44 results on '"Reuben Ng"'
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2. News media coverage of LGBT identities over 10 years in a 400-million-word corpus.
- Author
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Reuben Ng, Ting Yu Joanne Chow, and Wenshu Yang
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundThis study is the first to analyze LGBT portrayals in a news media dataset over a decade (2010-2020). We selected Singapore as a country of interest, emblematic of a nation grappling with state-encouraged heteronormativity and a remnant colonial law against homosexuality (377A), fraught with calls for its repeal that was only enacted in 2022. Our study is interested in this period bookended by challenge and change, particularly in newspaper portrayals of LGBT narratives. Newspapers are an important source of current information and have the power to shape societal perceptions. We lay the groundwork and provide a framework to analyze news media narratives of other Commonwealth nations with colonial pasts and inherited laws criminalizing LGBT communities.ObjectivesThis study analyzes LGBT portrayals in a 400-million-word news media dataset over a decade (2010-2020). First, we aimed to track the volume of LGBT media coverage over time and elucidate differences in coverage of different identity markers. Second, we aimed to track sentiments on LGBT portrayals. Third, we aimed to track salient narratives circulated about LGBT stories.MethodsThe study leveraged a 400-million-word corpus from news media in Singapore, identifying the following target keywords: LGBT, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Pink Dot (a local Pride event), 377A. First, coverage volume was tracked using annual changes in keyword mentions per million, elucidating differences in coverage of different sub-groups. Second, sentiment analysis on a valence scale was conducted on LGBT collocates. Third, we distilled salient narratives about LGBT identities using thematic labelling of top-frequency collocates.ResultsFirst, overall coverage of LGBT steadily increased over the decade, though Gay identities evidenced asymmetrical coverage-outstripping 'Bisexual' keywords by seven times, 'Lesbian' by four, 'Transgender' by two. Second, sentiment scores for Pink Dot (a local pride event) were most positive; Lesbian, Gay, LGBT, Transgender were neutral; Bisexual and 377A dipped slightly negative. Third, topics differed across the four identities: uniquely, 'Lesbian' collocates related to sensationalized cinema; 'Gay' about hate crimes; 'Bisexual' about population surveys; 'Transgender' about challenges (transitioning, alienation, suicide).ConclusionsPractically, we presented a decade-long barometer of LGBT sentiments and themes on a national level, providing a framework to analyze media for more effective communication strategies-applicable to Commonwealth countries with similar inherited colonial laws. Salient repetition through media association may unwittingly frame certain issues negatively; caution is prudent in representing each sub-group adequately, rather than portraying the LGBT identity as monolithic.
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- 2024
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3. Narratives of pregnancy across 19 Countries: Analysis of a 1.5-billion-word news media database.
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Kalla Maxine P Sy, Ting Yu Joanne Chow, Jeannette R Ickovics, and Reuben Ng
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Pregnancy is a universal experience shaped by sociocultural contexts. News media presents a unique opportunity to analyze public narratives of pregnancy and how it differs across cultures. Our study aims to (1) identify the most prevalent overall themes in news media narratives of pregnancy across 19 English-speaking countries, and (2) compare pregnancy narratives across geographic regions. We used the largest English news media corpus that included over 30 million news articles from more than 7000 news websites across 19 countries, and extracted a one-year data subset (2019; 1.5 billion words). Of the primary search terms 'pregnant' and 'pregnancy', we collated 240,464 descriptors that met criteria of lexical proximity and semantic bonding. Thereafter, we used topic modelling to identify the five most prevalent pregnancy-related themes: (1) complications and risk, (2) crime, (3) celebration, (4) celebrity births, and (5) contraception. Although there were regional differences, themes of complications and risk were most common, comprising 39.6% of all pregnancy narratives in our big-data corpus. The second-most dominant theme was crime (20.8%). Narratives of contraception were more prevalent in Europe, North America, and Oceania (27.2-31.3%) compared to Africa and Asia (11.9-19.6%). Though the vast majority of pregnancies are healthy, themes of complications and risk dominated the news media discourse; unchecked, this may be an avenue for misinformation, stress, and anxiety. In addition, lower prevalence of contraception narratives in Africa and Asia may reflect a gap that requires the attention of policymakers in building culturally-adapted programs to promote family planning and encourage open discussions about sexual health. Results contribute to the academic repository of societal representations of pregnancy through a big-data lens, providing contextual information for future development, implementation and evaluation of localized pregnancy-related campaigns.
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- 2024
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4. The development of empathy in the healthcare setting: a qualitative approach
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Chou Chuen YU, Laurence TAN, Mai Khanh LE, Bernard TANG, Sok Ying LIAW, Tanya TIERNEY, Yun Ying HO, Beng Eng Evelyn LIM, Daphne LIM, Reuben NG, Siew Chin CHIA, and James Alvin LOW
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Empathy ,Empathy development ,Empathy assessment ,Empathy definition ,Medical education ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Healthcare professionals’ empathetic behaviors have been known to lead to higher satisfaction levels and produce better health outcomes for patients. However, empathy could decrease over time especially during training and clinical practice. This study explored factors that contributed to the development of empathy in the healthcare setting. Findings could be used to improve the effectiveness and sustainability of empathy training. Method A qualitative approach, informed by aspects of grounded theory, was utilized to identify factors that enabled the development of empathy from the perspectives of doctors, nurses, allied healthcare workers and students. Twelve sessions of focus group discussions were conducted with 60 participants from two hospitals, a medical school, and a nursing school. Data was analyzed independently by three investigators who later corroborated to refine the codes, subthemes, and themes. Factors which influence the development of empathy were identified and categorized. This formed the basis of the creation of a tentative theory of empathy development for the healthcare setting. Results The authors identified various personal (e.g. inherent characteristics, physiological and mental states, professional identity) and external (e.g. work environment, life experience, situational stressors) factors that affected the development of empathy. These could be further categorized into three groups based on the stability of their impact on the individuals’ empathy state, contributed by high, medium, or low stability factors. Findings suggest empathy is more trait-like and stable in nature but is also susceptible to fluctuation depending on the circumstances faced by healthcare professionals. Interventions targeting medium and low stability factors could potentially promote the development of empathy in the clinical setting. Conclusions Understanding factors that impact the development of empathy allows us to develop measures that could be implemented during training or at the workplace leading to improve the quality of care and higher clinical work satisfaction.
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- 2022
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5. Granfluencers on TikTok: Factors linked to positive self-portrayals of older adults on social media.
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Reuben Ng and Nicole Indran
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Lately, there have been news reports on the rise of older content creators on various social media outlets. However, while journalists have picked up on this topic, scholars have been slow to accord it any attention. Our study delves into this topic and looks at how older TikTokers' self-perceptions of aging are expressed in their videos. Specifically, we analyze the valence of the content of these videos and factors associated with older adults' self-presentations. TikTok has only gone from strength to strength since its global launch in 2017. Even as stay-at-home orders and safe distancing protocols amid the COVID-19 pandemic have led to a dramatic increase in the consumption of media across various platforms, TikTok stands out among its rivals in terms of growth and user activity. Given its wide reach, content on TikTok has the potential to influence public opinion. We collated 1,382 videos created by TikTokers aged 60 and above with at least 100,000 followers. These videos amassed over 3.5 billion views. Following previous studies, three raters coded each video for valence (negative-neutral-positive). We found that women created twice as many videos as men. The middle-old group (ages 75-84) created more videos than the young-old and oldest-old groups. Positive videos outnumbered negative ones by 10 times. As hypothesized, themes linked to positive self-portrayals were 'physical functioning' (p < .001) and 'social interaction' (p < .001). Conversely, 'cognitive functioning' (p < .001) evidenced a negative association, controlling for age and gender of the user. This is one of the first studies on older adults' self-portrayals of aging on TikTok. Our findings suggest that older adults tend to portray themselves positively across various domains on the application. If used purposefully, TikTok may serve as a promising platform for improving public perceptions of old age.
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- 2023
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6. Cohort profile: Singapore’s nationally representative Retirement and Health Study with 5 waves over 10 years
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Reuben Ng, Yi Wen Tan, and Kelvin Bryan Tan
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retirement ,health ,well-being ,employment ,longitudinal studies ,geriatrics ,Medicine - Abstract
The Retirement and Health Study (RHS) is Singapore’s largest nationally representative cohort with over 15,000 participants (aged 45-85 years) followed across five timepoints in 10 years (2014-2024). Accounting for sample weights, the sample represents 1.2 million Singaporeans and permanent residents of a total population of 5.5 million. The RHS sought consent to link survey responses to relevant administrative data, enabling the cross-validation of self-reports with national databases. There are 10 sections in the RHS with over 400 questions, 50% of which are on respondents’ physical and mental health, healthcare utilization and insurance; the remaining 50% are about employment history, retirement adequacy, wealth, and household expenditure. The RHS was set up to provide microdata to compliment administrative data for whole-of-government policy making given that Singapore will reach super-aged status by 2026. Sample findings include a need for older adults to balance between immediate financial needs and investments regarding their pension funds. Also, 86% of older adults preferred to transit into partial retirement by reducing workloads. On the health front, existing studies utilising the RHS have revealed latent classes of disabilities, and that intentions to seek employment can mitigate disability developments. Another study reported that physical disability and social isolation was projected to increase, with ethnic disparities in social functioning. Overall, the RHS will be used for evidenced-informed policy agenda setting and evaluation across domains of health, finance, retirement adequacy, social and family development.
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- 2022
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7. Media attention toward COVID-19 across 18 countries: The influence of cultural values and pandemic severity
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Reuben Ng and Yi Wen Tan
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Background Current media studies of COVID-19 devote asymmetrical attention to social media, in contrast, newspapers have received comparatively less attention. Newspapers are an integral source of current information—that are syndicated and amplified by social media to a wide global audience. This is the first-known study to investigate the impact of cultural values and pandemic severity on media attention towards COVID-19. Findings lay the groundwork for targeted public health communications that are culturally nuanced. Objective We investigated the impact of cultural values and pandemic severity on Media Attention towards COVID-19 across 18 countries. Methods We tracked the global volume of COVID-19 coverage (to measure media attention) over 8 months in a news media database of 12 billion words with 30 million articles from over 7,000 news media sites. Predictors of Media Attention towards COVID-19 came from the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (incidence and mortality) and Hofstede’s Cultural Values. Results Media attention toward COVID-19 increased 55 times over 8 months. Higher rates of new cases and deaths predicted this exponential increase. Countries with higher power distance, uncertainty avoidance, and long-term orientation, were associated with increased media attention, controlling for covariates. Conclusions Cultural values play a significant role in the news media’s attention toward COVID-19, controlling for pandemic severity. We provided a framework to design targeted public health communications that are culturally nuanced.
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- 2022
8. Defining clinical empathy: a grounded theory approach from the perspective of healthcare workers and patients in a multicultural setting
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Evelyn Lim, Laurence Tan, Sok Ying Liaw, Tanya Tierney, Mai Khanh Le, Chou Chuen Yu, Yun Ying Ho, Daphne Lim, Reuben Ng, Colin Ngeow, and James Low
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To define clinical empathy from the perspective of healthcare workers and patients from a multicultural setting.Design Grounded theory approach using focus group discussions.Setting A health cluster in Singapore consisting of an acute hospital, a community hospital, ambulatory care teams, a medical school and a nursing school.Participants 69 participants including doctors, nurses, medical students, nursing students, patients and allied health workers.Main outcome measures A robust definition of clinical empathy.Results The construct of clinical empathy is consistent across doctors, nurses, students, allied health and students. Medical empathy consists of an inner sense of empathy (imaginative, affective and cognitive), empathy behaviour (genuine concern and empathic communication) and a sense of connection (trust and rapport). This construct of clinical empathy is similar to definitions by neuroscientists but challenges a common definition of clinical empathy as a cognitive process with emotional detachment.Conclusions This paper has defined clinical empathy as ‘a sense of connection between the healthcare worker and the patient as a result of perspective taking arising from imaginative, affective and cognitive processes, which are expressed through behaviours and good communication skills that convey genuine concern’. A clear and multidimensional definition of clinical empathy will improve future education and research efforts in the application and impact of clinical empathy.
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- 2021
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9. News media narratives of Covid-19 across 20 countries: Early global convergence and later regional divergence.
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Reuben Ng, Ting Yu Joanne Chow, and Wenshu Yang
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundSeldom in history does one get a 'front row seat'-with large-scale dynamic data-on how online news media narratives shift with a global pandemic. News media narratives matter because they shape societal perceptions and influence the core tent poles of our society, from the economy to elections. Given its importance-and with the benefit of hindsight-we provide a systematic framework to analyze news narratives of Covid-19, laying the groundwork to evaluate policy and risk communications.ObjectivesWe leverage a 10-billion-word-database of online news, taken from over 7,000 English newspapers and magazines across 20 countries, culminating in 28 million articles. First, we track the volume of Covid-19 conversations across 20 countries from before to during the pandemic (Oct'19 to May'20). Second, we distill the phases of global pandemic narratives, and elucidate regional differences.MethodsTo track the volume of Covid-19 narratives, we identified 10 target terms-Coronavirus, Covid-19, Covid, nCoV, SARS-CoV-2, Wuhan Virus, Virus, Disease, Epidemic, Pandemic-and tracked their combined monthly prevalence across eight months from October 2019 through May 2020. Globally, across 20 countries, we identified 18,042,855 descriptors of the target terms. Further, these descriptors were analysed with natural language processing models to generate the top five topics of Covid-19 that were labelled by two independent researchers. This process was repeated across six continents to distil regional topics.ResultsOur model found four phases of online news media narratives: Pre-pandemic, Early, Peak and Recovery. Pre-pandemic narratives (Oct'19-Dec'19) were divergent across regions with Africa focused on monkeypox, Asia on dengue fever, and North America on Lyme disease and AIDS. Early (Jan-Feb'20) and Peak Pandemic (Mar-May'20) evidenced a global convergence, reflecting the omnipresence of Covid-19. The brief transition from early to peak pandemic narratives underscored the pandemic's rapid spread. Emerging from the embers of the pandemic's peak were nascent recovery words that are regionally divergent-Oceania focused on hope and an uncertain future while North America centered on re-opening the economy and tackling discrimination.ConclusionsPractically, we presented a media barometer of Covid-19, and provided a framework to analyse the pandemic's impact on societal perceptions-laying the important groundwork for policy makers to evaluate policy communications, and design risk communication strategies.
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- 2021
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10. Societal perceptions of caregivers linked to culture across 20 countries: Evidence from a 10-billion-word database.
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Reuben Ng and Nicole Indran
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Caregivers play an indispensable role in society. In 2017, 41 million family caregivers in the United States provided approximately 34 billion hours of care to their aging parents, spouses, partners and friends. The estimated economic value of their unpaid contributions amounted to $470 billion. Despite their invaluable contributions, caregivers often operate in a reality of inadequate social support. Little is known about the factors linked to the societal perceptions of caregivers, and our study seeks to contribute by filling this gap. Importantly, whether society honors or stigmatizes caregivers is critical as it could impact caregiving decisions and either exacerbate or ameliorate caregiver burden. We leveraged an online media database of 10 billion words collated from over 28 million articles, across 20 countries, to analyze societal perceptions of caregivers. Of the 20 countries, 18 evidenced neutral to positive perceptions of caregivers. Bangladesh and Ghana had the most positive perceptions, while Sri Lanka and Tanzania had the most negative perceptions. Aging demographics and culture (individualism, masculinity and uncertainty avoidance) were significantly associated with perceptions of caregivers. Findings suggest that positive perceptions of caregivers can be better cultivated when caring is lauded as a virtuous act that aids in reducing the care deficit. This study is among the first to analyze the societal perceptions of caregivers globally, and lays the groundwork to design culturally sensitive interventions that increase society's appreciation for caregivers.
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- 2021
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11. Pettiness: Conceptualization, measurement and cross-cultural differences.
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Reuben Ng and Becca Levy
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Although pettiness, defined as the tendency to get agitated over trivial matters, is a facet of neuroticism which has negative health implications, no measure exists. The goal of the current study was to develop, and validate a short pettiness scale. In Study 1 (N = 2136), Exploratory Factor Analysis distilled a one-factor model with five items. Convergent validity was established using the Big Five Inventory, DASS, Satisfaction with Life Scale, and Conner-Davidson Resilience Scale. As predicted, pettiness was positively associated with neuroticism, depression, anxiety and stress but negatively related to extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, openness, life satisfaction and resilience. Also, as predicted, pettiness was not significantly related to physical functioning, or blind and constructive patriotism, indicating discriminant validity. Confirmatory Factor Analysis in Study 2 (N = 734) revealed a stable one-factor model of pettiness. In Study 3 (N = 532), the scale, which showed a similar factor structure in the USA and Singapore, also reflected predicted cross-cultural patterns: Pettiness was found to be significantly lower in the United States, a culture categorized as "looser" than in Singapore, a culture classified as "tighter" in terms of Gelfand and colleagues' framework of national tendencies to oppose social deviance. Results suggest that this brief 5-item tool is a reliable and valid measure of pettiness, and its use in health research is encouraged.
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- 2018
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12. Increasing negativity of age stereotypes across 200 years: evidence from a database of 400 million words.
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Reuben Ng, Heather G Allore, Mark Trentalange, Joan K Monin, and Becca R Levy
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Scholars argue about whether age stereotypes (beliefs about old people) are becoming more negative or positive over time. No previous study has systematically tested the trend of age stereotypes over more than 20 years, due to lack of suitable data. Our aim was to fill this gap by investigating whether age stereotypes have changed over the last two centuries and, if so, what may be associated with this change. We hypothesized that age stereotypes have increased in negativity due, in part, to the increasing medicalization of aging. This study applied computational linguistics to the recently compiled Corpus of Historical American English (COHA), a database of 400 million words that includes a range of printed sources from 1810 to 2009. After generating a comprehensive list of synonyms for the term elderly for these years from two historical thesauri, we identified 100 collocates (words that co-occurred most frequently with these synonyms) for each of the 20 decades. Inclusion criteria for the collocates were: (1) appeared within four words of the elderly synonym, (2) referred to an old person, and (3) had a stronger association with the elderly synonym than other words appearing in the database for that decade. This yielded 13,100 collocates that were rated for negativity and medicalization. We found that age stereotypes have become more negative in a linear way over 200 years. In 1880, age stereotypes switched from being positive to being negative. In addition, support was found for two potential explanations. Medicalization of aging and the growing proportion of the population over the age of 65 were both significantly associated with the increase in negative age stereotypes. The upward trajectory of age-stereotype negativity makes a case for remedial action on a societal level.
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- 2015
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13. Diversity of COVID-19 News Media Coverage across 17 Countries: The Influence of Cultural Values, Government Stringency and Pandemic Severity
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Reuben Ng and Yi Wen Tan
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Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,public policy ,Public policy ,Article ,Newspaper ,newspapers ,cultural values ,Humans ,Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory ,Social media ,Mass Media ,Pandemics ,News media ,media_common ,Government ,text as data ,SARS-CoV-2 ,pandemic ,public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Collectivism ,quantitative social science ,COVID-19 ,Advertising ,Geography ,Medicine ,digital humanities ,Diversity (politics) - Abstract
The current media studies of COVID-19 devote asymmetrical attention to social media, in contrast, newspapers have received comparatively less attention. Newspapers are an integral source of current information that are syndicated and amplified by social media to a wide global audience. This is one of the first known studies to operationalize news media diversity and examine its association with cultural values during the pandemic. We tracked the global diversity of COVID-19 coverage in a news media database of 12 billion words, collated from 28 million articles over 7000 news websites, across 8 months. Media diversity was measured weekly by the number of unique descriptors of 10 target terms of the pandemic (e.g., COVID-19, coronavirus) and normalized by the corpus size for the respective countries per week. Government Stringency was taken from the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker and cultural scores were taken from Hofstede’s Cultural Values global database. Results showed that Media Diversity Rate increased 6.7 times over 8 months, from the baseline period (October–December 2019) to during the pandemic (January–May 2020). Mixed effects modelling revealed that higher COVID-19 prevalence rates and governmental stringency predicted this increase. Interestingly, collectivist cultures are linked to more diverse media coverage during COVID-19. It is possible that news outlets in collectivist societies are motivated to present a diverse array of topics given the impact of COVID-19 on every segment of society. Of broader significance, we provided a framework to design targeted public health communications that are culturally nuanced.
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- 2021
14. Societal Narratives on Caregivers in Asia
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Nicole Indran and Reuben Ng
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caregivers ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,caregiving ,public policy ,Public policy ,Article ,Digital media ,narratives ,Asian country ,Humans ,Statistical analysis ,Narrative ,Sociology ,Sri Lanka ,Singapore ,Family unit ,Narration ,text as data ,biology ,business.industry ,aging policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,social gerontology ,quantitative social science ,Public relations ,psychomics ,Toll ,Public discourse ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,digital humanities ,business - Abstract
Although there has been an increase in awareness of the struggles experienced by caregivers, discourse on caregiving remains confined mostly to academia, policy circles or the family unit. There have been suggestions that public discourse on informal caregiving dwells overwhelmingly on the outsize toll it takes on the health of caregivers. However, few studies have examined societal narratives on caregivers—a gap our study aims to fill. We leveraged an online media database of 12 billion words collated from over 30 million articles to explore societal narratives on caregivers in six Asian countries. Computational linguistics and statistical analysis were applied to study the content of narratives on caregivers. The prevalence of societal narratives on caregivers was highest in Singapore—five times higher than Sri Lanka, which evidenced the lowest prevalence. Findings reveal that the inadequacies of institutional care as well as the need to train and empower caregivers are pressing issues that need to be prioritized on the policy agenda in Asia. Of broader significance, the diverse capabilities across Asia present opportunities for cross-country learning and capacity-building.
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- 2021
15. Reframing aging during COVID-19: Familial role-based framing of older adults linked to decreased ageism
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Nicole Indran and Reuben Ng
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Gerontology ,Aging ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Population ,Ageism ,Framing (construction) ,Terminology as Topic ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,Humans ,Narrative ,education ,News media ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Stereotyping ,text as data ,business.industry ,Brief Report ,quantitative social science ,COVID-19 ,Grandparent ,Cognitive reframing ,age stereotypes ,psychomics ,reframing aging ,aging narratives ,Brief Reports ,Family Relations ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business - Abstract
Background Contributions of older adults amid the COVID‐19 pandemic have been eclipsed by discourse positioning them as an at‐risk population. We assess whether age‐based framing (e.g., senior citizen) is associated with more negative stereotyping in the media compared to familial role‐based framing (e.g., grandparent) across 8 months, from a baseline period (October 2019–December 2019) to the onset of the pandemic (January 2020–May 2020). Methods Leveraging a 12‐billion‐word news media database—with over 30 million news articles from over 7000 websites—we identified the most common synonyms for age‐based framing (e.g., senior citizen) and familial role‐based framing (e.g., grandparent). For each framing category, we compiled the most frequently used descriptors every month, amassing 488,907 descriptors in total. All descriptors were rated from 1 (very negative) to 5 (very positive) to determine a Cumulative Aging Narrative Score (CANS) for age‐based and familial role‐based framing. Results Age‐based framing of older adults increased negative stereotyping in the media by 7 times compared to familial role‐based framing during COVID‐19. The percentage of positive topics for age‐based framing was significantly lower during COVID‐19 (35%) than before (61%). Conversely, the percentage of positive topics for familial role‐based framing was higher during the pandemic (91%) than before (70%). Conclusion This is one of the first empirical studies on whether framing older adults based on age or role is linked to more negative stereotypes during COVID‐19. We argue for a more role‐centered approach in framing older adults so that their contributions are acknowledged and valued by society. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2021
16. Implementing an Individual-Centric Discharge Process across Singapore Public Hospitals
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Reuben Ng and Kelvin Bryan Tan
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Population ageing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Asia ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Psychological intervention ,Article ,Proxy (climate) ,Artificial Intelligence ,Acute care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Operations management ,Aged ,Singapore ,Hospitals, Public ,business.industry ,aging policy ,change management ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Change management ,Length of Stay ,Predictive analytics ,Patient Discharge ,policy implementation ,Hospitalization ,predictive analytics ,Public hospital ,acute care ,business ,Senior management ,public healthcare - Abstract
Singapore is one of the first known countries to implement an individual-centric discharge process across all public hospitals to manage frequent admissions—a perennial challenge for public healthcare, especially in an aging population. Specifically, the process provides daily lists of high-risk patients to all public hospitals for customized discharge procedures within 24 h of admission. We analyzed all public hospital admissions (N = 150,322) in a year. Among four models, the gradient boosting machine performed the best (AUC = 0.79) with a positive predictive value set at 70%. Interestingly, the cumulative length of stay (LOS) in the past 12 months was a stronger predictor than the number of previous admissions, as it is a better proxy for acute care utilization. Another important predictor was the “number of days from previous non-elective admission”, which is different from previous studies that included both elective and non-elective admissions. Of note, the model did not include LOS of the index admission—a key predictor in other models—since our predictive model identified frequent admitters for pre-discharge interventions during the index (current) admission. The scientific ingredients that built the model did not guarantee its successful implementation—an “art” that requires the alignment of processes, culture, human capital, and senior management sponsorship. Change management is paramount, otherwise data-driven health policies, no matter how well-intended, may not be accepted or implemented. Overall, our study demonstrated the viability of using artificial intelligence (AI) to build a near real-time nationwide prediction tool for individual-centric discharge, and the critical factors for successful implementation.
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- 2021
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17. A multi-site study on the impact of an advance care planning workshop on attitudes, beliefs and behavioural intentions over a 6-month period
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A G H Sim, C C Yu, E J Koh, J A Low, R Chong, M L Ong, J Low, D Y Q Hong, and Reuben Ng
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Advance care planning ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Health Personnel ,Intention ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Advance Care Planning ,0302 clinical medicine ,Healthcare professionals ,Training ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Evaluation ,Competence (human resources) ,Medical education ,Singapore ,LC8-6691 ,Health professionals ,Social work ,Repeated measures design ,Correction ,General Medicine ,Special aspects of education ,030228 respiratory system ,Facilitator ,Facilitation ,Medicine ,Psychology ,Period (music) ,Living matters ,Research Article - Abstract
Background This study evaluated the impact of the adapted version of the Respecting Choices® The Living Matters Advance Care Planning (ACP) facilitator training programme on trainees’ attitudes on facilitation 6 months post-training. Setting and participants Two hundred and twenty-one healthcare professionals consisting of doctors, nurses, medical social workers from different training venues in Singapore participated in the first phase of the study (pre- and post) of which 107 participated in the second phase 6 months later (follow-up). Methods Participants self-rated their attitudes, beliefs and behavioural intentions through surveys at three time points in an evaluation design that utilised repeated measures one-way ANOVA (pre-, post-, follow-up). Between-group differences were also examined using independent t-test. Results At follow-up, mean scores increased significantly in understanding, confidence, and competence. Changes in effect sizes were large. Although trainees continued to think that ACP is emotionally draining for facilitators, more than before, facilitation experience was considered pleasant for themselves with the positive change significant and moderate in effect size. Those who had experience completing/initiating ACP significantly held more positive views than those who did not. Conclusions The ACP facilitator training programme had lasting effects on enhancing the understanding, competence, and confidence of trainees. Importantly, findings showed that experience in actual facilitation within 6 months after training was important and giving trainees opportunities to facilitate is recommended.
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- 2021
18. Societal perceptions of caregivers linked to culture across 20 countries: Evidence from a 10-billion-word database
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Nicole Indran and Reuben Ng
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Aging ,genetic structures ,Databases, Factual ,Physiology ,Culture ,Social Sciences ,computer.software_genre ,Ghana ,Tanzania ,Geographical locations ,Sociology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,media_common ,Bangladesh ,Multidisciplinary ,Database ,biology ,Family caregivers ,Caregiver burden ,Caregivers ,Social Perception ,Masculinity ,Medicine ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Research Article ,Asia ,Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social support ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,medicine ,Humans ,Sri Lanka ,Uncertainty avoidance ,Internet ,Cultural Characteristics ,Biology and Life Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Long-Term Care ,Health Care ,Long-term care ,Africa ,People and places ,Physiological Processes ,computer ,Organism Development ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Caregivers play an indispensable role in society. In 2017, 41 million family caregivers in the United States provided approximately 34 billion hours of care to their aging parents, spouses, partners and friends. The estimated economic value of their unpaid contributions amounted to $470 billion. Despite their invaluable contributions, caregivers often operate in a reality of inadequate social support. Little is known about the factors linked to the societal perceptions of caregivers, and our study seeks to contribute by filling this gap. Importantly, whether society honors or stigmatizes caregivers is critical as it could impact caregiving decisions and either exacerbate or ameliorate caregiver burden. We leveraged an online media database of 10 billion words collated from over 28 million articles, across 20 countries, to analyze societal perceptions of caregivers. Of the 20 countries, 18 evidenced neutral to positive perceptions of caregivers. Bangladesh and Ghana had the most positive perceptions, while Sri Lanka and Tanzania had the most negative perceptions. Aging demographics and culture (individualism, masculinity and uncertainty avoidance) were significantly associated with perceptions of caregivers. Findings suggest that positive perceptions of caregivers can be better cultivated when caring is lauded as a virtuous act that aids in reducing the care deficit. This study is among the first to analyze the societal perceptions of caregivers globally, and lays the groundwork to design culturally sensitive interventions that increase society’s appreciation for caregivers.
- Published
- 2021
19. Self-Acceptance and Interdependence Promote Longevity: Evidence From a 20-year Prospective Cohort Study
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Becca R. Levy, Heather G. Allore, and Reuben Ng
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Male ,Mediation (statistics) ,Aging ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Longevity ,Psychological intervention ,lcsh:Medicine ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,mediation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,media_common ,Successful aging ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,social gerontology ,successful aging ,mortality ,psychomics ,Psychological well-being ,preventive health ,psychological well-being ,Female ,business ,Psychosocial ,Body mass index ,Demography ,Personality - Abstract
We explored psychosocial pathways to longevity, specifically, the association between psychological well-being and mortality in a 20-year prospective cohort study of 7626 participants. As hypothesized, high self-acceptance and interdependence were associated with decreased mortality risk, controlling for other psychological components (purpose, positive relations, growth, mastery) and potential confounders: personality, depression, self-rated health, smoking status, body mass index (BMI), illness, and demographics. Self-acceptance decreased mortality risk by 19% and added three years of life. Longevity expectation fully mediated the relationship between self-acceptance and mortality. Interdependence decreased mortality risk by 17% and added two years of life. Serenity towards death fully mediated the relationship between interdependence and mortality. This is the first known study to investigate self-acceptance, interdependence, and serenity toward death as promoters of longevity, and distilled the relative contributions of these factors, controlling for covariates&mdash, all of which were measured over multiple time points. Theoretically, this study suggests that components of well-being may make meaningful contributions to longevity, and practically recommend that self-acceptance and interdependence could be added to interventions to promote aging health.
- Published
- 2020
20. 40-Year Projections of Disability and Social Isolation of Older Adults for Long-Range Policy Planning in Singapore
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Su Ying Saw, Si Qi Lim, Kelvin Bryan Tan, and Reuben Ng
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Gerontology ,Male ,Longitudinal study ,Population ageing ,Asia ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,public policy ,Ethnic group ,Public policy ,lcsh:Medicine ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Social isolation ,Malay ,Aged ,risk ,Aged, 80 and over ,Singapore ,Health Policy ,aging ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,social gerontology ,Middle Aged ,language.human_language ,Policy planning ,psychomics ,Health Planning ,Geography ,Social Isolation ,language ,Marital status ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Forecasting - Abstract
Against a rapidly aging population, projections are done to size up the demand for long-term care (LTC) services for long-range policy planning. These projections are typically focused on functional factors such as disability. Recent studies indicate the importance of social factors, for example, socially isolated seniors living alone are more likely to be institutionalized, resulting in higher demand for LTC services. This is one the first known studies to complete a 40-year projection of LTC demand based on disability and social isolation. The primary micro dataset was the Retirement and Health Survey, Singapore&rsquo, s first nationally representative longitudinal study of noninstitutionalized older adults aged 45 to 85 with over 15,000 respondents. Disability prevalence across the mild to severe spectrum is projected to increase five-fold over the next 40 years, and the number of socially isolated elders living alone is projected to grow four-fold. Regression models of living arrangements revealed interesting ethnic differences: Malay elders are 2.6 times less likely to live alone than their Chinese counterparts, controlling for marital status, age, and housing type. These projections provide a glimpse of the growing demand for LTC services for a rapidly aging Singapore and underscore the need to shore up community-based resources to enable seniors to age-in-place.
- Published
- 2020
21. News media narratives of Covid-19 across 20 countries: Early global convergence and later regional divergence
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Ting Yu Joanne Chow, Wenshu Yang, and Reuben Ng
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Viral Diseases ,Economic growth ,History ,Epidemiology ,Science ,Cancer Treatment ,Social Sciences ,Geographical locations ,Newspaper ,Medical Conditions ,Sociology ,Pandemic ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Humans ,Social media ,Narrative ,Mass Media ,Pandemics ,News media ,Mass media ,Narration ,Multidisciplinary ,Divergence (linguistics) ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,Covid 19 ,Linguistics ,Convergence (economics) ,Communications ,Semantics ,Infectious Diseases ,Oncology ,Medical Risk Factors ,North America ,Medicine ,People and places ,business ,Social Media ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Seldom in history does one get a ‘front row seat’—with large-scale dynamic data—on how online news media narratives shift with a global pandemic. News media narratives matter because they shape societal perceptions and influence the core tent poles of our society, from the economy to elections. Given its importance—and with the benefit of hindsight—we provide a systematic framework to analyze news narratives of Covid-19, laying the groundwork to evaluate policy and risk communications. Objectives We leverage a 10-billion-word-database of online news, taken from over 7,000 English newspapers and magazines across 20 countries, culminating in 28 million articles. First, we track the volume of Covid-19 conversations across 20 countries from before to during the pandemic (Oct’19 to May’20). Second, we distill the phases of global pandemic narratives, and elucidate regional differences. Methods To track the volume of Covid-19 narratives, we identified 10 target terms—Coronavirus, Covid-19, Covid, nCoV, SARS-CoV-2, Wuhan Virus, Virus, Disease, Epidemic, Pandemic—and tracked their combined monthly prevalence across eight months from October 2019 through May 2020. Globally, across 20 countries, we identified 18,042,855 descriptors of the target terms. Further, these descriptors were analysed with natural language processing models to generate the top five topics of Covid-19 that were labelled by two independent researchers. This process was repeated across six continents to distil regional topics. Results Our model found four phases of online news media narratives: Pre-pandemic, Early, Peak and Recovery. Pre-pandemic narratives (Oct’19–Dec’19) were divergent across regions with Africa focused on monkeypox, Asia on dengue fever, and North America on Lyme disease and AIDS. Early (Jan–Feb’20) and Peak Pandemic (Mar–May’20) evidenced a global convergence, reflecting the omnipresence of Covid-19. The brief transition from early to peak pandemic narratives underscored the pandemic’s rapid spread. Emerging from the embers of the pandemic’s peak were nascent recovery words that are regionally divergent—Oceania focused on hope and an uncertain future while North America centered on re-opening the economy and tackling discrimination. Conclusions Practically, we presented a media barometer of Covid-19, and provided a framework to analyse the pandemic’s impact on societal perceptions—laying the important groundwork for policy makers to evaluate policy communications, and design risk communication strategies.
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- 2021
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22. Societal Age Stereotypes in the U.S. and U.K. from a Media Database of 1.1 Billion Words
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Reuben Ng
- Subjects
Media conglomerate ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public opinion ,computer.software_genre ,Article ,Newspaper ,Power (social and political) ,ageism ,Political science ,British National Corpus ,Synonym (database) ,Narrative ,Valence (psychology) ,Stereotyping ,text as data ,Database ,business.industry ,quantitative social science ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,media portrayals of aging ,United States ,age discrimination ,psychomics ,aging narratives ,Public Opinion ,Medicine ,Television ,business ,computer - Abstract
Recently, 194 World Health Organization member states called on the international organization to develop a global campaign to combat ageism, citing its alarming ubiquity, insidious threat to health, and prevalence in the media. Existing media studies of age stereotypes have mostly been single-sourced. This study harnesses a 1.1-billion-word media database comprising the British National Corpus and Corpus of Contemporary American English—with genres including spoken/television, fiction, magazines, newspapers—to provide a comprehensive view of ageism in the United Kingdom and United States. The US and UK were chosen as they are home to the largest media conglomerates with tremendous power to shape public opinion. The most commonly used synonym of older adults was identified, and its most frequently used descriptors were analyzed for valence. Such computational linguistics techniques represent a new advance in studying aging narratives. The key finding is consistent, though no less alarming: Negative descriptions of older adults outnumber positive ones by six times. Negative descriptions tend to be physical, while positive ones tend to be behavioral. Magazines contain the highest levels of ageism, followed by the spoken genre, newspapers, and fiction. Findings underscore the need to increase public awareness of ageism and lay the groundwork to design targeted societal campaigns to tackle ageism—one of our generation’s most pernicious threats.
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- 2021
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23. Measuring Coping Behavior in Liver Transplant Candidates
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Dwain C. Fehon, Anne C. Fernandez, Nicole R. Amoyal, and Reuben Ng
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Predictive validity ,050103 clinical psychology ,Transplantation ,Psychometrics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Construct validity ,050109 social psychology ,Coping behavior ,Liver transplantation ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Liver Transplantation ,Developmental psychology ,Distress ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Scale (social sciences) ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Liver transplant candidates must cope with significant physiological and psychological challenges. The Brief COPE is a frequently used measure of coping behavior; however, knowledge of the scale’s factor structure and construct validity is limited with regard to liver transplant candidates. This study assessed the validity of the Brief COPE in 120 liver transplant candidates using exploratory factor analysis. Results revealed a 6-factor solution, only 2 of which were consistent with the original scale assignments. Construct validity of the 6 Brief COPE scales yielded in this study was demonstrated. The results indicate that the Brief COPE is valid, reliable, and can be meaningfully interpreted in liver transplant patients. Future research should confirm this factor structure and examine its predictive validity prior to widespread use among liver transplant patients. Suggestions are presented for enhancing the care of transplant candidates by promoting the use of adaptive coping mechanisms to manage distress.
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- 2016
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24. Complexities and Challenges of Singapore Nurses Providing Postacute Home Care in Multicultural Communities: A Grounded Theory Study
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Reuben Ng, Kirsten Eom Yoon, Desiree Lie, David B. Matchar, Shu Fen Ong, Alfred Ka-Shing Wong, and Chek Hooi Wong
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Adult ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision Making ,Nurses ,Grounded theory ,Interviews as Topic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Cultural diversity ,Medicine ,Humans ,Transitional care ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Work complexity ,General Nursing ,Qualitative Research ,media_common ,Nursing practice ,Singapore ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,Cultural Diversity ,Home Care Services ,Caregivers ,Multiculturalism ,Grounded Theory ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Nurse-Patient Relations ,Community nursing ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Introduction: Studies are needed to inform the preparation of community nurses to address patient behavioral and social factors contributing to unnecessary readmissions to hospital. This study uses nurses’ input to understand challenges faced during home care, to derive a framework to address the challenges. Methods: Semistructured interviews were conducted to saturation with 16 community nurses in Singapore. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and transcripts independently coded for emergent themes. Themes were interpreted using grounded theory. Results: Seven major themes emerged from 16 interviews: Strained social relationships, complex care decision-making processes within families, communication barriers, patient’s or caregiver neglect of health issues, building and maintaining trust, trial-and-error nature of work, and dealing with uncertainty. Discussion: Community nurses identified uncertainty arising from complexities in social-relational, personal, and organizational factors as a central challenge. Nursing education should focus on navigating and managing uncertainty at the personal, patient, and family levels.
- Published
- 2018
25. The ideal ear position in Caucasian females
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P. Niclas Broer, Lukas Prantl, Paul I. Heidekrueger, Sabrina Juran, Caroline Szpalski, Denis Ehrl, Milomir Ninkovic, Sammy Sinno, Reuben Ng, and Aung Thiha
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ethnic group ,030230 surgery ,Audiology ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,Beauty ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Aged ,Demography ,Response rate (survey) ,Ideal (set theory) ,business.industry ,Ear ,Middle Aged ,Sociological Factors ,Facial appearance ,Position (obstetrics) ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Surgery ,Residence ,Female ,sense organs ,Analysis of variance ,Self Report ,Oral Surgery ,Rotational axis ,business - Abstract
Purpose Ear position contributes significantly to facial appearance. However, while objective measurements remain the foundation for esthetic evaluations, little is known about how an ear should ideally be positioned regarding its rotational axis. This study aimed to further evaluate whether there exists a universally applicable ideal ear axis, and how sociodemographic factors impact such preferences. Materials and methods An interactive online survey was designed, enabling participants to change the axis of a female model's ear in terms of its forward and backward rotation. The questionnaire was sent out internationally to plastic surgeons and the general public. Demographic data were collected and analysis of variance was used to investigate respective preferences. Results A total of 1016 responses from 35 different countries (response rate: 18.5%) were gathered. Overall, 60% of survey takers chose the minus 10 or 5° angles to be most attractive. Significant differences were found regarding sex, ethnicity, country of residence, profession and respective ear axis preferences. Conclusion Across multiple countries and ethnicities, an ear position in slight reclination of minus 5–10° is considered most pleasing in Caucasian females. However, sociodemographic factors significantly impact individual ear axis preferences and should be taken into consideration when performing reconstructive ear surgery.
- Published
- 2017
26. The Ideal Buttock Size: A Sociodemographic Morphometric Evaluation
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Milomir Ninkovic, Sabrina Juran, Caroline Szpalski, Sammy Sinno, Reuben Ng, Paul I. Heidekrueger, Daniel Schmauss, Denis Ehrl, Neil Tanna, and P. Niclas Broer
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Latin Americans ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic group ,030230 surgery ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Beauty ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Waist–hip ratio ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Buttocks ,media_common ,Aged ,Demography ,Ideal (set theory) ,business.industry ,Waist-Hip Ratio ,Organ Size ,Middle Aged ,Sociological Factors ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Surgery ,Residence ,Female ,Self Report ,business - Abstract
Background Perception of beauty is influenced by geographic, ethnic, cultural, and demographic factors. However, objective measurements remain the foundation for aesthetic evaluations. In the quest to better define the "ideal" female buttock, this study assumes interdependence among variables such as country of residence, sex, age, occupation, and aesthetic perception, yielding a waist-to-hip ratio that appears most pleasing across most cultures and geographic locations. Methods An online survey was designed. Modifiable ranges of buttock sizes were achieved by means of digital alteration, enabling participants to interactively change the size and waist-to-hip ratio of a single model's buttocks. The questionnaire was translated into multiple languages and sent to more than 9000 plastic surgeons and to the general public worldwide. Demographic data were collected, and analysis of variance was used to elucidate buttock shape preferences. Results A total of 1032 responses were gathered from over 40 different countries. Significant differences regarding preferences for buttock size were identified across the respondents. Overall, 404 of 1032 of survey takers (39 percent) chose the 0.7 waist-to-hip ratio to be their ideal. Significant relationships were distilled between sex, age, self-reported ethnicity, plastic surgeons' country of residence, and ethnic background. For example, surgeons in Latin America preferred the largest buttocks, followed by surgeons in Asia, North America, and Europe, with non-Caucasians preferring larger buttocks than Caucasians. Conclusion There seems to exist a global consensus regarding the ideal waist-to-hip ratio; however, multiple other factors impact the aesthetic perception of the buttocks significantly.
- Published
- 2017
27. A prospective, randomized-controlled pilot study comparing closed suction versus negative pressure drains for panniculectomy patients
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P. Niclas Broer, Cynthia Tsay, Marc E. Walker, Reuben Ng, Leslie M. Scoutt, Victor Z. Zhu, J. Grant Thomson, Tracy Sturrock, and Stephanie L. Kwei
- Subjects
Suction (medicine) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominoplasty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Treatment outcome ,MEDLINE ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Surgery ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Seroma ,Panniculectomy ,Medicine ,business ,Prospective cohort study - Published
- 2018
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28. COGNITIVE APPRAISAL AND KNOWLEDGE AS RISK FACTORS FOR HIGH FEAR OF FALLING IN OLDER AND MIDDLE-AGED ADULTS IN SINGAPORE
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Angelique Chan, Pey June Tan, Jagadish Ullal Mallya, Reuben Ng, Noor Hafizah Ismail, Peter Kay Chai Tay, and Chek Hooi Wong
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Gerontology ,Abstracts ,Session 2360 (Poster) ,Health (social science) ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,Fear of falling ,Disability, Falls, and Mobility ,Cognitive appraisal - Abstract
Fear-of-falling (FOF) can be adaptive or maladaptive depending on one’s appraisal of knowledge and beliefs, but few have elucidated this cognitive process in older adults surrounding falls. We aim to identify risk factors for high FOF amongst community-dwelling older adults (OA) and middle-aged adults (MA) in Singapore. This was a cross-sectional survey of a nationally-representative sample of OA (≥60 years) and MA (40-59 years) identified by stratified random sampling. Primary outcome was high FOF measured by a single-item (4-point scale). Independent variables were history-of-falls, quality-of-life, fall-related cognitive appraisal (balance problems, importance to restrict activities to prevent falls) and knowledge indicators (knowledge of other OA who fell, ability to identify out of 13 fall risk factors). MA were also asked if they’re caregivers. Multiple logistic regressions identified risk factors for high FOF separately by age-groups, adjusting for socio-demographics and comorbidities. The final analysis included 549 OA (70.6±6.88 years) and 309 MA (49.7±5.89 years). No differences in high FOF was found among OA and MA (37% vs. 38%, p=0.305), but there were more falls among OA (19% vs 12%, p=0.010). Higher knowledge of fall risk factors and self-reported balance problems were significant risk factors for high FOF among OA only, while a history-of-falls and being a caregiver were significant among MA only. Perceived importance to restrict activities was associated with high FOF in both age-groups. Although findings suggest differences in the mechanism of high FOF between OA and MA, both age-groups have maladaptive appraisal tendencies related to restrict activities to prevent falls.
- Published
- 2019
29. Modeling Risk Categories to Predict the Longitudinal Prevalence of Childhood Diarrhea in Indonesia
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Laura C. Sima, Reuben Ng, and Menachem Elimelech
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Risk Assessment ,Structural equation modeling ,Hygiene ,Virology ,Environmental health ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Socioeconomic status ,media_common ,Family Characteristics ,Models, Statistical ,Poverty ,business.industry ,Infant ,Articles ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Infectious Diseases ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Indonesia ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Risk assessment - Abstract
We present an innovative approach for analyzing diarrheal prevalence data that uses latent variables to model the relationships between multiple, interdependent environmental risk factors, and socioeconomic mediators. This strategy was applied to elucidate diarrheal longitudinal prevalence risk factors in children 1–4 years of age in low-income areas of Jakarta, Indonesia. Through a prospective cohort study, we identified 257 children who had at least one episode of diarrhea. At the onset of the study, we collected responses to 44 indicators, covering a wide range of previously identified diarrhea risk factors, including demographic and socioeconomic factors. We used exploratory factor analysis to uncover four latent categories of risk factors and their respective indicators from the initial pool of 44 indicators. Thereafter, we used structural equation modeling to model the relationships between the four risk categories and diarrheal longitudinal prevalence, controlling for socioeconomic and demographic covariates. Our final model elucidated several pathways to longitudinal diarrheal prevalence. Most notably, poverty exerts its effect on increased diarrheal prevalence via dual pathways: poor household hygiene and food quality, controlling for covariates. Implications of this and other findings for disease control in Jakarta are discussed.
- Published
- 2013
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30. Venous coupler size in autologous breast reconstruction-does it matter?
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Stelios C. Wilson, Robert J. Allen, Jamie P. Levine, P. Niclas Broer, Mihye Choi, Reuben Ng, Neil Tanna, Christina Y. Ahn, Nolan S. Karp, and Katie E. Weichman
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal Mammary Vein ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anastomosis ,Microsurgery ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,Hematoma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine.vein ,medicine ,Fat necrosis ,business ,Vein ,Breast reconstruction - Abstract
Background Autologous microvascular breast reconstruction is an increasingly common procedure. While arterial anastomoses are traditionally being hand-sewn, venous anastomoses are often completed with a coupler device. The largest coupler size possible should be used, as determined by the smaller of either the donor or recipient vein. While its efficacy has been shown using 3.0-mm size and greater couplers, little is known about the consequences of using coupler sizes less than or equal to 2.5 mm. Methods: A retrospective chart review of patients undergoing autologous breast reconstruction was conducted at NYU Medical Center between November 2007 and November 2011. Flaps were divided into cohorts based on coupler size used: 2.0 mm, 2.5 mm, and 3.0 mm. Outcomes included incidence of arterial or venous insufficiency, hematoma, fat necrosis, partial flap loss, full flap loss, and need for future fat grafting. Results: One-hundred ninety-seven patients underwent 392 flaps during the study period. Patients were similar in age, type of flap, smoking status, and radiation history. Coupler size less than or equal to 2.0 mm was found to be a significant risk factor for venous insufficiency (P = 0.038), as well as for development of fat necrosis (P = 0.041) and future need for fat grafting (P = 0.050). In multivariate analysis, body mass index was found to be an independent risk factor for skin flap necrosis (P = 0.010) and full flap loss (P = 0.035). Conclusions: Complications were significantly increased in patients where couplers of 2.0 mm or less were used, therefore to be avoided whenever possible. When needed, more aggressive vessel exposure through rib harvest, the use of thoracodorsal vessels or hand-sewing the anastomosis should be considered in cases of internal mammary vein caliber of 2.0 mm or less. Clinical Question Therapeutic Level of Evidence Level III. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Microsurgery 33:514–518, 2013.
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- 2013
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31. AlloDerm plication: a novel technique for enhancing acellular dermis-assisted breast reconstruction
- Author
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Peter Niclas Broer, David Wages, Michael Matthew, Stephanie L. Kwei, Marc E. Walker, and Reuben Ng
- Subjects
Tissue expander ,Novel technique ,Acellular Dermis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sling (implant) ,business.industry ,Surgery ,Plastic surgery ,medicine ,Implant ,Dermal matrix ,Breast reconstruction ,business - Abstract
Background The use of acellular dermal matrix (ADM) as an adjunct to immediate tissue expander or implant breast reconstruction has been widely established. Given the increased number of patients benefiting from ADM and the demand for greater projection in breast reconstruction, the authors have attempted to further enhance results by modifying existing techniques. We report on a novel technique employing longitudinal plication of the AlloDerm graft prior to its insertion as an inferolateral sling.
- Published
- 2013
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32. The current preferred female lip ratio
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Sabrina Juran, Lorenz Larcher, P. Niclas Broer, Reuben Ng, Paul I. Heidekrueger, and Caroline Szpalski
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Lower lip ,Ethnic group ,030230 surgery ,Demographic data ,03 medical and health sciences ,Beauty ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sex Factors ,Perception ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Surgery, Plastic ,media_common ,Aged ,Response rate (survey) ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,030206 dentistry ,Middle Aged ,Preference ,Lip ,Surgery ,stomatognathic diseases ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Residence ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,Oral Surgery ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Background Perception of beauty is influenced by the individual's demographic background and characteristics. However, objective measurements and ratios remain the foundation for aesthetic evaluations. This study aimed to elucidate if there exists a universally applicable ideal upper to lower lip ratio. Methods An interactive online survey was designed. Modifiable ranges of lip ratios were achieved via digital alteration, enabling participants to change the ratio of a single female model's lips. The questionnaire was translated into multiple languages and sent to more than 9000 plastic surgeons and the general public worldwide. Demographic data were collected and analysis of variance was used to investigate respective lip ratio preferences. Results A total of 1011 responses from 35 different countries (response rate of 14%) was gathered. The majority of survey takers (60%) chose the 1.0:1.0 lip ratio as most attractive. No differences were found in respect to lip ratio preference and the self-reported ethnicity. However, interesting preferences prevailed when analyzing the subgroups regarding lower lip size. Conclusion Age, gender, country of residence, and profession significantly impact individual upper to lower lip ratio preferences. However, a 1.0:1.0 lip ratio can apparently be considered most pleasing in females.
- Published
- 2016
33. Resilience in Organ Transplantation: An Application of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) With Liver Transplant Candidates
- Author
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Reuben Ng, Dwain C. Fehon, Hayley R. Treloar, Anne C. Fernandez, and William H. Sledge
- Subjects
Predictive validity ,Male ,Psychometrics ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Article ,Social support ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,media_common ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Construct validity ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Resilience, Psychological ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Liver Transplantation ,Clinical Psychology ,Anxiety ,Female ,Psychological resilience ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
End-stage liver disease (ESLD) is a chronic and debilitating condition associated with substantial psychological stress, morbidity, and mortality. The Connor Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC; Connor & Davidson, 2003) is commonly used resilience measure. The current research examined the validity of the CD-RISC among ESLD patients (N = 120) using exploratory factor analysis. Results supported a single-factor solution after removing poorly loading items. The CD-RISC also was correlated with measures of depression, anxiety, quality of life, social support, age, and cognitive ability, thus providing evidence to support its construct validity. Future research should confirm this factor structure and examine its predictive validity prior to wide-spread use among ESLD patients. The current research represents the first step in this process and proposes an alternative version of the CD-RISC for this population.
- Published
- 2015
34. Increasing Negativity of Age Stereotypes across 200 Years: Evidence from a Database of 400 Million Words
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Becca R. Levy, Mark Trentalange, Heather G. Allore, Joan K. Monin, and Reuben Ng
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Synonym ,Population ,lcsh:Medicine ,computer.software_genre ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030502 gerontology ,Medicalization ,medicine ,Historical linguistics ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,lcsh:Science ,10. No inequality ,education ,Association (psychology) ,Geriatrics ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,Evolutionary linguistics ,Database ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,American English ,Age Factors ,Models, Theoretical ,lcsh:Q ,0305 other medical science ,business ,computer ,Research Article - Abstract
Scholars argue about whether age stereotypes (beliefs about old people) are becoming more negative or positive over time. No previous study has systematically tested the trend of age stereotypes over more than 20 years, due to lack of suitable data. Our aim was to fill this gap by investigating whether age stereotypes have changed over the last two centuries and, if so, what may be associated with this change. We hypothesized that age stereotypes have increased in negativity due, in part, to the increasing medicalization of aging. This study applied computational linguistics to the recently compiled Corpus of Historical American English (COHA), a database of 400 million words that includes a range of printed sources from 1810 to 2009. After generating a comprehensive list of synonyms for the term elderly for these years from two historical thesauri, we identified 100 collocates (words that co-occurred most frequently with these synonyms) for each of the 20 decades. Inclusion criteria for the collocates were: (1) appeared within four words of the elderly synonym, (2) referred to an old person, and (3) had a stronger association with the elderly synonym than other words appearing in the database for that decade. This yielded 13,100 collocates that were rated for negativity and medicalization. We found that age stereotypes have become more negative in a linear way over 200 years. In 1880, age stereotypes switched from being positive to being negative. In addition, support was found for two potential explanations. Medicalization of aging and the growing proportion of the population over the age of 65 were both significantly associated with the increase in negative age stereotypes. The upward trajectory of age-stereotype negativity makes a case for remedial action on a societal level.
- Published
- 2015
35. Conclusions of the African Regional GIS Summit (2019): using geographic information systems for public health decision-making
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Godwin Ubong Akpan, Hani Farouk Mohammed, Kebba Touray, John Kipterer, Isah Mohammed Bello, Reuben Ngofa, Andrew Stein, Vince Seaman, Pascal Mkanda, and Joseph Cabore
- Subjects
Africa ,Decision-making ,Geographic information systems ,GIS ,Polio ,Public health ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The use of geographic information system (GIS) technologies to improve access to health is gaining momentum in Africa. This has become more pertinent with the increasing penetration of mobile-phone technology and internet use, and calls for innovative strategies to support implementation of the World Health Organization Sustainable Development Goals for universal health coverage on the continent. The huge potential benefits of GIS to advance health service delivery in Africa is, however, yet to be fully harnessed due to critical challenges such as proliferation of pilot projects, poor coordination, inadequate preparedness of the health workforce for GIS, lack of interoperability, and inadequate sustainable financing. To discuss these challenges and propose the way forward for rapid, cost-effective, and sustainable deployment of GIS, the African Regional GIS Summit was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo, on 7–10 October 2019 under the umbrella of the AFRO GIS Centre.
- Published
- 2022
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36. Aesthetic breast shape preferences among plastic surgeons
- Author
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Yuen-Jong Liu, Ajul Shah, Peter Niclas Broer, Neil Tanna, John A. Persing, Thomson Jg, Katie E. Weichman, Anup Patel, Sabrina Juran, Marc E. Walker, and Reuben Ng
- Subjects
Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Esthetics ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Breast surgery ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mammaplasty ,MEDLINE ,India ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Breast ,Surgery, Plastic ,Surgeons ,Cultural Characteristics ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Breast shape ,Surgery.plastic ,United States ,Surgery ,Europe ,Plastic surgery ,Multiple factors ,Female ,business ,Brazil - Abstract
There has been little discussion in the plastic surgery literature regarding breast shape preferences among plastic surgeons, despite strong evidence that such aesthetic preferences are influenced by multiple factors. Much effort has been focused on delineating the objective criteria by which an "attractive" breast might be defined. This study aimed at providing a better understanding of the presence and significance of differences in personal aesthetic perception, and how these relate to a plastic surgeon's demographic, ethnic, and cultural background, as well as practice type (academic vs private).An interactive online survey was designed. Modifiable ranges of upper pole fullness and areola size were achieved via digital alteration, enabling participants to interactively change the shape of a model's breasts. The questionnaire was translated into multiple languages and sent to plastic surgeons worldwide. Demographic data were also collected. Analysis of variance was used to elucidate plastic surgeon's breast shape preferences in respect to sex and age, geographic and ethnic background, as well as practice type.The authors gathered 614 responses from 29 different countries. Significant differences regarding preferences for upper pole fullness, areola size in the natural breast, and areola size in the augmented breast were identified across surgeons from the different countries. Further, significant relationships regarding breast shape preferences were distilled between the age and sex of the surgeon, as well as the practice type. No differences were found in respect to the surgeons' self-reported ethnic background.Country of residence, age, and practice type significantly impact breast shape preferences of plastic surgeons. These findings have implications for both patients seeking and surgeons performing cosmetic and reconstructive breast surgery. In an increasingly global environment, cultural differences and international variability must be considered when defining and publishing new techniques and aesthetic outcomes. When both the plastic surgeon and the patient are able to adequately and effectively communicate their preferences regarding the shape and relations of the breast, they will be more successful at achieving satisfying results.
- Published
- 2014
37. The impact of geographic, ethnic, and demographic dynamics on the perception of beauty
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Neil Tanna, Marc E. Walker, Reuben Ng, Yuen-Jong Liu, Katie E. Weichman, John A. Persing, Sabrina Juran, and Peter Niclas Broer
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Adult ,Male ,Chin ,Visual perception ,Internationality ,Adolescent ,Esthetics ,Social Values ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Culture ,Ethnic group ,Individuality ,Social value orientations ,Nose ,Beauty ,Young Adult ,Age Distribution ,Sex Factors ,Perception ,medicine ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Occupations ,Sex Distribution ,Surgery, Plastic ,media_common ,Aged ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Lip ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Private practice ,Face ,Population Surveillance ,Visual Perception ,Surgery ,Residence ,Female ,business ,Social psychology - Abstract
Background Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder, but influenced by the individual's geographic, ethnic, and demographic background and characteristics. In plastic surgery, objective measurements are used as a foundation for aesthetic evaluations. This study assumes interdependence between variables such as country of residence, sex, age, occupation, and aesthetic perception. Methods Computerized images of a model's face were generated with the ability to alter nasal characteristics and the projection of the lips and chin. A survey containing these modifiable images was sent to more than 13,000 plastic surgeons and laypeople in 50 different countries, who were able to virtually create a face that they felt to be the aesthetically "ideal" and most pleasing. Demographic information about the interviewees was obtained. Results Values of various aesthetic parameters of the nose were described along with their relationship to geography, demography, and occupation of the respondents. Interregional and ethnic comparison revealed that variables of country of residence, ethnicity, occupation (general public vs surgeon), and sex correlate along a 3-way dimension with the ideal projection of the lips and the chin. Significant interaction effects were found between variables of country of residence or ethnicity with occupation and sex of the respondents. Conclusions What are considered the "ideal" aesthetics of the face are highly dependent on the individual's cultural and ethnic background and cannot simply and solely be defined by numeric values and divine proportions. As confirmed with this study, ethnic, demographic, and occupational factors impact peoples' perception of beauty significantly.
- Published
- 2014
38. Radiation therapy and expander-implant breast reconstruction: an analysis of timing and comparison of complications
- Author
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Michael Matthew, Stefano Fusi, Stephanie L. Kwei, Rachel Lentz, Reuben Ng, and Susan A. Higgins
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Adult ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Implants ,Tissue Expansion ,Breast Neoplasms ,Postoperative Complications ,Statistical significance ,medicine ,Humans ,Breast Implantation ,Mastectomy ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Tissue Expansion Devices ,Retrospective cohort study ,Capsular contracture ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Logistic Models ,Treatment Outcome ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,business ,Breast reconstruction ,Complication ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background The optimal timing of expander-implant exchange in the setting of postmastectomy radiation therapy (PMRT) remains unclear with prior reports yielding inconsistent and variable results. The purpose of this study was to characterize complications associated with the sequencing of expander-implant breast reconstruction before or after PMRT and to compare the outcomes between early ( 4 months) expander-implant exchange in the subset of patients who received PMRT before exchange. Materials and methods The medical records of all patients PMRT in the setting of tissue expander-implant breast reconstruction between June 2004 and June 2011 at our institution were reviewed retrospectively. Patients were first classified as having undergone expander-implant exchange before the initiation of PMRT or after the completion of PMRT. Patients who underwent expander-implant exchange after PMRT were then classified as having undergone exchange early ( 4 months after PMRT). All complications requiring additional surgery or hospitalization were recorded. Results Fifty-five eligible patients were identified as having undergone 56 two-stage tissue expander-implant breast reconstructions. Twenty-two reconstructions underwent exchange before PMRT and 34 reconstructions underwent exchange after PMRT. There was no significant difference in overall complication rate (54.55% vs 47.06%, P = 0.785) or reconstruction failure rate (13.64% vs 20.59%, P = 0.724) between the 2 cohorts. Twenty reconstructions underwent exchange less than 4 months after PMRT and 14 underwent exchange more than 4 months after PMRT. There was no significant difference in overall complication rate (40% vs 57.14%, P = 0.487) or failure rate (25% vs 14.29%, P = 0.672) between the 2 groups. Trends suggest a higher rate of infection in patients who underwent exchange earlier (30% vs 14.29%, P = 0.422) and a higher rate of capsular contracture in patients who underwent exchange later (5% vs 21.43%, P = 0.283); however, statistical significance was not reached. Conclusions Our findings suggest that neither the sequencing nor timing of expander-implant exchange in the setting of PMRT affects overall complication or reconstruction failure rate. However, the timing of exchange may impact the type of complication encountered. Further investigation is necessary to determine an optimal time for expander-implant exchange.
- Published
- 2013
39. Lip Attractiveness: A Cross-Cultural Analysis
- Author
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Carla Claussen, P. Niclas Broer, Paul I. Heidekrueger, Caroline Szpalski, Milomir Ninkovic, Sabrina Juran, Reuben Ng, and Katie E. Weichman
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Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Attractiveness ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic group ,Context (language use) ,030230 surgery ,Beauty ,Young Adult ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Cultural diversity ,Perception ,Ethnicity ,medicine ,Humans ,Cross-cultural ,Surgery, Plastic ,Aged ,media_common ,Surgeons ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Organ Size ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,Cross-cultural studies ,Lip ,Surgery ,stomatognathic diseases ,Female ,Residence ,business ,Social psychology - Abstract
Background Perception of beauty is influenced by the individual's geographic, ethnic, cultural, and demographic background. However, objective measurements remain the foundation for aesthetic evaluations. In the quest for to better define “ideal” lip characteristics, this study assumes interdependence between variables such as country of residence, sex, age, occupation, and aesthetic perception. Objectives This study will increase surgeons' awareness with respect to different lip size preferences. The provided information might enhance and clarify communication among plastic surgeons and aid to put often quoted “ideal proportions” in context. Methods An online survey was designed. Modifiable ranges of lip fullness were achieved via digital alteration, enabling participants to interactively change the shape of a single model's lips. The questionnaire was sent to more than 9000 plastic surgeons and laypeople worldwide. Demographic data were collected and analysis of variance was used to elucidate lip shape preferences. Results A total of 1011 responses (14% response rate) from 35 different countries were gathered. Significant differences regarding lip fullness were identified. Surgeons who practice in Asia or non-Caucasian surgeons prefer larger lips, while those in Europe and Caucasians prefer smaller lips. Lastly, laypersons living in Asia prefer the smallest lips. Conclusions Country of residence, ethnic background, and profession significantly impact individual lip shape preferences. These findings have implications for patients and surgeons, because differences in aesthetics' preferences can lead to dissatisfaction of patients and surgeons alike. In our increasingly global environment, cultural differences and international variability must be considered when defining new aesthetic techniques, treating patients, and reporting outcomes.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Divinity and distress: the impact of religion and spirituality on the mental health of HIV-positive adults in Tanzania
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Trace Kershaw, John S. Mosha, Jeremy Steglitz, and Reuben Ng
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Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,Coping (psychology) ,Social Psychology ,Adolescent ,Psychological intervention ,Anxiety ,Models, Psychological ,Tanzania ,Religiosity ,Social support ,Young Adult ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,HIV Seropositivity ,medicine ,Humans ,Spirituality ,Aged ,Depression ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Social Support ,Middle Aged ,Mental health ,Distress ,Health psychology ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Mental Health ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Quality of Life ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Stress, Psychological ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This study examined the relationship between religiosity, spirituality and mental health in the context of a stress-coping framework. Participants were 135 rural, low-income HIV-positive adults in Iringa, Tanzania. The relationships between religiosity, spirituality, coping responses, social support, and psychological distress (depression, anxiety, and stress) were examined using structural equation modeling. Religiosity was related to decreased avoidant coping and increased social support, which in turn were related to psychological distress. Spirituality was positively related to active coping and social support. Results suggest that coping strategies and social support may mediate the relationship between religiosity and spirituality and psychological distress. Interventions to reduce psychological distress among HIV-positive individuals in Tanzania might incorporate strategies to reduce avoidant coping and increase social support. According to the present findings, this may be accomplished through faith-based approaches that incorporate religious and spiritual activities into HIV prevention programs.
- Published
- 2012
41. Coping with anxiety, depression, anger and aggression : the mediational role of resilience in adolescents
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Reuben Ng, Moon-Ho Ringo Ho, Rebecca P. Ang, and School of Humanities and Social Sciences
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Coping (psychology) ,Aggression ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Anger ,Mental health ,Optimism ,medicine ,Anxiety ,Psychological resilience ,medicine.symptom ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common ,Clinical psychology ,Psychopathology - Abstract
Background The New Freedom Commission on Mental Health urged that mental health services be transformed from a reactive approach of treatment to a proactive one of prevention and building resilience. In response, the present study delineates the role of resilience in reducing psychopathology. Objective The study examined the mediational role of resilience (positive thinking, tenacity and help-seeking), on the relationship between coping (approach and avoidance) and psychopathology (anxiety, depression, anger and aggression). Methods Adolescents (n = 719) aged 14–15 completed questionnaires assessing study variables in school settings. Results Mediation analysis using Structural Equation Modeling found that resilience factors mediated the approach coping–psychopathology relationship but not the avoidance coping–psychopathology relationship. Specifically, positive thinking mediated the approach coping–internalizing disorders (anxiety; depression) relationship; tenacity mediated the approach coping–aggression link; help-seeking mediated both the approach coping–internalizing disorders, and approach coping–externalizing behaviors (anger; aggression) links. Further, strength-of-mediation analysis revealed that help-seeking was a stronger mediator than positive thinking in the approach coping–anxiety relationship. Conclusion Approach coping works via resilience processes to bring about a decrease in internalizing (anxiety and depression) and externalizing (anger and aggression) conditions. Specific strategies to cope with these aforementioned conditions are: think positive for anxiety and depression; be tenacious when coping with aggression and seek help for anxiety, depression, anger and aggression. These findings lay the groundwork for resilience interventions.
- Published
- 2012
42. Prevention of Seroma and Other Post-Operative Complications Using Continuous Negative Pressure Drain Devices Following Panniculectomy in Massive-Weight Loss Patients
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Grant T. Thomson, Tracy Sturrock, Marquita Kilgore, Stephanie L. Kwei, Marc E. Walker, Reuben Ng, Anup Patel, P. Niclas Broer, Jake X. Wang, and Victor Z. Zhu
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Weight loss ,business.industry ,Seroma ,medicine ,Panniculectomy ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,Post operative ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The sandwich omental flap for abdominal wall defect reconstruction
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K. Lancaster, Reuben Ng, D.M. Mercer, and Naguib El-Muttardi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,Omental flap ,Surgical Flaps ,Abdominal wall ,Split thickness skin graft ,Medicine ,Humans ,Basal cell carcinoma ,Vicryl ,Prolene ,Abdominal Muscles ,business.industry ,Abdominal wall defect ,Abdominal Wall ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Carcinoma, Basal Cell ,Abdominal Neoplasms ,Full thickness ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
We present a case of a large full thickness abdominal wall defect following excision of a huge basal cell carcinoma, uniquely reconstructed with a sandwich omental flap, vicryl/prolene (vypro II) mesh and split thickness skin graft.
- Published
- 2004
44. Abstract 142
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Marc E. Walker, Reuben Ng, Peter Niclas Broer, Matthew L. Webb, Stephanie L. Kwei, Victor Z. Zhu, Thomson Jg, and Tracy Sturrock
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Weight loss ,Negative-pressure wound therapy ,Seroma ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Panniculectomy ,medicine.symptom ,Post operative ,business - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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