7,718 results
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152. "We are never taught anything about the elderly." Establishing the gap in elderly health care competencies in nursing education in Uganda.
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Nawagi, Faith, Mukisa, John, Najjuma, Josephine Nambi, and Nabirye, Rose C.
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FOCUS groups ,NURSING ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,INTERVIEWING ,CURRICULUM ,ATTITUDES toward aging ,NURSING education ,QUALITATIVE research ,CLINICAL competence ,GERIATRIC nursing ,RESEARCH funding ,NURSING students ,DATA analysis software ,JUDGMENT sampling ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,STUDENT attitudes ,ELDER care ,HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
Background: Nurses contribute the largest portion of Uganda's health workforce providing care to individuals of all ages and communities. However, despite the growing number of the elderly population in Uganda with improved life expectancy, there is hardly any study that has looked at the elderly health care competencies in the nursing training programs at various levels. This paper provides an overview of the gaps in elderly health care competencies in nursing education in Uganda. Methods: We conducted a descriptive qualitative cross-sectional study that involved document review, Key Informant Interviews (KIIs) with nursing leaders, and Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) with faculty at all levels of nursing training and nurses in practice. Data was analyzed using latent and manifest content analysis with Open Code software 4.03. Common categories were identified and incorporated into a matrix to create themes. Results: Almost all the curricula and minimum standards for training nurses at certificate, diploma, and degree levels lack a module and nursing competencies on elderly nursing care. This is aggravated by a lack of faculty trained in elderly health care skills, and a lack of specialized wards for nursing elderly care clinical training among others. Conclusions: There is hardly any elderly health care training module and elderly nursing competencies at all levels of nursing training in Uganda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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153. Spatially resolved transcriptomics provide a new method for cancer research.
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Zheng, Bowen and Fang, Lin
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CANCER research ,TUMOR microenvironment ,RESEARCH methodology ,TRANSCRIPTOMES - Abstract
A major feature of cancer is the heterogeneity, both intratumoral and intertumoral. Traditional single-cell techniques have given us a comprehensive understanding of the biological characteristics of individual tumor cells, but the lack of spatial context of the transcriptome has limited the study of cell-to-cell interaction patterns and hindered further exploration of tumor heterogeneity. In recent years, the advent of spatially resolved transcriptomics (SRT) technology has made possible the multidimensional analysis of the tumor microenvironment in the context of intact tissues. Different SRT methods are applicable to different working ranges due to different working principles. In this paper, we review the advantages and disadvantages of various current SRT methods and the overall idea of applying these techniques to oncology studies, hoping to help researchers find breakthroughs. Finally, we discussed the future direction of SRT technology, and deeper investigation into the complex mechanisms of tumor development from different perspectives through multi-omics fusion, paving the way for precisely targeted tumor therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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154. 'Getting involved in research': a co-created, co-delivered and co-analysed course for those with lived experience of health and social care services.
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Blair, Carolyn, Best, Paul, Burns, Patricia, Campbell, Anne, Davidson, Gavin, Duffy, Joe, Johnston, Anne, Kelly, Berni, Killick, Campbell, Dermott, Denise Mac, Maddock, Alan, McCartan, Claire Jane, McFadden, Paula, McGlade, Anne, Montgomery, Lorna, Patton, Sonia, Schubotz, Dirk, Taylor, Brian, Templeton, Fiona, and Webb, Paul
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MEDICAL care ,MIXED methods research ,NONPROFIT sector ,VIRTUAL communities ,RESEARCH methodology ,EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
Background: 'Getting Involved in Research' was co-created and delivered by a multi-organisational group to provide an accessible introduction to research for those with lived experience of health and social care services. Method: The evaluation of participants' perceptions adopted an exploratory mixed method research design and aimed to gather data to provide an in-depth understanding of the participants' experience of 'Getting Involved in Research' through the co-researchers' analysis of qualitative data using Participatory Theme Elicitation (PTE). PTE was used with the qualitative data to promote co-analysis by the course development group; analyses from an independent academic was also used to further validate the method of PTE. Results: Thirty-five participants in total participated in 'Getting Involved in Research'. Age ranges varied from 19 to 73 years old. Participants were predominately female (n = 24), five males participated (n = 5) and there was one participant who identified as non-binary (n = 1). Six core themes were identified using the PTE approach: (1) A Meaningful Participatory Approach (2) Increasing the Confidence of Participants (3) Interactive Online Format (4) An Ambient Learning Environment (5) A Desire for Future Courses (6) A Balance of Course Content and Discussion. Participants in 'Getting Involved in Research' reported that the content of the training was applicable, relevant, fostered awareness of research methods and anticipated that it would support their involvement in research. Conclusion: 'Getting Involved in Research' has contributed innovatively to the evidence base for how to engage with and motivate those who have experience of health and social care to become actively involved in research. This study demonstrates that 'Getting Involved in Research' may be helpful to train those with lived experience and their care partners however, further research following up on the application of the course learning would be required to ascertain effectiveness. Future directions: Future research should explore methods to apply research skills in practice to further develop participants' confidence in using the skills gained through 'Getting Involved in Research'. Plain English summary: The aim of this study was to gather information to help us understand the experience of participants' undertaking a research course called 'Getting Involved in Research'. A group of individuals including those with lived experience of health and social care services, academics, community and voluntary sector workers and a representative from the Department of Health in Northern Ireland worked together to develop a course to encourage and support people to engage with research. The 'Getting Involved in Research', course was designed to provide an understandable introduction to research for those people with lived experience of health and social care. We did this because research in health and social care sector should involve the patients and public who it is intended to help. The evaluation of the course had two distinct phases; we asked course participants to complete a survey before and after the course (pre- and post-course survey) and also asked them to complete a journal reflecting on their experiences after each lecture. This paper gives an overview of the profile of course participants and their responses to the survey questions. The survey answers were analysed using an approach to analysing information which encourages involvement from people with a range of experience of research methods, (known as Participatory Theme Elicitation). Thirty-five participants in total participated in 'Getting Involved in Research'. Age ranges varied from 19 to 73 years old. Participants were predominately female (n = 24), five males participated (n = 5) and there was one participant who identified as non-binary (n = 1). Participants in 'Getting Involved in Research' reported that the content of the course was relevant, encouraged awareness of research methods and encourage their future involvement in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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155. Inpatient generalist palliative care during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic – experiences, challenges and potential solutions from the perspective of health care workers.
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Schallenburger, Manuela, Reuters, Marie Christine, Schwartz, Jacqueline, Fischer, Marius, Roch, Carmen, Werner, Liane, Bausewein, Claudia, Simon, Steffen T., van Oorschot, Birgitt, and Neukirchen, Martin
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FOCUS groups ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,CRITICALLY ill ,TERMINALLY ill ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENTS ,INTERVIEWING ,HYGIENE ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL isolation ,AT-risk people ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONTENT analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,ODDS ratio ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has presented major challenges to the health system. Despite high acute case numbers, patients without Covid-19 still need to be cared for. Due to the severity of the disease and a possible stressful overall situation, patients with palliative care needs also require comprehensive care during pandemic times. In addition to specialized palliative care facilities, this also takes place in non palliative care wards. In order to ensure this general palliative care also in pandemic times, the experience of the staff should be used. The aim of this paper is to examine challenges and possible solutions for general palliative care inpatients in relation to the care of seriously ill and dying patients and their relatives. Methods: Qualitative semi-structured focus groups were conducted online for the study. Participants were staff from intensive care or isolation wards or from units where vulnerable patients (e.g. with cognitive impairment) are cared for. The focus groups were recorded and subsequently transcribed. The data material was analysed with the content structuring content analysis according to Kuckartz. Results: Five focus groups with four to eight health care professionals with various backgrounds were conducted. Fifteen main categories with two to eight subcategories were identified. Based on frequency and the importance expressed by the focus groups, six categories were extracted as central aspects: visiting regulations, communication with relatives, hygiene measures, cooperation, determination of the patients will and the possibility to say good bye. Conclusion: The pandemic situation produced several challenges needing specific solutions in order to manage the care of seriously ill and dying patients. Especially visiting needs regulation to prevent social isolation and dying alone. Finding alternative communication ways as well as interprofessional and interdisciplinary cooperation is a precondition for individualised care of seriously ill and dying patients and their relatives. Measures preventing infections should be transparently communicated in hospitals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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156. An analysis of the gender and social determinants of health in urban poor areas of the most populated cities of Pakistan.
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Ahmed, Khawaja Aftab, Grundy, John, Hashmat, Lubna, Ahmed, Imran, Farrukh, Saadia, Bersonda, Dexter, Shah, Muhammad Akram, Yunus, Soofia, and Banskota, Hari Krishna
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SOCIAL determinants of health ,IMMUNIZATION ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,QUANTITATIVE research ,POVERTY areas ,SEX distribution ,QUALITATIVE research ,SURVEYS ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Background: Recent surveys, studies and reviews in urban areas of Pakistan have highlighted the impacts of social inequities on access of women and children to health services for women and children in Pakistan. Objectives: The Urban Slum Profiles and coverage surveys were conducted between 2017 and 2019. The objective of the profiles was to obtain an updated listing of slums and other underserved areas, and to better understand current vaccination and health service coverage in these areas. Utilising findings from these studies, this paper aims to better understand the gender and social determinants of health that are giving rise to health inequalities in the slums. Methods: The Urban Slum Profiles adopted a mixed methods approach combining both qualitative and quantitative methods. The study was comprised of two main survey approaches of Urban Slum Profiles and Immunisation Coverage Survey in 4431 urban poor areas of the 10 most highly populated cities of Pakistan. Results: Findings are classified into six analytic categories of (1) access to health services, (2) female workforce participation, (3) gender-friendly health services, (4) access to schools and literacy, (5) social connections, and (6) autonomy of decision making. Out of a national sample of 14,531 children in urban poor areas of 10 cities, the studies found that just over half of the children are fully immunised (54%) and 14% of children had received zero doses of vaccine. There are large shortages of health facilities and female health workforce in the slums, with significant gaps in the quality of health infrastructure, which all serve to limit both demand for, and supply of, health services for women and children. Results demonstrate low availability of schools, low levels of female literacy and autonomy over decision making, limited knowledge of the benefits of vaccination, and few social connections outside the home. All these factors interact and reinforce existing gender norms and low levels of health literacy and service access. Conclusion: The Urban Slum profiles and coverage studies provide an opportunity to introduce gender transformative strategies that include expansion of a female health workforce, development of costed urban health action plans, and an enabling policy environment to support community organisation and more equitable health service delivery access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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157. A social innovation model for equitable access to quality health services for rural populations: a case from Sumapaz, a rural district of Bogota, Colombia.
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Bautista-Gómez, Martha Milena and van Niekerk, Lindi
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MEDICAL quality control ,EVALUATION of medical care ,COMMUNITY services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PATIENT participation ,MIDDLE-income countries ,RURAL conditions ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,HUMAN services programs ,QUALITATIVE research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HOLISTIC medicine ,THEORY ,LOW-income countries ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,PATIENT care ,RURAL population ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Background: Despite efforts to extend Universal Health Coverage in Colombia, rural and remote populations still face significant challenges in accessing equitable health services. Social innovation has been growing in Colombia as a creative response to the country's social problems including access to healthcare. This paper presents the findings of a social innovation case study, which was implemented in the rural area of Sumapaz in Colombia, with the purpose of holistically addressing the health needs of the local population and enhancing health service access. Methods: A case study methodology was used to investigate and understand the process by which the Model of Integral Health Care for Rural Areas was developed and how the various strategies were defined and implemented. Qualitative methods were used in the data collection and all data was analysed using Farmer et al. staged framework on grassroots social innovation which includes growing the idea; implementing the idea; sustainability and diffusion. Results: The social innovation model was designed as a co-learning process based on community participation. The model was implemented adopting a holistic health approach and considerate of the conditions of a rural context. As a result of this process, access to quality health services were enhanced for the vulnerable rural community. The model has also provided outcomes that transcend health and contribute to individual and community development in different areas eg. agriculture. Conclusion: The Model of Integral Health Care for Rural Areas is a social innovation in health that demonstrates how Universal Health Coverage can be achieved for vulnerable populations through a series of creative strategies which fill systemic voids in access and co-ordination of care, as well as in addresings upstream environmental factors responsible for ill-health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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158. Breastfeeding-friendly policies and programs in three public Universities in Ghana.
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Gbagbo, Fred Yao and Nkrumah, Jacqueline
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HEALTH policy ,RESEARCH ,MOTHERS ,SOCIAL support ,BREASTFEEDING promotion ,RESEARCH methodology ,SELF-efficacy ,HUMAN services programs ,EMPLOYEES ,BREASTFEEDING ,PUBLIC sector ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,STATISTICAL sampling ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Background: The United Nations through its Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) 3 and 5 has championed Women empowerment for exclusive breastfeeding through various action plans and expected the concept to be decentralized through locally mandatory implementation of various institutional policies and programs in member Countries. Using Kabeer's empowerment concept, the authors in this paper assessed availability and implementation of breastfeeding policies and programs in three public universities in Ghana. Methods: The study design was an exploratory-descriptive-case study involving university employees and student mothers from three public universities in Ghana. The universities were selected via simple random approach whilst selection of participants was purposive. Data were collected between April and July 2018 using an unstructured interview guide developed by the authors, audio recordings, field notes and desktop review of documents. Manual thematic analysis of data was done to present results descriptively. The University of Cape-Coast Ethics Review Board approved the study. Results: Thirty-six respondents participated in the study. Three main themes (Breastfeeding policy and programs, Institutional support, and views on Breastfeeding/Childcare support) emerged. Despite being gender/child friendly, none of the universities in this study has a formal breastfeeding/childcare policy/program and there are no immediate policy plans for on-campus facilities to enhance breastfeeding. Financial cost emerged as a major challenge hindering the universities from implementing a policy/program in this regard. On the part of student mothers, lack of legal protection, lack of breastfeeding-friendly university policies, inadequate availability of breastfeeding facilities, and insufficient awareness of the importance of breastfeeding among nursing mothers has been a major setback for breastfeeding on campus, hence nursing mothers continue to make personal but challenging arrangements for breastfeeding on university campuses. Conclusions: The study findings reflect negative implications for childcare as it affects optimal child nutrition, hence impacting on achieving the SDGs 3 and 5 in Ghana. The authors recommend introducing formal breastfeeding-friendly policies/programs as one of the criteria for accreditation of universities in Ghana to enhance optimal childcare and sound maternal mind for studies and/or work once there is an assurance of child safety and proximity to breastfeed on demand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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159. Using a modified nominal group technique to develop complex interventions for a randomised controlled trial in children with symptomatic pes planus.
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Backhouse, Michael R., Parker, Daniel J., Morison, Stewart C., Anderson, Jenny, Cockayne, Sarah, and Adamson, Joy A.
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FLATFOOT ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,ARM exercises ,FOOT orthoses ,MEDICAL personnel ,CHILD care ,STRETCH (Physiology) ,HEALTH education ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding ,EXERCISE therapy ,ORTHOPEDIC apparatus - Abstract
Background: Children with symptomatic flat feet (pes planus) frequently present for care but there remains uncertainty about how best to manage their condition. There is considerable variation in practice between and within professions. We intend to conduct a three-arm trial to evaluate three frequently used interventions for pes planus (exercise and advice, exercise and advice plus prefabricated orthoses, and exercise and advice plus custom made orthoses). Each of these interventions are complex and required developing prior to starting the trial. This paper focusses on the development process undertaken to develop the interventions.Methods: We used a modified Nominal Group Technique combining an electronic survey with two face-to-face meetings to achieve consensus on the final logic model and menu of options for each intervention. Using the Nominal Group Technique across consecutive meetings in combination with a questionnaire is novel, and enabled us to develop complex interventions that reflect contemporary clinical practice.Results: In total 16 healthcare professionals took part in the consensus. These consisted of 11 podiatrists, two orthotists, two physiotherapists, and one orthopaedic surgeon. Both meetings endorsed the logic model with amendments to reflect the wider psychosocial impact of pes planus and its treatment, as well as the increasing use of shared decision making in practice. Short lists of options were agreed for prefabricated and custom made orthoses, structures to target in stretching and strengthening exercises, and elements of health education and advice.Conclusions: Our novel modification of the nominal group technique produced a coherent logic model and shortlist of options for each of the interventions that explicitly enable adaptability. We formed a consensus on the range of what is permissible within each intervention so that their integrity is kept intact and they can be adapted and pragmatically applied. The process of combining survey data with face-to-face meetings has ensured the interventions mirror contemporary practice and may provide a template for other trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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160. Building social accountability to improve reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health in Nigeria.
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Robinson, Rachel Sullivan and Adams, Tariah
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PATIENT participation ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITATIVE research ,CHILD health services ,CASE studies ,SOCIAL responsibility ,REPRODUCTIVE health - Abstract
Background: Like many places in Nigeria, Niger, a predominantly rural and poor state in the north of the country, has high fertility, low contraceptive prevalence, and high maternal mortality. This paper presents a descriptive, contextualized case study of a social accountability campaign run by the nongovernmental organization White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria to strategically mobilize collective action to demand quality maternal health care and improve government responsiveness to those demands. We treat maternal health as a component of reproductive health, while recognizing it as a less contested area. Methods: Data come from more than 40 interviews with relevant actors in Niger State in 2017 and 2018 during the initial phase of the campaign, and follow-up interviews with White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria staff in 2019 and 2021. Other data include White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria's monthly reports. We analyzed these data both deductively and inductively using qualitative techniques. Results: During its first phase, the campaign used advocacy techniques to convince the previously reticent state government to engage with citizens, and worked to amplify citizen voice by hosting community dialogues and town halls, training a cadre of citizen journalists, and shoring up ward health development committees. Many of these efforts were unsustainable, however, so during the campaign's second phase, White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria worked to solidify state commitment to durable accountability structures intended to survive beyond the campaign's involvement. Key challenges have included a nontransparent state budget release process and the continued need for significant support from White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria. Conclusion: These findings reveal the significant time and resource inputs associated with implementing a strategic social accountability campaign, important compromises around the terminology used to describe "accountability," and the constraints on government responsiveness posed by unrealistic budgeting procedures. The campaign's contributions towards increased social accountability for maternal health should, however, also benefit accountability for reproductive health, as informed and empowered woman are better prepared to demand health services in any sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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161. Predictors of mortality in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Owusuaa, Catherine, Dijkland, Simone A., Nieboer, Daan, van der Rijt, Carin C. D., and van der Heide, Agnes
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CHRONIC obstructive pulmonary disease ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,PROGNOSTIC models ,PATIENT readmissions ,OXYGEN therapy ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease treatment ,RESEARCH ,META-analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PROGNOSIS ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL care ,RESEARCH funding ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background: Better insight in patients' prognosis can help physicians to timely initiate advance care planning (ACP) discussions with patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We aimed to identify predictors of mortality.Methods: We systematically searched databases Embase, PubMed, MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Cochrane Central in April 2020. Papers reporting on predictors or prognostic models for mortality at 3 months and up to 24 months were assessed on risk-of-bias. We performed a meta-analysis with a fixed or random-effects model, and evaluated the discriminative ability of multivariable prognostic models.Results: We included 42 studies (49-418,251 patients); 18 studies were included in the meta-analysis. Significant predictors of mortality within 3-24 months in the random-effects model were: previous hospitalization for acute exacerbation (hazard ratio [HR] 1.97; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.32-2.95), hospital readmission within 30 days (HR 5.01; 95% CI 2.16-11.63), cardiovascular comorbidity (HR 1.89; 95% CI 1.25-2.87), age (HR 1.48; 95% CI 1.38-1.59), male sex (HR 1.68; 95% CI 1.38-1.59), and long-term oxygen therapy (HR 1.74; 95% CI 1.10-2.73). Nineteen previously developed multicomponent prognostic models, as examined in 11 studies, mostly had moderate discriminate ability.Conclusion: Identified predictors of mortality may aid physicians in selecting COPD patients who may benefit from ACP. However, better discriminative ability of prognostic models or development of a new prognostic model is needed for further large-scale implementation.Registration: PROSPERO (CRD42016038494), https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/ . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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162. Food, home and health: the meanings of food amongst Bengali Women in London.
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Jennings, Hannah Maria, Thompson, Janice L., Merrell, Joy, Bogin, Barry, and Heinrich, Michael
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DAUGHTERS ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,FOCUS groups ,FOOD ,HEALTH ,HEALTH promotion ,HORTICULTURE ,HOUSING ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MOTHERS ,PLANTS ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,WOMEN ,ETHNOLOGY research ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background This paper explores the nature of food and plants and their meanings in a British Bengali urban context. It focuses on the nature of plants and food in terms of their role in home making, transnational connections, generational and concepts of health. Methods An ethnographic approach to the research was taken, specific methods included participant observation, focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews. Thirty women of Bengali origin were mostly composed of "mother" and "daughter" pairs. The mothers were over 45 years old and had migrated from Bangladesh as adults and their grown-up daughters grew up in the UK. Results Food and plants play an important role in the construction of home "here" (London) while continuing to connect people to home "there" (Sylhet). This role, however, changes and is redefined across generations. Looking at perceptions of "healthy" and "unhealthy" food, particularly in the context of Bengali food, multiple views of what constitutes "healthy" food exist. However, there appeared to be little two-way dialogue about this concept between the research participants and health professionals. This seems to be based on "cultural" and power differences that need to be addressed for a meaningful dialogue to occur. Conclusion In summary, this paper argues that while food is critical to the familial spaces of home (both locally and globally), it is defined by a complex interplay of actors and wider meanings as illustrated by concepts of health and what constitutes Bengali food. Therefore, we call for greater dialogue between health professionals and those they interact with, to allow for an enhanced appreciation of the dynamic nature of food and plants and the diverse perceptions of the role that they play in promoting health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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163. Barriers to the conduct of randomised clinical trials within all disease areas.
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Djurisic, Snezana, Rath, Ana, Gaber, Sabrina, Garattini, Silvio, Bertele, Vittorio, Ngwabyt, Sandra-Nadia, Hivert, Virginie, Neugebauer, Edmund A. M., Laville, Martine, Hiesmayr, Michael, Demotes-Mainard, Jacques, Kubiak, Christine, Jakobsen, Janus C., and Gluud, Christian
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RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CLINICAL medicine research ,MEDICAL research ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,RESEARCH & economics ,RESEARCH laws ,CLINICAL trial laws ,SYMPTOMS ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CLINICAL trials ,COOPERATIVENESS ,DIET therapy ,ENDOWMENT of research ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,HEALTH attitudes ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL ethics ,MEDICAL personnel ,PRIVACY ,RESEARCH ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,EQUIPMENT & supplies ,RESEARCH personnel ,ECONOMICS ,THERAPEUTICS ,MEDICAL laws - Abstract
Background: Randomised clinical trials are key to advancing medical knowledge and to enhancing patient care, but major barriers to their conduct exist. The present paper presents some of these barriers.Methods: We performed systematic literature searches and internal European Clinical Research Infrastructure Network (ECRIN) communications during face-to-face meetings and telephone conferences from 2013 to 2017 within the context of the ECRIN Integrating Activity (ECRIN-IA) project.Results: The following barriers to randomised clinical trials were identified: inadequate knowledge of clinical research and trial methodology; lack of funding; excessive monitoring; restrictive privacy law and lack of transparency; complex regulatory requirements; and inadequate infrastructures. There is a need for more pragmatic randomised clinical trials conducted with low risks of systematic and random errors, and multinational cooperation is essential.Conclusions: The present paper presents major barriers to randomised clinical trials. It also underlines the value of using a pan-European-distributed infrastructure to help investigators overcome barriers for multi-country trials in any disease area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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164. It's all about the money? A qualitative study of healthcare worker motivation in urban China.
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Ross Millar, Yaru Chen, Meng Wang, Liang Fang, Jun Liu, Zhidong Xuan, and Guohong Li
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MEDICAL personnel ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH facility employees ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,CASE studies ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,TRUST ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,WAGES ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: China's healthcare reform programme continues to receive much attention. Central to these discussions has been how the various financial incentives underpinning reform efforts are negatively impacting on the healthcare workforce. Research continues to document these trends, however, qualitative analysis of how these incentives impact on the motivation of healthcare workers remains underdeveloped. Furthermore, the application of motivational theories to make sense of healthcare worker experiences has yet to be undertaken. Methods: The purpose of our paper is to present a comparative case study account of healthcare worker motivation across urban China. It draws on semi structured interviews (n = 89) with a range of staff and organisations across three provinces. In doing so, the paper analyses how healthcare worker motivation is influenced by a variety of financial incentives; how motivation is influenced by the opportunities for career development; and how motivation is influenced by the day to day pressures of meeting patient expectations. Results: The experience of healthcare workers in China highlights how a reliance on financial incentives has challenged their ability to maintain the values and ethos of public service. Our findings suggest greater attention needs to be paid to the motivating factors of improved income and career development. Further work is also needed to nurture and develop the motivation of healthcare workers through the building of trust between fellow workers, patients, and the public. Conclusions: Through the analysis of healthcare worker motivation, our paper presents a number of ways China can improve its current healthcare reform efforts. It draws on the experience of other countries in calling for policy makers to support alternative approaches to healthcare reform that build on multiple channels of motivation to support healthcare workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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165. MYPLAN -mobile phone application to manage crisis of persons at risk of suicide: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Andreasson, Kate, Krogh, Jesper, Bech, Per, Frandsen, Hanne, Buus, Niels, Stanley, Barbara, Kerkhof, Ad, Nordentoft, Merete, and Erlangsen, Annette
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SUICIDE prevention ,SUICIDAL ideation ,CLINICAL trials ,SUPPORTIVE psychotherapy ,SUICIDAL behavior ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH protocols ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,RELATIVE medical risk ,MOBILE apps - Abstract
Background: Persons with a past episode of self-harm or severe suicidal ideation are at elevated risk of self-harm as well as dying by suicide. It is well established that suicidal ideation fluctuates over time. Previous studies have shown that a personal safety plan can assist in providing support, when a person experiences suicide ideation, and help seeking professional assistance if needed. The aim of the trial is to determine whether a newly developed safety mobile app is more effective in reducing suicide ideation and other symptoms, compared to a safety plan on paper.Methods/design: The trial is designed as a two-arm, observer-blinded, parallel-group randomized clinical superiority trial, where participants will either receive: (1) Experimental intervention: the safety plan provided as the app MyPlan, or (2) Treatment as Usual: the safety plan in the original paper format. Based on a power calculation, a total of 546 participants, 273 in each arm will be included. They will be recruited from Danish Suicide Prevention Clinics. Both groups will receive standard psychosocial therapeutic care, up to 8-10 sessions of supportive psychotherapy. Primary outcome will be reduction in suicide ideation after 12 months. Follow-up interviews will be conducted at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after date of inclusion.Discussion: A safety plan is a mandatory part of the treatment in the Suicide Prevention Clinics in Demark. There are no studies investigating the effectiveness of a safety plan app compared to a safety plan on paper on reducing suicide ideation in patients with suicide ideation and suicidal behavior. The trial will gain new knowledge of whether modern technology can augment the effects of traditional personalized safety planning.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02877316 . Registered on 19 August 2016. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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166. Dimensions of sustainability for a health communication intervention in African American churches: a multi-methods study.
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Scheirer, Mary Ann, Santos, Sherie Lou Z., Tagai, Erin K., Bowie, Janice, Slade, Jimmie, Carter, Roxanne, and Holt, Cheryl L.
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HEALTH promotion ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,MEDICAL communication ,SUSTAINABILITY ,AFRICAN American churches ,TUMOR diagnosis ,COMMUNITY health workers ,BLACK people ,COMMUNICATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PRAYER ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,TEACHING ,TUMORS ,EVALUATION research ,EARLY detection of cancer ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Background: Sustainability of evidence-based health promotion interventions has received increased research attention in recent years. This paper reports sustainability data from Project HEAL (Health through Early Awareness and Learning) a cancer communication implementation trial about early detection, based in African American churches. In this paper, we used a framework by Scheirer and Dearing (Am J Publ Health 101:2059-2067, 2011) to evaluate multiple dimensions of sustainability from Project HEAL.Methods: We examined the following dimensions of sustainability: (a) continued benefits for intervention recipients, (b) continuation of intervention activities, c) maintaining community partnerships, (d) changes in organizational policies or structures, (e) sustained attention to the underlying issues, (f) diffusion to additional sites, or even (g) unplanned consequences of the intervention. Project HEAL provided a three-workshop cancer educational series delivered by trained lay peer community health advisors (CHAs) in their churches. Multiple sources of sustainability were collected at 12 and 24 months after the intervention that reflect several levels of analysis: participant surveys; interviews with CHAs; records from the project's management database; and open-ended comments from CHAs, staff, and community partners.Results: Outcomes differ for each dimension of sustainability. For continued benefit, 39 and 37% of the initial 375 church members attended the 12- and 24-month follow-up workshops, respectively. Most participants reported sharing the information from Project HEAL with family or friends (92% at 12 months; 87% at 24 months). For continuation of intervention activities, some CHAs reported that the churches held at least one additional cancer educational workshop (33% at 12 months; 24% at 24 months), but many more CHAs reported subsequent health activities in their churches (71% at 12 months; 52% at 24 months). No church replicated the original series of three workshops. Additional data confirm the maintenance of community partnerships, some changes in church health policies, and continued attention to health issues by churches and CHAs.Conclusions: The multiple dimensions of sustainability require different data sources and levels of analysis and show varied sustainability outcomes in this project. The findings reinforce the dynamic nature of evidence-based health interventions in community contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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167. Characteristics and knowledge synthesis approach for 456 network meta-analyses: a scoping review.
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Zarin, Wasifa, Veroniki, Areti Angeliki, Nincic, Vera, Vafaei, Afshin, Reynen, Emily, Motiwala, Sanober S., Antony, Jesmin, Sullivan, Shannon M., Rios, Patricia, Daly, Caitlin, Ewusie, Joycelyne, Petropoulou, Maria, Nikolakopoulou, Adriani, Chaimani, Anna, Salanti, Georgia, Straus, Sharon E., and Tricco, Andrea C.
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META-analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,CONTENT analysis ,REPORT writing ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RESEARCH bias - Abstract
Background: Network meta-analysis (NMA) has become a popular method to compare more than two treatments. This scoping review aimed to explore the characteristics and methodological quality of knowledge synthesis approaches underlying the NMA process. We also aimed to assess the statistical methods applied using the Analysis subdomain of the ISPOR checklist.Methods: Comprehensive literature searches were conducted in MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews from inception until April 14, 2015. References of relevant reviews were scanned. Eligible studies compared at least four different interventions from randomised controlled trials with an appropriate NMA approach. Two reviewers independently performed study selection and data abstraction of included articles. All discrepancies between reviewers were resolved by a third reviewer. Data analysis involved quantitative (frequencies) and qualitative (content analysis) methods. Quality was evaluated using the AMSTAR tool for the conduct of knowledge synthesis and the ISPOR tool for statistical analysis.Results: After screening 3538 citations and 877 full-text papers, 456 NMAs were included. These were published between 1997 and 2015, with 95% published after 2006. Most were conducted in Europe (51%) or North America (31%), and approximately one-third reported public sources of funding. Overall, 84% searched two or more electronic databases, 62% searched for grey literature, 58% performed duplicate study selection and data abstraction (independently), and 62% assessed risk of bias. Seventy-eight (17%) NMAs relied on previously conducted systematic reviews to obtain studies for inclusion in their NMA. Based on the AMSTAR tool, almost half of the NMAs incorporated quality appraisal results to formulate conclusions, 36% assessed publication bias, and 16% reported the source of funding. Based on the ISPOR tool, half of the NMAs did not report if an assessment for consistency was conducted or whether they accounted for inconsistency when present. Only 13% reported heterogeneity assumptions for the random-effects model.Conclusions: The knowledge synthesis methods and analytical process for NMAs are poorly reported and need improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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168. "...they think we are conversing, so we don't care about them..." Examining the causes of workplace violence against nurses in Ghana.
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Mensah Boafo, Isaac
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INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOLOGY of nurses ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SURVEYS ,VIOLENCE in the workplace ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background: This study is part of a larger project aimed at exploring the workplace experiences of nurses working in public general hospitals in Ghana. The current paper explores the causes of workplace violence against nurses in Ghana. Methods: Twenty-four semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with professional nurses working in five regions of Ghana. They were selected through purposive and participant-to-participant snowball sampling techniques. Data was analysed through thematic analyses. Results: The findings of the study suggest that nurses are not (always) passive recipients of violence. Workplace violence can be instigated by either of the parties to the nurse-patient/relative interaction. Nurses' accounts of the causes of violence suggest that violence could be instrumental or reactive. The study further suggests that the causes of violence may differ depending on which party instigated the violence. The main causes of violence identified include ineffective communication, long waiting times and perceived unresponsiveness, and enforcement of visiting hours. Conclusion: It is concluded that workplace violence could be reduced through the provision of adequate information to patients and their relatives. Nurses could also be trained in effective communication and interpersonal skills; and on how to identify and avoid potentially violent situations. It is also imperative that policies and measures aimed at addressing workplace violence are instituted to address the problem. Mass education may also be carried out to sensitise the general public on the adverse effects of violence against nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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169. Reviewing the research methods literature: principles and strategies illustrated by a systematic overview of sampling in qualitative research.
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Gentles, Stephen J., Charles, Cathy, Nicholas, David B., Ploeg, Jenny, and McKibbon, K. Ann
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RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITATIVE research ,META-analysis - Abstract
Background: Overviews of methods are potentially useful means to increase clarity and enhance collective understanding of specific methods topics that may be characterized by ambiguity, inconsistency, or a lack of comprehensiveness. This type of review represents a distinct literature synthesis method, although to date, its methodology remains relatively undeveloped despite several aspects that demand unique review procedures. The purpose of this paper is to initiate discussion about what a rigorous systematic approach to reviews of methods, referred to here as systematic methods overviews, might look like by providing tentative suggestions for approaching specific challenges likely to be encountered. The guidance offered here was derived from experience conducting a systematic methods overview on the topic of sampling in qualitative research. Results: The guidance is organized into several principles that highlight specific objectives for this type of review given the common challenges that must be overcome to achieve them. Optional strategies for achieving each principle are also proposed, along with discussion of how they were successfully implemented in the overview on sampling. We describe seven paired principles and strategies that address the following aspects: delimiting the initial set of publications to consider, searching beyond standard bibliographic databases, searching without the availability of relevant metadata, selecting publications on purposeful conceptual grounds, defining concepts and other information to abstract iteratively, accounting for inconsistent terminology used to describe specific methods topics, and generating rigorous verifiable analytic interpretations. Since a broad aim in systematic methods overviews is to describe and interpret the relevant literature in qualitative terms, we suggest that iterative decision making at various stages of the review process, and a rigorous qualitative approach to analysis are necessary features of this review type. Conclusions: We believe that the principles and strategies provided here will be useful to anyone choosing to undertake a systematic methods overview. This paper represents an initial effort to promote high quality critical evaluations of the literature regarding problematic methods topics, which have the potential to promote clearer, shared understandings, and accelerate advances in research methods. Further work is warranted to develop more definitive guidance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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170. Rethinking walkability and developing a conceptual definition of active living environments to guide research and practice.
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Tobin, Melissa, Hajna, Samantha, Orychock, Kassia, Ross, Nancy, DeVries, Megan, Villeneuve, Paul J., Frank, Lawrence D., McCormack, Gavin R., Wasfi, Rania, Steinmetz-Wood, Madeleine, Gilliland, Jason, Booth, Gillian L., Winters, Meghan, Kestens, Yan, Manaugh, Kevin, Rainham, Daniel, Gauvin, Lise, Widener, Michael J., Muhajarine, Nazeem, and Luan, Hui
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WALKABILITY ,SOCIAL context ,HEALTH ,PHYSICAL activity ,BUILT environment ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,ECOLOGY ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EXERCISE ,WALKING ,RESIDENTIAL patterns - Abstract
Background: Walkability is a popular term used to describe aspects of the built and social environment that have important population-level impacts on physical activity, energy balance, and health. Although the term is widely used by researchers, practitioners, and the general public, and multiple operational definitions and walkability measurement tools exist, there are is no agreed-upon conceptual definition of walkability.Method: To address this gap, researchers from Memorial University of Newfoundland hosted "The Future of Walkability Measures Workshop" in association with researchers from the Canadian Urban Environmental Health Research Consortium (CANUE) in November 2017. During the workshop, trainees, researchers, and practitioners worked together in small groups to iteratively develop and reach consensus about a conceptual definition and name for walkability. The objective of this paper was to discuss and propose a conceptual definition of walkability and related concepts.Results: In discussions during the workshop, it became clear that the term walkability leads to a narrow conception of the environmental features associated with health as it inherently focuses on walking. As a result, we suggest that the term Active Living Environments, as has been previously proposed in the literature, are more appropriate. We define Active Living Environments (ALEs) as the emergent natural, built, and social properties of neighbourhoods that promote physical activity and health and allow for equitable access to health-enhancing resources.Conclusions: We believe that this broader conceptualization allows for a more comprehensive understanding of how built, natural, and social environments can contribute to improved health for all members of the population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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171. Influence of education on sexual and reproductive health service utilization for persons with disabilities in nationwide Bangladesh: an explanatory sequential mixed-methods study.
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Du, Katherine Coral, Mohosin, Arifa Bente, Amin, Amina, and Hasan, Md Tanvir
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FAMILY planning ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care use ,ETHNOLOGY research ,SEX education ,CASE studies ,CHI-squared test ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,PRENATAL care ,POSTNATAL care ,POVERTY ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,SEXUAL health ,REPRODUCTIVE health - Abstract
Background: Persons with disabilities comprise more than one billion people in the world, yet they are one of the most discriminated groups and face significant health disparities. Particularly in developing countries, which contain 80% of the entire population with disabilities, these individuals experience major barriers in accessing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services. Education is an important factor that greatly affects individuals' SRH service utilization. Hence, we sought to investigate the relationship between education and SRH service utilization for persons with disabilities in Bangladesh. Methods: Using an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design, a total of 5000 persons with disabilities were surveyed for the quantitative component and 15 mini-ethnographic case studies were conducted with persons with disabilities for the qualitative component. Chi-squared tests and logistic regression analyses were performed on the survey data, while the qualitative interviews were coded and their SRH themes synthesized accordingly. Results: Our quantitative findings show that education statistically significantly increases persons with disabilities' SRH service utilization of antenatal care, delivery care, postnatal care, and family planning (P < 0.05). Interestingly, for persons with disabilities, primary education shows increased adjusted odds of family planning use but is likely not enough to increase antenatal care, delivery care, or postnatal care use; secondary or post-secondary education may be required to improve utilization of these latter services. Qualitative findings support the association between higher education levels and greater SRH service use. Persons with disabilities of lower educational attainment held misinformation and distrust in SRH services and experienced mistreatment by SRH healthcare providers, discouraging them from seeking future SRH services. Conclusions: We report that higher formal education level is associated with greater SRH service use for persons with disabilities in Bangladesh. Formally educating persons with disabilities expands their SRH knowledge and familiarity with SRH services, as well as leads to more economic opportunities so they can afford SRH services. Increasing formal education levels for persons with disabilities, paired with integrating comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) in their schools, will likely help close the gap in SRH health disparities for this vulnerable population. Plain Language Summary: Out of more than one billion persons with disabilities in the world, 80% of them live in developing countries. Persons with disabilities commonly face discrimination and health disparities, particularly experiencing major barriers in accessing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services. Education is a key factor that often leads to social and economic empowerment, which positively contributes towards individuals' SRH service utilization. In this paper, we examined the relationship between education and SRH service utilization for persons with disabilities in Bangladesh. We surveyed persons with disabilities across all of Bangladesh on their utilization of SRH services and conducted mini-ethnographic case studies with selected participants to more deeply understand their SRH issues and SRH service utilization. Our survey findings show that education significantly increases persons with disabilities' SRH service utilization of antenatal care, delivery care, postnatal care, and family planning in Bangladesh. Interestingly, for persons with disabilities, primary education may only be able to increase family planning use while secondary or post-secondary education may be required to increase antenatal care, delivery care, and postnatal care use. Our qualitative findings support the association between higher education levels and greater SRH service use. Persons with disabilities of higher education prioritized obtaining formal SRH services from qualified health care providers, even when financially constrained, while lower educated participants tended to be misinformed and distrustful of formal SRH services. We recommend helping persons with disabilities attain higher formal education levels and including comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) in their schools, as it likely will reduce SRH health disparities for this vulnerable group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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172. A parallel classification strategy to simultaneous control elbow, wrist, and hand movements.
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Leone, Francesca, Gentile, Cosimo, Cordella, Francesca, Gruppioni, Emanuele, Guglielmelli, Eugenio, and Zollo, Loredana
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WRIST ,FISHER discriminant analysis ,ELBOW ,PATTERN recognition systems ,REGULARIZATION parameter ,CLASSIFICATION ,ARTIFICIAL limbs ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,BODY movement ,HAND ,INFORMATION science ,ELECTROMYOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background: In the field of myoelectric control systems, pattern recognition (PR) algorithms have become always more interesting for predicting complex electromyography patterns involving movements with more than 2 Degrees of Freedom (DoFs). The majority of classification strategies, used for the prosthetic control, are based on single, hierarchical and parallel linear discriminant analysis (LDA) classifiers able to discriminate up to 19 wrist/hand gestures (in the 3-DoFs case), considering both combined and discrete motions. However, these strategies were introduced to simultaneously classify only 2 DoFs and their use is limited by the lack of online performance measures. This study introduces a novel classification strategy based on the Logistic Regression (LR) algorithm with regularization parameter to provide simultaneous classification of 3 DoFs motion classes.Methods: The parallel PR-based strategy was tested on 15 healthy subjects, by using only six surface EMG sensors. Twenty-seven discrete and complex elbow, hand and wrist motions were classified by keeping the number of electromyographic (EMG) electrodes to a bare minimum and the classification error rate under 10 %. To this purpose, the parallel classification strategy was implemented by using three classifiers one for each DoF: the "Elbow classifier", the "Wrist classifier", and the "Hand classifier" provided the simultaneous control of the elbow, hand, and wrist joints, respectively.Results: Both the offline and real-time performance metrics were evaluated and compared with the LDA parallel classification results. The real-time recognition results were statistically better with the LR classifier with respect to the LDA classifier, for all motion classes (elbow, hand and wrist).Conclusions: In this paper, a novel parallel PR-based strategy was proposed for classifying up to 3 DoFs: three joint classifiers were employed simultaneously for classifying 27 motion classes related to the elbow, wrist, and hand and promising results were obtained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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173. Reporting methodological issues of the mendelian randomization studies in health and medical research: a systematic review.
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Islam, Shabab Noor, Ahammed, Tanvir, Anjum, Aniqua, Albalawi, Olayan, and Uddin, Md. Jamal
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SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LEAST squares ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background: Mendelian randomization (MR) studies using Genetic risk scores (GRS) as an instrumental variable (IV) have increasingly been used to control for unmeasured confounding in observational healthcare databases. However, proper reporting of methodological issues is sparse in these studies. We aimed to review published papers related to MR studies and identify reporting problems.Methods: We conducted a systematic review using the clinical articles published between 2009 and 2019. We searched PubMed, Scopus, and Embase databases. We retrieved information from every MR study, including the tests performed to evaluate assumptions and the modelling approach used for estimation. Using our inclusion/exclusion criteria, finally, we identified 97 studies to conduct the review according to the PRISMA statement.Results: Only 66 (68%) of the studies empirically verified the first assumption (Relevance assumption), and 40 (41.2%) studies reported the appropriate tests (e.g., R2, F-test) to investigate the association. A total of 35.1% clearly stated and discussed theoretical justifications for the second and third assumptions. 30.9% of the studies used a two-stage least square, and 11.3% used the Wald estimator method for estimating IV. Also, 44.3% of the studies conducted a sensitivity analysis to illuminate the robustness of estimates for violations of the untestable assumptions.Conclusions: We found that incompleteness of the justification of the assumptions for the instrumental variable in MR studies was a common problem in our selected studies. This may misdirect the findings of the studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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174. Resource management framework using simulation modeling and multi-objective optimization: a case study of a front-end department of a public hospital in Thailand.
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Tanantong, Tanatorn, Pannakkong, Warut, and Chemkomnerd, Nittaya
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PUBLIC hospitals ,RESOURCE management ,PATIENT satisfaction ,OPERATING costs ,MEDICAL triage ,SIMULATION methods & models ,COMPUTER simulation ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background: The overcrowded patients, which cause the long waiting time in public hospitals, become significant problems that affect patient satisfaction toward the hospital. Particularly, the bottleneck usually happens at front-end departments (e.g., the triage and medical record department) as every patient is firstly required to visit these departments. The problem is mainly caused by ineffective resource management. In order to support decision making in the resource management at front-end departments, this paper proposes a framework using simulation and multi-objective optimization techniques considering both operating cost and patient satisfaction.Methods: To develop the framework, first, the timestamp of patient arrival time at each station was collected at the triage and medical record department of Thammasat University Hospital in Thailand. A patient satisfaction assessment method was used to convert the time spend into a satisfaction score. Then, the simulation model was built from the current situation of the hospital and was applied scenario analyses for the model improvement. The models were verified and validated. The weighted max-min for fuzzy multi-objective optimization was done by minimizing the operating cost and maximizing the patient satisfaction score. The operating costs and patient satisfaction scores from various scenarios were statistically compared. Finally, a decision-making guideline was proposed to support suitable resource management at the front-end departments of the hospital.Result: The three scenarios of the simulation model were built (i.e., a real situation, a one-stop service, and partially shared resources) and ensured to be verified and valid. The optimized results were compared and grouped into three situations which are (1) remain the same satisfaction score but decrease the cost (cost decreased by 2.8%) (2) remain the same satisfaction score but increase the cost (cost increased up to 80%) and (3) decrease the satisfaction score and decrease the cost (satisfaction decreased up to 82% and cost decreased up to 59%). According to the guideline, the situations 1 and 3 were recommended to use in the improvement and the situation 2 was rejected.Conclusion: This research demonstrates the resource management framework for the front-end department of the hospital. The experimental results imply that the framework can be used to support the decision making in resource management and used to reduce the risk of applying a non-improvement model in a real situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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175. Non-parametric estimation of reference adjusted, standardised probabilities of all-cause death and death due to cancer for population group comparisons.
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Rutherford, Mark J., Andersson, Therese M.-L., Myklebust, Tor Åge, Møller, Bjørn, and Lambert, Paul C.
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NONPARAMETRIC estimation ,RECTAL cancer ,PROBABILITY theory ,POPULATION statistics ,CANCER patients ,CANCER diagnosis ,CAUSES of death ,RESEARCH ,RECTUM tumors ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Background: Ensuring fair comparisons of cancer survival statistics across population groups requires careful consideration of differential competing mortality due to other causes, and adjusting for imbalances over groups in other prognostic covariates (e.g. age). This has typically been achieved using comparisons of age-standardised net survival, with age standardisation addressing covariate imbalance, and the net estimates removing differences in competing mortality from other causes. However, these estimates lack ease of interpretability. In this paper, we motivate an alternative non-parametric approach that uses a common rate of other cause mortality across groups to give reference-adjusted estimates of the all-cause and cause-specific crude probability of death in contrast to solely reporting net survival estimates.Methods: We develop the methodology for a non-parametric equivalent of standardised and reference adjusted crude probabilities of death, building on the estimation of non-parametric crude probabilities of death. We illustrate the approach using regional comparisons of survival following a diagnosis of rectal cancer for men in England. We standardise to the covariate distribution and other cause mortality of England as a whole to offer comparability, but with close approximation to the observed all-cause region-specific mortality.Results: The approach gives comparable estimates to observed crude probabilities of death, but allows direct comparison across population groups with different covariate profiles and competing mortality patterns. In our illustrative example, we show that regional variations in survival following a diagnosis of rectal cancer persist even after accounting for the variation in deprivation, age at diagnosis and other cause mortality.Conclusions: The methodological approach of using standardised and reference adjusted metrics offers an appealing approach for future cancer survival comparison studies and routinely published cancer statistics. Our non-parametric estimation approach through the use of weighting offers the ability to estimate comparable survival estimates without the need for statistical modelling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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176. How and why are communities of practice established in the healthcare sector? A systematic review of the literature.
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COMMUNITIES of practice ,MEDICAL care ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,RESEARCH methodology ,CARING - Abstract
The article presents a study that examined how and why Communities of Practice (CoPs) established in health care sectors. For this purpose research papers on Cops in the health care sectors were reviewed which have information related to purpose of establishing CoPs, their composition, and research methods. Findings revealed that earlier publication on CoPs was based on knowledge sharing but now they offer tool to improve clinical practice.
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- 2011
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177. Exploring the efficacy of an electronic symptom assessment and self-care intervention to preserve physical function in individuals receiving neurotoxic chemotherapy.
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Knoerl, Robert, Weller, Edie, Halpenny, Barbara, and Berry, Donna
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TREATMENT of peripheral neuropathy ,NEUROTOXIC agents ,CHEMOTHERAPY complications ,QUALITY of life ,PERIPHERAL neuropathy ,INSOMNIA ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,MENTAL health ,ANTINEOPLASTIC agents ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NEUROTOXICOLOGY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH self-care ,SELF-report inventories ,SYNDROMES ,SYMPTOMS ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SELF diagnosis ,PSYCHOLOGY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Impaired physical function due to chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) symptoms may lead to diminished quality of life. However, even with the knowledge of the effects of CIPN on physical function, clinicians infrequently assess and manage CIPN. Interventions that prioritize the early identification of CIPN to provide prompt treatment may reduce the impact of CIPN on physical function. The purpose of this paper is to compare self-reported physical function in individuals receiving neurotoxic chemotherapy between Electronic Symptom Assessment-Cancer (ESRA-C) intervention group (e.g., opportunity for symptom screening, self-care recommendations, communication coaching, and symptom tracking) and control group participants (i.e., electronic assessment alone). Secondary outcomes include pain intensity, sensory/motor CIPN, depression, fatigue, and insomnia.Methods: The data used in this paper are a subset of a randomized controlled trial that examined the impact of the ESRA-C intervention on symptom distress in individuals receiving cancer treatment. Since the interest in this analysis is on the effects of neurotoxic chemotherapy on physical function, subjects were included if they received platinum and/or taxane-based chemotherapy and completed the baseline and end-of-treatment measures. Participants completed standardized questionnaires of physical function, CIPN, fatigue, depression, pain intensity, and insomnia prior to treatment, 3-6 weeks after treatment initiation, and after the completion of treatment. Changes in mean scores are compared between groups using linear mixed models adjusting for age.Results: Intervention group participants reported significantly less reduction in physical functioning (baseline: 87.4/100; end-of-treatment: 84.5/100) relative to the control (baseline: 90.2/100; end-of-treatment: 81.8/100) (p = 0.011). For secondary measures, significantly less depression (p = 0.005) was observed in the intervention group as compared to the control, but otherwise, there were no between-group differences. Among participants who received high cumulative doses of neurotoxic chemotherapy, the intervention group reported significantly less severe sensory (p = 0.007) and motor CIPN (p = 0.039) relative to the control.Conclusion: Use of the ESRA-C intervention led to less reduction in physical function in comparison to the control in individuals receiving neurotoxic chemotherapy. Further research is needed to confirm our findings and to identify how electronic symptom assessment technology may mediate physical function preservation.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov NCT00852852 . Registered 27 February 2009. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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178. Unity in diversity—food plants and fungi of Sakartvelo (Republic of Georgia), Caucasus.
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Bussmann, Rainer W., Paniagua Zambrana, Narel Y., Ur Rahman, Inayat, Kikvidze, Zaal, Sikharulidze, Shalva, Kikodze, David, Tchelidze, David, Khutsishvili, Manana, and Batsatsashvili, Ketevan
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GEORGIANS (South Caucasians) ,MEDICINAL plants ,ANALYSIS of variance ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,AGRICULTURE ,FUNGI ,INTERVIEWING ,CULTURAL pluralism ,EDIBLE plants ,ECOSYSTEMS ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background: The Republic of Georgia is part of the Caucasus biodiversity hotspot, and human agricultural plant use dates back at least 6000 years. Over the last years, lots of ethnobotanical research on the area has been published. In this paper, we analyze the use of food plants in the 80% of Georgia not occupied by Russian forces. We hypothesized that (1) given the long tradition of plant use, and the isolation under Soviet rule, plant use both based on home gardens and wild harvesting would be more pronounced in Georgia than in the wider region, (2) food plant use knowledge would be widely and equally spread in most of Georgia, (3) there would still be incidence of knowledge loss despite wide plant use, especially in climatically favored agricultural regions in Western and Eastern Georgia. Methods: From 2013 to 2019, we interviewed over 380 participants in all regions of Georgia not occupied by Russian forces and recorded over 19,800 mentions of food plants. All interviews were carried out in the participants' homes and gardens by native speakers of Georgian and its dialects (Imeretian, Rachian, Lechkhumian, Tush, Khevsurian, Psavian, Kakhetian), other Kartvelian languages (Megrelian, Svan) and minority languages (Ossetian, Ude, Azeri, Armenian, Greek). Results: The regional division was based primarily on historic provinces of Georgia, which often coincides with the current administrative borders. The total number of taxa, mostly identified to species, including their varieties, was 527. Taxonomically, the difference between two food plant groups—garden versus wild—was strongly pronounced even at family level. The richness of plant families was 65 versus 97 families in garden versus wild plants, respectively, and the difference was highly significant. Other diversity indices also unequivocally pointed to considerably more diverse family composition of wild collected versus garden plants as the differences between all the tested diversity indices appeared to be highly significant. The wide use of leaves for herb pies and lactofermented is of particular interest. Some of the ingredients are toxic in larger quantities, and the participants pointed out that careful preparation was needed. The authors explicitly decided to not give any recipes, given that many of the species are widespread, and compound composition—and with it possible toxic effects—might vary across the distribution range, so that a preparation method that sufficiently reduces toxicity in the Caucasus might not necessary be applicable in other areas. Conclusions: Relationships among the regions in the case of wild food plants show a different and clearer pattern. Adjacent regions cluster together (Kvemo Zemo Racha, and Zemo Imereti; Samegrelo, Guria, Adjara, Lechkhumi and Kvemo and Zemo Svaneti; Meskheti, Javakheti, Kvemo Kartli; Mtianeti, Kakheti, Khevsureti, Tusheti. Like in the case of the garden food plants, species diversity of wild food plants mentioned varied strongly. Climate severity and traditions of the use of wild food plants might play role in this variation. Overall food plant knowledge is widely spread all-across Georgia, and broadly maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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179. The integration of mixed methods data to develop the quality of life - aged care consumers (QOL-ACC) instrument.
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Hutchinson, Claire, Ratcliffe, Julie, Cleland, Jenny, Walker, Ruth, Milte, Rachel, McBain, Candice, Corlis, Megan, Cornell, Victoria, and Khadka, Jyoti
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QUALITY of life ,ELDER care ,OLDER people ,DATA quality ,INDEPENDENT living ,RESIDENTIAL mobility ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,COST benefit analysis ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background: This paper describes the collection and integration of mixed methods data to facilitate the final selection of items for the Quality of Life - Aged Care Consumers (QOL-ACC) instrument. The aim of the wider project is to develop a preference-based quality of life instrument that can be used for quality assessment and economic evaluation. Older people have been involved at every stage of the development of the QOL-ACC to ensure that the final instrument captures their perspectives and preferences.Methods: Mixed methods data was collected on draft items for the QOL-ACC instrument across six key quality of life dimensions (mobility, pain management, emotional well-being, independence, social connections, and activities). Qualitative face validity data was collected from older people (aged 66 to 100 years) living in the community and in residential aged care via semi-structured interviews (n = 59). Quantitative data was collected from older people (aged 65 to 91 years) receiving aged care services in the community via an online survey (n = 313). A traffic light pictorial approach was adopted as a practical and systematic way to categorise and present data in a meaningful way that was easy for non-academic workshop members to understand and to be able to discuss the relative merits of each draft item.Results: The traffic light approach supported the involvement of consumer and aged care provider representatives in the selection of the final items. Six items were selected for the QOL-ACC instrument with one item representing each of the six dimensions.Conclusions: This methodological approach has ensured that the final instrument is psychometrically robust as well as meaningful, relevant and acceptable to aged care consumers and providers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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180. A descriptive study of sports chiropractors with an International Chiropractic Sport Science Practitioner qualification: a cross-sectional survey.
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Nelson, Luke, Pollard, Henry, Ames, Rick, Jarosz, Brett, Garbutt, Pete, and Da Costa, Cliff
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SPORTS sciences ,JOB qualifications ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SPINAL adjustment - Abstract
Background: This paper describes the education and case management profile of sports chiropractors with the Federation of International Sports Chiropractors (FICS) postgraduate qualification: International Chiropractic Sport Science Practitioner (ICSSP). The ICSSP is the predominant international sports chiropractic qualification. Methods: A cross-sectional survey, carried out between 22/10/2014 and 22/12/2014,was utilized with a 39-item web-based survey examining practitioner, practice and clinical management characteristics, and was distributed via email to all sports chiropractors who held an ICSSP qualification (n = 240) in 2014. Results: The survey response rate was 64% (n = 154). 36% of chiropractors were aged between 31 and 40 years, just over three quarters were male, and 27% had been in practice for 5–10 years. The majority of respondents were based in North America. All sports chiropractors surveyed reported treating neuromusculoskeletal conditions outside of the spine. 91% utilized a multimodal approach in most of their treatments, prescribing rehabilitative exercises in 76% of consultations. Almost 64% of respondents reported current treatment of professional athletes, and 78% reported current treatment of semi-professional athletes, whilst the vast majority of those surveyed endorsed past treatment of professional (91%) and semi-professional (95%) athletes. All respondents reported referring to a range of conventional and allied health providers. Conclusions: This study of ICSSP-qualified sports chiropractors describes a small but well-educated workforce treating high-level athletes, managing a wide range of spine and non-spinal neuromusculoskeletal conditions, utilising multimodal approaches (including active and passive strategies), and referring to and co-managing with other health practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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181. "Fear of stopping" vs "wanting to get off the medication": exploring women's experiences of using domperidone as a galactagogue - a qualitative study.
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Zizzo, Gabriella, Rumbold, Alice R., and Grzeskowiak, Luke E.
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THERAPEUTICS ,DRUG efficacy ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,HERBAL medicine ,CONFIDENCE ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,LACTATION disorders ,RESEARCH methodology ,FEAR ,INTERVIEWING ,TREATMENT duration ,EXPERIENCE ,PIPERIDINE ,QUALITATIVE research ,PREVENTIVE health services ,BREASTFEEDING ,DRUG therapy ,HEALTH attitudes ,FOOD ,THEMATIC analysis ,PHARMACY information services ,DOPAMINE antagonists ,GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: Domperidone is the most frequently prescribed medicine used to increase breast milk supply. There is considerable controversy surrounding the use of domperidone in lactation, due to limited evidence about efficacy and concerns about rare but life-threatening side-effects. Despite this, in many high-income settings such as Australia, use of domperidone among breastfeeding mothers appears to be increasing. The aim of this paper was to explore women's experiences of using domperidone during breastfeeding. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted in 2019 with 15 women in Australia who reported using domperidone as a galactagogue during breastfeeding. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically. Results: Women reported a wide variety of practices concerning the timing of initiation of domperidone use, including prophylactic use, as well as the dose and duration of use. Prolonged periods of use and unsupervised dosing were commonly reported, these practices were sometimes associated with a fear of the consequences of stopping, insufficient provision of information about the drug or feeling dismissed by health professionals. Some women indicated that when doctors refused to prescribe domperidone they responded by doctor shopping and seeking anecdotal information about benefits and risks online, leading to unsupervised practices. Women often reported high expectations surrounding the effectiveness of domperidone, and most used the medication in conjunction with food/herbal galactagogues and non-galactagogue support. Positive outcomes following domperidone use included having greater confidence in breastfeeding and pride at achieving breastfeeding goals. Conclusions: This study identified a variety of practices concerning domperidone use, including potentially unsafe practices, linked in some cases to inconsistent advice from health professionals and a reliance on online, anecdotal information sources. These findings emphasise the urgent need for development of clinical practice guidelines and a greater focus on translating existing evidence concerning domperidone into clinical practice, including clinical support that is tailored to women's needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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182. Health priority-setting for official development assistance in low-income and middle-income countries: a Best Fit Framework Synthesis study with primary data from Ethiopia, Nigeria and Tanzania.
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Kwete, Xiaoxiao Jiang, Berhane, Yemane, Mwanyika-Sando, Mary, Oduola, Ayo, Liu, Yuning, Workneh, Firehiwot, Hagos, Smret, Killewo, Japhet, Mosha, Dominic, Chukwu, Angela, Salami, Kabiru, Yusuf, Bidemi, Tang, Kun, Zheng, Zhi-Jie, Atun, Rifat, and Fawzi, Wafaie
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MEDICAL decision making ,MEDICAL care ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DEVELOPING countries ,HEALTH planning - Abstract
Background: Decision making process for Official Development Assistance (ODA) for healthcare sector in low-income and middle-income countries involves multiple agencies, each with their unique power, priorities and funding mechanisms. This process at country level has not been well studied.Methods: This paper developed and applied a new framework to analyze decision-making process for priority setting in Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Tanzania, and collected primary data to validate and refine the model. The framework was developed following a scoping review of published literature. Interviews were then conducted using a pre-determined interview guide developed by the research team. Transcripts were reviewed and coded based on the framework to identify what principles, players, processes, and products were considered during priority setting. Those elements were further used to identify where the potential capacity of local decision-makers could be harnessed.Results: A framework was developed based on 40 articles selected from 6860 distinct search records. Twenty-one interviews were conducted in three case countries from 12 institutions. Transcripts or meeting notes were analyzed to identify common practices and specific challenges faced by each country. We found that multiple stakeholders working around one national plan was the preferred approach used for priority setting in the countries studied.Conclusions: Priority setting process can be further strengthened through better use of analytical tools, such as the one described in our study, to enhance local ownership of priority setting for ODA and improve aid effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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183. Collecting quantitative experimental data from a non-WEIRD population: challenges and practical recommendations from a field experiment in rural Sierra Leone.
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Luetke Lanfer, Hanna, Reifegerste, Doreen, and Kargbo, Sorie Ibrahim
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HEALTH programs ,ETHICAL problems ,RESEARCH methodology ,ACQUISITION of data ,EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
Objective: Standardized pretest–posttest experimental designs with quantitative surveys are frequently applied to evaluate the effectiveness of health programs. However, this method is strongly informed by research on samples from Western, Educated, Industralized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD) societies and may not produce meaningful results in a distinct cultural, educational and socioeconomic context. Results: This paper reports several methodological challenges encountered along the research process of collecting quantitative survey data (i.e., during recruitment, obtaining informed consent, matching pretest–posttest data and data collection) for a mixed-methods field experiment on domestic handwashing in Sierra Leone. Ethical dilemmas of certain research practices are pointed out and potential solutions or alternatives are recommended for each challenge. Analysis of these challenges highlights the importance of reflecting on the aptness of research methodologies for non-WEIRD samples. While this is not to say that quantitative surveys are not suitable in a non-WEIRD context, their employment require considerable time for extensive pilot testing, involving local interviewers and participants in designing research projects and the modification of data collection strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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184. Enriching limited information on rare diseases from heterogeneous networks for drug repositioning.
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Cao, Hongkui, Zhang, Liang, Jin, Bo, Cheng, Shicheng, Wei, Xiaopeng, and Che, Chao
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DRUG repositioning ,RARE diseases ,RANDOM walks ,INFORMATION networks ,MACHINE learning ,PROTEINS ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,BIOINFORMATICS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SYMPTOMS ,RESEARCH funding ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Background: The historical data of rare disease is very scarce in reality, so how to perform drug repositioning for the rare disease is a great challenge. Most existing methods of drug repositioning for the rare disease usually neglect father-son information, so it is extremely difficult to predict drugs for the rare disease.Method: In this paper, we focus on father-son information mining for the rare disease. We propose GRU-Cooperation-Attention-Network (GCAN) to predict drugs for the rare disease. We construct two heterogeneous networks for information enhancement, one network contains the father-nodes of the rare disease and the other network contains the son-nodes information. To bridge two heterogeneous networks, we set a mapping to connect them. What's more, we use the biased random walk mechanism to collect the information smoothly from two heterogeneous networks, and employ a cooperation attention mechanism to enhance repositioning ability of the network.Result: Comparing with traditional methods, GCAN makes full use of father-son information. The experimental results on real drug data from hospitals show that GCAN outperforms state-of-the-art machine learning methods for drug repositioning.Conclusion: The performance of GCAN for drug repositioning is mainly limited by the insufficient scale and poor quality of the data. In future research work, we will focus on how to utilize more data such as drug molecule information and protein molecule information for the drug repositioning of the rare disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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185. Enhancing unsupervised medical entity linking with multi-instance learning.
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Yan, Cheng, Zhang, Yuanzhe, Liu, Kang, Zhao, Jun, Shi, Yafei, and Liu, Shengping
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MEDICAL consultation ,MEDICAL language ,DRUG prescribing ,DRUGS ,KNOWLEDGE base ,PILLS ,RESEARCH ,NATURAL language processing ,RESEARCH methodology ,LANGUAGE & languages ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA mining - Abstract
Background: A lot of medical mentions can be extracted from a huge amount of medical texts. In order to make use of these medical mentions, a prerequisite step is to link those medical mentions to a medical domain knowledge base (KB). This linkage of mention to a well-defined, unambiguous KB is a necessary part of the downstream application such as disease diagnosis and prescription of drugs. Such demand becomes more urgent in colloquial and informal situations like online medical consultation, where the medical language is more casual and vaguer. In this article, we propose an unsupervised method to link the Chinese medical symptom mentions to the ICD10 classification in a colloquial background.Methods: We propose an unsupervised entity linking model using multi-instance learning (MIL). Our approach builds on a basic unsupervised entity linking method (named BEL), which is an embedding similarity-based EL model in this paper, and uses MIL training paradigm to boost the performance of BEL. First, we construct a dataset from an unlabeled large-scale Chinese medical consultation corpus with the help of BEL. Subsequently, we use a variety of encoders to obtain the representations of mention-context and the ICD10 entities. Then the representations are fed into a ranking network to score candidate entities.Results: We evaluate the proposed model on the test dataset annotated by professional doctors. The evaluation results show that our method achieves 60.34% accuracy, exceeding the fundamental BEL by 1.72%.Conclusions: We propose an unsupervised entity linking method to the entity linking in the medical domain, using MIL training manner. We annotate a test set for evaluation. The experimental results show that our model behaves better than the fundamental model BEL, and provides an insight for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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186. Automatic RadLex coding of Chinese structured radiology reports based on text similarity ensemble.
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Chen, Yani, Nan, Shan, Tian, Qi, Cai, Hailing, Duan, Huilong, and Lu, Xudong
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MACHINE translating ,RADIOLOGY ,ALGORITHMS ,TRANSLATING & interpreting ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,MEDICAL radiology ,RESEARCH ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,NATURAL language processing ,RESEARCH methodology ,LANGUAGE & languages ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists - Abstract
Background: Standardized coding of plays an important role in radiology reports' secondary use such as data analytics, data-driven decision support, and personalized medicine. RadLex, a standard radiological lexicon, can reduce subjective variability and improve clarity in radiology reports. RadLex coding of radiology reports is widely used in many countries, but translation and localization of RadLex in China are far from being established. Although automatic RadLex coding is a common way for non-standard radiology reports, the high-accuracy cross-language RadLex coding is hardly achieved due to the limitation of up-to-date auto-translation and text similarity algorithms and still requires further research.Methods: We present an effective approach that combines a hybrid translation and a Multilayer Perceptron weighting text similarity ensemble algorithm for automatic RadLex coding of Chinese structured radiology reports. Firstly, a hybrid way to integrate Google neural machine translation and dictionary translation helps to optimize the translation of Chinese radiology phrases to English. The dictionary is made up of 21,863 Chinese-English radiological term pairs extracted from several free medical dictionaries. Secondly, four typical text similarity algorithms are introduced, which are Levenshtein distance, Jaccard similarity coefficient, Word2vec Continuous bag-of-words model, and WordNet Wup similarity algorithms. Lastly, the Multilayer Perceptron model has been used to synthesize the contextual, lexical, character and syntactical information of four text similarity algorithms to promote precision, in which four similarity scores of two terms are taken as input and the output presents whether the two terms are synonyms.Results: The results show the effectiveness of the approach with an F1-score of 90.15%, a precision of 91.78% and a recall of 88.59%. The hybrid translation algorithm has no negative effect on the final coding, F1-score has increased by 21.44% and 8.12% compared with the GNMT algorithm and dictionary translation. Compared with the single similarity, the result of the MLP weighting similarity algorithm is satisfactory that has a 4.48% increase compared with the best single similarity algorithm, WordNet Wup.Conclusions: The paper proposed an innovative automatic cross-language RadLex coding approach to solve the standardization of Chinese structured radiology reports, that can be taken as a reference to automatic cross-language coding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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187. Cross-country abortion travel to England and Wales: results from a cross-sectional survey exploring people's experiences crossing borders to obtain care.
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Garnsey, Camille, Zanini, Giulia, De Zordo, Silvia, Mishtal, Joanna, Wollum, Alexandra, and Gerdts, Caitlin
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PREGNANCY & psychology ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,TRAVEL ,ABORTION ,MEDICAL care costs ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,MEDICAL tourism - Abstract
Background: The laws governing abortion access vary across Europe. Even in countries with relatively liberal laws, numerous barriers to abortion access exist. In response to these barriers, evidence suggests that people living in countries with both restrictive and liberal laws travel outside of their home country for abortion care. England and Wales are common destinations for those who travel to seek abortions, but little is known about the motivations and experiences of those who undertake cross-country travel to England or Wales to obtain care. This paper aims to describe the abortion seeking and travel experiences of women and pregnant people who traveled to England and Wales for an abortion between 2017 and 2019. Methods: We recruited 97 participants who had traveled cross-country from both liberal and restrictive contexts to seek abortion care at three participating BPAS clinics in England and Wales. Participants completed an electronic survey about their reproductive histories, abortion decision-making, experiences seeking abortion care, and traveling. We conducted a descriptive analysis, and include comparisons between participants who traveled from liberal and restrictive contexts. Results: Over a third of participants considered abortion four weeks or more before presenting for care at BPAS, and around two-thirds sought abortion services in their home country before traveling. The majority of participants indicated that they would have preferred to have obtained an abortion earlier and cited reasons including scheduling issues, a dearth of local services, delayed pregnancy recognition, and financial difficulties as causing their delay. About seventy percent of participants reported travel costs between €101–1000 and 75% of participants reported that the cost of the abortion procedure exceeded €500. About half of participants indicated that, overall, their travel was very or somewhat difficult. Conclusions: This analysis documents the burdens associated with cross-country travel for abortion and provides insight into the factors that compel people to travel. Our findings highlight the need for expanded access to abortion care throughout Europe via the removal of legal impediments and other social or procedural barriers. Removing barriers would eliminate the need for cumbersome abortion travel, and ensure that all people can obtain necessary, high-quality healthcare in their own communities. Plain language summary: In Europe, people who live in countries where abortion is severely restricted or illegal altogether lack access to abortion care entirely, but even people who live in countries with more liberal laws face barriers due to gestational age limits, waiting periods, and a lack of trained and willing providers. Existing evidence suggests that restrictions and barriers compel people from both countries with restrictive laws as well as those from countries with more liberal laws to travel outside of their home country for abortion services. England and Wales are common destinations for people traveling within Europe to obtain abortion services, but little is known about the experiences of these travelers. We surveyed individuals who had traveled from another country to seek abortion services in England or Wales. Our analysis documents that many participants contemplated getting an abortion and sought care in their home countries before traveling. Likewise, many participants indicated that they would have preferred to have obtained an abortion earlier in their pregnancy, and referenced scheduling issues, a dearth of local services, delayed pregnancy recognition, and financial difficulties as causing their delay. A majority of participants indicated that covering the costs of their abortion, and the costs of travel was difficult, and that the travel experience in its entirety was difficult. Our findings document the reasons for, and burdens associated with abortion travel and highlight the need to expand access to abortion across Europe via the elimination of all legal restrictions and impediments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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188. Optimising an intervention to support home-living older adults at risk of malnutrition: a qualitative study.
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Payne, Liz, Ghio, Daniela, Grey, Elisabeth, Slodkowska-Barabasz, Joanna, Harris, Philine, Sutcliffe, Michelle, Green, Sue, Roberts, Helen C., Childs, Caroline, Robinson, Sian, Gudgin, Bernard, Holloway, Pam, Kelly, Jo, Wallis, Kathy, Dean, Oliver, Aveyard, Paul, Gill, Paramjit, Stroud, Mike, Little, Paul, and Yardley, Lucy
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FOOD habits ,RESEARCH methodology ,FAMILY medicine ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care use ,DIETARY supplements ,QUALITATIVE research ,PRIMARY health care ,MALNUTRITION ,INDEPENDENT living ,QUALITY of life ,AGING ,THEMATIC analysis ,DISEASE risk factors ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: In the UK, about 14% of community-dwelling adults aged 65 and over are estimated to be at risk of malnutrition. Screening older adults in primary care and treating those at risk may help to reduce malnutrition risk, reduce the resulting need for healthcare use and improve quality of life. Interventions are needed to raise older adults' risk awareness, offer relevant and meaningful strategies to address risk and support general practices to deliver treatment and support. Methods: Using the Person-based Approach and input from Patient and Public Involvement representatives, we developed the 'Eat well, feel well, stay well' intervention. The intervention was optimised using qualitative data from think aloud and semi-structured process evaluation interviews with 23 and 18 older adults respectively. Positive and negative comments were extracted to inform rapid iterative modifications to support engagement with the intervention. Data were then analysed thematically and final adjustments made, to optimise the meaningfulness of the intervention for the target population. Results: Participants' comments were generally positive. This paper focuses predominantly on participants' negative reactions, to illustrate the changes needed to ensure that intervention materials were optimally relevant and meaningful to older adults. Key factors that undermined engagement included: resistance to the recommended nutritional intake among those with reduced appetite or eating difficulties, particularly frequent eating and high energy options; reluctance to gain weight; and a perception that advice did not align with participants' specific personal preferences and eating difficulties. We addressed these issues by adjusting the communication of eating goals to be more closely aligned with older adults' beliefs about good nutrition, and acceptable and feasible eating patterns. We also adjusted the suggested tips and strategies to fit better with older adults' everyday activities, values and beliefs. Conclusions: Using iterative qualitative methods facilitated the identification of key behavioural and contextual elements that supported engagement, and issues that undermined older adults' engagement with intervention content. This informed crucial revisions to the intervention content that enabled us to maximise the meaningfulness, relevance and feasibility of the key messages and suggested strategies to address malnutrition risk, and therefore optimise engagement with the intervention and the behavioural advice it provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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189. What's suffering got to do with it? A qualitative study of suffering in the context of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID).
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Pesut, Barbara, Wright, David Kenneth, Thorne, Sally, Hall, Margaret I., Puurveen, Gloria, Storch, Janet, and Huggins, Madison
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TERMINAL care ,NURSES' attitudes ,ASSISTED suicide ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,DECISION making ,THEMATIC analysis ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Background: Intolerable suffering is a common eligibility requirement for persons requesting assisted death, and although suffering has received philosophic attention for millennia, only recently has it been the focus of empirical inquiry. Robust theoretical knowledge about suffering is critically important as modern healthcare provides persons with different options at end-of-life to relieve suffering. The purpose of this paper is to present findings specific to the understanding and application of suffering in the context of MAID from nurses' perspectives. Methods: A longitudinal qualitative descriptive study using semi-structured telephone interviews. Inductive analysis was used to construct a thematic account. The study received ethical approval and all participants provided written consent. Results: Fifty nurses and nurse practitioners from across Canada were interviewed. Participants described the suffering of dying and provided insights into the difficulties of treating existential suffering and the iatrogenic suffering patients experienced from long contact with the healthcare system. They shared perceptions of the suffering that leads to a request for MAID that included the unknown of dying, a desire for predictability, and the loss of dignity. Eliciting the suffering story was an essential part of nursing practice. Knowledge of the story allowed participants to find the balance between believing that suffering is whatever the persons says it is, while making sure that the MAID procedure was for the right person, for the right reason, at the right time. Participants perceived that the MAID process itself caused suffering that resulted from the complexity of decision-making, the chances of being deemed ineligible, and the heighted work of the tasks of dying. Conclusions: Healthcare providers involved in MAID must be critically reflective about the suffering histories they bring to the clinical encounter, particularly iatrogenic suffering. Further, eliciting the suffering stories of persons requesting MAID requires a high degree of skill; those involved in the assessment process must have the time and competency to do this important role well. The nature of suffering that patients and family encounter as they enter the contemplation, assessment, and provision of MAID requires further research to understand it better and develop best practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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190. A socio-ecological analysis of factors influencing HIV treatment initiation and adherence among key populations in Papua New Guinea.
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Mitchell, Elke, Hakim, Avi, Nosi, Somu, Kupul, Martha, Boli-Neo, Ruthy, Aeno, Herick, Redman-Maclaren, Michelle, Ase, Sophie, Amos, Angelyn, Hou, Parker, Narokobi, Rebecca, Willie, Barne, Vallely, Andrew J., Kaldor, John M., Badman, Steven G., and Kelly-Hanku, Angela
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HIV infections ,PATIENT compliance ,HIV-positive persons ,SEX workers ,MEN who have sex with men ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HUMAN sexuality ,HIV infection epidemiology ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background: In Papua New Guinea (PNG) members of key populations, including female sex workers (FSW), men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW), have higher rates of HIV compared to the general adult population and low engagement in HIV care. This paper examines the socio-ecological factors that encourage or hinder HIV treatment initiation and adherence among HIV positive members of key populations in PNG.Methods: As part of a larger biobehavioural survey of key populations in PNG, 111 semi-structured interviews were conducted with FSW, MSM and TGW, of whom 28 identified as living with HIV. Interviews from 28 HIV positive participants are used in this analysis of the influences that enabled or inhibited HIV treatment initiation and treatment adherence.Results: Enablers included awareness of the biomedical benefits of treatment; experiences of the social, familial and health benefits of early treatment initiation and adherence; support provided by family and friends; and non-judgmental and supportive HIV service provision. Factors that inhibited treatment initiation and adherence included perception of good health and denial of HIV diagnosis; poor family support following positive diagnosis; and anonymity and stigma concerns in HIV care services.Conclusion: Exploring health promotion messages that highlight the positive health impacts of early treatment initiation and adherence; providing client-friendly services and community-based treatment initiation and supply; and rolling out HIV viral load testing across the country could improve health outcomes for these key populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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191. Evaluating the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of the 'strengthening families, strengthening communities' group-based parenting programme: study protocol and initial insights.
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Lodder, Annemarie, Mehay, Anita, Pavlickova, Hana, Hoare, Zoe, Box, Leandra, Butt, Jabeer, Weaver, Tim, Crawford, Mike J., Clutterbuck, Donna, Westbrook, Nicola, Manning, Karlet, Karlsen, Saffron, Morris, Steve, Brand, Andrew, Ramchandani, Paul, Kelly, Yvonne, Heilmann, Anja, and Watt, Richard G.
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PARENTING ,FAMILY relations ,CHILD welfare ,FAMILIES ,DISCRIMINATION in medical care ,MEDICAL care of minorities ,RESEARCH ,MINORITIES ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,QUALITY of life ,COST effectiveness ,RESEARCH funding ,ETHNIC groups ,PARENTS - Abstract
Background: Up to 20% of UK children experience socio-emotional difficulties which can have serious implications for themselves, their families and society. Stark socioeconomic and ethnic inequalities in children's well-being exist. Supporting parents to develop effective parenting skills is an important preventive strategy in reducing inequalities. Parenting interventions have been developed, which aim to reduce the severity and impact of these difficulties. However, most parenting interventions in the UK focus on early childhood (0-10 years) and often fail to engage families from ethnic minority groups and those living in poverty. Strengthening Families, Strengthening Communities (SFSC) is a parenting programme designed by the Race Equality Foundation, which aims to address this gap. Evidence from preliminary studies is encouraging, but no randomised controlled trials have been undertaken so far.Methods/design: The TOGETHER study is a multi-centre, waiting list controlled, randomised trial, which aims to test the effectiveness of SFSC in families with children aged 3-18 across seven urban areas in England with ethnically and socially diverse populations. The primary outcome is parental mental well-being (assessed by the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale). Secondary outcomes include child socio-emotional well-being, parenting practices, family relationships, self-efficacy, quality of life, and community engagement. Outcomes are assessed at baseline, post intervention, three- and six-months post intervention. Cost effectiveness will be estimated using a cost-utility analysis and cost-consequences analysis. The study is conducted in two stages. Stage 1 comprised a 6-month internal pilot to determine the feasibility of the trial. A set of progression criteria were developed to determine whether the stage 2 main trial should proceed. An embedded process evaluation will assess the fidelity and acceptability of the intervention.Discussion: In this paper we provide details of the study protocol for this trial. We also describe challenges to implementing the protocol and how these were addressed. Once completed, if beneficial effects on both parental and child outcomes are found, the impact, both immediate and longer term, are potentially significant. As the intervention focuses on supporting families living in poverty and those from minority ethnic communities, the intervention should also ultimately have a beneficial impact on reducing health inequalities.Trial Registration: Prospectively registered Randomised Controlled Trial ISRCTN15194500 . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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192. Patient and physician perspectives on engaging in palliative and healthcare trials: a qualitative descriptive study.
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Cardenas, Valeria, Rahman, Anna, Giulioni, Jenna, Coulourides Kogan, Alexis, and Enguidanos, Susan
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CAREGIVER attitudes ,HUMAN research subjects ,PSYCHOLOGY of human research subjects ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENT selection ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUALITATIVE research ,PSYCHOLOGY of Research personnel ,ACCOUNTABLE care organizations ,MEDICAL referrals ,THEMATIC analysis ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background: Researchers are encountering increasing challenges in recruiting participants for palliative and healthcare research. This paper aims to understand challenges to and methods for engaging physicians and seriously ill patients and their caregivers in research studies. Methods: Between October 2019 to July 2020, we conducted qualitative interviews with 25 patients, proxies, and caregivers participants who were eligible for a randomized controlled trial of home-based palliative care and 31 physicians from participating accountable care organizations. Using thematic analysis, we analyzed participants' responses to identify concepts and key ideas within the text. From these initial concepts, core themes around barriers to research and preferred research recruitment approaches were generated. Results: Themes from patient and caregiver interviews included time constraints, privacy concerns, lack of research familiarity, disconnect with research institution, self-perceived health status, and concerns with study randomization. Physician-identified barriers focused on time constraints and study randomization. Patient and caregiver recommendations for study recruitment included in-person recruitment, recruitment at healthcare providers' offices, recruitment via mail, additional study information, and frequent calls. Physician recommendations were related to placement of flyers at clinics, financial incentives, and formal events. Conclusions: Findings demonstrated that although patients and caregivers prefer that their physicians recruit them for health-related research studies, physicians identified time constraints as a consistent barrier to research involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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193. GoodReports: developing a website to help health researchers find and use reporting guidelines.
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Struthers, Caroline, Harwood, James, de Beyer, Jennifer Anne, Dhiman, Paula, Logullo, Patricia, and Schlüssel, Michael
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ACQUISITION of manuscripts ,USER experience ,WRITING processes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH ,FERRANS & Powers Quality of Life Index ,RESEARCH methodology ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,WRITTEN communication - Abstract
Background: Th EQUATOR Network improves the quality and transparency in health research, primarily by promoting awareness and use of reporting guidelines. In 2018, the UK EQUATOR Centre launched GoodReports.org , a website that helps authors find and use reporting guidelines. This paper describes the tool's development so far. We describe user experience and behaviour of using GoodReports.org both inside and outside a journal manuscript submission process. We intend to use our findings to inform future development and testing of the tool.Methods: We conducted a survey to collect data on user experience of the GoodReports website. We cross-checked a random sample of 100 manuscripts submitted to a partner journal to describe the level of agreement between the tool's checklist recommendation and what we would have recommended. We compared the proportion of authors submitting a completed reporting checklist alongside their manuscripts between groups exposed or not exposed to the GoodReports tool. We also conducted a study comparing completeness of reporting of manuscript text before an author received a reporting guideline recommendation from GoodReports.org with the completeness of the text subsequently submitted to a partner journal.Results: Seventy percent (423/599) of survey respondents rated GoodReports 8 or more out of 10 for usefulness, and 74% (198/267) said they had made changes to their manuscript after using the website. We agreed with the GoodReports reporting guideline recommendation in 84% (72/86) of cases. Of authors who completed the guideline finder questionnaire, 14% (10/69) failed to submit a completed checklist compared to 30% (41/136) who did not use the tool. Of the 69 authors who received a GoodReports reporting guideline recommendation, 20 manuscript pairs could be reviewed before and after use of GoodReports. Five included more information in their methods section after exposure to GoodReports. On average, authors reported 57% of necessary reporting items before completing a checklist on GoodReports.org and 60% after.Conclusion: The data suggest that reporting guidance is needed early in the writing process, not at submission stage. We are developing GoodReports by adding more reporting guidelines and by creating editable article templates. We will test whether GoodReports users write more complete study reports in a randomised trial targeting researchers starting to write health research articles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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194. Considerations for designing and implementing combination HIV cure trials: findings from a qualitative in-depth interview study in the United States.
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Dubé, Karine, Kanazawa, John, Dee, Lynda, Taylor, Jeff, Sauceda, John A., Gianella, Sara, Smith, Davey, Deeks, Steven G., and Peluso, Michael J.
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,HIV infections ,CLINICAL trials ,COMBINATION drug therapy ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY of human research subjects ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,QUALITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background: An increasing number of HIV cure trials involve combining multiple potentially curative interventions. Until now, considerations for designing and implementing complex combination HIV cure trials have not been thoroughly considered. Methods: We used a purposive method to select key informants for our study. Informants included biomedical HIV cure researchers, regulators, policy makers, bioethicists, and community members. We used in-depth interviews to generate ethical and practical considerations to guide the design and implementation of combination HIV cure research. We analyzed the qualitative data using conventional content analysis focused on inductive reasoning. Results: We interviewed 11 biomedical researchers, 4 community members, 2 regulators, 1 policy researcher, and 1 bioethicist. Informants generated considerations for designing and implementing combination interventions towards an HIV cure, focused on ethical aspects, as well as considerations to guide trial design, benefit/risk determinations, regulatory requirements, prioritization and sequencing and timing of interventions, among others. Informants also provided considerations related to combining specific HIV cure research modalities, such as broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs), cell and gene modification products, latency-reversing agents and immune-based interventions. Finally, informants provided suggestions to ensure meaningful therapeutic improvements over standard antiretroviral therapy, overcome challenges of designing combination approaches, and engage communities around combination HIV cure research. Conclusion: The increasing number of combination HIV cure trials brings with them a host of ethical and practical challenges. We hope our paper will inform meaningful stakeholder dialogue around the use of combinatorial HIV cure research approaches. To protect the public trust in HIV cure research, considerations should be periodically revisited and updated with key stakeholder input as the science continues to advance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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195. Breastfeeding experiences of Latina migrants living in Spain: a qualitative descriptive study.
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Iglesias-Rosado, Blanca and Leon-Larios, Fatima
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BREASTFEEDING & psychology ,ATTITUDES toward breastfeeding ,RESEARCH methodology ,HISPANIC Americans ,MIGRANT labor ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,HEALTH attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,RELIGION - Abstract
Background: The migratory flows in Spain have changed due to the arrival of a diverse migrant population. Among the new migrants the Latino collective predominate with more than half being women of childbearing age. There are no previous studies exploring breastfeeding experiences of migrants in a country where their mother tongue is spoken. This study aimed to explore Latina migrants' breastfeeding experiences in a Spanish-speaking country. Methods: A descriptive qualitative study was carried out in the main province in southern Andalusia between November 2019 and June 2020. The study used intentional sampling. The study participants were contacted by video calls and data were collected through a semi-structured in-depth interview (n = 19). The interviews were transcribed and analysed by thematic analysis. Results: The nineteen participants were aged between 22 and 43 years old and came from six different countries in Latin America. The two main categories that emerged were breastfeeding facilitators and barriers, divided into ten interrelated sub-categories: working conditions; precarious socioeconomic conditions; lack of support (health professionals, family and society); physiological changes, pain and fatigue; ignorance and wrong beliefs; support networks (partner, health professionals and family); host country versus home country; religious practices/worship; appropriate attitude, knowledge and experience; and breastfeeding support groups. Most of the study participants stated that their breastfeeding experiences were influenced by barriers such as work and by facilitators such as peer support. Conclusions: More support from caregivers and more sensitivity to cultural diversity were demanded by the women and well-trained professionals are needed to enable breastfeeding for a longer time. This paper provides caregivers, such as nurses, more knowledge about the care demanded by migrant women to ensure a longer breastfeeding experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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196. Approximate parameter inference in systems biology using gradient matching: a comparative evaluation.
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Macdonald, Benn, Niu, Mu, Rogers, Simon, Filippone, Maurizio, and Husmeier, Dirk
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SYSTEMS biology ,ORDINARY differential equations ,GAUSSIAN processes ,HILBERT space ,BIOLOGICAL systems ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,BIOINFORMATICS ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: A challenging problem in current systems biology is that of parameter inference in biological pathways expressed as coupled ordinary differential equations (ODEs). Conventional methods that repeatedly numerically solve the ODEs have large associated computational costs. Aimed at reducing this cost, new concepts using gradient matching have been proposed, which bypass the need for numerical integration. This paper presents a recently established adaptive gradient matching approach, using Gaussian processes (GPs), combined with a parallel tempering scheme, and conducts a comparative evaluation with current state-of-the-art methods used for parameter inference in ODEs. Among these contemporary methods is a technique based on reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces (RKHS). This has previously shown promising results for parameter estimation, but under lax experimental settings. We look at a range of scenarios to test the robustness of this method. We also change the approach of inferring the penalty parameter from AIC to cross validation to improve the stability of the method.Methods: Methodology for the recently proposed adaptive gradient matching method using GPs, upon which we build our new method, is provided. Details of a competing method using RKHS are also described here.Results: We conduct a comparative analysis for the methods described in this paper, using two benchmark ODE systems. The analyses are repeated under different experimental settings, to observe the sensitivity of the techniques.Conclusions: Our study reveals that for known noise variance, our proposed method based on GPs and parallel tempering achieves overall the best performance. When the noise variance is unknown, the RKHS method proves to be more robust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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197. How to improve vital sign data quality for use in clinical decision support systems? A qualitative study in nine Swedish emergency departments.
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Skyttberg, Niclas, Vicente, Joana, Rong Chen, Blomqvist, Hans, Koch, Sabine, and Chen, Rong
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DECISION support systems ,DATA quality ,ELECTRONIC health records ,HEALTH information technology ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MEDICAL informatics ,VITAL signs ,QUALITY assurance standards ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,QUALITATIVE research ,EVALUATION research ,STANDARDS - Abstract
Background: Vital sign data are important for clinical decision making in emergency care. Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) have been advocated to increase patient safety and quality of care. However, the efficiency of CDSS depends on the quality of the underlying vital sign data. Therefore, possible factors affecting vital sign data quality need to be understood. This study aims to explore the factors affecting vital sign data quality in Swedish emergency departments and to determine in how far clinicians perceive vital sign data to be fit for use in clinical decision support systems. A further aim of the study is to provide recommendations on how to improve vital sign data quality in emergency departments.Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with sixteen physicians and nurses from nine hospitals and vital sign documentation templates were collected and analysed. Follow-up interviews and process observations were done at three of the hospitals to verify the results. Content analysis with constant comparison of the data was used to analyse and categorize the collected data.Results: Factors related to care process and information technology were perceived to affect vital sign data quality. Despite electronic health records (EHRs) being available in all hospitals, these were not always used for vital sign documentation. Only four out of nine sites had a completely digitalized vital sign documentation flow and paper-based triage records were perceived to provide a better mobile workflow support than EHRs. Observed documentation practices resulted in low currency, completeness, and interoperability of the vital signs. To improve vital sign data quality, we propose to standardize the care process, improve the digital documentation support, provide workflow support, ensure interoperability and perform quality control.Conclusions: Vital sign data quality in Swedish emergency departments is currently not fit for use by CDSS. To address both technical and organisational challenges, we propose five steps for vital sign data quality improvement to be implemented in emergency care settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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198. The use of qualitative methods to inform Delphi surveys in core outcome set development.
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Keeley, T., Williamson, P., Callery, P., Jones, L. L., Mathers, J., Jones, J., Young, B., and Calvert, M.
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QUALITATIVE research ,CLINICAL trials ,RHEUMATOLOGY ,NEUROLOGY ,CARDIOPULMONARY system ,PHARMACEUTICAL research ,BIOLOGICAL assay ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,DELPHI method ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Background: Core outcome sets (COS) help to minimise bias in trials and facilitate evidence synthesis. Delphi surveys are increasingly being used as part of a wider process to reach consensus about what outcomes should be included in a COS. Qualitative research can be used to inform the development of Delphi surveys. This is an advance in the field of COS development and one which is potentially valuable; however, little guidance exists for COS developers on how best to use qualitative methods and what the challenges are. This paper aims to provide early guidance on the potential role and contribution of qualitative research in this area. We hope the ideas we present will be challenged, critiqued and built upon by others exploring the role of qualitative research in COS development. This paper draws upon the experiences of using qualitative methods in the pre-Delphi stage of the development of three different COS. Using these studies as examples, we identify some of the ways that qualitative research might contribute to COS development, the challenges in using such methods and areas where future research is required.Results: Qualitative research can help to identify what outcomes are important to stakeholders; facilitate understanding of why some outcomes may be more important than others, determine the scope of outcomes; identify appropriate language for use in the Delphi survey and inform comparisons between stakeholder data and other sources, such as systematic reviews. Developers need to consider a number of methodological points when using qualitative research: specifically, which stakeholders to involve, how to sample participants, which data collection methods are most appropriate, how to consider outcomes with stakeholders and how to analyse these data. A number of areas for future research are identified.Conclusions: Qualitative research has the potential to increase the research community's confidence in COS, although this will be dependent upon using rigorous and appropriate methodology. We have begun to identify some issues for COS developers to consider in using qualitative methods to inform the development of Delphi surveys in this article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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199. A scoping review of indirect comparison methods and applications using individual patient data.
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Veroniki, Areti Angeliki, Straus, Sharon E., Soobiah, Charlene, Elliott, Meghan J., and Tricco, Andrea C.
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META-analysis ,EMPIRICAL research ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDLINE ,COMMUNICATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DOCUMENTATION ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,IDENTIFICATION ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL research ,PATIENTS ,REPORT writing ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LITERATURE reviews ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Several indirect comparison methods, including network meta-analyses (NMAs), using individual patient data (IPD) have been developed to synthesize evidence from a network of trials. Although IPD indirect comparisons are published with increasing frequency in health care literature, there is no guidance on selecting the appropriate methodology and on reporting the methods and results.Methods: In this paper we examine the methods and reporting of indirect comparison methods using IPD. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library, and CINAHL from inception until October 2014. We included published and unpublished studies reporting a method, application, or review of indirect comparisons using IPD and at least three interventions.Results: We identified 37 papers, including a total of 33 empirical networks. Of these, only 9 (27 %) IPD-NMAs reported the existence of a study protocol, whereas 3 (9 %) studies mentioned that protocols existed without providing a reference. The 33 empirical networks included 24 (73 %) IPD-NMAs and 9 (27 %) matching adjusted indirect comparisons (MAICs). Of the 21 (64 %) networks with at least one closed loop, 19 (90 %) were IPD-NMAs, 13 (68 %) of which evaluated the prerequisite consistency assumption, and only 5 (38 %) of the 13 IPD-NMAs used statistical approaches. The median number of trials included per network was 10 (IQR 4-19) (IPD-NMA: 15 [IQR 8-20]; MAIC: 2 [IQR 3-5]), and the median number of IPD trials included in a network was 3 (IQR 1-9) (IPD-NMA: 6 [IQR 2-11]; MAIC: 2 [IQR 1-2]). Half of the networks (17; 52 %) applied Bayesian hierarchical models (14 one-stage, 1 two-stage, 1 used IPD as an informative prior, 1 unclear-stage), including either IPD alone or with aggregated data (AD). Models for dichotomous and continuous outcomes were available (IPD alone or combined with AD), as were models for time-to-event data (IPD combined with AD).Conclusions: One in three indirect comparison methods modeling IPD adjusted results from different trials to estimate effects as if they had come from the same, randomized, population. Key methodological and reporting elements (e.g., evaluation of consistency, existence of study protocol) were often missing from an indirect comparison paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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200. An analysis of the complementarity of ICECAP-A and EQ-5D-3 L in an adult population of patients with knee pain.
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Keeley, T., Coast, J., Nicholls, E., Foster, N. E., Jowett, S., and Al-Janabi, H.
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KNEE pain ,DISEASES in older people ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,RANK correlation (Statistics) ,TARIFF ,PAIN & psychology ,QUALITY of life ,MENTAL health ,PAIN measurement ,COMPARATIVE studies ,KNEE ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
Background: The ICECAP measures potentially offer a broader assessment of quality of life and well-being, in comparison to measures routinely used in economic evaluation, such as the EQ-5D-3 L. This broader assessment may allow measurement of the full effects of an intervention or treatment. Previous research has indicated that the ICECAP-O (for older people) and EQ-5D-3 L measure provide complementary information. This paper aims to determine similar information for the ICECAP-A (for the entire adult population) in terms of whether the measure is a substitute or complement to the EQ-5D-3 L.Methods: Data from the BEEP trial - a multi-centre, pragmatic, randomised controlled trial - were used. Spearman rank correlations and exploratory factor analytic methods were used to assess whether ICECAP-A and EQ-5D-3 L are measuring the same, or different, constructs.Results: A correlation of 0.49 (p < 0.01) was found between the ICECAP-A tariff score and the EQ-5D-3 L index. Using the pooled items of the EQ-5D-3 L and the ICECAP-A a two factor solution was optimal, with the majority of EQ-5D-3 L items loading onto one factor and the majority of ICECAP-A items onto another.Conclusion: The results presented in this paper indicate that ICECAP-A and EQ-5D-3 L are measuring two different constructs and provide largely different, complementary information. Results showed a similarity to results presented by Davis et al. using the ICECAP-O.Trial Registration: ISRCTN 93634563. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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