33,463 results on '"Tilley A"'
Search Results
52. Targeting crime prevention
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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53. Crime prevention examples
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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54. Evidence-based crime prevention
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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55. Introduction
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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56. Doing crime prevention
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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57. Crime prevention theories
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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58. Principled crime prevention?
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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59. Politics of crime prevention
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Tilley, Nick, primary
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- 2024
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60. The BlueWalker 3 Satellite Has Faded
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Mallama, Anthony, Cole, Richard E., and Tilley, Scott
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of BlueWalker 3 (BW3) beginning on December 8 of this year indicate that its apparent brightness had decreased. We postulate that the orbital beta angle and resultant solar power considerations required an adjustment to the satellite attitude around that time. So, the nominally zenith facing side of the flat-panel shaped spacecraft, which supports the solar array, was tilted toward the Sun. Consequently, the nadir side, which is seen by observers on the ground, was mostly dark. Thus, BW3 has generally appeared faint and on some occasions was not seen at all. The amount of fading was up to 4 magnitudes. Numerical modeling indicates that the amount of tilt was in the range 13{\deg} to 16{\deg}. This situation indicates the improvement in the appearance of BW3 from the ground that can be achieved with small tilts of the spacecraft. Satellite operators and astronomers can jointly address the adverse impact of bright satellites on celestial observations based on this finding.
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- 2022
61. The Role of Project Based Learning at the Core of Curriculum Development
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John Mitchell and Emanuela Tilley
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Problem Based Learning (PBL) ,Curriculum design ,Curriculum development ,Integrated curricula ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
This paper will present the argument that while Problem Based Learning (PBL) (or its variant Project Based Learning, PjBL) provides significant benefits and advantages to student learning in of itself, the full benefit of PBL is only completely realised as part of an “integrated” curriculum that provides a variety of learning opportunities and instructional support. We propose that PBL should be more widely considered and used as the key integrative feature within a curriculum to enable programmes to connect theory, practice, societal context, values and skills as well as to break the mentality that comes with modularisation. To do this, we suggest that a coherent thread of PBL should be enacted that is stratified to progress students through increasingly open problems and projects, each connected to other aspects of the taught curriculum while enabling skills development and the formation of professional and responsible attitudes and attributes. We provide some examples from our own experience in Engineering but advocate that this approach is much more widely applicable within higher education.
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- 2024
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62. The Self‐Calibrating Tilt Accelerometer: A Method for Observing Tilt and Correcting Drift With a Triaxial Accelerometer
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E. K. Fredrickson, W. S. D. Wilcock, M. J. Harrington, G. Cram, J. Tilley, D. Martin, and J. Burnett
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seafloor geodesy ,tiltmeter ,gauge drift ,tectonic deformation ,accelerometer ,drift correction ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Abstract We present observations from two field deployments of a calibrated tiltmeter that we name the Self‐Calibrating Tilt Accelerometer (SCTA). The tiltmeter is based upon a triaxial quartz crystal accelerometer; the horizontal channels measure tilt and are periodically rotated into the vertical to obtain a measurement of the acceleration of gravity. Changes in the measured total acceleration are ascribed to drift in the vertical channel and used as calibrations for removing that same drift from the tilt time series observed between calibrations. Changes in the span (sensitivity) of the accelerometer channels can also be measured by calibrating them pointing up and down. A 3‐year test on the seafloor at Axial Seamount show that the calibrations are consistent with a linear‐exponential model of drift to a RMS residual of ∼0.5 μg (μrad). The calibrated tilt time series was impacted by platform settling for the first 2 years, but after repositioning the tiltmeter, the calibrated observations were consistent for the final year with the tilt observed on a nearby LILY tiltmeter, within an assumed level of drift for the unconstrained LILY sensor. A separate 15‐month test in a stable vault at Piñon Flat Observatory was complicated by seasonal temperature variations of >5°C; the calibrations are consistent with a linear‐exponential model of drift to ∼2 μg RMS when temperature and temperature time‐derivative dependence is included. Similarly, the calibrated tilt time series was impacted by thermal deformation of the SCTA assembly. A future test in a thermally and tectonically stable borehole will be required to assess the accuracy of the SCTA.
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- 2024
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63. Reflections on an Evidence Review Process to Inform the Co‐Design of a Toolkit for Supporting End‐of‐Life Care Planning With People With Intellectual Disabilities
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Elizabeth Tilley, Lorna Rouse, Irene Tuffrey‐Wijne, and Rebecca Anderson‐Kittow
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AGREE II ,co‐design ,evidence review ,inclusive research ,intellectual disabilities ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Introduction There is growing recognition that healthcare inequalities faced by people with intellectual disabilities extend to their experiences at the end of life, resulting in calls for more inclusive research to help address these inequities. Our study aimed to address this through the co‐design of a toolkit for supporting end‐of‐life care planning with people with intellectual disabilities. To inform the co‐design process, we undertook an evidence review to identify existing tools, resources and approaches that were already being used in practice. Methods Our evidence review comprised three components: (i) a rapid scoping review of the academic literature, (ii) a desk‐based search of the grey literature and (iii) an online survey to capture unpublished resources that were distributed to services, professionals, third‐sector organisations and family members. A longlist of existing materials was appraised using an adapted version of the AGREE II instrument, resulting in a shortlist that was shared with the co‐design team. Results The evidence review played a critical role in the co‐design of a new toolkit of end‐of‐life care resources for people with intellectual disabilities. However, AGREE II proved to be limited for our purposes. Conclusions The survey was particularly useful in helping us identify resources, tools and approaches in current use. We identified evidence review processes that served to support co‐design team activities and elements that were more problematic. We argue that evidence review practices might be enhanced to better aid co‐design activities in health and care research, particularly for studies involving people with intellectual disabilities. Patient or Public Contribution This article reflects on an evidence review that was conducted as part of The Victoria and Stuart Project. People with intellectual disabilities were deeply involved at every stage of project design, delivery and dissemination. The project employed people with intellectual disabilities as members of the core research team. People with intellectual disabilities and family carers were members of the project co‐design team and the project Advisory Group. The evidence review process itself was led by academic members of the research team with contributions from colleagues with intellectual disabilities via the Advisory Group and core research team. The findings from the evidence review were used by the co‐design team to inform the development of an end‐of‐life care planning toolkit for people with intellectual disabilities.
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- 2024
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64. Tactile Network Topologies: Inclusive Learning for Visually Impaired Students in Computer Networking Education.
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Nicholas Caporusso, Quentin Roa, Brad Thomas, and Mason Tilley
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- 2024
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65. Psychosocial Risk Factors Associated with Internalising Problems Among Singapore Youth: A Review of the Literature
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Tilley, Jacqueline L., Lee, Kristy J. J., Seet, Nicholas W. K., Tan, Oon Seng, Series Editor, Low, Ee Ling, Series Editor, Caleon, Imelda Santos, editor, and Ng, Ee Lynn, editor
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- 2024
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66. HEALINT4ALL Digital Interactive Platform for European and National Placements Audit for Medicine and Allied Health Professions Following a User-Centered Design
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Konstantinidis, Stathis Th., Poultourtzidis, Ioannis, Papamalis, Foivos, Spachos, Dimitris, Savvidis, Theodoros, Athanasopoulos, Nikolaos, Nikolaidou, Maria, Tilley, Zoe, Ko, Stan, Henderson, James, Cunningham, Sheila, Pam, Hodge, Höijer-Brear, Viveka, Törne, Mari, Lillo-Crespo, Manuel, Catala Rodriguez, Maria Pilar, Stefanowicz-Kocol, Anna, Jankowicz-Szymanska, Agnieszka, Grochowska, Aneta, Kołpa, Małgorzata, Hall, Carol, Bamidis, Panagiotis D., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Auer, Michael E., editor, and Tsiatsos, Thrasyvoulos, editor
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- 2024
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67. Uncovering the link between well-being and factory performance among workers in China: a longitudinal study
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Bellingan, Minette, Tilley, Catherine, Kumar, Mukesh, Batista, Luciano, and Evans, Steve
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- 2024
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68. Doxycycline Prophylaxis for Skin and Soft Tissue Infections in Naval Special Warfare Trainees, United States
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Spiro, Jeffrey, Wisniewski, Piotr, Schwartz, Julia, Smith, Alfred G., Burger, Sara, Tilley, Drake H., and Maves, Ryan C.
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Doxycycline -- Military aspects -- Analysis ,Metronidazole -- Analysis -- Military aspects ,Mupirocin -- Analysis -- Military aspects ,Infection -- Military aspects -- Analysis ,Skin -- Military aspects -- Analysis ,Panitumumab -- Analysis -- Military aspects ,Health - Abstract
Skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs) are common and potentially severe medical conditions that occur regularly in both military and nonmilitary populations. Military members, however, have a 21% higher incidence [...]
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- 2024
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69. The molecular consequences of androgen activity in the human breast
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Raths, Florian, Karimzadeh, Mehran, Ing, Nathan, Martinez, Andrew, Yang, Yoona, Qu, Ying, Lee, Tian-Yu, Mulligan, Brianna, Devkota, Suzanne, Tilley, Wayne T, Hickey, Theresa E, Wang, Bo, Giuliano, Armando E, Bose, Shikha, Goodarzi, Hani, Ray, Edward C, Cui, Xiaojiang, and Knott, Simon RV
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Breast Cancer ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,androgen regulation of human breast homeostasis ,breast microenvironment ,cellular metabolism ,chromatin regulation ,hormone receptor ,lactation ,multiplexed immunohistochemistry by co-detection by indexing ,single-cell ATAC sequencing ,single-cell RNA sequencing ,transcriptional control - Abstract
Estrogen and progesterone have been extensively studied in the mammary gland, but the molecular effects of androgen remain largely unexplored. Transgender men are recorded as female at birth but identify as male and may undergo gender-affirming androgen therapy to align their physical characteristics and gender identity. Here we perform single-cell-resolution transcriptome, chromatin, and spatial profiling of breast tissues from transgender men following androgen therapy. We find canonical androgen receptor gene targets are upregulated in cells expressing the androgen receptor and that paracrine signaling likely drives sex-relevant androgenic effects in other cell types. We also observe involution of the epithelium and a spatial reconfiguration of immune, fibroblast, and vascular cells, and identify a gene regulatory network associated with androgen-induced fat loss. This work elucidates the molecular consequences of androgen activity in the human breast at single-cell resolution.
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- 2023
70. Selective inhibition of CDK9 in triple negative breast cancer
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Mustafa, Ebtihal H., Laven-Law, Geraldine, Kikhtyak, Zoya, Nguyen, Van, Ali, Simak, Pace, Alex A., Iggo, Richard, Kebede, Alemwork, Noll, Ben, Wang, Shudong, Winter, Jean M., Dwyer, Amy R., Tilley, Wayne D., and Hickey, Theresa E.
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- 2024
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71. Acceptability, Implementation, and Perceived Utility of a School-Based Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention: A Qualitative Feasibility Study
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Tilley, Micah A. and Montreuil, Tina
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Understanding how cognitive-behavioral therapy programs can be best implemented within the school environment is critical for ensuring that preventative mental health efforts reach all children and are most effective. The purpose of this study was to provide a qualitative analysis of students and school-based facilitators' perspectives of a cognitive-behavioral school-based intervention. Thematic analysis was used to evaluate the feasibility of the program, with a focus given to acceptability, implementation, and perceived utility. School-based facilitators (n = 10) provided data via weekly checklists. At the end of the program, facilitators also completed an online survey, and elementary students (n = 186) completed a questionnaire and open-ended worksheet. Results indicated that the program was feasible for teaching important coping skills to elementary school students. While there were specific challenges and barriers reported regarding program implementation, the program was deemed useful, engaging, and beneficial for students overall. These findings provide invaluable information from key stakeholders that will permit revisions and improvements to the program post-validation. This study also serves to further bridge the research-to-practice gap by incorporating facilitator and student perspectives into existing interventions to ensure the successful and sustained transfer of clinical practice into the school setting.
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- 2023
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72. Contextual Predictors of Internalizing and Externalizing Problems among Adolescents from High-Achieving Private Schools in Hong Kong
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Tilley, Jacqueline L. and Farver, JoAnn M.
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Emerging research suggests that adolescents at high-achieving schools (HAS) in Western societies are at elevated risk for problem behaviours. This cross-sectional study explored whether adolescents attending HAS in a non-Western setting show similar risk patterns and if contextual (school-, family-, and peer-based) factors typically associated with the excessive pressures to achieve predict these problems. Participants were 237 adolescents (14-18 years old), and one of their parents, who were recruited from high-achieving private schools in Hong Kong. The parent-child dyads completed questionnaires on youth internalizing and externalizing problems and perceived stressors. Multiple linear regressions were conducted to test whether academic demands, parent-related stressors, and social status among peers were associated with youth problem behaviours, after controlling for age and gender. The study found that nearly half of the female adolescents and over a third of the males met borderline-clinical levels ([greater than or equal to] 86%ile) of internalizing problems; moreover, more females than males met clinical criteria ([greater than or equal to] 98%ile) for self-reported externalizing problems and parent-reported internalizing problems. Academic demands, parent-related stressors, and social status among peers predicted youth-reported internalizing problems; and the latter two factors contributed parent-reported internalizing problems. However, only parent-related stressors significantly predicted youth- and parent-reported externalizing problems. The findings provide preliminary indication that HAS adolescents from Hong Kong may be an "at risk" group, highlighting the need for increased awareness and targeted interventions.
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- 2023
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73. Race, risk, and greed: Harold Black's contributions to the institutional economics of finance
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Munger, Michael and Tilley, Cameron
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- 2023
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74. Library size confounds biology in spatial transcriptomics data
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Dharmesh D. Bhuva, Chin Wee Tan, Agus Salim, Claire Marceaux, Marie A. Pickering, Jinjin Chen, Malvika Kharbanda, Xinyi Jin, Ning Liu, Kristen Feher, Givanna Putri, Wayne D. Tilley, Theresa E. Hickey, Marie-Liesse Asselin-Labat, Belinda Phipson, and Melissa J. Davis
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Spatial molecular data has transformed the study of disease microenvironments, though, larger datasets pose an analytics challenge prompting the direct adoption of single-cell RNA-sequencing tools including normalization methods. Here, we demonstrate that library size is associated with tissue structure and that normalizing these effects out using commonly applied scRNA-seq normalization methods will negatively affect spatial domain identification. Spatial data should not be specifically corrected for library size prior to analysis, and algorithms designed for scRNA-seq data should be adopted with caution.
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- 2024
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75. Intubation Decision Based on Illness Severity and Mortality in COVID-19: An International Study*
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Chalkias, Athanasios, Huang, Yiyuan, Ismail, Anis, Pantazopoulos, Ioannis, Papagiannakis, Nikolaos, Bitterman, Brayden, Anderson, Elizabeth, Catalan, Tonimarie, Erne, Grace K., Tilley, Caroline R., Alaka, Abiola, Amadi, Kingsley M., Presswalla, Feriel, Blakely, Pennelope, Bernal-Morell, Enrique, Cebreiros López, Iria, Eugen-Olsen, Jesper, García de Guadiana Romualdo, Luis, Giamarellos-Bourboulis, Evangelos J., Loosen, Sven H., Reiser, Jochen, Tacke, Frank, Skoulakis, Anargyros, Laou, Eleni, Banerjee, Mousumi, Pop-Busui, Rodica, Hayek, Salim S., Hayek, Salim S., Blakely, Pennelope, Launius, Christopher, Berlin, Hanna, Amadi, Kingsley M., Azam, Tariq U., Shadid, Husam, Pan, Michael, O’ Hayer, Patrick, Meloche, Chelsea, Feroze, Rafey, Padalia, Kishan J., Anderson, Elizabeth, Perry, Danny, Bitar, Abbas, Kaakati, Rayan, Zhao, Lili, Zhao, Peiyao, Michaud, Erinleigh, Huang, Yiyuan, Catalan, Tonimarie, Khaleel, Ibrahim, Alaka, Abiola, Pop-Busui, Rodica, Banerjee, Mousumi, Tekumulla, Annika, Tilley, Caroline R., Tripathi, Medha, Vasbinder, Alexi, Bardwell, Alina, Presswalla, Feriel, Nelapudi, Namratha, Erne, Grace K., Chen, Jiazi, Mayette, Nathan, Sulaiman, Noor, Ismail, Anis, Pizzo, Ian, Bitterman, Brayden, Reiser, Jochen, Samelko, Beata, Hlepas, Alexander, Wang, Xuexiang, Patel, Priya, Chalkias, Athanasios, Pantazopoulos, Ioannis, Laou, Eleni, Skoulakis, Anargyros, Papagiannakis, Nikolaos, Eugen-Olsen, Jesper, Altintas, Izzet, Tingleff, Jens, Stauning, Marius, Houlind, Morten Baltzer, Lindstrøm, Mette B, Andersen, Ove, Gamst-Jensen, Hejdi, Hartmann Rasmussen, Line Jee, Rasmussen, Christian, Nehlin, Jan O., Kallemose, Thomas, Parvaiz, Imran, Loosen, Sven H., Luedde, Tom, Keitel, Verena, Giamarellos-Bourboulis, Evangelos J., Adami, Maria-Evangelia, Solomonidi, Nicky, Tsilika, Maria, Saridaki, Maria, Lekakis, Vasileios, Tacke, Frank, Tober-Lau, Pinkus, Mohr, Raphael, Kurth, Florian, Sander, Leif Erik, Jochum, Christoph, Garcia de Guadiana-Romualdo, Luis, Albaladejo-Otón, María Dolores, Rodríguez Mulero, María Dolores, Martínez, María Galindo, Olivo, Marta Hernández, Rodríguez, Valerio Campos, López, Iria Cebreiros, Carrillo, María Arnaldos, Noguera Velasco, Jose Antonio, Pascual Figal, Domingo A., Morell, Enrique Bernal, García, Antonia Alcaraz, Alcaraz García, María José, Martínez, Monica Martínez, Esteban-Torrella, Patricia, and Sancho-Rodríguez, Natalia
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- 2024
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76. Re-wilding Ritual: An Archaeological Study of Plants in Ritual Contexts in the Traprain Law Environs, Scotland
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Tilley, Leia Kristen
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- 2024
77. Using a Survey of Social and Emotional Learning and School Climate to Inform Decisionmaking. REL 2021-114
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National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) (ED/IES), Regional Educational Laboratory Mid-Atlantic (ED), Mathematica, Kautz, Tim, Feeney, Kathleen, Chiang, Hanley, Lauffer, Sarah, Bartlett, Maria, and Tilley, Charles
- Abstract
The District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) has prioritized efforts to support students' social and emotional learning (SEL) competencies, such as perseverance and social awareness. To measure students' SEL competencies and the school experiences that promote SEL competencies (school climate), DCPS began administering annual surveys to students, teachers, and parents in 2017/18. DCPS partnered with the Mid-Atlantic Regional Educational Laboratory to study how the district could use these surveys to improve students' outcomes. The study found the following: (1) Students' SEL competencies and school experiences are the most favorable in elementary school and the least favorable in middle school and the beginning of high school. This pattern suggests that schools might provide targeted supports before or during grades 6-10 to promote SEL competencies and school experiences when students need the most support; (2) The trajectories of students' SEL competencies and school experiences differed in different schools, to a similar degree as trajectories in academic measures like test scores. To understand why changes in SEL competencies and school experiences differ across schools, DCPS could explore differences in practices between schools with better and worse trajectories. In addition, DCPS could provide targeted support to schools with lower levels of positive change; (3) Of the SEL competencies and school experiences in DCPS's survey, self-management--how well students control their emotions, thoughts, and behavior--is most related to students' later academic outcomes. Programs or interventions that target self-management might have the most potential for improving students' outcomes compared to those that target other SEL competencies or school experiences; (4) In statistical models designed to predict students' future academic outcomes, SEL competency and school experience data add little accuracy beyond prior academic outcomes (such as achievement test scores and attendance) and demographic characteristics. Prior academic outcomes and demographic characteristics predict later outcomes with a high degree of accuracy, and they may implicitly incorporate the SEL competencies and school experiences. These findings suggest that DCPS would not need to use SEL competencies and school experiences to identify whether or not students are at risk of poor academic outcomes; and (5) Student, teacher, and parent reports on SEL competencies and school experiences are positively related across schools, but they also exhibit systematic differences, suggesting that some respondent groups may not be aligned in their view of SEL competencies and school experiences. These differences may serve as a tool to help DCPS target efforts to improve communication among students, teachers, and parents.
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- 2021
78. The digital harms of smart home devices: A systematic literature review
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Buil-Gil, David, Kemp, Steven, Kuenzel, Stefanie, Coventry, Lynne, Zakhary, Sameh, Tilley, Daniel, and Nicholson, James
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Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
The connection of home electronic devices to the internet allows remote control of physical devices and involves the collection of large volumes of data. With the increase in the uptake of Internet-of-Things home devices, it becomes critical to understand the digital harms of smart homes. We present a systematic literature review on the security and privacy harms of smart homes. PRISMA methodology is used to systematically review 63 studies published between January 2011 and October 2021; and a review of known cases is undertaken to illustrate the literature review findings with real-world scenarios. Published literature identifies that smart homes may pose threats to confidentiality (unwanted release of information), authentication (sensing information being falsified) and unauthorised access to system controls. Most existing studies focus on privacy intrusions as a prevalent form of harm against smart homes. Other types of harms that are less common in the literature include hacking, malware and DoS attacks. Digital harms, and data associated with these harms, may vary extensively across smart devices. Most studies propose technical measures to mitigate digital harms, while fewer consider social prevention mechanisms. We also identify salient gaps in research, and argue that these should be addressed in future cross-disciplinary research initiatives., Comment: This work is funded by the PETRAS National Centre of Excellence for IoT Systems Cybersecurity
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- 2022
79. Implementing and Breaking Load-Link / Store-Conditional on an ARM-Based System
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Tilley, Evan, Liebeskind, Alexander, and Asensio, Rafael
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Manufacturers of modern electronic devices are constantly attempting to implement additional features into ever-increasingly complex and performance demanding systems. This race has been historically driven by improvements in the processor's clock speed, but as power consumption and real estate concerns in the embedded space pose an growing challenge, multithreading approaches have become more prevalent and relied upon. Synchronization is essential to multithreading systems, as it ensures that threads do not interfere with each others' operations and produce reliable and consistent outputs whilst maximizing performance and efficiency. One of the primary mechanisms guaranteeing synchronization in RISC architectures is the load-link/store conditional routine, which implements an atomic operation that allows a thread to obtain a lock. In this study, we implement, test, and manipulate an LL/SC routine in a multithreading environment using GDB. After examining the routine mechanics, we propose a concise implementation in ARMv7l, as well as demonstrate the importance of register integrity and vulnerabilities that occur when integrity is violated under a limited threat model. This work sheds light on LL/SC operations and related lock routines used for multithreading.
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- 2022
80. Skin swabbing protocol to collect DNA samples from small-bodied fish species [version 2; peer review: 1 approved, 1 approved with reservations]
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Ceinwen Tilley, Iain Barber, and William Norton
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Method Article ,Articles ,Zebrafish ,stickleback ,skin swabbing ,fin clipping ,DNA extraction ,refinement ,reduction - Abstract
Fish species are commonly used as experimental models in the laboratory. DNA is routinely collected from these animals to permit identification of their genotype. The current standard procedure to sample DNA is fin clipping, which involves anaesthetising individuals and removing a portion of the caudal fin. While fin clipping reliably generates good quality DNA samples for downstream applications, there is evidence that it can alter health and welfare, and impact the fish’s behaviour. This in turn can result in greater variation in the data collected. In a recent study we adapted a skin swabbing protocol to collect DNA from small-bodied fish, including sticklebacks and zebrafish, without the use of analgesics, anaesthetics or sharp instruments. A rayon-tipped swab was used to collect mucus from the flank of the fish, which was then used for DNA extraction. We subsequently demonstrated that compared to fin clipping, skin swabbing triggered fewer changes in stress axis activation and behaviour. We also found that gene expression and behaviour data collected from swabbed fish were less variable than similar data collected from fish that had been fin clipped. This potentially allows smaller sample sizes in experimental groups to be used after skin swabbing, thereby reducing animal use. Here we provide a detailed protocol explaining how to collect DNA samples from small laboratory fish using skin swabs.
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- 2024
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81. sSNAPPY: an R/Bioconductor package for single-sample directional pathway perturbation analysis [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]
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Wenjun Liu, Ville-Petteri Mäkinen, Wayne D Tilley, and Stephen M Pederson
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Software Tool Article ,Articles ,RNA-Seq ,pathway enrichment ,R package ,topology ,KEGG ,Reactome ,scRNA-seq - Abstract
A common outcome of analysing RNA-Seq data is the detection of biological pathways with significantly altered activity between the conditions under investigation. Whilst many strategies test for over-representation of genes, showing changed expression within pre-defined gene-sets, these analyses typically do not account for gene-gene interactions encoded by pathway topologies, and are not able to directly predict the directional change of pathway activity. To address these issues we have developed sSNAPPY,now available as an R/Bioconductor package, which leverages pathway topology information to compute pathway perturbation scores and predict the direction of change across a set of pathways. Here, we demonstrate the use of sSNAPPY by applying the method to public scRNA-seq data, derived from ovarian cancer patient tissues collected before and after chemotherapy. Not only were we able to predict the direction of pathway perturbations discussed in the original study, but sSNAPPY was also able to detect significant changes of other biological processes, yielding far greater insight into the response to treatment. sSNAPPY represents a novel pathway analysis strategy that takes into consideration pathway topology to predict impacted biology pathways, both within related samples and across treatment groups. In addition to not relying on differentially expressed genes, the method and associated R package offers important flexibility and provides powerful visualisation tools. R version: R version 4.3.3 (2024-02-29) Bioconductor version: 3.18 Package: 1.6.1
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- 2024
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82. Evaluation of an occupational therapy led Paediatric burns telehealth review clinic: Exploring the experience of family/carers and clinicians
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Phillips, Debra, Matheson, Lauren, Pain, Tilley, and Kingston, Gail A
- Published
- 2022
83. Direct Transformation of SiH4 to a Molecular L(H)2CoSiCo(H)2L Silicide Complex
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Handford, Rex C, Nguyen, Trisha T, Teat, Simon J, Britt, R David, and Tilley, T Don
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Chemical Sciences ,2.0 TEST ,General Chemistry ,Chemical sciences ,Engineering - Abstract
The synthesis of bimetallic molecular silicide complexes is reported, based on the use of multiple Si-H bond activations in SiH4 at the metal centers of 14-electron LCoI fragments (L = Tp″, HB(3,5-diisopropylpyrazolyl)3-; [BP2tBuPz], PhB(CH2PtBu2)2(pyrazolyl)). Upon exposure of (Tp″Co)2(μ-N2) (1) to SiH4, a mixture of (Tp″Co)2(μ-H) (2) and (Tp″Co)2(μ-H)2 (3) was formed and no evidence for Si-H oxidative addition products was observed. In contrast, [BP2tBuPz]-supported Co complexes led to Si-H oxidative additions with the generation of silylene and silicide complexes as products. Notably, the reaction of ([BP2tBuPz]Co)2(μ-N2) (5) with SiH4 gave the dicobalt silicide complex [BP2tBuPz](H)2Co═Si═Co(H)2[BP2tBuPz] (8) in high yield, representing the first direct route to a symmetrical bimetallic silicide. The effect of the [BP2tBuPz] ligand on Co-Si bonding in 7 and 8 was explored by analysis of solid-state molecular structures and density functional theory (DFT) investigations. Upon exposure to CO or DMAP (DMAP = 4-dimethylaminopyridine), 8 converted to the corresponding [BP2tBuPz]Co(L)x adducts (L = CO, x = 2; L = DMAP, x = 1) with concomitant loss of SiH4, despite the lack of significant Si-H interactions in the starting complex. On heating to 60 °C, 8 underwent reaction with MeCl to produce small quantities of MexSiH4-x (x = 1-3), demonstrating functionalization of the μ-silicon atom in a molecular silicide to form organosilanes.
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- 2023
84. The Relationship between Maternal Antibodies to Fetal Brain and Prenatal Stress Exposure in Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Costa, Amy N, Ferguson, Bradley J, Hawkins, Emily, Coman, Adriana, Schauer, Joseph, Ramirez-Celis, Alex, Hecht, Patrick M, Bruce, Danielle, Tilley, Michael, Talebizadeh, Zohreh, Van de Water, Judy, and Beversdorf, David Q
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Autism ,Mental Health ,Genetics ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,autism spectrum disorder ,gene expression ,stress ,immune system ,5-HTTLPR ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Clinical Sciences ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical biochemistry and metabolomics ,Analytical chemistry - Abstract
Environmental and genetic factors contribute to the etiology of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but their interaction is less well understood. Mothers that are genetically more stress-susceptible have been found to be at increased risk of having a child with ASD after exposure to stress during pregnancy. Additionally, the presence of maternal antibodies for the fetal brain is associated with a diagnosis of ASD in children. However, the relationship between prenatal stress exposure and maternal antibodies in the mothers of children diagnosed with ASD has not yet been addressed. This exploratory study examined the association of maternal antibody response with prenatal stress and a diagnosis of ASD in children. Blood samples from 53 mothers with at least one child diagnosed with ASD were examined by ELISA. Maternal antibody presence, perceived stress levels during pregnancy (high or low), and maternal 5-HTTLPR polymorphisms were examined for their interrelationship in ASD. While high incidences of prenatal stress and maternal antibodies were found in the sample, they were not associated with each other (p = 0.709, Cramér's V = 0.051). Furthermore, the results revealed no significant association between maternal antibody presence and the interaction between 5-HTTLPR genotype and stress (p = 0.729, Cramér's V = 0.157). Prenatal stress was not found to be associated with the presence of maternal antibodies in the context of ASD, at least in this initial exploratory sample. Despite the known relationship between stress and changes in immune function, these results suggest that prenatal stress and immune dysregulation are independently associated with a diagnosis of ASD in this study population, rather than acting through a convergent mechanism. However, this would need to be confirmed in a larger sample.
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- 2023
85. A systematic review of change in symptoms, well-being and quality of life with group singing in people with cancer and their caregivers
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Bains, Kuljit Kaur, Jennings, Sophie, Bull, Caitlin, Tilley, Louise, Montgomery, Laura, and Lee, Annemarie L.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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86. Development of an occupational-therapy-led paediatric burn telehealth review clinic
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Phillips, Debra, Matheson, Lauren, Pain, Tilley, and Kingston, Gail A
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- 2021
87. Controlled monodefluorination and alkylation of C(sp 3 )–F bonds by lanthanide photocatalysts: importance of metal–ligand cooperativity
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Kynman, Amy E, Elghanayan, Luca K, Desnoyer, Addison N, Yang, Yan, Sévery, Laurent, Di Giuseppe, Andrea, Tilley, T Don, Maron, Laurent, and Arnold, Polly L
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Chemical Sciences - Abstract
The controlled functionalization of a single fluorine in a CF3 group is difficult and rare. Photochemical C-F bond functionalization of the sp3-C-H bond in trifluorotoluene, PhCF3, is achieved using catalysts made from earth-abundant lanthanides, (CpMe4)2Ln(2-O-3,5- t Bu2-C6H2)(1-C{N(CH)2N(iPr)}) (Ln = La, Ce, Nd and Sm, CpMe4 = C5Me4H). The Ce complex is the most effective at mediating hydrodefluorination and defluoroalkylative coupling of PhCF3 with alkenes; addition of magnesium dialkyls enables catalytic C-F bond cleavage and C-C bond formation by all the complexes. Mechanistic experiments confirm the essential role of the Lewis acidic metal and support an inner-sphere mechanism of C-F activation. Computational studies agree that coordination of the C-F substrate is essential for C-F bond cleavage. The unexpected catalytic activity for all members is made possible by the light-absorbing ability of the redox non-innocent ligands. The results described herein underscore the importance of metal-ligand cooperativity, specifically the synergy between the metal and ligand in both light absorption and redox reactivity, in organometallic photocatalysis.
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- 2022
88. Transitions for Older People with Intellectual Disabilities and Behaviours That Challenge Others: A Rapid Scoping Review
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Tilley, Elizabeth, Jordan, Joanne, Larkin, Mary, Vseteckova, Jitka, Ryan, Sara, and Wallace, Louise
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Background: People with intellectual disabilities and behaviours that challenge others are living longer. This review aimed to explore what is known about the health and social care needs, experiences, service interventions and resources of and for this population as they transition to different care contexts in the UK. Method: A rapid scoping review of published and unpublished literature was conducted based on collaborative working with key stakeholders and using systematic methods of data searching, extraction and analysis. Results: Consistent social work support, skilled staff, suitable accommodation, creative engagement with individuals and families to plan ahead, and timely access to quality healthcare are all required to promote successful transitions as people age, and to avoid unwanted/inappropriate transitions at points of crisis. Conclusions: More research is needed to assess the types of services that this population can and do access as they age, the quality of those services, and the extent to which local commissioners are planning ahead for people with intellectual disabilities and behaviours that challenge others.
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- 2023
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89. Becoming ‘Swiss’: waste management integration among Ethiopian and Eritrean migrants in Zürich, Switzerland
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Gudina Terefe Tucho, Marc Kalina, and Elizabeth Tilley
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migration ,integration ,Europe ,solid waste management ,refugee ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Abstract
For Swiss cities, connecting new migrants to basic services, like waste management, has emerged as an essential challenge toward their social and civic integration. Drawing on an ethnographic approach, this study investigates solid waste management integration within Zürich’s Ethiopian and Eritrean migrant communities. Our findings suggest that new arrivals learn quickly and are driven by a motivation to integrate and adapt to expected norms. However, learning is often characterized by trial and error and accompanied by expensive mistakes. Barriers include a lack of translated informational material and insufficient opportunity for asylum seekers to learn rules and norms on waste management. We recommend making standardized materials available and ensuring clear communication in a language that newly arriving migrants can understand. We also recommend targeted training on life skills, including waste management behaviors for asylum seekers at residential processing centers so that refugees can be trained on expected norms before transitioning into an independent living situation.
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- 2024
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90. Description, life cycle, and development of the myxozoan Myxobolus rasmusseni n. sp. in fathead minnows, Pimephales promelas: A possible emerging pathogen in southern Alberta, Canada
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Molly F. Tilley, Danielle Barry, Patrick C. Hanington, and Cameron P. Goater
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Myxospore ,Triactinomyxon spores ,TAM ,18S rDNA gene ,Emerging aquatic disease ,Tubifex ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Morphological, gene sequence, host tissue tropism, and life cycle characteristics were utilized to describe the myxozoan, Myxobolus rasmusseni n. sp. from fathead minnow, Pimephales promelas, collected from reservoirs in southern Alberta. Results from serial histological sections of whole heads showed that myxospores were contained within irregular-shaped and sized coelozoic capsules (=plasmodia). Clusters of membrane-bound, myxospore-filled plasmodia filled the head cavities of juvenile fathead minnows, leading to the development of large, white, disfiguring lesions in mid to late summer. Bilateral exopthalmia (pop-eye disease) was a common outcome of M. rasmusseni n. sp. development. BLASTn search of a 1974 bp sequence of the 18S rDNA gene isolated from myxospores indicated that M. rasmusseni n. sp. was distinct from other coelozoic and histozoic Myxobolus spp. cataloged in GenBank. 18S rDNA gene sequences from triactinomyxon spores released from the oligochaete Tubifex were 100% identical to sequences from myxospores collected from syntopic fathead minnows. Results from a longitudinal survey of the 2020 cohort of fathead minnows showed that young-of-the-year are exposed at 1–5 mo and that 60–90% of these had developed myxospore-filled lesions approximately one year later. Data regarding potential sources and timing of M. rasmusseni n. sp. emergence in fathead minnow populations are needed.
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- 2024
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91. 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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92. Skin swabbing protocol to collect DNA samples from small-bodied fish species [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]
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Ceinwen Tilley, Iain Barber, and William Norton
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Zebrafish ,stickleback ,skin swabbing ,fin clipping ,DNA extraction ,refinement ,eng ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Fish species are commonly used as experimental models in the laboratory. DNA is routinely collected from these animals to permit identification of their genotype. The current standard procedure to sample DNA is fin clipping, which involves anaesthetising individuals and removing a portion of the caudal fin. While fin clipping reliably generates good quality DNA samples for downstream applications, there is evidence that it can alter health and welfare, and impact the fish’s behaviour. This in turn can result in greater variation in the data collected. In a recent study we adapted a skin swabbing protocol to collect DNA from small-bodied fish, including sticklebacks and zebrafish, without the use of analgesics, anaesthetics or sharp instruments. A rayon-tipped swab was used to collect mucus from the flank of the fish, which was then used for DNA extraction. We subsequently demonstrated that compared to fin clipping, skin swabbing triggered fewer changes in stress axis activation and behaviour. We also found that gene expression and behaviour data collected from swabbed fish were less variable than similar data collected from fish that had been fin clipped. This potentially allows smaller sample sizes in experimental groups to be used after skin swabbing, thereby reducing animal use. Here we provide a detailed protocol explaining how to collect DNA samples from small laboratory fish using skin swabs.
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- 2024
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93. Improving support and planning ahead for older people with learning disabilities and family carers: a mixed-methods study
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Sara Ryan, Louise Wallace, Elizabeth Tilley, Irene Tuffrey-Wijne, Magdalena Mikulak, Rebecca Anderson, Angeli Vaid, Pam Bebbington, Richard Keagan-Bull, Emmie Morrissey, and Angela Martin
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older people with people with learning disabilities ,intellectual disabilities ,learning disability ,behaviours that challenge others ,end-of-life care planning ,growing older ,ageing ,support ,social care ,older carers ,public involvement ,under-represented groups ,learning disabilities ,adult learning disabilities ,intellectual disability ,aging ,caregivers ,patient participation ,mixed methods study ,ethnography ,qualitative research ,experience-based co-design ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background People with learning disabilities are living longer. Despite government policy to encourage people to lead supported lives in their community, family carers often maintain support due to dissatisfaction with services. This can lead to people moving from the family home in a crisis. Objectives (1) Find out what is known about health needs and resources for older people with learning disabilities (aged ≥ 40 years); (2) identify exemplars of good services for older people with learning disabilities; (3) explore service exemplars through ethnographic case studies; (4) evaluate support for older people with learning disabilities and their families through co-producing and testing future planning tools and (5) co-produce recommendations and resources. Design and methods Work package 1 rapid scoping reviews – three reviews focused on the health and social care needs of older people with learning disabilities and ‘behaviours that challenge others’, and family carers, and the co-ordination of support for this group. Work package 2 scoping and mapping exemplars of good practice – analysis of published service standards to assess excellence criteria, by mapping services, interviews (n = 30), survey (n = 9) and informal discussion with commissioners. Work package 3 ethnography of case studies of exemplar provision; independent supported living (n = 4); residential/nursing home (n = 2); day activities (n = 1), Shared Lives (n = 2). Fieldwork (20 days per model), interviews (n = 77) with older people with learning disabilities, family carers, support staff and commissioners. Work package 4 – co-producing and testing resources for older people with learning disabilities and their families involved interviews and focus groups with 36 people with learning disabilities, parents, and siblings, and experience-based co-design with 11 participants. Eight families evaluated the resources. Work package 5 – three stakeholder workshops co-produced service recommendations. Findings The reviews confirmed an inadequate evidence base concerning the experiences and support of family carers and older people with learning disabilities and ‘behaviours that challenge others’. Criteria of excellence were produced, and a shortlist of 15 services was identified for consideration in work package 3. The ethnographic work found that environmental, organisational and social factors were important, including supporting independence and choice about who people live with, matching staff to people, consistent relationships and adapting to ageing. Practices of institutionalisation were observed. In work package 4, we found that families were worried about the future and unsupported to explore options. ‘Planning Ahead’ cards and a booklet to record discussions were produced, and the evaluation was positively rated. Finally, formative discussion informed recommendations. Outputs include training packages, a carers’ forum, a film, a podcast and academic papers. Conclusions There is little focus on older people with learning disabilities and family carers. Services vary in their approach to planning for older-age support. Families are unsupported to plan, leaving people without choice. ‘Behaviours that challenge others’ was found to be unhelpful terminology. Recommendations: A new strategy is recommended for older people with learning disabilities and family carers that encompasses commissioning practices, professional input and peer learning, proactive support in ageing well and excellent service design. Limitations The COVID-19 pandemic created recruitment challenges. Reliance on providers for recruitment resulted in a lack of diversity in work package 3. Families’ plans, and therefore change, may be frustrated by insufficient service resources. Future work Given the lack of focus in this area, there is a range of future work to consider: experiences of older people with learning disabilities from diverse ethnic backgrounds; supporting people to age and die ‘in place’; best practice regarding designing/commissioning services, including housing; the role of social workers; access to nature; accessing mainstream support; and evaluation of the ‘Planning Ahead’ cards. Trial registration This trial is registered as ISRCTN74264887. Funding This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR129491) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 16. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information. Plain language summary People with learning disabilities are living longer, but most live with their families, who are also getting older. This is because there are not enough suitable places for people with learning disabilities to live, and family carers worry that the person will not get the right support and have a good life. Our research aimed to improve support for people with learning disabilities and their family carers to plan ahead for a good life. We focused on people who are labelled with ‘behaviours that challenge others’. We read what has been written about this area. We looked for and found examples of excellent support for older people with learning disabilities. Researchers and people with learning disabilities and family carers spent time hanging out with people where they live or spend their days to see what support they get. Then we had three meetings with everyone involved and discussed our research findings with people with learning disabilities, family carers, and professionals. We found that people can be supported to live good lives as they grow older. This can be living alone or with people they choose, and it means having staff they like and who like them and being supported to be active. However, we found that ageing of people with learning disabilities is often ignored, and some people were not living good lives. We also found that the label of ‘behaviours that challenge others’ is unhelpful. We worked with people with learning disabilities and family carers to make a set of cards with pictures and questions to help people plan ahead for a good life. We produced resources and made recommendations to create a new plan for older people with learning disabilities to support people to lead good lives. This is very important because there is a lack of attention to and support for people with learning disabilities as they age. Scientific summary Background While a significant age gap remains in mortality between people with learning disabilities (PWLD) and the general population, more PWLD are growing older. Research shows that parents of PWLD are dissatisfied with social care services and concerned about the future of their adult child. Various policies aim to enable PWLD to live independently with support; however, family carers often maintain long-term care. This can generate a crisis for the PWLD, who may be moved to an alternative home that may not be appropriate for them. Our research focuses on PWLD aged ≥ 40 years in line with evidence that people may experience early onset of long-term conditions such as neurological, cardiovascular, respiratory and gastrointestinal disorders. Aim The aim was to improve support for family carers, older PWLD (aged ≥ 40 years) and ‘behaviours that challenge others’ (‘BTCO’) by producing effective recommendations and resources to support planning ahead for a good older age. Objectives Develop an understanding of what is known about the health needs, service interventions and resources for older PWLD, with a focus on those labelled with ‘BTCO’, and family carers [work package 1 (WP1)]. Identify exemplars of good practice in services in the UK for older PWLD, and their family and professional carers towards the end of life (WP2). Explore service exemplars through ethnographic case studies (WP3). Evaluate support for older PWLD and their families through the co-production and testing of decision aid tools to support future planning (WP4). Co-produce recommendations with PWLD, carers, providers, social workers and commissioners, and resources for older PWLD, family and support workers and social workers (WP5). Methods Work package 1: systematic scoping reviews Three rapid scoping reviews (RRs) focused on the health and social care needs of older PWLD and ‘BTCO’ (RR1), the health and social care needs of family carers of older PWLD and ‘BTCO’ (RR2), and how care can be best co-ordinated for older PWLD and ‘BTCO’ (RR3). Literature including research articles, reports, policy and practice guidance was included. RR1 and RR2 included UK-related evidence from 2001, and RR3 had no date restriction and was international in scope. Older PWLD were defined as those aged ≥ 40 years. ‘Family carers’ included parents and siblings. Care contexts encompassed any community living. We focused our search strategy on ‘challenging behaviour’, ‘ageing’ and ‘learning disability’. Data were extracted into a form and considered alongside non-research information and guidance relevant to older PWLD and ‘BTCO’, and their family carers. A narrative approach was combined with insights from the research team and Project Advisory Groups. A three-stage inductive process was applied: development of a coding framework; development of descriptive themes and subthemes; and development of analytical themes and subthemes. Database searches yielded 261 returns, and a subsequent extended search for RR1 yielded 355 returns; 9 papers were included. RR2 searches yielded 157 returns; 7 items were included. RR3 searches yielded 1449 returns, with 9 included. Work package 2: scoping and mapping exemplars of good practice in living arrangements in the community for older people with learning disabilities and ‘behaviour that challenges others’ Published service standards and grey literature of WP1 were analysed into themes supporting criteria to judge the excellence of services. Data from the mapping of services were subject to rapid analysis to refine the criteria, and further criteria were generated about participants’ relationships with services. A mapping exercise aimed to identify if services met the criteria for excellence. Multiple routes were used to identify the commissioning and provision of exemplar services and to find out key information about services using interviews (n = 30), an online survey (n = 9), websites and other documentary sources, including a search of Care Quality Commission (CQC) reports. Data generation produced descriptions of services and critiques of the criteria of excellence. Analysis involved coding and summarising information into a template including how the service met the criteria, the service model and who the services were provided to. The templates were presented to the research team and Advisory Groups for a final decision on the list of excellent services for WP3. Work package 3: ethnography of exemplar community living models Nine case studies of four models of provision: independent supported living (n = 4), residential nursing home (n = 2), living with family and using day activities (n = 1) and Shared Lives (n = 2). Shared Lives is a national scheme in which PWLD live as part of a family usually funded by the local authority (LA). Ethnographic fieldwork was conducted by academics and co-researchers with lived experience. Sites were dispersed across England. Researchers spent approximately 20 days within each model of care. Interviews were conducted with 95 PWLD including people who would be described by services as having severe learning disabilities and/or complex needs, family carers, support workers and managers, and commissioners. A thematic data analysis of observation notes, interview transcripts and policy documents was undertaken. Coding categories evolved iteratively. Mind maps and more conceptual analysis of meaning, action and process were used, capturing the micro-detail of participants’ lives. Co-researchers were involved in a section of analysis using audio and written extracts of data. The opening of a second residential nursing site selected during proposal development was delayed. Modified ethnographic data collection methods, including documentary analysis of planning meetings, interviews with the service development project manager, lead commissioner, a LA councillor, the chairperson of a parent carer group, and the co-design process, were considered in interviews and by observation. Work package 4: co-production and testing of resources for older people with learning disabilities and their families Co-design methods explored what approaches are considered appropriate by PWLD and family carers, and a set of resources for PWLD and families was co-produced. The team included a research assistant with learning disabilities. Thirty-six people (9 PWLD, 11 parents, 16 siblings) took part in interviews and focus groups using communication aids Books Beyond Words and Talking Mats™. Data were analysed using a Framework approach. An experience-based co-design approach was used to produce a decision-making resource. Twelve online sessions were held with 11 participants, including a core group of 4 PWLD and 4 parents, to develop the resources. A small-scale evaluation tested these with eight families across a 2-month period. This focused on the usefulness of the resource, the impact of planning actions and feedback for improvement. Data were collected twice using a questionnaire. Work package 5: methods This WP aimed to co-produce recommendations for commissioners and providers, resources for carers and PWLD, and online training materials for social workers and support staff. Participants in two co-design workshops (n = 45 and n = 30) shared initial findings and discussed developing recommendations. A third workshop (n = 22) focused on the developing recommendations, and research priority setting in the north of England. Participants included a wide range of stakeholders: PWLD and family carers, NHS England, NHS, the CQC, LA delegates, disability charity organisations, service providers, commissioners and academics. Findings Work package 1 Rapid review 1 generated four themes: transition over time, including proactive planning for circumstances in which PWLD are no longer able to remain in their home; avoiding the need for inappropriate transitions; making transition work; and an absence of targeted resources to support this. There is limited planning by ageing family carers and PWLD, and a need for professional involvement in supporting the family before ageing-related problems become manifest. Commissioners have a responsibility to proactively plan for the delivery of appropriate housing and support, requiring robust databases of ageing family carers and older PWLD. Rapid review 2 generated four themes: a lack of accessible advice, information and support for families to plan ahead; challenges facing family members with their own needs; the lack of availability of suitable housing and support; and lack of targeted resources to guide PWLD, family carers or professionals in planning ahead. Rapid review 3 identified three layers to co-ordinating care for older PWLD. For individuals this is communicating effectively and co-ordinating care to pre-empt the effects of ageing, delivered by skilled staff. At service level this is co-ordination across teams and services including housing, drawing on those with expertise in learning disabilities. At local/regional level, this is commissioning services taking account of current and future age-related needs. The reviews confirmed an inadequate evidence base concerning the experiences, needs and support of family carers of older PWLD, who are being supported when their family member’s preference is to remain at home and/or to achieve a potential move where appropriate and desired. WP1 also highlighted the conceptual limitations of the term ‘BTCO’. Work package 2 The final criteria of excellence were: personalisation, with goals, daily plans and activities shared and updated matching staff to people being supported personalised living space and choice around who this is shared with proactive, preventative health care involving primary care, and involvement of NHS multidisciplinary learning disability teams staff recruitment underpinned with the right values and skills high staff retention to provide continuity of care inclusive communication methods family involvement community engagement and inclusion trauma-informed services where appropriate good practices such as end-of-life care planning, dementia assessment and management embedded as routine commissioner endorsement of provider quality and resilience commissioners working with providers, PWLD and families in building capacity for future services. The mapping involved review of 330 potentially relevant locations, which was reduced to 74 after consideration of the relevance of the service to older PWLD. There was contact with around 260 people across England, which led to 89 contacts who provided information in formal interviews and informal discussions, via online meetings and by e-mail about at least one specific service, with around 3–6 provider and commissioner perspectives on the same services. A shortlist of 15 services was agreed for consideration in WP3. Work package 3 Findings were organised around environmental, organisational and social factors. Environmental factors supporting independence, and choice over who people interact with, were maximised for those living on their own or with people they chose to live with. Organisational factors related to systems that support good and consistent relationships with support staff, staff matching, aspirational support and adapting to changing needs as people age. Commissioners that actively plan for adapting care packages and contingency provision were seen to avoid crises. Planning for end-of-life care was not well supported by policies and practices except in the nursing home and one supported living provider. Shared Lives provision actively supported people who were developing dementia. Social factors included maintaining family and community relationships and being supported to do a range of activities. The label of ‘BTCO’ could be removed with consistently good support and environment. Poor practices of institutionalisation were observed, where staff schedules over-rode choice and/or duration of activities. Small providers that had strong values and management engagement with support workers were more able to offer consistently good support than larger organisations where excellent support can exist alongside examples of poor support. Observation of planning for a new nursing home offered useful insights into the challenges involved in growing capacity for local services for PWLD as they age, while adhering to models of excellent care. The research showed the extent to which independence, choice in relationships, support for healthy ageing, and meaningful activity including work was evidenced in different ways across providers, with some failing to achieve this despite the rhetoric and aspirations of providers and commissioners. Work package 4 Families were acutely aware of the need to plan ahead and were worried about the future, unaware of and unsupported to explore options. Co-design sessions stimulated ideas and discussion and the content and format of a decision-making resource was produced based on what worked for family carers and PWLD. This comprised a set of 102 ‘Planning Ahead’ cards and a ‘Me and my plans’ booklet in which families could record their discussions and plans. What participants wanted in their home reflected WP3 findings about the factors that enable excellence in care. They wanted to choose who they lived with; to be supported by people who know them well and care for them; to live in a location that suits their lives; and to have control over what they do and when. The lack of awareness of alternatives and absence of social work support was striking. In some cases, the lack of options led to parents ignoring the future, denying PWLD the opportunities to have lives that their peers without learning disabilities can have. Work package 5 Formative discussion across three stakeholder workshops informed the development of recommendations about how to raise awareness and improve access to information about planning and options. The workshops involved a range of stakeholders, and short films were used to present developing project analysis and raise key questions. Discussion focused on improved needs assessment data including for those not known to services; improved peer learning by providers and commissioners, and funding of self-advocacy groups to support people’s local decision-making; and improved individual support by matching staff to people and enabling staff to celebrate their successes. To support dissemination, a session plan was created in standard and Easy Read versions to enable self-advocacy groups to contribute to the development of practical recommendations for providers and commissioners. Resources Project outputs include two OpenLearn courses, one for practitioners and one for family carers; a training resource to support researchers, PWLD and family carers to work together as ethnographers; a resource for social workers hosted by the British Association of Social Workers; a carers’ forum hosted on Facebook; a short film; a podcast about the experience of taking part in the project; blogs; and a range of publications for non-academic audiences and academic papers. Limitations While a systematic approach was taken to reviews and mapping services, it is possible that some evidence was missed in WP1 and WP2. The COVID-19 pandemic created challenges for participant recruitment, and workarounds were needed. One ‘excellent’ site withdrew early in WP3 due to staffing issues caused by the pandemic. Reliance on providers for recruitment in WP3 resulted in a sample limited to White British participants. Participation may have influenced providers to present excellence and hide less good practice, but, given the mix of provision observed, this was a low risk. The discussion cards produced in WP4 may be in formats and have content that exclude some people. This needs to be tested further. Attempts to plan by families may be frustrated by insufficient resources and options to achieve what people want, raising expectations that cannot be met. Conclusions There is little research on older PWLD and family carers. Some participants were leading good lives in their own homes with excellent support from staff who knew them well. Even largely excellent services vary in their proactive approach to planning for older age support and end-of-life care. Families are often unsupported to plan ahead, and PWLD are by default left without choices about their future lives. The label ‘BCTO’ was found to be an unhelpful term that did not stimulate discussion of personalised care and rights to autonomy. It had little practical utility in the ethnographic research and was absent in the reviews. Research recommendations The over-riding recommendation is the urgent need for a new strategy for older PWLD and family carers that encompasses commissioning practices (including the sharing of best practice); professional input (roles and responsibilities, the role of social workers, support staff skills and training); proactive support to live and age well; and excellent service design (appropriate, sustainable, local and adaptable housing that enables people to age and die in place). Recommendations are made for improved proactive health care, organisational learning, matching and support for staff, and ‘try before you buy’ options to support choice and personalisation. Future work Given the lack of focus in this area, there is a range of future work to consider: experiences of older PWLD from diverse ethnic backgrounds; supporting people to age and die ‘in place’; best practice regarding designing/commissioning services, including housing; the role of social workers; access to nature and pet ownership; access to mainstream support; and evaluation of the ‘Planning Ahead’ cards. Trial registration This trial is registered as ISRCTN74264887. Funding This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR129491) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 16. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
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- 2024
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94. Rare case of epithelioid angiosarcoma presenting as nodular pulmonary opacities in a 23-year-old woman
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Zein Kattih, Jonathan Moore, Alain Borczuk, and Ann E. Tilley
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Epithelioid angiosarcoma ,Pulmonary disease ,Ct imaging ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Epithelioid angiosarcoma involving the lung is a rare entity that can present with nodules or consolidations on CT imaging. We describe the case of a 23-year-old woman who presented with chronic cough and pleuritic chest pain and consolidations on CT chest who ultimately underwent diagnostic biopsy. A high index of suspicion is required for this disease, and biopsy is essential for the diagnosis of angiosarcoma. Histological evaluation and immunohistochemical analysis are helpful for the diagnosis of epithelioid angiosarcoma, and expression of CD31 is supportive of the diagnosis.
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- 2024
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95. 8 “Never Any Dirty Ones”: Comics Readership among African American Youth in the Mid-Twentieth Century
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Tilley, Carol L., primary
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- 2023
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96. Embodied carbon in biogenic and earth materials
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Braham, William W., primary, Hou, Miaomiao, additional, Prabhakaran, Suryakiran, additional, and Tilley, David, additional
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- 2023
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97. Substance and Behavioral Addiction in Family Law Cases.
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Friedman, Scott and Tilley, John L.
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Family law -- Practice -- Evaluation ,Psychiatric counseling -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Compulsive gambling -- Care and treatment -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Addiction -- Care and treatment -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Substance abuse -- Care and treatment ,Government regulation - Abstract
Addiction is a condition demarcated by repetitive, compulsive behavior that results in either substantial distress to the person or significant impairment in some area of the persons i functioning, such [...]
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- 2024
98. The UCL Integrated Engineering Programme
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Hailes, Stephen, Jones, Liz, Micheletti, Martina, Mitchell, John E., Nyamapfene, Abel, Roach, Kate, Tilley, Emanuela, and Truscott, Fiona
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In 2014, the UCL Faculty of Engineering Sciences introduced the Integrated Engineering Programme -- a revision of eight existing degree programmes across a range of engineering disciplines. Centred on a thread of authentic project-based activities, the programme aimed to enhance the students' understanding of key theoretical concepts and heighten the development of key professional skills. This paper provides an outline of the rationale for the various project-based activities implemented, details their key features and described the impact these activities have had on the students' development of key skills.
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- 2021
99. Myeloperoxidase-ANCA IgG induces different forms of small vessel vasculitis based on type of synergistic immune stimuli
- Author
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Hu, Peiqi, Xiao, Hong, Alba, Marco A., Atkins, Hannah M., Gou, Shenju, Hu, Yanglin, Gomez, John C., Jania, Corey M., Martin, Jessica R., Morrison, Thomas E., Tilley, Stephen L., Heise, Mark T., Doerschuk, Claire M., Falk, Ronald J., and Jennette, J. Charles
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Adrenergic orchestration of immune cell dynamics in response to cardiac stress
- Author
-
Nayak, Tapas K., Parasania, Dev, and Tilley, Douglas G.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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