30 results
Search Results
2. Geographical distribution of publications in Human Reproduction and Fertility and Sterility in the 1990s.
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Kremer, Jan A. M., Braat, Didi D. M., Evers, Johannes L. H., Kremer, J A, Braat, D D, and Evers, J L
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ECONOMIC statistics ,HUMAN reproduction ,MEDLINE ,NEWSLETTERS ,POPULATION density ,POPULATION geography ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Curious about the geographical distribution of publications in reproductive medicine, we compared the numbers of publications in Human Reproduction (HR) and Fertility and Sterility (F&S). The annual number of publications from the individual countries was obtained by searching the Medline database using the internet provider PubMed. The data were analysed and normalized to population size, gross domestic product (GDP) and total number of Medline publications. The 8511 publications of both journals in the 1990s came from 56 countries. The number of publications per year was increasing in HR and remained constant in F&S. In absolute numbers, the UK produced the most publications in HR (21%) and the USA in F&S (45%) as well as in both journals together (28%). Relatively, Israel was the most productive country per million inhabitants (8.4 +/- 2.1 publications/year), per billion US dollars GDP (0.85 +/- 0.21 publications/year) and per 1000 Medline publications (15 +/- 4 publications/year). Europe was the most productive world region in absolute numbers (54%) and Australia/New Zealand in relative numbers per million inhabitants and per 1000 billion US dollars GDP. Almost 87% of all publications in HR and F&S came from the 18 countries with a GDP per capita of >10 000 US dollars. In conclusion, the geographical distribution of publications in HR and F&S follows the pattern of the distribution of publications in general biomedical research. Most publications come from affluent countries. Although the USA and the UK appear to be the most productive countries in absolute numbers, smaller affluent countries like Israel and Belgium are more productive when the numbers are normalized to population or GDP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
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3. Comparison of radiology residency programs in ten countries.
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Willatt, J. M. G. and Mason, A. C.
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RADIOLOGY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESIDENTS (Medicine) ,TRAINING ,LEARNING ,QUALITY assurance ,INDUSTRIAL management ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,QUALITY assurance standards ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERNSHIP programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,PROGRAMMED instruction ,RESEARCH ,SCHOLARSHIPS ,ETHNOLOGY research ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
The purpose of our study was to compare various aspects of radiology training schemes in ten countries. A questionnaire was sent to senior residents in the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Italy, Egypt, India, Malaysia and Greece. The questions concerned length of training, required pre-training experience, the organization of the training scheme, teaching, resources, stages at which residents can independently perform and report examinations, fellowships, and progression to jobs. A wide variety of training, ranging from highly scheduled programs with detailed aims and objectives, to self-learning occurs across the world. Examinations and assessments are also variable. There are lessons to be learned from varying practices; more exchanges of ideas should be encouraged. In view of the "internationalization" of radiology services and the variation in training styles an international qualification for quality assurance purposes may be desirable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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4. Comparative analysis of alcohol control policies in 30 countries.
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Brand, Donald A., Saisana, Michaela, Rynn, Lisa A., Pennoni, Fulvia, and Lowenfels, Albert B.
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ALCOHOL drinking ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PUBLIC health ,REGRESSION analysis ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention ,MEDICAL policy laws ,ALCOHOLIC beverages ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,WORLD health ,EVALUATION research ,CROSS-sectional method ,ALCOHOL-induced disorders ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: Alcohol consumption causes an estimated 4% of the global disease burden, prompting governments to impose regulations to mitigate the adverse effects of alcohol. To assist public health leaders and policymakers, the authors developed a composite indicator-the Alcohol Policy Index-to gauge the strength of a country's alcohol control policies.Methods and Findings: The Index generates a score based on policies from five regulatory domains-physical availability of alcohol, drinking context, alcohol prices, alcohol advertising, and operation of motor vehicles. The Index was applied to the 30 countries that compose the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and regression analysis was used to examine the relationship between policy score and per capita alcohol consumption. Countries attained a median score of 42.4 of a possible 100 points, ranging from 14.5 (Luxembourg) to 67.3 (Norway). The analysis revealed a strong negative correlation between score and consumption (r = -0.57; p = 0.001): a 10-point increase in the score was associated with a one-liter decrease in absolute alcohol consumption per person per year (95% confidence interval, 0.4-1.5 l). A sensitivity analysis demonstrated the robustness of the Index by showing that countries' scores and ranks remained relatively stable in response to variations in methodological assumptions.Conclusions: The strength of alcohol control policies, as estimated by the Alcohol Policy Index, varied widely among 30 countries located in Europe, Asia, North America, and Australia. The study revealed a clear inverse relationship between policy strength and alcohol consumption. The Index provides a straightforward tool for facilitating international comparisons. In addition, it can help policymakers review and strengthen existing regulations aimed at minimizing alcohol-related harm and estimate the likely impact of policy changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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5. DART: a new missile in Australia's e-research strategy.
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Moira Paterson, David Lindsay, Ann Monotti, and Anne Chin
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ELECTRONIC reference sources , *ELECTRONIC information resources , *RESEARCH , *REFERENCE sources - Abstract
Purpose - The aim of this paper is to provide a brief overview of the evolution of a new e-research paradigm and to outline key projects and developments in Europe, North America, Canada and Australia. The article also provides a detailed summary of the Dataset Acquisition, Accessibility and Annotation e-Research Technology (DART) project. Design/methodology/approach - A review of relevant government reports, documents and general literature was conducted. Findings - Projects currently being conducted in Europe, the USA, Canada and Australia are part of an international movement that aims to use modern ICTs to enhance e-research. The DART project is a significant part of this movement as it has adopted a "whole process" approach to e-research, and provides a platform for the examination of the technical, legal and policy issues that arise in the new e-research environment. Originality/value - Provides an overview of current projects that concern the development of e-research, with a particular focus on Australian research and the DART project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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6. MPP PROGRAMS EMERGING AROUND THE WORLD.
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Geva-May, Iris, Nasi, Greta, Turrini, Alex, and Scott, Claudia
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RESEARCH ,PUBLIC administration ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
The article presents a discussion relating to public policy and management programs in Canada, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, which are compared with similar programs in the U.S. It was inferred that the comparing programs raises important questions as to whether developments within countries and across countries have been successful in creating education and training offerings that are fit for purpose. According to the author, the study of public policy programs indicates that there are several challenges ahead in terms of making good decisions on the form and content of programs that would add value to governments and citizens. Furthermore, the complexity of policy environments has major implications for the design and delivery of education and training programs in policy analysis.
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- 2008
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7. PUBLIC POLICY EDUCATION GOES GLOBAL: A MULTI-DIMENSIONAL CHALLENGE.
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Fritzen, Scott A.
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RESEARCH ,PUBLIC institutions ,PUBLIC administration ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,SURVEYS - Abstract
The article examines several papers relating to public policy schools and programs around the world. According to the author, the paper focused on six emerging programs that had representatives present, including four that usefully supplemented the conference paper's survey of broad trends in Canada, Europe, Australia and New Zealand. In addition, the programs examined have complex relationship with the demand side of policy education. Furthermore, a table showing a descriptive overview of some of the programs discussed is offered.
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- 2008
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8. A European perspective on Digital Earth.
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Annoni, Alessandro, Craglia, Max, Ehlers, M., Georgiadou, Y., Giacomelli, A., Konecny, M., Ostlaender, N., Remetey-Fülöpp, G., Rhind, D., Smits, P., and Schade, S.
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RESEARCH ,LANDSCAPES ,NATURE - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to contribute to the definition of a European perspective on Digital Earth (DE), identify some actions that can contribute to raise the awareness of DE in the European context and thus strengthen the European contribution to the International Society for Digital Earth (ISDE). The paper identifies opportunities and synergies with the current policy priorities in Europe (Europe 2020, Innovation Union and Digital Agenda) and highlights a number of key areas to advance the development of DE from a European perspective: (1) integrating scientific research into DE; (2) exploiting the Observation Web with human-centred sensing; and (3) governance, including the establishment of stronger linkages across the European landscape of funding streams and initiatives. The paper is offered also as a contribution to the development of this new vision of DE to be presented at the next International DE Conference in Perth, Australia, in August 2011. The global recognition of this new vision will then reinforce the European component and build a positive feedback loop for the further implementation of DE across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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9. Frailty and Fracture, Disability, and Falls: A Multiple Country Study From the Global Longitudinal Study of Osteoporosis in Women.
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Tom, Sarah E., Adachi, Jonathan D., Anderson, Frederick A., Boonen, Steven, Chapurlat, Roland D., Compston, Juliet E., Cooper, Cyrus, Gehlbach, Stephen H., Greenspan, Susan L., Hooven, Frederick H., Nieves, Jeri W., Pfeilschifter, Johannes, Roux, Christian, Silverman, Stuart, Wyman, Allison, and LaCroix, Andrea Z.
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RISK factors of fractures ,RISK factors of falling down ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,FRAIL elderly ,HEALTH surveys ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,POPULATION geography ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALES (Weighing instruments) ,STATISTICS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objectives To test whether women aged 55 and older with increasing evidence of a frailty phenotype would have greater risk of fractures, disability, and recurrent falls than women who were not frail, across geographic areas ( Australia, Europe, and North America) and age groups. Design Multinational, longitudinal, observational cohort study. Setting Global Longitudinal Study of Osteoporosis in Women ( GLOW). Participants Women (N = 48,636) aged 55 and older enrolled at sites in Australia, Europe, and North America. Measurements Components of frailty (slowness and weakness, poor endurance and exhaustion, physical activity, and unintentional weight loss) at baseline and report of fracture, disability, and recurrent falls at 1 year of follow-up were investigated. Women also reported health and demographic characteristics at baseline. Results Women younger than 75 from the United States were more likely to be prefrail and frail than those from Australia, Canada, and Europe. The distribution of frailty was similar according to region for women aged 75 and older. Odds ratios from multivariable models for frailty versus nonfrailty were 1.23 (95% confidence interval ( CI) = 1.07-1.42) for fracture, 2.29 (95% CI = 2.09-2.51) for disability, and 1.68 (95% CI = 1.54-1.83) for recurrent falls. The associations for prefrailty versus nonfrailty were weaker but still indicated statistically significantly greater risk of each outcome. Overall, associations between frailty and each outcome were similar across age and geographic region. Conclusion Greater evidence of a frailty phenotype is associated with greater risk of fracture, disability, and falls in women aged 55 and older in 10 countries, with similar patterns across age and geographic region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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10. The International Costs and Utilities Related to Osteoporotic Fractures Study (ICUROS)-quality of life during the first 4 months after fracture.
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Borgström, F., Lekander, I., Ivergård, M., Ström, O., Svedbom, A., Alekna, V., Bianchi, M., Clark, P., Curiel, M., Dimai, H., Jürisson, M., Kallikorm, R., Lesnyak, O., Mccloskey, E., Nassonov, E., Sanders, K., Silverman, S., Tamulaitiene, M., Thomas, T., and Tosteson, A.
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RISK factors of fractures ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,BONE fractures ,PATIENT aftercare ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,COST analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Summary: The quality of life during the first 4 months after fracture was estimated in 2,808 fractured patients from 11 countries. Analysis showed that there were significant differences in the quality of life (QoL) loss between countries. Other factors such as QoL prior fracture and hospitalisation also had a significant impact on the QoL loss. Introduction: The International Costs and Utilities Related to Osteoporotic Fractures Study (ICUROS) was initiated in 2007 with the objective of estimating costs and quality of life related to fractures in several countries worldwide. The ICUROS is ongoing and enrols patients in 11 countries (Australia, Austria, Estonia, France, Italy, Lithuania, Mexico, Russia, Spain, UK and the USA). The objective of this paper is to outline the study design of ICUROS and present results regarding the QoL (measured using the EQ-5D) during the first 4 months after fracture based on the patients that have been thus far enrolled ICUROS. Methods: ICUROS uses a prospective study design where data (costs and quality of life) are collected in four phases over 18 months after fracture. All countries use the same core case report forms. Quality of life was collected using the EQ-5D instrument and a time trade-off questionnaire. Results: The total sample for the analysis was 2,808 patients (1,273 hip, 987 distal forearm and 548 vertebral fracture). For all fracture types and countries, the QoL was reduced significantly after fracture compared to pre-fracture QoL. A regression analysis showed that there were significant differences in the QoL loss between countries. Also, a higher level of QoL prior to the fracture significantly increased the QoL loss and patients who were hospitalised for their fracture also had a significantly higher loss compared to those who were not. Conclusions: The findings in this study indicate that there appear to be important variations in the QoL decrements related to fracture between countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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11. Psychiatric comorbidity in treatment-seeking substance use disorder patients with and without attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: results of the IASP study.
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Emmerik‐van Oortmerssen, Katelijne, Glind, Geurt, Koeter, Maarten W. J., Allsop, Steve, Auriacombe, Marc, Barta, Csaba, Bu, Eli Torild H., Burren, Yuliya, Carpentier, Pieter‐Jan, Carruthers, Susan, Casas, Miguel, Demetrovics, Zsolt, Dom, Geert, Faraone, Stephen V., Fatseas, Melina, Franck, Johan, Johnson, Brian, Kapitány‐Fövény, Máté, Kaye, Sharlene, and Konstenius, Maija
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ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,COMORBIDITY ,DATA analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL models ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Aims To determine comorbidity patterns in treatment-seeking substance use disorder ( SUD) patients with and without adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ( ADHD), with an emphasis on subgroups defined by ADHD subtype, taking into account differences related to gender and primary substance of abuse. Design Data were obtained from the cross-sectional International ADHD in Substance use disorder Prevalence ( IASP) study. Setting Forty-seven centres of SUD treatment in 10 countries. Participants A total of 1205 treatment-seeking SUD patients. Measurements Structured diagnostic assessments were used for all disorders: presence of ADHD was assessed with the Conners' Adult ADHD Diagnostic Interview for DSM-IV ( CAADID), the presence of antisocial personality disorder ( ASPD), major depression ( MD) and (hypo)manic episode ( HME) was assessed with the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview- Plus ( MINI Plus), and the presence of borderline personality disorder ( BPD) was assessed with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis II ( SCID II). Findings The prevalence of DSM-IV adult ADHD in this SUD sample was 13.9%. ASPD [odds ratio ( OR) = 2.8, 95% confidence interval ( CI) = 1.8-4.2], BPD ( OR = 7.0, 95% CI = 3.1-15.6 for alcohol; OR = 3.4, 95% CI = 1.8-6.4 for drugs), MD in patients with alcohol as primary substance of abuse ( OR = 4.1, 95% CI = 2.1-7.8) and HME ( OR = 4.3, 95% CI = 2.1-8.7) were all more prevalent in ADHD
+ compared with ADHD− patients ( P < 0.001). These results also indicate increased levels of BPD and MD for alcohol compared with drugs as primary substance of abuse. Comorbidity patterns differed between ADHD subtypes with increased MD in the inattentive and combined subtype ( P < 0.01), increased HME and ASPD in the hyperactive/impulsive ( P < 0.01) and combined subtypes ( P < 0.001) and increased BPD in all subtypes ( P < 0.001) compared with SUD patients without ADHD. Seventy-five per cent of ADHD patients had at least one additional comorbid disorder compared with 37% of SUD patients without ADHD. Conclusions Treatment-seeking substance use disorder patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder are at a very high risk for additional externalizing disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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12. Clinical Benefit Assessment of Vismodegib Therapy in Patients With Advanced Basal Cell Carcinoma.
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Dreno, Brigitte, Basset‐Seguin, Nicole, Caro, Ivor, Yue, Huibin, and Schadendorf, Dirk
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ANTINEOPLASTIC agents ,BASAL cell carcinoma ,CLINICAL trials ,EXPERTISE ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Purpose. Vismodegib was approved for the treatment of advanced basal cell carcinoma (aBCC) based on the pivotal ERIVANCE BCC study. The primary endpoint (objective response rate [ORR]) was assessed 9 months after the last patient was enrolled. To confirm the clinical benefit of vismodegib, an additional analysis was performed 12 months after the primary analysis. Materials and Methods. ERIVANCE BCC was a multicenter, nonrandomized, two-cohort study of 104 patients with histologically confirmed aBCC. Patients received 150 mg oral vismodegib daily until disease progression, intolerable toxicity, or withdrawal. An independent review panel comprising three expert clinicians reviewed patient photographs individually and as a consensus panel to evaluate baseline disease severity and clinical benefit after vismodegib treatment in 71 patients with locally advanced BCC (laBCC). Results. Sixty-three patients were efficacy evaluable; baseline and postprogression photographs for 61 were available for review. Baseline disease severity was judged as 5 or 4 (very severe or moderately severe) in 71.4%. Clinical benefit was observed in 76.2% (significant: 65.1%; some: 11.1%). Interpanelist agreement (maximum difference #1 point among panelists' scores in 65.1% and 87.3% of patients for clinical benefit and baseline disease severity, respectively) and correlation between individual and panel reviews were strong. Clinical benefit scores showed good concordance with the protocol-specified ORR obtained by an independent review facility and with investigator-assessed response. Conclusion. Clinical benefit assessed by independent review based on expert clinical judgment provides strong evidence that treatment with vismodegib results in clinically meaningful and durable responses in patients with laBCC. The Oncologist 2014;19:790-796 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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13. Building research initiative group: chronic illness management and adherence in transplantation ( BRIGHT) study: study protocol.
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Berben, Lut, Denhaerynck, Kris, Dobbels, Fabienne, Engberg, Sandra, Vanhaecke, Johan, Crespo‐Leiro, Maria G., Russell, Cynthia L., and De Geest, Sabina
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CHRONIC disease treatment ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEART transplantation ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSION ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents ,HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PATIENT compliance ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,HEALTH self-care ,SURVEYS ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,DISEASE management ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SOCIAL support ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Aim This article describes the rationale, design and methodology of the Building research initiative group: chronic illness management and ad herence in transplantation ( BRIGHT) study. This study of heart transplant patients will: (1) describe practice patterns relating to chronic illness management; (2) assess prevalence and variability of non-adherence to the treatment regimen; (3) determine the multi-level factors related to immunosuppressive medication non-adherence. Background The unaltered long-term prognosis after heart transplantation underscores an urgent need to identify and improve factors related to survival outcomes. The healthcare system (e.g. level of chronic illness management implemented) and patient self-management are major drivers of outcome improvement. Design The study uses a survey design in 40 heart transplant centres covering 11 countries in four continents. Methods Theoretical frameworks informed variable selection, which are measured by established and investigator-developed instruments. Heart transplant recipients, outpatient clinicians and programme's directors complete a survey. A staged convenience sampling strategy is implemented in heart transplant centres, countries and continents. Depending on the centre's size, a random sample of 25-60 patients is selected (N estimated 1680 heart transplant recipients). Five randomly selected clinicians and the medical director from each centre will be invited to participate. Conclusion This is the first multi-centre, multi-continental study examining healthcare system and heart transplant centres chronic illness management practice patterns and potential correlates of immunosuppressive medication non-adherence. The knowledge gained will inform clinicians, researchers and healthcare policy makers at which level(s) interventions need to be implemented to improve long-term outcomes for transplant recipients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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14. MRI Assessment of Ablation-Induced Scarring in Atrial Fibrillation: Analysis from the DECAAF Study.
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AKOUM, NAZEM, WILBER, DAVID, HINDRICKS, GERHARD, JAIS, PIERRE, CATES, JOSH, MARCHLINSKI, FRANCIS, KHOLMOVSKI, EUGENE, BURGON, NATHAN, HU, NAN, MONT, LLUIS, DENEKE, THOMAS, DUYTSCHAEVER, MATTIAS, NEUMANN, THOMAS, MANSOUR, MOUSSA, MAHNKOPF, CHRISTIAN, HUTCHINSON, MATHEW, HERWEG, BENGT, DAOUD, EMILE, WISSNER, ERIK, and BRACHMANN, JOHANNES
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ATRIAL fibrillation ,CATHETER ablation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MEDICAL cooperation ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,SCARS ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LEFT heart atrium - Abstract
MRI Assessment of Ablation-Induced Scarring in Atrial Fibrillation Background There is limited knowledge on the extent and location of scarring that results from catheter ablation and its role in suppressing atrial fibrillation (AF). We examined the effect of atrial fibrosis and ablation-induced scarring on catheter ablation outcomes in AF. Methods We conducted a prospective multicenter study that enrolled 329 AF patients presenting for catheter ablation. Delayed enhancement magnetic resonance imaging (DE-MRI) of the left atrium was obtained preablation. Scarring was evaluated in 177 patients with a DE-MRI scan obtained 90 days postablation. We evaluated residual fibrosis, defined as preablation atrial fibrosis not covered by ablation scar. The primary outcome was freedom from recurrent atrial arrhythmia. Results In the analysis cohort of 177 patients, preablation fibrosis was 18.7 ± 8.7% of the atrial wall. Ablation aimed at pulmonary vein (PV) isolation was performed in 163 patients (92.1%). Ablation-induced scar averaged 10.6 ± 4.4% of the atrial wall. Scarring completely encircled all 4 PVs only in 12 patients (7.3%). Residual fibrosis was calculated at 15.8 ± 8.0%. At 325 days follow-up, 35% of patients experienced recurrent arrhythmia. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards models demonstrated that baseline atrial fibrosis (HR and 95% CIs) (1.09 [1.06-1.12], P < 0.001) and residual fibrosis (1.09 [1.05-1.13], P < 0.001) were associated with atrial arrhythmia recurrence, while PV encirclement and overall scar were not. Conclusions Catheter ablation of AF targeting PVs rarely achieves permanent encircling scar in the intended areas. Overall atrial fibrosis present at baseline and residual fibrosis uncovered by ablation scar are associated with recurrent arrhythmia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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15. How should health service organizations respond to diversity? A content analysis of six approaches.
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Seeleman, Conny, Essink-Bot, Marie-Louise, Stronks, Karien, and Ingleby, David
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MEDICAL care , *DIVERSITY in organizations , *CONTENT analysis , *CULTURAL competence , *OPERATIONAL definitions , *CLASSIFICATION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *MEDICAL care standards , *HEALTH insurance statistics , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *CLINICAL competence , *CORPORATE culture , *DECISION making , *ETHNIC groups , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH status indicators , *MANAGEMENT , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL personnel , *CULTURAL pluralism , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *PATIENT participation , *PATIENTS' rights , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Health care organizations need to be responsive to the needs of increasingly diverse patient populations. We compared the contents of six publicly available approaches to organizational responsiveness to diversity. The central questions addressed in this paper are: what are the most consistently recommended issues for health care organizations to address in order to be responsive to the needs of diverse groups that differ from the majority population? How much consensus is there between various approaches?Methods: We purposively sampled six approaches from the US, Australia and Europe and used qualitative textual analysis to categorize the content of each approach into domains (conceptually distinct topic areas) and, within each domain, into dimensions (operationalizations). The resulting classification framework was used for comparative analysis of the content of the six approaches.Results: We identified seven domains that were represented in most or all approaches: organizational commitment, empirical evidence on inequalities and needs, a competent and diverse workforce, ensuring access for all users, ensuring responsiveness in care provision, fostering patient and community participation, and actively promoting responsiveness. Variations in the operationalization of these domains related to different scopes, contexts and types of diversity. For example, approaches that focus on ethnic diversity mostly provide recommendations to handle cultural and language differences; approaches that take an intersectional approach and broaden their target population to vulnerable groups in a more general sense also pay attention to factors such as socio-economic status and gender.Conclusions: Despite differences in labeling, there is a broad consensus about what health care organizations need to do in order to be responsive to patient diversity. This opens the way to full scale implementation of organizational responsiveness in healthcare and structured evaluation of its effectiveness in improving patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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16. Does deterioration in mental health after smoking cessation predict relapse to smoking?
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Taylor, Gemma, McNeill, Ann, and Aveyard, Paul
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MENTAL health ,SMOKING cessation ,SMOKING ,HEALTH ,DISEASE relapse ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SECONDARY analysis ,SMOKING & psychology ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH surveys ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL illness ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: It is possible that some people who quit smoking experience improved mental health after cessation and therefore remain abstinent, whereas other people who quit may experience worse mental health after cessation and therefore be more likely to relapse to smoking. Thus, in this study we aimed to examine the association between an enduring change in mental health following the cessation period and future risk of relapse.Methods: A secondary analysis of prospective data pooled from five placebo-controlled randomised trials for smoking reduction conducted in Europe, USA and Australia. Change in mental health (SF-36, scored 0-100) was measured from baseline to four months for those who were biologically-validated as point-prevalence abstainers at four month follow-up. Thereafter we assessed whether relapse to smoking by 12 months was more likely in those whose mental health had worsened between baseline and four months compared with those who saw no change or an improvement.Results: After adjustment for baseline mental health and other major covariates, there was no greater tendency to relapse at 12 months for those whose mental health worsened after cessation compared with those who had no change or an improvement. The odds ratio and 95% confidence interval was 1.01 (0.97 to 1.05).Conclusions: People whose mental health worsens after smoking cessation are at no greater risk of subsequent relapse to smoking than those whose mental health stays the same or improves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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17. Treatment of nausea in pregnancy: a cross-sectional multinational web-based study of pregnant women and new mothers.
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Heitmann, Kristine, Holst, Lone, Lupattelli, Angela, Maltepe, Caroline, and Nordeng, Hedvig
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MORNING sickness treatment ,PREGNANT women ,MOTHERS ,HERBAL medicine ,CROSS-sectional method ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,BIOTHERAPY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,NAUSEA ,PREGNANCY complications ,RESEARCH ,SELF-evaluation ,COMORBIDITY ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: The factors related to the treatment of nausea during pregnancy have not yet been investigated in several countries simultaneously. The present study aimed to describe differences in self-reported nausea during pregnancy and the patterns of use for both conventional and herbal medicines across countries. The factors related to nausea and its treatment and the relationships between different self-reported co-morbidities and nausea were also investigated.Methods: This cross-sectional study used data collected by a web-based questionnaire distributed between October 2011 and February 2012 in several countries within five regions: Western, Northern, and Eastern Europe, North America, and Australia. Women who were pregnant or had a child less than one year old were eligible to participate.Results: A total of 9113 women were included in the study, whereof 6701 (73.5%) had experienced nausea during pregnancy. Among respondents with nausea, conventional medicines were used by 1201 (17.9%) women and herbal medicines by 556 (8.3%) women. The extent of self-reported nausea and its treatment varied by country. Education, working status, and folic acid use were significantly associated with the use of conventional medicines against nausea. Respondents who had nausea also had a high burden of co-morbidity.Conclusion: The prevalence of nausea was high across all participating countries but its treatment varied, possibly due to cultural differences and differences in attitudes towards medicines. A high degree of co-morbidity was found among respondents with nausea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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18. Cross-national variations in reported discrimination among people treated for major depression worldwide: the ASPEN/INDIGO international study.
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Lasalvia, Antonio, Bortel, Tine Van, Bonetto, Chiara, Jayaram, Geetha, Weeghel, Jaap van, Zoppei, Silvia, Knifton, Lee, Quinn, Neil, Wahlbeck, Kristian, Cristofalo, Doriana, Lanfredi, Mariangela, Sartorius, Norman, Thornicroft, Graham, Van Bortel, Tine, van Weeghel, Jaap, and ASPEN/INDIGO Study Group
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MENTAL depression ,THERAPEUTICS ,CROSS-cultural differences ,DISCRIMINATION against people with mental illness ,HUMAN Development Index ,MULTILEVEL models ,POISSON processes ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL status examination ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,STEREOTYPES ,SOCIAL stigma ,ETHNOLOGY research ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION research ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: No study has so far explored differences in discrimination reported by people with major depressive disorder (MDD) across countries and cultures.Aims: To (a) compare reported discrimination across different countries, and (b) explore the relative weight of individual and contextual factors in explaining levels of reported discrimination in people with MDD.Method: Cross-sectional multisite international survey (34 countries worldwide) of 1082 people with MDD. Experienced and anticipated discrimination were assessed by the Discrimination and Stigma Scale (DISC). Countries were classified according to their rating on the Human Development Index (HDI). Multilevel negative binomial and Poisson models were used.Results: People living in 'very high HDI' countries reported higher discrimination than those in 'medium/low HDI' countries. Variation in reported discrimination across countries was only partially explained by individual-level variables. The contribution of country-level variables was significant for anticipated discrimination only.Conclusions: Contextual factors play an important role in anticipated discrimination. Country-specific interventions should be implemented to prevent discrimination towards people with MDD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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19. Is there continued evidence for an association between abacavir usage and myocardial infarction risk in individuals with HIV? A cohort collaboration.
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Sabin, Caroline A., Reiss, Peter, Ryom, Lene, Phillips, Andrew N., Weber, Rainer, Law, Matthew, Fontas, Eric, Mocroft, Amanda, de Wit, Stephane, Smith, Colette, Dabis, Francois, d'Arminio Monforte, Antonella, El-Sadr, Wafaa, Lundgren, Jens D., and D:A:D Study Group
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ABACAVIR ,MYOCARDIAL infarction risk factors ,NUCLEOSIDE reverse transcriptase inhibitors ,MYOCARDIAL infarction treatment ,MEDICAL care of HIV-positive persons ,THERAPEUTICS ,ANTI-HIV agents ,HIV infection epidemiology ,DEOXYRIBONUCLEOSIDES ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,PHARMACOLOGY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK assessment ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background: In March 2008, the D:A:D study published results demonstrating an increased risk of myocardial infarction (MI) for patients on abacavir (ABC). We describe changes to the use of ABC since this date, and investigate changes to the association between ABC and MI with subsequent follow-up.Methods: A total of 49,717 D:A:D participants were followed from study entry until the first of an MI, death, 1 February 2013 or 6 months after last visit. Associations between a person's 10-year cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and the likelihood of initiating or discontinuing ABC were assessed using multivariable logistic/Poisson regression. Poisson regression was used to assess the association between current ABC use and MI risk, adjusting for potential confounders, and a test of interaction was performed to assess whether the association had changed in the post-March 2008 period.Results: Use of ABC increased from 10 % of the cohort in 2000 to 20 % in 2008, before stabilising at 18-19 %. Increases in use pre-March 2008, and subsequent decreases, were greatest in those at moderate and high CVD risk. Post-March 2008, those on ABC at moderate/high CVD risk were more likely to discontinue ABC than those at low/unknown CVD risk, regardless of viral load (≤1,000 copies/ml: relative rate 1.49 [95 % confidence interval 1.34-1.65]; >1,000 copies/ml: 1.23 [1.02-1.48]); no such associations were seen pre-March 2008. There was some evidence that antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naïve persons at moderate/high CVD risk post-March 2008 were less likely to initiate ABC than those at low/unknown CVD risk (odds ratio 0.74 [0.48-1.13]). By 1 February 2013, 941 MI events had occurred in 367,559 person-years. Current ABC use was associated with a 98 % increase in MI rate (RR 1.98 [1.72-2.29]) with no difference in the pre- (1.97 [1.68-2.33]) or post- (1.97 [1.43-2.72]) March 2008 periods (interaction P = 0.74).Conclusions: Despite a reduction in the channelling of ABC for patients at higher CVD risk since 2008, we continue to observe an association between ABC use and MI risk. Whilst confounding cannot be fully ruled out, this further diminishes channelling bias as an explanation for our findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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20. Paediatric International Nursing Study: using person-centred key performance indicators to benchmark children's services.
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McCance, Tanya, Wilson, Val, and Kornman, Kelly
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NURSING audit , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *BENCHMARKING (Management) , *CHILDREN'S hospitals , *CLINICAL medicine , *FAMILY medicine , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL records , *NURSING , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PEDIATRIC nursing , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *TRANSLATIONS , *QUANTITATIVE research , *EVALUATION research , *KEY performance indicators (Management) , *PARENT attitudes , *PATIENT-centered care , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aims and objectives The aim of the Paediatric International Nursing Study was to explore the utility of key performance indicators in developing person-centred practice across a range of services provided to sick children. The objective addressed in this paper was evaluating the use of these indicators to benchmark services internationally. Background This study builds on primary research, which produced indicators that were considered novel both in terms of their positive orientation and use in generating data that privileges the patient voice. This study extends this research through wider testing on an international platform within paediatrics. Design The overall methodological approach was a realistic evaluation used to evaluate the implementation of the key performance indicators, which combined an integrated development and evaluation methodology. Methods The study involved children's wards/hospitals in Australia (six sites across three states) and Europe (seven sites across four countries). Qualitative and quantitative methods were used during the implementation process, however, this paper reports the quantitative data only, which used survey, observations and documentary review. Results The findings demonstrate the quality of care being delivered to children and their families across different international sites. The benchmarking does, however, highlight some differences between paediatric and general hospitals, and between the different key performance indicators across all the sites. Conclusions The findings support the use of the key performance indicators as a novel method to benchmark services internationally. Whilst the data collected across 20 paediatric sites suggest services are more similar than different, benchmarking illuminates variations that encourage a critical dialogue about what works and why. Relevance to clinical practice The transferability of the key performance indicators and measurement framework across different settings has significant implications for practice. The findings offer an approach to benchmarking and celebrating the successes within practice, while learning from partners across the globe in further developing person-centred cultures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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21. Health state utility instruments compared: inquiring into nonlinearity across EQ-5D-5L, SF-6D, HUI-3 and 15D.
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Gamst-Klaussen, Thor, Chen, Gang, Lamu, Admassu, Olsen, Jan, Lamu, Admassu N, and Olsen, Jan Abel
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HEALTH status indicators , *NONLINEAR theories , *MEDICAL economics , *HEALTH care intervention (Social services) , *SEVERITY of illness index , *QUANTILE regression , *CHRONIC diseases & psychology , *CHRONIC diseases , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *QUALITY-adjusted life years ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Purpose: Different health state utility (HSU) instruments produce different utilities for the same individuals, thereby compromising the intended comparability of economic evaluations of health care interventions. When developing crosswalks, previous studies have indicated nonlinear relationships. This paper inquires into the degree of nonlinearity across the four most widely used HSU-instruments and proposes exchange rates that differ depending on the severity levels of the health state utility scale.Methods: Overall, 7933 respondents from six countries, 1760 in a non-diagnosed healthy group and 6173 in seven disease groups, reported their health states using four different instruments: EQ-5D-5L, SF-6D, HUI-3 and 15D. Quantile regressions investigate the degree of nonlinear relationships between these instruments. To compare the instruments across different disease severities, we split the health state utility scale into utility intervals with 0.2 successive decrements in utility starting from perfect health at 1.00. Exchange rates (ERs) are calculated as the mean utility difference between two utility intervals on one HSU-instrument divided by the difference in mean utility on another HSU-instrument.Results: Quantile regressions reveal significant nonlinear relationships across all four HSU-instruments. The degrees of nonlinearities differ, with a maximum degree of difference in the coefficients along the health state utility scale of 3.34 when SF-6D is regressed on EQ-5D. At the lower end of the health state utility scale, the exchange rate from SF-6D to EQ-5D is 2.11, whilst at the upper end it is 0.38.Conclusion: Comparisons at different utility levels illustrate the fallacy of using linear functions as crosswalks between HSU-instruments. The existence of nonlinear relationships between different HSU-instruments suggests that level-specific exchange rates should be used when converting a change in utility on the instrument used, onto a corresponding utility change had another instrument been used. Accounting for nonlinearities will increase the validity of the comparison for decision makers when faced with a choice between interventions whose calculations of QALY gains have been based on different HSU-instruments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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22. Job insecurity and risk of diabetes: a meta-analysis of individual participant data.
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Ferrie, Jane E., Virtanen, Marianna, Jokela, Markus, Madsen, Ida E. H., Heikkilä, Katriina, Alfredsson, Lars, Batty, G. David, Bjorner, Jakob B., Borritz, Marianne, Burr, Hermann, Dragano, Nico, Elovainio, Marko, Fransson, Eleonor I., Knutsson, Anders, Koskenvuo, Markku, Koskinen, Aki, Kouvonen, Anne, Kumari, Meena, Nielsen, Martin L., and Nordin, Maria
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JOB security ,DIABETES risk factors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATABASES ,DIABETES ,ALCOHOL drinking ,EMPLOYMENT ,EXERCISE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,META-analysis ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,OBESITY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SMOKING ,SOCIAL classes ,EVALUATION research ,DISEASE incidence ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background: Job insecurity has been associated with certain health outcomes. We examined the role of job insecurity as a risk factor for incident diabetes.Methods: We used individual participant data from 8 cohort studies identified in 2 open-access data archives and 11 cohort studies participating in the Individual-Participant-Data Meta-analysis in Working Populations Consortium. We calculated study-specific estimates of the association between job insecurity reported at baseline and incident diabetes over the follow-up period. We pooled the estimates in a meta-analysis to produce a summary risk estimate.Results: The 19 studies involved 140 825 participants from Australia, Europe and the United States, with a mean follow-up of 9.4 years and 3954 incident cases of diabetes. In the preliminary analysis adjusted for age and sex, high job insecurity was associated with an increased risk of incident diabetes compared with low job insecurity (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1.19, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.09-1.30). In the multivariable-adjusted analysis restricted to 15 studies with baseline data for all covariates (age, sex, socioeconomic status, obesity, physical activity, alcohol and smoking), the association was slightly attenuated (adjusted OR 1.12, 95% CI 1.01-1.24). Heterogeneity between the studies was low to moderate (age- and sex-adjusted model: I2 = 24%, p = 0.2; multivariable-adjusted model: I2 = 27%, p = 0.2). In the multivariable-adjusted analysis restricted to high-quality studies, in which the diabetes diagnosis was ascertained from electronic medical records or clinical examination, the association was similar to that in the main analysis (adjusted OR 1.19, 95% CI 1.04-1.35).Interpretation: Our findings suggest that self-reported job insecurity is associated with a modest increased risk of incident diabetes. Health care personnel should be aware of this association among workers reporting job insecurity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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23. Developments in Research Data Management in Academic Libraries: Towards an Understanding of Research Data Service Maturity.
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Cox, Andrew M., Kennan, Mary Anne, Lyon, Liz, and Pinfield, Stephen
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LIBRARY education ,DATABASE management ,ACADEMIC libraries ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,SURVEYS ,LIBRARY technical services - Abstract
This article reports an international study of research data management (RDM) activities, services, and capabilities in higher education libraries. It presents the results of a survey covering higher education libraries in Australia, Canada, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and the UK. The results indicate that libraries have provided leadership in RDM, particularly in advocacy and policy development. Service development is still limited, focused especially on advisory and consultancy services (such as data management planning support and data-related training), rather than technical services (such as provision of a data catalog, and curation of active data). Data curation skills development is underway in libraries, but skills and capabilities are not consistently in place and remain a concern. Other major challenges include resourcing, working with other support services, and achieving "buy in" from researchers and senior managers. Results are compared with previous studies in order to assess trends and relative maturity levels. The range of RDM activities explored in this study are positioned on a "landscape maturity model," which reflects current and planned research data services and practice in academic libraries, representing a "snapshot" of current developments and a baseline for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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24. "I felt some prejudice in the back of my head": Nursing students' perspectives on learning about mental health from "Experts by Experience".
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Happell, Brenda, Waks, Shifra, Bocking, Julia, Horgan, Aine, Manning, Fionnuala, Greaney, Sonya, Goodwin, John, Scholz, Brett, Vaart, Kornelis Jan, Allon, Jerry, Hals, Elisabeth, Granerud, Arild, Doody, Rory, MacGabhann, Liam, Russell, Siobhan, Griffin, Martha, Lahti, Mari, Ellilä, Heikki, Pulli, Jarmo, and Vatula, Annaliina
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CONSUMERS ,EXPERIENCE ,FOCUS groups ,LEARNING strategies ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY of nursing students ,PREJUDICES ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,STEREOTYPES ,STUDENTS ,STUDENT attitudes ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,PATIENT participation ,QUALITATIVE research ,TEACHING methods ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Accessible Summary: What is known on the subject?: Consumer participation in mental health services is embedded in mental health policy in many countries. The negative attitudes of nurses and other health professionals to consumer participation poses a significant obstacle to this policy goalInvolving mental health "Experts by Experience" in the education of nursing students demonstrates positive attitudinal change What this paper adds to existing knowledge?: More detailed understanding of nursing students' experiences and perspectives about being taught mental health nursing by "Experts by Experience"An international focus, extending understandings about how Experts by Experience might be perceived in a broader range of countries What are the implications for practice?: Positive attitudes towards people labelled with mental illness are essential for quality nursing practiceNurses have an important leadership role in facilitating consumer participation within health services. It is critical that their attitudes are professional and optimistic. Introduction: Consumer participation is central to mental health policy. Negative attitudes of health professionals are barriers to realizing policy goals. Evidence suggests consumers (Experts by Experience) can influence positive attitudes in nursing students. Research in this area to date is limited and primarily from Australia and New Zealand. Aim: To enhance understanding of nursing students' perspectives and experiences of being taught mental health by an Expert by Experience. Method: A qualitative exploratory approach was used. Focus groups were conducted with nursing students from seven universities in Australia and Europe. Data were analysed thematically. Results: Student participants described how exposure to Experts by Experience challenged their views and attitudes and provided a mechanism for reflection, critique and change. The main theme "changing mindset" includes two subthemes: exposing stereotypes and reflection. Discussion: This unique international study demonstrates the capacity for Experts by Experience to contribute to positive attitudinal change towards mental illness in nursing students. This changed mindset must occur for policy goals to be realized. Implications for practice: Nurses in all areas of practice will work with people labelled with mental illness and experiencing mental distress. Overcoming stereotypes and adopting more positive attitudes is essential to deliver quality mental health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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25. Sex and gender in health research: updating policy to reflect evidence.
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Wainer, Zoe, Carcel, Cheryl, Hickey, Martha, Schiebinger, Londa, Schmiede, Annette, McKenzie, Briar, Jenkins, Christine, Webster, Jacqui, Woodward, Mark, Hehir, Angela, Solomon, Benjamin, Costa, Caroline, Lukaszyk, Caroline, Colville, Deborah J, Dempsey, Erika, Wright, Gavin M, Mishra, Gita D, Fisher, Jane RW, Kulkarni, Jayashri, and Mitchell, Julie Anne
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GENDER ,PUBLIC health research ,SCIENTIFIC communication ,MEDICAL research ,SEXUAL dimorphism ,DATA analysis ,COMPARATIVE studies ,GENDER identity ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH policy ,RESEARCH ,SEX distribution ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Australia needs to align with other nations and implement sex and gender analysis in health and medical research In response, the Institute of Medicine established the Understanding the Biology of Sex and Gender Differences committee, which produced the landmark report I Exploring the biological contributions to human health: does sex matter? Key informants from journals shared that despite no publicly available policies on sex and gender health data, there were internal rules that the editors, reviewers and authors followed. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2020
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26. In-vitro maturation of oocytes versus conventional IVF in women with infertility and a high antral follicle count: a randomized non-inferiority controlled trial.
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Vuong, Lan N, Ho, Vu N A, Ho, Tuong M, Dang, Vinh Q, Phung, Tuan H, Giang, Nhu H, Le, Anh H, Pham, Toan D, Wang, Rui, Smitz, Johan, Gilchrist, Robert B, Norman, Robert J, and Mol, Ben W
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OVUM donation ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,INDUCED ovulation ,FERTILIZATION in vitro ,OVARIAN hyperstimulation syndrome ,POLYCYSTIC ovary syndrome ,RESEARCH ,OVUM ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,INFERTILITY ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Study Question: Is one cycle of IVM non-inferior to one cycle of conventional in IVF with respect to live birth rates in women with high antral follicle counts (AFCs)?Summary Answer: We could not demonstrate non-inferiority of IVM compared with IVF.What Is Known Already: IVF with ovarian hyperstimulation has limitations in some subgroups of women at high risk of ovarian stimulation, such as those with polycystic ovary syndrome. IVM is an alternative ART for these women. IVM may be a feasible alternative to IVF in women with a high AFC, but there is a lack of data from randomized clinical trials comparing IVM with IVF in women at high risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome.Study Design, Size, Duration: This single-center, randomized, controlled non-inferiority trial was conducted at an academic infertility center in Vietnam from January 2018 to April 2019.Participants/materials, Setting, Methods: In total, 546 women with an indication for ART and a high AFC (≥24 follicles in both ovaries) were randomized to the IVM (n = 273) group or the IVF (n = 273) group; each underwent one cycle of IVM with a prematuration step versus one cycle of IVF using a standard gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist protocol with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist triggering. The primary endpoint was live birth rate after the first embryo transfer. The non-inferiority margin for IVM versus IVF was -10%.Main Results and the Role Of Chance: Live birth after the first embryo transfer occurred in 96 women (35.2%) in the IVM group and 118 women (43.2%) in the IVF group (absolute risk difference -8.1%; 95% confidence interval (CI) -16.6%, 0.5%). Cumulative ongoing pregnancy rates at 12 months after randomization were 44.0% in the IVM group and 62.6% in the IVF group (absolute risk difference -18.7%; 95% CI -27.3%, -10.1%). Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome did not occur in the IVM group, versus two cases in the IVF group. There were no statistically significant differences between the IVM and IVF groups with respect to the occurrence of pregnancy complications, obstetric and perinatal complications, preterm delivery, birth weight and neonatal complications.Limitations, Reasons For Caution: The main limitation of the study was its open-label design. In addition, the findings are only applicable to IVM conducted using the prematuration step protocol used in this study. Finally, the single ethnicity population limits the external generalizability of the findings.Wider Implications Of the Findings: Our randomized clinical trial compares live birth rates after IVM and IVF. Although IVM is a viable and safe alternative to IVF that may be suitable for some women seeking a mild ART approach, the current study findings approach inferiority for IVM compared with IVF when cumulative outcomes are considered. Future research should incorporate multiple cycles of IVM in the study design to estimate cumulative fertility outcomes and better inform clinical decision-making.Study Funding/competing Interest(s): This work was partly supported by Ferring grant number 000323 and funded by the Vietnam National Foundation for Science and Technology Development (NAFOSTED) and by the Fund for Research Flanders (FWO). LNV has received speaker and conference fees from Merck, grant, speaker and conference fees from Merck Sharpe and Dohme, and speaker, conference and scientific board fees from Ferring; TMH has received speaker fees from Merck, Merck Sharp and Dohme, and Ferring; RJN has received conference and scientific board fees from Ferring, is a minor shareholder in an IVF company, and receives grant funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia; BWM has acted as a paid consultant to Merck, ObsEva and Guerbet, and is the recipient of grant money from an NHMRC Investigator Grant; RBG reports grants and fellowships from the NHMRC of Australia; JS reports lecture fees from Ferring Pharmaceuticals, Biomérieux, Besins Female Healthcare and Merck, grants from Fund for Research Flanders (FWO), and is co-inventor on granted patents on CAPA-IVM methodology in the US (US10392601B2) and Europe (EP3234112B1); TDP, VQD, VNAH, NHG, AHL, THP and RW have no financial relationships with any organizations that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years, and no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.Trial Registration Number: NCT03405701 (www.clinicaltrials.gov).Trial Registration Date: 16 January 2018.Date Of First Patent’s Enrolment: 25 January 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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27. Does parental farm upbringing influence the risk of asthma in offspring? A three-generation study.
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Timm, Signe, Svanes, Cecilie, Frydenberg, Morten, Sigsgaard, Torben, Holm, Mathias, Janson, Christer, Bråbäck, Lennart, Campbell, Brittany, Madsen, Marie Kjaer, Jõgi, Nils Oskar, Jõgi, Rain, Schiöler, Linus, Bertelsen, Randi Jacobsen, Johannessen, Ane, Sanchez-Ramos, Jose Luis, Martinez-Moretalla, Jesus, Dratva, Julia, Dharmage, Shyamali, Schlünssen, Vivi, and Kjaer Madsen, Marie
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ASTHMA ,EUROPEAN communities ,WHEEZE ,FARMS ,GENES ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PARENTS - Abstract
Background: A farm upbringing has been associated with lower risk of asthma and methylation of asthma-related genes. As such, a farm upbringing has the potential to transfer asthma risk across generations, but this has never been investigated. We aimed to study the generational effects from a parental farm upbringing on offspring asthma.Methods: Our study involved three generations: 5759 participants from the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS) study (born 1945-1971, denoted G1), their 9991 parents (G0) and their 8260 offspring (G2) participating in RHINESSA (Respiratory Health In Northern Europe, Spain and Australia). Questionnaire data were collected on G0 and G1 from G1 in 2010 and on G2 from themselves in 2013. The parental/grandparental place of upbringing was categorized: (i) both parents from farm; (ii) mother from farm, father from village/city; (iii) father from farm, mother from village/city; (iv) both parents from village or one parent from village and one from city; (v) both parents from city (reference group). Grandparental upbringing was equivalently categorized. Offspring asthma was self-reported and data were analysed using Cox-regression models with G2 age as the time scale.Results: A parental farm upbringing was not associated with offspring asthma when compared with city upbringing [hazard ratio (HR) 1.12, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.74-1.69]. Findings remained similar when stratified by offspring upbringing and asthma phenotypes. Quantitative bias analyses showed similar estimates for alternative data sources. A grandparental farm upbringing was not associated with offspring asthma in either the maternal (HR 1.05, 95% CI 0.67-1.65) or paternal line (HR 1.02, 95% CI 0.62-1.68).Conclusions: This multigenerational analysis suggests no evidence of an association between parental/grandparental farm upbringing and offspring asthma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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28. 'Meet Me Where I Am': Mental health service users' perspectives on the desirable qualities of a mental health nurse.
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Horgan, Aine, O Donovan, Moira, Manning, Fionnuala, Doody, Rory, Savage, Eileen, Dorrity, Claire, O'Sullivan, Hazel, Goodwin, John, Greaney, Sonya, Biering, Pall, Bjornsson, Einar, Bocking, Julia, Russell, Siobhan, Griffin, Martha, MacGabhann, Liam, Vaart, Kornelis Jan, Allon, Jerry, Granerud, Arild, Hals, Elisabeth, and Pulli, Jarmo
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CURRICULUM ,EMPATHY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MENTAL health services ,NURSES ,NURSING students ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,RESEARCH ,QUALITATIVE research ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,UNDERGRADUATES ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Nurses play a central role in the delivery of quality mental health services. Desired qualities of a mental health nurse, in particular therapeutic relationships, have been described in the literature, primarily reflecting the nursing paradigm. Service users' perspectives must be more fully understood to reflect contemporary mental health policy and to recognize their position at the centre of mental health service delivery and to directly influence and contribute their perspectives and experiences to mental health nursing education. A qualitative exploratory research project was undertaken to inform and enhance understanding of what service users see as the desired qualities of a mental health nurse. The project was co‐produced by service users as experts by experience, and mental health nurse academics to ensure the service user perspective was privileged. This international project conducted in Europe and Australia included a series of focus groups with service users (n = 50). Data were analysed thematically. Being with me was a major theme identified and reflected the sub‐themes: respect towards service users as persons; empathy, compassion and effective communication; understanding service users; knowledge of services; and fostering hope and believing that recovery is possible. These qualities specifically reflecting the service user perspective must be central to mental health nursing curricula to facilitate the development of holistic care and recovery‐oriented practice. These findings were utilized to directly inform development of a co‐produced mental health nursing learning module, to maximize genuine service user involvement, and to fully realize the benefits of service user led education for undergraduate nursing students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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29. Performance and image enhancing drug interventions aimed at increasing knowledge among healthcare professionals (HCP): reflections on the implementation of the Dopinglinkki e-module in Europe and Australia in the HCP workforce.
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Atkinson, A.M., van de Ven, K., Cunningham, M., de Zeeuw, T., Hibbert, E., Forlini, C., Barkoukis, V., and Sumnall, H.R.
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STEROID drugs , *MEDICAL personnel , *LABOR supply , *SOCIAL support , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DRUGS - Abstract
Background: Healthcare professionals (HCPs) provide an important point of contact through which people who use performance and image enhancing drugs (PIEDs) could access reliable information, advice, and interventions on a range of PIEDs, their use and related harms. However, HCPs often report difficulties engaging and building rapport with people who use PIEDs, and research suggests that they often lack specialist knowledge on these substances. Providing credible evidence-based resources to support HCPs is thus important. However, educational materials in this area are generally absent and the ones that exist have not been assessed for their utility in the HCP workforce. This paper examines the acceptability and usability of a PIED e-learning module (the Dopinglinkki e-module) targeted at HCPs in three EU Member States and Australia.Methods: A standardised two stage, mixed methodology was implemented. Stage 1 involved HCPs completing the e-module and completing an online survey (N = 77). Stage 2 involved conducting individual structured interviews with a subset of survey respondents (N = 37). Normalisation Process Theory and the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability were used as conceptual lenses.Findings: The e-module provided information that was perceived as useful for HCPs' current and future practice. However, several individual, organisational and societal level barriers were reported as preventing the e-module becoming an accepted and normalised aspect of the HCP workforce, including the need for up to date evidence, the time-consuming nature of completing the e-module, lack of organisational support, the use of over-complex language, and the module's potential to reinforce the stigmatisation of PIEDs.Conclusion: Providing credible evidence-based resources to support HCPs' knowledge development is important. Evidence-based and theory informed interventions are needed to equip HCPs with knowledge that can aid culturally sensitive interactions and effective engagement with people who use PIEDs. Reflecting on our study findings, it is important that the development of interventions should include the voices of both HCP and those using PIEDs, and that careful consideration is given to the various factors that may act as a barrier to effective implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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30. Something special, something unique: Perspectives of experts by experience in mental health nursing education on their contribution.
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Happell, Brenda, Warner, Terri, Waks, Shifra, O'Donovan, Aine, Manning, Fionnuala, Doody, Rory, Greaney, Sonya, Goodwin, John, Hals, Elisabeth, Griffin, Martha, Scholz, Brett, Granerud, Arild, Platania‐Phung, Chris, Russell, Siobhan, MacGabhann, Liam, Pulli, Jarmo, Vatula, Annaliina, van der Vaart, Kornelis Jan, Allon, Jerry, and Bjornsson, Einar
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PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,RESEARCH ,PROFESSIONS ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,NURSING students ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Accessible Summary: What is known on the subject: ●Expert by Experience participation in mental health services is embedded in mental health policy in many countries. The negative attitudes of nurses and other health professionals to consumer participation poses a significant obstacle to this policy goal.●Involving mental health Experts by Experience in the education of nursing students demonstrates positive attitudinal change. What the paper adds to existing knowledge: ●The paper presents perspectives from Experts by Experience about the unique knowledge and expertise they derive from their lived experience of mental distress and mental health service use. As a result, they can make a unique and essential contribution to mental health nursing education. They utilize this knowledge to create an interactive learning environment and encourage critical thinking.●The international focus of this research enriches understandings about how Experts by Experience might be perceived in a broader range of countries. What are the implications for practice: ●Mental health policy articulates the importance of service user involvement in all aspects of mental health service delivery. This goal will not be fully achieved without nurses having positive attitudes towards experts by experience as colleagues.●Positive attitudes are more likely to develop when nurses understand and value the contribution experts by experience bring by virtue of their unique knowledge and expertise. This paper provides some important insights to achieving this end. Introduction: Embedding lived experience in mental health nursing education is increasing, with research findings suggesting the impact is positive. To date, research has primarily targeted the perspectives of nursing students and academics from the health professions. Aim: To enhance understanding of the unique knowledge and expertise experts by experience contribute to mental health nursing education. Methods: Qualitative exploratory research methods were employed. In‐depth individual interviews were conducted with experts by experience who delivered a coproduced learning module to nursing students in Europe and Australia. Results: Participants described their unique and essential contribution to mental health nursing education under four main themes: critical thinking, beyond textbooks; interactive and open communication; understanding personal recovery; and mental health is health. Conclusions: These findings present an understanding of the unique knowledge and expertise Experts by Experience contribute to mental health education not previously addressed in the literature. Appreciating and respecting this, unique contribute is necessary as Expert by Experience contributions continue to develop. Implications for Practice: Mental health services purport to value service user involvement. Identifying and respecting and valuing the unique contribution they bring to services is essential. Without this understanding, tokenistic involvement may become a major barrier. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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