59,731 results on '"Walker, As"'
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2. The impact of two world wars on medicine in Australia.
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WALKER AS
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- Australia, Humans, Medicine, Warfare
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- 1951
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3. Exploring Factors That Influence the Efficacy of Functional Communication Training
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Jessie Weber, Tara Fahmie, Seth Walker, Joseph Lambert, Bailey Copeland, Thomas Freetly, and Amanda Zangrillo
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Understanding factors that influence the efficacy of functional communication training has both practical and conceptual benefits. The current study extended research in this area by exploring data from 95 consecutive applications of functional communication training with extinction across two independent clinics. We selected candidate predictor variables based on conceptual analysis, conducted preliminary exploratory analyses, and then selectively applied quantitative methods that are used in precision medicine to examine their accuracy and predictive utility. Treatment outcomes were better when challenging behavior was maintained by a single function than they were when it was maintained by multiple functions; however, these differences were most apparent among cases with an escape function. We also analyzed within-session responding to explore the potential influence of unprogrammed establishing operations on decrements in treatment efficacy. Our within-session measure only distinguished responders from nonresponders when escape was one of the multiple functions. Additional research is needed to validate these findings with an independent sample and to address a number of clinical conceptual issues.
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- 2024
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4. Narrative Medicine: Community Poetry Heals Young and Old
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Walker, Allison S.
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This is a snapshot of a service learning course founded on narrative medicine, a clinical practice designed to replace impersonal care with empathic listening. By utilizing poetry therapy techniques among nursing home populations, a program called "HPU LifeLines" promotes a community literacy of illness and provides psychological and physical benefits to elders and students alike through intergenerational relationships sustained by a community writing infrastructure.
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- 2016
5. Azithromycin in severe malaria bacterial co-infection in African children (TABS-PKPD): a phase II randomised controlled trial
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Roisin Connon, Peter Olupot-Olupot, Arthur M. A. Pistorius, William Okiror, Tonny Ssenyondo, Rita Muhindo, Sophie Uyoga, Ayub Mpoya, Thomas N. Williams, Diana M. Gibb, A. Sarah Walker, Rob ter Heine, Elizabeth C. George, and Kathryn Maitland
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Severe malaria ,African children ,Bacterial infection ,Pharmacokinetics ,Clinical trial ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background African children with severe malaria are at increased risk of non-typhoidal salmonellae co-infection. Broad-spectrum antibiotics are recommended by guidelines but the optimal class and dose have not been established. We investigated the optimal dose of oral dispersible azithromycin and whether simple clinical criteria and point-of-care biomarkers could target antibiotics to those at greatest risk of bacterial co-infection. Methods We conducted a phase I/II trial in Ugandan children with severe malaria comparing a 5-day course of azithromycin: 10, 15 and 20 mg/kg of azithromycin (prescribed by weight bands) spanning the dose-range effective for other salmonellae infection. We generated relevant pharmacokinetic (PK) data by sparse sampling during dosing intervals and investigated associations between azithromycin exposure and potential mechanisms (PK-pharmacodynamics) using change in C-reactive protein (CRP), a putative marker of sepsis, at 72 h (continuous) and microbiological cure (7-day) (binary), alone and as a composite with 7-day and 90-day survival. To assess whether clinical or biomarkers could identify those at risk of sepsis, a non-severe malaria control was concurrently enrolled. Results Between January 2020 and January 2022, 105 cases were randomised azithromycin doses: 35 to 10 mg/kg, 35 to 15 mg/kg and 35 to 20 mg/kg. Fifty non-severe malaria controls were concurrently enrolled. CRP reduced in all arms by 72 h with a mean reduction of 65.8 mg/L (95% CI 57.1, 74.5) in the 10 mg/kg arm, 64.8 mg/L (95% CI 56.5, 73.1; p = 0.87) in the 20 mg/kg arm and a smaller reduction 51.2 mg/L (95% CI 42.9, 59.5; p = 0.02) in the 15 mg/kg arm. Microbiological cure alone outcome was not analysed as only one pathogen was found among cases. Three events contributed to the composite outcome of 7-day survival and microbiological cure, with no events in the 15 mg/kg arm. The odds ratio comparing 20 vs 10 mg/kg was 0.50 (95% CI 0.04, 5.79); p = 0.58. Due to the low number of pathogens identified, it was not possible to identify better methods for targeting antibiotics including both the cases and controls. Conclusions We found no evidence for an association between systemic azithromycin exposure and reduction in CRP. Further work is needed to better identify children at highest risk from bacterial co-infection. Trial registration ISRCTN49726849 (registered on 27th October 2017).
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- 2024
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6. Implementation of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) for the therapies for long COVID in non-hospitalised individuals (TLC) project
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Olalekan Lee Aiyegbusi, Christel McMullan, Sarah E. Hughes, Grace M. Turner, Shamil Haroon, Richard Hotham, Kirsty Brown, Yvonne Alder, Lisa Agyen, Lewis Buckland, Jennifer Camaradou, Amy Chong, Felicity Jeyes, Karen L. Matthews, Patricia Moore, Jane Ormerod, Gary Price, Michael Saint-Cricq, David Stanton, Anita Walker, and Melanie J. Calvert
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Patient and public involvement and engagement ,PPIE ,Involvement ,Engagement ,Co-production ,Patient partners ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Patients, their family members and caregivers have firsthand experiences of living with or supporting someone living with a disease or medical condition. This knowledge by experience cannot be replaced by the knowledge acquired by clinicians, researchers, or other professionals through study and/or work. The Therapies for Long COVID in non-hospitalised individuals (TLC) research project was funded in the UK by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) and UK Research and Innovation to investigate the impact of long COVID on affected individuals. This article focuses on the implementation of PPIE for the TLC project. It provides details on the methodological approach that was adopted, the evaluation and reporting of the PPIE for the project and some previously unreported challenges we faced. Main body A PPIE Lead was appointed to coordinate PPIE for the project and facilitate communication and relationship building with the patient partners. Our overarching approach was collaborative with patient partners actively involved in the various work packages of the project.. This was achieved by recruiting PPIE members from (1) direct contacts, (2) long COVID support groups (3) a local general practitioner (GP) surgery. Although we were unable to hold face-to-face meetings due to the social restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic, we offered patients the choice of using virtual platforms like Zoom, telephone calls, and emails for communication. We adopted a 4-tiered model for the PPIE group with each tier providing different opportunities for contributing to the project. This model helped the PPIE Lead to effectively co-ordinate PPIE activities for the project as well as provide all patient partners the opportunity to contribute to the project whilst managing their condition. PPIE for the TLC project was co-evaluated with patient partners. Conclusions Despite the challenges we encountered with the pandemic, the TLC project provided a valuable opportunity for patients to shape the design, conduct and dissemination of the research findings. The information provided in this article may be useful to other researchers and patients when planning PPIE for future health research. The implementation of PPIE in healthcare research could help ensure that the outcomes of research are those valued by and relevant to the needs of patients and other end users.
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- 2024
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7. Rubisco activity and activation state dictate photorespiratory plasticity in Betula papyrifera acclimated to future climate conditions
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Luke M. Gregory, Kate F. Scott, Luke A. Sharpe, Ludmila V. Roze, Stephanie C. Schmiege, Julia M. Hammer, Danielle A. Way, and Berkley J. Walker
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Acclimation ,Photorespiratory capacity ,Rubisco activation state ,B. papyrifera ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Plant metabolism faces a challenge of investing enough enzymatic capacity to a pathway without overinvestment. As it takes energy and resources to build, operate, and maintain enzymes, there are benefits and drawbacks to accurately matching capacity to the pathway influx. The relationship between functional capacity and physiological load could be explained through symmorphosis, which would quantitatively match enzymatic capacity to pathway influx. Alternatively, plants could maintain excess enzymatic capacity to manage unpredictable pathway influx. In this study, we use photorespiration as a case study to investigate these two hypotheses in Betula papyrifera. This involves altering photorespiratory influx by manipulating the growth environment, via changes in CO2 concentration and temperature, to determine how photorespiratory capacity acclimates to environmental treatments. Surprisingly, the results from these measurements indicate that there is no plasticity in photorespiratory capacity in B. papyrifera, and that a fixed capacity is maintained under each growth condition. The fixed capacity is likely due to the existence of reserve capacity in the pathway that manages unpredictable photorespiratory influx in dynamic environments. Additionally, we found that B. papyrifera had a constant net carbon assimilation under each growth condition due to an adjustment of functional rubisco activity driven by changes in activation state. These results provide insight into the acclimation ability and limitations of B. papyrifera to future climate scenarios currently predicted in the next century.
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- 2024
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8. Endolymphatic hydrops and cochlear synaptopathy after noise exposure are distinct sequelae of hair cell stereociliary bundle trauma
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Michelle L. Fong, Connie B. Paik, Patricia M. Quiñones, Clayton B. Walker, Michael J. Serafino, Dorothy W. Pan, Eduardo Martinez, Juemei Wang, Grady W. Phillips, Brian E. Applegate, Michael Anne Gratton, and John S. Oghalai
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Hearing ,Cochlea ,Auditory nerve ,Hair cell ,Osmosis ,Optical coherence tomography ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Endolymphatic hydrops, increased endolymphatic fluid within the cochlea, is the key pathologic finding in patients with Meniere’s disease, a disease of episodic vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, tinnitus, and aural fullness. Endolymphatic hydrops also can occur after noise trauma and its presence correlates with cochlear synaptopathy, a form of hearing loss caused by reduced numbers of synapses between hair cells and auditory nerve fibers. Here we tested whether there is a mechanistic link between these two phenomena by using multimodal imaging techniques to analyze the cochleae of transgenic mice exposed to blast and osmotic challenge. In vivo cochlear imaging after blast exposure revealed dynamic increases in endolymph that involved hair cell mechanoelectrical transduction channel block but not the synaptic release of glutamate at the hair cell–auditory nerve synapse. In contrast, ex vivo and in vivo auditory nerve imaging revealed that synaptopathy requires glutamate release from hair cells but not endolymphatic hydrops. Thus, although endolymphatic hydrops and cochlear synaptopathy are both observed after noise exposure, one does not cause the other. They are simply co-existent sequelae that derive from the traumatic stimulation of hair cell stereociliary bundles. Importantly, these data argue that Meniere’s disease derives from hair cell transduction channel blockade.
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- 2024
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9. Prospective analysis of sex differences and factors associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviours in young people from the MILESTONE Italian sample
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Gabriele Torino, Silvia Leone, Samuele Cortese, Gwen Dieleman, Suzanne Gerritsen, Deborah Maffezzoni, Donato Martella, Rocco Micciolo, Swaran Singh, Cathy Street, Amanda Tuffrey, Leanne Walker, Manuel Zamparini, Giovanni de Girolamo, and the Italian MILESTONE Consortium
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Suicidal ideation ,Suicidal behaviour ,Adolescence ,Child and adolescent mental health services ,Adult mental health services ,Care transition ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Suicide is a significant leading cause of death among young people, particularly those struggling with mental disorders. The present study utilised data from 230 young people (aged 16–18 years) undergoing a transitional care process from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services to Adult Mental Health Services within the MILESTONE European project (2014–2019), a longitudinal cluster randomised controlled trial. The objectives of this study were to monitor temporal patterns of general health and social functioning over two years, to detect sex differences, and to identify factors associated with Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviours (STB) at the first and last time points. The results demonstrate a decrease in STB over the two-year follow-up period among all participants. Females exhibited a higher prevalence of STB across all time points, whereas males only exhibited STB at the nine-month follow-up. The most influential factors associated with STB were previous suicide attempts and mood disorders at baseline, and mood disorders and relational problems at the end of follow-up. These findings emphasise the importance of monitoring STB and informing young people undergoing a transitional care period about its key risk factors. Moreover, sex differences in STB suggest the need for different preventive strategies for males and females.
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- 2024
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10. Ugandan optometry students’ experiences of their clinical training: a qualitative study
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Boaz Mucunguzi, Walker Guti, Moreen Tumwine, Aloysius G. Mubuuke, Ian Munabi, Arild Raaheim, and Sarah Kiguli
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Optometry ,Clinical training ,Clinical learning environment ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Abstract Background There is a gradual increase in the number of optometry education programs in Africa yet there is limited knowledge on optometry students’ experiences of their clinical training. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore the optometry students’ experiences of their clinical learning environment at a national referral and teaching hospital in Uganda. Methods Between April 2023 and May 2023, face to face in-depth interviews were conducted to explore the experiences of the participants. All 16 optometry students in fourth-year at university were purposefully recruited into the study. Data was collected at the end of the students’ clinical training at the eye clinic of a national referral and teaching hospital. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed for analysis using an inductive thematic approach. Results Two themes, learning at the eye clinic and organization of the eye clinic, were identified to represent participants’ experiences. Each theme had three sub themes. Conclusion Training optometry students at an eye clinic enhances their clinical skills and knowledge of diagnosing and managing various eye conditions. Future studies should compare optometry students’ experiences in lower-level health units to those in national referral hospitals.
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- 2024
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11. Cognitive-motor interference in people with essential tremor
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Patrick G. Monaghan, William M. Murrah, Harrison C. Walker, Kristina A. Neely, and Jaimie A. Roper
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Cognition ,Physical function ,Neurological ,Gait ,Attention ,Tremor ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Adapting to different environments throughout daily activities requires flexibility in allocating attention. Compromised dual-tasking can hinder mobility, increase fall risk, and decrease functional independence in patients with essential tremor, who exhibit both mobility and cognitive impairments. We evaluated motor and cognitive dual-task effects and task prioritization in 15 people with Essential Tremor (ET) and 15 age-matched people without ET during a standard and more challenging water-carry TUG. Task-specific interference was evaluated by calculating motor and cognitive dual-task effects, whereas task prioritization was assessed by contrasting the cognitive dual-task effect with the motor dual-task effect. The simultaneous performance of two tasks did not differentially impact motor or cognitive performance in either group, and both groups prioritized cognitive task performance in standard and water-carry TUG assessments. This study enhances our understanding of motor-cognitive interactions in individuals with essential tremor. These insights could lead to patient-centered approaches to therapy to improve functional performance in dynamic daily environments.
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- 2024
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12. First responders’ occupational injury and disease associated with periods of extreme bushfires
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Janneke Berecki-Gisolf, Win Wah, Malcolm R Sim, Deborah C Glass, Ryan F Hoy, Tim Driscoll, Alex Collie, and Karen Walker-Bone
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Bushfire ,Emergency responders ,Firefighters ,Health impacts ,Workers’ compensation ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract There has been limited research on the health impacts of extreme bushfire exposure among emergency responders (ER) involved in suppressing extreme bushfires. This study aimed to evaluate the associations between extreme bushfires and ER’s compensated injury and illness in Victoria, Australia. State-wide ER compensation claims from January 2005 to April 2023 were analysed. Logistic regression modelling was used to identify factors associated with compensation claims during the extreme bushfire periods in 2009 and 2019/20, compared to all other claims, adjusting for seasonality (summer). Of the 44,164 included claims, 1105 (2.5%) had recorded injury/disease onset dates within extreme bushfire periods, and 11,642 (26.4%) occurred in summer months. Over half of claims were made by police (52.4%), followed by ambulance officers/paramedics (27.2%) and firefighters (20.5%). Extreme bushfire period claims were associated with older workers (odds ratio/OR = 1.58,95%CI = 1.30–1.92, ages ≥ 55 vs. 35–44 years). Mental disorders (OR = 1.61,95%CI = 1.25–2.07), intracranial injuries (OR = 3.04,95%CI = 1.69–5.48) and infections/parasites (OR = 3.11,95%CI = 1.61–5.98) vs. wounds were associated with extreme bushfire period claims. Given the expected increase in extreme bushfire events and the ageing workforce, study findings underscore the importance of primary and secondary prevention in ER. This can include periodic health surveillance for older workers, access to early treatment, and ongoing support for mental health conditions.
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- 2024
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13. Age-adapted painting descriptions change the viewing behavior of young visitors to the Rijksmuseum
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Francesco Walker, Berno Bucker, Joshua Snell, Nicola Anderson, Zsofia Pilz, Kim Houwaart, Reinout Van den Brink, Pauline Kintz, Irma de Vries, and Jan Theeuwes
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Children learn about art by actively engaging with their surroundings. This makes museums potentially rich environments for learning and development. Yet, the descriptions of paintings on show are usually written for adults rather than younger visitors. This study uses mobile eye tracking to examine how painting descriptions tailored for children influence their eye movements when viewing paintings at the Rijksmuseum - the national museum of The Netherlands. Our findings underscore the importance of adapting information specifically for children, rather than simply providing them with adult-oriented museum materials. Children who received information tailored to their developmental level showed increased glance durations to areas highlighted in the descriptions. Strikingly, the behavior of children provided with painting descriptions intended for adults was no different from their behavior when they received no information at all.
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- 2024
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14. Representation of multimorbidity and frailty in the development and validation of kidney failure prognostic prediction models: a systematic review
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Heather Walker, Scott Day, Christopher H. Grant, Catrin Jones, Robert Ker, Michael K. Sullivan, Bhautesh Dinesh Jani, Katie Gallacher, and Patrick B. Mark
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Prognosis ,Chronic renal failure ,CKD ,Multimorbidity ,Frailty ,Guidelines ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Prognostic models that identify individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD) at greatest risk of developing kidney failure help clinicians to make decisions and deliver precision medicine. It is recognised that people with CKD usually have multiple long-term health conditions (multimorbidity) and often experience frailty. We undertook a systematic review to evaluate the representation and consideration of multimorbidity and frailty within CKD cohorts used to develop and/or validate prognostic models assessing the risk of kidney failure. Methods We identified studies that described derivation, validation or update of kidney failure prognostic models in MEDLINE, CINAHL Plus and the Cochrane Library—CENTRAL. The primary outcome was representation of multimorbidity or frailty. The secondary outcome was predictive accuracy of identified models in relation to presence of multimorbidity or frailty. Results Ninety-seven studies reporting 121 different kidney failure prognostic models were identified. Two studies reported prevalence of multimorbidity and a single study reported prevalence of frailty. The rates of specific comorbidities were reported in a greater proportion of studies: 67.0% reported baseline data on diabetes, 54.6% reported hypertension and 39.2% reported cardiovascular disease. No studies included frailty in model development, and only one study considered multimorbidity as a predictor variable. No studies assessed model performance in populations in relation to multimorbidity. A single study assessed associations between frailty and the risks of kidney failure and death. Conclusions There is a paucity of kidney failure risk prediction models that consider the impact of multimorbidity and/or frailty, resulting in a lack of clear evidence-based practice for multimorbid or frail individuals. These knowledge gaps should be explored to help clinicians know whether these models can be used for CKD patients who experience multimorbidity and/or frailty. Systematic review registration This review has been registered on PROSPERO (CRD42022347295).
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- 2024
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15. Predicting future hospital antimicrobial resistance prevalence using machine learning
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Karina-Doris Vihta, Emma Pritchard, Koen B. Pouwels, Susan Hopkins, Rebecca L. Guy, Katherine Henderson, Dimple Chudasama, Russell Hope, Berit Muller-Pebody, Ann Sarah Walker, David Clifton, and David W. Eyre
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Predicting antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a top global health threat, nationwide at an aggregate hospital level could help target interventions. Using machine learning, we exploit historical AMR and antimicrobial usage to predict future AMR. Methods Antimicrobial use and AMR prevalence in bloodstream infections in hospitals in England were obtained per hospital group (Trust) and financial year (FY, April–March) for 22 pathogen–antibiotic combinations (FY2016-2017 to FY2021-2022). Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) model predictions were compared to the previous value taken forwards, the difference between the previous two years taken forwards and linear trend forecasting (LTF). XGBoost feature importances were calculated to aid interpretability. Results Here we show that XGBoost models achieve the best predictive performance. Relatively limited year-to-year variability in AMR prevalence within Trust–pathogen–antibiotic combinations means previous value taken forwards also achieves a low mean absolute error (MAE), similar to or slightly higher than XGBoost. Using the difference between the previous two years taken forward or LTF performs consistently worse. XGBoost considerably outperforms all other methods in Trusts with a larger change in AMR prevalence from FY2020-2021 (last training year) to FY2021-2022 (held-out test set). Feature importance values indicate that besides historical resistance to the same pathogen–antibiotic combination as the outcome, complex relationships between resistance in different pathogens to the same antibiotic/antibiotic class and usage are exploited for predictions. These are generally among the top ten features ranked according to their mean absolute SHAP values. Conclusions Year-to-year resistance has generally changed little within Trust–pathogen–antibiotic combinations. In those with larger changes, XGBoost models can improve predictions, enabling informed decisions, efficient resource allocation, and targeted interventions.
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- 2024
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16. Dengue Virus Serotype 3 Origins and Genetic Dynamics, Jamaica
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Shanice A. Redman, Lester J. Perez, Kenn Forberg, Keisha Francis, Jerome P. Walker, Tamara K. Thompson, Heather Phillips, Gavin A. Cloherty, Michael G. Berg, and Joshua J. Anzinger
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dengue ,dengue virus ,dengue virus serotype 3 ,sequence ,serotype ,genotype ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We identified 3 clades of dengue virus serotype 3 belonging to genotype III isolated during 2019–2020 in Jamaica by using whole-genome sequencing and phylogenomic and phylogeographic analyses. The viruses likely originated from Asia in 2014. Newly expanded molecular surveillance efforts in Jamaica will guide appropriate public health responses.
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- 2024
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17. Metformin use and preeclampsia risk in women with diabetes: a two-country cohort analysis
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Hannah Gordon, Noor Salim, Stephen Tong, Susan Walker, Manarangi De Silva, Catherine Cluver, Parinaz Mehdipour, Richard Hiscock, Lauren Sutherland, Ann Doust, Lina Bergman, Anna-Karin Wikström, Anthea Lindquist, Susanne Hesselman, and Roxanne Hastie
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Metformin ,Pregnancy ,Gestational diabetes ,Pre-eclampsia ,Gestational hypertension ,Pregnancy-induced hypertension ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Metformin is a hypoglycaemic medication that has been proposed to treat or prevent preeclampsia. Combining national birth data from Scotland and Sweden, we investigated whether metformin used during pregnancy was associated with an altered risk of developing a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy. Methods We utilised data from two population-based cohorts: Scotland (2012–2018) and Sweden (2007–2019). Nulliparous women with gestational diabetes or type 2 diabetes who had birth outcome data linked with medications prescribed during pregnancy were included. The association between metformin prescription and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy was characterised using inverse probability weighted regression analysis, adjusting for variables that predict metformin use and potential confounders. Adverse neonatal outcomes were included as secondary outcomes. Results from both countries were then combined in a meta-analysis using a random effects model. Results The Scottish cohort included 3859 women with gestational diabetes or type 2 diabetes. Of these women, 30.8% (n = 1187) received at least one metformin prescription during pregnancy. For Sweden, 7771 women with gestational diabetes were included where 19.3% (1498) used metformin during pregnancy. Metformin prescription was not associated with an altered risk of any hypertensive disorder of pregnancy (Scotland adjusted relative risk (aRR) 0.88 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.66–1.19]; Sweden aRR 1.08 [95% CI 0.86–1.37]) or preeclampsia (Scotland aRR 1.02 [95% CI 0.66–1.60]; Sweden aRR 1.00 [95% CI 0.72–1.39]). Combining adjusted results in a meta-analysis produced similar findings, with a pooled RR of 0.98 (95% CI 0.79–1.18) for any hypertensive disorder and RR 1.01 ([95% CI 0.73–1.28]) for preeclampsia. For neonatal outcomes, metformin was associated with a reduced risk of birthweight > 4500 g in Scotland (aRR 0.39 [95% CI 0.21–0.71]) but not in Sweden. There was no association between metformin and preterm birth or birthweight
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- 2024
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18. Engineering potent chimeric antigen receptor T cells by programming signaling during T-cell activation
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Aileen W. Li, Jessica D. Briones, Jia Lu, Quinn Walker, Rowena Martinez, Hajime Hiraragi, Bijan A. Boldajipour, Purnima Sundar, Shobha Potluri, Gary Lee, Omar A. Ali, and Alexander S. Cheung
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Programming cell signaling during T-cell activation represents a simple strategy for improving the potency of therapeutic T-cell products. Stim-R technology (Lyell Immunopharma) is a customizable, degradable synthetic cell biomimetic that emulates physiologic, cell-like presentation of signal molecules to control T-cell activation. A breadth of Stim-R formulations with different anti-CD3/anti-CD28 (αCD3/αCD28) antibody densities and stoichiometries were screened for their effects on multiple metrics of T-cell function. We identified an optimized formulation that produced receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 1 (ROR1)-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells with enhanced persistence and polyfunctionality in vitro, as assessed in repeat-stimulation assays, compared with a benchmark product generated using a conventional T-cell–activating reagent. In transcriptomic analyses, CAR T cells activated with Stim-R technology showed downregulation of exhaustion-associated gene sets and retained a unique subset of stem-like cells with effector-associated gene signatures following repeated exposure to tumor cells. Compared with the benchmark product, CAR T cells activated using the optimized Stim-R technology formulation exhibited higher peak expansion, prolonged persistence, and improved tumor control in a solid tumor xenograft model. Enhancing T-cell products with Stim-R technology during T-cell activation may help improve therapeutic efficacy against solid tumors.
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- 2024
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19. A systems serology approach to identifying key antibody correlates of protection from cerebral malaria in Malawian children
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Isobel S. Walker, Saber Dini, Elizabeth H. Aitken, Timon Damelang, Wina Hasang, Agersew Alemu, Anja T. R. Jensen, Janavi S. Rambhatla, D. Herbert Opi, Michael F. Duffy, Eizo Takashima, Visopo Harawa, Takafumi Tsuboi, Julie A. Simpson, Wilson Mandala, Terrie E. Taylor, Karl B. Seydel, Amy W. Chung, and Stephen J. Rogerson
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Plasmodium falciparum ,Malawi ,Antibody ,Immunity ,Africa ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) proteins are expressed on the surface of infected erythrocytes, mediating parasite sequestration in the vasculature. PfEMP1 is a major target of protective antibodies, but the features of the antibody response are poorly defined. Methods In Malawian children with cerebral or uncomplicated malaria, we characterized the antibody response to 39 recombinant PfEMP1 Duffy binding like (DBL) domains or cysteine-rich interdomain regions (CIDRs) in detail, including measures of antibody classes, subclasses, and engagement with Fcγ receptors and complement. Using elastic net regularized logistic regression, we identified a combination of seven antibody targets and Fc features that best distinguished between children with cerebral and uncomplicated malaria. To confirm the role of the selected targets and Fc features, we measured antibody-dependent neutrophil and THP-1 cell phagocytosis of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) and endothelial protein C (EPCR) co-binding infected erythrocytes. Results The selected features distinguished between children with cerebral and uncomplicated malaria with 87% accuracy (median, 80–96% interquartile range) and included antibody to well-characterized DBLβ3 domains and a less well-characterized CIDRγ12 domain. The abilities of antibodies to engage C1q and FcγRIIIb, rather than levels of IgG, correlated with protection. In line with a role of FcγRIIIb binding antibodies to DBLβ3 domains, antibody-dependent neutrophil phagocytosis of ICAM-1 and EPCR co-binding IE was higher in uncomplicated malaria (15% median, 8–38% interquartile range) compared to cerebral malaria (7%, 30–15%, p
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- 2024
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20. DNAm scores for serum GDF15 and NT-proBNP levels associate with a range of traits affecting the body and brain
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Danni A. Gadd, Hannah M. Smith, Donncha Mullin, Ola Chybowska, Robert F. Hillary, Dorien M. Kimenai, Elena Bernabeu, Yipeng Cheng, Chloe Fawns-Ritchie, Archie Campbell, Danielle Page, Adele Taylor, Janie Corley, Maria Del C. Valdés-Hernández, Susana Muñoz Maniega, Mark E. Bastin, Joanna M. Wardlaw, Rosie M. Walker, Kathryn L. Evans, Andrew M. McIntosh, Caroline Hayward, Tom C. Russ, Sarah E. Harris, Paul Welsh, Naveed Sattar, Simon R. Cox, Daniel L. McCartney, and Riccardo E. Marioni
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GDF15 ,NT-proBNP ,Epigenetic ,DNA methylation ,Dementia ,Diabetes ,Medicine ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Plasma growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) and N‐terminal proB‐type natriuretic peptide (NT‐proBNP) are cardiovascular biomarkers that associate with a range of diseases. Epigenetic scores (EpiScores) for GDF15 and NT-proBNP may provide new routes for risk stratification. Results In the Generation Scotland cohort (N ≥ 16,963), GDF15 levels were associated with incident dementia, ischaemic stroke and type 2 diabetes, whereas NT-proBNP levels were associated with incident ischaemic heart disease, ischaemic stroke and type 2 diabetes (all PFDR 95%) with levels of GDF15 and NT-proBNP, respectively. EpiScores for GDF15 and NT-proBNP were trained in a subset of the population. The GDF15 EpiScore replicated protein associations with incident dementia, type 2 diabetes and ischaemic stroke in the Generation Scotland test set (hazard ratios (HR) range 1.36–1.41, PFDR
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- 2024
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21. Sensing the structural and conformational properties of single-stranded nucleic acids using electrometry and molecular simulations
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Rowan Walker-Gibbons, Xin Zhu, Ali Behjatian, Timothy J. D. Bennett, and Madhavi Krishnan
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Single stranded nucleic acids ,Disordered molecules ,Molecular electrostatics ,Molecular dynamics ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Inferring the 3D structure and conformation of disordered biomolecules, e.g., single stranded nucleic acids (ssNAs), remains challenging due to their conformational heterogeneity in solution. Here, we use escape-time electrometry (ETe) to measure with sub elementary-charge precision the effective electrical charge in solution of short to medium chain length ssNAs in the range of 5–60 bases. We compare measurements of molecular effective charge with theoretically calculated values for simulated molecular conformations obtained from Molecular Dynamics simulations using a variety of forcefield descriptions. We demonstrate that the measured effective charge captures subtle differences in molecular structure in various nucleic acid homopolymers of identical length, and also that the experimental measurements can find agreement with computed values derived from coarse-grained molecular structure descriptions such as oxDNA, as well next generation ssNA force fields. We further show that comparing the measured effective charge with calculations for a rigid, charged rod—the simplest model of a nucleic acid—yields estimates of molecular structural dimensions such as linear charge spacings that capture molecular structural trends observed using high resolution structural analysis methods such as X-ray scattering. By sensitively probing the effective charge of a molecule, electrometry provides a powerful dimension supporting inferences of molecular structural and conformational properties, as well as the validation of biomolecular structural models. The overall approach holds promise for a high throughput, microscopy-based biomolecular analytical approach offering rapid screening and inference of molecular 3D conformation, and operating at the single molecule level in solution.
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- 2024
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22. A Pan Plasmodium lateral flow recombinase polymerase amplification assay for monitoring malaria parasites in vectors and human populations
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Matthew Higgins, Mojca Kristan, Emma L. Collins, Louisa A. Messenger, Jamille G. Dombrowski, Leen N. Vanheer, Debbie Nolder, Christopher J. Drakeley, William Stone, Almahamoudou Mahamar, Teun Bousema, Michael Delves, Janvier Bandibabone, Sévérin N’Do, Chimanuka Bantuzeko, Bertin Zawadi, Thomas Walker, Colin J. Sutherland, Claudio R. F. Marinho, Mary M. Cameron, Taane G. Clark, and Susana Campino
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Robust diagnostic tools and surveillance are crucial for malaria control and elimination efforts. Malaria caused by neglected Plasmodium parasites is often underestimated due to the lack of rapid diagnostic tools that can accurately detect these species. While nucleic-acid amplification technologies stand out as the most sensitive methods for detecting and confirming Plasmodium species, their implementation in resource-constrained settings poses significant challenges. Here, we present a Pan Plasmodium recombinase polymerase amplification lateral flow (RPA–LF) assay, capable of detecting all six human infecting Plasmodium species in low resource settings. The Pan Plasmodium RPA-LF assay successfully detected low density clinical infections with a preliminary limit of detection between 10–100 fg/µl for P. falciparum. When combined with crude nucleic acid extraction, the assay can serve as a point-of-need tool for molecular xenomonitoring. This utility was demonstrated by screening laboratory-reared Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes fed with Plasmodium-infected blood, as well as field samples of An. funestus s.l. and An. gambiae s.l. collected from central Africa. Overall, our proof-of-concept Pan Plasmodium diagnostic tool has the potential to be applied for clinical and xenomonitoring field surveillance, and after further evaluation, could become an essential tool to assist malaria control and elimination.
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- 2024
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23. Differences in macular thickness associated with peripheral retinal vessel whitening in diabetic patients
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Fritz Gerald P. Kalaw, Paripoorna Sharma, Evan Walker, and Shyamanga Borooah
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract This study aimed to determine the difference in macular thickness among patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) with and without peripheral retinal vessel whitening (PRVW). PRVW was defined by retinal vessel whitening outside the standard seven ETDRS fields. Subjects were divided into DM with PRVW, DM without PRVW, and normal age-matched controls. Optical coherence tomography scans were divided into total, inner, and outer retinal layer thicknesses and were compared in the macula's central, inner, and outer rings. Forty-seven eyes were included: DM with PRVW = 15, DM without PRVW = 16, and Controls = 16. Overall, the mean retinal thickness in patients with DM with PRVW was lower than in patients with DM without PRVW and controls. In the inner macula, DM patients with PRVW showed a significantly lower mean inner superior, nasal, inferior, and temporal macula compared to DM patients without PRVW (p = 0.014, 0.008, 0.005,
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- 2024
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24. Developing an image-based grading scale for peripheral drusen to investigate associations of peripheral drusen type with age-related macular degeneration
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Paripoorna Sharma, Fritz Gerald P. Kalaw, Andrew Lin, Evan H. Walker, and Shyamanga Borooah
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Age-related macular degeneration ,Drusen ,Peripheral drusen ,Peripheral retinal abnormalities ,Retinal imaging ,Ultra-widefield fundus imaging ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of blindness. It is associated with peripheral drusen which has not been categorized. We investigated peripheral drusen to validate an image grading system and to understand possible associations between peripheral drusen and AMD. We collated clinical data, ultra-widefield (UWF) pseudocolor fundus images and Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography (SD-OCT) scans from consecutive retinal patients. SD-OCT scans were used to determine AMD stage. A masked retinal specialist recorded the types of peripheral drusen observed in UWF images. Eyes whose UWF images did not pass quality screening and those without AMD and peripheral drusen were excluded from the study. Statistical tests were utilized to determine the validity of our grading system and associations of peripheral drusen with AMD. A total of 481 eyes (283 subjects) were included in the study (mean age 73.1 ± 1.2years, 64.3% female). Interobserver and test–retest statistical analyses to evaluate the UWF image grading system resulted in Cohen’s Kappa 0.649 (p
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- 2024
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25. Photorespiratory glycine contributes to photosynthetic induction during low to high light transition
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Xinyu Fu and Berkley J. Walker
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Photorespiration ,Photosynthesis ,Light induction ,Metabolism ,Glycine ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Leaves experience near-constant light fluctuations daily. Past studies have identified many limiting factors of slow photosynthetic induction when leaves transition from low light to high light. However, the contribution of photorespiration in influencing photosynthesis during transient light conditions is largely unknown. This study employs dynamic measurements of gas exchange and metabolic responses to examine the contribution of photorespiration in constraining net rates of carbon assimilation during light induction. This work indicates that photorespiratory glycine accumulation during the early light induction contributes 5–7% to the additional carbon fixed relative to the low light conditions. Mutants with large glycine pools under photorespiratory conditions (5-formyl THF cycloligase and hydroxypyruvate reductase 1) showed a transient spike in net CO2 assimilation during light induction, with glycine buildup accounting for 22–36% of the extra carbon assimilated. Interestingly, levels of many C3 cycle intermediates remained relatively constant in both mutants and wild-type throughout the light induction period where glycine accumulated, indicating that recycling of carbon into the C3 cycle via photorespiration is not needed to maintain C3 cycle activity under transient conditions. Furthermore, our data show that oxygen transient experiments can be used as a proxy to identify the photorespiratory component of light-induced photosynthetic changes.
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- 2024
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26. Identifying personalized barriers for hypertension self-management from TASKS framework
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Jiami Yang, Yong Zeng, Lin Yang, Nadia Khan, Shaminder Singh, Robin L. Walker, Rachel Eastwood, and Hude Quan
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Hypertension ,Self-management ,Personalized ,Barriers ,TASKS framework ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Abstract Objective Effective management of hypertension requires not only medical intervention but also significant patient self-management. The challenge, however, lies in the diversity of patients' personal barriers to managing their condition. The objective of this research is to identify and categorize personalized barriers to hypertension self-management using the TASKS framework (Task, Affect, Skills, Knowledge, Stress). This study aims to enhance patient-centered strategies by aligning support with each patient's specific needs, recognizing the diversity in their unique circumstances, beliefs, emotional states, knowledge levels, and access to resources. This research is based on observations from a single study focused on eight patients, which may have been a part of a larger project. Results The analysis of transcripts from eight patients and the Global Hypertension Practice Guidelines revealed 69 personalized barriers. These barriers were distributed as follows: emotional barriers (49%), knowledge barriers (24%), logical barriers (17%), and resource barriers (10%). The findings highlight the significant impact of emotional and knowledge-related challenges on hypertension self-management, including difficulties in home blood pressure monitoring and the use of monitoring tools. This study emphasizes the need for tailored interventions to address these prevalent barriers and improve hypertension management outcomes.
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- 2024
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27. Pozelimab for CHAPLE disease: results from in-trial interviews and clinical outcome assessments
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Leighann Litcher-Kelly, Ahmet Ozen, Sarah Ollis, Hagit Baris Feldman, Andrew Yaworsky, Paolo Medrano, Voranush Chongsrisawa, Taylor Brackin, Lorah Perlee, Marisa Walker, Sharanya Pradeep, Michael J. Lenardo, Olivier A. Harari, and Jessica J. Jalbert
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(3–10): CHAPLE disease ,COA ,Open-label trial ,Pozelimab ,Within-trial interviews ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background CD55 deficiency with hyper-activation of complement, angiopathic thrombosis, and protein-losing enteropathy (CHAPLE) disease is ultra-rare (
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- 2024
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28. Novel approach for tracheal resection in Morquio a syndrome with end-stage critical airway obstruction: a UK case series
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Johnny Kenth, Elizabeth Maughan, Colin R Butler, Jasleen Gabrie, Maral Rouhani, Benjamin Silver, Olumide K Ogunbiyi, Stuart Wilkinson, Reema Nandi, Robert Walker, Nagarajan Muthialu, Simon Jones, Richard Hewitt, and Iain A Bruce
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) type IVA is a rare lysosomal storage disorder caused by aberrations of the N-acetyl-galactosamine-6-sulfatase (GALNS) enzyme. MPS IVA is associated with a wide gamut of respiratory and airway disorders that manifest in a continuum of severity. In individuals exhibiting severe phenotypic expression, terminal stages of the disease frequently culminate in life-threatening, critical airway obstruction. These manifestations of end-stage disease are engendered by an insidious progression of multi-level airway pathologies, comprising of tracheomalacia, stenosis, tortuosity and 'buckling'. Historically, the management of end-stage airway disease has predominantly leaned towards palliative modalities. However, contemporary literature has posited that the potential benefits of tracheal resection with aortopexy, performed under cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), may offer a promising therapeutic option. In this context, we report on outcomes from patients undergoing a novel approach to tracheal resection that is combined with manubrial resection, leading to improved airway calibre, obviating the requisition for CPB. Results In this study, seven patients with severe MPS IVA exhibited clinical symptoms and radiological evidence indicative of advanced airway obstruction. All patients had a tracheal resection with a partial upper manubriectomy via transcervical approach, which did not require CPB. The surgical cohort consisted of 5 females and 2 males, the median age was 16 years (range 11-19) and the median height was 105.6cm (range 96.4-113.4). Postoperatively, significant improvements were seen in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), with a mean increase of 0.68 litres (95% CI: 0.45-0.91; SD: 0.20). Notably, other spirometry variables also showed meaningful improvements, providing evidence of positive treatment effects. Furthermore, there were no major long-term complications, and the procedure resulted in a significant enhancement in patient-reported domains using PedsQL (version 4.0). Conclusions This study represents the largest case series to date, on tracheal resection in patients with severe MPS IVA. Our findings demonstrate the effectiveness of the transcervical approach with partial manubriectomy for improving respiratory function and quality of life for individuals with advanced airway obstruction. Tracheal resection presents a promising treatment modality for severe cases of MPS IVA. Successful outcomes rely on meticulous multidisciplinary assessment, judicious decision-making, and appropriate timing of tracheal surgery. Further research and long-term follow-up studies are warranted to validate the long-term efficacy and safety of this approach.
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- 2024
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29. Plasma metabolites are altered before and after diagnosis of preeclampsia or fetal growth restriction
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Lucy A. Bartho, Daniel R. McKeating, Susan P. Walker, Brunda Nijagal, Teresa M. MacDonald, Natasha Pritchard, Natalie J. Hannan, Anthony V. Perkins, Stephen Tong, and Tu’uhevaha J. Kaitu’u-Lino
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Metabolomics is the study of small molecules (metabolites), within cells, tissues and biofluids. Maternal metabolites can provide important insight into the health and development of both mother and fetus throughout pregnancy. This study assessed metabolic profiles in the maternal circulation prior to and at the time of diagnosis of preeclampsia and fetal growth restriction. Maternal plasma samples were collected from two independent cohorts: (1) Established disease cohort: 50 participants diagnosed with early-onset preeclampsia (
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- 2024
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30. Consistency, completeness and external validity of ethnicity recording in NHS primary care records: a cohort study in 25 million patients’ records at source using OpenSAFELY
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The OpenSAFELY Collaborative, Colm D. Andrews, Rohini Mathur, Jon Massey, Robin Park, Helen J. Curtis, Lisa Hopcroft, Amir Mehrkar, Seb Bacon, George Hickman, Rebecca Smith, David Evans, Tom Ward, Simon Davy, Peter Inglesby, Iain Dillingham, Steven Maude, Thomas O’Dwyer, Ben F. C. Butler-Cole, Lucy Bridges, Chris Bates, John Parry, Frank Hester, Sam Harper, Jonathan Cockburn, Ben Goldacre, Brian MacKenna, Laurie A. Tomlinson, Alex J. Walker, and William J. Hulme
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Primary care health sciences ,Electronic health records ,Ethnicity ,Data curation ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Ethnicity is known to be an important correlate of health outcomes, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic, where some ethnic groups were shown to be at higher risk of infection and adverse outcomes. The recording of patients’ ethnic groups in primary care can support research and efforts to achieve equity in service provision and outcomes; however, the coding of ethnicity is known to present complex challenges. We therefore set out to describe ethnicity coding in detail with a view to supporting the use of this data in a wide range of settings, as part of wider efforts to robustly describe and define methods of using administrative data. Methods We describe the completeness and consistency of primary care ethnicity recording in the OpenSAFELY-TPP database, containing linked primary care and hospital records in > 25 million patients in England. We also compared the ethnic breakdown in OpenSAFELY-TPP with that of the 2021 UK census. Results 78.2% of patients registered in OpenSAFELY-TPP on 1 January 2022 had their ethnicity recorded in primary care records, rising to 92.5% when supplemented with hospital data. The completeness of ethnicity recording was higher for women than for men. The rate of primary care ethnicity recording ranged from 77% in the South East of England to 82.2% in the West Midlands. Ethnicity recording rates were higher in patients with chronic or other serious health conditions. For each of the five broad ethnicity groups, primary care recorded ethnicity was within 2.9 percentage points of the population rate as recorded in the 2021 Census for England as a whole. For patients with multiple ethnicity records, 98.7% of the latest recorded ethnicities matched the most frequently coded ethnicity. Patients whose latest recorded ethnicity was categorised as Other were most likely to have a discordant ethnicity recording (32.2%). Conclusions Primary care ethnicity data in OpenSAFELY is present for over three quarters of all patients, and combined with data from other sources can achieve a high level of completeness. The overall distribution of ethnicities across all English OpenSAFELY-TPP practices was similar to the 2021 Census, with some regional variation. This report identifies the best available codelist for use in OpenSAFELY and similar electronic health record data.
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- 2024
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31. AI driven analysis of MRI to measure health and disease progression in FSHD
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Lara Riem, Olivia DuCharme, Matthew Cousins, Xue Feng, Allison Kenney, Jacob Morris, Stephen J. Tapscott, Rabi Tawil, Jeff Statland, Dennis Shaw, Leo Wang, Michaela Walker, Leann Lewis, Michael A. Jacobs, Doris G. Leung, Seth D. Friedman, and Silvia S. Blemker
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MRI ,FSHD ,Fat fraction ,Muscle volume ,Progression ,Atrophy ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) affects roughly 1 in 7500 individuals. While at the population level there is a general pattern of affected muscles, there is substantial heterogeneity in muscle expression across- and within-patients. There can also be substantial variation in the pattern of fat and water signal intensity within a single muscle. While quantifying individual muscles across their full length using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) represents the optimal approach to follow disease progression and evaluate therapeutic response, the ability to automate this process has been limited. The goal of this work was to develop and optimize an artificial intelligence-based image segmentation approach to comprehensively measure muscle volume, fat fraction, fat fraction distribution, and elevated short-tau inversion recovery signal in the musculature of patients with FSHD. Intra-rater, inter-rater, and scan-rescan analyses demonstrated that the developed methods are robust and precise. Representative cases and derived metrics of volume, cross-sectional area, and 3D pixel-maps demonstrate unique intramuscular patterns of disease. Future work focuses on leveraging these AI methods to include upper body output and aggregating individual muscle data across studies to determine best-fit models for characterizing progression and monitoring therapeutic modulation of MRI biomarkers.
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- 2024
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32. Phylogeny, envenomation syndrome, and membrane permeabilising venom produced by Australia’s electric caterpillar Comana monomorpha
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Mohaddeseh H. Goudarzi, Samuel D. Robinson, Fernanda C. Cardoso, Michela L. Mitchell, Lyn G. Cook, Glenn F. King, and Andrew A. Walker
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Aerolysin ,Venom toxin ,Pore-forming protein ,Zygaenoidea ,Cytolysis ,DNA barcoding ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Zygaenoidea is a superfamily of lepidopterans containing many venomous species, including the Limacodidae (nettle caterpillars) and Megalopygidae (asp caterpillars). Venom proteomes have been recently documented for several species from each of these families, but further data are required to understand the evolution of venom in Zygaenoidea. In this study, we examined the ‘electric’ caterpillar from North-Eastern Australia, a limacodid caterpillar densely covered in venomous spines. We used DNA barcoding to identify this caterpillar as the larva of the moth Comana monomorpha (Turner, 1904). We report the clinical symptoms of C. monomorpha envenomation, which include acute pain, and erythema and oedema lasting for more than a week. Combining transcriptomics of venom spines with proteomics of venom harvested from the spine tips revealed a venom markedly different in composition from previously examined limacodid venoms that are rich in peptides. In contrast, the venom of C. monomorpha is rich in aerolysin-like proteins similar to those found in venoms of asp caterpillars (Megalopygidae). Consistent with this composition, the venom potently permeabilises sensory neurons and human neuroblastoma cells. This study highlights the diversity of venom composition in Limacodidae.
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- 2024
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33. Trajectories of functional limitations, health-related quality of life and societal costs in individuals with long COVID: a population-based longitudinal cohort study
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John R Hurst, Ann Blandford, William Henley, Katherine Bradbury, Sarah Walker, Manuel Gomes, Paul Pfeffer, Henry Goodfellow, Chris Robson, David Sunkersing, and Jiunn Wang
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives To examine trajectories of functional limitations, fatigue, health-related quality of life (HRQL) and societal costs of patients referred to long COVID clinics.Design A population-based longitudinal cohort study using real-time user data.Setting 35 specialised long COVID clinics in the UK.Participants 4087 adults diagnosed with long COVID in primary or secondary care deemed suitable for rehabilitation and registered in the Living With Covid Recovery (LWCR) programme between 4 August 2020 and 5 August 2022.Main outcome measures Generalised linear mixed models were fitted to estimate trajectories of functional limitations, using the Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS); scores of ≥20 indicate moderately severe limitations. Other outcomes included fatigue using the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy–Fatigue (FACIT-F) reversed score (scores of ≥22 indicate impairment), HRQL using the EQ-5D-5L, and long COVID-related societal costs, encompassing healthcare costs and productivity losses.Results The mean WSAS score at 6 months after registration in the LWCR was 19.1 (95% CI 18.6, 19.6), with 46% of the participants (95% CI 40.3%, 52.4%) reporting a WSAS score above 20 (moderately severe or worse impairment). The mean change in the WSAS score over the 6-month period was −0.86 (95% CI −1.32, –0.41). The mean reversed FACIT-F score at 6 months was 29.1 (95% CI 22.7, 35.5) compared with 32.0 (95% CI 31.7, 32.3) at baseline. The mean EQ-5D-5L score remained relatively constant between baseline (0.63, 95% CI 0.62, 0.64) and 6 months (0.64, 95% CI 0.59, 0.69). The monthly societal cost per patient related to long COVID at 6 months was £931, mostly driven by the costs associated with working days lost.Conclusions Individuals referred to long COVID clinics in the UK reported small improvements in functional limitations, fatigue, HRQL and ability to work within 6 months of registering in the LWCR programme.
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- 2024
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34. Spatial-temporal regulation of the prostanoid receptor EP2 co-ordinates PGE2-mediated cAMP signaling in decidualizing human endometrium
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Paul J. Brighton, Abigail R. Walker, Oliver Mann, Chow-Seng Kong, Emma S. Lucas, Pavle Vrljicak, Jan J. Brosens, and Aylin C. Hanyaloglu
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Health sciences ,Medicine ,Medical specialty ,Internal medicine ,Endocrinology ,Reproductive medicine ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Decidualization denotes the differentiation of endometrial stromal cells into specialized decidual cells, essential for embryo implantation and pregnancy. The process requires coordination of progesterone and cAMP signaling, which converge on downstream transcription factors. PGE2 and relaxin, acting, respectively, through Gαs-coupled GPCRs EP2 and RXFP1, are putative candidates for generating cAMP in differentiating stromal cells. Here, we show that PGE2 is less efficacious than relaxin in elevating intracellular cAMP levels in primary stromal cells but more effective at driving the expression of decidual genes. PGE2-and relaxin-induced cAMP generation involves receptor internalization, but EP2 is endocytosed into very early endosomes (VEEs). Perturbation of VEE machinery through depletion of key trafficking proteins; APPL1 and GIPC, dysregulates PGE2-dependent cAMP profiles and disrupts key decidual signaling pathways, resulting in a disordered differentiation response. We demonstrate that regulation of EP2 via internalization is essential for coordinated activation of the downstream signaling cascades that govern decidualization.
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- 2024
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35. Telehealth service use and quality of care among US adults with diabetes: A cross-sectional study of the 2022 health information national trends survey
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Zhigang Xie, Kea Turner, Ashby F Walker, Young-Rock Hong, and Oliver T Nguyen
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To characterise telehealth use, reasons for using or not using telehealth and the factors associated with telehealth use among US adults with diabetes.Design A cross-sectional study.Setting Data were sourced from the 2022 Health Information National Trends Survey.Participants US adults aged 18 years or older with self-reported diagnosis of diabetes (both type 1 and type 2).Primary and secondary outcomes Past 12-month utilisation of telehealth services, modality (eg, video, voice only), overall perception of quality of care, perceived trust in healthcare system and patient-centred communication score.Results In an analysis of 1116 US adults with diabetes, representing 33.6 million individuals, 48.1% reported telehealth use in the past year. Telehealth users were likely to be younger, women, with higher income, and urban dwellers. Older adults (≥65 years) were less likely to use telehealth compared with those aged 18–49 years (OR 0.43, 95% CI 0.20 to 0.90). Higher income and more frequent healthcare visits were predictors of telehealth usage, with no significant differences across race, education or location. Across respondents with telehealth usage, 39.3% reported having video-only, 35.0% having phone (voice)-only and 25.7% having both modalities. The main motivations included provider recommendation, convenience, COVID-19 avoidance and guidance on in-person care needs. Non-users cited preferences for in-person visits, privacy concerns and technology challenges. Patient-reported quality-of-care outcomes were comparable between telehealth users and non-users, with no significant differences observed by telehealth modality or area of residence (metro status).Conclusions Around half of US adults with diabetes used telehealth services in the past year. Patient-reported care quality was similar for telehealth and in-person visits. However, further efforts are needed to address key barriers to telehealth adoption, including privacy concern, technology difficulties, and care coordination issues.
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- 2024
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36. Healthy Eating and Active Lifestyles for Diabetes (HEAL-D) Online: a mixed methods evaluation exploring the feasibility of implementing a virtual culturally tailored diabetes self-management programme for African and Caribbean communities
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Nick Sevdalis, Andrew Walker, Natasha Curran, Louise M Goff, Joseph T S Low, Sally Irwin, Sophie Lowry, and Oliver Brady
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives To assess the feasibility and acceptability of delivering Healthy Eating and Active Lifestyles for Diabetes (HEAL-D) Online.Intervention HEAL-D Online—a 7-week culturally tailored type 2 diabetes educational programme delivered using online platform.Setting Programme delivered by a London NHS trust, with patients referred from primary care healthcare professionals via a central booking system.Participants 53 HEAL-D service users completed a postcourse questionnaire, and 14 service users and 7 service delivery staff participated in interviews.Design Mixed methods service evaluation.Primary and secondary outcomes Service user engagement, acceptability and perceived patient benefit assessed using service activity data. Feasibility and acceptability of HEAL-D Online, using semi-structured interviews to explore the views and experiences of service users and service delivery staff.Results Service activity data showed that initial uptake of HEAL-D Online was good (62% attendance) with a high adherence to the programme (77% completion). A high fidelity (94%) was observed, and qualitative findings showed that staff and service users were satisfied with all aspects of course delivery. Both service activity and qualitative data indicated that attendees felt more confident in controlling their diet and managing their diabetes post-HEAL-D Online.Conclusion This evaluation demonstrates the feasibility of delivering HEAL-D using an online platform, with its ability to achieve similar goals compared with its face-to-face counterpart. Challenges were identified around the identification, recruitment and referral of eligible patients into the programme, which need to be addressed for successful implementation on a wider scale.
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- 2024
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37. Exploration of patients’ and healthcare professionals’ perspectives on kidney failure risk and the use of the kidney failure risk equation in MULTIPle lOng-term condItions aNd frailTy (MULTIPOINT) study: a qualitative interview and focus group study protocol
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Patrick B Mark, Katie I Gallacher, Bhautesh Dinesh Jani, Heather Walker, and Michael K Sullivan
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Clinical guidelines recommend the use of the kidney failure risk equation (KFRE) to guide the referral of individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD) to secondary kidney care services. People living with CKD frequently experience multiple long-term conditions (multimorbidity) and/or frailty. This may impact patients’ or carers’ perceptions of kidney failure in the context of other health problems and associated risks and emphasises the need for shared decision-making. This paper presents the research protocol for the exploration of patients’ and healthcare professionals’ perspectives on kidney failure risk and the use of the KFRE in the MULTIPle lOng-term condItions aNd frailTy study. This study aims to investigate patient and healthcare professionals’ perspectives and expectations of the use of KFRE in individuals with CKD and multimorbidity and/or frailty, with a focus on shared decision-making.Methods and analysis Analysis of semistructured interviews with adults who have CKD and multimorbidity and/or frailty and focus groups with healthcare professionals (who are involved in caring for patients with CKD). Framework analysis, underpinned by normalisation process theory, will be used to develop codes and explore themes from the interviews and focus groups. Patient and public involvement has been pivotal to the study conceptualisation and will continue to be embedded throughout the study.Ethics and dissemination The study protocol has undergone peer review by the NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Research and Innovation team and has been granted ethical approval in August 2023 by the NHS Health Research Authority following a favourable opinion from the West of Scotland Research Ethics Committee (REC) 3 (IRAS ID: 325848, REC reference: 23WS/0119, Protocol number GN22RE559).The results of the research will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and conferences, as well as to patient and public involvement groups who have been involved in the study and through knowledge exchange events.
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- 2024
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38. Investigating Exposure and Hazards of Micro- and Nanoplastics During Pregnancy and Early Life (AURORA Project): Protocol for an Interdisciplinary Study
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Amanda M Durkin, Runyu Zou, Justin M Boucher, Matthew SP Boyles, Jeske van Boxel, Mariona Bustamante, Emily A Christopher, Payam Dadvand, Hanna M Dusza, Majorie van Duursen, Markus M Forsberg, Karen S Galea, Juliette Legler, Laurens DB Mandemaker, Florian Meirer, Jane Muncke, Tim S Nawrot, Petra Přibylová, Anna R Robuck, Nelly D Saenen, Barbara M Scholz-Böttcher, Kuanliang Shao, Martine Vrijheid, Douglas I Walker, Lisa Zimmermann, Laura M Zoutendijk, Virissa Lenters, and Roel Vermeulen
- Subjects
Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundMicro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) are emerging pollutants of concern with ubiquitous presence in global ecosystems. MNPs pose potential implications for human health; however, the health impacts of MNP exposures are not yet understood. Recent evidence suggests that MNPs can cross the placental barrier, underlying the urgent need to understand their impact on reproductive health and development. ObjectiveThe Actionable eUropean ROadmap for early-life health Risk Assessment of micro- and nanoplastics (AURORA) project will investigate MNP exposures and their biological and health effects during pregnancy and early life, which are critical periods due to heightened vulnerability to environmental stressors. The AURORA project will enhance exposure assessment capabilities for measuring MNPs, MNP-associated chemicals, and plastic additives in human tissues, including placenta and blood. MethodsIn this interdisciplinary project, we will advance methods for in-depth characterization and scalable chemical analytical strategies, enabling high-resolution and large-scale toxicological, exposure assessment, and epidemiological studies. The AURORA project performs observational studies to investigate determinants and health impacts of MNPs by including 800 mother-child pairs from 2 existing birth cohorts and 110 women of reproductive age from a newly established cohort. This will be complemented by toxicological studies using a tiered-testing approach and epidemiological investigations to evaluate associations between maternal and prenatal MNP exposures and health perturbations, such as placental function, immune-inflammatory responses, oxidative stress, accelerated aging, endocrine disruption, and child growth and development. The ultimate goal of the AURORA project is to create an MNP risk assessment framework and identify the remaining knowledge gaps and priorities needed to comprehensively assess the impact of MNPs on early-life health. ResultsIn the first 3 years of this 5-year project (2021-2026), progress was made toward all objectives. This includes completion of recruitment and data collection for new and existing cohorts, development of analytical methodological protocols, and initiation of the toxicological tiered assessments. As of September 2024, data analysis is ongoing and results are expected to be published starting in 2025. ConclusionsAs plastic pollution increases globally, it is imperative to understand the impact of MNPs on human health, particularly during vulnerable developmental stages such as early life. The contributions of the AURORA project will inform future risk assessment. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/63176
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- 2024
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39. Rural service coordination programming for women using substances and their families
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Lesley Cottrell, Charlotte Workman, Melina Danko, Ellis Walker, Anthony Dmytrijuk, Susan Harrison, Mikisha Lee, Ashleigh McKinsey, and Mark C Smith
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Medicine - Abstract
Background: Women experiencing substance use during their pregnancies or after the birth of a child report being fearful of losing their children based on care, stigmatized when seeking assistance, and barriers to care such as having to provide the same information to different providers, and having to repeat their lived experiences with substance use in detail. Particularly these service barriers can be confusing, complicated, and difficult to follow, which could lead to non-compliance or not seeking services. Objectives: We evaluated components of a service coordination program for women experiencing substance use, their children, and larger families who help with caregiving. We examined stakeholder interest in the program, feasibility providing services over time, and initial program effectiveness. Design: Participant enrollment and outcomes as well as service coordination activities provided over a 4-year period was gathered across three demonstration site locations (a birthing hospital, reunification program, and home visiting program). Methods: Program information was gathered from needs assessment data, health survey data from enrolled caregivers and infants, training evaluations, and budget recordings of direct aid. In this mixed method design, we examined potential differences between baseline and the last assessment for women and children enrolled in the program. We also utilized univariate analyses of variance to examine the main effects of maternal and infant characteristics on final maternal and infant outcomes. Results: Three sites enrolled 182 women and families for program services. Patient navigators provided direct aid, training, goal setting, and service coordination and planning. Families remained in the program, on average, 655 days and were satisfied with the services received. Respondents thought the program elements were easy to implement within the rural setting. The program effectively addressed basic needs, violence ( p
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- 2024
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40. Associations between respiratory pathogens and lung function in primary ciliary dyskinesia: cross-sectional analysis from the PROVALF-PCD cohort
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Bruna Rubbo, Avni Kant, Kewei Zhang, Annalisa Allegorico, Simona Basilicata, Mieke Boon, Melissa Borrelli, Claudia Calogero, Siobhán B. Carr, Mary Carroll, Carolina Constant, Silvia Castillo Corullón, Harriet Corvol, Renato Cutrera, Stefanie Dillenhöfer, Nagehan Emiralioglu, Ela Eralp, Sanem Eryilmaz Polat, Laura Gardner, Yasemin Gokdemir, Amanda Harris, Claire Hogg, Bulent Karadag, Helene Kobbernagel, Cordula Koerner-Rettberg, Panayiotis Kouis, Natalie Lorent, Markella Marcou, June K. Mathin, Vendula Martinu, Antonio Moreno-Galdó, Lucy Morgan, Kim G. Nielsen, Heymut Omran, Ugur Ozcelik, Petr Pohunek, Johanna Raidt, Phil Robinson, Sandra Rovira-Amigo, Francesca Santamaria, Anne Schlegtendal, Aline Tamalet, Guillaume Thouvenin, Nicola Ullmann, Woolf Walker, Panayiotis Yiallouros, Claudia E. Kuehni, Philipp Latzin, Nicole Beydon, and Jane S. Lucas
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Respiratory pathogens are frequently isolated from airway samples in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) patients. Few studies have investigated associations between these pathogens and lung function, with current management based on evidence from cystic fibrosis. We investigated the association between commonly isolated respiratory pathogens and lung function in PCD patients. Methods Using a cross-sectional design, we prospectively collected clinical and concurrent microbiology data from 408 participants with probable or confirmed PCD, aged ≥5 years, from 12 countries. We used Global Lung Function Initiative 2012 references to calculate forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) z-scores. For 351 patients (86%) with complete data, we assessed the association of the four most frequently isolated pathogens with lung function by fitting multilevel linear models with country as random intercept, adjusted for age at diagnosis, age at lung function, use of antibiotic prophylaxis and body mass index z-scores. Results Individuals with Pseudomonas aeruginosa growth in culture had significantly lower FEV1 z-scores (β= −0.87, 95% CI −1.40– −0.34), adjusted for presence of Haemophilus influenzae, methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae, and for covariates. When stratified by age, associations remained strong for adults but not for children. Results were similar when ciliary defects by transmission electron microscopy were included in the models and when restricting analysis to only confirmed PCD cases. Conclusions We found that P. aeruginosa was associated with worse lung function in individuals with PCD, particularly adults. These findings suggest that it is prudent to aim for P. aeruginosa eradication in the first instance, and to treat exacerbations promptly in colonised patients.
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- 2024
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41. The iSEARCH randomised controlled trial protocol: a pragmatic Australian phase III clinical trial of intrapartum sildenafil citrate to improve outcomes potentially related to intrapartum hypoxia
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Ben W Mol, Vicki Flenady, Sailesh Kumar, Emily Callander, William Tarnow-Mordi, Nadia Badawi, Susan P Walker, Helen Liley, R O'Connell, Lene Seidler, and Jonathan Hyett
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction We showed in a phase II randomised controlled trial (RCT) that oral sildenafil citrate in term labour halved operative birth for fetal distress. We outline the protocol for a phase III RCT (can intrapartum SildEnafil safely Avert the Risks of Contraction-induced Hypoxia? (iSEARCH)) of 3200 women in Australia to assess if sildenafil citrate reduces adverse perinatal outcomes related to intrapartum hypoxia.Methods and analysis iSEARCH will enrol 3200 Australian women in term labour to determine whether up to three 50 mg oral doses of sildenafil citrate versus placebo reduce the relative risk of a primary composite end point of 10 perinatal outcomes potentially related to intrapartum hypoxia by 35% (from 7% to 4.55%). Secondary aims are to evaluate reductions in the relative risk of emergency caesarean section or instrumental vaginal birth for fetal distress by 25% (from 20% to 15%) and in healthcare costs. To detect a 35% reduction in the primary outcome for an alpha of 0.05 and power of 80% with 10% dropout in each arm requires 3200 women (1600 in each arm). This sample size will also yield >90% power to detect a 25% reduction for the secondary outcome of any operative birth (caesarean section or instrumental vaginal birth) for fetal distress.Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval for the iSEARCH RCT was granted by the Hunter New England Human Research Ethics Committee (ref no: 2020/ETH02791). Results will be disseminated through websites, peer-reviewed publications, scientific meetings and social media, news outlets, television and radio.Trial registration number ACTRN12621000231842.
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- 2024
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42. Identifying markers of health-seeking behaviour and healthcare access in UK electronic health records
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Nick Andrews, Dorothea Nitsch, Jemma L Walker, Helen McDonald, Sophie Graham, and Edward P K Parker
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To assess the feasibility of identifying markers of health-seeking behaviour and healthcare access in UK electronic health records (EHR), for identifying populations at risk of poor health outcomes and adjusting for confounding in epidemiological studies.Design Cross-sectional observational study using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink Aurum prelinked to Hospital Episode Statistics.Setting Individual-level routine clinical data from 13 million patients across general practices (GPs) and secondary data in England.Participants Individuals aged ≥66 years on 1 September 2019.Main outcome measures We used the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) model and the literature to iteratively develop criteria for markers selection. Based on this we selected 15 markers: those that represented uptake of public health interventions, markers of active healthcare access/use and markers of lack of access/underuse. We calculated the prevalence of each marker using relevant lookback periods prior to the index date (1 September 2019) and compared with national estimates. We assessed the correlation coefficients (phi) between markers with inferred hierarchical clustering.Results We included 1 991 284 individuals (mean age: 75.9 and 54.0% women). The prevalence of markers ranged from
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- 2024
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43. Left atrial septal pouch thrombus: An unusual cause of an embolic stroke
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Aditya Bhave, Aditya Patel, Raag Patel, Walker Barmore, Mithilesh Siddu, Jeffrey Switzer, Juliet Yirerong, and Gyanendra Sharma
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cerebrovascular disease ,cryptogenic stroke ,echocardiography ,left atrial septal pouch ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Key Clinical Message Left‐atrial septal pouch (LASP) is a newly described anatomical variant caused by incomplete fusion of the septa primum and secundum. This case visualizes LASP as a potential nidus for blood stasis and cardiac embolism and highlights the need for consideration of TEE in the work up of cryptogenic stroke.
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- 2024
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44. 'He’s used drugs - he’s biased! He’s not a drug user - what would he know!': A cross-sectional, online study of drug researchers’ experiential knowledge of drug use and disclosure
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Danielle C. Ompad, Cho-Hee Shrader, Kyle M. Snyder, Jules Netherland, Sheila P. Vakharia, and Ingrid Walker
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Drug use ,Stigma ,Experiential knowledge ,Disclosure ,Online survey ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Despite the recognized value of experiential knowledge, drug use and disclosure of drug use within the drug research community is rarely discussed or studied. Methods: We distributed a cross-sectional online survey using targeted recruitment. Researchers provided information on drug use, disclosure of use (or abstinence) professionally, and their impact via write-in text boxes. We used the general inductive approach to analyze the data. Results: Of the sample (n=669, 43 countries), 52 % were cisgender women, 89 % had post-graduate education, and 79 % worked in academia. Most (86 %) reported lifetime drug use and 47 % past 3-month use. Among 557 researchers who used drugs, 59 % disclosed their use to institutional colleagues, 59 % to colleagues outside their institution, 25 % to research participants, and 11 % in their research/scholarship. Themes included frequency; context; meaning of drug use disclosure personally, professionally, and socially; and how drug use experience and disclosure informs research. Respondents connected their concerns about disclosure in research with issues of social identity, professional risk, and the role of stigma related to lived experience. Some respondents felt that such concerns reinforce a vacuum, noting that the inability to disclose drug use limits research questions and the knowledge base overall. Discussion: Our findings support the dichotomy of thought surrounding the lived experience of drug use: “[They’ve] used drugs- [they’re] biased!” and “[They’re] not a drug user-what would [they] know!” Our findings provide an opportunity to reflect upon our positionality and the impact researchers’ own drug use may have on the field.
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- 2024
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45. Gastrointestinal delivery of bitter hop extract reduces appetite and food cravings in healthy adult women undergoing acute fasting
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Edward Walker, Kim Lo, and Pramod Gopal
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Fasting ,Bitter taste receptors ,Appetite ,Satiety ,Water fasting ,Dietary supplement ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: Dietary restrictions or reductions such as fasting for weight loss are often difficult to adhere to due to increased appetite and food cravings. Recently, gastrointestinal delivery of bitter hops has been shown to be effective at reducing appetite in men. Our aim was to determine the effect of a bitter hop extract on appetite and cravings in women, using a 24 h, water-only fast. Methods: This was a randomized, double-blind, cross-over treatment study. Thirty adult women were recruited and required to fast for 24 h from 1800 h to 1800 h on three occasions and given an ad libitum meal to break each fast. Treatments of either a placebo or one of two doses (high dose; HD: 250 mg or low dose; LD: 125 mg) of a bitter hop-based appetite suppressant (Amarasate®) were given twice per day at 16 and 20 h into the fast. Results: The HD and LD treatment groups exhibited a significant (p
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- 2024
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46. Leaders Seeking Resonance: Managing the Connectors that Bind Schools
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Walker, Allan
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This commentary focuses on school leadership as connective activity. Leadership is essentially about designing, managing and energizing the right connections, and untying the wrong ones, in order to make schools successful, equitable, happier places. The author's basic proposition is that school leaders who influence students and their communities positively are not those who focus just on secluded patches of their organizational turf, but leaders who consciously make connections within, across and beyond it. The article is divided into three major sections. In the first section, the author discusses what he means by connection. To do this, he draws partly on notion of resonance, and the metaphor of reflexology. In the second section, he applies this metaphor to schools and school leadership; and teases out briefly some parallels between reflexology and leadership. In the third section, he suggests that the job of a leader is to simultaneously connect, reconnect and disconnect within, across and beyond the school. In this section, he attempts to capture and illustrate some of the connective activities which form such an important part of school leadership. The foundational connective activity is that of defining purpose. (Contains 5 tables.)
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- 2012
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47. Long-term impact of COVID-19 hospitalisation among individuals with pre-existing airway diseases in the UK: a multicentre, longitudinal cohort study – PHOSP-COVID
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Omer Elneima, John R. Hurst, Carlos Echevarria, Jennifer K. Quint, Samantha Walker, Salman Siddiqui, Petr Novotny, Paul E. Pfeffer, Jeremy S. Brown, Manu Shankar-Hari, Hamish J.C. McAuley, Olivia C. Leavy, Aarti Shikotra, Amisha Singapuri, Marco Sereno, Matthew Richardson, Ruth M. Saunders, Victoria C. Harris, Linzy Houchen-Wolloff, Neil J. Greening, Ewen M. Harrison, Annemarie B. Docherty, Nazir I. Lone, James D. Chalmers, Ling-Pei Ho, Alex Horsley, Michael Marks, Krisnah Poinasamy, Betty Raman, Rachael A. Evans, Louise V. Wain, Aziz Sheikh, Chris E. Brightling, Anthony De Soyza, Liam G. Heaney, J.K. Baillie, N.I. Lone, E. Pairo-Castineira, N. Avramidis, K. Rawlik, S Jones, L. Armstrong, B. Hairsine, H. Henson, C. Kurasz, A. Shaw, L. Shenton, H. Dobson, A. Dell, S. Fairbairn, N. Hawkings, J. Haworth, M. Hoare, V. Lewis, A. Lucey, G. Mallison, H. Nassa, C. Pennington, A. Price, C. Price, A. Storrie, G. Willis, S. Young, K. Poinasamy, S. Walker, I. Jarrold, A. Sanderson, K. Chong-James, C. David, W.Y. James, P. Pfeffer, O. Zongo, A. Martineau, C. Manisty, C. Armour, V. Brown, J. Busby, B. Connolly, T. Craig, S. Drain, L.G. Heaney, B. King, N. Magee, E. Major, D. McAulay, L. McGarvey, J. McGinness, T. Peto, R. Stone, A. Bolger, F. Davies, A. Haggar, J. Lewis, A. Lloyd, R. Manley, E. McIvor, D. Menzies, K. Roberts, W. Saxon, D. Southern, C. Subbe, V. Whitehead, A. Bularga, N.L. Mills, J. Dawson, H. El-Taweel, L. Robinson, L. Brear, K. Regan, D. Saralaya, K. Storton, S. Amoils, A. Bermperi, I. Cruz, K. Dempsey, A. Elmer, J. Fuld, H. Jones, S. Jose, S. Marciniak, M. Parkes, C. Ribeiro, J. Taylor, M. Toshner, L. Watson, J. Worsley, L. Broad, T. Evans, M. Haynes, L. Jones, L. Knibbs, A. McQueen, C. Oliver, K. Paradowski, R. Sabit, J. Williams, I. Jones, L. Milligan, E. Harris, C. Sampson, E. Davies, C. Evenden, A. Hancock, K. Hancock, C. Lynch, M. Rees, L. Roche, N. Stroud, T. Thomas-Woods, S. Heller, T. Chalder, K. Shah, E. Robertson, B. Young, M. Babores, M. Holland, N. Keenan, S. Shashaa, H. Wassall, L. Austin, E. Beranova, T. Cosier, J. Deery, T. Hazelton, H. Ramos, R. Solly, S. Turney, H. Weston, M. Ralser, L. Pearce, S. Pugmire, W. Stoker, A. Wilson, W. McCormick, E. Fraile, J. Ugoji, L. Aguilar Jimenez, G. Arbane, S. Betts, K. Bisnauthsing, A. Dewar, N. Hart, G. Kaltsakas, H. Kerslake, M.M. Magtoto, P. Marino, L.M. Martinez, M. Ostermann, J. Rossdale, T.S. Solano, M. Alvarez Corral, A. Arias, E. Bevan, D. Griffin, J. Martin, J. Owen, S. Payne, A. Prabhu, A. Reed, W. Storrar, N. Williams, C. Wrey Brown, T. Burdett, J. Featherstone, C. Lawson, A. Layton, C. Mills, L. Stephenson, Y. Ellis, P. Atkin, K. Brindle, M.G. Crooks, K. Drury, N. Easom, R. Flockton, L. Holdsworth, A. Richards, D.L. Sykes, S. Thackray-Nocera, C. Wright, S. Coetzee, K. Davies, R. Hughes, R. Loosley, H. McGuinness, A. Mohamed, L. O'Brien, Z. Omar, E. Perkins, J. Phipps, G. Ross, A. Taylor, H. Tench, R. Wolf-Roberts, L. Burden, E. Calvelo, B. Card, C. Carr, E.R. Chilvers, D. Copeland, P. Cullinan, P. Daly, L. Evison, T. Fayzan, H. Gordon, S. Haq, R.G. Jenkins, C. King, O. Kon, K. March, M. Mariveles, L. McLeavey, N. Mohamed, S. Moriera, U. Munawar, J. Nunag, U. Nwanguma, L. Orriss-Dib, A. Ross, M. Roy, E. Russell, K. Samuel, J. Schronce, N. Simpson, L. Tarusan, D.C. Thomas, C. Wood, N. Yasmin, D. Altmann, L.S. Howard, D. Johnston, A. Lingford-Hughes, W.D-C. Man, J. Mitchell, P.L. Molyneaux, C. Nicolaou, D.P. O'Regan, L. Price, J. Quint, D. Smith, R.S. Thwaites, J. Valabhji, S. Walsh, C.M. Efstathiou, F. Liew, A. Frankel, L. Lightstone, S. McAdoo, M. Wilkins, M. Willicombe, R. Touyz, A-M. Guerdette, M. Hewitt, R. Reddy, K. Warwick, S. White, A. McMahon, M. Malim, K. Bramham, M. Brown, K. Ismail, T. Nicholson, C. Pariante, C. Sharpe, S. Wessely, J. Whitney, O. Adeyemi, R. Adrego, H. Assefa-Kebede, J. Breeze, S. Byrne, P. Dulawan, A. Hoare, C.J. Jolley, A. Knighton, S. Patale, I. Peralta, N. Powell, A. Ramos, K. Shevket, F. Speranza, A. Te, A. Shah, A. Chiribiri, C. O'Brien, A. Hayday, A. Ashworth, P. Beirne, J. Clarke, C. Coupland, M. Dalton, C. Favager, J. Glossop, J. Greenwood, L. Hall, T. Hardy, A. Humphries, J. Murira, D. Peckham, S. Plein, J. Rangeley, G. Saalmink, A.L. Tan, E. Wade, B. Whittam, N. Window, J. Woods, G. Coakley, L. Turtle, L. Allerton, A.M. Allt, M. Beadsworth, A. Berridge, J. Brown, S. Cooper, A. Cross, S. Defres, S.L. Dobson, J. Earley, N. French, W. Greenhalf, K. Hainey, H.E. Hardwick, J. Hawkes, V. Highett, S. Kaprowska, A.L. Key, L. Lavelle-Langham, N. Lewis-Burke, G. Madzamba, F. Malein, S. Marsh, C. Mears, L. Melling, M.J. Noonan, L. Poll, J. Pratt, E. Richardson, A. Rowe, M.G. Semple, V. Shaw, K.A. Tripp, L.O. Wajero, S.A. Williams-Howard, D.G. Wootton, J. Wyles, S.N. Diwanji, S. Gurram, P. Papineni, S. Quaid, G.F. Tiongson, E. Watson, A. Briggs, M. Marks, C. Hastie, N. Rogers, N. Smith, D. Stensel, L. Bishop, K. McIvor, P. Rivera-Ortega, B. Al-Sheklly, C. Avram, J. Blaikely, M. Buch, N. Choudhury, D. Faluyi, T. Felton, T. Gorsuch, N.A. Hanley, A. Horsley, T. Hussell, Z. Kausar, N. Odell, R. Osbourne, K. Piper Hanley, K. Radhakrishnan, S. Stockdale, T. Kabir, J.T. Scott, P.J.M. Openshaw, I.D. Stewart, D. Burn, A. Ayoub, G. Burns, G. Davies, A. De Soyza, C. Echevarria, H. Fisher, C. Francis, A. Greenhalgh, P. Hogarth, J. Hughes, K. Jiwa, G. Jones, G. MacGowan, D. Price, A. Sayer, J. Simpson, H. Tedd, S. Thomas, S. West, M. Witham, S. Wright, A. Young, M.J. McMahon, P. Neill, D. Anderson, N. Basu, H. Bayes, A. Brown, A. Dougherty, K. Fallon, L. Gilmour, D. Grieve, K. Mangion, A. Morrow, R. Sykes, C. Berry, I.B. McInnes, K. Scott, F. Barrett, A. Donaldson, E.K. Sage, D. Bell, R. Hamil, K. Leitch, L. Macliver, M. Patel, J. Quigley, A. Smith, B. Welsh, G. Choudhury, S. Clohisey, A. Deans, A.B. Docherty, J. Furniss, E.M. Harrison, S. Kelly, A. Sheikh, J.D. Chalmers, D. Connell, C. Deas, A. Elliott, J. George, S. Mohammed, J. Rowland, A.R. Solstice, D. Sutherland, C.J. Tee, J. Bunker, R. Gill, R. Nathu, K. Holmes, H. Adamali, D. Arnold, S. Barratt, A. Dipper, S. Dunn, N. Maskell, A. Morley, L. Morrison, L. Stadon, S. Waterson, H. Welch, B. Jayaraman, T. Light, I. Vogiatzis, P. Almeida, C.E. Bolton, A. Hosseini, L. Matthews, R. Needham, K. Shaw, A.K. Thomas, J. Bonnington, M. Chrystal, C. Dupont, P.L. Greenhaff, A. Gupta, W. Jang, S. Linford, A. Nikolaidis, S. Prosper, A. Burns, N. Kanellakis, V.M. Ferreira, C. Nikolaidou, C. Xie, M. Ainsworth, A. Alamoudi, A. Bloss, P. Carter, M. Cassar, J. Chen, F. Conneh, T. Dong, R.I. Evans, E. Fraser, J.R. Geddes, F. Gleeson, P. Harrison, M. Havinden-Williams, L.P. Ho, P. Jezzard, I. Koychev, P. Kurupati, H. McShane, C. Megson, S. Neubauer, D. Nicoll, G. Ogg, E. Pacpaco, M. Pavlides, Y. Peng, N. Petousi, J. Pimm, N.M. Rahman, B. Raman, M.J. Rowland, K. Saunders, M. Sharpe, N. Talbot, E.M. Tunnicliffe, A. Korszun, S. Kerr, R.E. Barker, D. Cristiano, N. Dormand, P. George, M. Gummadi, S. Kon, K. Liyanage, C.M. Nolan, B. Patel, S. Patel, O. Polgar, P. Shah, S. Singh, J.A. Walsh, M. Gibbons, S. Ahmad, S. Brill, J. Hurst, H. Jarvis, L. Lim, S. Mandal, D. Matila, O. Olaosebikan, C. Singh, C. Laing, H. Baxendale, L. Garner, C. Johnson, J. Mackie, A. Michael, J. Newman, J. Pack, K. Paques, H. Parfrey, J. Parmar, A. Reddy, M. Halling-Brown, P. Dark, N. Diar-Bakerly, D. Evans, E. Hardy, A. Harvey, D. Holgate, S. Knight, N. Mairs, N. Majeed, L. McMorrow, J. Oxton, J. Pendlebury, C. Summersgill, R. Ugwuoke, S. Whittaker, W. Matimba-Mupaya, S. Strong-Sheldrake, P. Chowienczyk, J. Bagshaw, M. Begum, K. Birchall, R. Butcher, H. Carborn, F. Chan, K. Chapman, Y. Cheng, L. Chetham, C. Clark, Z. Coburn, J. Cole, M. Dixon, A. Fairman, J. Finnigan, H. Foot, D. Foote, A. Ford, R. Gregory, K. Harrington, L. Haslam, L. Hesselden, J. Hockridge, A. Holbourn, B. Holroyd-Hind, L. Holt, A. Howell, E. Hurditch, F. Ilyas, C. Jarman, A. Lawrie, J-H. Lee, E. Lee, R. Lenagh, A. Lye, I. Macharia, M. Marshall, A. Mbuyisa, J. McNeill, S. Megson, J. Meiring, L. Milner, S. Misra, H. Newell, T. Newman, C. Norman, L. Nwafor, D. Pattenadk, M. Plowright, J. Porter, P. Ravencroft, C. Roddis, J. Rodger, S.L. Rowland-Jones, P. Saunders, J. Sidebottom, J. Smith, L. Smith, N. Steele, G. Stephens, R. Stimpson, B. Thamu, A.A.R. Thompson, N. Tinker, K. Turner, H. Turton, P. Wade, J. Watson, I. Wilson, A. Zawia, L. Allsop, K. Bennett, P. Buckley, M. Flynn, M. Gill, C. Goodwin, M. Greatorex, H. Gregory, C. Heeley, L. Holloway, M. Holmes, J. Hutchinson, J. Kirk, W. Lovegrove, T.A. Sewell, S. Shelton, D. Sissons, K. Slack, S. Smith, D. Sowter, S. Turner, V. Whitworth, I. Wynter, J. Tomlinson, L. Warburton, S. Painter, S. Palmer, D. Redwood, J. Tilley, C. Vickers, T. Wainwright, G. Breen, M. Hotopf, R. Aul, D. Forton, M. Ali, A. Dunleavy, M. Mencias, N. Msimanga, T. Samakomva, S. Siddique, V. Tavoukjian, J. Teixeira, R. Ahmed, R. Francis, L. Connor, A. Cook, G.A. Davies, T. Rees, F. Thaivalappil, C. Thomas, M. McNarry, K.E. Lewis, M. Coulding, S. Kilroy, J. McCormick, J. McIntosh, V. Turner, J. Vere, A. Butt, H. Savill, S.S. Kon, G. Landers, H. Lota, S. Portukhay, M. Nasseri, A. Daniels, A. Hormis, J. Ingham, L. Zeidan, M. Chablani, L. Osborne, S. Aslani, A. Banerjee, R. Batterham, G. Baxter, R. Bell, A. David, E. Denneny, A.D. Hughes, W. Lilaonitkul, P. Mehta, A. Pakzad, B. Rangelov, B. Williams, J. Willoughby, M. Xu, N. Ahwireng, D. Bang, D. Basire, J.S. Brown, R.C. Chambers, A. Checkley, R. Evans, M. Heightman, T. Hillman, J. Jacob, R. Jastrub, M. Lipman, S. Logan, D. Lomas, M. Merida Morillas, H. Plant, J.C. Porter, K. Roy, E. Wall, T. Treibel, N. Ahmad Haider, C. Atkin, R. Baggott, M. Bates, A. Botkai, A. Casey, B. Cooper, J. Dasgin, C. Dawson, K. Draxlbauer, N. Gautam, J. Hazeldine, T. Hiwot, S. Holden, K. Isaacs, T. Jackson, V. Kamwa, D. Lewis, J.M. Lord, S. Madathil, C. McGhee, K. McGee, A. Neal, A. Newton-Cox, J. Nyaboko, D. Parekh, Z. Peterkin, H. Qureshi, L. Ratcliffe, E. Sapey, J. Short, T. Soulsby, J. Stockley, Z. Suleiman, T. Thompson, M. Ventura, S. Walder, C. Welch, D. Wilson, S. Yasmin, K.P. Yip, N. Chaudhuri, C. Childs, R. Djukanovic, S. Fletcher, M. Harvey, M.G. Jones, E. Marouzet, B. Marshall, R. Samuel, T. Sass, T. Wallis, H. Wheeler, R. Steeds, P. Beckett, C. Dickens, U. Nanda, M. Aljaroof, N. Armstrong, H. Arnold, H. Aung, M. Bakali, M. Bakau, E. Baldry, M. Baldwin, C. Bourne, M. Bourne, C.E. Brightling, N. Brunskill, P. Cairns, L. Carr, A. Charalambou, C. Christie, M.J. Davies, E. Daynes, S. Diver, R. Dowling, S. Edwards, C. Edwardson, O. Elneima, H. Evans, R.A. Evans, J. Finch, S. Finney, S. Glover, N. Goodman, B. Gooptu, N.J. Greening, K. Hadley, P. Haldar, B. Hargadon, V.C. Harris, L. Houchen-Wolloff, W. Ibrahim, L. Ingram, K. Khunti, A. Lea, D. Lee, H.J.C. McAuley, G.P. McCann, P. McCourt, T. McNally, G. Mills, W. Monteiro, M. Pareek, S. Parker, A. Prickett, I.N. Qureshi, A. Rowland, R. Russell, M. Sereno, A. Shikotra, S. Siddiqui, A. Singapuri, S.J. Singh, J. Skeemer, M. Soares, E. Stringer, S. Terry, T. Thornton, M. Tobin, T.J.C. Ward, F. Woodhead, T. Yates, A.J. Yousuf, B. Guillen Guiio, O.C. Leavy, L.V. Wain, M. Broome, P. McArdle, D. Thickett, R. Upthegrove, D. Wilkinson, P. Moss, D. Wraith, J. Evans, E. Bullmore, J.L. Heeney, C. Langenberg, W. Schwaeble, C. Summers, J. Weir McCall, D. Adeloye, D.E. Newby, R. Pius, I. Rudan, M. Shankar-Hari, C.L. Sudlow, M. Thorpe, S. Walmsley, B. Zheng, L. Allan, C. Ballard, A. McGovern, J. Dennis, J. Cavanagh, S. MacDonald, K. O'Donnell, J. Petrie, N. Sattar, M. Spears, E. Guthrie, M. Henderson, R.J. Allen, M. Bingham, T. Brugha, R. Free, D. Jones, L. Gardiner, A.J. Moss, E. Mukaetova-Ladinska, P. Novotny, C. Overton, J.E. Pearl, T. Plekhanova, M. Richardson, N. Samani, J. Sargent, M. Sharma, M. Steiner, C. Taylor, C. Tong, E. Turner, J. Wormleighton, B. Zhao, K. Ntotsis, R.M. Saunders, D. Lozano-Rojas, D. Cuthbertson, G. Kemp, A. McArdle, B. Michael, W. Reynolds, L.G. Spencer, B. Vinson, M. Ashworth, K. Abel, H. Chinoy, B. Deakin, M. Harvie, C.A. Miller, S. Stanel, P. Barran, D. Trivedi, H. McAllister-Williams, S. Paddick, A. Rostron, J.P. Taylor, D. Baguley, C. Coleman, E. Cox, L. Fabbri, S. Francis, I. Hall, E. Hufton, S. Johnson, F. Khan, P. Kitterick, R. Morriss, N. Selby, L. Wright, C. Antoniades, A. Bates, M. Beggs, K. Bhui, K. Breeze, K.M. Channon, D. Clark, X. Fu, M. Husain, X. Li, E. Lukaschuk, C. McCracken, K. McGlynn, R. Menke, K. Motohashi, T.E. Nichols, G. Ogbole, S. Piechnik, I. Propescu, J. Propescu, A.A. Samat, Z.B. Sanders, L. Sigfrid, M. Webster, L. Kingham, P. Klenerman, H. Lamlum, G. Carson, M. Taquet, L. Finnigan, L.C. Saunders, J.M. Wild, P.C. Calder, N. Huneke, G. Simons, D. Baldwin, S. Bain, L. Daines, E. Bright, P. Crisp, R. Dharmagunawardena, M. Stern, L. Bailey, A. Reddington, A. Wight, A. Ashish, J. Cooper, E. Robinson, A. Broadley, L. Barman, C. Brookes, K. Elliott, L. Griffiths, Z. Guy, K. Howard, D. Ionita, H. Redfearn, C. Sarginson, and A. Turnbull
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Medicine - Abstract
Background The long-term outcomes of COVID-19 hospitalisation in individuals with pre-existing airway diseases are unknown. Methods Adult participants hospitalised for confirmed or clinically suspected COVID-19 and discharged between 5 March 2020 and 31 March 2021 were recruited to the Post-hospitalisation COVID-19 (PHOSP-COVID) study. Participants attended research visits at 5 months and 1 year post discharge. Clinical characteristics, perceived recovery, burden of symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of individuals with pre-existing airway disease (i.e., asthma, COPD or bronchiectasis) were compared to the non-airways group. Results A total of 615 out of 2697 (22.8%) participants had a history of pre-existing airway diseases (72.0% diagnosed with asthma, 22.9% COPD and 5.1% bronchiectasis). At 1 year, the airways group participants were less likely to feel fully recovered (20.4% versus 33.2%, p
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- 2024
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48. Changes in sick notes associated with COVID-19 from 2020 to 2022: a cohort study in 24 million primary care patients in OpenSAFELY-TPP
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Andrew Steptoe, John Macleod, Daniel McCartney, Aziz Sheikh, Annie Herbert, Ben Goldacre, David Evans, Louise Jones, Sam Harper, Michael Green, Nicholas Timpson, John Wright, Liam Smeeth, Laurie A Tomlinson, Sinead Brophy, Kate Tilling, Andy Gibson, Paola Zaninotto, Stefan Neubauer, Yinghui Wei, Betty Raman, Chloe Park, Alun Hughes, Jonathan Sterne, Elena Lukaschuk, Stefan Piechnik, Angela Wood, Mark Green, Agnieszka Lemanska, Krishnan Bhaskaran, Kathryn Willan, Elsie Horne, Hannah Woodward, Ian Douglas, Andrew Wong, Andy Boyd, Harriet Forbes, Sinéad Langan, Nishi Chaturvedi, Tom Palmer, Kathryn Mansfield, Rachel Denholm, Emily Herrett, Kevin Wang, Bo Hou, Felix Greaves, Laura Sheard, Praveetha Patalay, Kishan Patel, Jessica Morley, Bang Zheng, Charlotte Booth, Spiros Denaxas, Brian MacKenna, Ruth E Costello, Jonathan Kennedy, William Hulme, Michael Parker, Geneviève Cezard, Syed A Shah, Amir Mehrkar, Peter Inglesby, Jonathan Cockburn, Laurie Tomlinson, John Parry, Frank Hester, Eoin McElroy, Amelia Green, Gillian Santorelli, Alisia Carnemolla, Richard Shaw, Samantha Ip, Venexia Walker, Emma L Turner, Richard Thomas, Rebecca Rhead, Archie Campbell, Ellen Thompson, Ruth Bowyer, Jane Maddock, Helen Curtis, Alex Walker, Olivia Hamilton, Rosie McEachan, Ellena Badrick, Stephen Smith, Richard Dobson, Stela McLachlan, Vanessa Ferreira, Vittal Katikireddi, Scott Walker, Lucy Teece, Simon Davy, John Tazare, Bettina Moltrecht, Theocharis Kromydas, Giorgio Di Gessa, Gareth Griffith, Viyaasan Mahalingasivam, Elizabeth Tunnicliffe, George Hickman, Tom Ward, Rebecca M Smith, Sam Parsons, Callum Stewart, Amos Folarin, Daniel Kopasker, Claire Steves, Louis Fisher, Sebastian C J Bacon, Lisa Hopcroft, Robin Y Park, Jon Massey, Iain Dillingham, Steven Maude, Wels Jacques, Linda Nab, Christopher Bates, Milan Wiedemann, Ruth Mitchell, Chao Fang, Fatima Almaghrabi, Jingmin Zhu, Lucy Bridges, Kurt Taylor, Colm Andrews, Jean Stafford, Nathan Cheetham, Sebastian CJ Bacon, Alicja Rapala, Robin Flaig, Andrea L Schaffer, Benjamin FC Butler-Cole, Liam Hart Ben Goldacre, Thomas O’Dwyer, Dylan Williams, Anika Knueppel, Katharine M Evans, Samantha Berman, Matthew Crane, Rebecca Whitehorn, Jacqui Oakley, Diane Foster, Kirsteen C Campbell, Alex Kwong, Ana Goncalves Soares, Renin Toms, Lizzie Huntley, Laura Fox, Rochelle Knight, Northstone Kate, Kanagaratnam Arun, Teri North, Marwa AL Arab, Jose IC Coronado, Arun S Karthikeyan, Ploubidis George, Bozena Wielgoszewska, Charis Bridger-Staatz, Paz Garcia, Maxim Freydin, Amy Roberts, Alex Walker Ben Goldacre, Jess Morley, Anoop Shah Richard Silverwood, Thomas Cowling, Kate Mansfield, Tiffany Yang, Tom Bolton, Alexia Sampri, Elena Rafeti, Robert Willans, Fiona Glen, Steve Sharp, Lee Hamill Howes, Lidia Nigrelli, Fintan McArdle, Chelsea Beckford, Yatharth Ranjan, Jd Carpentieri, Sarah Baz, John Kellas, Laura C Saunders, James M Wild, Peter Jezzard, Zeena-Britt Sanders, Lucy Finnigan, Milla Kibble, Francisco Perez-Reche, Dominik Piehlmaier, and Edward Parker
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives Long-term sickness absence from employment has negative consequences for the economy and can lead to widened health inequalities. Sick notes (also called ‘fit notes’) are issued by general practitioners when a person cannot work for health reasons for more than 7 days. We quantified the sick note rate in people with evidence of COVID-19 in 2020, 2021 and 2022, as an indication of the burden for people recovering from COVID-19.Design Cohort study.Setting With National Health Service (NHS) England approval, we used routine clinical data (primary care, hospital and COVID-19 testing records) within the OpenSAFELY-TPP database.Participants People 18–64 years with a recorded positive test or diagnosis of COVID-19 in 2020 (n=365 421), 2021 (n=1 206 555) or 2022 (n=1 321 313); general population matched in age, sex and region in 2019 (n=3 140 326), 2020 (n=3 439 534), 2021 (n=4 571 469) and 2022 (n=4 818 870); people hospitalised with pneumonia in 2019 (n=29 673).Primary outcome measure Receipt of a sick note in primary care.Results Among people with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test or COVID-19 diagnosis, the sick note rate was 4.88 per 100 person-months (95% CI 4.83 to 4.93) in 2020, 2.66 (95% CI 2.64 to 2.67) in 2021 and 1.73 (95% CI 1.72 to 1.73) in 2022. Compared with the age, sex and region-matched general population, the adjusted HR for receipt of a sick note over the entire follow-up period (up to 10 months) was 4.07 (95% CI 4.02 to 4.12) in 2020 decreasing to 1.57 (95% CI 1.56 to 1.58) in 2022. The HR was highest in the first 30 days postdiagnosis in all years. Among people hospitalised with COVID-19, after adjustment, the sick note rate was lower than in people hospitalised with pneumonia.Conclusions Given the under-recording of postacute COVID-19-related symptoms, these findings contribute a valuable perspective on the long-term effects of COVID-19. Despite likely underestimation of the sick note rate, sick notes were issued more frequently to people with COVID-19 compared with those without, even in an era when most people are vaccinated. Most sick notes occurred in the first 30 days postdiagnosis, but the increased risk several months postdiagnosis may provide further evidence of the long-term impact.
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- 2024
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49. Incorporating Foundational Evidence-Based Practice Concepts and Skills across an Athletic Training Education Program
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Jutte, Lisa S. and Walker, Stacy E.
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Objective: The purpose of this article is to provide an example of how to develop and implement an evidence-based practice (EBP) concepts and skills plan in an athletic training education program (ATEP). Background: Evidence-based practice is an integral part of medical practice today. As stated in the "Athletic Training Educational Competencies 4th edition", athletic training educators are expected to develop their students' abilities to engage in EBP. However, foundational concepts and skills are needed to effectively practice EBP. Description: To eliminate redundancy and better prepare our students for EBP, a plan based on incorporating foundational concepts and skills concepts in small, sequential doses in our ATEP was devised and implemented. Clinical Advantage(s): Exposure to foundational EBP concepts and skills is necessary for students to actively engage in EBP. Conclusion(s): Despite the challenges for both students and faculty, the plan ensures we expose our students to EBP concepts and skills, therefore better enabling them to engage in EBP. (Contains 5 tables.)
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- 2010
50. Learning Scientific and Medical Terminology with a Mnemonic Strategy Using an Illogical Association Technique
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Brahler, C. Jayne and Walker, Diane
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For students pursuing careers in medical fields, knowledge of technical and medical terminology is prerequisite to being able to solve problems in their respective disciplines and professions. The Dean Vaughn Medical Terminology 350 Total Retention System, also known as Medical Terminology 350 (25), is a mnemonic instructional and learning strategy that combines mental imagery and keyword mnemonic elaboration processes to help students recall the scientific meaning of Greek and Latin word parts. High school students in Anatomy and Physiology classes at a career technology center were divided into experimental (Medical Terminology 350), control (rote memorization), or combination (Medical Terminology 350 and rote memorization) groups and completed pre- and posttests of standardized word recall tests. Students in the Dean Vaughn Medical Terminology 350 Total Retention System group achieved significantly greater pre- to posttest word recall improvement compared with students in both the rote memorization (P less than or equal to 0.0001) and combined rote memorization and Medical Terminology 350 (P less than or equal to 0.05) groups. There appeared to be a dose-dependent response as the pre- to posttest gain in word recall scores increased as exposure to the treatment increased. (Contains 1 table and 5 figures.)
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- 2008
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