6 results on '"Brown, Hannah M"'
Search Results
2. A review of pregnancy apps freely available in the Google Play Store
- Author
-
Brown, Hannah M, Bucher, Tamara, Collins, Clare E, and Rollo, Megan E
- Published
- 2020
3. Fixed or Rotating Night Shift Work Undertaken by Women: Implications for Fertility and Miscarriage.
- Author
-
Fernandez, Renae C., Marino, Jennifer L., Varcoe, Tamara J., Davis, Scott, Moran, Lisa J., Rumbold, Alice R., Brown, Hannah M., Whitrow, Melissa J., Davies, Michael J., and Moore, Vivienne M.
- Subjects
NIGHT work ,WORKING hours ,WOMEN'S health ,MISCARRIAGE ,HUMAN fertility ,REPRODUCTIVE health - Abstract
This review summarizes the evidence concerning effects of night shift work on women's reproductive health, specifically difficulty in conceiving and miscarriage.We distinguish between fixed night shift and rotating night shift, as the population subgroups exposed, the social and biological mechanisms, and themagnitude of effects are likely to differ; of note, women working fixed night shift are known to have high tolerance for this schedule. We identified two relevant systematic reviews with meta-analyses and five additional studies. Night shift work may give rise to menstrual cycle disturbances, but effect sizes are imprecise. Endometriosis may be elevated in night shift workers, but evidence is only preliminary. Adequate data are lacking to assess associations between night shift work and infertility or time to pregnancy. The weight of evidence begins to point to working at night, whether in fixed or rotating shifts, as a risk factor for miscarriage. There are many methodological problems with this literature, with substantial variation in the definitions of night shift and schedule types making comparisons between studies difficult and pooling across studies questionable. Nevertheless, there appears to be grounds for caution and counselling where women have concerns about night shift work and their reproductive health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. ADAMTS proteases in fertility.
- Author
-
Russell, Darryl L., Brown, Hannah M., and Dunning, Kylie R.
- Subjects
- *
PROTEOLYTIC enzymes , *HUMAN fertility , *TISSUE remodeling , *GAMETES , *POLYCYSTIC ovary syndrome - Abstract
The reproductive organs are unique among adult organs in that they must undergo continual tissue remodelling as a key aspect of their normal function. The processes for persistent maturation and release of new gametes, as well as fertilisation, implantation, placentation, gestation and parturition involve cyclic development and regression of tissues that must continually regenerate to support fertility. The ADAMTS family of proteases has been shown to contribute to many aspects of the tissue morphogenesis required for development and function of each of the reproductive organs. Dysregulation or functional changes in ADAMTS family proteases have been associated with reproductive disorders such as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) and premature ovarian failure (POF). Likewise, proteolytic substrates of ADAMTS enzymes have also been linked to reproductive function. New insight into the roles of ADAMTS proteases has yielded a deeper understanding of the molecular mechanisms behind fertility with clinical potential to generate therapeutic targets to resolve infertility, develop biomarkers that predict dysfunction of the reproductive organs and potentially offer targets for development of non-hormonal male and female contraceptives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A review of pregnancy iPhone apps assessing their quality, inclusion of behaviour change techniques, and nutrition information.
- Author
-
Brown, Hannah M., Bucher, Tamara, Collins, Clare E., and Rollo, Megan E.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH , *HEALTH behavior , *MOTHERS , *NUTRITION , *NUTRITIONAL requirements , *PRENATAL care , *QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH funding , *SURVEYS , *INFORMATION resources , *USER-centered system design , *SMARTPHONES , *MOBILE apps , *PREGNANCY - Abstract
Smartphone apps for use in pregnancy are common and could influence lifestyle behaviours, but they have not been evaluated. This review aimed to assess the quality of iPhone pregnancy apps and whether they included behaviour change techniques (BCTs) and/or pregnancy‐specific nutrition information. A keyword search of the Australian iTunes app store was conducted. For inclusion, apps had to be available at no cost, in English, intended for use by pregnant women, and contain nutrition information. App quality was assessed using the Mobile Application Rating Scale (MARS). Absence or presence of BCTs was assessed using the CALO‐RE taxonomy, with type of nutrition information included also reported. The initial key word search identified 607 apps, with 51 iPhone apps included in final evaluation. Mean overall MARS quality rating score was 3.05 out of 5 (1 = inadequate; 5 = excellent). The functionality subscale scored highest (mean = 3.32), and aesthetics scored lowest (mean = 2.87). Out of a possible 40 BCTs, 11 were present across the apps with a median of three BCTs (range: 0–6) identified per app. The median number of pregnancy‐specific nutrition topics per app was three (range 0 to 7). Despite the availability of a large number of iPhone pregnancy apps, few are of high quality, with only a small number of BCTs used and limited inclusion of pregnancy‐specific nutrition information. It is important to be aware of limitations within current pregnancy apps before recommending usage during this key life stage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Fixed or rotating night shift work undertaken by women: implications for fertility and miscarriage
- Author
-
Renae C Fernandez, Scott Davis, Alice R. Rumbold, Jennifer L. Marino, Hannah M. Brown, Michael J. Davies, Vivienne M. Moore, Melissa J. Whitrow, Tamara J. Varcoe, Lisa J. Moran, Fernandez, Renae C, Marino, Jennifer L, Varcoe, Tamara J, Davis, Scott, Moran, Lisa J, Rumbold, Alice R, Brown, Hannah M, Whitrow, Melissa J, Davies, Michael J, and Moore, Vivienne M
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,miscarriage ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Fertility ,Workload ,Abortion ,Risk Assessment ,Miscarriage ,Shift work ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Work Schedule Tolerance ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,night shift work ,Life Style ,Reproductive health ,media_common ,Gynecology ,fertility ,education.field_of_study ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Reproduction ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,medicine.disease ,Abortion, Spontaneous ,Schedule (workplace) ,shift work ,Reproductive Medicine ,Female ,pregnancy ,business ,Infertility, Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography - Abstract
This review summarizes the evidence concerning effects of night shift work on women's reproductive health, specifically difficulty in conceiving and miscarriage. We distinguish between fixed night shift and rotating night shift, as the population subgroups exposed, the social and biological mechanisms, and the magnitude of effects are likely to differ; of note, women working fixed night shift are known to have high tolerance for this schedule. We identified two relevant systematic reviews with meta-analyses and five additional studies. Night shift work may give rise to menstrual cycle disturbances, but effect sizes are imprecise. Endometriosis may be elevated in night shift workers, but evidence is only preliminary. Adequate data are lacking to assess associations between night shift work and infertility or time to pregnancy. The weight of evidence begins to point to working at night, whether in fixed or rotating shifts, as a risk factor for miscarriage. There are many methodological problems with this literature, with substantial variation in the definitions of night shift and schedule types making comparisons between studies difficult and pooling across studies questionable. Nevertheless, there appears to be grounds for caution and counselling where women have concerns about night shift work and their reproductive health. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2016
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