43 results on '"Antypas K"'
Search Results
2. Storage 2020: A Vision for the Future of HPC Storage
- Author
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Lockwood, GK, Hazen, D, Koziol, Q, Canon, RS, Antypas, K, Balewski, J, Balthaser, N, Bhimji, W, Botts, J, Broughton, J, Butler, TL, Butler, GF, Cheema, R, Daley, C, Declerck, T, Gerhardt, L, Hurlbert, WE, Kallback-Rose, KA, Leak, S, Lee, J, Lee, R, Liu, J, Lozinskiy, K, Paul, D, Prabhat, Snavely, C, Srinivasan, J, Stone Gibbins, T, and Wright, NJ
- Subjects
hpc ,mass storage ,data management - Published
- 2021
3. The Hopper System: How the Largest XE6 in the World Went From Requirements to Reality.
- Author
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Carter, JT, Antypas, K, and Butler, T
- Subjects
HPC - Abstract
This paper will discuss the entire process of acquiring and deploying Hopper from the first vendor market surveys to providing 3.8 million hours of production cycles per day for NERSC users. Installing the latest system at NERSC has been both a logistical and technical adventure. Balancing compute requirements with power, cooling, and space limitations drove the initial choice and configuration of the XE6, and a number of first-of- a-kind features implemented in collaboration with Cray have resulted in a high performance, usable, and reliable system.
- Published
- 2021
4. An empirical study of I/O separation for burst buffers in HPC systems
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Koo, D, Lee, J, Liu, J, Byun, EK, Kwak, JH, Lockwood, GK, Hwang, S, Antypas, K, Wu, K, and Eom, H
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Burst buffer ,Multi-streamed SSD ,I/O separation ,Stream-aware ,Evaluation ,Distributed Computing ,Computer Software - Abstract
To meet the exascale I/O requirements for the High-Performance Computing (HPC), a new I/O subsystem, Burst Buffer, based on solid state drives (SSD), has been developed. However, the diverse HPC workloads and the bursty I/O pattern cause severe data fragmentation that requires costly garbage collection (GC) and increases the number of bytes written to the SSD. To address this data fragmentation challenge, a new multi-stream feature has been developed for SSDs. In this work, we develop an I/O Separation scheme called BIOS to leverage this multi-stream feature to group the I/O streams based on the user IDs. We propose a stream-aware scheduling policy based on burst buffer pools in the workload manager, and integrate the BIOS with the workload manager to optimize the I/O separation scheme in burst buffer. We evaluate the proposed framework with a burst buffer I/O traces from Cori Supercomputer including a diverse set of applications. Experimental results show that the BIOS could improve the performance by 1.44x on average and reduce the Write Amplification Factor (WAF) by up to 1.20x. These demonstrate the potential benefits of the I/O separation scheme for solid state storage systems.
- Published
- 2021
5. Cross-facility science with the Superfacility Project at LBNL
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Enders, B, Bard, D, Snavely, C, Gerhardt, L, Lee, J, Totzke, B, Antypas, K, Byna, S, Cheema, R, Cholia, S, Day, M, Gaur, A, Greiner, A, Groves, T, Kiran, M, Koziol, Q, Rowland, K, Samuel, C, Selvarajan, A, Sim, A, Skinner, D, Thomas, R, and Torok, G
- Abstract
As data sets from DOE user science facilities grow in both size and complexity there is an urgent need for new capabilities to transfer, analyze and manage the data underlying scientific discoveries. LBNL's Superfacility project brings together experimental and observational research instruments with computational and network facilities at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) and the Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) with the goal of enabling user science. Here, we report on recent innovations in the Superfacility project, including advanced data management, API-based automation, real-Time interactive user interfaces, and supported infrastructure for 'edge' services.
- Published
- 2020
6. ScienceSearch: Enabling search through automatic metadata generation
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Rodrigo, GP, Henderson, M, Weber, GH, Ophus, C, Antypas, K, and Ramakrishnan, L
- Abstract
Scientific facilities are increasingly generating and handling large amounts of data from experiments and simulations. Next-generation scientific discoveries rely on insights derived from data, especially across domain boundaries. Search capabilities are critical to enable scientists to discover datasets of interest. However, scientific datasets often lack the signals or metadata required for effective searches. Thus, we need formalized methods and systems to automatically annotate scientific datasets from the data and its surrounding context. Additionally, a search infrastructure needs to account for the scale and rate of application data volumes. In this paper, we present ScienceSearch, a system infrastructure that uses machine learning techniques to capture and learn the knowledge, context, and surrounding artifacts from data to generate metadata and enable search. Our current implementation is focused on a dataset from the National Center for Electron Microscopy (NCEM), an electron microscopy facility at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory sponsored by the Department of Energy which supports hundreds of users and stores millions of micrographs. In this paper, we describe a) our search infrastructure and model, b) methods for generating metadata using machine learning techniques, and c) optimizations to improve search latency, and deployment on an HPC system. We demonstrate that ScienceSearch is capable of producing valid metadata for NCEM's dataset and providing low-latency good quality search results over a scientific dataset.
- Published
- 2018
7. Towards understanding HPC users and systems: A NERSC case study
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Rodrigo, GP, Östberg, PO, Elmroth, E, Antypas, K, Gerber, R, and Ramakrishnan, L
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Workload analysis ,Supercomputer ,HPC ,Scheduling ,NERSC ,Heterogeneity ,k-means ,Distributed Computing ,Computer Software - Abstract
High performance computing (HPC) scheduling landscape currently faces new challenges due to the changes in the workload. Previously, HPC centers were dominated by tightly coupled MPI jobs. HPC workloads increasingly include high-throughput, data-intensive, and stream-processing applications. As a consequence, workloads are becoming more diverse at both application and job levels, posing new challenges to classical HPC schedulers. There is a need to understand the current HPC workloads and their evolution to facilitate informed future scheduling research and enable efficient scheduling in future HPC systems. In this paper, we present a methodology to characterize workloads and assess their heterogeneity, at a particular time period and its evolution over time. We apply this methodology to the workloads of three systems (Hopper, Edison, and Carver) at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC). We present the resulting characterization of jobs, queues, heterogeneity, and performance that includes detailed information of a year of workload (2014) and evolution through the systems’ lifetime (2010–2014).
- Published
- 2018
8. Storage 2020: A Vision for the Future of HPC Storage
- Author
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Lockwood, GK, Hazen, D, Koziol, Q, Canon, RS, Antypas, K, Balewski, J, Balthaser, N, Bhimji, W, Botts, J, Broughton, J, Butler, TL, Butler, GF, Cheema, R, Daley, C, Declerck, T, Gerhardt, L, Hurlbert, WE, Kallback-Rose, KA, Leak, S, Lee, J, Lee, R, Liu, J, Lozinskiy, K, Paul, D, Prabhat, Snavely, C, Srinivasan, J, Stone Gibbins, T, and Wright, NJ
- Subjects
hpc ,mass storage ,data management - Published
- 2017
9. Accelerating Science with the NERSC Burst Buffer Early User Program
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Bhimji, W, Bard, D, Romanus, M, Paul, D, Ovsyannikov, A, Friesen, B, Bryson, M, Correa, J, Lockwood, GK, Tsulaia, V, Byna, S, Farrell, S, Gursoy, D, Daley, C, Beckner, V, Van Straalen, B, Trebotich, D, Tull, C, Weber, GH, Wright, NJ, Antypas, K, and Prabhat
- Published
- 2016
10. Extensible Component Based Architecture for FLASH, A Massively Parallel, Multiphysics Simulation Code
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Dubey, A., Reid, L. B., Weide, K., Antypas, K., Ganapathy, M. K., Riley, K., Sheeler, D., and Siegal, A.
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Computer Science - Software Engineering - Abstract
FLASH is a publicly available high performance application code which has evolved into a modular, extensible software system from a collection of unconnected legacy codes. FLASH has been successful because its capabilities have been driven by the needs of scientific applications, without compromising maintainability, performance, and usability. In its newest incarnation, FLASH3 consists of inter-operable modules that can be combined to generate different applications. The FLASH architecture allows arbitrarily many alternative implementations of its components to co-exist and interchange with each other, resulting in greater flexibility. Further, a simple and elegant mechanism exists for customization of code functionality without the need to modify the core implementation of the source. A built-in unit test framework providing verifiability, combined with a rigorous software maintenance process, allow the code to operate simultaneously in the dual mode of production and development. In this paper we describe the FLASH3 architecture, with emphasis on solutions to the more challenging conflicts arising from solver complexity, portable performance requirements, and legacy codes. We also include results from user surveys conducted in 2005 and 2007, which highlight the success of the code., Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures; revised paper submitted to Parallel Computing
- Published
- 2009
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11. The Hopper System: How the Largest XE6 in the World Went From Requirements to Reality.
- Author
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Carter, JT, Antypas, K, and Butler, T
- Subjects
HPC - Abstract
This paper will discuss the entire process of acquiring and deploying Hopper from the first vendor market surveys to providing 3.8 million hours of production cycles per day for NERSC users. Installing the latest system at NERSC has been both a logistical and technical adventure. Balancing compute requirements with power, cooling, and space limitations drove the initial choice and configuration of the XE6, and a number of first-of- a-kind features implemented in collaboration with Cray have resulted in a high performance, usable, and reliable system.
- Published
- 2011
12. The Hopper System: How the Largest XE6 in the World Went From Requirements to Reality.
- Author
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Carter, JT, Carter, JT, Antypas, K, Butler, T, Carter, JT, Carter, JT, Antypas, K, and Butler, T
- Abstract
This paper will discuss the entire process of acquiring and deploying Hopper from the first vendor market surveys to providing 3.8 million hours of production cycles per day for NERSC users. Installing the latest system at NERSC has been both a logistical and technical adventure. Balancing compute requirements with power, cooling, and space limitations drove the initial choice and configuration of the XE6, and a number of first-of- a-kind features implemented in collaboration with Cray have resulted in a high performance, usable, and reliable system.
- Published
- 2023
13. Storage 2020: A Vision for the Future of HPC Storage
- Author
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Lockwood, GK, Lockwood, GK, Hazen, D, Koziol, Q, Canon, RS, Antypas, K, Balewski, J, Balthaser, N, Bhimji, W, Botts, J, Broughton, J, Butler, TL, Butler, GF, Cheema, R, Daley, C, Declerck, T, Gerhardt, L, Hurlbert, WE, Kallback-Rose, KA, Leak, S, Lee, J, Lee, R, Liu, J, Lozinskiy, K, Paul, D, Prabhat, Snavely, C, Srinivasan, J, Stone Gibbins, T, Wright, NJ, Lockwood, GK, Lockwood, GK, Hazen, D, Koziol, Q, Canon, RS, Antypas, K, Balewski, J, Balthaser, N, Bhimji, W, Botts, J, Broughton, J, Butler, TL, Butler, GF, Cheema, R, Daley, C, Declerck, T, Gerhardt, L, Hurlbert, WE, Kallback-Rose, KA, Leak, S, Lee, J, Lee, R, Liu, J, Lozinskiy, K, Paul, D, Prabhat, Snavely, C, Srinivasan, J, Stone Gibbins, T, and Wright, NJ
- Published
- 2023
14. Flash-X
- Author
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Dubey, Anshu, primary, Weide, K., additional, O’Neal, J., additional, Dhruv, A., additional, Couch, S., additional, Harris, J.A., additional, Klosterman, T., additional, Jain, R., additional, Messer, O.E.B., additional, Pajkos, M., additional, Carlson, J., additional, Chawdhary, S., additional, Ricker, P.M., additional, Lee, D., additional, Antypas, K., additional, Riley, K.M., additional, Ganapathy, M., additional, Timmes, F.X., additional, Townsley, D.M., additional, Vanella, M., additional, Rich, P., additional, Kumar, S., additional, Endeve, E., additional, Hix, W. R., additional, Mezzacappa, A., additional, Papatheodore, T., additional, Rudi, J., additional, Daley, C., additional, Bachan, John, additional, Chu, R., additional, and Wahib, M., additional
- Published
- 2022
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15. Enabling discovery data science through cross-facility workflows
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Antypas, K. B., primary, Bard, D. J., additional, Blaschke, J. P., additional, Shane Canon, R., additional, Enders, Bjoern, additional, Shankar, Mallikarjun Arjun, additional, Somnath, Suhas, additional, Stansberry, Dale, additional, Uram, Thomas D., additional, and Wilkinson, Sean R., additional
- Published
- 2021
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16. Terascale turbulence computation using the FLASH3 application framework on the IBM Blue Gene/L system
- Author
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Fisher, R.T., Kadanoff, L.P., Lamb, D.Q., Dubey, A., Plewa, T., Calder, A., Cattaneo, F., Constantin, P., Foster, I., Papka, M.E., Abarzhi, S.I., Asida, S.M., Rich, P.M., Glendening, C.C., Antypas, K., Sheeler, D.J., Reid, L.B., Gallagher, B., and Needham, S.G.
- Subjects
Visualization (Computers) -- Analysis ,Computer-generated environments -- Analysis ,Computer simulation -- Analysis - Abstract
Understanding the nature of turbulent flows remains one of the outstanding questions in classical physics. Significant progress has been recently made using computer simulation as an aid to our understanding of the rich physics of turbulence. Here, we present both the computer science and the scientific features of a unique terascale simulation of a weakly compressible turbulent flow that includes tracer particles. (Terascale refers to performance and dataset storage use in excess of a teraflop and terabyte, respectively.) The simulation was performed on the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory IBM Blue Gene/[TM] system, using version 3 of the FLASH application framework. FLASH3 is a modular, publicly available code designed primarily for astrophysical simulations, which scales well to massively parallel environments. We discuss issues related to the analysis and visualization of such a massive simulation and present initial scientific results. We also discuss challenges related to making the database available .for public release. We suggest that widespread adoption o fan open dataset model of high-performance computing is likely to result in significant advantages for the scientific computing community, in much the same way that the widespread adoption of open-source software has produced similar gains over the last 10 years.
- Published
- 2008
17. The Hopper System: How the Largest XE6 in the World Went From Requirements to Reality
- Author
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Carter, JT, Antypas, K, and Butler, T
- Subjects
HPC - Abstract
This paper will discuss the entire process of acquiring and deploying Hopper from the first vendor market surveys to providing 3.8 million hours of production cycles per day for NERSC users. Installing the latest system at NERSC has been both a logistical and technical adventure. Balancing compute requirements with power, cooling, and space limitations drove the initial choice and configuration of the XE6, and a number of first-of- a-kind features implemented in collaboration with Cray have resulted in a high performance, usable, and reliable system.
- Published
- 2017
18. STRENGTHENING GERIATRIC COMPETENCE IN PRIMARY HEALTH CARE IN NORWAY: THE ROLE OF THE ADVANCED GERIATRIC NURSES
- Author
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Antypas, K, primary and Henni, S, additional
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- 2018
- Full Text
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19. Promoting interprofessional education in health sector within the European Interprofessional Education Network
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Liaskos, J. Frigas, A. Antypas, K. Zikos, D. Diomidous, M. Mantas, J.
- Abstract
According to a common definition, interprofessional education (IPE) is described as "occasions when two or more professions learn from and about each other to improve collaboration and the quality of care". The Leonardo project under the name European Interprofessional Education Network (EIPEN) in health and social care, has been dealing with the challenges of interprofessional education. The EIPEN project tries to develop a transnational network of universities and employers in the six participating countries and at the same time to promote good practices in interprofessional learning and teaching in health and social care. IPE provides opportunities for students and practitioners to learn with, from and about each other during qualifying and post-qualifying training and in their practice. IPE in health and social care includes the education and training of practitioners in human and animal medicine, dentistry, nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, pharmacy and all other health professions including public and environmental health and health promotion, and social work. The outcomes of the EIPEN Project will provide means, material and guidelines for the enhancement of professional education in the multi-disciplinary field of Health Informatics. The methodology on the development of the Greek Interprofessional Network was based on a series of workshops aiming to document the educational process in healthcare institutes and universities followed by the assessment of the needs for the development of an interprofessional environment. The outcomes will provide means, material and guidelines for the enhancement of professional education in the multi-disciplinary field of Health Informatics. © 2008 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2009
20. Characterizing and predicting the I/O performance of HPC applications using a parameterized synthetic benchmark.
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Hongzhang Shan, Antypas, K., and Shalf, J.
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- 2008
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21. E-Rehabilitation – an Internet and mobile phone based tailored intervention to enhance self-management of Cardiovascular Disease: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Antypas Konstantinos and Wangberg Silje C
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Tailoring ,Cardiac rehabilitation ,Cardiovascular disease ,EHealth ,Internet-based ,Mobile-based ,Self-management ,Physical activity ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background Cardiac rehabilitation is very important for the recovery and the secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease, and one of its main strategies is to increase the level of physical activity. Internet and mobile phone based interventions have been successfully used to help people to achieve this. One of the components that are related to the efficacy of these interventions is tailoring of content to the individual. This trial is studying the effect of a longitudinally tailored Internet and mobile phone based intervention that is based on models of health behaviour, on the level of physical activity and the adherence to the intervention, as an extension of a face-to-face cardiac rehabilitation stay. Methods/Design A parallel group, cluster randomized controlled trial. The study population is adult participants of a cardiac rehabilitation programme in Norway with home Internet access and mobile phone, who in monthly clusters are randomized to the control or the intervention condition. Participants have access to a website with information regarding cardiac rehabilitation, an online discussion forum and an online activity calendar. Those randomized to the intervention condition, receive in addition tailored content based on models of health behaviour, through the website and mobile text messages. The objective is to assess the effect of the intervention on maintenance of self-management behaviours after the rehabilitation stay. Main outcome is the level of physical activity one month, three months and one year after the end of the cardiac rehabilitation programme. The randomization of clusters is based on a true random number online service, and participants, investigators and outcome assessor are blinded to the condition of the clusters. Discussion The study suggests a theory-based intervention that combines models of health behaviour in an innovative way, in order to tailor the delivered content. The users have been actively involved in its design, and because of the use of Open-Source software, the intervention can easily and at low-cost be reproduced and expanded by others. Challenges are the recruitment in the elderly population and the possible underrepresentation of women in the study sample. Funding by Northern Norway Regional Health Authority. Trial registration Trial registry http://www.clinicaltrials.gov: NCT01223170.
- Published
- 2012
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22. Allinea DDT as a Parallel Debugging Alternative to Totalview
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Antypas, K
- Published
- 2007
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23. Adoption, acceptability and sustained use of digital interventions to promote physical activity among inactive adults: a mixed-method study.
- Author
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Manskow US, Sagelv EH, Antypas K, and Zanaboni P
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Behavior Therapy, Motivation, Sedentary Behavior, Exercise, Mobile Applications
- Abstract
Introduction: Despite the positive effects of physical activity (PA) to prevent lifestyle diseases and improve health and well-being, only one-third of Norwegian adults meet the minimum recommendations on PA. Digital interventions to promote PA in inactive adults may improve health and well-being by being available, personalized and adequate. Knowledge on users' adoption, acceptability and sustainability of digital interventions to promote PA is still limited., Objective: To investigate the adoption, acceptability and sustained use of three digital interventions for promoting PA among inactive adults., Design: A randomized control trial (ONWARDS) with 183 participants assigned to 3 groups and followed up for 18 months. All participants received a wearable activity tracker with the personalized metric Personal Activity Intelligence (PAI) on a mobile app, two groups received additional access to online training and one group had also access to online social support., Methods: A mixed-methods approach was used to address the study objective. Acceptability was evaluated through the System Usability Scale (SUS) ( n = 134) at 6 months. Adoption and sustained use were evaluated through a set of questions administered at 12 months ( n = 109). Individual interviews were performed at 6 months with a sample of participants ( n = 18). Quantitative data were analyzed with descriptive statistics, whereas qualitative data were analyzed using the Framework approach., Results: PAI was the most successful intervention, with satisfactory usability and positive effects on motivation and behavior change, contributing to high adoption and sustained use. Online social support had a high acceptability and sustained use, but the intervention was not perceived as motivational to increase PA. Online training had low adoption, usability and sustained use. The qualitative interviews identified five main themes: (1) overall approach to physical activity, (2) motivation, (3) barriers to perform PA, (4) effects of PA, and (5) usability and acceptability of the digital interventions., Conclusion: Personalized digital interventions integrating behavior change techniques such as individual feedback and goal setting are more likely to increase acceptability, adoption and sustained use. Future studies should investigate which digital interventions or combinations of different interventions are more successful in promoting PA among inactive adults according to the characteristics and preferences of the users., Trial Registration: Clinical trial registered at ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04526444., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Manskow, Sagelv, Antypas and Zanaboni.)
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- 2024
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24. Barriers for Accessing Assistive Products in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs).
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Eide AH, Muller S, Zhang W, Khasnabis C, Antypas K, Blakstad M, and Borg J
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Records, Research Design, Self Report, Developing Countries, Self-Help Devices
- Abstract
WHO implemented the Rapid Assistive Technology Assessment in 2021. This is a household survey on self-reported use, need and barriers for accessing AT in 35 countries globally. In order to obtain comparable data, all surveys followed guidelines developed by WHO, including national two-stage random sampling of households. The 2021 rATA survey included 32 of a total of 140 LMICs globally. Around 40 % of the total respondents (all countries) estimated travel distance to be <5 km, varying from less than 10 % to almost 60 % among the countries. Around 15 % had to travel more than 50 km, varying from 1.3 % to 37.5 %. More individuals living in rural as compared to urban areas had to travel more than 25 km to get their main assistive product. Gender differences were marginal. By far the most prevalent barrier to access assistive products was "Cannot afford", amounting to 39.9% and varying from 6.7 % to 79.1 % among countries. This was followed by "No support" with 14.3 %, varying from 2.3 % to 36.9 %, and "Not available" with 8.1 %, varying from 1 % to 21.5 %. More barriers were reported in rural than urban areas and women report more barriers than men. Variation between countries in both travel time and barriers is substantial and country-specific service development is needed to guide service development.
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- 2023
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25. Facilitators and Barriers to the Sustainability of eHealth Solutions in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Descriptive Exploratory Study.
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Mamuye A, Nigatu AM, Chanyalew MA, Amor LB, Loukil S, Moyo C, Quarshie S, Antypas K, and Tilahun B
- Abstract
Background: Despite the widely anticipated benefits of eHealth technologies in enhancing health care service delivery, the sustainable usage of eHealth in transitional countries remains low. There is limited evidence supporting the low sustainable adoption of eHealth in low- and middle-income countries., Objective: The aim of this study was to explore the facilitators and barriers to the sustainable use of eHealth solutions in low- and middle-income nations., Methods: A qualitative descriptive exploratory study was conducted in 4 African nations from September to December 2021. A semistructured interview guide was used to collect the data. Data were audio-recorded and transcribed from the local to the English language verbatim, and the audio data were transcribed. On the basis of the information gathered, we assigned codes to the data, searched for conceptual patterns, and created emerging themes. Data were analyzed thematically using OpenCode software., Results: A total of 49 key informant interviews (10 from Tunisia, 15 from Ethiopia, 13 from Ghana, and 11 from Malawi) were conducted. About 40.8% (20/49) of the study participants were between the ages of 26 and 35 years; 73.5% (36/49) of them were male participants; and 71.4% (35/49) of them had a master's degree or higher in their educational background. Additionally, the study participants' work experience ranged from 2 to 35 years. Based on the data we gathered, we identified 5 themes: organizational, technology and technological infrastructure, human factors, economy or funding, and policy and regulations., Conclusions: This study explores potential facilitators and barriers to long-term eHealth solution implementation. Addressing barriers early in the implementation process can aid in the development of eHealth solutions that will better fulfill the demands of end users. Therefore, focusing on potential challenges would enhance the sustainability of eHealth solutions in low- and middle-income countries., (©Adane Mamuye, Araya Mesfin Nigatu, Moges Asressie Chanyalew, Lamia Ben Amor, Sihem Loukil, Chris Moyo, Samuel Quarshie, Konstantinos Antypas, Binyam Tilahun. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 12.05.2023.)
- Published
- 2023
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26. eHealth policy framework in Low and Lower Middle-Income Countries; a PRISMA systematic review and analysis.
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Mengiste SA, Antypas K, Johannessen MR, Klein J, and Kazemi G
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- Humans, Health Personnel, Policy, Developing Countries, Telemedicine methods
- Abstract
Background: Low and lower middle-income countries suffer lack of healthcare providers and proper workforce education programs, a greater spread of illnesses, poor surveillance, efficient management, etc., which are addressable by a central policy framework implementation. Accordingly, an eHealth policy framework is required specifically for these countries to successfully implement eHealth solutions. This study explores existing frameworks and fills the gap by proposing an eHealth policy framework in the context of developing countries., Methods: This PRISMA-based (PRISMA Preferred Reporting Items For Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) systematic review used Google Scholar, IEEE, Web of Science, and PubMed latest on 23
rd May 2022, explored 83 publications regarding eHealth policy frameworks, and extracted 11 publications scrutinizing eHealth policy frameworks in their title, abstract, or keywords. These publications were analyzed by using both expert opinion and Rstudio programming tools. They were explored based on their developing/developed countries' context, research approach, main contribution, constructs/dimensions of the framework, and related categories. In addition, by using cloudword and latent semantic space techniques, the most discussed concepts and targeted keywords were explored and a correlation test was conducted to depict the important concepts mentioned in the related literature and extract their relation with the targeted keywords in the interest of this study., Results: Most of these publications do not develop or synthesize new frameworks for eHealth policy implementation, but rather introduce eHealth implementation frameworks, explain policy dimensions, identify and extract relevant components of existing frameworks or point out legal or other relevant eHealth implementation issues., Conclusion: After a thorough exploration of related literature, this study identified the main factors affecting an effective eHealth policy framework, found a gap in the context of developing countries, and proposed a four-step eHealth policy implementation guideline for successful implementation of eHealth in the context of developing. The limitation of this study is the lack of a proper amount of practically implemented eHealth policy framework cases in developing countries published in the literature for the review. Ultimately, this study is part of the BETTEReHEALTH (More information about the BETTEReHEALTH project at https://betterehealth.eu ) project funded by the European Union Horizon's 2020 under agreement number 101017450., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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27. Factors associated with predictors of smoking cessation from a Norwegian internet-based smoking cessation intervention study.
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Gram IT, Antypas K, Wangberg SC, Løchen ML, and Larbi D
- Abstract
Introduction: We examined if we could identify predictors for smoking cessation at six months post cessation, among smokers enrolled in a large Norwegian population-based intervention study., Methods: We followed 4333 (72.1% women) smokers who enrolled in an internet-based smoking cessation intervention during 2010-2012. The baseline questionnaire collected information on sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, including current snus use. The cessation outcome was self-reported no smoking past seven days, at six months. We used logistic regression to estimate odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals, to identify predictors of smoking cessation, adjusting for potential confounders., Results: Women (OR=1.30; 95% CI: 1.01-1.69) compared with men, and those with medium (OR=1.31; 95% CI: 1.02-1.68) and longer (OR=1.42; 95% CI: 1.06-1.90) education compared with those with shorter education, were more likely to be successful quitters.Overall, being a student (OR=0.56; 95% CI: 0.37-0.85) compared with having full-time work, and a moderate to high Fagerström test for nicotine dependence (FTND) score (OR=0.69; 95% CI: 0.55-0.87) compared with a low score, were predictors for unsuccessful cessation. Current snus use was a predictor for unsuccessful cessation compared to no snus use for both men (OR=0.49; 95% CI: 0.28-0.88) and women (OR=0.49; 95% CI: 0.32-0.75)., Conclusions: Our study identifies female sex and longer education as predictors for successful smoking cessation, while a medium or high FTND score, being a student, and current snus use, were predictors for unsuccessful smoking cessation. Only current snus use was a predictor for unsuccessful cessation for both sexes. Our results indicate that smokers should be warned that snus use may prevent successful smoking cessation., Competing Interests: The authors have each completed and submitted an ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. The authors declare that they have no competing interests, financial or otherwise, related to the current work. M. L. Løchen reports fees from Sanofi, Bayer and BMS/Pfizer outside the submitted work., (© 2022 Gram I. T. et al.)
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- 2022
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28. Capacity Development to Leverage Advances in Health Informatics for All.
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Moen A and Antypas K
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- Curriculum, Europe, Capacity Building, Medical Informatics, Telemedicine, Nursing Informatics
- Abstract
In this essay we will discuss capacity development in health informatics research and application, which to us is among the major contributions of Professor John Mantas scholarship. Specifically, driven by the inspiration of his scholarship we will elaborate on advancing new applications areas, additional actors and geographical uptake of health informatics and eHealth solutions over time. We will illustrate capacity development in health informatics and address challenges that systematically foster digital health literacy, engagement and empowerment, and building health informatics capacities regionally, in Europe and globally.
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- 2022
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29. Digital interventions to promote physical activity among inactive adults: A study protocol for a hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled trial.
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Zanaboni P, Manskow US, Sagelv EH, Morseth B, Edvardsen AE, Aamot IL, Nes BM, Hastings B, Gagnon MP, and Antypas K
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- Adult, Humans, Exercise, Counseling, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Sedentary Behavior, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Introduction: Physical inactivity is the fourth leading risk factor for global mortality, and inactive adults have a higher risk to develop lifestyle diseases. To date, there is preliminary evidence of the efficacy of fitness technologies and other digital interventions for physical activity (PA) promotion. Intervention studies are needed to test the effectiveness and implementation of innovative PA promotion strategies., Methods and Analysis: The ONWARDS study is a hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation randomized control trial aiming at an inactive and presumably high-risk population living in Northern Norway. One hundred and eighty participants will be assigned to 3 groups in a 1:1:1 ratio and participate for 18 months. Participants in group A will be provided an activity tracker with the personalized metric Personal Activity Intelligence (PAI). Participants in group B will be provided with both an activity tracker with the personalized metric PAI and access to online training videos (Les Mills+) to perform home-based training. Participants in group C will be provided an activity tracker with the personalized metric PAI, home-based online training and additional peer support via social media. The primary objective is to test which combination of interventions is more effective in increasing PA levels and sustaining long-term exercise adherence. Secondary objectives include: proportion of participants reaching PA recommendations; exercise adherence; physical fitness; cardiovascular risk; quality of life; perceived competence for exercise; self-efficacy; social support; usability; users' perspectives on implementation outcomes (adoption, acceptability, adherence, sustainability). The study design will allow testing the effectiveness of the interventions while gathering information on implementation in a real-world situation., Discussion: This study can contribute to reduce disparities in PA levels among inactive adults by promoting PA and long-term adherence. Increased PA might, in turn, result in better prevention of lifestyle diseases. Digital interventions delivered at home can become an alternative to training facilities, making PA accessible and feasible for inactive populations and overcoming known barriers to PA. If effective, such interventions could potentially be offered through national health portals to citizens who do not meet the minimum recommendations on PA or prescribed by general practitioners or specialists., Trial Registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04526444, Registered 23 April 2021, identifier: NCT04526444., Competing Interests: Author AEE was employed by Memento U. Author BH is Head of Research at Les Mills International. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Zanaboni, Manskow, Sagelv, Morseth, Edvardsen, Aamot, Nes, Hastings, Gagnon and Antypas.)
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- 2022
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30. Teleclinical Microbiology: An Innovative Approach to Providing Web-Enabled Diagnostic Laboratory Services in Syria.
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Karah N, Antypas K, Al-Toutanji A, Suveyd U, Rafei R, Haraoui LP, Elamin W, Hamze M, Abbara A, Rhoads DD, Pantanowitz L, and Uhlin BE
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents, Diagnostic Services, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Pilot Projects, Syria, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Proteus mirabilis
- Abstract
Objectives: Telemedicine can compensate for the lack of health care specialists in response to protracted humanitarian crises. We sought to assess the usability of a teleclinical microbiology (TCM) program to provide diagnostic services in a hard-to-reach region of Syria., Methods: A semimobile station was equipped with conventional micrograph and macrograph digital imaging systems. An electronic platform (Telemicrobiology in Humanitarian Crises, TmHC) was created to facilitate sharing, interpreting, and storing the results. A pilot study was conducted to identify the bacterial species and antimicrobial susceptibility pattern of 74 urinary clinical isolates. An experience survey was conducted to capture the feedback of 8 participants in the program., Results: The TmHC platform (https://sdh.ngo/tmhc/) enabled systematic transmission of the laboratory records and co-interpretation of the results. The isolates were identified as Escherichia coli (n = 61), Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 12), and Proteus mirabilis(n = 1). All the isolates were multidrug resistant. The performance of our TCM module was rated 4 (satisfying) and 5 (very satisfying) by 6 and 2 users, respectively. Data security of and cost-effectiveness were the main perceived concerns., Conclusions: Although we encountered several context-related obstacles, our TCM program managed to reach a highly vulnerable population of 4 million people confined in the northwest region of Syria., (© American Society for Clinical Pathology, 2021.)
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- 2022
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31. Early Childhood Professionals' Management of Young Children Who Stutter: A Cross-Sectional Study.
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Kefalianos E, Guttormsen LS, Hansen EH, Hofslundsengen HC, Næss KB, Antypas K, and Kirmess M
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, School Teachers, Speech, Speech-Language Pathology education, Stuttering diagnosis, Stuttering therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Early childhood professionals must accurately identify, refer, and treat children who stutter (CWS) within the scope of their respective roles to ensure each child receives the best possible care. This study aimed to investigate similarities and differences between the practices of speech-language pathologists (SLPs), preschool teachers, and public health nurses when they initially meet a young child reported as stuttering., Method: This cross-sectional study was conducted in Norway. A sample of 342 early childhood professionals (126 preschool teachers, 95 public health nurses, and 121 SLPs) completed an online survey about their management practices with young children reported as stuttering. Descriptive statistics, ordinal regression, and chi-square analyses were used to analyze data., Results: Initial management practices reflected the different roles and competencies of each profession. Less than 15% of SLPs reported they have access to guidelines for working with CWS. This figure was even lower for public health nurses (6.5%) and preschool teachers (12%). The most common recommendations provided to parents by all professions was giving the child time to talk and maintaining eye contact. Each profession's referral for further speech-language pathology management was most commonly influenced by stuttering severity. All professions reported collaborating about management of CWS; the most common reported collaboration was with preschool teachers., Conclusions: Initial management practices varied between professions; however, differences largely reflected the roles and competencies of each profession. The development of guidelines and interdisciplinary seminars is recommended to develop a more complementary approach across professions to improve management practices and ensure young CWS receive the best possible care.
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- 2022
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32. Perceptions of the scope of practice of nurse practitioners caring for older adults: level of agreement among different healthcare providers.
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Henni SH, Kirkevold M, Antypas K, and Foss C
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- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Nurse's Role, Perception, Surveys and Questionnaires, Nurse Practitioners, Scope of Practice
- Abstract
Background: Globally, new nurse practitioner roles have been introduced into interdisciplinary teams. Research indicates that agreement among the different healthcare providers regarding one another's role and scope of practice is important for establishing interdisciplinary teamwork. Lack of agreement regarding a new nurse practitioner's scope of practice may hinder collaboration., Aim: To investigate the level of agreement among advanced geriatric nurses (AGNs), their colleagues and their leaders regarding which activities related to direct and indirect care, teaching/supervision, coordination and research and development work are perceived as appropriate for AGNs., Design: A cross-sectional descriptive survey., Methods: The total population of AGNs in Norway (n = 26) and a sample of their colleagues, including leaders (n = 465), were invited to answer an online questionnaire. Twenty-three (88.5%) AGNs and 195 (42%) colleagues answered the questionnaires. A series of cross-tabulations were conducted to identify the respondents reporting on the appropriateness of different activities., Results: The respondents identified all of the activities related to coordination, teaching/supervision and research and development work as appropriate for AGNs. Although the respondents considered several of the direct and indirect care activities as appropriate, there were conflicting views on the activities that traditionally fall within the medical field vs. those that traditionally fall within the nursing field. The AGNs saw most of the nursing and medical activities as appropriate, but their colleagues and leaders saw only some of the nursing activities as appropriate. The results also showed that there was high disagreement among the leaders regarding appropriate activities., Conclusion: The results indicate that healthcare providers agree on which activities related to teaching/supervision, coordination, and research and development work are appropriate to include in AGNs' scope of practice, but that there are conflicting views regarding activities related to direct and indirect care., (© 2020 The Authors. Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Nordic College of Caring Science.)
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- 2021
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33. Criteria for Assessing and Recommending Digital Diabetes Tools: A Delphi Study.
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Larbi D, Randine P, Årsand E, Bradway M, Antypas K, and Gabarron E
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- Delphi Technique, Health Personnel, Humans, Norway, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Mobile Applications, Self-Management
- Abstract
Diabetes self-management, an integral part of diabetes care, can be improved with the help of digital self-management tools such as apps, sensors, websites, and social media. The study objective was to reach a consensus on the criteria required to assess and recommend digital diabetes self-management tools targeting those with diabetes in Norway. Healthcare professionals working with diabetes care from all health regions in Norway were recruited to participate in a three-round Delphi study. In all rounds, the panellists rated criteria identified in a systematic review and interviews on a scale from 0-10, with the option to provide comments. On a scale of 0:not important to 10:extremely important, the highest rated criteria for assessing and recommending digital diabetes self-management tools were "Usability" and "Information quality", respectively. For assessing apps, "Security and privacy" was one of the lowest rated criteria. Having access to a list of criteria for assessing and recommending digital self-management tools can help diabetes care stakeholders to make informed choices in recommending and choosing suitable apps, websites, and social media for self-management. Future work on quality assessment of digital health tools should place emphasis on security and privacy compliance, to enable diabetes care stakeholders focus on other relevant criteria to recommend or choose and use such tools.
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- 2021
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34. How community software ecosystems can unlock the potential of exascale computing.
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McInnes LC, Heroux MA, Draeger EW, Siegel A, Coghlan S, and Antypas K
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- 2021
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35. Structure evaluation of the implementation of geriatric models in primary care: a multiple-case study of models involving advanced geriatric nurses in five municipalities in Norway.
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Antypas K and Kirkevold M
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- Aged, Cities, Health Services Research, Humans, Models, Organizational, Norway, Organizational Case Studies, Geriatric Nursing organization & administration, Nurse's Role, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: The Advanced Geriatric Nurse role recently has been introduced into Norway's primary healthcare system, and our study's purpose was to examine the implementation of models of care developed for Advanced Geriatric Nurse in primary care. With a structure evaluation, we tried to identify conditions that affect the implementation of different models of care and understand how these conditions affected the realisation of each model's intentions and goals., Methods: An embedded multiple-case study was used that included five Norwegian municipalities and seven AGNs. The study included data from August 2014 through September 2018. We used data from 25 semi-structured face-to-face interviews with AGNs and stakeholders, documents and statistical information. We used a cross-case procedure with an emphasis on case findings for the analysis of the multiple case study., Results: We analysed the structure-related conditions on two levels: the meso-level and the micro-level. On the meso-level, we found that the conditions that affected the implementation of the different models of care were related to each municipality's structure characteristics, stakeholders' involvement in the design of the models of care, the clarity of the models and their goals, the evaluation of the models and their adaptation. At the micro-level, we found that the conditions that affected the models' implementation were related to the collaboration within the implemented models of care, the role clarity of Advanced Geriatric Nurses themselves and adjustments within the models., Conclusions: The implementation of the AGN role in Norway seems to have been implemented in ways that can impact patients and municipalities positively. Potential improvements include extensive stakeholder involvement, improved roles, goal clarity and better documentation of structures and outcomes. The models' dynamic nature seemed to be a beneficial characteristic, but adaptation should be systematic and a necessary time should be considered for a new model of care to be integrated and produce results.
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- 2020
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36. Methods and Evaluation Criteria for Apps and Digital Interventions for Diabetes Self-Management: Systematic Review.
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Larbi D, Randine P, Årsand E, Antypas K, Bradway M, and Gabarron E
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- Humans, Self-Management, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 therapy, Mobile Applications standards, Telemedicine methods
- Abstract
Background: There is growing evidence that apps and digital interventions have a positive impact on diabetes self-management. Standard self-management for patients with diabetes could therefore be supplemented by apps and digital interventions to increase patients' skills. Several initiatives, models, and frameworks suggest how health apps and digital interventions could be evaluated, but there are few standards for this. And although there are many methods for evaluating apps and digital interventions, a more specific approach might be needed for assessing digital diabetes self-management interventions., Objective: This review aims to identify which methods and criteria are used to evaluate apps and digital interventions for diabetes self-management, and to describe how patients were involved in these evaluations., Methods: We searched CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, and Web of Science for articles published from 2015 that referred to the evaluation of apps and digital interventions for diabetes self-management and involved patients in the evaluation. We then conducted a narrative qualitative synthesis of the findings, structured around the included studies' quality, methods of evaluation, and evaluation criteria., Results: Of 1681 articles identified, 31 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. A total of 7 articles were considered of high confidence in the evidence. Apps were the most commonly used platform for diabetes self-management (18/31, 58%), and type 2 diabetes (T2D) was the targeted health condition most studies focused on (12/31, 38%). Questionnaires, interviews, and user-group meetings were the most common methods of evaluation. Furthermore, the most evaluated criteria for apps and digital diabetes self-management interventions were cognitive impact, clinical impact, and usability. Feasibility and security and privacy were not evaluated by studies considered of high confidence in the evidence., Conclusions: There were few studies with high confidence in the evidence that involved patients in the evaluation of apps and digital interventions for diabetes self-management. Additional evaluation criteria, such as sustainability and interoperability, should be focused on more in future studies to provide a better understanding of the effects and potential of apps and digital interventions for diabetes self-management., (©Dillys Larbi, Pietro Randine, Eirik Årsand, Konstantinos Antypas, Meghan Bradway, Elia Gabarron. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 06.07.2020.)
- Published
- 2020
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37. The integration of new nurse practitioners into care of older adults: A survey study.
- Author
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Henni SH, Kirkevold M, Antypas K, and Foss C
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Norway, Surveys and Questionnaires, Geriatric Nursing organization & administration, Nurse Practitioners organization & administration, Nurse's Role
- Abstract
Aims and Objectives: To assess Norwegian advanced geriatric nurses' (AGNs) use of their knowledge and skills, and factors that may influence AGNs' opportunities to use their knowledge and skills to reach their full potential., Background: Despite the need for nurses with advanced knowledge and skill in the care of older adults, the introduction of new advanced nursing roles has been challenging. Countries in the process of establishing advanced roles need to monitor and identify possible implementation issues., Design: A cross-sectional descriptive survey., Methods: We invited the total population of AGNs in Norway (n = 26) and some of their colleagues (n = 465) to answer an online questionnaire. Twenty-three (88.5%) of the AGNs and 195 (42.0%) of the invited colleagues completed and submitted the questionnaires. The data were analysed with descriptive statistics. STROBE guidelines were used in reporting this study., Results: Of the AGNs, 16 (69.6%) used their knowledge and skills to their full potential when providing direct care. However, a minority used their knowledge and skills to their full potential when proving indirect care (n = 11, 47.8%), teaching/supervision (n = 11, 47.8%) and coordination (n = 5, 21.8%). A total of 47 (24.1%) colleagues experienced the AGNs' scope of practice as completely clear, and 52 (26.6%) collaborated with the AGNs several times a week. Of the colleagues, 131 (67.2%) considered the AGNs' role and scope of practice contributed positively to a high degree to health service for older adults., Conclusion: The results indicate the need for greater focus on organisational adjustment for the AGNs to utilise their knowledge and skills to their full potential., Relevance to Clinical Practice: There is a need for greater focus on organisational adjustment to integrate AGNs at the workplace, as complete integration may improve the AGNs' use of their knowledge and skills., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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38. The role of advanced geriatric nurses in Norway: A descriptive exploratory study.
- Author
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Henni SH, Kirkevold M, Antypas K, and Foss C
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Health Services Needs and Demand, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Norway, Advanced Practice Nursing organization & administration, Geriatric Nursing organization & administration, Nurse's Role
- Abstract
Background: Care of older adults in the community is becoming increasingly complex. However, nursing staff often has insufficient knowledge and skills to adequately address the needs of frail older adults. There is therefore a need for nurses with advanced qualifications. To meet this need, advanced geriatric nursing has been introduced in Norway., Aims and Objectives: This study aimed to describe the experiences of nurses with their new role as advanced geriatric nurses in care of older adults and to determine what strategies the nurses considered important in the development of their new role., Design: This study applied a descriptive, exploratory design., Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted with 21 nurses who had undergone an educational programme to become advanced geriatric nurses in Norway in 2016. Content analysis was used to analyse the data., Findings: The participants described a complex and extensive nursing role, which they related to a new understanding of the patients, relatives and the system in which they worked. This new gaze had developed based on a combination of their new knowledge, their skills, experiences and professional interests. The opportunities to use their role depended on their workplace conditions. They related to contextual challenges at their workplace in different ways to optimise the use of their new gaze., Conclusions: Common for all participants was a broader and deeper understanding of the patient's health and life situation, which guided participants' actions. The key issue in developing the new role was developing effective strategies to foster role integration., Implications for Practice: Advanced geriatric nurses should collaborate with their managers to create a role that takes advantage of their knowledge and skills, as well as collaborate with colleagues to enhance understanding of utilisation of their role., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
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39. An Internet- and mobile-based tailored intervention to enhance maintenance of physical activity after cardiac rehabilitation: short-term results of a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Antypas K and Wangberg SC
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Anxiety, Cardiovascular Diseases psychology, Cell Phone, Depression, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Care methods, Self Efficacy, Social Support, Surveys and Questionnaires, Therapy, Computer-Assisted methods, Cardiac Rehabilitation, Exercise, Internet, Text Messaging
- Abstract
Background: An increase in physical activity for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease and cardiac rehabilitation has multiple therapeutic benefits, including decreased mortality. Internet- and mobile-based interventions for physical activity have shown promising results in helping users increase or maintain their level of physical activity in general and specifically in secondary prevention of cardiovascular diseases and cardiac rehabilitation. One component related to the efficacy of these interventions is tailoring of the content to the individual., Objective: Our trial assessed the effect of a longitudinally tailored Internet- and mobile-based intervention for physical activity as an extension of a face-to-face cardiac rehabilitation stay. We hypothesized that users of the tailored intervention would maintain their physical activity level better than users of the nontailored version., Methods: The study population included adult participants of a cardiac rehabilitation program in Norway with home Internet access and a mobile phone. The participants were randomized in monthly clusters to a tailored or nontailored (control) intervention group. All participants had access to a website with information regarding cardiac rehabilitation, an online discussion forum, and an online activity calendar. Those using the tailored intervention received tailored content based on models of health behavior via the website and mobile fully automated text messages. The main outcome was self-reported level of physical activity, which was obtained using an online international physical activity questionnaire at baseline, at discharge, and at 1 month and 3 months after discharge from the cardiac rehabilitation program., Results: Included in the study were 69 participants. One month after discharge, the tailored intervention group (n=10) had a higher median level of overall physical activity (median 2737.5, IQR 4200.2) than the control group (n=14, median 1650.0, IQR 2443.5), but the difference was not significant (Kolmogorov-Smirnov Z=0.823, P=.38, r=.17). At 3 months after discharge, the tailored intervention group (n=7) had a significantly higher median level of overall physical activity (median 5613.0, IQR 2828.0) than the control group (n=12, median 1356.0, IQR 2937.0; Kolmogorov-Smirnov Z=1.397, P=.02, r=.33). The median adherence was 45.0 (95% CI 0.0-169.8) days for the tailored group and 111.0 (95% CI 45.1-176.9) days for the control group; however, the difference was not significant (P=.39). There were no statistically significant differences between the 2 groups in stage of change, self-efficacy, social support, perceived tailoring, anxiety, or depression., Conclusions: Because of the small sample size and the high attrition rate at the follow-up visits, we cannot make conclusions regarding the efficacy of our approach, but the results indicate that the tailored version of the intervention may have contributed to the long-term higher physical activity maintained after cardiac rehabilitation by participants receiving the tailored intervention compared with those receiving the nontailored intervention., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01223170; http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01223170 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6Nch4ldcL).
- Published
- 2014
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40. Combining users' needs with health behavior models in designing an internet- and mobile-based intervention for physical activity in cardiac rehabilitation.
- Author
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Antypas K and Wangberg SC
- Abstract
Background: Internet-based physical activity interventions have great potential in supporting patients in cardiac rehabilitation. Health behavior change theories and user input are identified as important contributors in the effectiveness of the interventions, but they are rarely combined in a systematic way in the design of the interventions., Objective: The aim of this study is to identify the appropriate theoretical framework, along with the needs of the users of a physical activity intervention for cardiac rehabilitation, and to combine them into an effective Internet- and mobile-based intervention., Methods: We explain the theoretical framework of the intervention in a narrative overview of the existing health behavior change literature as it applies to physical activity. We also conducted a focus group with 11 participants of a cardiac rehabilitation program and used thematic analysis to identify and analyze patterns of meaning in the transcribed data., Results: We chose stage-based approaches, specifically the transtheoretical model and the health action process approach as our main framework for tailoring, supplemented with other theoretical concepts such as regulatory focus within the appropriate stages. From the thematic analysis of the focus group data, we identified seven themes: (1) social, (2) motivation, (3) integration into everyday life, (4) information, (5) planning, (6) monitoring and feedback, and (7) concerns and potential problems. The final design of the intervention was based on both the theoretical review and the user input, and it is explained in detail., Conclusions: We applied a combination of health behavioral theory and user input in designing our intervention. We think this is a promising design approach with the potential to combine the high efficacy of theory-based interventions with the higher perceived usefulness of interventions designed according to user input., Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01223170; http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01223170 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6M5FqT9Q2).
- Published
- 2014
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41. Effect of tailoring in an internet-based intervention for smoking cessation: randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Wangberg SC, Nilsen O, Antypas K, and Gram IT
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Electronic Mail, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Health Behavior, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Norway, Self Efficacy, Smoking Cessation psychology, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Internet, Smoking Cessation methods, Therapy, Computer-Assisted methods
- Abstract
Background: Studies suggest that tailored materials are superior to nontailored materials in supporting health behavioral change. Several trials on tailored Internet-based interventions for smoking cessation have shown good effects. There have, however, been few attempts to isolate the effect of the tailoring component of an Internet-based intervention for smoking cessation and to compare it with the effectiveness of the other components., Objective: The study aim was to isolate the effect of tailored emails in an Internet-based intervention for smoking cessation by comparing two versions of the intervention, with and without tailored content., Methods: We conducted a two-arm, randomized controlled trial of the open and free Norwegian 12-month follow-up, fully automated Internet-based intervention for smoking cessation, slutta.no. We collected information online on demographics, smoking, self-efficacy, use of the website, and participant evaluation at enrollment and subsequently at 1, 3, and 12 months. Altogether, 2298 self-selected participants aged 16 years or older registered at the website between August 15, 2006 and December 7, 2007 and were randomly assigned to either a multicomponent, nontailored Internet-based intervention for smoking cessation (control) or a version of the same Internet-based intervention with tailored content delivered on the website and via email., Results: Of the randomly assigned participants, 116 (of 419, response rate = 27.7%) in the intervention group and 128 (of 428, response rate = 29.9%) in the control group had participated over the 12 months and responded at the end of follow-up. The 7-day intention-to-treat abstinence rate at 1 month was 15.2% (149/982) among those receiving the tailored intervention, compared with 9.4% (94/999) among those who received the nontailored intervention (P < .001). The corresponding figures at 3 months were 13.5% (122/902) and 9.4% (84/896, P =.006) and at 12 months were 11.2% (47/419) and 11.7% (50/428, P = .91). Likewise, the intervention group had higher self-efficacy and perceived tailoring at 1 and 3 months. Self-efficacy was found to partially mediate the effect of the intervention., Conclusion: Tailoring an Internet-based intervention for smoking cessation seems to increase the success rates in the short term, but not in the long term.
- Published
- 2011
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42. Promoting interprofessional education in health sector within the European Interprofessional Education Network.
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Liaskos J, Frigas A, Antypas K, Zikos D, Diomidous M, and Mantas J
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- Europe, Medical Informatics, Education, Professional organization & administration
- Abstract
According to a common definition, interprofessional education (IPE) is described as "occasions when two or more professions learn from and about each other to improve collaboration and the quality of care". The Leonardo project under the name European Interprofessional Education Network (EIPEN) in health and social care, has been dealing with the challenges of interprofessional education. The EIPEN project tries to develop a transnational network of universities and employers in the six participating countries and at the same time to promote good practices in interprofessional learning and teaching in health and social care. IPE provides opportunities for students and practitioners to learn with, from and about each other during qualifying and post-qualifying training and in their practice. IPE in health and social care includes the education and training of practitioners in human and animal medicine, dentistry, nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, pharmacy and all other health professions including public and environmental health and health promotion, and social work. The outcomes of the EIPEN Project will provide means, material and guidelines for the enhancement of professional education in the multi-disciplinary field of Health Informatics. The methodology on the development of the Greek Interprofessional Network was based on a series of workshops aiming to document the educational process in healthcare institutes and universities followed by the assessment of the needs for the development of an interprofessional environment. The outcomes will provide means, material and guidelines for the enhancement of professional education in the multi-disciplinary field of Health Informatics.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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43. The EIPEN project: promoting interprofessional education in health professions.
- Author
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Liaskos J, Frigas A, Antypas K, Zikos D, Diomidous M, and Mantas J
- Subjects
- Europe, Interdisciplinary Communication, Interprofessional Relations, Education, Professional, Health Occupations education, Medical Informatics education
- Abstract
The Leonardo project under the name European Interprofessional Education Network (EIPEN) in health and social care, has been dealing with the challenges of Interprofessional Education (IPE). The EIPEN project tries to develop a transnational network of universities and employers in the six participating countries and at the same time to promote good practices in Interprofessional LearningTeaching in healthsocial care. IPE provides opportunities for students and practitioners to learn with, from and about each other during qualifying and post-qualifying training and in their practice. IPE in health and social care includes the education and training of practitioners in human and animal medicine, dentistry, nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, pharmacy and all other health professions including public and environmental health and health promotion, and social work. The outcomes of the EIPEN Project will provide means, material and guidelines for the enhancement of professional education in the multidisciplinary field of Health Informatics.
- Published
- 2007
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