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Comparison of diluted vs concentrated regional citrate anticoagulation in continuous renal replacement therapy: A quasi‐experimental study.
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Mateos‐Dávila, Almudena, Betbesé Roig, Antonio Jorge, Santos Rodríguez, José Alberto, and Guix‐Comellas, Eva Maria
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ANTICOAGULANTS , *PATIENT safety , *ALKALOSIS , *T-test (Statistics) , *CLINICAL trials , *HEMODIALYSIS , *TERTIARY care , *ACUTE kidney failure , *CHI-squared test , *FISHES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *ODDS ratio , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *DRUG efficacy , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTENSIVE care units , *CITRATES , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: The incidence of coagulation of continuous renal replacement therapy circuits remains high. To the best of our knowledge, no scholar has published a protocol to avoid management errors when different types of citrates coexist in the same Intensive Care Unit. Aim: To assess the safety and efficacy of the unification of two protocols with different concentrations of citrate solution. Study Desing: A prospective, quasi‐experimental study was carried out in the intensive care unit of a tertiary referral hospital (in Barcelona, Spain), over 3 years. Consecutive adult patients requiring continuous renal replacement therapy with citrate were included. The sample was divided into two groups, a control group (concentrated citrate) and an intervention group (diluted citrate). The decision to initiate anticoagulation with diluted (18 mmol/L) or concentrated (136 mmol/L) citrate was made based on the machine available and the decision of the doctor responsible for the patient. It was not possible to randomize the sample. Both protocols were matched with a starting citrate dose of 3.5 mmol/L, and a dialysis solution was used. Post‐filter replacement was not used, and the citrate solution was the only fluid administered pre‐filter. Results: The analysis included 59 circuits in the concentrated citrate group and 40 circuits in the diluted citrate group. An increased need for electrolyte replacement was observed in the diluted group (p <.001). The concentrated citrate group had a longer filter life (p <.05), and there was a slight trend toward alkalosis. Conclusion: The diluted citrate group had a higher incidence of electrolyte replacement. The concentrated citrate group had longer circuit lifespan and a trend toward metabolic alkalosis, although this was not statistically significant. If these conclusions are considered, the protocol can be unified. Relevance to Clinical Practice: The present work aims to provide information on the differences in the use of regional anticoagulation with diluted or concentrated citrate. The objective is to pay special attention to aspects that can lead to complications. The unified protocol proposed in this paper could be extrapolated to any machine on the market that uses either of these two types of citrate concentration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Psychosocial outcomes from one cohort participating in the STan Australian Randomised controlled Trial (START).
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Benton, Madeleine, Salter, Amy, Wilkinson, Chris, Simpson, Bronni, and Turnbull, Deborah
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CESAREAN section , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *HEALTH status indicators , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *EMERGENCY medical services , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *POSTPARTUM depression , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHI-squared test , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INFANT nutrition , *BIRTH rate , *QUALITY of life , *QUALITY assurance , *DATA analysis software , *FETAL heart rate monitoring - Abstract
Background: In an Australian randomized controlled trial (RCT), two techniques for intrapartum fetal surveillance were compared: ST analysis (STan) as an adjunct to cardiotocography (CTG), compared with CTG alone. The aim was to determine whether CTG + STan could reduce emergency cesarean birth rates while maintaining or improving neonatal outcomes. Secondary aims were to compare clinical, economic, and psychosocial outcomes. The purpose of this paper was to present psychosocial outcomes from one cohort enrolled in the trial. Methods: The study was conducted at one tertiary referral hospital. Participants who had taken part in the trial from the outset were invited to complete a questionnaire between March 2018 and January 2020, approximately 8 weeks after giving birth. Outcomes included depression, psychological distress, health‐related quality of life, and infant feeding practices. Analysis was by intention to treat. Results: N = 207/527 participants completed the questionnaire (n = 113, STan; n = 94, CTG alone). Overall, no statistically significant or clinically meaningful differences were found in the two groups for symptoms of depression, psychological distress, quality of life, or infant feeding. A statistically significant difference was observed for the subscale of pain‐discomfort, where scores were higher on average in the CTG alone arm relative to that in the CTG + STan arm. Conclusions: Although STan as an adjunct to CTG constitutes a different clinical technology from CTG alone, both monitoring types appeared to produce similar results in terms of postnatal psychosocial outcomes for women. Findings from this study provide service users and staff with a comprehensive assessment of STan that can be used to make evidence‐informed decisions about monitoring options should STan become more widely available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Molar incisor hypomineralisation: A survey of awareness and management strategies among Libyan dentists in Benghazi.
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Tarhuni, Hala, Benghasheer, Hala Fathalla, Naser, Yasmin, and Arheiam, Arheiam
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MOLARS ,HEALTH literacy ,DENTAL fillings ,POLYMERS ,CROSS-sectional method ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,DENTAL crowns ,SURVEYS ,DENTISTS ,TOOTH demineralization ,DENTISTRY ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DENTISTS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: Molar incisor hypomineralisation (MIH) is a developmental enamel defect in the first permanent molars and frequently in the incisors. It poses a unique challenge to the dental practitioner because of its nature, clinical presentations and treatment strategies. Aim: This study assessed the perception of Libyan dentists in Benghazi regarding MIH and its management. Design: Paper‐based, self‐administered questionnaires were distributed to dentists in Benghazi, Libya. The questionnaires investigated the awareness of MIH, knowledge of MIH aetiology, clinical challenges of MIH treatment and choices of restorative management. Descriptive statistics, chi‐squared test and binary logistic regression analysis were performed at a significance level of ≤.05. Results: A total of 389 questionnaires were completed and analysed, giving an overall response rate of 76% (389/511). Most participants were female (85%, 332), with an average of 6.05 (SD = 6.24) years of experience. The majority of participants (67%) recognised MIH in their practice. Statistically significant differences in the awareness of MIH and its prevalence were observed according to the type of practice (p ≤.001) and experience of dentists (p ≤.001). Dentists working in public dental practice were less familiar with MIH and less likely to report it. Likewise, novice dentists were less aware of MIH than more experienced colleagues. The most reported aetiological factor in MIH was genetics by 60.2% of respondents, followed by environmental contamination (47.6%) and fluorides (42.9%). Most participants (92.3%) considered MIH a clinical problem. Aesthetics and diagnosis were the most reported challenging aspects (59.4% and 44.2%, respectively). The most commonly selected restorative options were high‐fluoride glass ionomer cement (43.2%) and preformed metal crowns (41.6%). Conclusion: The majority of participants reported awareness of the existence of MIH condition. Nevertheless, variations in estimating MIH prevalence and its proper treatment, as well as factors influencing its treatment and diagnosis, were recorded. It is recommended that the current dental curriculum is reviewed, and scientific evidence providing dental practitioners with updated information on the diagnosis and clinical management of MIH should be circulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Effects of Tactile Massage in Improving Older Residents' Psychological Health in Long‐Term Care Facilities: A Randomised Controlled Trial.
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Huang, Pi‐Hua, Chien, Wan‐Pin, Lin, Ya‐Chun, Chung, Min‐Huey, Lin, Pi‐Chu, Lin, Yueh‐Kuei, and Chuang, Yeu‐Hui
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COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,ANXIETY prevention ,PREVENTION of mental depression ,NURSING home residents ,REPEATED measures design ,T-test (Statistics) ,LONG-term health care ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,LONELINESS ,NURSING care facilities ,THERAPEUTIC touch ,ANALYSIS of variance ,MASSAGE therapy ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: Loneliness, anxiety and depressive symptoms are common among older residents in long‐term care facilities (LTCFs), which can negatively impact their quality of life and increase mortality rates. Addressing these psychological health issues is an important task for nursing staff. There is a need for easy and accessible interventions to improve older residents' negative emotions. Tactile massage (TM) is a form of touch therapy that induces oxytocin, which can help individuals feel relaxed, experience pleasure and reduce anxiety. TM can also provide a sense of security and care for individuals. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of TM in improving older residents' psychological health in LTCFs. Design: In this study, we applied a two‐arm randomised controlled trial research design. Methods: We used convenience sampling to enrol 55 older residents in three long‐term care facilities who were randomly assigned to an intervention group and a comparison group. The intervention group received TM by research assistants on both hands for 15 min per time, twice a week for 4 weeks and the comparison group received regular care. Data were collected before and after the intervention. Generalised estimating equations (GEEs) were used to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention. Results: There were no significant differences in loneliness, anxiety, depressive symptoms, happiness, ear temperature, heart rate or diastolic blood pressure between the two groups after the intervention. However, the intervention group had significant improvements in comfort (B = 0.86, p < 0.001), relaxation (B = 1.00, p < 0.001), respiratory rate (B = −0.16, p = 0.021) and systolic blood pressure (B = − 4.17, p = 0.002) compared to the control group. Conclusions: TM can help older residents who live in LTCFs feel relaxed and comfortable. Implications for Practice: TM can be easily implemented as it requires no tools. We recommend that nursing staff and healthcare professionals incorporate TM as part of their care routines. They also can encourage family members to perform TM on residents during their visits to enhance residents' comfort and relaxation. Reporting Method: The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) checklist was used for this paper. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05052138) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Physical performance is associated with long‐term survival in adults 80 years and older: Results from the ilSIRENTE study.
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Cacciatore, Stefano, Calvani, Riccardo, Marzetti, Emanuele, Picca, Anna, Russo, Andrea, Tosato, Matteo, and Landi, Francesco
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- *
INDEPENDENT living , *T-test (Statistics) , *BODY mass index , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SEX distribution , *OCTOGENARIANS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *SURVEYS , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *LOG-rank test , *GERIATRIC assessment , *BODY movement , *WALKING speed , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATA analysis software , *LONGEVITY , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *INTERLEUKINS - Abstract
The article presents a research paper on the link between physical performance and long-term survival in a cohort of community-dwelling older people from the "Aging and Longevity in the Sirente Geographic Area" study. Topics discussed include the methods used in the study, the definition of long-term survival, and the implications of the study for assessing mortality risk in octogenarians.
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- 2024
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24. Analysing students' concept mapping style and its association with task performance in computer‐based inquiry learning.
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Chen, Juanjuan, Wang, Minhong, Grotzer, Tina A., and Dede, Chris
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COMPUTER simulation , *SCHOOL environment , *CURRICULUM , *TASK performance , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *HEALTH occupations students , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *PROBLEM solving , *ECOSYSTEMS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test , *CHI-squared test , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH , *PROBLEM-based learning , *STATISTICS , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *LEARNING strategies , *COMPARATIVE studies , *STUDENT attitudes , *CONCEPT mapping , *INTER-observer reliability , *NONPARAMETRIC statistics - Abstract
Background: In scientific inquiry learning, students often have difficulties conducting hypothetical reasoning with multiple intertwined variables. Concept maps have a potential to facilitate complex thinking and reasoning. However, there is little investigation into the content of student‐constructed concept maps and its association with inquiry task performance. Objectives: This study explored students' concept mapping style and its association with task performance in computer‐based inquiry learning. Methods: An exploratory study was conducted with 80 Grade 11 students, who collaboratively constructed concept maps in a free style to support inquiry learning with a virtual ecosystem. Student‐constructed concept maps was analysed by firstly identifying different types of propositions formed in the maps and then determining the style of each concept map based on the dominant type of propositions in the map. Finally, the association between the concept map style and inquiry task performance was explored. Results and Conclusions: Two major concept map styles were identified: (1) knowledge‐oriented concept maps (KCMs) mainly representing problem‐related subject knowledge as a set of concepts and their relationships, and (2) problem‐oriented concept maps (PCMs) mainly representing problem situation as a sequence of changes and their causal relationships. Compared with those constructing KCMs, the students constructing PCMs formed higher‐quality propositions in their maps and performed better in hypothesising, reasoning, and drawing conclusions in the inquiry task. Implications: Besides KCMs, students in inquiry learning can be encouraged to construct PCMs to foster effective thinking and reasoning; that is, constructing a concept map to represent the problem situation as a sequence of changes and the causal relationships between the changes. Lay Description: What is currently known about the subject matter: Concept maps (CMs) can facilitate complex thinking and reasoning in inquiry learning.There is little investigation into the content of student‐constructed CMs.It is unknown how CM content might associate with inquiry task performance. What this paper adds: Students constructed two major styles of CMs in computer‐based inquiry learning.The two styles of CMs are problem‐oriented and knowledge‐oriented CMs.Students constructing problem‐oriented CMs performed better in the inquiry task. Implications for practitioners: Analysing student‐constructed CMs helps understand student thinking in inquiry.Students are encouraged to build problem‐oriented CMs in inquiry learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Empowering learners with AI‐generated content for programming learning and computational thinking: The lens of extended effective use theory.
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Shanshan, Shang and Sen, Geng
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GENERATIVE artificial intelligence , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *SELF-efficacy , *PROGRAMMING languages , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CHI-squared test , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *LEARNING strategies , *CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
Background: Artificial intelligence–generated content (AIGC) has stepped into the spotlight with the emergence of ChatGPT, making effective use of AIGC for education a hot topic. Objectives: This study seeks to explore the effectiveness of integrating AIGC into programming learning through debugging. First, the study presents three levels of AIGC integration based on varying levels of abstraction. Then, drawing on extended effective use theory, the study proposes the underlying mechanism of how AIGC integration impacts programming learning performance and computational thinking. Methods: Three debugging interfaces integrated with AIGC by ChatGPT were developed for this study according to three levels of AIGC integration design. The study conducts a between‐subject experiment with one control group and three experimental groups. Analysis of covariance and a structural equation model are employed to examine the effects. Results and Conclusions: The results show that the second and third levels of abstraction in AIGC integration yield better learning performance and computational thinking, but the first level shows no difference compared to traditional debugging. The underlying mechanism suggests that the second and third levels of abstraction promote transparent interaction, which enhances representational fidelity and consequently impacts learning performance and computational thinking, as evidenced in test of the mechanism. Moreover, the study finds that learning fidelity weakens the effect of transparent interaction on representational fidelity. Our research offers valuable theoretical and practical insights. Lay Description: What is currently known about the subject matter?: In the present information era, programming and computational thinking are important.AIGC has attracted remarkable attention from both academics and managers.If it is appropriately utilised, AIGC can facilitate education. What this paper adds: Three forms of AIGC integration based on the level of abstraction, which enhance programming learning and computational thinking.Application of extended effective use theory to propose an underlying mechanism for how AIGC integration affects learning performance and computational thinking.Concrete information on the utilisation of AIGC in the education domain.Evidence that shows the importance of interaction transparency and representational fidelity for leveraging information technologies in education. Implications of the study findings for practitioners: AIGC can be an effective tool for teachers, learners, and institutions.Platform designers and teachers should carefully design AICG integration.Platform designers and teachers could make use of various methods and other forms of AIGC integration to promote interaction transparency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Who benefits and who doesn't in virtual reality learning: An experimental study comparing two types of school.
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Šikl, Radovan, Brücknerová, Karla, Švedová, Hana, Děchtěrenko, Filip, Ugwitz, Pavel, Chmelík, Jiří, Pokorná, Hana, and Juřík, Vojtěch
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- *
INTELLECT , *RESEARCH funding , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *DATA analysis , *T-test (Statistics) , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *STATISTICAL sampling , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *VIRTUAL reality , *MIDDLE school students , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *STATISTICS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *LEARNING strategies , *MAPS , *MIDDLE schools , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
Introduction: Media comparison studies examining the effectiveness of immersive virtual reality in education have yielded inconclusive findings, leaving the question of its impact on learning compared to conventional media unanswered. To address this issue, our study employs a novel approach that combines media comparison with an investigation on the influence of broader educational context. Methods: In the experiment, 262 students from two distinct types of lower secondary schools—comprehensive school and multi‐year gymnasium (a selective academic school)—participated. The students received a lesson on topography and contour line interpretation, using either an immersive virtual environment or a PowerPoint slideshow. A transfer test was carried out before, immediately after, and 1 month after the lesson to measure knowledge application. Results: The impact of the media (immersive virtual reality vs. PowerPoint slideshow) on learning outcomes was found to be minimal, with no clear advantage of one over the other in any experimental condition. In contrast, a significant influence on learning gains was observed due to school type. Multi‐year gymnasium students consistently outperformed comprehensive school students in the pre‐test and demonstrated greater learning gains, regardless of the learning media. Conclusion: The present study employs an innovative approach by integrating a comparative analysis of different media types with an investigation into the impact of learner characteristics. By including students from distinct types of schools, the study provides insights into the differential effects of immersive virtual reality in varied educational contexts. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Media comparison studies typically assess the effectiveness of immersive virtual reality as a learning medium in comparison to other instructional methods in education.The findings of these studies differ markedly.Numerous factors impact learning outcomes in an immersive virtual environment. What this paper adds: Recommendation that research in the field should explore not only if but also when and how IVR learning is effective.Evidence that learning achievements may not be affected by the medium used.Evidence that the type of school can significantly influence learning gains.Evidence that cognitive dispositions, such as spatial abilities, can be another factor that influence learning outcomes. Implications for practice: A technology‐centred approach alone does not allow for a proper evaluation of the learning gain potential of IVR, learner characteristics and broader educational context should also be taken into account.IVR as a learning medium may not be appropriate for all students and every educational setting.To ensure reliable evaluation of learning gains, it is necessary to align the content and format of the intervention in both learning mediums as closely as possible.Measuring learning gains not only immediately after the intervention but also with a significant time delay can contribute to a more comprehensive understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. On regression modeling in varieties research.
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Gries, Stefan Th.
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REGRESSION analysis , *CHI-squared test , *PREDICTION models - Abstract
One particularly prominent methodological development in linguistics is what has been termed the “quantitative turn”: Not only are more and more studies using statistical tools to explore data and to test hypotheses, the complexity of the statistical methods employed is growing as well. This development is particularly prominent in all kinds of corpus‐linguistic studies: 20 years ago chi‐squared tests,
t ‐tests, and Pearson'sr reigned supreme, but now more and more corpus studies are using multivariate exploratory tools and, for hypothesis testing, multifactorial predictive modeling techniques, in particular regression models (and, increasingly, tree‐based methods). However welcome this development is, it, and especially its pace as well as the fact that few places offer rigorous training in statistical methods, comes with its own risks, chief among them that analytical methods are misapplied, which can lead imprecise, incomplete, or wrong analyses. In this paper, I will revisit a recent regression‐analytic study in the research area of English varieties (on clause‐finalalso andonly in three Asian Englishes) to: highlight in particular three fundamental yet frequent mistakes that it exemplifies; discuss why and how each of these mistakes should be addressed; reanalyze the data (as far as is possible with what is available) and show briefly how that affects the analysis's results and interpretation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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28. NIPT for adult‐onset conditions: Australian NIPT users' views.
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Marks, India R., Devolder, Katrien, Bowman‐Smart, Hilary, Johnston, Molly, and Mills, Catherine
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PRENATAL diagnosis , *CHROMOSOME abnormalities , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *BIOETHICS , *QUANTITATIVE research , *CHI-squared test , *RESEARCH methodology , *DATA analysis software , *GENETIC testing - Abstract
Noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT) has become widely available in recent years. While initially used to screen for trisomies 21, 18, and 13, the test has expanded to include a range of other conditions and will likely expand further. This paper addresses the ethical issues that arise from one particularly controversial potential use of NIPT: screening for adult‐onset conditions (AOCs). We report data from our quantitative survey of Australian NIPT users' views on the ethical issues raised by NIPT for AOCs. The survey ascertained support for NIPT for several traits and conditions including AOCs. Participants were then asked about their level of concern around implications of screening for AOCs for the future child and parent(s). Descriptive and comparative data analyses were conducted. In total, 109 respondents were included in data analysis. The majority of respondents expressed support for NIPT screening for preventable (70.9%) and nonpreventable AOCs (80.8%). Most respondents indicated concern around potential harmful impacts associated with NIPT for AOCs, including the psychological impact on the future child and on the parent(s). Despite this, the majority of participants thought that continuation of a pregnancy known to be predisposed to an AOC is ethically acceptable. The implications of these data are critically discussed and used to inform the normative claim that prospective parents should be given access to NIPT for AOCs. The study contributes to a body of research debating the ethical acceptability and regulation of various applications of NIPT as screening panels expand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Jordanian children involvement within family consumption decision‐making during COVID‐19.
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Huneiti, Kholod Saleh
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PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *SOCIAL media , *FOOD consumption , *ELECTRONIC commerce , *SHOPPING , *CONSUMER attitudes , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PARENT-child relationships , *QUANTITATIVE research , *FAMILY relations , *INTERNET , *CHI-squared test , *COMMUNICATION , *DECISION making in children , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PATIENT participation , *CHILD behavior , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The whole of society has been passing through difficult times due to the effects of COVID‐19. Such a lengthy period has greatly impacted lifestyles and living standards. Accordingly, this paper aimed to examine the role of Jordanian children in purchasing decision‐making within the framework of parental mediation during COVID‐19. A quantitative methodology was applied, and a questionnaire targeted 287 children aged 8–12. Findings demonstrated a correlation between the influence of COVID‐19. They changed the purchasing behaviour of children, as their daily habits have changed to increased periods of stay at home, leading to a long preoccupation with watching the Internet/commercials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Urinary tract infections in patients with urinary catheterization receiving home health service: A prevalence study.
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Köse, Mert and Çiftçi, Bahar
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HOME care services ,RISK assessment ,CROSS-sectional method ,FISHER exact test ,URINARY catheterization ,URINARY catheters ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,ECONOMIC status ,RESEARCH methodology ,MARITAL status ,URINALYSIS ,CATHETER-associated urinary tract infections ,URINE collection & preservation ,DATA analysis software ,PERINEAL care ,CONSTIPATION ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
This study aimed to determine the prevalence of urinary tract infections in patients with urinary catheterization receiving home health services and the affecting factors. The population of this descriptive study consisted of patients who had lived in the central districts of Erzurum between February and March 2022, were actively registered to home health services, had a urinary catheter and met the research criteria. The period prevalence method (3 months) was used in the study, and 121 patients constituted the study sample. The study data were collected using a Sociodemographic and Information Form on Urinary Catheter. Before the home visit, patients' relatives were asked to clamp the urinary catheter. After completing the data collection forms, a sufficient amount of urine was taken from the attached urinary catheter, put into the urine and culture cup/tube, and labelled with a barcode. The samples were sent to the laboratory within 15 min at the latest. The medical specialist evaluated the results, and the necessary pharmacological treatment was delivered to the patient. Of the patients with indwelling urinary catheters who received home health services, 94.2% had a urinary tract infection. Moreover, it was determined that there was a statistically significant correlation between the presence of urinary tract infection in patients and the variables of constipation, frequency of perineal cleaning, and the use of toilet paper. It was concluded that the prevalence of urinary tract infections is very high in patients with urinary catheterization receiving home health services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Evolution of advanced practice nursing in acute care in Germany: A cross‐sectional study of nurses' scope of practice.
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von der Lühe, Verena, Roos, Marcelina, Adams, Anne, Scholten, Nadine, Köpke, Sascha, and Dichter, Martin Nikolaus
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NURSES , *CROSS-sectional method , *PATIENT selection , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *EVIDENCE-based nursing , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *MEDICAL quality control , *RESEARCH funding , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *HUMAN research subjects , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *LEADERSHIP , *NURSING , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *NURSING education , *SURVEYS , *ADVANCED practice registered nurses , *NURSING practice , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *CRITICAL care medicine - Abstract
Aim: To describe activities and professional characteristics of nurses in expanded roles in acute care in Germany and achieve a greater understanding of the current situation of advanced practice nursing. Background: Advanced practice nursing plays an important role in meeting increased demands in healthcare and promoting high‐quality care. Introduction: In Germany, advanced practice nursing is still at an early stage with a lack of studies describing the scope of practice of nurses in expanded roles. Methods: We conducted a cross‐sectional‐study using a paper‐and‐pencil questionnaire. In a nationwide convenience sample, we surveyed nurses with an academic degree, who work in an acute care hospital and take over expanded roles in direct patient care. Reporting followed the STROBE checklist. Results: Of 108 eligible nurses, 84 (77%) completed the survey. The majority had a Master's degree (63.1%) and the average work experience was 18.2 years. Participants carried out activities in all the domains that were queried (direct clinical practice, guidance and coaching, consultation, leadership and research) with differences within and between domains. Foci were on direct clinical practice and coaching and guidance. Discussion: In Germany, qualifications are nearing the international standard of advanced practice nursing. Results suggest that participants partly undertake activities within the scope of registered nurses' practice that do not correspond fully to their formal qualifications. Conclusion and implications for nursing and/or health policy: In order to foster the role development of expanded practice nurses in Germany, political efforts are needed in terms of training (e.g. specific Master's programmes), funding of corresponding positions in practice and control mechanisms (e.g. professional registration). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Pre‐class learning analytics in flipped classroom: Focusing on resource management strategy, procrastination and repetitive learning.
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Doo, Min Young and Park, Yeonjeong
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SCHOOL environment , *PERSONNEL management , *UNDERGRADUATES , *EMPIRICAL research , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *VIDEODISC media , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *BEHAVIOR , *CHI-squared test , *SELF-control , *PROCRASTINATION , *SURVEYS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *LEARNING strategies , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Background: Despite the many advantages of flipped learning, it is challenging for educators to ensure that students complete the pre‐class learning assignments before the in‐class session. Objectives: Using a learning analytics approach, this study analysed students' pre‐class video‐watching behaviour in flipped learning with a focus on learners' resource management strategies, procrastination, and repeated video‐watching. Methods: For the empirical study, three types of data (i.e., log data, survey and exam) were obtained from 70 undergraduate students who were enrolled in pre‐service teacher program designed in a flipped classroom including pre‐class videos and in‐class session. Results and conclusions: The findings showed significant differences between the non‐procrastination group and procrastination group in their video watching time and resource management strategies. Those who watched the pre‐class videos at home/dorm greatly outnumbered those who did not, and they performed better than students who watched the pre‐class videos in other locations. What are the major takeaways from the study?: This finding highlights the importance of resource management strategies in terms of the time and study environment to promote success in flipped learning courses. However, the number of times students accessed the pre‐class videos or watched the videos before class was not correlated with learning achievement. The reason for re‐watching pre‐class videos is a suggested future direction so instructors can design effective flipped learning courses. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic?: Flipped learning is a type of blended learning that combines two teaching and learning modes: face‐to‐face learning and online learning. The effectiveness of flipped learning has also been demonstrated in many empirical studies and meta‐analyses.Despite the many advantages of flipped learning, it is challenging to ensure that students complete the pre‐class materials before class.Data‐driven decisions based on the learning analytics approach can help instructors revise the in‐class activities more adoptively and individual learners can be more engaged in flipped learning. What this paper adds?: Using a learning analytics approach, this study analysed students' pre‐class video‐watching behaviour in flipped learning with a focus on learners' resource management strategies, procrastination, and repeated video‐watching.We also examined the correlations among pre‐class video‐watching behaviour variables and learning achievement.This study highlights the following: (1) The no‐procrastination group had better resource management strategies than the procrastination group; (2) students who watched pre‐class videos at home outperformed those who watched them in other locations: (3) the number of times students accessed pre‐class videos was not correlated with learning achievement; and (4) whether or not students watched pre‐class videos prior to the in‐class sessions was not correlated with learning achievement. Implications for practise and/or policy: Although flipped learning gives students considerable autonomy in terms of when and where to watch pre‐class videos at their convenience, it is necessary to help students develop resource management strategies by providing role models, best practises, and statistics in previous flipped learning classes.Research findings suggest that instructors should provide guidelines and learning strategies on how to review or repeat the pre‐class videos to improve the quality of learning.To encourage students to repeat the videos, the pre‐class videos should be short and concise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Reliability of the 2020 School Health Profiles Principal and Lead Health Education Teacher Questionnaires.
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Jones, Sherry Everett, Brener, Nancy D., Queen, Barbara, Hershey‐Arista, Molly, Harris, William, and Underwood, J. Michael
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EXERCISE , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SCHOOL administrators , *DISEASE prevalence , *CHI-squared test , *PHYSICAL education , *TEACHERS , *SCHOOL administration , *STATISTICAL reliability , *STATISTICS , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *SCHOOL health services - Abstract
Background: School Health Profiles assesses school health policies and practices among US secondary schools. Methods: The 2020 School Health Profiles principal and teacher questionnaires were used for a test‐retest reliability study. Cohen's kappa coefficients tested the agreement in dichotomous responses to each questionnaire variable at 2 time points. The aggregate prevalence estimates between time 1 and time 2 were compared for each questionnaire item via overlapping 95% confidence intervals. Chi‐square tests examined whether the prevalence at time 2 differed between paper and web administration for both questionnaires. Results: For the principal (N = 50) and teacher (N = 34) data, there were no significant differences in the prevalence of any items between time 1 and time 2. For the principal survey, the mean kappa for 191 variables was 0.49. For the teacher survey, the mean kappa for 260 variables was 0.65. Overall, 60.7% of principal and 91.1% of teacher questionnaire items had at least "moderate" reliability. Conclusions: School Health Profiles offers education and health agencies a reliable tool to monitor school policies and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Promoting social inclusion for adult communities: The moderating role of leisure constraints on life satisfaction in five European countries.
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Koçak, Funda and Gürbüz, Bülent
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STATISTICAL correlation , *INDEPENDENT living , *SATISFACTION , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL integration , *LEISURE , *STATISTICS , *RESEARCH , *HEALTH promotion , *DATA analysis software , *ADULTS - Abstract
Although leisure constraints that individuals have to cope with can negatively affect their social inclusion and satisfaction with life, little research has addressed the link between these variables. Therefore, the current paper examined the moderator role of leisure constraints on the relationship between satisfaction with life and leisure constraints among adults living in five different European countries. The respondents were 1,382 women and 877 men adults. The findings of analysis revealed that all factors used in the study accounted for 15% of the variance in satisfaction with life and social inclusion had a significant and positive impact on satisfaction with life. As a result, it can be said that leisure constraints had a moderating effect on the relationship between satisfaction with life and social inclusion. The present research study recommends that social inclusion should be encouraged through decreasing to leisure constraints to increase the life satisfaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Quantile Correlation‐Based Sufficient Variable Screening by Controlling False Discovery Rate.
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Qiu, Han, Chen, Jiaqing, and Yuan, Zihao
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FALSE discovery rate , *CHI-squared test - Abstract
Sufficient variable screening (SVS) with the false discovery rate (FDR) controlled rapidly reduces dimensionality with high probability in high dimensional modeling. By using quantiles, this paper proposes a new SVS procedure by controlling the FDR based on two‐stage Pearson's goodness testing with Chi‐square statistics for high dimensional data, abbreviated as QC‐SVS‐FDR. Without any specified distribution of the actual model, the QC‐SVS‐FDR method screens important predictors by a series of testing procedures combined with the adaptive composite of Pearson's chi‐square statistics. The quantile correlation‐based sufficient utility is sensitive to capture the subtle correlations under different quantile levels and is easy to implement with computational efficiency. Asymptotic results and sufficient screening properties of the proposed methods are obtained under mild conditions. Numerical studies including simulation studies and real data analysis demonstrate the advantages of the proposed method in practical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. The impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on speech and language therapy services in Ireland: A mixed‐methods survey at two time points during the pandemic.
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Müller, Nicole, Lyons, Rena, Devlin, Anne Marie, Antonijevic‐Elliott, Stanislava, and Kirkpatrick, Vickie
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CROSS-sectional method , *SPEECH therapists , *SEASONS , *PERSONAL protective equipment , *HEALTH occupations students , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PRIMARY health care , *CONTENT analysis , *JUDGMENT sampling , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TELEMEDICINE , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *NEEDS assessment , *PUBLIC health , *DATA analysis software , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SPEECH therapy , *MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Background: During the COVID‐19 pandemic, Ireland implemented a series of stringent public health measures, including lockdowns and suspension of non‐urgent clinical services. Aims: To investigate the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on the demand for and delivery of speech and language therapy (SLT) services in Ireland in 2020. Methods & Procedures: Two iterations of a cross‐sectional, mixed‐methods online survey were distributed to speech and language therapists (SLTs) and SLT students in Ireland in the spring and autumn of 2020 using a combination of purposive and snowball sampling. The spring survey yielded 407 responses (including 14 from SLT students), while 197 respondents took part in the autumn (13 students). Survey analysis focused on questions related to the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on delivery and demand for SLT services (student responses were excluded from analysis owing to low response rate). The largest group in respect of experience were senior SLTs (58% in both surveys). The work settings most strongly represented were HSE primary care (34.4%) and disability services (26.5%) in the spring, and HSE primary care (39.1%), acute hospitals (22.8%) and disability services (20.8%) in the autumn. We used descriptive statistics, including distribution analysis, to analyse the quantitative data. Free text data were interrogated through a variant of a conventional qualitative content analysis. Outcomes & Results: In the spring, cessation of face‐to‐face services featured prominently (reported by 65.6% versus 14.2% in the autumn), across SLTs' work settings, except acute hospitals. Lower demand was reported by 42.5% in the spring, while in the autumn, 48.7% indicated that demand was higher. SLTs experienced large‐scale redeployment (spring: 45.9%, autumn: 38.4%), with HSE primary care SLTs redeployed most (spring: 71.7%; autumn: 62.3%). The need to suddenly pivot to telehealth was a significant challenge in terms of training, technology and logistics. New ways of working emerged and gradually, telehealth became more embedded. SLTs also had to adapt to working with evolving public health measures, such as space restrictions and personal protective equipment (PPE) requirements. Across the two survey iterations, SLTs reported tensions between demands and capacity: while referrals and demand initially decreased in the spring, this led to increased backlog and longer waiting lists, ongoing and increasing pressure on clinicians and services, and negatively impacted clients and families. Conclusions & Implications: The COVID‐19 pandemic had a significant negative impact on SLT services in Ireland. Going forward, the SLT profession and its services will require sustained support to mitigate long‐term negative consequences, such as increased waiting lists. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: The negative impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on SLT services has been examined in several countries. Ireland imposed more stringent pandemic‐management measures than many other countries, and it was therefore warranted to investigate how SLT services in the country were affected. What this study adds to the existing knowledge: Face‐to‐face SLT services effectively ceased in most non‐urgent contexts in spring 2020. This coincided with large‐scale redeployment of SLTs to non‐SLT contexts. By autumn 2020, demand had increased again, but not all services had recommenced, and redeployment was still a factor. Although SLTs adapted to the ongoing changes imposed by the pandemic, they voiced concern about increasing backlogs and longer waiting lists, ongoing and increasing pressure on both SLTs and services, and negative impacts on clients and families. What are the actual and clinical implications of this work?: The COVID‐19 pandemic had a significant negative impact on SLT services in Ireland. Going forward, the SLT profession and its services will require sustained support to mitigate long‐term negative consequences, such as increased waiting lists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. Correspondence Analysis Using the Cressie–Read Family of Divergence Statistics.
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Beh, Eric J. and Lombardo, Rosaria
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CHI-squared test , *STATISTICS , *SINGULAR value decomposition - Abstract
Summary: The foundations of correspondence analysis rests with Pearson's chi‐squared statistic. More recently, it has been shown that the Freeman–Tukey statistic plays an important role in correspondence analysis and confirmed the advantages of the Hellinger distance that have long been advocated in the literature. Pearson's and the Freeman–Tukey statistics are two of five commonly used special cases of the Cressie–Read family of divergence statistics. Therefore, this paper explores the features of correspondence analysis where its foundations lie with this family and shows that log‐ratio analysis (an approach that has gained increasing attention in the correspondence analysis and compositional data analysis literature) and the method based on the Hellinger distance are special cases of this new framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. Understanding variation in children's reading comprehension: A dynamic approach.
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Gruhn, Sophie, Segers, Eliane, Keuning, Jos, and Verhoeven, Ludo
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READING , *CLINICAL trials , *TEACHING methods , *LEARNING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *CONTROL groups , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *ODDS ratio , *ABILITY , *INTRACLASS correlation , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *VOCABULARY , *DATA analysis software , *TRAINING , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Reading comprehension is an interactive process. Yet, instructional needs are usually identified with isolated componential tests. This study examined whether a dynamic approach, in which componential abilities are measured within the same text and global text comprehension is facilitated via feedback, can help in understanding variation in children's reading comprehension. Objectives: With a pretest‐posttest control group design, componential abilities before and after feedback were related to growth in global text comprehension within the same text. Methods: At pretest, third to fifth graders read 30 short texts, each followed by one global text comprehension question. This was repeated at posttest, but additional questions were asked with feedback prior to each global text comprehension question. The vocabulary group received two vocabulary questions with feedback (n = 97). The vocabulary plus integration group received two vocabulary questions and one sentence‐integration question with feedback (n = 98). The control group (n = 98) only answered the global text comprehension questions. Results and Conclusion: Participants in the experimental conditions who needed feedback (i.e., lower‐skilled) experienced a decrease in global text comprehension, whereas this was not found for the control group and participants in the experimental groups who did not need feedback (i.e., higher‐skilled). There was also less decrease among those lower‐skilled participants who had profited from the feedback. Implications: It is concluded from explorative analyses that not feedback but the overall design caused the decrease. Conceptually, the dynamic approach is worth further research. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Reading comprehension is a complex interaction of several componential abilities at word level, sentence level, and text level (e.g., vocabulary and sentence‐integration).Instruction should adapt to the profile of strengths and weaknesses in componential abilities.Assessing componential abilities with isolated tests does not align with the interactive processes in reading comprehension.Measuring learning ability can help to identify children with low responsiveness to instruction. What this paper adds: Reading comprehension is profiled by asking questions on vocabulary, sentence‐integration, and global text comprehension for the same text in third to fifth graders (8–11 years olds).Feedback is provided after a mistake in a vocabulary and sentence‐integration question, and the feedback effect on global text comprehension is measured with a pretest‐posttest design.Children who receive feedback decrease in global text comprehension but children with higher skills in componential abilities decrease less.Explorative analyses and previous research indicate that the assessment design had a negative impact on performance, for example, via cognitive load, attention, self‐esteem, and motivation. Implications for practice and/or policy: Global text comprehension cannot always be facilitated by providing feedback on vocabulary and sentence‐integration within the same text.The design of the assessment and its influence on performance should be carefully considered by instructional designers, educators, and researchers, especially in case of young learners.It remains unclear from this study if facilitating global text comprehension via feedback with a dynamic approach is useful to understand variation in children's reading comprehension.The dynamic approach with a proper design may potentially still provide a useful insight in individual differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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39. Understanding English‐as‐a‐foreign‐language university teachers' synchronous online teaching satisfaction: A Chinese perspective.
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Sun, Peijian Paul and Luo, Xinran
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SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SELF-efficacy , *WORK environment , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICAL sampling , *TEACHING methods , *SOCIAL norms , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *QUANTITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *CONFIDENCE , *CHI-squared test , *ENGLISH as a foreign language , *JOB satisfaction , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *ONLINE education , *SOCIAL support , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: In a context where synchronous online teaching has become a new trend of instruction for online education due to the COVID‐19 pandemic, it is valuable and insightful to examine what factors contribute to teachers' satisfaction with synchronous online teaching. Objective: Informed by the technology acceptance model (TAM), this study investigated English‐as‐a‐foreign‐language (EFL) university teachers' synchronous online teaching satisfaction in China from social (i.e., subjective norms), institutional (i.e., facilitating conditions), and individual (i.e., self‐efficacy, attitudes toward use, perceived usefulness, and perceived ease of use) levels during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Methods: A total of 250 in‐service EFL university teachers participated in this study. An online questionnaire was adaptively developed to measure teachers' perceptions of and satisfaction with synchronous online teaching. The structural equation modelling (i.e., path analyses) was performed to find out a model that can best represent EFL university teachers' synchronous online teaching satisfaction. Results and Conclusion: The results showed that facilitating conditions, self‐efficacy, attitudes toward use, and perceived usefulness are direct contributors to EFL university teachers' satisfaction with synchronous online teaching. Whereas, perceived ease of use, self‐efficacy, and subjective norms are indirect contributors through the mediation of attitudes toward use. Moreover, different from previous TAM research, facilitating conditions have been found to be the most significant direct factor positively contributing to satisfaction. The findings of this study are expected to shed light on how to enhance teachers' synchronous online teaching satisfaction. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: The technology acceptance model (TAM) has been frequently adopted to examine teachers' acceptance of technology in various contexts over the last two decades.The TAM model identifies three key factors that contribute to people's intention of technology use: perceived usefulness, perceived ease of, and attitudes toward technology use.Although the TAM model has been extensively examined in various technology‐supported teaching contexts, there has been a lack of focus on livestream technology‐supported synchronous online teaching. What the paper adds: EFL university teachers' synchronous online teaching satisfaction during the COVID‐19 in China.Teachers' satisfaction with synchronous online teaching is a joint interplay of individual (i.e., self‐efficacy, attitudes toward use, perceived usefulness, and perceived ease of use), institutional (i.e., facilitating conditions), and social (i.e., subjective norms) factors.Facilitating conditions, self‐efficacy, attitudes toward use, and perceived usefulness are direct contributors, while perceived ease of use, self‐efficacy, and subjective norms are indirect contributors to teachers' synchronous online teaching satisfaction through the mediation of attitudes toward use.Different from previous TAM research, facilitating conditions have been found to be the most significant direct factor positively contributing to satisfaction. Implications for practice and/or policy: This study offers a diagnostic measure for schools and universities to understand the status quo of their teachers' perceptions of and satisfaction with synchronous online teaching.Universities are advised to provide teachers with readily accessible support and training to enhance their self‐efficacy for synchronous online teaching so that their satisfaction with synchronous online teaching can be strengthened. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Digital re‐attributional feedback in high school mathematics education and its effect on motivation and achievement.
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Whalen, Katharina Alexandra, Renkl, Alexander, Eitel, Alexander, and Glogger‐Frey, Inga
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SCHOOL environment , *MATHEMATICS , *SELF-efficacy , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *CLINICAL trials , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ATTENTION , *ACADEMIC achievement , *FIELD research , *INTRACLASS correlation , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *LEARNING strategies , *FACTOR analysis , *DATA analysis software , *SELF-perception - Abstract
Background: Students often show unfavourable attribution: they attribute poor school performance to stable factors such as lack of ability and good school performance to variable factors such as effort. However, attribution can be influenced by individualized digital re‐attributional feedback leading to positive motivational effects and higher learning outcomes. This is very promising, but it still is unclear, whether this digital re‐attributional feedback can also be successfully integrated in everyday classroom activities. Objectives: The present field experiment investigated how integrating digital re‐attributional feedback into classroom instruction affects student attribution, motivation and learning outcomes. Methods: In the experiment, 8th–10th grade high school students (N = 322) worked with a digital mathematics learning program which was integrated in a three‐week teaching unit. Half the students in each classroom received only standard feedback after each practice task (SF group); the other half received additionally an individual re‐attributional feedback (RF group) after every third task. Attribution, mathematics self‐concept, and self‐efficacy were measured by an online questionnaire twice a week; learning outcomes in mathematics were measured weekly. Results and Conclusion: Hierarchical analyses showed that re‐attributional feedback led to a more favourable attribution in case of success on stable factors. Especially low‐performing students benefited from this feedback. No effects on attribution in case of failure, self‐efficacy or learning outcomes could be found. Further research could investigate if certain adaptations to the digital re‐attributional feedback is more effective in a real classroom setting and has a broader impact on different students. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Working with computers in the classroom and at home is becoming more common.Re‐attributional feedback can increase student's motivation when given directly after solving a task and at a high density.Digital re‐attributive feedback can be given in a high density.Re‐attributional training sessions have been shown to be effective in individual training sessions or outside the students' classroom. What this paper adds: The study took place within a real teaching environment during mathematics class for 4 weeks.Digital re‐attributional feedback sessions were directly integrated into the students' online learning which was part of the teaching plan. The implications of study findings for practitioners: Computer‐based re‐attributional training show some limited effects in regular classroom instruction and could be well integrated in student online learning—when adapted accordingly.Low‐performing students show less favourable attribution than better‐performing students in case of success and benefit the most from re‐attributional training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. Outcomes of adverse childhood experience during late adolescence: Evidence from college and community samples.
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Almaradheef, Rana and Alhalal, Eman
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MEDICAL care use ,CROSS-sectional method ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,ADOLESCENT health ,HEALTH status indicators ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,COMMUNITIES ,PATH analysis (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,DATA analysis software ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,WELL-being ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Scant studies have investigated adverse childhood experience (ACE) outcomes and mastery during adolescence in different cultural contexts. This cross‐sectional study examines the impact of ACEs on subjective well‐being, health complaints, and healthcare utilization during late adolescence, including the mediating role of the sense of mastery in the Saudi context. Adolescents (N = 396) aged 17–21 years were recruited via convenience sampling from colleges and local communities from two regions in Saudi Arabia. Data were collected using a paper‐pencil anonymous survey and analyzed using path analysis. Of the sample, 85.5% experienced at least one ACE. ACEs had a direct effect on subjective well‐being (p = 0.034), health complaints (p < 0.001), healthcare utilization (p < 0.001), and sense of mastery (p < 0.001). Sense of mastery had an effect on subjective well‐being (p < 0.001) and health complaints (p < 0.001), but not on healthcare utilization (p = 0.436). Sense of mastery partially mediated the relationship between ACEs and subjective well‐being (p = 0.034) and health complaints (p < 0.001), but not healthcare utilization (p = 0.438). ACEs have detrimental effects on adolescent health. Attention should be paid to primary prevention and early detection to avoid further harm, and interventions that address the role of the sense of mastery should be developed for adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. Exploring neuropsychological underpinnings of poor communication after traumatic brain injury: The role of apathy, disinhibition and social cognition.
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Filipčíková, Michaela, Quang, Halle, Cassel, Anneli, Darke, Lilly, Wilson, Emily, Wearne, Travis, Rosenberg, Hannah, and McDonald, Skye
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EMPATHY , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *EMOTION regulation , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *T-test (Statistics) , *STATISTICAL hypothesis testing , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ALEXITHYMIA , *SOCIAL perception , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EMOTIONS , *CHI-squared test , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *COMMUNICATIVE disorders , *COMMUNICATION , *SOCIAL skills , *FRONTAL lobe , *CASE-control method , *STATISTICAL reliability , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *BRAIN injuries , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *APATHY , *MENTAL depression , *COGNITION , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Dysarthria, aphasia and executive processes have been examined for their role in producing impaired communicative competence post traumatic brain injury (TBI). Less understood is the role of emotional dysregulation, that is, apathy and disinhibition, and social cognition, that is, reading and interpreting social cues. Methods & Procedures: In this study, we examined 49 adults with moderate to severe TBI and 18 neurologically healthy adults. We hypothesised that apathy and disinhibition would predict communication outcomes as would social cognition. We also predicted that apathy and disinhibition would influence social cognition. Communication outcomes were measured by the La Trobe Communication Questionnaire (LCQ) and the Social Skills Questionnaire‐TBI (SSQ‐TBI). Apathy and disinhibition were measured by the Frontal Systems Behavior Scale (FrSBe). We measured four aspects of social cognition: emotion perception and theory of mind using The Awareness of Social Inference Test (TASIT) and the Complex Audio‐Visual Evaluation of Affect Test (CAVEAT), empathy using the Questionnaire of Cognitive and Affective Empathy (QCAE) and the Balanced Emotional Empathy Scale (BEES), and alexithymia using the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS‐20) and the Bermond–Vorst Alexithymia Questionnaire. Outcomes & Results: Consistent with predictions, the LCQ and SSQ‐TBI were associated with disinhibition and the LCQ was also associated with apathy. The LCQ was associated with the full range of social cognition constructs although the SSQ‐TBI was not. Finally, apathy and disinhibition predicted a number of social cognition measures. Conclusions and Implications: These results are discussed in relation to understanding the nature of communication disorders following TBI and how they are measured, as well as the interrelation between emotion dysregulation and social cognition. What this study adds: What is already known on this subject: The role of emotional dysregulation and social cognition in producing impaired communicative competence post traumatic brain injury (TBI) is not well understood. Although most adults with severe TBI have minimal or possibly no language impairment, they often struggle with functional communication in everyday situations. Many have been reported to be overtalkative, insensitive, childish and self‐centred, displaying an inappropriate level of self‐disclosure and making tangential and irrelevant comments. Conversely, some speakers with TBI have been noted to have impoverished communication, producing little language either spontaneously or in response to the speaker's questions and prompts. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: We found that both apathy and disinhibition were strongly associated with the Latrobe Communication Questionnaire both empirically and conceptually, despite the LCQ being developed from a different, pragmatic orientation. Disinhibition was also associated with the Social Skills Questionnaire for TBI. We also found that poor social cognition scores predicted communication difficulties. Finally, we found that behavioural dysregulation itself, i.e., both apathy and disinhibition, predicted poor social cognition. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Our findings highlight the central role that apathy and disinhibition play in both communication and social cognition. These insights point to the importance of remediation to target behavioural and autonomic dysregulation as a means to improve everyday social function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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43. Online exams in higher education: Exploring distance learning students' acceptance and satisfaction.
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Aristeidou, Maria, Cross, Simon, Rossade, Klaus‐Dieter, Wood, Carlton, Rees, Terri, and Paci, Patrizia
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ONLINE education , *NATIONAL competency-based educational tests , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *COMPUTER assisted testing (Education) , *RESEARCH methodology , *SATISFACTION , *INTERVIEWING , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *T-test (Statistics) , *STUDENTS , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *FACTOR analysis , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STUDENT attitudes , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *THEMATIC analysis , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Background: Research into online exams in higher education has grown significantly, especially as they became common practice during the COVID‐19 pandemic. However, previous studies focused on understanding individual factors that relate to students' dispositions towards online exams in 'traditional' universities. Moreover, there is little knowledge on university distance learning students' experience of transitioning from in‐person to online exams. Objectives: This study investigates the acceptance and satisfaction of university distance learning students in their transitioning from in‐person to online exams, through multiple factors. Methods: We employed a mixed‐methods study to understand the relationship between assessment and online exam factors (e.g., revision and online exam satisfaction, assessment competencies, invigilation acceptance, exam anxiety and workspace satisfaction). Cluster analysis and interview data contributed to our understanding of students who are 'strongly positive' and 'less positive' towards online exams. Results and Conclusions: Our findings highlight the overall importance of increasing student confidence by building their assessment competencies throughout their studies and familiarising them early with the technologies and formats to be used in the actual exam. We also shed light on particular student characteristics that relate to reduced online exam acceptance, such as students with disabilities, caring responsibilities and mental health issues, or students who lack access to the necessary technology. Implications: The findings and recommendations of this research contribute to the wider agenda of designing fair and trustworthy online assessment, including exams, for the future. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic?: Studies focusing on students' perceptions of online exams have increased.The COVID‐19 pandemic has increased online exams at universities.Research show that students appreciate online exams.The factors that contribute to students' positive dispositions are not clear. What this paper adds?: A mixed‐methods study on online exams in distance learning higher education.Factors that determine students' positive dispositions towards online exams.Student characteristics that relate to reduced online exam acceptance. Implications for practice: Guidelines for designing online exam systems positively perceived by students.Online exams to be an integral part of teaching and learning design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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44. Understanding the effect of video conferencing learning environments on students' engagement: The role of basic psychological needs.
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Shi, Yafei, Cheng, Qi, Wei, Yantao, Tong, Mingwen, and Yao, Huang
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SCHOOL environment , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *TEACHING methods , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *VIDEOCONFERENCING , *SATISFACTION , *JOB involvement , *LEARNING strategies , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *STUDENTS , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *RESEARCH funding , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *NEED (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY of school children , *STUDENT attitudes , *EMOTIONS , *ALTERNATIVE education ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: Video conferencing learning offers a more accessible and flexible learning mode for students who cannot attend face‐to‐face class in person. However, research about the video conferencing learning is still lacked, especially for students' engagement in this setting. Objectives: This study adopts the self‐system model of motivational development to uncover effects of the video conferencing learning environment (VCLE) to students' engagement. Methods: Two hundred and ninety‐eight primary school students involved in the VCLE were surveyed. The partial least square structural equation modelling was employed to explore the link between the VCLE and students' engagement with a mediating role of basic psychological needs satisfaction (BPNS). Results and Conclusions: Results showed that the BPNS played a mediating role in the processes from the VCLE to engagement. Both pedagogical and social affordance had a significant effect on the BPNS. However, their influences were different. Specifically, pedagogical affordance yielded a stronger effect on the BPNS for autonomy than social affordance. The predicting power of social affordance on BPNS for relatedness and competence was stronger than pedagogical affordance. Generally, social affordance yielded more contributions to behavioral and emotional engagement than pedagogical affordance. Moreover, BPNS for competence was the only significant mediator between the VCLE and behavioral engagement, and it owned the strongest mediating power on the relationship between the VCLE and emotional engagement, followed by autonomy, and the smallest of relatedness. This study suggests that practitioners and researchers should give more consideration to improve social affordance of the VCLE and to meet students' BPNS especially for competence in order to design and implement an engaged video conferencing course. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Video conferencing learning provides an accessible and flexible learning mode.Mechanism from learning environment to engagement is helpful to design an engaged video conferencing course.Less is known about how video conferencing learning affects students' engagement. What the paper adds: This study uncovered the functioning process of video conferencing learning to students' engagement.PLS‐SEM was employed to verify the mediating role of BPNS in this process.BPNS for autonomy, competence, and relatedness played mediating roles and their powers were different. Implications for practice and/or policy: More attention is needed to improve to social affordance to enhance students' emotional engagement.BPNS especially for competence deserves special consideration to improve students' behavioral and emotional engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. Targeting fraction misconceptions and reducing high confidence errors in an online tutor.
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Barbieri, Christina Areizaga and Devlin, Brianna L.
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MEMORY , *SCHOOL environment , *CONFIDENCE , *PROBLEM solving , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *MIDDLE school students , *MATHEMATICS , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *ACADEMIC achievement , *HUMAN error , *INTELLECT , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *STATISTICAL sampling , *HIGH school students - Abstract
Background: Providing students with worked out problem solutions is a beneficial instructional technique in STEM disciplines, and studying examples that have been worked out incorrectly may be especially helpful for reducing misconceptions in students with low prior content knowledge. However, past results are inconclusive and the effects of incorrect worked examples alone or in combination with correct examples remains unclear. Objectives: We aim to address whether studying incorrect examples alone or in combination with correct examples can support the reduction of students' fraction misconceptions, operationalized as errors made with high confidence. Methods: After incorrectly solving a sampling problem, 130 students in 4th through 11th grade in the U.S. were randomly assigned to a condition in an online problem set focused on fraction equivalence. Students studied either single‐type worked examples (i.e., correct or incorrect; n = 49) or combination‐type worked examples (correct and incorrect; n = 41) or engaged in a problem‐solving control (n = 50). Results: Studying a combination of correct and incorrect worked examples was as effective as the problem‐solving control with feedback at improving fraction equivalence knowledge and reducing the rate of high‐confidence errors. Students in both the combination condition and the problem‐solving with feedback condition outperformed those who studied either correct or incorrect worked examples alone. Conclusions: Results support the inclusion of a combination of correct and incorrect worked examples when teaching students with low prior content knowledge. Studying a combination of example types within an online tutor helps to reduce misconceptions about fractions, a topic students commonly struggle with. A problem‐solving task with corrective feedback worked equally well. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Studying worked examples of mathematical solutions improves student learning.Incorrect examples, either alone or in combination with correct examples, are particularly effective for improving learning for students with low prior knowledge in the target content.Comparing correct and incorrect examples is also effective at improving problem‐solving but this effect may be specific to those with high prior knowledge.Still unknown are the impacts of these different combinations of examples on misconceptions in particular. What this paper adds: We show that studying a combination of correct and incorrect examples reduces math misconceptions.Problem‐solving with corrective feedback within an online tutor also has this effect. Implications for practice and/or policy: Using a combination of example types will help reduce students' misconceptions about fractions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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46. Learning from screencast software tutorials: A comparison of cognitive load in dual and single‐monitor learning environments.
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Kueker, Doug and Moore, Joi
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SCHOOL environment , *COMPUTER software , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *MEMORY , *COLLEGE students , *RELATIVE medical risk , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *ANALYSIS of variance , *USER interfaces , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *TIME , *TASK performance , *INTERVIEWING , *REFLEXES , *LEARNING strategies , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *CONTINUING education , *EYE movement measurements , *ATTENTION , *CHI-squared test , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COGNITIVE testing , *STATISTICAL sampling , *ALTERNATIVE education , *SCHOOL orientation - Abstract
Background: Learning to use software using screencast videos with worked examples in the corresponding practice files presents a classic split‐attention problem that requires learners to mentally integrate information from the video with a target application. While there is evidence that splitting attention either temporally or spatially adversely impacts learning, it is unclear if there is a meaningful difference in the load imposed by splitting attention in different ways. Furthermore, while much is known about effective screencast design, little is known about how learning environment features, such as the monitor configuration, influence learning from this form of instruction. Objective: An experiment was conducted with 42 novice learners to compare the effects of two common monitor configurations that divided attention differently on three physiological measures of cognitive load. Methods: Effects due to the monitor setup were assessed using a 2 × 2 study design that controlled for task order and working memory capacity. In one condition, subjects split attention temporally by toggling back and forth between the video and target application on one monitor. In contrast, the other condition required subjects to split attention spatially by shifting their gaze between the video and target application displayed on two side‐by‐side monitors. Results and Conclusions: Results indicated that cognitive load as measured through task‐evoked pupil response was significantly higher, p < 0.05, for groups with two monitors during both instruction and testing, even after controlling for working memory capacity. Lay Description: What is currently known about the subject matter: Splitting attention between information sources negatively impacts learningInstructional media that splits attention temporally or spatially increases cognitive loadEnvironmental factors such as monitor configuration also contribute to cognitive loadPrior research suggests integrating the mutually referring information sources What the paper adds: Compares cognitive load in two monitor configurations designed to split attention differently – temporally and spatiallyCognitive load increased when attention was split spatially across two monitors during an encoding phaseCognitive load also increased when attention was split spatially across two monitors during a retrieval phaseWorking memory capacity did not explain variances in cognitive load Implications for practice: To reduce cognitive load, learners should consider working on one monitor while engaging with screencast software tutorials and the related practice filesFocus on studying worked examples in the video before attempting to replicate them in the practice filesWhen designing instructional videos, structure opportunities to practice closest to the point where they are taught in the video to avoid added cognitive load [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. Leveraging performance and feedback‐seeking indicators from a digital learning platform for early prediction of students' learning outcomes.
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Ober, Teresa M., Cheng, Ying, Carter, Matthew F., and Liu, Cheng
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ONLINE education , *STATISTICS , *RELATIVE medical risk , *RACE , *ACADEMIC achievement , *LEARNING strategies , *SEX distribution , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *STUDENT attitudes , *DATA analysis , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PARENTS , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Background: Students' tendencies to seek feedback are associated with improved learning. Yet, how soon this association becomes robust enough to make predictions about learning is not fully understood. Such knowledge has strong implications for early identification of students at‐risk for underachievement via digital learning platforms. Objectives: We sought to understand how early in the academic year students' end‐of‐year learning outcomes could be predicted by their performance and feedback‐seeking behaviours within a digital learning platform. We analysed data collected at different time points in the academic year and across different cohorts of students within the context of high school advanced placement (AP) Statistics courses. Methods: High school students enrolled in AP Statistics spanning three academic years between 2017 and 2020 (N = 726; Mage = 16.72 years) completed 3 or 4 homework assignments, each 2 and 3 months apart. Results and conclusions: Across the three cohorts, and even as early as the first assignment, a model consisting of demographic variables (gender, race/ethnicity, parental education), assignment performance, and interaction with the digital score report explained significant variation in students' final course grades (R2 = 0.314–0.412) and AP exam scores (κ = 0.583–0.689). Students' assignment performance was positively associated with end‐of‐year learning outcomes. Students who more frequently checked their digital score reports tended to receive better learning outcomes, though not consistently across cohorts. Implications: These findings further an understanding of how students' early performance and feedback‐seeking behaviours within a digital learning platform predict end‐of‐year learning outcomes. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Students' early academic performance predicts end‐of‐year success.Students' self‐regulated learning behaviours are another predictor of academic success.Clickstream data have been used as an indicator of the application of self‐regulated learning strategies, particularly behaviours associated with seeking feedback.Indicators of feedback‐seeking behaviours reflected via clickstream data have been shown to predict student learning.Yet, how soon associations between early performance and such indicators of self‐regulated learning as feedback‐seeking are robust across different groups of learners, different learning circumstances, and different types of learning outcomes has yet to be more fully understood. What this paper adds: We investigated whether performance and feedback‐seeking behaviours predict end‐of‐year learning outcomes at different points during the academic year across multiple cohorts of learners (2017–2018, 2018–2019, and 2019–2020) and using two different learning outcomes (class grades, AP exam scores).One cohort was affected by COVID‐19 during the 2019–2020 academic year, allowing us to examine whether differences emerge amidst unprecedented circumstances.We used assignment scores and online feedback‐seeking to predict end‐of‐year learning outcomes.Assignment scores were positively associated with end‐of‐year grades.First assignment performance predicted AP exam scores.Use of feedback (an indication of self‐regulated learning behaviours) tended to predict learning outcomes, though not consistently across cohorts. Implications for practice and/or policy: The findings from this study could improve understanding of how digital learning platform measurements predict end‐of‐year learning outcomes though also highlight the importance of context differences.Such findings hold implications for early identification of at‐risk students and appreciation for differences between learners and contexts.These findings also contribute to a growing understanding of the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on student engagement and learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. AI literacy curriculum and its relation to children's perceptions of robots and attitudes towards engineering and science: An intervention study in early childhood education.
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Su, Jiahong and Yang, Weipeng
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PARENT attitudes , *PILOT projects , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *RESEARCH methodology , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *INTERVIEWING , *CURRICULUM , *ROBOTICS , *ENGINEERING , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *PRESCHOOLS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *INTELLECT , *CHI-squared test , *STUDENT attitudes , *DATA analysis software , *COMPUTER literacy , *SCIENCE , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: The number of artificial intelligence (AI) literacy studies in K‐12 education has recently increased, with most research focusing on primary and secondary education contexts. Little research focuses on AI literacy programs in early childhood education. Objectives: The aim of this mixed‐methods study is to examine the feasibility of an AI literacy program called "AI4KG" and explore how it might affect kindergarteners' perceptions of robots and attitudes towards engineering and science. Methods: A total of 26 child–parent dyads recruited from a Hong Kong kindergarten were involved in this study, consisting of 26 children (Mage = 4 years, SD = 0.28) and their parents. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected through surveys and interviews designed to explore children's perceptions of robots and attitudes towards engineering and science, and parents' perceptions of the AI4KG intervention. Results: It is found that children have increased their perceptions of robots after the AI literacy program, but the AI4KG curriculum had no significant effects on kindergarten children's engineering and science attitudes. Most parents (22 out of 26) agreed that their children's AI knowledge, AI skills, and AI attitudes have been enhanced after learning through the AI4KG curriculum. Conclusions: This study suggests that the AI4KG curriculum is potentially effective in promoting early AI literacy and favourable attitudes towards the technology, but further research is needed to develop age‐appropriate measures and assess its long‐term impact on children's education and career paths. Lay Description: What is currently known about this topic?: AI literacy is becoming important as AI transforms society, but few studies have explored AI literacy in early childhood education.Prior research found AI activities can positively influence older children's views of robots and engineering. What does this paper add?: It evaluates an 8‐week AI literacy curriculum called AI4KG for kindergarteners in Hong Kong.The curriculum used tools like Teachable Machine and taught concepts through play and storytelling.It improved children's perceptions of robots but did not significantly impact engineering/science attitudes.Parents perceived improvements in children's AI knowledge, skills, and attitudes after the curriculum. Implications for practice/policy: The curriculum provides an example for developing age‐appropriate AI literacy activities.More rigorous research on impacts over time is needed, but results suggest potential benefits of AI literacy in early childhood.Policymakers could consider incorporating AI literacy into kindergarten curricula to prepare children for the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Gender moderates the association between posttraumatic stress disorder and mutual intimate partner violence in an emergency department sample.
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Caetano, Raul, Cunradi, Carol, Ponicki, William R., and Alter, Harrison J.
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ADVERSE childhood experiences ,STATISTICAL significance ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,IMPULSIVE personality ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,INTIMATE partner violence ,SEX distribution ,RISK assessment ,MENTAL depression ,ALCOHOL drinking ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,METROPOLITAN areas ,ODDS ratio ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Introduction: Patients in emergency departments (EDs) constitute a diverse population with multiple health‐related risk factors, many of which are associated with intimate partner violence (IPV). This paper examines the interaction effect of depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), impulsivity, drug use, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), at‐risk drinking, and having a hazardous drinker partner with gender on mutual physical IPV in an urban ED sample. Methods: Research assistants surveyed 1037 married, cohabiting, or partnered patients in face‐to‐face interviews (87% response rate) regarding IPV exposure, alcohol and drug use, psychological distress, ACEs, and other sociodemographic features. IPV was measured with the Revised Conflict Tactics Scale. Interaction effects were examined in multinomial and logistic models. Results: Results showed a significant interaction of gender and PTSD (odds ratio [OR] 3.06, 95% CI 1.21–7.23, p < 0.05) for mutual IPV. Regarding main effects, there were also statistically significant positive associations between mutual physical IPV and at‐risk drinking (OR 1.73, 95% CI 1.07–2.77, p < 0.05), having a hazardous drinker partner (OR 2.19, 95% CI 1.35–3.55, p < 0.01), illicit drug use (OR 2.09, 95% CI 1.18–3.71, p < 0.01), ACEs (OR 1.23, 95% CI 1.06–1.42, p < 0.01), days of cannabis use past in the 12 months (OR 1.003, 95% CI 1.002–1.005, p < 0.001), and impulsivity (OR 2.04, 95% CI 1.29–3.22, p < 0.01). Conclusions: IPV risk assessment in EDs will be more effective if implemented with attention to patients' gender and the presence of various and diverse other risk factors, especially PTSD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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50. Effectiveness of extracorporeal shockwave therapy in treatment of upper and lower limb tendinopathies: A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
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Elgendy, Mohamed H., Khalil, Shehab ElDin, ElMeligie, Mohamed M., and Elazab, Doaa Rafat
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TENDINOPATHY , *ONLINE information services , *MEDICAL databases , *META-analysis , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PHYSICAL therapy , *TIME , *FUNCTIONAL status , *ARM , *LEG , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ULTRASONIC therapy , *MEDLINE , *DATA analysis software , *PAIN management , *EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Tendinopathy is caused by repetitive motion, excessive stress on the tendon, overstretch, and motion past the critical angle of rotation or translation. There are various treatment options available for tendinitis, including those affecting both the upper and lower limbs and those of calcific and non‐calcific types. Hypothesis/purpose: Few reviews have analyzed the efficacy of Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy (ESWT) in treating upper and lower limb tendinopathies while considering calcific and non‐calcific‐type tendinitis. This paper provides a review and meta‐analysis on Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs), which compared results from a group undergoing ESWT treatment to another group under different treatments. Study design: Systematic review and meta‐analysis. Methods: A systematic search was conducted on PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, the Cochrane Central Register of Control Trials (CENTRAL), and Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) databases for articles published up to January 2022. The reference lists of identified articles were further scanned. Twenty‐two studies were included in the meta‐analysis. Results: Meta‐analysis showed no difference in pain reduction in ESWT when compared with a comparison group at 4 (p = 0.26) and 12 weeks (p = 0.33). There were no differences in DASH scores at 12 months between the two groups (p = 0.32). Conclusion: Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy (ESWT) is effective when used to treat lower limb and calcific tendinitis. It does not yield any better results than other treatment options in managing upper limb tendinopathies and non‐calcific tendinopathies. Key points: What is known about the subjectThere are various treatment options available for tendinitis, including those affecting both the upper and lower limbs and those of calcific and non‐calcific types. The most common are extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT), wait and see policy, laser therapy, ultrasound, surgical decompression, Platelet‐ Rich Plasma (PRP) injections, mucopolysaccharide supplements, autologous blood injection, paratendinous dry needling, ibuprofen tablets, intense pulsed therapy, and radiofrequency microdebridement. What this study adds to existing knowledgeThis review concluded that ESWT is better to be used to treat lower limb and calcific tendinitis. It does not yield any better results than other treatment options in the treatment of upper limb tendinopathies and non‐calcific tendinopathies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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