55,409 results
Search Results
102. Bibliometric analysis of Journal of Nursing Management from 1993 to 2018.
- Author
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Yanbing, Su, Ruifang, Zhu, Chen, Wang, Shifan, Han, Hua, Liu, and Zhiguang, Duan
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AUTHORS ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,JOB satisfaction ,LEADERSHIP ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NURSING career counseling ,NURSING services administration ,POPULATION geography ,RESEARCH funding ,SERIAL publications ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CITATION analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aim: This study presents a general bibliometric overview of the developmental status of Journal of Nursing Management from its first issue (1993) to 2018. Background: Bibliometric method is proved to be effective in analysing the publication characteristics and influence of a given journal, and it gained considerable interest from the scientific community in recent years. However, to the best of our knowledge, bibliometric approach was not previously used to analyse the publications of Journal of Nursing Management. Methods: A total of 1,913 publications of Journal of Nursing Management were retrieved from Scopus database. Bibliometric analysis was used to explore the dynamic trends of publications and to identify most influential authors, institutions, countries and research teams in this journal. This paper also uses the VOS viewer software to graphically map the hot topics of Journal of Nursing Management. Results: After a rapid growth from 2006 to 2008, the number of publications of Journal of Nursing Management tends to stabilize with exception of several years in the latest 11 years. The top prolific institutions are mainly from the UK, Canada, Finland and Sweden, and Journal of Nursing Management has attracted increasing attention from researchers around the world. Nursing, nurses, management, leadership and job satisfaction are the most frequently used keywords in Journal of Nursing Management. Conclusion: Nursing management, nursing leadership/leaders, nursing human resource management, nursing quality and safety management, nursing communication, and conflict management have always been popular topics in Journal of Nursing Management. Implications for Nursing Management: This study informs scholars and managers within nursing management field about structured knowledge of the research status and development of Journal of Nursing Management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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103. Measuring Library Broadband Networks to Address Knowledge Gaps and Data Caps.
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Ritzo, Chris, Rhinesmith, Colin, and Jie Jiang
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DIGITAL libraries ,FOCUS groups ,DIGITAL divide ,RURAL conditions ,DIGITAL technology ,LIBRARY technical services ,QUANTITATIVE research ,INTERVIEWING ,RACE ,QUALITATIVE research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SURVEYS ,INTERNET access ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,ACCESS to information ,METROPOLITAN areas ,ETHNIC groups ,PUBLIC libraries ,INTERNET service providers ,LONGITUDINAL method ,INFORMATION technology - Abstract
In this paper, we present findings from a three-year research project funded by the US Institute of Museum and Library Services that examined how advanced broadband measurement capabilities can support the infrastructure and services needed to respond to the digital demands of public library users across the US. Previous studies have identified the ongoing broadband challenges of public libraries while also highlighting the increasing digital expectations of their patrons. However, few large-scale research efforts have collected automated, longitudinal measurement data on library broadband speeds and quality of service at a local, granular level inside public libraries over time, including when buildings are closed. This research seeks to address this gap in the literature through the following research question: How can public libraries utilize broadband measurement tools to develop a better understanding of the broadband speeds and quality of service that public libraries receive? In response, quantitative measurement data were gathered from an open-source broadband measurement system that was both developed for the research and deployed at 30 public libraries across the US. Findings from our analysis of the data revealed that Ookla measurements over time can confirm when the library's internet connection matches expected service levels and when they do not. When measurements are not consistent with expected service levels, libraries can observe the differences and correlate this with additional local information about the causes. Ongoing measurements conducted by the library enable local control and monitoring of this vital service and support critique and interrogation of the differences between internet measurement platforms. In addition, we learned that speed tests are useful for examining these trends but are only a small part of assessing an internet connection and how well it can be used for specific purposes. These findings have implications for state library agencies and federal policymakers interested in having access to data on observed versus advertised speeds and quality of service of public library broadband connections nationwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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104. Environmental Impact of Bronchoscopy: Analysis of Waste Mass and Recyclability of Bronchoscopic Equipment and Consumables.
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Patrucco, Filippo, Gavelli, Francesco, and Balbo, Piero Emilio
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MEDICAL wastes ,ENERGY metabolism ,WASTE recycling ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,GREENHOUSE gases ,CARBON dioxide ,BRONCHOSCOPY ,POLLUTION ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Background: Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are significant contributors to climate change, and CO
2 equivalent (CO2 -e) is measured to compare emissions from GHGs. The healthcare sector contributes 4.4% of global CO2 -e emissions, mainly with energy consumption and, in lesser extent, waste production. In this regard, bronchoscopy procedures produce a large amount of waste and are responsible for a significant consumption of energy. Objective: We aimed at quantifying the impact on waste mass production, energy consumption, and recyclability of bronchoscopic procedures. Methods: We conducted a prospective single-centre observational study; for each type of procedure (performed with either reusable or single-use instruments), the number of items used, their weight, and recyclability were evaluated, as well as the material of which recyclable waste was made of. We then calculated the total amount of waste produced, its recyclability, energy consumption, and CO2 -e produced over 10 days of activity in our Interventional Pulmonology Unit. Results: Sixty procedures generated 61,928 g of waste, of which only 15.8% was potentially recyclable. Single-use instruments generated nearly twofold more recyclable waste than reusable ones, 80% during the procedure phase. Reusable instruments generated 45% of waste during the reprocessing phase, of which 50% was recyclable. The recyclable material was totally composed of paper and plastic. During 10 days of activity, we consumed 64 kWh and produced more than 67 kg of CO2 -e due to non-recyclable waste and energy consumption. Conclusions: Our results confirm the compelling need to recycle as many materials as possible, even if the amount of recyclable waste is limited. In this respect, official documents issued by international societies are urgently needed to align our activity with climate requirements and improve the sustainability of our work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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105. Visualising COVID‐19: Implications for Design Education.
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Chatteur, Fiona and Leppens, Mieke
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VISUAL communication ,CORONAVIRUS diseases ,INFORMATION design ,GRAPHIC design ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
This paper reports on the findings of a visual text analysis of selected infographics and data visualisations used in news websites during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Sydney, Australia. Infographics and data visualisations used in news website articles disseminated and communicated local and national information to the public about the COVID‐19 pandemic and related social implications. For the first time live data, animation and interaction were used in reporting health and societal information to a general news readership, contributing to the knowledge base and visual literacy of the public. The information presented was not only clear but also aesthetically appealing. This paper examines the styles of news digital infographics and data visualisation of three longitudinal studies using lessons learned from Grainger et al. (2016), Dick (2020) and Tufte (2001) and contextualises the context, narrative, aesthetics, communication, data, functionality and examines the collaboration between communication designers, journalists and the development team. The implications for communication design education are explored in the context of skills, tools and teamwork needed for future communication design students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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106. Obstacles affecting the management innovation process through different actors during the covid-19 crisis: a longitudinal study of Industry 4.0.
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Robert, Marc, Giuliani, Philippe, and Dubouloz, Sandra
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COVID-19 pandemic ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,INNOVATION management ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Industry 4.0 represents the most advanced stage of organization of industrial companies, allowing them to respond to an uncertain and changing environment, particularly as accentuated by the recent crisis resulting from COVID-19. Management innovation (MI) contributes to this process of permanent adaptation. The MI implementation phase is a critical step in MI generation that can generate many potential obstacles. This study focuses on these obstacles while considering the different activities (or subprocesses) embedded in this phase and the different actors involved in this complex process. We conducted a longitudinal case study in real time to investigate the implementation of MI internally generated by a multinational industrial company. Our results show that the obstacles encountered during the MI implementation phase may differ depending on the different activities and actors of this phase, thus leading us to question current implementation frameworks. This paper contributes by refining the theoretical model of MI generation and providing a better understanding of the obstacles that occur during the MI implementation phase. From a managerial perspective, this paper highlights key management principles to overcome the obstacles identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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107. Delirium incidence, predictors and outcomes in the intensive care unit: A prospective cohort study.
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Alzoubi, Elaf, Shaheen, Feras, and Yousef, Khalil
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INTENSIVE care units ,TIME ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,DISEASE incidence ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,APHASIA ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DELIRIUM ,DIAGNOSTIC errors ,STATISTICAL sampling ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,LONGITUDINAL method ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate the incidence, predictors, and outcomes of delirium in intensive care units. Background: Delirium is a common complication in intensive care units. In developing countries, it can be misdiagnosed or unrecognised. Design: Prospective cohort study reported according to the strengthening the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology criteria. Methods: We included patients who were conscious, >18 years old, and admitted to the intensive care units for at least 8 h between December 2019 and February 2020. Patients with a Richmond score of −4 or −5, mental disability, receptive aphasia and/or visual or auditory impairment were excluded from the study. Delirium was assessed using the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM‐ICU), whereas the functional outcome was assessed by the Katz Activity of Daily Living Index. Results: This study included 111 patients with a delirium incidence of 31.5%. The severity of illness was the only significant predictor of delirium. Patients with delirium had longer intensive care unit and in‐hospital stays in contrast to those without delirium. Delirium was associated with in‐hospital and 4‐month mortality but not the activities of daily living. Conclusions: Delirium is associated with increased length of stay and mortality. Further investigation to determine whether delirium management can improve outcomes is warranted. Summary statement: What is already known about this topic? Delirium is a common complication in the intensive care unit and can affect patients' outcomes.The incidence and the effect of delirium on patients' outcomes in low‐resource countries remain largely unexplored. Delirium is potentially underdiagnosed and commonly undetected in these countries. What this paper adds? Delirium is associated with a longer duration of stay in the hospital and the intensive care unit as well as mortality in the hospital and 4 months after discharge.Delirium may not affect long‐term functional outcomes after discharge.The severity of illness is an independent predictor of delirium. The implications of this paper In low‐resource countries, the increased length of stay can add a significant burden on healthcare systems.Proper management of delirium will potentially maximise resource utilisation.Delirium affects mortality and length of stay, thus investigating the effect of the current management protocols on these outcomes is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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108. Strategizing in agency reform: a longitudinal case study from The Netherlands.
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Zwaan, Pieter, van Thiel, Sandra, and Zonneveld, Michelle
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LONGITUDINAL method ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,REFORMS ,AGENT (Philosophy) ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
Copyright of Public Money & Management is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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109. Examining Variance , Flexibility , and Centrality in the Spatial Configurations of Yazd Schools: A Longitudinal Analysis.
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Fallah Tafti, Fatemeh and Lee, Ju Hyun
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CENTRALITY ,WORLD Heritage Sites ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Past historical research on Iranian educational architecture has highlighted three socio-spatial characteristics: (i) the topological variance of spatial properties, (ii) the flexibility of spatial configuration, and (ii) the centrality of outdoor spaces, which remain under scrutiny. This paper aims to quantitatively examine the topological changes in the spatial configurations of Yazd schools over time. The study entails the application of a Justified Plan Graph (JPG) method to quantify and compare the morphological properties of three historical sets of 20 Yazd schools (traditional, transitional and modern, and contemporary). The results confirm the historical changes in the Yazd schools' flexibility and their outdoor spaces' centrality, although the variance of spatial properties over time is not clearly observed. In particular, due to the relatively higher centrality values of outdoor spaces, the traditional schools, regardless of their rigid spatial logics, developed more integrated and interactive spatial configurations. As a first historical study on the socio-spatial configuration of Yazd schools, this paper precisely demonstrates the JPG method for this longitudinal spatial analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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110. Clinical effectiveness of late maxillary protraction in cleft lip and palate: A methods paper.
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Lee, M. K., Lane, C., Azeredo, F., Landsberger, M., Kapadia, H., Sheller, B., and Yen, S. L.
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CLEFT lip ,MAXILLARY artery ,MALOCCLUSION ,DENTAL occlusion ,ORTHODONTICS ,SURGERY ,TREATMENT of malocclusion ,CLEFT palate ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FACIAL bone growth ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,ORTHODONTIC appliances ,CORRECTIVE orthodontics ,OSTEOTOMY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Objectives: A prospective parallel cohort trial was conducted to compare outcomes of patients treated with maxillary protraction vs LeFort 1 maxillary advancement surgery.Setting and Sample Population: The primary site for the clinical trial is Children's Hospital Los Angeles; the satellite test site is Seattle Children's Hospital. All patients have isolated cleft lip and palate and a skeletal Class III malocclusion.Material and Methods: A total of 50 patients, ages 11-14, will be recruited for the maxillary protraction cohort. The maxillary surgery cohort consists of 50 patients, ages 16-21, who will undergo LeFort 1 maxillary advancement surgery. Patients with additional medical or cognitive handicaps were excluded from the study.Results: Current recruitment of patients is on track to complete the study within the proposed recruitment period.Conclusion: This observational trial is collecting information that will examine dental, skeletal, financial and quality-of-life issues from both research cohorts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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111. Recruitment of emergency department patients to a prospective observational study.
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Shubeck, Claire, Reyes Garay, Hans, Nelson, Bret P., Wilder, Marcee, Degtyar, Aleksandra, Lukas, Megan, Gordon, Lauren, Loo, George T., Coleman, Bernice, Richardson, Lynne D., and Souffront, Kimberly
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PATIENT selection ,PATIENTS ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN research subjects ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,HYPERTENSION ,LEADERSHIP ,EMERGENCY medical services ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RACE ,MEDICAL research ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: The dynamic environment of the emergency department (ED) poses unique challenges to the execution of well-designed research. There is limited investigation into the viability of studies conducted in the ED. This paper offers a systematic evaluation of our recruitment of emergency patients for a prospective observational research study, shedding light on the intricate landscape of research feasibility within the ED setting. Results: Research coordinators dedicated 2816.83 h to screening, recruiting, and enrolling patients between June 2018 and September 2023, having to stop recruitment twice due to financial constraints and the COVID-19 pandemic. 485 patients were approached and 84 of them were enrolled, resulting in a 31.94% enrollment rate, with approximately 2.8 participants recruited per month. Of those enrolled, 77 completed all study endpoints. Most participants were Hispanic (n = 44; 52.3%) and/or Black (n = 37; 44%), middle-aged (µ = 51.7 years), and female (n = 48; 57.1%). Participant recruitment was challenged by competing mindsets, the COVID-19 pandemic, and high staff turnover. Conclusions: Recruiting emergency patients for a prospective observational study is feasible given adequate staffing and financial resources. Standardizing feasibility assessments for the recruitment of patients in the emergency department is important to the success of future study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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112. Exploring the potential cost-effectiveness of a new computerised decision support tool for identifying fetal compromise during monitored term labours: an early health economic model.
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Campbell, H. E., Ratushnyak, S., Georgieva, A., Impey, L., and Rivero-Arias, O.
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STATISTICAL models ,QUALITY-adjusted life years ,COST control ,COST effectiveness ,RESEARCH funding ,CLINICAL decision support systems ,LABOR (Obstetrics) ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ECONOMICS ,FETAL monitoring ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,FETAL heart rate monitoring - Abstract
Background: Around 60% of term labours in the UK are continuously monitored using cardiotocography (CTG) to guide clinical labour management. Interpreting the CTG trace is challenging, leading to some babies suffering adverse outcomes and others unnecessary expedited deliveries. A new data driven computerised tool combining multiple clinical risk factors with CTG data (attentive CTG) was developed to help identify term babies at risk of severe compromise during labour. This paper presents an early health economic model exploring its potential cost-effectiveness. Methods: The model compared attentive CTG and usual care with usual care alone and simulated clinical events, healthcare costs, and infant quality-adjusted life years over 18 years. It was populated using data from a cohort of term pregnancies, the literature, and administrative datasets. Attentive CTG effectiveness was projected through improved monitoring sensitivity/specificity and potential reductions in numbers of severely compromised infants. Scenario analyses explored the impact of including litigation costs. Results: Nationally, attentive CTG could potentially avoid 10,000 unnecessary alerts in labour and 2400 emergency C-section deliveries through improved specificity. A reduction of 21 intrapartum stillbirths amongst severely compromised infants was also predicted with improved sensitivity. Attentive CTG could potentially lead to cost savings and health gains with a probability of being cost-effective at £25,000 per QALY ranging from 70 to 95%. Potential exists for further cost savings if litigation costs are included. Conclusions: Attentive CTG could offer a cost-effective use of healthcare resources. Prospective patient-level studies are needed to formally evaluate its effectiveness and economic impact in routine clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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113. Changing Leadership: A Longitudinal Study of Decision-making by Academic Library Leaders.
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Meier, John J.
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SCHOLARLY method , *DIVERSITY & inclusion policies , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *GROUP identity , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *LEADERSHIP , *LIBRARIANS , *INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CONTENT analysis , *DECISION making , *STRATEGIC planning , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *GOAL (Psychology) , *LONGITUDINAL method , *WORKING hours , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *ACADEMIC library administration , *BUDGET , *CHANGE management , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COVID-19 pandemic , *FORECASTING - Abstract
This paper presents the results of thirty-seven interviews of senior library leaders at American Association of University (AAU) institutions conducted in Spring 2023. The author replicated a 2016 study from portal , revealing an increased focus on strategic plan-based decision-making along with new priorities of open scholarship and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). The COVID-19 pandemic had a drastic impact on staffing and budgets, requiring academic library leaders to balance internal operations and external collaboration. A younger, more diverse AAU library leadership population achieves success through strong advocacy to campus leadership and the inclusive leadership practices outlined in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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114. Assessing the Relationships between Physical Activity, a Healthy Life, and Personal Happiness in European Union Countries.
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Mangra, Gabriel Ioan, Mangra, Mădălina Giorgiana, Bocean, Claudiu George, and Vărzaru, Anca Antoaneta
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FAMILIES & psychology ,COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,OBESITY risk factors ,DIABETES risk factors ,TUMOR risk factors ,HEART disease risk factors ,RISK assessment ,STATISTICAL models ,SATISFACTION ,HEALTH status indicators ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,SELF-efficacy ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,HEALTH expectancy ,EMPIRICAL research ,SEDENTARY lifestyles ,EMOTIONS ,ANXIETY ,EVALUATION of medical care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HAPPINESS ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,QUALITY of life ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH promotion ,SOCIAL support ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,PHYSICAL activity ,WELL-being ,MENTAL depression ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: Maintaining a physically active lifestyle is a determinant factor of a healthy life and personal happiness. Meanwhile, physical inactivity remains a significant issue, resulting in negative consequences for public health. Objectives: This paper investigates the relationships between physical activity, physical inactivity, a healthy life, life expectancy, and personal happiness in European Union (EU) countries. Methods: This empirical study uses an artificial neural network and cluster analysis to analyze and interpret data from 27 EU countries. Artificial neural network analysis enables the assessment of the relationships between physical activity and inactivity, a healthy life, and personal happiness, while cluster analysis identifies groups of EU countries based on physical activity, healthy life, and personal happiness indicators. Results: The results show significant positive links between physical activity and improvements in healthy living and personal happiness. Conclusions: This study highlights considerable variations among EU countries regarding the levels of physical activity, healthy living, and personal happiness, emphasizing the importance of promoting physical activity to enhance public health and overall well-being. The findings suggest the need to develop customized policies that address country-specific factors and promote an active lifestyle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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115. 'On the mountain, the world is still all right': Nature connections in context and the Covid journey of young adults in Austria.
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Bork‐Hüffer, Tabea, Wächter, Leonie, and Hitchings, Russell
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LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,PANDEMICS ,CRISES - Abstract
Research and policy during the Covid‐19 pandemic often dovetailed with an established interest in how nearby urban nature spaces can encourage human well‐being. Yet, to define the focus upfront in this way is to overlook the many ways in which different groups may draw on experiences in diverse natural environments to get through challenging times.This paper draws on a qualitative study with 98 university students in Innsbruck, Austria. As part of a co‐production approach, and using a range of exploratory and inductive methods, we examined how they coped with lockdown restrictions and other challenges to everyday life during the pandemic between March and November 2020.The study's longitudinal design reveals how their nature relations evolved over the lifetime of the pandemic. Participants showed a strong identification with the Alpine nature surrounding Innsbruck and deeply mourned opportunities to go there during quarantine at the start. With the relaxation of restrictions, they briefly celebrated the return of access to these spaces before nature experiences were soon blended back into their everyday lives as before.The findings present an account of nature spaces being valued during the pandemic precisely because they were away from urban spaces nearby that had come to feel strange as a result of the lockdown restrictions. This leads us to reflect on the importance of how exactly people engage with local nature and how nature connections change in response to the evolving pressures and preoccupations that shape everyday life, both for young people and others. We emphasise the value of contextual sensitivity in future research and policy hoping to foster nature benefits, both during crisis situations such as these and more generally. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Zusammenfassung: Forschungen und Maßnahmen während der Covid‐19‐Pandemie haben oft auf nahe gelegene städtische Naturräume und ihre Bedeutung für (eine Verbesserung von) Wohlbefinden fokussiert. Wenn der Schwerpunkt im Voraus auf diese Weise festlegt wird, übersieht man jedoch andere und vielfältige Naturräume die verschiedene Bevölkerungsgruppen nutzen um Krisen und schwierige Zeiten zu überstehen.Dieser Beitrag beruht auf einer qualitativen Studie mit 98 Studierenden in Innsbruck, Österreich. Im Rahmen eines ko‐produktiven und partizipativen Ansatzes und unter Verwendung einer Reihe von explorativen und induktiven Methoden haben wir untersucht, wie Studierende während der Pandemie von März bis November 2020 mit den pandemiebedingten Maßnahmen und damit zusammenhängenden Herausforderungen des Alltagslebens zurechtkamen.Das Längsschnittdesign der Studie zeigt, wie sich ihre Naturbeziehungen während der Dauer der Pandemie verändert haben. Die Teilnehmenden zeigten eine starke Identifikation mit der alpinen Natur rund um Innsbruck und trauerten zu Beginn der Quarantäne sehr um die Möglichkeit diese zu nutzen. Mit der Lockerung der Restriktionen zelebrierten sie kurzzeitig die Rückkehr des Zugangs zu diesen Räumen, bevor sich die Naturerfahrungen bald wieder in ihren Alltag einfügten wie zuvor.Naturräume um Innsbruck wurden von unseren Teilnehmenden während der Pandemie gerade deshalb so geschätzt, weil sie außerhalb der Stadt lagen, die aufgrund der pandemischen Maßnahmen als fremd empfunden wurde. Vor dem Hintergrund dieser Ergebnisse, möchten wir anregen zu einer Diskussion über die Spezifika räumlicher Naturerfahrungen und ‐beziehungen und wie sie Belastungen, Sorgen und das Wohlbefinden von (jungen) Menschen prägen. Wir plädieren für kontextsensible zukünftige Forschungen und Maßnahmen, die darauf zielen den Nutzen von Natur für menschliches Wohlbefinden zu fördern – sowohl in Krisensituationen wie einer Pandemie aber auch ganz allgemein. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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116. Variation in direct healthcare costs to the health system by residents living in long-term care facilities: a Registry of Senior Australians study.
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Khadka, Jyoti, Ratcliffe, Julie, Caughey, Gillian, Air, Tracy, Wesselingh, Steve, Corlis, Megan, Evans, Keith, and Inacio, Maria
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DIAGNOSIS of dementia ,STATISTICAL models ,PROPRIETARY health facilities ,ELDER care ,RESEARCH funding ,LONG-term health care ,HOSPITAL care ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,GOVERNMENT aid ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL care costs ,DEMENTIA patients ,PATIENT aftercare ,HOSPITAL costs - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to examine the national variation in government-subsidised healthcare costs of residents in long-term care facilities (LTCFs) and costs differences by resident and facility characteristics. Methods: A retrospective population-based cohort study was conducted using linked national aged and healthcare data of older people (≥65 years) living in 2112 LTCFs in Australia. Individuals' pharmaceutical, out-of-hospital, hospitalisation and emergency presentations direct costs were aggregated from the linked healthcare data. Average annual healthcare costs per resident were estimated using generalised linear models, adjusting for covariates. Cost estimates were compared by resident dementia status and facility characteristics (location, ownership type and size). Results: Of the 75,142 residents examined, 70% (N = 52,142) were women and 53.4% (N = 40,137) were living with dementia. The average annual healthcare cost (all costs in $A) was $9233 (95% CI $9150–$9295) per resident, with hospitalisation accounting for 47.2% of the healthcare costs. Residents without dementia had higher healthcare costs ($11,097, 95% CI $10,995–$11,200) compared to those with dementia ($7561, 95% CI $7502–$7620). Residents living in for-profit LTCFs had higher adjusted average overall annual healthcare costs ($11,324, 95% CI $11,185–$11,463) compared to those living in not-for-profit ($11,017, 95% CI $10,895–$11,139) and government ($9731, 95% CI $9365–$10,099) facilities. Conclusions: The healthcare costs incurred by residents of LTCFs varied by presence of dementia and facility ownership. The variation in costs may be associated with residents' care needs, care models and difference in quality of care across LTCFs. As hospitalisation is the biggest driver of the healthcare costs, strategies to reduce preventable hospitalisations may reduce downstream cost burden to the health system. What is known about the topic? Residents living in long-term care facilities have high health and care needs, but little research exists on how downstream healthcare costs vary based on facility and individual characteristics. What does this paper add? Using linked national aged care and healthcare data, this study determined that the average annual healthcare cost per resident was $9233 (95% CI $9150–$9295), with hospitalisation accounting for nearly half of these costs. Furthermore, healthcare costs varied based on facility ownership and size, as well as whether individuals had dementia. What are the implications for practitioners? Understanding sectoral variation and learning from long-term care facilities with lower hospitalisation rates could be a strategic approach to reducing healthcare costs for long-term care residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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117. Informing the management of the post-COVID condition: insights from the Western Australian experience comparing those who tested positive and negative to early COVID-19 strains.
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Grove, Kristen, Cavalheri, Vinicius, Chih, HuiJun, Natarajan, Varsha, Harrold, Meg, Mohd, Sheeraz, Hurn, Elizabeth, Van der Lee, Lisa, Maiorana, Andrew, Tearne, Jessica, Watson, Carol, Pearce, Jane, Jacques, Angela, White, Ann, Vicary, Caitlin, Roffman, Caroline, Synnott, Emma-Leigh, Suttie, Ian, Lin, Ivan, and Larsson, Jade
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T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,COVID-19 testing ,POST-acute COVID-19 syndrome ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,SEX distribution ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,FISHER exact test ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,FUNCTIONAL status ,AGE distribution ,ANXIETY ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHI-squared test ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ODDS ratio ,CONVALESCENCE ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,STATISTICS ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,DYSPNEA ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 ,ASTHMA ,GRIP strength ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to compare the relative physical recovery and symptoms after SARS-CoV-2 infection between groups confirmed positive or negative to early strains of COVID-19. Methods: A prospective, longitudinal cohort study compared outcomes of metropolitan adults polymerase chain reaction-tested for COVID-19 between March and November 2020 in Western Australia. Control matching was attempted: inpatients (gender, age) and ambulatory clinic (gender, age, asthma, chronic pulmonary disease). One-year follow-up involved three repeated measures: physical function (grip strength and 1-min sit-to-stand) and patient-reported outcomes (Fatigue Severity Scale, modified Medical Research Council dyspnoea scale and Euroqol-5D-5L). Results: Three hundred and forty-four participants were recruited (154 COVID+, age 54 ± 18 years, 75 females [49%]); 190 COVID−, age 52 ± 16 years, 67 females [35%]) prior to national vaccination roll-out. No between-group differences in physical function measures were evident at any time point. Fatigue (OR 6.62, 95% CI 2.74–15.97) and dyspnoea (OR 2.21, 95% CI 1.14–4.30) were higher in the COVID+ group at second assessment (T2). On Euroqol-5D-5L, no between-group differences were evident in the physical function domains of self-care, mobility or usual activities at any time point. However, COVID+ participants were less likely to report an absence of anxiety or depression symptoms at T2 (OR 0.41, 95% CI 0.19–0.89). Conclusions: Neither statistical nor clinically meaningful differences in physical function were evident between COVID+ and COVID− participants to 12-months after acute illness. Symptoms of fatigue, dyspnoea, anxiety or depression were more prevalent in the COVID+ group til ~8 months after illness with between-group differences no longer evident at 1 year. What is known about the topic? COVID-19 evokes multi-system sequelae including persistent physical and mental health symptoms, functional impairments and poorer quality of life. What does this paper add? A COVID+ group had equivalent physical recovery over 12 months; but higher prevalence of fatigue, dyspnoea and anxiety/depression symptoms at ~8 months compared to a COVID− group. What are the implications for practitioners? Health authorities and employers should know that while adequate physical function may return within months, post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 impair sufferers for over 6 months, likely necessitating healthcare support and workplace adjustments to optimise timely return to participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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118. Longitudinal association of social isolation and loneliness with physical function among in‐patients living with schizophrenia.
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Chen, Li‐Jung, Steptoe, Andrew, Chien, I‐Chia, and Ku, Po‐Wen
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,RISK assessment ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LONELINESS ,FUNCTIONAL status ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STATISTICAL reliability ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL isolation ,ACTIVITIES of daily living - Abstract
What is Known on the Subject?: People living with schizophrenia have reduced physical function and are more likely to experience loneliness than those without condition.Low physical function is associated with greater loneliness in people with psychosis. However, it is unclear whether social isolation and loneliness contribute to impaired physical function in this population.Loneliness is linked to an increased risk of physical function impairment among older individuals, but research on patients living with schizophrenia is limited. What This Paper Adds to Existing Knowledge?: This study is the first to evaluate the longitudinal association of social isolation and loneliness with physical function among inpatients living with schizophrenia.It showed that more than one third of the participants experienced a decline in physical function over a 2‐year period.Loneliness, rather than social isolation, was associated with an increase in physical function impairment over 2 years among inpatients living with schizophrenia. What are the Implications for Practice?: Healthcare professionals should recognize loneliness as a potential risk factor for impaired physical function among inpatients diagnosed with schizophrenia.It is recommended that people living with schizophrenia are assessed for loneliness and that interventions are offered to alleviate their feelings of loneliness.Implementing interventions to reduce loneliness may help improve physical function and overall quality of life for individuals living with schizophrenia. Introduction: Patients living with schizophrenia often experience low physical function, which is associated with negative health outcomes. Therefore, investigating the risk factors for physical function is crucial in this population. Aim: This study examined the longitudinal association of social isolation and loneliness with physical function among inpatients living with schizophrenia. Methods: Physical function was assessed using measures of activities daily living (ADL), instrumental activities daily living (IADL) and the combination scores of ADL/IADL. Social isolation was indexed with five types of social connection and loneliness was measured using UCLA Loneliness Scale. Results: Social isolation was not associated with the measures of physical function over 2 years. Loneliness exhibited an association with IADL and ADL/IADL at follow‐up, after adjustment for baseline levels of the outcomes. These associations remained when both social isolation and loneliness were simultaneously entered into the model. Discussion: Loneliness, rather than social isolation, was associated with increased physical function impairment over 2 years among inpatients living with schizophrenia. Implications for Practice: Healthcare professionals should consider loneliness as a potential risk factor for impaired physical function. It would be beneficial to assess patients for loneliness and implement interventions to reduce feelings of loneliness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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119. Childhood Maltreatment, Revictimization, and Partner Violence Victimization Through Midlife: A Prospective Longitudinal Investigation.
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Widom, Cathy Spatz
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RISK of violence ,RISK assessment ,VICTIM psychology ,INTIMATE partner violence ,RESEARCH funding ,CHILD abuse ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXPERIENCE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CHILD sexual abuse ,ODDS ratio ,DATA analysis software ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,ADULTS - Abstract
Existing research suggests that prior victimizations during a person's lifetime, particularly childhood traumas and maltreatment, are risk factors for abuse and revictimization in adulthood, although longitudinal evidence is sparse. Using data from a 30-year ongoing longitudinal study of the long-term consequences of childhood maltreatment, this paper describes the extent to which childhood maltreatment predicts subsequent victimization and partner violence victimization at two time points in adulthood. Data were obtained from a prospective cohort design study in which children with court-substantiated cases of maltreatment (ages 0–11 years) and demographically matched controls were followed into adulthood and interviewed over several waves. Childhood maltreatment was assessed through juvenile and adult court records from 1967 to 1971 in a midwestern county area in the United States. Victimization experiences were assessed from 2000 to 2002 (M
age = 39.5 years) and 2009 to 2010 (Mage = 47.5) and included two types based on information from the lifetime trauma and victimization history instrument and questions about past year partner violence victimization. Individuals with histories of childhood maltreatment were more likely to report physical and sexual assaults and kidnapping and stalking victimization than controls through age 39.5. In contrast, the two groups did not differ at the later assessment at age 47.5, except maltreated individuals reported greater risk for sexual assault/abuse than controls. For intimate partner violence victimization at age 39.5, maltreated and control groups differed only in terms of victimization involving injury. Later in adulthood, more individuals with histories of childhood maltreatment reported partner physical violence victimization compared to controls. Although these longitudinal findings showed a general decline in victimization experiences over the two time points, these results demonstrate that childhood maltreatment increases risk for subsequent revictimization in middle adulthood, specifically for sexual assault/abuse and intimate partner physical violence victimization. These findings have implications for prevention and intervention efforts targeting maltreated children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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120. An engagement framework for the authentic co-design of a consent and healthy relationships intervention with upper-secondary students.
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Pantaleo, Ashleigh M., Dzidic, Peta L., Newnham, Elizabeth, HuiJun Chih, Wells, Robert, Olson, Brad, Langley, Sarah, Schonfeld, Adrian, and Hendriks, Jacqueline
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HIGH schools ,EXECUTIVES ,RESEARCH funding ,HIGH school students ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,LONGITUDINAL method ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,ACTION research ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,STUDENT attitudes - Abstract
Introduction: The objective of this demand driven research is to co-design an intervention for upper-secondary students that addresses issues of consent and healthy relationships. In this paper, we (university researchers, student coresearchers, school staff), present the engagement framework that has been critical to the project's development and planned implementation. Methods: An iterative co-design approach grounded in a participatory research approach is currently being adopted. Student co-researchers from three independent secondary schools on Whadjuk Nyungar Country in Boorloo/ Perth, Western Australia, have been engaged as co-researchers in the design of the intervention. Supplementary quantitative and qualitative data from students enrolled at each school site is also being collated to further inform the intervention design. Student co-researchers will provide insights on the overarching design of the intervention including: the scope of key concepts they want to learn, interpretation of supplementary data, and the development of contextually relevant educative content. Results: Retrospective and prospective components of the engagement framework are described and supported with applied examples where applicable. Preliminary results demonstrate the imperative of adopting iterative co-design, and the efficacy of our authentic engagement framework. A draft intervention has been formalized and will soon undergo piloting. The codesign process has already resulted in an intervention that differs from the initial program first conceptualized by university researchers. Conclusion: Imperative to our engagement framework is centering students as experts of their lived experience. It is anticipated that this engagement framework will provide insights around the feasibility, value, and necessity for authentic engagement of upper-secondary school students in the design of their consent and healthy relationship education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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121. Families with more than one trans person: Investments and divestments in cisnormativity.
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Riggs, Damien W., Skelton, Salem, Katz‐Wise, Sabra L., Sansfaçon, Annie Pullen, and Arora, Manvi
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YOUNG adults , *TRANSGENDER people , *DISINVESTMENT , *LONGITUDINAL method , *CISGENDER people - Abstract
Objective Background Method Results Implications To examine how having more than one trans person in a family facilitates investments in or divestments from cisnormativity.While there is now a robust body of literature on trans people's experiences with cisgender family members and vice versa, largely missing has been a focus on families where more than one person in the family is trans.This paper focuses on a subsample of 10 families from a large international qualitative longitudinal study conducted across six countries, focused on trans young people and their families. The paper draws on interviews conducted in 2022 and 2023 with families in which more than one family member was trans. Transcribed interviews were analyzed thematically.The themes developed indicate that while for some families having multiple trans family members may mean that some cisgender family members invest further in cisnormativity, for other family members the existence of multiple trans family members may encourage divestments from cisnormativity, to the benefit of trans young people. Specifically, themes focus on multiple trans family members highlighting cisnormativity, and conversely, multiple trans family members indicating likelihood of support and offering a safe haven.The paper concludes by emphasizing that while encouraging divestments from cisnormativity should not be the work of trans people, it is nonetheless important that research continues to investigate the experiences of families in which more than one person is trans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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122. Ethical analysis of informed consent methods in longitudinal cohort studies: A Chinese perspective.
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Li, Kun, Huang, Mingtao, Zhai, Xiaomei, and Wang, Chen
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LONGITUDINAL method , *HUMAN research subjects , *DISCLOSURE , *MEDICAL research , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
In longitudinal cohort studies involving large populations over extended periods, informed consent entails numerous urgent challenges. This paper explores challenges regarding informed consent in long‐term, large‐scale longitudinal cohort studies based on the longitudinal and dynamic nature of such research. It analyzes and evaluates widely recognized broad consent and dynamic consent methods, highlighting limitations concerning their ability to adapt to evolving research objectives and participant perspectives. This paper discusses trust‐based informed consent and emphasizes the needs to establish and maintain trust with research participants and to balance information disclosure with respect for participants' autonomy. Informed consent in long‐term studies is an evolving process that must adapt to changing research environments. Based on participant trust, researchers should observe and assess potential research risks. Finally, the paper recommends enhancing institutional credibility, implementing reconsent procedures, and ensuring robust ethical oversight to safeguard participants' rights despite the complexity of modern biomedical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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123. Intersections of age and agency as trans and gender diverse children navigate primary school: listening to children in (re)considering the potential of sexuality education.
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Neary, Aoife
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GENDER-nonconforming people , *ELEMENTARY schools , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *GENDER identity , *TRANSGENDER people , *PSYCHOLOGY of school children , *SEX education , *INTERVIEWING , *AGE distribution , *DECISION making , *LONGITUDINAL method , *TEACHERS , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *PRACTICAL politics , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *ADOLESCENCE , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The adult-centric concept of 'age-appropriateness' is an arbitrary signifier and yet it commands a powerful common-sense appeal in governing the shape of sexuality education. The visibility of LGBTQ+ lives in primary schools is deeply impacted by the cis-heteronormative ways in which age-appropriateness is commonly understood and mobilised; very often resulting in silence and delay. The concept of age-appropriateness also becomes entangled with moral panics about 'promoting' LGBTQ+ lives, or children being somehow 'recruited' to identify as LGBTQ+. This paper draws on findings from a study with the parents of eleven trans and gender diverse children (then aged between 5 and 13) conducted in 2017, as well as a follow-up study conducted with seven participants from the same group of parents and children in 2022. The paper explores how the politics of age and agency intersect and become intensified as trans and gender diverse children and their parents navigate and make decisions about their bodies, lives and everyday worlds in primary schools. These stories of trans and gender diverse children provide an arresting invitation to adults to attend closely to the rich stories of children themselves in (re)considering the potential of sexuality education across contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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124. Abemaciclib Therapy Using the MonarchE Criteria Results in Large Numbers of Excess Axillary Node Clearances—Time to Pause and Reflect?
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Ahari, Daniel, Wilkinson, Mark, Ali, Nisha, Taxiarchi, Vicky P., Dave, Rajiv V., and Gandhi, Ashu
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THERAPEUTIC use of antineoplastic agents ,LYMPHEDEMA ,RISK assessment ,HORMONE receptor positive breast cancer ,AXILLARY lymph node dissection ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DISEASES ,WOMEN'S health ,CYCLIN-dependent kinases ,DISEASE risk factors ,CHEMICAL inhibitors - Abstract
Simple Summary: Abemaciclib is an important addition to the care of women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. To qualify for abemaciclib treatment, some women are advised to undergo axillary node clearance surgery as finding more than three axillary nodes with metastatic cancer allows access to abemaciclib. This paper explores the balance between the benefits of axillary node clearance in permitting access to abemaciclib and the harms of surgery. We examine how many women need to undergo axillary node clearance before one woman clinically benefits from the procedure. We show that for every 10 women undergoing axillary node clearance surgery, only one eventually qualifies for abemaciclib. The remaining nine would have axillary surgery but still not qualify for abemaciclib as less than four metastatic axillary nodes are found despite full axillary clearance. However, these women could still suffer the complications of axillary node clearance surgery. The monarchE study added the CDK4/6 inhibitor abemaciclib to the care of women with oestrogen-positive (ER+) breast cancers. Eligibility required meeting monarchE criteria—either >3 positive axillary nodes, or 1–3 positive sentinel nodes (SNB+) with tumour size >50 mm or grade 3 cancers. Women were advised to proceed to completion axillary node clearance (cANC) if size/grade criteria were not fulfilled for >3 positive nodes to be identified. However, cANC is associated with significant morbidity, conflicting with the potential benefits of abemaciclib. We analysed data of 229 consecutive women (2016-2022) with ER+ breast cancer and SNB+ who proceeded to cANC, keeping with contemporary treatment guidelines. We used this cohort to assess numbers that, under national guidance in place currently, would be advised to undergo cANC solely to check eligibility for abemaciclib treatment. Using monarchE criteria, 90 women (39%) would have accessed abemaciclib based on SNB+ and size/grade, without cANC. In total, 139 women would have been advised to proceed to cANC to check eligibility, with only 15/139 (11%) having >3 positive nodes after sentinel node biopsy and cANC. The remaining 124 (89%) would have undergone cANC but remained ineligible for abemaciclib. Size, age, grade, and Ki67 did not predict >3 nodes at cANC. Following cANC, a large majority of women with ER+, <50 mm, and grade 1–2 tumours remain ineligible for abemaciclib yet are subject to significant morbidity including lifelong lymphoedema risk. The monarchE authors state that 15 women need abemaciclib therapy for 1 to clinically benefit. Thus, in our cohort, 139 women undergoing cANC would lead to one woman benefitting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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125. What's Time Got to Do With It?: A Time-Informed Approach to Longitudinal Research With Trauma Affected and Bereaved Populations.
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Saltzman, Leia Y. and Hunter, Lauren D.
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POST-traumatic stress disorder ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,WEARABLE technology ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BEREAVEMENT ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EXPERIENCE ,CONTENT mining ,TECHNOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,GRIEF ,TIME ,SELF-perception - Abstract
This paper outlines a new approach to using participants' self-identified temporal triggers to center data collection around meaningful time periods as it pertains to coping with loss and trauma. We describe the utility of ecological momentary assessment and wearable technology as tools for time-informed data collection; and provide a study protocol for a recent study in which we paired these approaches to gather data from adult respondents who had lost a loved one. Data collection included two phases: a baseline phase and a target date phase. The target date phase was centered around the participant's self-identified temporal trigger. Several lmitations to this mode of data collection are disucsed. The overall approach is client centered and more accurately captures the lived experiences of individuals coping with loss and trauma. Data of this kind will begin to highlight the psychological and physiological impacts of anniversary dates among survivors of trauma and loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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126. Priorities for data collection through a prospective cohort study on gender-affirming hormone therapy in Aotearoa New Zealand: community and clinical perspectives.
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Carroll, Rona, Rose, Sally B., Ker, Alex, Pettie, Michaela A., and Garrett, Susan M.
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HEALTH services accessibility ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) ,HEALTH attitudes ,ADOLESCENT health ,MEDICAL quality control ,RESEARCH funding ,GENDER identity ,GENDER affirming care ,PRIMARY health care ,TRANSGENDER people ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,ENDOCRINOLOGISTS ,INTERVIEWING ,NONBINARY people ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,THEMATIC analysis ,INFORMATION needs ,PROFESSIONS ,HORMONE therapy ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,QUALITY assurance ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,SEXUAL health - Abstract
Introduction. Gender affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) is an important aspect of health care for many transgender and non-binary (TNB) people, but little is known about the long-term outcomes for TNB people in Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ). Pathways to access GAHT are shifting from secondary care towards primary care, so this is an opportune time to commence local research on long-term health and wellbeing outcomes for people initiating GAHT. Aim. This paper aims to report on the key findings from four meetings held to inform the design of a prospective cohort study to follow the journey of people initiating GAHT in primary and secondary care settings in NZ. Methods. We worked with a community advisory group of six TNB young people and sought input from 14 health care providers involved in the care of TNB people initiating GAHT (GPs, secondary care doctors, and mental health providers). Semi-structured interview schedules were used to guide discussions. Template analysis was used to initially code data based on themes identified from the interview schedule and new themes from discussions were added. Results. Participants shared ideas about recruitment and data collection priorities for baseline and follow-up surveys. These included understanding the journey to starting hormone therapy (information-seeking, decision-making), access to services for GAHT initiation, appropriateness of information provision, receipt of the first prescription, goals for and experience of GAHT, and the unique needs of non-binary people. Discussion. Input from a TNB advisory group and health care professionals has informed the development of a survey that will be used to understand the experience of, and outcomes for, people starting GAHT in NZ. Findings from this planned prospective cohort study have the potential to improve access to GAHT for TNB people who wish to pursue this option. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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127. The Study of Environmental Exposure of Mothers and Infants Impacted by Large-Scale Agriculture (SEMILLA): Description of the Aims and Methods of a Community-Based Birth Cohort Study.
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Handal, Alexis J., Orozco, Fadya, Montenegro, Stephanie, Cadena, Nataly, Muñoz, Fabián, Ramírez del Rio, Eileen, and Kaciroti, Niko
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STATISTICAL power analysis ,MATERNAL exposure ,INFANT development ,PRENATAL exposure delayed effects ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis ,T-test (Statistics) ,CHEMICAL reagents ,NEURAL development ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,FISHER exact test ,PREGNANT women ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SURVEYS ,OCCUPATIONAL exposure ,ANALYSIS of variance ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis software ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Women of childbearing age not only reside in agricultural communities but also form an integral part of the agricultural labor force. Limited research investigates the impact of prenatal fungicide exposure on infant health, specifically ethylenebisdithiocarbamates and their toxic by-product, ethylenethiourea (ETU), particularly in occupational settings. This paper describes the background, aims, protocol, and baseline sample characteristics for the SEMILLA study, which investigates prenatal ETU exposure, neonatal thyroid function, infant growth, and neurobehavioral development in an agricultural region of Ecuador. Methods: This cohort study follows pregnant women and their infants up to 18 months of age, incorporating urinary biomarkers and survey data on ETU exposure and infant growth and neurodevelopmental measures. Data collection includes detailed questionnaires, scales, and physical examinations on maternal and infant health and development, as well as environmental factors. Descriptive statistics on key characteristics of the study population at baseline are presented. Results: SEMILLA enrolled 409 participants (72% enrollment rate): 111 agricultural workers (mostly floricultural), 149 non-agricultural workers, and 149 non-workers. Baseline characteristics show comparability between work sector groups, with some economic differences. Conclusions: SEMILLA will provide key evidence on prenatal fungicide exposure and infant development and encompass comprehensive multistage data collection procedures in pregnancy and infancy, focusing on structural and social determinants of health as well as individual-level chemical exposures. The community-based approach has proven essential, even amid challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic. The medium-term objective is to inform sustainable interventions promoting maternal and child health, with a long-term goal to reduce community exposures and improve worker health policies, particularly for women and pregnant workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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128. A Cross-Sectional, Decade-Long Examination of the Impacts of International Service Learning in Teacher Education.
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Kearney, Sean P., Maakrun, Julie, Thai, Thuan, and Athota, Vidya Sagar
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IN-service training of teachers ,CULTURAL competence ,TEACHER education ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SERVICE learning ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The literature has expounded on the impacts of international service-learning (ISL) in teacher education as positively affecting everything from improving academic achievement to developing a greater moral and ethical sense. Other studies have examined the role of cultural competence and dimensions of power between those providing and receiving service. Purpose: This paper examines a decade-long ISL immersion program to understand the outcomes on students in three key areas that have received attention in the literature: motivation, employment, and academics. Methodology: A longitudinal case study comprising a cross-section of students who were asked to reflect on their immersion experiences, which took place from 2011 to 2020. Reflective journals completed during and directly after each immersion supplemented the survey data. Findings: While much of the data supports previous studies regarding the impacts of ISL, there are some anomalous findings, especially in the longer-term effects of ISL within teacher education. While participants' perceptions of the impacts were significant, evidence of that impact was lacking. Implications: Although short-term impacts of the immersion were more significantly noted, students perceived the impact for more extended periods than previously thought. However, the evidence to suggest that these perceptions are realizable is lacking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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129. Enhancing Emergency Department Management: A Data-Driven Approach to Detect and Predict Surge Persistence.
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Lim, Kang Heng, Nguyen, Francis Ngoc Hoang Long, Cheong, Ronald Wen Li, Tan, Xaver Ghim Yong, Pasupathy, Yogeswary, Toh, Ser Chye, Ong, Marcus Eng Hock, and Lam, Sean Shao Wei
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PUBLIC hospitals ,RISK assessment ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PREDICTION models ,EMERGENCY room visits ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STRATEGIC planning ,EMERGENCY medical services ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PATIENT-centered care ,EARLY warning score ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
The prediction of patient attendance in emergency departments (ED) is crucial for effective healthcare planning and resource allocation. This paper proposes an early warning system that can detect emerging trends in ED attendance, offering timely alerts for proactive operational planning. Over 13 years of historical ED attendance data (from January 2010 till December 2022) with 1,700,887 data points were used to develop and validate: (1) a Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average with eXogenous factors (SARIMAX) forecasting model; (2) an Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) surge prediction model, and (3) a trend persistence prediction model. Drift detection was achieved with the EWMA control chart, and the slopes of a kernel-regressed ED attendance curve were used to train various machine learning (ML) models to predict trend persistence. The EWMA control chart effectively detected significant COVID-19 events in Singapore. The surge prediction model generated preemptive signals on changes in the trends of ED attendance over the COVID-19 pandemic period from January 2020 until December 2022. The persistence of novel trends was further estimated using the trend persistence model, with a mean absolute error of 7.54 (95% CI: 6.77–8.79) days. This study advanced emergency healthcare management by introducing a proactive surge detection framework, which is vital for bolstering the preparedness and agility of emergency departments amid unforeseen health crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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130. Dietary supplement use is common in older adult drivers: an analysis from the AAA LongROAD study.
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Moran, Ryan, Baird, Sara, DiGuiseppi, Carolyn G., Eby, David W., Hacker, Sarah, Isom, Chelsea, Jones, Vanya, Lee, Kelly C., Li, Guohua, Molnar, Lisa J., Patrick, Rudy, Strogatz, David, and Hill, Linda
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THERAPEUTIC use of vitamin D ,VITAMIN therapy ,PATIENT compliance ,RESEARCH funding ,SECONDARY analysis ,T-test (Statistics) ,AUTOMOBILE driving ,SEX distribution ,PHARMACEUTICAL chemistry ,POLYPHARMACY ,WHITE people ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CALCIUM ,INFERENTIAL statistics ,DRUGS ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,DIETARY supplements ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: Dietary supplement (DS) use is common and increasing among older adults, though much data available on use frequencies are from surveys and performed cross-sectionally. This paper sought to assess the frequency and pattern of dietary supplement use among older adults over time. Methods: A secondary analysis of data from the AAA LongROAD study, a longitudinal prospective cohort study of older adult drivers, using data from baseline and the first two years of follow up included a total of 2990 drivers aged 65–79 years recruited at five study sites across the US from July 2015 to March 2017. Participants underwent baseline and annual evaluations, which included a "brown bag" medication review. DS were identified and categorized according to type and key components. Prevalence and pattern of DS use over time and relationship to demographics were measured with frequency and Chi squared analyses. Results: 84% of participants took at least one dietary supplement during the 2-year study period, and 55% of participants continually reported use. DS accounted for approximately 30% of the total pharmacologic-pill burden in all years. Participants who were White non-Hispanic, female, 75–79 years of age at baseline, and on more non-supplement medications took significantly more dietary supplements (P < 0.05). Vitamin D, multivitamins, calcium, and omega-3 formulations were the most common supplements, with stable use over time. Use of individual herbal supplements and cannabis products was uncommon (< 1% participants per year). Conclusions: DS use among older adults is common and relatively stable over time and contributes to polypharmacy. In clinical settings, providers should consider the influence of DS formulations on polypharmacy, and the associated cost, risk of medication interactions, and effect on medication compliance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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131. Longitudinal mixed-methods analysis of tertiary students' dropout considerations.
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Lykkegaard, Eva and Qvortrup, Ane
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SCHOOL dropouts ,RESEARCH questions ,POSTSECONDARY education ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EXPECTATION (Psychology) - Abstract
The paper presents a longitudinal mixed methods study investigating tertiary humanity students' dropout considerations, utilizing Tinto's institutional departure model as theoretical background. The research question is: How do students' dropout considerations take form and evolve throughout tertiary education? Methodically we have collected half-yearly register and survey data from 2,781 tertiary humanities students matriculating in 2017--2019. Additionally, we have conducted half-yearly interviews with 14 focus students that had high dropout considerations in the first survey round. Quantitative analysis of all humanity students and qualitative analysis of three case students are presented and discussed. The complementary analysis provides an in-depth understanding of the complex interplay between individual characteristics and institutional factors in shaping different students' dropout considerations and decisions in tertiary education. We find that there is a stable share of students with low, medium, and high dropout considerations throughout time. However, although we find stable shares, we identify primary movements from high dropout considerations towards dropout, and from low dropout considerations towards completion, we also find considerable secondary movement (i.e., from low dropout considerations towards dropout). As is also confirmed in the qualitative analyses, there are significant fluctuations in some students' dropout considerations. Dropout considerations are thus malleable and do not necessarily accumulate linearly over time to dropout. Individual students' dropout considerations change repeatedly in interaction with their experiences, their expectations for the future as well as with current challenges in meeting academic and personal requirements. Challenges are often about a lack of alignment between expectations and experiences and how well students and the study programs' norms and values match. We find students who seek to improve this match through personal transformations and others who try to change their study program. In both regards successfully improving the match seems to be a profitable strategy to prevent dropout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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132. Optimization of the vertical transmission prevention program in Guinea: impact of the improvement plan on performance indicators at large-cohort sites.
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Camara, Soriba, Millimouno, Tamba Mina, Hounmenou, Castro Gbêmêmali, Kolié, Delphin, Kadio, Kadio Jean-Jacques Olivier, Sow, Abdoulaye, Sidibé, Sidikiba, and Delamou, Alexandre
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HIV prevention ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,MANN Whitney U Test ,PREGNANT women ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HIGHLY active antiretroviral therapy ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,VERTICAL transmission (Communicable diseases) ,RURAL conditions ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,EARLY diagnosis ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
Introduction: Vertical transmission of HIV remains a major challenge in Guinea, especially, in low-resource rural areas. This paper presents the results of a pilot project designed to enhance the prevention of vertical transmission through a comprehensive improvement plan implemented across 66 large-cohort sites. Methods: Data from 66 large-cohort of mother to child transmission prevention (PMTCT) sites from 2019 to 2022 were analysed to compare PMTCT metrics before (2019–2020) and after (2021–2022) the improvement initiative. Key indicators were reviewed, and trends were statistically analysed using Mann‒Whitney tests, with a p value less than 0.05 indicating statistical significance. Results: The implementation of this strategy significantly increased the antiretroviral therapy rate among HIV-positive pregnant women from 66 to 94%, and full antiretroviral prophylaxis coverage was achieved in infants. However, early infant diagnosis via polymerase chain reaction testing falls short of the national target, highlighting deficiencies in laboratory and specimen transport capacities. The study also revealed regional disparities in the use of PMTCT services. Conclusion: The improvement plan effectively enhanced antiretroviral therapy and prophylaxis use, demonstrating the benefits of structured interventions and capacity development. Despite improvements, challenges such as insufficient polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing and uneven access to services remain. Future initiatives should aim to equip PMTCT sites with essential resources and promote community-driven health-seeking behaviours in underserved areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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133. Non-invasive technology to assess hydration status in advanced cancer to explore relationships between fluid status and symptoms: an observational study using bioelectrical impedance analysis.
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Nwosu, Amara Callistus, Stanley, Sarah, Mayland, Catriona R, Mason, Stephen, McDougall, Alexandra, and Ellershaw, John E
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STATISTICAL models ,DRINKING (Physiology) ,CANCER treatment ,MEDICAL technology ,RESEARCH funding ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PILOT projects ,BODY composition ,MEDICAL care ,BIOELECTRIC impedance ,DECISION making ,CANCER patients ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EVALUATION of medical care ,HYDRATION ,LONGITUDINAL method ,WATER in the body ,QUALITY of life ,TUMOR classification ,TUMORS ,TERMINAL care ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DEHYDRATION ,REGRESSION analysis ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Oral fluid intake decreases in advanced cancer in the dying phase of illness. There is inadequate evidence to support the assessment, and management, of hydration in the dying. Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) is a body composition assessment tool. BIA has the potential to inform clinal management in advanced cancer, by examining the relationships between hydration status and clinical variables. Aim: BIA was used to determine the association between hydration status, symptoms, clinical signs, quality-of-life and survival in advanced cancer, including those who are dying (i.e. in the last week of life). Materials and methods: We conducted a prospective observational study of people with advanced cancer in three centres. Advance consent methodology was used to conduct hydration assessments in the dying. Total body water was estimated using the BIA Impedance index (Height – H (m)
2 /Resistance – R (Ohms)). Backward regression was used to identify factors (physical signs, symptoms, quality of life) that predicted H2 /R. Participants in the last 7 days of life were further assessed with BIA to assess hydration changes, and its relationship with clinical outcomes. Results: One hundred and twenty-five people participated (males n = 74 (59.2%), females, n = 51 (40.8%)). We used backward regression analysis to describe a statistical model to predict hydration status in advanced cancer. The model demonstrated that 'less hydration' (lower H2 /R) was associated with female sex (Beta = -0.39, p < 0.001), increased appetite (Beta = -0.12, p = 0.09), increased dehydration assessment scale score (dry mouth, dry axilla, sunken eyes - Beta = -0.19, p = 0.006), and increased breathlessness (Beta = -0.15, p = 0.03). 'More hydration' (higher H2 /R) was associated with oedema (Beta = 0.49, p < 0.001). In dying participants (n = 18, 14.4%), hydration status (H2 /R) was not significantly different compared to their baseline measurements (n = 18, M = 49.6, SD = 16.0 vs. M = 51.0, SD = 12.1; t(17) = 0.64, p = 0.53) and was not significantly associated with agitation (rs = -0.85, p = 0.74), pain (rs = 0.31, p = 0.23) or respiratory tract secretions (rs = -0.34, p = 0.19). Conclusions: This is the first study to use bioimpedance to report a model (using clinical factors) to predict hydration status in advanced cancer. Our data demonstrates the feasibility of using an advance consent method to conduct research in dying people. This method can potentially improve the evidence base (and hence, quality of care) for the dying. Future BIA research can involve hydration assessment of cancers (according to type and stage) and associated variables (e.g., stage of illness, ethnicity and gender). Further work can use BIA to identify clinically relevant outcomes for hydration studies and establish a core outcome set to evaluate how hydration affects symptoms and quality-of-life in cancer. Key message: What is already known about this topic? - Oral fluid intake decreases in people with advanced cancer, especially when they approach the dying phase of their illness. - There is inadequate evidence to support hydration assessment and decision making in the dying phase of illness. - It is important to understand which clinical factors are associated with hydration status in advanced cancer, to enable healthcare professionals, to evaluate hydration status and support clinical decision making. - Bioimpedance is a non-invasive technology, which has potential to identify clinically relevant variables for cancer hydration assessment. What this paper adds. - This is the first study to use bioimpedance to report a model (using clinical factors) to predict hydration status in advanced cancer. - The variables with combined significance for predicting hydration status were biological sex, appetite, dry mouth, dry axilla, sunken eyes, breathlessness and oedema. In the dying phase, hydration status did not significantly change compared to baseline, and hydration status was not significantly associated with survival. Implications for practice, theory or policy. - Further work can use bioimpedance to identify clinically relevant outcomes for hydration studies, to establish a core outcome set to evaluate how hydration affects symptoms and quality-of-life in cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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134. Incidence and risk factors of post‐operative delirium in glioma patients: A prospective cohort study in general wards.
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Yuan, Caiyun, Cheng, Ziying, Liu, Yapeng, You, Yuan, Wang, Linlin, Li, Deling, and Zhong, Liyun
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RISK assessment ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,PREOPERATIVE period ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,GLIOMAS ,SURGERY ,PATIENTS ,NEUROSURGERY ,T-test (Statistics) ,HOSPITAL care ,EMPIRICAL research ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,POSTOPERATIVE pain ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PREOPERATIVE care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,ANXIETY ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHI-squared test ,GLASGOW Coma Scale ,SURGICAL complications ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ODDS ratio ,DELIRIUM ,RESEARCH methodology ,FRONTAL lobe ,DATA analysis software ,HOSPITAL wards ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,REGRESSION analysis ,MENTAL depression ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Aims: Glioma patients are at high risk for postoperative delirium (POD), yet studies focusing on this population in general neurosurgical ward settings are limited. This paper investigates the incidence of POD and related risk factors in glioma patients hospitalized in general wards. Design: Prospective observational study. Methods: This prospective study included 133 adult glioma patients hospitalized in the general neurosurgery ward. In addition to collecting routine perioperative general clinical data, patients' psychological status was assessed preoperatively using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). POD was assessed within 3 days postoperatively using the Confusion of Consciousness Assessment method, twice daily. The incidence of POD was calculated, and risk factors were identified using logistic regression analysis. Results: The incidence of POD in glioma patients admitted to the general ward was 31.6% (40/133). Multivariate regression revealed advanced age (age > 50 years), frontal lobe tumour, presence of preoperative anxiety or depression, retention of a luminal drain, postoperative pain, indwelling catheter these six factors were independent risk factors for the development of delirium in patients after surgery. Conclusion: In general ward settings, supratentorial glioma patients exhibit a high risk of POD. Critical risk factors include preoperative psychological conditions, as well as postoperative pain, drainage and catheterization. Rigorous preoperative evaluations, effective pain management strategies and the integration of humanistic care principles are essential in mitigating the risk of POD for glioma patients. Relevance to Clinical Practice: In general ward settings, this study reveals the high occurrence of POD in glioma patients and identifies preoperative psychological states, age, tumour location and several postoperative factors as significant risk factors for POD, which provides a framework for targeted interventions. By integrating these insights into clinical practice, healthcare teams can better identify glioma patients at risk for POD and implement preventive measures, thereby enhancing recovery and overall care quality for glioma patients in general neurosurgical wards. Reporting Method: This study adheres to the STROBE guidelines, ensuring a transparent and comprehensive reporting of the observational research methodology and results. Patient or Public Contribution: Patients involvement was limited to the provision of data through their participation in the study's assessments and the collection of clinical information. The study did not involve a direct patient or public contribution in the design, conduct, analysis, or interpretation of the data, nor in the preparation of the manuscript. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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135. A simple and effective method for simulating nested exchangeable correlated binary data for longitudinal cluster randomised trials.
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Bowden, Rhys A., Kasza, Jessica, and Forbes, Andrew B.
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MULTILEVEL models ,RANDOM variables ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CROSSOVER trials ,STATISTICS - Abstract
Background: Simulation is an important tool for assessing the performance of statistical methods for the analysis of data and for the planning of studies. While methods are available for the simulation of correlated binary random variables, all have significant practical limitations for simulating outcomes from longitudinal cluster randomised trial designs, such as the cluster randomised crossover and the stepped wedge trial designs. For these trial designs as the number of observations in each cluster increases these methods either become computationally infeasible or their range of allowable correlations rapidly shrinks to zero. Methods: In this paper we present a simple method for simulating binary random variables with a specified vector of prevalences and correlation matrix. This method allows for the outcome prevalence to change due to treatment or over time, and for a 'nested exchangeable' correlation structure, in which observations in the same cluster are more highly correlated if they are measured in the same time period than in different time periods, and where different individuals are measured in each time period. This means that our method is also applicable to more general hierarchical clustered data contexts, such as students within classrooms within schools. The method is demonstrated by simulating 1000 datasets with parameters matching those derived from data from a cluster randomised crossover trial assessing two variants of stress ulcer prophylaxis. Results: Our method is orders of magnitude faster than the most well known general simulation method while also allowing a much wider range of correlations than alternative methods. An implementation of our method is available in an R package NestBin. Conclusions: This simulation method is the first to allow for practical and efficient simulation of large datasets of binary outcomes with the commonly used nested exchangeable correlation structure. This will allow for much more effective testing of designs and inference methods for longitudinal cluster randomised trials with binary outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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136. Detection of freezing of gait in Parkinson's disease from foot-pressure sensing insoles using a temporal convolutional neural network.
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Jae-Min Park, Chang-Won Moon, Byung Chan Lee, Eungseok Oh, Juhyun Lee, Won-Jun Jang, Kang Hee Cho, and Si-Hyeon Lee
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BODY mass index ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SEX distribution ,BODY weight ,PARKINSON'S disease ,GAIT disorders ,WEARABLE technology ,TERTIARY care ,AGE distribution ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STATURE ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,DEEP learning ,CASE studies ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Backgrounds: Freezing of gait (FoG) is a common and debilitating symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD) that can lead to falls and reduced quality of life. Wearable sensors have been used to detect FoG, but current methods have limitations in accuracy and practicality. In this paper, we aimed to develop a deep learning model using pressure sensor data from wearable insoles to accurately detect FoG in PD patients. Methods: We recruited 14 PD patients and collected data frommultiple trials of a standardized walking test using the Pedar insole system. We proposed temporal convolutional neural network (TCNN) and applied rigorous data filtering and selective participant inclusion criteria to ensure the integrity of the dataset. We mapped the sensor data to a structured matrix and normalized it for input into our TCNN. We used a train-test split to evaluate the performance of the model. Results: We found that TCNN model achieved the highest accuracy, precision, sensitivity, specificity, and F1 score for FoG detection compared to othermodels. The TCNN model also showed good performance in detecting FoG episodes, even in various types of sensor noise situations. Conclusions: We demonstrated the potential of using wearable pressure sensors andmachine learningmodels for FoG detection in PD patients. The TCNNmodel showed promising results and could be used in future studies to develop a real-time FoG detection system to improve PD patients' safety and quality of life. Additionally, our noise impact analysis identifies critical sensor locations, suggesting potential for reducing sensor numbers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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137. Trends in spinal cancers: Primary & metastatic. An Irish epidemiological perspective.
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O'Halloran, Amanda, McKee, Christopher, Cunniffe, Gráinne, and Morris, Seamus
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PATIENTS ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,CANCER patient medical care ,BREAST tumors ,SPINAL tumors ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,METASTASIS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,LUNG tumors ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
The incidence and histological type of spinal cancer is diverse. It is our role as physicians to explore the epidemiology of spinal cancers so that several projections can be made. Resource allocation, cost analyses, and the requirement of rehabilitation facilities all need to be considered. The objective of this paper is to provide an account of the acute spinal oncological admissions to the National Spinal Injuries Unit (NSIU) in both 2010 and 2020 with the hypothesis that upward trends will be noted. Only by exemplifying this trend, will it highlight the need to give spinal cancer the attention it deserves in the Republic of Ireland. All patients who were to undergo spinal surgery for primary or metastatic spinal cancer in the Mater Misericordiae University Hospital (MMUH) in 2010 and 2020 were included in this retrospective cohort study. A list of medical record numbers (MRNs) for all patients who underwent spinal surgery in the MMUH were included. Data pertaining to patient demographics were noted. 90 patients were included in this retrospective cohort study. 37 patients in 2010, had increased to 53 by 2020. Metastatic disease to the spine was still the most prominent reason for referral. The most common spinal region affected was the thoracic spine. Breast cancer was the most prevalent metastatic cancer to the spine in 2010. Lung cancer became the most prevalent by 2020. Posterior spinal fusion was the most frequent surgical procedure performed. The length of stay in higher care facilities decreased from 5.4 days in 2010, to 4 days in 2020. Decreased were also seen in the mean length of hospital stay, plummeting from 23.6 days in 2010, to 7.6 days in 2020. The same could not be said for the 30-day mortality rate, increasing from 5.4% in 2010, to 9.4% in 2020. The results of this study show a substantial rise in the incidence and prevalence of both primary and metastatic spinal disease here in Ireland. One can see clear improvements in operative technique, with less patients proceeding to higher levels of post-operative care, and earlier discharge times. This data can be used for future planning. The paper highlights the economic cost of spinal oncological care, but it also identifies key areas where preventative campaigns can be targeted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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138. Using emergency department data to define a 'mental health presentation' – implications of different definitions on estimates of emergency department mental health workload.
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Goyal, Nikita, Proper, Edmund, Lin, Phyllis, Ahmad, Usman, John-White, Marietta, O'Reilly, Gerard M., and Craig, Simon S.
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PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,DOCUMENTATION ,TERMS & phrases ,MENTAL health services ,DATA analysis ,MENTAL illness ,EMERGENCY services in psychiatric hospitals ,INDUSTRIAL psychology ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SOUND recordings ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,PSYCHIATRIC emergencies ,NOSOLOGY ,MEDICAL triage ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to describe and compare the proportion of patients classified as an emergency department (ED) mental health presentation under different definitions, including the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) definition. Methods: This retrospective cohort study enrolled all patients that presented to the EDs of a multi-centre Victorian health service between 1 January 2020 and 30 June 2023. Varying definitions of a mental health presentation were applied to each ED attendance, applying the current AIHW definition (using selected diagnosis codes), broader diagnosis-based coding, the presenting complaint recorded at triage and whether the patient was seen by or referred to the emergency psychiatric service (EPS). The proportion of all ED presentations meeting each definition and any overlap between definitions were calculated. The agreement between each definition and the AIHW definition was evaluated using Kappa's coefficient. Results: There were 813,078 presentations to ED of which 34,248 (4.2%) met the AIHW definition for a mental health presentation. Throughout the study, 45,376 (5.6%) patients were seen and/or referred to EPS, and 36,160 (4.4%) patients were allocated a mental health presenting complaint by triage staff. There was moderate interrater agreement between these definitions, with a kappa statistic (95% confidence interval) between the AIHW definition and a mental health presenting complaint recorded at triage of 0.58 (0.58–0.59) and between the AIHW definition and review by EPS of 0.58 (0.57–0.58). Conclusions: The AIHW definition is a conservative measure of ED mental health presentations and may underestimate emergency psychiatry workload in Australian EDs. What is known about this topic? It is unknown whether the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) definition of an emergency department (ED) mental health presentation definition accurately reflects ED mental health workload. What does this paper add? The AIHW definition appears to underestimate the clinical workload related to ED mental health presentations. There is moderate agreement between the AIHW definition and mental health presentations classified according to complaint recorded at triage, or whether the patient is reviewed by psychiatry services. What are the implications for practitioners? Accurate measurement of emergency psychiatry workload should not rely on the AIHW definition alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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139. Maintaining the health of people with and without COVID-19 during isolation: a case study.
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Scales, Caoimhe, Tsai, Ling-Ling, Whitney, Sarah, Shaw, Miranda, Vrklevski, Lil, Carey, Sharon, Hutchings, Owen, Spencer, Lissa, and Alison, Jennifer
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DIETETICS ,HEALTH status indicators ,PATIENTS ,T-test (Statistics) ,EXERCISE ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,PILOT projects ,STATISTICAL sampling ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,ANXIETY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,QUARANTINE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SURVEYS ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,HEALTH promotion ,HOTELS ,CASE studies ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 ,NUTRITION ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,MENTAL depression ,NUTRITION education - Abstract
This case study evaluated the effects of a health package (HP) of a light intensity individualised exercise program and advice on anxiety management and nutrition, on the physical and mental health of people with or without COVID-19, who were quarantined in hotels used as Special Health Accommodation and admitted to the Royal Prince Alfred Virtual Hospital, Sydney during the COVID-19 pandemic. After initial screening and consenting, participants completed three surveys: Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scale; Brief Fatigue Inventory; and the European Quality of Life 5-Dimensions 5-Levels, and were provided with the HP for the duration of their quarantine. The three surveys and a participant reported experience measure were completed prior to discharge. The HP for people in quarantine demonstrated stability of health outcomes and reduction in fatigue. Most participants reported that the HP helped them cope with isolation. Provision of a HP during quarantine could be useful to support physical and mental health. What is known about the topic? Quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic could negatively impact physical and mental health. What does this paper add? A health package of light intensity exercise, advice on anxiety management and nutritional information demonstrated maintenance of physical and mental health and reduced fatigue in people with and without mild COVID-19 in hotel quarantine. What are the implications for practitioners? Practitioners should consider providing a health package of exercise, anxiety management and nutritional information to help people in quarantine to cope with the physical and mental isolation. Adequate staffing is required to enable implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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140. Friday, September 28, 2018 9:00 AM–10:00 AM best papers Friday: 153. Intravenous and oral tranexamic acid are equivalent at reducing blood loss in thoracolumbar spinal fusion: a prospective randomized trial.
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Yu, Charles C., Pawloski, Jacob A., Buraimoh, Ayodele, and Bartol, Stephen
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TRANEXAMIC acid , *SPINAL surgery , *BLOOD transfusion , *ORTHOPEDIC surgery , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
BACKGROUND CONTEXT Due to the significant risks and complications associated with blood loss and allogeneic transfusions, identifying safe and effective ways to minimize blood loss during spine surgery is crucial. Tranexamic acid (TXA) is effective at reducing blood loss and transfusion rate in orthopaedic surgery. Although intravenous (IV) TXA has been shown to be successful in patients undergoing spine fusion, no studies in the current literature have investigated the efficacy of its low cost counterpart, oral (PO) TXA. PURPOSE The purpose of this prospective randomized trial was to determine if PO TXA is equivalent to IV TXA in reducing blood loss in spinal fusion. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING This study was a single-center, randomized, prospective trial designed to test equivalence between IV and oral TXA in the setting of thoracolumbar fusion between February and December 2017. PATIENT SAMPLE Enrolled patients were randomly assigned between the two treatment groups of IV and oral TXA using a random number algorithm. A total of 44 patients received IV TXA and 45 patients received PO TXA. OUTCOME MEASURES The primary outcome was reduction of hemoglobin. In addition, calculated blood loss, drain output, postoperative transfusion, complications, and length of hospital stay were investigated. METHODS In this prospective randomized trial, 89 patients undergoing thoracolumbar fusion were randomized to receive 1.95g of PO TXA 2hours preoperatively or 2g IV TXA (1g before incision and 1g before wound closure) intraoperatively. Because the number of fusion levels can influence blood loss, the sample was sub-categorized by the number of vertebral levels arthrodesed (1–2 levels, 3–5 levels, >5 levels). Power analysis determined that 30 patients were needed in each group. Equivalence analysis was performed with a two one-sided test (TOST). A P-value of <.05 suggested equivalence between treatments. RESULTS Patient demographic factors were similar between groups except for BMI. The mean reduction of hemoglobin was similar between IV and PO groups (3.35g/dL vs. 3.18g/dL, respectively; P=.016, equivalence). Similarly, the calculated blood loss was equivalent (1233mL vs. 1227mL, respectively; P=.027, equivalence). Eight patients (18%) in IV TXA group received a transfusion compared to six patients in PO TXA group (13%) (P=.53). One patient (2% each) in each group experienced a DVT/PE (P=.99). CONCLUSIONS Intravenous and PO TXA are both effective in reducing the expensive perioperative costs associated with blood loss and transfusions after spinal fusions. Oral TXA provides equivalent reductions in blood loss at a greatly reduced cost compared to the IV formulation. As the incidence of spinal fusions increases in the near future, adopting an oral regimen of TXA can drastically improve cost-efficiency for our health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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141. The hidden value of paper records.
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Buma, Brian
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LONGITUDINAL method , *BOTANICAL research , *BIG data - Abstract
The author discusses their experience searching for a location in the forests of Glacier Bay, Alaska where Dr. William Cooper began collecting data about individual plant establishment, growth and death in 1916, returning to the location every 5 to 10 years until his death to create a longitudinal record.
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- 2018
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142. Are higher quality papers cited more often?
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Michael S Patterson and Simon Harris
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REPORT writing ,LIBRARY administrators ,CITATION analysis ,PERIODICALS ,EDITORS ,PROFESSIONAL peer review ,RESEARCH libraries ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Most researchers are aware of the increasing emphasis placed on citations as an indicator of quality by their colleagues, as well as by administrators and librarians. But is it true that high quality papers are cited more often? In what we believe to be the only previous publication to examine this question, West and McIlwaine (2002) selected 79 papers that had been published in the journal Addiction in 1997. These papers were rated by an assistant editor of the journal on a five-level quality scale (ranging from ''among the top 10%'' to ''should not have been published'') as well as a second ''blind'' rater. The authors found that the number of citations to each paper from 1997 to 2000 did not correlate with the mean score of the two reviewers, the score assigned by the editors, or the score assigned by the blind referees. The peer-review system used by Physics in Medicine and Biology (PMB) facilitates a larger, prospective study with much less effort. In general, two reviewers are asked to assign each paper a score of 1 to 10 in each of three categories: originality, soundness and significance. The total scores (out of 30) are averaged and on this basis manuscripts are given a quality rating from Q1 (highest quality) to Q5. In a paper recently published in Scientometrics (Patterson and Harris 2009), we compared the number of citations to papers published in PMB in 2003, 2004 and 2005 to the mean quality rating assigned by the reviewers. In total, data were analyzed for 1095 published papers. For each year we found that there was a low but statistically robust correlation between citations and quality rating: for 2003, -0.227 (p < 0.001); for 2004, -0.238 (p < 0.001), and for 2005, -0.154 (p < 0.01). The low correlation means that it is not possible to predict the citation frequency of an individual paper with accuracy but, as a group, the highest ranked papers were cited about twice as often as the average for all published papers. We also examined the data retrospectively by dividing the papers published in each year into five citation quintiles. A paper of the highest quality (Q1) was about ten times more likely to be found in the most-cited quintile than in the least-cited. While it is reassuring to find that the best papers in PMB are, indeed, cited more often on average, we cannot discount the hypothesis that both measures might be influenced by an extrinsic factor, such as the reputation of the authors. We suggest that a study similar to ours be performed for a journal that utilizes a system of double-blind peer review. Michael S Patterson Editorial Board Member Simon Harris Publisher References West R and McIlwaine A 2002 What do citation counts count for in the field of addiction? An empirical evaluation of citation counts and their link with peer ratings of quality Addiction 97 501-4 Patterson M S and Harris S 2009 The relationship between reviewers'' quality-scores and number of citations for papers published in the journal Physics in Medicine and Biology from 2003-2005 Scientometrics 80 343-9 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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143. The relationship between workplace psychosocial environment and retirement intentions and actual retirement: a systematic review.
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Browne, Peter, Carr, Ewan, Fleischmann, Maria, Xue, Baowen, and Stansfeld, Stephen A.
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RETIREMENT & psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,INTENTION ,JOB satisfaction ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,INDUSTRIAL psychology ,WORK environment ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Psychosocial work characteristics are potential determinants of retirement intentions and actual retirement. A systematic review was conducted of the influence of psychosocial work characteristics on retirement intentions and actual retirement among the general population. This did not include people who were known to be ill or receiving disability pension. Relevant papers were identified by a search of PubMed, PsycINFO and Web of Science databases to December 2016. We included longitudinal and cross-sectional papers that assessed psychosocial work characteristics in relation to retirement intentions or actual retirement. Papers were filtered by title and abstract before data extraction was performed on full texts using a predetermined extraction sheet. Forty-six papers contained relevant evidence. High job satisfaction and high job control were associated with later retirement intentions and actual retirement. No consistent evidence was found for an association of job demands with retirement intentions or actual retirement. We conclude that to extend working lives policies should increase the job control available to older employees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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144. Eutrophication mitigation in rivers: 30 years of trends and seasonality changes in biogeochemistry of the Loire River (1980-2012).
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Minaudo, C., Meybeck, M., Moatar, F., Gassama, N., and Curie, F.
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EUTROPHICATION ,BIOGEOCHEMISTRY ,CLIMATE change ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Trends and seasonality analysis since 1980 and longitudinal distribution from headwaters to estuary of algal pigment, nitrate and phosphate were investigated in the eutrophic Loire River. The continuous decline of phosphate concentrations recorded since 1991 both in the main river and in the tributaries led to a significant reduction in algal biomass across the whole river system. While eutrophication remained lower in the main tributaries than in the Loire itself, they were found to contribute up to 45 % to the total nutrient load of the main river. The seasonality analysis revealed that the river has always been under P limitation, explaining why reducing P inputs led to decreasing eutrophication in the whole Loire basin. The decline of seasonal amplitudes of algal pigments reduced the seasonal amplitude of phosphate and of daily variations of dissolved oxygen and pH but did not significantly affect the seasonal amplitude of nitrate. Thus, algal uptake responsibility on the summer nitrate loss seemed to be declining, questioning the exact role played by denitrification, terrestrial vegetation and fixed aquatic vegetation on the nitrogen cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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145. Permutation tests for ASCA in multivariate longitudinal intervention studies.
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Camacho, José, Díaz, Caridad, and Sánchez‐Rovira, Pedro
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LONGITUDINAL method ,PERMUTATIONS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,METABOLOMICS - Abstract
Permutation tests are the standard technique for significance testing in Analysis of Variance Simultaneous Component Analysis. However, there is a vast number of alternative approaches for permutation testing, and the number of choices grows in relation to the complexity of the study design. In this paper, we focus on longitudinal intervention studies with multivariate outcomes, a relevant experimental design in clinical studies where the outcome is an omics profile (such as in genomics, metabolomics, and the like). We propose a new technique to derive power curves tailored to the size and (un)balanced nature of the data set in the study. This technique is useful to identify misleading permutation tests, with lack of power or overly optimistic outcomes. We found that choosing the best permutation approach is far from intuitive and that there is a significant risk of deriving incorrect conclusions in real‐life analyses. Our approach avoids this risk and can be extended to other complex designs of interest. The code is available for free use. Permutation tests are the standard technique for significance testing in ASCA. However, there is a vast number of alternative approaches. In this paper, we focus on clinical studies where the outcome is an omics profile (such as in metabolomics and the like). We propose a new technique to derive power curves tailored to the size and (un)balanced nature of the data set. This technique is useful to identify misleading permutation tests, with lack of power or overly optimistic outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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146. Postoperative delirium screening tools for post‐anaesthetic adult patients in non‐intensive care units: A systematic review and meta‐analysis.
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Kim, Sujeong, Choi, Eunju, Jung, Youngsun, and Jang, Insil
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DIAGNOSIS of delirium ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL databases ,ANESTHESIA ,RESEARCH evaluation ,META-analysis ,GENERAL anesthesia ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL screening ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,HOSPITAL wards ,QUALITY assurance ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,MEDLINE ,PREDICTIVE validity ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NURSING assessment ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Aims and Objectives: To identify the most accurate postoperative delirium screening tools for detecting postoperative delirium among patients who underwent general anaesthesia surgery in general wards. Background: The lack of detection of postoperative delirium can negatively affect the patient's condition, along with their postoperative treatment and rehabilitation, and it can prolong their hospitalisation, persists cognitive dysfunction and increases mortality. Screening for postoperative delirium in hospitalised patients as nursing assessment is routine clinical practice for early detection. Design: A systematic review and meta‐analysis. Methods: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, KoreaMed and Cochrane electronic databases were searched using the key words delirium, postoperative, assessment or screening, and adult for articles published up to April 2020, with no limit on the year of publishing. Only prospective cohort studies reporting sensitivity and specificity values were included. We followed the recommendations of the Cochrane Handbook of Diagnostic Test Accuracy Reviews and the PRISMA checklist. The Quality Assessment of the Diagnostic Accuracy Studies‐2 tool was used for data extraction and quality assessment, while a bivariate random‐effects meta‐analysis model was used for pooling and comparing diagnostic accuracy and providing a summary of evidence. Results: Six delirium assessment tools were evaluated from nine papers including 3088 patients. Due to the limited number of papers, the meta‐analysis included the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) and its variants, Delirium Detection Score (DDS) and Nurses' Delirium Screening Checklist (NuDESC). Overall, NuDESC demonstrated higher sensitivity than CAM or DDS, while all showed high specificity (0.90 or greater). Conclusion: This review suggested that NuDESC can be employed as an accurate screening tool with high specificity for assessing postoperative delirium during routine checkups. However, it is necessary to consider suitable cut‐off values, which is the reference point, in accordance with the clinical setting and the patients' condition. Relevance to clinical practice: NuDESC reported the best evidence of diagnostic accuracy, and we recommend clinical nurses to employ this easy‐to‐use and validated tool for daily screening of postoperative delirium in general wards to facilitate its early detection and the accurate estimation of its prevalence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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147. CONSULTANTS' PROFFERED PAPER SESSION ABSTRACTS.
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COGNITIVE ability , *COLON cancer , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LUNG cancer ,ABSTRACTS - Abstract
The article presents consultants' proffered paper session abstracts to be presented at the 2010 Medical Oncology Group of Australia (MOGA) and Private Cancer Physicians of Australia (PCPA) Joint Scientific Meeting which include "Cognitive Function in Colorectal Cancer (CRC) Patients: Interim Analysis of a Longitudinal Prospective Study" and "Management of Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) in Victoria in 2003: What Has Changed in Ten Years?"
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- 2010
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148. The evaluation of a healthcare passport to improve quality of care and communication for people living with dementia (EQuIP): a protocol paper for a qualitative, longitudinal study.
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Leavey, Gerard, Abbott, Aine, Watson, Max, Todd, Stephen, Coates, Vivien, McIlfactrick, Sonja, McCormack, Brendan, Waterhouse-Bradley, Bethany, and Curran, Emma
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TREATMENT of dementia ,MEDICAL quality control ,CONTINUUM of care ,MEDICAL personnel ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DEMENTIA ,COMMUNICATION ,EMPATHY ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITY assurance ,QUALITY of life ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL support ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Background: There is an urgent need for the development of simple communication tools that convey the strengths, assets, and healthcare needs of people living with dementia. A Healthcare Passport may improve communication with range of health and social support services, enhancing quality and continuity of care, and to permit a consideration of the challenges and how these might be managed effectively and compassionately. This study aims to evaluate the acceptability and use of this type of intervention for people living with dementia and their carers.Methods/design: This is a qualitative longitudinal study informed by a critical realist review. The participants will be individuals identified as having mild-moderate dementia and informal carers. The in-depth interviews will occur at three points over the course of 18 months as they use the passport. This will be supplemented by analysis of the content of the passports and information from health and social care providers on the daily practicalities of using the passport in a range of healthcare settings.Discussion: By using a critical realist review and a qualitative, longitudinal approach, the study allows for the assessment of a complex intervention in a manner which goes beyond evaluating the basic efficacy of the passport, but looking more deeply at how it worked, for whom, and in what context. It has the potential to develop new data on how interventions improve communication across a range of service providers, while encouraging health and social care professionals to respect and encourage the development of self-management and retention of personhood throughout the progression of life-limiting illnesses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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149. Recycling potential of gastrointestinal endoscopy in German hospitals and offices – a multicentre prospective study.
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Welsch, L., Kim, S., Tal, A., Haider, N., Eickhoff, A., Schneider, M., Wittersheim, L., Schmitt, L., Heilani, M., Zeuzem, S., Friedrich-Rust, M., and Michael, F.
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MEDICAL offices ,OFFICES ,MULTIHOSPITAL systems ,ENDOSCOPY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
This article presents the findings of a study on the amount of waste generated during gastrointestinal endoscopic examinations in German hospitals and offices. The study aimed to calculate the recycling potential of this waste. Over a four-week period, waste was collected and categorized into residual waste, accessories, personal protective equipment, plastics, and paper. The study found that an average of 1.15 kg of waste was generated per examination, with 69.9% being residual waste. Although the recycling potential for plastic and paper was low, it could still contribute to reducing the amount of residual waste. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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150. A Systematic Review of Second Language Acquisition from the Perspective of Complex Dynamic System Theory.
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Behdarvandirad, Soheil
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SECOND language acquisition ,COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) ,VARIATION in language ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Copyright of Theory & Practice of Second Language Acquisition is the property of Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Slaskiego and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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