12 results
Search Results
2. "Carpal tunnel syndrome:" A bibliometric study of 35 years of research.
- Author
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Ram, Shri
- Subjects
CARPAL tunnel syndrome ,MEDICAL databases ,MEDIAN nerve ,PHYSICIANS ,RESEARCH ,COMPUTER music - Abstract
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is a disease caused by compression of the median nerve passing through the wrist. Patients suffer from severe pain and paresthesis in the median nerve. Compression of the median nerve occurs, with prolonged working on keyboards (computer or laptop or music players) being one of the reasons along with others such as diabetes or rheumatoid arthritis. CTS research holds great promise for the patients as well as doctors for better medical treatment. The study has been carried out with an objective to analyze research progress based on the literature published on CTS during the last 35 years. The retrospective study has been carried out from the data indexed in SCOPUS multidisciplinary database from 1983 to 2017 (35 years). The study involves analysis of publication trends in terms of total articles, productive countries, institutions, journals, productive authors, most cited articles along with impact in terms of citation and h-Index. The SCOPUS database yielded 13187 articles during the study period. These articles were analyzed further for interpreting results. In the last 35 years, the number of scientific publications on CTS has been increasing with an annual growth rate of 9.86% per year. USA has been the most productive country. Literature pertaining to females is more than clinical studies involving males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Bibliometric analysis and visualization of the extrahepatic portal venous obstruction publication landscape.
- Author
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Dhua, Anjan, Garg, Mohit, Yadav, Devendra, Goel, Prabudh, Jain, Vishesh, Anand, Sachit, and Verma, Ajay
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,SERIAL publications ,EMBOLISMS ,CITATION analysis ,PORTAL vein ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Introduction: A scientometric analysis was conducted to characterize the global research publications in extrahepatic portal venous obstruction (EHPVO), and state-of-the-art visualization graphics were generated to provide insight into specific bibliometric variables. Materials and Methods: The Web of Science database was accessed for research productivity and bibliometric variables of countries, institutions, authors, journals, and content analysis of top-20 cited documents were performed. Collaborative networks and co-occurrence of keywords map were generated using VOSviewer software. Results: Two hundred and sixteen records were retrieved with an annual growth rate of 2.53%. India is the leading country in productivity (n = 4339), followed by the USA and China. Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, was the top productive institute. Sarin SK was the most prolific author, having the highest citations received and h-index. The hotspot topics were "portal hypertension," "cirrhosis," "children," "biliopathy/cholangiopathy," "liver fibrosis," and "liver transplantation" as per keyword co-occurrence networking. J Gastroenterol Hepatol had the most publications of EHPVO research as well the h-index. Regarding collaborative network mapping, the USA and Primignani M were the significant nodes among country and author, respectively. Conclusion: EHPVO research publication volume is low but is gradually progressing with dominant contributions from Indian institutes and authors. Most highly cited articles are of low level of evidence, and multi-institutional collaborative research can be the way forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
4. National database of urological malignancies: The vision and road ahead.
- Author
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Bora, Girdhar, Choudhary, Gautam, Madduri, Vijay, Nayak, Brusabhanu, Singh, Uday, Prakash, Gagan, and Kumar, Rajeev
- Subjects
INFORMATION technology laws ,INFORMATION technology ,REPORTING of diseases ,DATABASES ,HEALTH Insurance Portability & Accountability Act ,CANCER ,URINARY organs ,DATA security ,DATA mining - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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5. Effect of COVID-19 Lockdown on Intrafamilial Relationship in Urban Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh, India.
- Author
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Ganji, Sravanthi, Babu, G. Krishna, Prabha, K. J. S. Surya, and Babji, K.
- Subjects
WELL-being ,CROSS-sectional method ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,DOMESTIC violence ,FAMILIES ,FAMILY attitudes ,CHI-squared test ,STAY-at-home orders ,FAMILY relations ,METROPOLITAN areas ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PARENTS - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has created public health crisis and economic instability globally. However, the pandemic and the nationwide lockdown have a significant impact on the psychosocial status, emotional state, relationships of individuals, family, and community. Families were facing challenges due to lockdown and will do their best to develop adaptive behavior for attaining self-stability. The present study helps to understand the effect of lockdown on family well-being and the shift of intrafamilial relationships during the lockdown. Subjects and Methods: A cross-sectional study was done in an urban area of Kakinada from April to June 2020. A convenient sample of 300 families was selected by systematic random method. One parent and one adolescent child from each family, a total of 600 study participants were included under the study. Data were collected using a semi-structured questionnaire, entered in Microsoft Excel and analyzed using IBM SPSS. The mean, frequencies, proportion, and Chi-square test were used to analyze data. Results: Adaptability has increased during lockdown by sharing of household work, from 3% before to 91.7%. 97.3% were happy spending time with family members. Communication and satisfaction have increased by a decrease in conflicts, from 19.7% to 7% during the lockdown. Only 3.08% of adults were facing either physical or verbal abuse. Conclusions: During the lockdown period, the family members spent quality time together acquired new skills, and conflicts among them were reduced. Domestic violence is low in this particular study area and familial bonding is high. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Practical use of rubric for assessment of eye bank professionals for eye retrieval and its role in improving eye retrieval process in eye banks: An Indo-American experience.
- Author
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Farooqui, Javed, Acharya, Manisha, Schunder, Ingrid, Hinesley, Renee, Das, Animesh, and Farooqui, Javed Hussain
- Subjects
CRYSTALLINE lens ,SCORING rubrics ,EYE ,BANKING industry ,CORNEA ,HOSPITALS ,TISSUE banks ,CORNEAL transplantation - Abstract
Purpose: To study the practical use of the Rubric for Assessment of Eye Bank Professionals for Eye Retrieval (RAEPER) as a competency assessment tool by organizing a workshop in two eye banks - one in India and other in America.Methods: Two-day workshop was conducted in two eye banks - named Shroff's Charity Eye Hospital (SCEH) in India and Miracles in Sight (MIS) in America. Day 1 of workshop comprised of didactic lectures and discussions and day 2 was eye retrieval assessment done on human eyes in a wet lab setting. Assessment was done using RAEPER by two independent senior eye bank managers.Results: MIS had 27 participants, 15 males and 12 females (mean age: 38.8 years, range: 28-55) and SCEH had 11 participants, 10 males and 1 female (mean age: 48 years, range: 22-68). All participants were in house technicians, who had a minimal experience of at least 150 eye retrievals. At MIS, step 19 (crystalline lens check) got a score of 3 (Competent) 93.5% of the time. At SCEH, step 6 (conjunctival removal) and step 4 (Irrigation of cornea with sterile saline) were high scoring with 90.11% and 72.7% scoring 3, respectively.Conclusion: India's cornea blind population is expected to reach 10 million by 2020. Steps need to be taken to improve cornea retrieval rates in the country and make various eye banks self-sufficient. Incorporating such training modules not only improves the cornea utilization rates, but also helps standardize the entire eye banking process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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7. Regulations and guidelines governing stem cell based products: Clinical considerations.
- Author
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George, Bobby
- Subjects
STEM cell treatment ,THERAPEUTICS research - Abstract
The use of stem cells as medicines is a promising and upcoming area of research as they may be able to help the body to regenerate damaged or lost tissue in a host of diseases like Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, heart disease, liver disease, spinal cord damage, cancer and many more. Translating basic stem cell research into routine therapies is a complex multi-step process which entails the challenge related to managing the expected therapeutic benefits with the potential risks while complying with the existing regulations and guidelines. While in the United States (US) and European Union (EU) regulations are in place, in India, we do not have a well-defined regulatory framework for "stem cell based products (SCBP)". There are several areas that need to be addressed as it is quite different from that of pharmaceuticals. These range from establishing batch consistency, product stability to product safety and efficacy through pre-clinical, clinical studies and marketing authorization. This review summarizes the existing regulations/guidelines in US, EU, India, and the associated challenges in developing SCBP with emphasis on clinical aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Report of the Indo-US Health Care Summit 2009 - Mental Health Section.
- Author
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Pandurangi, Anand K. and Desai, Nimesh G.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,MEDICAL care ,PSYCHIATRY education ,MENTAL depression ,SUMMIT meetings ,PHYSICIANS - Abstract
The 2nd Indo-US Health Care Summit held in January 2009 was a forum to discuss collaboration between physicians in the US and India on medical education, health care services and research. Six specialties were represented including Mental Health (MH). Using Depression as the paradigmatic disorder, the following objectives were developed. Objective I - Leadership and Public Education: Linkage with like-minded agencies and organizations. The core message should be simple. Major Depression is a brain disorder. Depression is treatable. Timely treatment prevents disability and suicide. Objective II - Medical Education: To improve psychiatric education, it was proposed that (1) relations between US/ UK and Indian mid-level institutions be established, (2) teaching methods such as tele-psychiatry and online courses be pursued, (3) use models of teaching excellence to arouse student interest, and (4) develop core curricula for other branches of medicine, and CME. Objective III - Reduce Complications of Depression (Suicide, Alcoholism): Goals include (1) decriminalizing attempted suicide, (2) improving reporting systems, and including depression, psychosis, alcoholism, and suicide in the national registry, (3) pilot studies in vulnerable groups on risk and interventions, and (4) education of colleagues on alcoholism as a link between psychiatric and medical disorders. Objective IV - Integrating MH Treatment & Primary Health Care: The focus should be on training of general practitioners in psychiatry. Available training modules including long distance learning modules to be suitably modified for India. Collaborations and specific project designs are to be developed, implemented and monitored by each specialty group and reviewed in future summits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Advocacy in neurology.
- Author
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Pauranik, Apoorva
- Subjects
PATIENT advocacy ,NEUROLOGY ,CHANGE ,PHYSICIAN training - Abstract
The article focuses on the importance of advocacy in neurology. It discusses some subjects, issues or situations in the U.S. and India that need change or improvement. It explores the role of formal training to a doctor or any individual or group so as to make them more effective advocate of their own and their patients.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Urology training in India: Balancing national needs with global perspectives.
- Author
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Aron, Monish
- Subjects
MEDICAL education ,UROLOGY ,UROLOGISTS ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,TRAINING - Abstract
The article looks at the status of urology training in India and its comparison with the U.S., Europe and Australia. It notes that urology training takes three years to finish but training centers lack standardized curriculum. The author adds that there is no formal subspecialty fellowship training in the country while training programs lack emphasis on research. Urological students in the U.S. undergo training for four years while the Surgical Education and Training course of the Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand takes six years.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Modern Practice Era: The Purpose of Physician's Sample.
- Author
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Bhatnagar, Sugam A. and Dixit, Jagannath V.
- Subjects
SAMPLES (Commerce) ,DRUGS ,MEDICAL practice ,PHYSICIANS ,PHARMACEUTICAL industry - Abstract
The article focuses on a study on the purpose of physician's sample (PS) in the context of modern practice era in India. It recalls that free samples were distributed by the pharmaceutical industry in the U.S. yet the cost of which are added to the drug formulation cost which will then be shouldered by the patient. The study involved the perception of physicians, medical representatives (MRs) and pharmaceutical company executives over the purpose of PS. Results show that 86% of the respondents believe that such purpose is not served effectively.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Ophthalmic research and publication in India: Where do we stand?
- Author
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Kumar Nayak, Barun
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,CONTRACTING out ,ACADEMIC dissertations ,SCHOLARLY publishing - Abstract
The author reflects on medical researches made in India. The research conducted by Wong and colleagues describes the challenges met in the development of research in Asian countries. The research made by Thatte and colleagues shows the reasons for the anticipated outsourcing of 65% of Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulated trials from the U.S. The study conducted by Dhaliwal and colleagues reveals that only 30% of postgraduate theses are published from an Indian university medical college.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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