384 results on '"Brauer, S"'
Search Results
152. Measures of activity limitation on admission to rehabilitation after stroke predict walking speed at discharge: an observational study
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Suzanne Kuys, Bew, P. G., Lynch, M. R., Morrison, G., and Brauer, S. G.
153. Melanesian and Asian origins of Polynesians: mtDNA and Y chromosome gradients across the Pacific
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Kayser, M., Brauer, S., Cordaux, R., Casto, A., Lao, O., Zhivotovsky, L. A., Moyse-Faurie, C., Rutledge, R. B., Schiefenhoevel, W., Gil, D., Lin, A. A., Underhill, P. A., Oefner, Peter J., Trent, R. J., and Stoneking, M.
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610 Medizin ,10. No inequality ,16. Peace & justice ,polynesia ,Y chromosome ,mtDNA ,genetic origins ,human population history - Abstract
The human settlement of the Pacific Islands represents one of the most recent major migration events of mankind. Polynesians originated in Asia according to linguistic evidence or in Melanesia according to archaeological evidence. To shed light on the genetic origins of Polynesians, we investigated over 400 Polynesians from 8 island groups, in comparison with over 900 individuals from potential parental populations of Melanesia, Southeast and East Asia, and Australia, by means of Y chromosome (NRY) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) markers. Overall, we classified 94.1% of Polynesian Y chromosomes and 99.8% of Polynesian mtDNAs as of either Melanesian (NRY-DNA: 65.8%, mtDNA: 6%) or Asian (NRY-DNA: 28.3%, mtDNA: 93.8%) origin, suggesting a dual genetic origin of Polynesians in agreement with the "Slow Boat" hypothesis. Our data suggest a pronounced admixture bias in Polynesians toward more Melanesian men than women, perhaps as a result of matrilocal residence in the ancestral Polynesian society. Although dating methods are consistent with somewhat similar entries of NRY/mtDNA haplogroups into Polynesia, haplotype sharing suggests an earlier appearance of Melanesian haplogroups than those from Asia. Surprisingly, we identified gradients in the frequency distribution of some NRY/mtDNA haplogroups across Polynesia and a gradual west-to-east decrease of overall NRY/mtDNA diversity, not only providing evidence for a west-to-east direction of Polynesian settlements but also suggesting that Pacific voyaging was regular rather than haphazard. We also demonstrate that Fiji played a pivotal role in the history of Polynesia: humans probably first migrated to Fiji, and subsequent settlement of Polynesia probably came from Fiji.
154. Feasibility of creating an enriched environment and subsequent impact on activity levels for stroke patients in an acute stroke unit: A study protocol
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Ingrid Rosbergen, Grimley, R., Hayward, K. S., Walker, K., Rowley, D., Campbell, A., Mcgufficke, S., Robertson, S., Trinder, J., and Brauer, S. G.
155. Embedding an Enriched Environment in an Acute Stroke Unit Increases Activity in People with Stroke: Results of a Pilot Study
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Ingrid Rosbergen, Grimley, R. S., Hayward, K. S., Walke, K. Cr, Rowley, D., Campbell, A. M., Mcgufficke, S., Robertson, S. T., Trinder, J., Janssen, H., and Brauer, S. G.
156. Monitoring the impact of Parkinson's disease on community life using everyday technology: Development of a remote monitoring platform using smartphones
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Chenery, H. J., Liddle, J., Ireland, D., Brauer, S. G., Theodoros, D., Wiles, J., Mcbride, S., Mohanraj Karunanithi, Ding, H., Lamont, R., and Silburn, P. A.
157. Fostering clinician-led research
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Brauer, S. G., Terry Haines, and Bew, P. G.
158. Increasing intensity during treadmill walking does not adversely affect walking pattern or quality in newly-ambulating stroke patients: an experimental study
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Kuys, S. S., Brauer, S. G., Louise Ada, and Russell, T. G.
159. Stroke patients in an acute stroke unit show little physical, social and cognitive activity
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Ingrid Rosbergen, Grimley, R. S., Hayward, K. S., Walker, K., Rowley, D., Campbell, A., Mcgufficke, S., Robertson, S., Trinder, J., Janssen, H., and Brauer, S. G.
160. Bone infarction as a cause of painful fingers in a child
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FOY, M, primary and BRAUER, S, additional
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- 1988
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161. HEPARIN PHARMACODYNAMICS CAN NOT BE ACCURATELY PREDICTED IN VITRO
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Gravlee, G. P., primary, Brauer, S. D., additional, Roy, R. C., additional, Howard, G., additional, Ramsey, F. M., additional, Pauca, A. L., additional, Royster, R. L., additional, and Johnston, W. E., additional
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- 1986
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162. Measuring the Lifespace of People With Parkinson’s Disease Using Smartphones: Proof of Principle
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Liddle, Jacki, Ireland, David, McBride, Simon J, Brauer, Sandra G, Hall, Leanne M, Ding, Hang, Karunanithi, Mohan, Hodges, Paul W, Theodoros, Deborah, Silburn, Peter A, and Chenery, Helen J
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Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundLifespace is a multidimensional construct that describes the geographic area in which a person lives and conducts their activities, and reflects mobility, health, and well-being. Traditionally, it has been measured by asking older people to self-report the length and frequency of trips taken and assistance required. Global Positioning System (GPS) sensors on smartphones have been used to measure Lifespace of older people, but not with people with Parkinson’s disease (PD). ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to investigate whether GPS data collected via smartphones could be used to indicate the Lifespace of people with PD. MethodsThe dataset was supplied via the Michael J Fox Foundation Data Challenge and included 9 people with PD and 7 approximately matched controls. Participants carried smartphones with GPS sensors over two months. Data analysis compared the PD group and the control group. The impact of symptom severity on Lifespace was also investigated. ResultsVisualization methods for comparing Lifespace were developed including scatterplots and heatmaps. Lifespace metrics for comparison included average daily distance, percentage of time spent at home, and number of trips into the community. There were no significant differences between the PD and the control groups on Lifespace metrics. Visual representations of Lifespace were organized based on the self-reported severity of symptoms, suggesting a trend of decreasing Lifespace with increasing PD symptoms. ConclusionsLifespace measured by GPS-enabled smartphones may be a useful concept to measure the progression of PD and the impact of various therapies and rehabilitation programs. Directions for future use of GPS-based Lifespace are provided.
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- 2014
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163. Stress-State, Temperature, and Strain Rate Dependence of Vintage ASTM A7 Steel
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Brauer, S. A., Whittington, W. R., Rhee, H., Allison, P. G., Dickel, D. E., Crane, C. K., and Horstemeyer, M. F.
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The structure–property relationships of a vintage ASTM A7 steel is quantified in terms of stress state, temperature, and strain rate dependence. The microstructural stereology revealed primary phases to be 15.8% ± 2.6% pearlitic and 84.2% ± 2.6 ferritic with grain sizes of 13.3 μm ± 3.1 μm and 36.5 μm ± 7.0 μm, respectively. Manganese particle volume fractions represented 0.38–1.53% of the bulk material. Mechanical testing revealed a stress state dependence that showed a maximum strength increase of 85% from torsion to tension and a strain rate dependence that showed a maximum strength increase of 38% from 10−1 to 103 s−1at 20% strain. In tension, a negative strain rate sensitivity (nSRS) was observed in the quasi-static rate regime yet was positive when traversing from the quasi-static rates to high strain rates. Also, the A7 steel exhibited a significant ductility reduction as the temperature increased from ambient to 573 K (300 °C), which is uncommon for metals. The literature argues that dynamic strain aging (DSA) can induce the negative strain rate sensitivity and ductility reduction upon a temperature increase. Finally, a tension/compression stress asymmetry arises in this A7 steel, which can play a significant role since bending is prevalent in this ubiquitous structural material. Torsional softening was also observed for this A7 steel.
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- 2019
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164. Bone Infarction as a Cause of Painful Fingers in a Child.
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FOY, M. A. and BRAUER, S. E.
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An unusual case of painful fingers in a two-year-old child is described. The possible aetiolgy is discussed. The condition normally runs a self-limiting course. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1988
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165. In-Situ Time-Resolved X-Ray Studies of Eutectic Crystallization in Amorphous Fe1−xBx and Co1−xZrx.
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Fischer, Henry E., Brauer, S., Sutton, M., Ström-Olsen, J., Zaluska, A., Stephenson, G. B., and Koster, Uwe
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- 1992
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166. Polymorphic Crystallization of Metal-Metalloid-Glasses above the Glass Transition Temperature.
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Köster, U., Schünemann, U., Stephenson, G.B., Brauer, S., and Sutton, M.
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- 1990
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167. Balance control in the elderly: do masters athletes show more efficient balance responses than healthy older adults?
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Neros C, Brauer S, and Woollacott M
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- 2009
168. Nanocrystalline materials by crystallization of metal-metalloid glasses
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Köster, U., Schünemann, U., Blank-Bewersdorff, M., Brauer, S., Sutton, M., and Stephenson, G.B.
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- 1991
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169. A biosensor for triazine herbicides based on chlorophyll fluorescence in photosystem 2
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Moss, D.A., Brauer, S., Reichert, J., Mäntele, W., and Ache, H.J.
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- 1992
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170. Die Autonomiekonzeption in Patientenverfügungen – Die Rolle von Persönlichkeit und sozialen Beziehungen
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Susanne Brauer, University of Zurich, and Brauer, S
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Health (social science) ,Health Policy ,Philosophy ,610 Medicine & health ,advance directives ,social relations ,2719 Health Policy ,character ,culture ,170 Ethics ,2910 Issues, Ethics and Legal Aspects ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,10222 Institute of Biomedical Ethics and History of Medicine ,values ,10001 Center for Ethics ,autonomy ,3306 Health (social science) ,1211 Philosophy ,Humanities - Abstract
Zusammenfassung : Sowohl in der klinischen und rechtlichen Praxis als auch in der Medizinethik besteht Uneinigkeit darüber, was die (moralische) Verbindlichkeit von Patientenverfügungen begründet und wie mit ihnen in der Praxis zu verfahren ist. Dieser Artikel versucht, die ethisch-normative Basis von Patientenverfügungen näher zu beleuchten. Eine Bestimmung erfolgt in drei Schritten. Erstens wird analysiert, welche Autonomiekonzeption Patientenverfügungen zugrunde liegt. Patientenverfügungen, so meine These, sind Ausdruck eines relationalen, um den Aspekt der Persönlichkeit angereicherten Autonomiebegriffs. Eine moralische Verbindlichkeit ist mit dieser Analyse noch nicht geklärt. Im Anschluss werden daher Argumente gesammelt, warum eine Patientenverfügung für Drittpersonen moralische Bindungskraft haben könnte. In der Achtung der Persönlichkeit sehe ich hier einen zentralen Punkt. Ob die Legitimität der in einer Patientenverfügung geäußerten Wünsche relativ zu einer bestehenden Rechtskultur, dem Allgemeinverständnis einer Gesellschaft oder der Kultur einer medizinischen Praxis ist, oder unabhängig vom soziokulturellen Kontext begründet werden kann, bleibt dabei eine offene Frage
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- 2008
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171. Age rationing and prudential lifespan account in Norman Daniels' Just health
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Sandra G. Brauer, University of Zurich, and Brauer, S
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Health (social science) ,Health Services for the Aged ,610 Medicine & health ,170 Ethics ,Health care rationing ,Life Expectancy ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Social Justice ,Health care ,Economics ,Humans ,Norman Daniels symposium ,Aged, 80 and over ,Social Responsibility ,Health Care Rationing ,Equity (economics) ,Actuarial science ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Health Policy ,Age Factors ,Rationing ,2719 Health Policy ,2910 Issues, Ethics and Legal Aspects ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Intergenerational equity ,10222 Institute of Biomedical Ethics and History of Medicine ,Life expectancy ,10001 Center for Ethics ,Form of the Good ,3306 Health (social science) ,business ,Social responsibility - Abstract
Could age be a valid criterion for rationing? In Just health, Norman Daniels argues that under certain circumstances age rationing is prudent, and therefore a morally permissible strategy to tackle the problem of resource scarcity. Crucial to his argument is the distinction between two problem-settings of intergenerational equity: equity among age groups and equity among birth cohorts. While fairness between age groups can involve unequal benefit treatment in different life stages, fairness between birth cohorts implies enjoying approximate equality in benefit ratios. Although both questions of fairness are distinct, the resolution of the one depends on resolution of the other. In this paper, I investigate whether Daniels' account of age rationing could be defended as a fair way of setting limits to healthcare entitlements. I will focus on two main points. First, I will consider whether the age group problem could be resolved without appealing to a conception of the good. Second, I will demonstrate that the connection between the age group problem and the birth cohort problem runs deeper than Daniels initially thought-and that it ultimately suggests a method for prioritisation in problem solving strategies.
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- 2009
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172. Selbstbestimmung und Selbstverständnis: Themenschwerpunkte im Umgang mit der Patientenverfügung
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Claudia Wiesemann, Susanne Brauer, Nikola Biller-Andorno, University of Zurich, and Brauer, S
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Reproductive medicine ,610 Medicine & health ,2719 Health Policy ,170 Ethics ,Philosophy ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,2910 Issues, Ethics and Legal Aspects ,Medicine public health ,Family medicine ,medicine ,10222 Institute of Biomedical Ethics and History of Medicine ,10001 Center for Ethics ,business ,3306 Health (social science) ,1211 Philosophy - Published
- 2008
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173. Mail. Placement crisis.
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Osborne Y, Lemke P, Wisniewski B, Needham J, Castaing J, Blow D, Walker R, Howlett S, Greaves S, Pickrell J, Reid-Searle K, Wilson G, Moore H, Brauer S, and Kemp L
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- 2004
174. Adapted MoCA for Use among Arabic-Speaking Immigrants in the United States.
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Ajrouch KJ, Tarraf W, Brauer S, Zahodne LB, and Antonucci TC
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- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Reproducibility of Results, United States, Arabs psychology, Language, Aged, 80 and over, Psychometrics, Dementia ethnology, Dementia diagnosis, Translating, Alzheimer Disease ethnology, Alzheimer Disease diagnosis, Neuropsychological Tests, Emigrants and Immigrants psychology, Mental Status and Dementia Tests
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Objective: Neuropsychological assessment among U.S. Arabic-speaking older adults is virtually non-existent due to lack of translated measures and normative data, as well as researchers' limited access to Middle Eastern/Arab Americans. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is the only validated, widely-used dementia screen with Arabic language norms/cutoffs, yet, Arabic MoCA translations vary across countries and studies. We examined utility of a modified translation among Arabic-speaking immigrants in metro-Detroit., Methods: The Arabic MoCA was modified to reflect consistency with the original English version while remaining meaningful in the Arabic language. The MoCA was then administered to 32 Arabic-speaking adults age 65 + living in metro-Detroit. Eight (25%) had an Alzheimer's disease or related dementia (ADRD) diagnosis. Each item was standardized and Cronbach's alpha assessed reliability. Ordinary least squares models examined whether an ADRD diagnosis predicts the total MoCA score and each item, adjusting for demographics., Results: The mean age of the sample was 73 years old. The alpha was acceptably high at 0.87. Bivariate analyses show those with ADRD diagnosis scored lower overall on the MoCA. However, probability of diagnosis and age were confounded in the sample such that in multivariate analyses ADRD diagnosis did not explain additional variation beyond what is explained by age. Orientation, cube-copy test and serial 7s best distinguished those with ADRD., Conclusion: The modified Arabic language MoCA shows promise distinguishing those with an ADRD diagnosis. This translation provides a resource for neuropsychologists looking for translated tests when working with Arabic-speaking patients in the U.S., Competing Interests: Declarations. Conflict of Interest: All authors have no competing interests to declare., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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175. Tools to study neural and glioma stem cell quiescence.
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Friess D, Brauer S, Pöysti A, Choudhury C, and Harris L
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- Humans, Animals, Neural Stem Cells physiology, Glioma pathology, Neoplastic Stem Cells physiology, Neoplastic Stem Cells pathology, Brain Neoplasms pathology
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Quiescence is a prolonged but reversible state of cell-cycle arrest that is an adaptive feature of most adult stem cell populations. In the brain, quiescence helps to protect adult neural stem cells from stress and supports lifelong neurogenesis. Unfortunately however, entry into a quiescent or a slow-cycling state is also a malignant feature of brain cancer stem cells. In glioblastoma, where the process has been best characterised, quiescent glioma stem cells preferentially survive chemoradiation, and after therapy, reactivate to regrow the tumour and drive recurrence. In this Review, we discuss the in vitro and in vivo models that have been developed for studying neural stem cell quiescence and how these tools may be used to deepen biological understanding and to develop novel therapies targeting quiescent glioma stem cells., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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176. COVID-19 Stress and Cognitive Disparities in Black, MENA, and White Older Adults.
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Ajrouch KJ, Zahodne LB, Brauer S, Tarraf W, and Antonucci TC
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Arabs psychology, Black or African American psychology, Michigan epidemiology, Middle Eastern People psychology, White psychology, Cognition, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 ethnology, COVID-19 psychology, Health Status Disparities, Stress, Psychological ethnology, Stress, Psychological epidemiology
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Background and Objectives: Population aging has led to an increased interest in cognitive health and, in particular, the role that stress plays in cognitive disparities. This paper extends previous work by characterizing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) stress type prevalence and its association with cognitive health in metro-Detroit among Black, Middle Eastern/Arab (MENA), and White older adults., Research Design and Methods: Data come from a regionally representative sample of adults aged 65+ in metro-Detroit (N = 600; MENA n = 199; Black n = 205; White n = 196). We used generalized linear models to compare groups on sociodemographic, objective stress, and social stress indicators. Multiple group structural equation models evaluated whether COVID-19 stress predicted cognitive health and whether that association varied across racial/ethnic groups., Results: MENA and Black older adults reported higher levels of objective stress than Whites. There were no racial/ethnic group differences in social stress. More objective stress was associated with better cognitive health, and more social stress was associated with worse cognitive health. The positive effect of objective stress was especially apparent for White older adults., Discussion and Implications: Though it appears that minority stress was not exacerbated in the context of pandemic stress, links between greater objective stress and better cognitive health apparent among White older adults were not evident among MENA or Black older adults. Broadening health disparities research by including underrepresented populations allows us to elevate scientific knowledge by clarifying what is universal and what is unique about the stress process., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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177. What should all health professionals know about movement behaviour change? An international Delphi-based consensus statement.
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Alsop T, Lehman E, Brauer S, Forbes R, Hanson CL, Healy G, Milton K, Reid H, Rosbergen I, and Gomersall S
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- Humans, Delphi Technique, Sedentary Behavior, Consensus, Health Personnel, Exercise
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The WHO has called for action to integrate physical activity promotion into healthcare settings, yet there is a lack of consensus on the competencies required by health professionals to deliver effective movement behaviour change support. The objective of this study was to establish key competencies relevant for all health professionals to support individuals to change their movement behaviours. Consensus was obtained using a three-phase Delphi process. Participants with expertise in physical activity and sedentary behaviour were asked to report what knowledge, skills and attributes they believed health professionals should possess in relation to movement behaviour change. Proposed competencies were developed and rated for importance. Participants were asked to indicate agreement for inclusion, with consensus defined as group level agreement of at least 80%. Participants from 11 countries, working in academic (55%), clinical (30%) or combined academic/clinical (13%) roles reached consensus on 11 competencies across 3 rounds (n=40, n=36 and n=34, respectively). Some competencies considered specific to certain disciplines did not qualify for inclusion. Participants agreed that health professionals should recognise, take ownership of, and practise interprofessional collaboration in supporting movement behaviour change; support positive culture around these behaviours; communicate using person-centred approaches that consider determinants, barriers and facilitators of movement behaviours; explain the health impacts of these behaviours; and recognise how their own behaviour influences movement behaviour change support. This consensus defines 11 competencies for health professionals, which may serve as a catalyst for building a culture of advocacy for movement behaviour change across health disciplines., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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178. Measurement and structural invariance of a neuropsychological battery among Middle Eastern/North African, Black, and White older adults.
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Zahodne LB, Brauer S, Tarraf W, Morris EP, Antonucci TC, and Ajrouch KJ
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- Aged, Humans, North African People, United States, White, Middle Eastern People, Black or African American, Ethnicity, Language, Racial Groups, Neuropsychological Tests
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Objective: There is a lack of guidance on common neuropsychological measures among Arabic speakers and individuals who identify as Middle Eastern/North African (MENA) in the United States. This study evaluated measurement and structural invariance of a neuropsychological battery across race/ethnicity (MENA, Black, White) and language (Arabic, English)., Method: Six hundred six older adults (128 MENA-English, 74 MENA-Arabic, 207 Black, 197 White) from the Detroit Area Wellness Network were assessed via telephone. Multiple-group confirmatory factor analyses examined four indicators corresponding to distinct cognitive domains: episodic memory (Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease [CERAD] Word List), language (Animal Fluency), attention (Montreal Cognitive Assessment [MoCA] forward digit span), and working memory (MoCA backward digit span)., Results: Measurement invariance analyses revealed full scalar invariance across language groups and partial scalar invariance across racial/ethnic groups suggesting a White testing advantage on Animal Fluency; yet this noninvariance did not meet a priori criteria for salient impact. Accounting for measurement noninvariance, structural invariance analyses revealed that MENA participants tested in English demonstrated lower cognitive health than Whites and Blacks, and MENA participants tested in Arabic demonstrated lower cognitive health than all other groups., Conclusions: Measurement invariance results support the use of a rigorously translated neuropsychological battery to assess global cognitive health across MENA/Black/White and Arabic/English groups. Structural invariance results reveal underrecognized cognitive disparities. Disaggregating MENA older adults from other non-Latinx Whites will advance research on cognitive health equity. Future research should attend to heterogeneity within the MENA population, as the choice to be tested in Arabic versus English may reflect immigrant, educational, and socioeconomic experiences relevant to cognitive aging. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2023
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179. Perspectives of health professionals on physical activity and sedentary behaviour in hospitalised adults: A systematic review and thematic synthesis.
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Alsop T, Woodforde J, Rosbergen I, Mahendran N, Brauer S, and Gomersall S
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- Humans, Adult, Exercise, Sedentary Behavior, Health Personnel
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Objective: To explore health professionals' perspectives on physical activity and sedentary behaviour of hospitalised adults to understand factors that contribute to these behaviours in this environment., Data Sources: Five databases (PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO and CINAHL) were searched in March 2023., Review Methods: Thematic synthesis. Included studies explored perspectives of health professionals on the physical activity and/or sedentary behaviour of hospitalised adults using qualitative methods. Study eligibility was assessed independently by two reviewers and results thematically analysed. Quality was assessed using the McMaster Critical Review Form and confidence in findings assessed using GRADE-CERQual., Results: Findings from 40 studies explored perspectives of over 1408 health professionals from 12 health disciplines. The central theme identified was that physical activity is not a priority in this setting due to the complex interplay of multilevel influences present in the interdisciplinary inpatient landscape. Subthemes, the hospital is a place for rest, there are not enough resources to make movement a priority, everyone's job is no one's job and policy and leadership drives priorities, supported the central theme. Quality of included studies was variable; critical appraisal scores ranged from 36% to 95% on a modified scoring system. Confidence in findings was moderate to high., Conclusion: Physical activity in the inpatient setting is not a priority, even in rehabilitation units where optimising function is the key. A shift in focus towards functional recovery and returning home may promote a positive movement culture that is supported by appropriate resources, leadership, policy, and the interdisciplinary team.
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- 2023
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180. The habituation of higher-order conscious processes: Evidence from mental arithmetic.
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Elsabbagh T, Wright-Wilson L, Brauer S, and Morsella E
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- Humans, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Consciousness, Cognition
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A recurring idea in psychology is that one is conscious only of the "outputs" of mental operations, but not of the operations themselves. Often, such "entry into consciousness" occurs involuntarily. To investigate involuntary entry, some experimentalists have used the reflexive imagery task (RIT). The RIT has revealed that, under certain conditions, external stimuli (e.g., line drawings) can elicit involuntary entry of high-level cognitions. In the basic version of the task, participants are presented with visual objects and instructed not to subvocalize (i.e., say in one's head) the names of these objects. Participants cannot suppress these subvocalizations on a majority of the trials. It has been proposed that, if RIT effects resemble a reflex, then perhaps they will habituate as reflexes do. In the "habituation" variant of the RIT, the same stimulus object (e.g., CAT) is presented on ten consecutive trials (ten "instantiations"), in order to induce habituation (i.e., a weakened RIT effect). It remains unknown whether such habituation effects arise for stimulus-elicited processes that depend, not on subvocalization, but on more complex processes, such as mental arithmetic. To illuminate this issue, we conducted a conceptual replication of the "habituation" RIT that involves, on each trial, the participant trying not to add two numbers (e.g., 14 and 2). We assessed whether the habituation effects were stimulus-specific or set-specific. Understanding the boundary conditions of the RIT effect and its habituation illuminates the limits of unconscious processes and the role of conscious processing., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors report that there are no conflicts of interest associated with the nature of this project or research report., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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181. Longitudinal Associations Between Loneliness and Self-Rated Health Among Black and White Older Adults.
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Sol K, Brauer S, and Antonucci TC
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- Humans, Female, Aged, Male, White People, Loneliness, Black People
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Objectives: This study examined the longitudinal association between loneliness and self-rated health (SRH), and whether there were race differences between non-Hispanic Black and White adults in these associations., Method: A total of 1,407 participants were drawn Social Relations Study, a regional study of social relations across the life span with 3 waves of data collection in 1992, 2005, and 2015 (Wave 1, W1: Mage = 50.28, 28% Black, 59% women). Cross-lagged structural equation models examined the association between loneliness and SRH over 3 waves. We adjusted for baseline age, gender, social network size, and depressive symptoms., Results: There were no race differences in loneliness at any wave. Loneliness W1 was associated with Loneliness W2; Loneliness W2 was associated with Loneliness W3. We had similar findings for associations among SRH. However, only one of the cross-lagged paths was significant. Worse SRH W2 was associated with more Loneliness W3. The only path that varied across race was in the association between SRH W2 and Loneliness W3, and this path was significant only in Whites., Discussion: Findings indicate that worse SRH at later midlife may increase risk for loneliness in later life, particularly for Whites. As a valid indicator of health, SRH can be used in the body of research on health correlates of loneliness as adults age. Use of the current sample of Black and White adults provides nuanced understanding in the ways in which racially diverse adults experience loneliness and should be useful in refining and developing culturally competent interventions for older adults., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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182. Effects of dance on gait and dual-task gait in Parkinson's disease.
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Haputhanthirige NKH, Sullivan K, Moyle G, Brauer S, Jeffrey ER, and Kerr G
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- Humans, Middle Aged, Aged, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, Australia, Gait, Walking, Parkinson Disease complications
- Abstract
Background: Gait impairments in Parkinson's disease (PD) limit independence and quality of life. While dance-based interventions could improve gait, further studies are needed to determine if the benefits generalise to different terrains and when dual-tasking. The aim was to assess the effects of a dance intervention, based on the Dance for PD® (DfPD®) program, on gait under different dual-tasks (verbal fluency, serial subtraction) and surfaces (even, uneven), and to determine if a larger scale follow-up RCT is warranted., Methods: A dance group (DG; n = 17; age = 65.8 ± 11.7 years) and a control group (CG: n = 16; age = 67.0 ± 7.7 years) comprised of non-cognitively impaired (Addenbrooke's score: DG = 93.2 ± 3.6, CG = 92.6 ± 4.3) independently locomoting people with PD (Hoehn & Yahr I-III). The DG undertook a one-hour DfPD®-based class, twice weekly for 12 weeks. The CG had treatment as usual. The spatiotemporal variables of gait were assessed at baseline and post-intervention while walking on two surfaces (even, uneven) under three conditions: regular walking; dual-task: verbal-fluency (DTVERB), and serial-subtraction (DTSUBT). The data were analysed by means of a linear mixed model., Results: At baseline, there was no significant group difference for any spatiotemporal gait variable. The DG improved significantly compared to the CG with and without a dual task when walking on even surface. During regular walking, DG improved in gait velocity (p = 0.017), cadence (p = 0.039), step length (p = 0.040) and stride length (p = 0.041). During DTVERB significant improvements were noted in gait velocity (p = 0.035), cadence (p = 0.034) and step length (p = 0.039). The DG also exhibited significant improvement compared to the CG during DTSUBT in the measures of gait velocity (p = 0.012), cadence (p = 0.021), step length (p = 0.018), and stride length (p = 0.151). On the uneven surface, improvements were noted when walking while performing serial subtractions only. During regular walking, improvements were noted for the CG but not for the DG. CG has spent less time in double support following the intervention than DG. While DTVERB condition had no significant group differences for any gait parameter (p's >0.05), in the DTSUBT condition, the DG improved significantly compared to the controls on gait velocity (p = 0.048), cadence (p = 0.026), and step length (p = 0.051)., Conclusions: DfPD®-based classes produced clinically significant improvement in spatiotemporal gait parameters under dual-task conditions and on uneven surfaces. This could arise from improved movement confidence and coordination; emotional expression; cognitive skills (planning, multitasking), and; utilisation of external movement cues. A large-scale RCT of this program is warranted., Trial Registration: A protocol for this study has been registered retrospectively at the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry. Identifier: ACTRN12618001834246., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests. ERJ is the Director of Dance for Parkinson’s Australia and a lead teacher in Dance for Parkinson’s attached to Queensland Ballet. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright: © 2023 Haputhanthirige et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
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183. The educational paradigm shift-a phenomenographic study of medical teachers' experiences of practices.
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Brauer S, Kettunen J, Levy A, Merenmies J, and Kulmala P
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- Humans, Curriculum, Faculty, Students, Teaching, Learning, Education, Medical
- Abstract
Background: This paper proposes a novel approach to the development of competence-oriented higher education, a national transformation aimed at harmonising and digitising undergraduate medical and dental education in Finland., Methods: We apply phenomenography as a viable qualitative method for medical education research. To better understand medical teachers' expectations towards the change in the educational paradigm, we need to study teachers' experiences of the current practices in undergraduate medical and dental education. The phenomenographic approach facilitates solid links between research, educational development, and change., Results: The phenomenographic study maps the qualitatively different ways in which medical teachers experience undergraduate medical and dental education practices. The answers reflect the changing educational paradigm in medical schools, suggesting practical implications for further development of medical and dental education and training. Core content analysis is preferred instructional scaffold for both teachers and students to prioritise the extensive medical education objectives. The change towards competence-based orientation is in progress and national co-operation accelerates its impact., Conclusion: There is an obvious need to enrich the content of the current curriculum with national guidelines that aim for congruence in assessment and objectives. Our results suggest an assessment application for the theoretical concepts presented and promote the competence orientation of education throughout the curricula of medical and dental undergraduate education. Moreover, our results contribute to current European discourses on competence-based approaches in higher education. Up-to-date pedagogical faculty development programmes are a key prerequisite for teacher empowerment and future orientation in teaching and learning for healthcare professions., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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184. Weighing up the benefits and challenges of hosting physiotherapy student placements in private practice; a qualitative exploration.
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Forbes R, Dinsdale A, Dunwoodie R, Birch S, and Brauer S
- Subjects
- Humans, Physical Therapy Modalities, Private Practice, Qualitative Research, Students, Clinical Competence, Physical Therapists
- Abstract
Introduction: New graduate physiotherapists are entering private practice in increasing numbers despite limited opportunity to experience this setting during training. Exploring the perceived benefits and challenges of physiotherapy private practices in hosting students is important to help understand what motivates private practices to engage in clinical education and inform how practices can be best supported in student placement provision., Objective: The aim of this study was to explore the benefits and challenges of hosting physiotherapy students from the perspective of private practice providers., Methods: A qualitative study with an inductive thematic analytical approach was used. Semi-structured interviews of 10 physiotherapy private practice placement providers responsible for student placement provision were undertaken., Results: Five themes emerged: 1) value to client care; 2) value to staff; 3) value to future planning; 4) contribution to students and the profession; and 5) stress associated with resources., Discussion and Conclusion: Private practice placement providers perceive a range of benefits to their practice, staff and clients, including rich opportunities for future recruitment when hosting physiotherapy students. These benefits are carefully weighed up against the required resources of time, physical space and opportunities for students to participate in client care. This study has identified implications for education providers in supporting physiotherapy student placements within private practice and may enhance placement capacity within this sector.
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- 2022
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185. Relation Between Sensorimotor Rhythm During Motor Attempt/Imagery and Upper-Limb Motor Impairment in Stroke.
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Chen S, Shu X, Jia J, Wang H, Ding L, He Z, Brauer S, and Zhu X
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- Electroencephalography, Humans, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Upper Extremity, Brain-Computer Interfaces, Motor Disorders, Stroke complications, Stroke Rehabilitation
- Abstract
Motor attempt (MA)/motor imagery (MI)-based brain-computer interface (BCI) is a newly developing rehabilitation technology for motor impairment. This study aims to explore the relationship between electroencephalography sensorimotor rhythm and motor impairment to provide reference for a BCI design. Twenty-eight stroke survivors with varying levels of motor dysfunction and spasticity status in the subacute or chronic stage were enrolled in the study to perform MA and MI tasks. Event-related desynchronization (ERD)/event-related synchronization (ERS) during and immediately after motor tasks were calculated. The Fugl-Meyer assessment scale (FMA) and the modified Ashworth scale (MAS) were applied to characterize upper-limb motor dysfunction and spasticity. There was a positive correlation between FMA total scores and ERS in the contralesional hemisphere in the MI task ( P < .05) and negative correlations between FMA total scores and ERD in both hemispheres in the MA task ( P < .05). Negative correlations were found between MAS scores of wrist flexors and ERD in the ipsilesional hemisphere ( P < .05) in the MA task. It suggests that motor dysfunction may be more correlated to ERS in the MI task and to ERD in the MA task while spasticity may be more correlated to ERD in the MA task.
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- 2022
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186. A Systematic Review of the Effect of Hearing Aids on Static and Dynamic Balance in Adults with Hearing Impairment.
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Mahafza MT, Wilson WJ, Brauer S, Timmer BHB, and Hickson L
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- Adult, Humans, Postural Balance physiology, Hearing Tests, Hearing, Hearing Aids, Hearing Loss diagnosis
- Abstract
This preregistered systematic review examined the peer-reviewed scientific literature to determine the effect of hearing aids (HAs) on static and dynamic balance in adults with Hearing Impairment (HI). A search of the English language literature in seven academic databases identified 909 relevant articles published prior to July 2021. Ten articles contained studies that met the inclusion criteria for this review. Seven studies had measured static balance with five reporting improvements and one reporting no changes in balance with HA use. Two studies had measured dynamic balance with both reporting no changes with HA use. One study had measured both dynamic and static balance and reported no changes with HA use. For adults with HI, the evidence was equivocal that amplification from HAs improves balance. High quality studies investigating the effect of HAs on balance in adults with HI are needed given this field is likely to develop in response to the growing population of adults with hearing and balance impairment worldwide.
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- 2022
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187. Lifespace metrics of older adults with mild cognitive impairment and dementia recorded via geolocation data.
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Liddle J, Ireland D, Krysinska K, Harrison F, Lamont R, Karunanithi M, Kang K, Reppermund S, Sachdev PS, Gustafsson L, Brauer S, Pachana NA, and Brodaty H
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Benchmarking, Humans, Independent Living, Male, Automobile Driving, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Dementia diagnosis, Dementia epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: Lifespace, the physical area in which someone conducts life activities, indicates lived community mobility. This study explored the feasibility of technology-based lifespace measurement for older people with dementia and mild cognitive impairment (MCI), including the generation of a range of lifespace metrics, and investigation of relationships with health and mobility status., Methods: An exploratory study was conducted within a longitudinal observational study. Eighteen older adults (mean age 86.7 years (SD: 3.2); 8 men; 15 MCI), participated. Lifespace metrics were generated from geolocation data (GPS and Bluetooth beacon) collected through a smartphone application for one week (2015-2016). Cognitive and mobility-related outcomes were compared from study data sets at baseline (2005-2007) and 6-year follow-up (2011-2014)., Results: Lifespace data could be collected from all participants, and metrics were generated including percentage of time at home, maximum distance from home, episodes of travel in a week, days in a week participants left home, lifespace area (daily, weekly and total), indoor lifespace (regions in the home/hour), and a developed lifespace score that combined time, frequency of travel, distance and area. Results indicated a large range of lifespace areas (0.1 - 97.88 km
2 ; median 6.77 km2 ) with similar patterns across lifespace metrics. Significant relationships were found between lifespace metrics and concurrent driving status and anteceding scores on the sit-to-stand test (at baseline and follow-up)., Conclusions: Further longitudinal exploration of lifespace is required to develop an understanding of the nature of lifespace of older community-dwelling people, and its relationship with health, mobility and well-being outcomes., (© 2021 AJA Inc’.)- Published
- 2021
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188. A review of possible therapies for Parkinson's disease.
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Chakraborty A, Brauer S, and Diwan A
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- Disease Progression, Humans, Parkinson Disease therapy
- Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a complex condition with a wide range of symptoms, like impaired movement, tremors, apathy and depression, and many other symptoms. The disease results from degeneration of dopaminergic neural cells. No cure at present but symptomatic some palliative treatments are available to slow down the disease progression. According to the Parkinson's Foundation every year in U.S., approximately 60,000 Americans diagnosed with PD. Nearly one million will be living with PD in the U.S. by 2020, which is more than the combined number of people diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). There is no diagnostic test for PD, yet, but this article will review all kinds symptomatic and disease-modifying therapy., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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189. Possible therapies of Parkinson's disease: A review.
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Chakraborty A, Brauer S, and Diwan A
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- Humans, Neurology trends, Parkinson Disease therapy
- Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a complex condition with a wide range of symptoms, like impaired movement, tremors, apathy and depression, and many other symptoms. The disease results from degeneration of dopaminergic neural cells. No cure at present but symptomatic some palliative treatments are available to slow down the disease progression. According to the Parkinson's Foundation every year in U.S., approximately 60,000 Americans diagnosed with PD. Nearly one million will be living with PD in the U.S. by 2020, which is more than the combined number of people diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). There is no diagnostic test for PD, yet, but this article will review all kinds symptomatic and disease-modifying therapy., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2020
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190. Upper limb use differs among people with varied upper limb impairment levels early post-stroke: a single-site, cross-sectional, observational study.
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Chin LF, Hayward KS, and Brauer S
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- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Stroke Rehabilitation, Paresis diagnosis, Paresis etiology, Paresis physiopathology, Stroke complications, Stroke diagnosis, Stroke physiopathology, Upper Extremity physiopathology
- Abstract
Background : There is limited knowledge on the upper limb (UL) use early post-stroke by impairment levels. Objectives : To 1) To characterize paretic UL use in people with different UL impairment levels early post-stroke during and outside therapy; 2) compare UL use in people early post-stroke to age-matched controls. Methods : A prospective cross-sectional study of inpatients with first-time stroke ≤4-weeks (n=60, 61±12 years) categorized by Fugl-Meyer UL score for impairment subgroups: mild (51-66), moderate (23-50) and severe (0-22) was conducted. Age-matched, community-dwelling individuals without a history of stroke were recruited (n=30, 60±11 years). Bilateral wrist-worn accelerometers measured the duration of paretic UL use and use the ratio of paretic/non-paretic and non-dominant/dominant UL. Results : Sixty-three percent of stroke participants with mild impairment used their paretic UL >6 h/day (median (IQR): 6.7(3.3); use ratio 0.9(0.3)). Those with moderate impairment demonstrated wide variation of use; 13.3% achieving >6 h use/day (median (IQR): 4.5(3.8); use ratio 0.5(0.2)). People with severe impairment demonstrated limited use. None achieved >6 h/day of use (median (IQR): 1.7(0.7); use ratio 0.3(0.2)). Paretic UL use and use ratio were greater during therapy compared to outside therapy in moderate and severe groups ( p <.002). Age-matched controls used their non-dominant UL for 8.7(3.0) hours, significantly more than all stroke participants ( p <.002). Conclusions : Patterns of UL use differed by severity of impairment. Moderate and severe groups used their paretic UL more during therapy, inferring that it is possible to increase paretic use despite motor impairment. Future research stratifying by impairment across multinational sites is warranted to generalize findings.
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- 2020
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191. An accelerometry and observational study to quantify upper limb use after stroke during inpatient rehabilitation.
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Chin LF, Hayward KS, Soh AJA, Tan CM, Wong CJR, Loh JW, Loke GJH, and Brauer S
- Subjects
- Accelerometry, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Inpatients, Male, Middle Aged, Paresis etiology, Stroke complications, Stroke physiopathology, Stroke Rehabilitation, Hand physiopathology, Paresis physiopathology, Paresis rehabilitation, Stroke therapy, Upper Extremity physiopathology
- Abstract
Objectives: The objectives of the study are to characterize paretic upper limb (UL) use in people with different levels of impairment 4 weeks poststroke and to compare accelerometry and direct observational approaches., Methods: Twelve stroke inpatients (five mild, three moderate, and four severe UL impairment) were recruited from a rehabilitation hospital. UL use was measured using accelerometry (24 hr) and direct observation (12 hr of behavioural mapping). Accelerometry variables included duration of use, use ratio, magnitude ratio, bilateral magnitude, and variation ratio. Direct observation recorded the duration of use and type of UL movement (e.g., functional vs. non-functional)., Results: From accelerometry data, people with mild, moderate, and severe UL impairments used their paretic UL 59%, 45%, and 22% of a 24 hr-day, respectively. People with severe UL impairment had the lowest paretic UL use duration (median 1.49 hr/day), magnitude ratio, and variation ratio compared with people with mild and moderate UL impairment. From 12 hr of observational data, people with mild impairment were using their UL for 37.8% of the observed time, whereas the people with moderate and severe impairment were using their UL 15.8% and 4.9%, respectively. UL movements for the mild cohort were mainly functional, whereas UL movements of the moderate and severe cohorts were mainly non-functional. UL movements were predominantly active for the mild and moderate cohorts but passive for the severe cohort. Duration of paretic UL use from accelerometry and observation data were highly correlated (ICC > 0.8), but the absolute percentage error between methods ranged from 34.2% to 42.7%., Conclusions: Paretic UL use within the first 4 weeks poststroke differs across levels of impairment in this exploratory study. Accelerometry and observation findings of paretic UL use were correlated and may be needed in different situations as they capture different information., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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192. Impacts of dance on cognition, psychological symptoms and quality of life in Parkinson's disease.
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Kalyani HHN, Sullivan KA, Moyle G, Brauer S, Jeffrey ER, and Kerr GK
- Subjects
- Aged, Cognition, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Dance Therapy methods, Parkinson Disease rehabilitation
- Abstract
Background: While dance may improve motor features in Parkinson's disease (PD), it is not yet clear if the benefits extend to non-motor features., Objective: To determine whether dance classes based on Dance for PD®, improve cognition, psychological symptoms and Quality of Life (QoL) in PD., Methods: Participants were allocated to a Dance Group (DG; n = 17) or Control Group (CG: n = 16). Participants had early-stage PD (Hoehn & Yahr: DG = 1.6±0.7, CG = 1.5±0.8) with no cognitive impairment (Addenbrooke's score: DG = 93.2±3.6, CG = 92.6±4.3). The DG undertook a one-hour class, twice weekly for 12 weeks, while the CG had treatment as usual. Both groups were assessed for disease severity (MDS-UPDRS), cognition (NIH Toolbox® cognition battery, Trail Making Test), psychological symptoms (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, MDS-UPDRS-I) and QoL (PDQ-39, MDS-UPDRS-II)., Results: Group comparison of pre-post change scores showed that selected cognitive skills (executive function and episodic memory), psychological symptoms (anxiety and depression) as well as QoL (PDQ-39 summary index) were significantly improved by the intervention (DG > CG, p's < 0.05, Cohen's d > 0.8)., Discussions and Conclusion: Dance classes had a clear benefit on psychological symptoms, QoL and a limited cognitive benefit. Follow-up assessment is required to confirm the durability of these effects.
- Published
- 2019
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193. Effects of Dance on Gait, Cognition, and Dual-Tasking in Parkinson's Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Kalyani HHN, Sullivan K, Moyle G, Brauer S, Jeffrey ER, Roeder L, Berndt S, and Kerr G
- Subjects
- Cognition, Gait, Gait Disorders, Neurologic etiology, Gait Disorders, Neurologic physiopathology, Humans, Multitasking Behavior, Parkinson Disease complications, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Parkinson Disease psychology, Task Performance and Analysis, Walk Test, Walking Speed, Dance Therapy, Gait Disorders, Neurologic rehabilitation, Parkinson Disease rehabilitation
- Abstract
Dance-based interventions have been proposed for the management of Parkinson's disease (PD) symptoms. This review critically appraises and synthesises the research on the effects of dance interventions on gait, cognition and dual-tasking in PD, through a meta-analysis of peer-reviewed literature from seven databases. Eligible studies included people with PD, used a parallel-group or cohort design with a dance-based intervention, reported outcome measures of gait, cognition or dual-tasking, and were published in English up until September 2017. Of the initial 1079 articles, 677 articles were reviewed for eligibility, and 25 articles were retained. Only 12 articles had sufficient common assessment items for meta-analysis. Two independent reviewers extracted the data and assessed the risk of bias of each study using the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool. Based on pre-post change scores, gait speed, Timed Up and Go (TUG) test performance, freezing of gait questionnaire, and six-minute walk test times significantly improved after a dance intervention compared to controls. Global cognition assessed with Montreal Cognitive Assessment, and cognitive dual-tasking measured using dual-task TUG, also exhibited greater improvement in dance groups. There was limited evidence to determine the most effective intensity, frequency, duration of dance interventions or the most beneficial music. Findings must be interpreted cautiously because of the lack of randomised control trials, and the moderate to high risk of bias of studies. However, the results of papers with level-I and level-II.1 evidence suggest that dance may have the potential to ameliorate PD symptoms, particularly gait, global cognition and cognitive dual-tasking.
- Published
- 2019
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194. The impact of staffing model in a 6-day rehabilitation physiotherapy service.
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Caruana EL, Kuys SS, Clarke J, and Brauer SG
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Australia, Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Organizational Innovation, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time Factors, After-Hours Care organization & administration, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling organization & administration, Physical Therapists organization & administration, Program Evaluation, Rehabilitation Centers organization & administration
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The impact of staffing model providing weekend physiotherapy rehabilitation has not been evaluated. This study aims to determine the impact of staffing a weekend rehabilitation service with physiotherapists currently working in rehabilitation compared to acute hospital physiotherapists, on length of stay (LOS), functional independence and gait and balance, and to determine the impact on neurological, orthopaedic, and reconditioning diagnostic groups., Methods: A prospective cohort study with historical control was completed in a private, metropolitan Australian rehabilitation unit. All participants admitted to the rehabilitation unit over two, 20-week periods in 2011 and 2012 were included. Weekend physiotherapy was provided by physiotherapists working in rehabilitation in 2012 (intervention) and physiotherapists working in the acute wards in 2011 (control). Outcomes included LOS, Functional Independence Measure (FIM), and gait and balance measures., Results: Overall, there were 504 participants; 234 in 2012 and 270 in 2011. No difference was found in LOS between staffing models (mean difference-1.5 days, 95%CI -4.4 to 1.3). Greater FIM change (mean difference 3.5, 95%CI 0.3 to 6.7) and efficiency (FIM change/LOS: mean difference 0.3, 95%CI 0.1 to 0.5) were found with rehabilitation compared to acute staffing. There was no between-group difference in gait or balance performance. When diagnostic groups were compared, no difference in LOS was found between staffing models. Participants with an orthopaedic diagnosis had a significantly greater FIM change (mean difference 3.8, 95%CI 0.4 to 7.1), whereas FIM efficiency was improved in neurological (mean difference 0.4, 95%CI 0.1 to 0.7) and orthopaedic populations (mean difference 0.3, 95%CI 0.03 to 0.5) with rehabilitation staffing., Discussion: Staffing a weekend rehabilitation service with physiotherapists currently working in rehabilitation influences functional independence. Different diagnostic groups appear to respond differently., (Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
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195. The dental phenotype of hairless dogs with FOXI3 haploinsufficiency.
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Kupczik K, Cagan A, Brauer S, and Fischer MS
- Subjects
- Animals, Bicuspid diagnostic imaging, Cuspid diagnostic imaging, Dentition, Permanent, Dogs, Female, Fossils, Gene Expression, Hair abnormalities, Incisor diagnostic imaging, Male, Mandible anatomy & histology, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Maxilla anatomy & histology, Maxilla diagnostic imaging, Molar diagnostic imaging, Mutagenesis, Insertional, Phenotype, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Tooth, Deciduous anatomy & histology, Tooth, Deciduous diagnostic imaging, Bicuspid anatomy & histology, Cuspid anatomy & histology, Exons, Forkhead Transcription Factors genetics, Incisor anatomy & histology, Molar anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Hairless dog breeds show a form of ectodermal dysplasia characterised by a lack of hair and abnormal tooth morphology. This has been attributed to a semi-dominant 7-base-pair duplication in the first exon of the forkhead box I3 gene (FOXI3) shared by all three breeds. Here, we identified this FOXI3 variant in a historical museum sample of pedigreed hairless dog skulls by using ancient DNA extraction and present the associated dental phenotype. Unlike in the coated wild type dogs, the hairless dogs were characterised in both the mandibular and maxillary dentition by a loss of the permanent canines, premolars and to some extent incisors. In addition, the deciduous fourth premolars and permanent first and second molars consistently lacked the distal and lingual cusps; this resulted in only a single enlarged cusp in the basin-like heel (talonid in lower molars, talon in upper molars). This molar phenotype is also found among several living and fossil carnivorans and the extinct order Creodonta in which it is associated with hypercarnivory. We therefore suggest that FOXI3 may generally be involved in dental (cusp) development within and across mammalian lineages including the hominids which are known to exhibit marked variability in the presence of lingual cusps.
- Published
- 2017
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196. Promoting physical activity after stroke via self-management: a feasibility study.
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Preston E, Dean CM, Ada L, Stanton R, Brauer S, Kuys S, and Waddington G
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- Aged, Feasibility Studies, Female, Health Promotion, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Efficacy, Exercise, Exercise Therapy methods, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Self-Management methods, Stroke therapy, Stroke Rehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Background: Many people with mild disability after stroke are physically inactive despite the risk of recurrent stroke. A self-management program may be one strategy to increase physical activity in stroke survivors., Objectives: To investigate the feasibility of a self-management program, and determine whether self-management can increase daily physical activity levels and self-efficacy for exercise, decrease cardiovascular risk, and improve walking ability, participation, and quality of life in people with mild disability after stroke., Method: A Phase I, single-group, pre-post intervention study was carried out with twenty stroke survivors who had mild disability and were discharged directly home from acute stroke units. A self-management program was delivered via five home-based sessions over 3 months, incorporating: education, goal setting, barrier identification, self-monitoring, and feedback. Feasibility of the intervention was determined by examining adherence, duration, usefulness, and safety. Clinical outcomes were amount of physical activity (duration of moderate physical activity in min/day and counts of physical activity in steps/day), self-efficacy, cardiovascular risk, walking ability, participation, and quality of life., Results: The intervention was feasible with 96% of sessions being delivered, each taking less than an hour (41 min, SD 12). Participants perceived the self-management program to be useful and there were few adverse events. At 3 months, participants completed 27 min/day (95% CI 4-49) more moderate physical activity than at baseline and 16 min/day (95% CI -10 to 42) at 6 months., Conclusion: Self-management appears to be feasible and has the potential to increase physical activity in people with mild disability after stroke. A Phase II randomized trial is warranted.
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- 2017
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197. Lack of gene-language correlation due to reciprocal female but directional male admixture in Austronesians and non-Austronesians of East Timor.
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Gomes SM, van Oven M, Souto L, Morreira H, Brauer S, Bodner M, Zimmermann B, Huber G, Strobl C, Röck AW, Côrte-Real F, Parson W, and Kayser M
- Subjects
- Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Female, Humans, Indonesia, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Genotype, Language, Population genetics
- Abstract
Nusa Tenggara, including East Timor, located at the crossroad between Island Southeast Asia, Near Oceania, and Australia, are characterized by a complex cultural structure harbouring speakers from two different major linguistic groups of different geographic origins (Austronesian (AN) and non-Austronesian (NAN)). This provides suitable possibilities to study gene-language relationship; however, previous studies from other parts of Nusa Tenggara reported conflicting evidence about gene-language correlation in this region. Aiming to investigate gene-language relationships including sex-mediated aspects in East Timor, we analysed the paternally inherited non-recombining part of the Y chromosome (NRY) and the maternally inherited mitochondrial (mt) DNA in a representative collection of AN- and NAN-speaking groups. Y-SNP (single-nucleotide polymorphism) data were newly generated for 273 samples and combined with previously established Y-STR (short tandem repeat) data of the same samples, and with previously established mtDNA data of 290 different samples with, however, very similar representation of geographic and linguistic coverage of the country. We found NRY and mtDNA haplogroups of previously described putative East/Southeast Asian (E/SEA) and Near Oceanian (NO) origins in both AN and NAN speakers of East Timor, albeit in different proportions, suggesting reciprocal genetic admixture between both linguistic groups for females, but directional admixture for males. Our data underline the dual genetic origin of East Timorese in E/SEA and NO, and highlight that substantial genetic admixture between the two major linguistic groups had occurred, more so via women than men. Our study therefore provides another example where languages and genes do not conform due to sex-biased genetic admixture across major linguistic groups.
- Published
- 2017
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198. Moral implications of obstetric technologies for pregnancy and motherhood.
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Brauer S
- Subjects
- Decision Making ethics, Female, Humans, Moral Obligations, Morals, Patient Participation, Patient Rights ethics, Personal Autonomy, Physician-Patient Relations ethics, Pregnancy, Delivery, Obstetric ethics, Informed Consent ethics, Pregnant People, Prenatal Care ethics, Ultrasonography, Prenatal ethics
- Abstract
Drawing on sociological and anthropological studies, the aim of this article is to reconstruct how obstetric technologies contribute to a moral conception of pregnancy and motherhood, and to evaluate that conception from a normative point of view. Obstetrics and midwifery, so the assumption, are value-laden, value-producing and value-reproducing practices, values that shape the social perception of what it means to be a "good" pregnant woman and to be a "good" (future) mother. Activities in the medical field of reproduction contribute to "kinning", that is the making of particular social relationships marked by closeness and special moral obligations. Three technologies, which belong to standard procedures in prenatal care in postmodern societies, are presently investigated: (1) informed consent in prenatal care, (2) obstetric sonogram, and (3) birth plan. Their widespread application is supposed to serve the moral (and legal) goal of effecting patient autonomy (and patient right). A reconstruction of the actual moral implications of these technologies, however, reveals that this goal is missed in multiple ways. Informed consent situations are marked by involuntariness and blindness to social dimensions of decision-making; obstetric sonograms construct moral subjectivity and agency in a way that attribute inconsistent and unreasonable moral responsibilities to the pregnant woman; and birth plans obscure the need for a healthcare environment that reflects a shared-decision-making model, rather than a rational-choice-framework.
- Published
- 2016
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199. High-quality mtDNA control region sequences from 680 individuals sampled across the Netherlands to establish a national forensic mtDNA reference database.
- Author
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Chaitanya L, van Oven M, Brauer S, Zimmermann B, Huber G, Xavier C, Parson W, de Knijff P, and Kayser M
- Subjects
- DNA Primers, DNA, Mitochondrial blood, Databases, Genetic, Genetics, Population methods, Haplotypes, Humans, Male, Netherlands, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Reference Standards, Sequence Analysis, DNA standards, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Databases, Nucleic Acid, Forensic Genetics methods, Mitochondria genetics
- Abstract
The use of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) for maternal lineage identification often marks the last resort when investigating forensic and missing-person cases involving highly degraded biological materials. As with all comparative DNA testing, a match between evidence and reference sample requires a statistical interpretation, for which high-quality mtDNA population frequency data are crucial. Here, we determined, under high quality standards, the complete mtDNA control-region sequences of 680 individuals from across the Netherlands sampled at 54 sites, covering the entire country with 10 geographic sub-regions. The complete mtDNA control region (nucleotide positions 16,024-16,569 and 1-576) was amplified with two PCR primers and sequenced with ten different sequencing primers using the EMPOP protocol. Haplotype diversity of the entire sample set was very high at 99.63% and, accordingly, the random-match probability was 0.37%. No population substructure within the Netherlands was detected with our dataset. Phylogenetic analyses were performed to determine mtDNA haplogroups. Inclusion of these high-quality data in the EMPOP database (accession number: EMP00666) will improve its overall data content and geographic coverage in the interest of all EMPOP users worldwide. Moreover, this dataset will serve as (the start of) a national reference database for mtDNA applications in forensic and missing person casework in the Netherlands., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
200. Opportunities and challenges of entertainment-education: Learning about Parkinson's disease via The Michael J. Fox Show.
- Author
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Link E, Schluetz DM, and Brauer S
- Abstract
Health topics are omnipresent in the media. However, although both informational and entertainment formats can increase public understanding of health and illness, media representations of diseases involve challenges as well as opportunities. The entertainment-education (E-E) approach highlights the positive effects of incorporating health messages into entertainment media. The goal of influencing awareness, knowledge and attitudes is reached by transporting the audience into a narrative, which as such enhances persuasive effects and suppresses counterarguing. The NBC sitcom The Michael J. Fox Show (TMJFS) is an E-E format inspired by the actor's own experiences with Parkinson's disease (PD). Using TMJFS as an exemplar, we conducted a multimethodological study to understand both the challenges and the opportunities of E-E comedy formats. A content analysis focusing on the representation of PD in TMJFS showed a focus on motoric symptoms of PD. Subsequent recap analyses and qualitative interviews were conducted to better understand different readings of the show in terms of its informative and entertaining aspects. Additionally, we performed a standardized online survey and an experiment to measure attitudinal effects of TMJFS., (Copyright 4 May, 2017 Equinox Publishing.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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