45 results on '"Naseem Naqvi"'
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2. Editorial, Vol 4 Issue 1, May 2021
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Editorial, Volume 4, Issue 1, May 2021.
- Published
- 2021
3. Conference Proceedings, 3rd Blockchain International Scientific Conference, ISC2021
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Conference Proceedings, 3rd Blockchain International Scientific Conference, ISC2021
- Published
- 2021
4. An aide mémoire: working on acute medical assessment units
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
acute health care ,junior ,medical assessment ,Medicine - Abstract
N/A
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. JBBA Vol 3, Issue 2, Nov 2020
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
The JBBA, Vol 3, Issue 2, November 2020
- Published
- 2020
6. Evidence-Based Blockchain: Findings from a Global Study of Blockchain Projects and Start-up Companies
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi and Mureed Hussain
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Evidence-based applications of resources remain one of the greatest challenges faced by governments, businesses, and policymakers. The United States Government Accountability Office (GAO) evaluated ten large programs, which together cost more than $10 billion/year, through randomised control trials – the highest standard of evidence-based practice (EBP). The evaluation found that nine of them had ‘weak or no positive effects’ on their participants. Many programs were not evaluated at all. In January 2019, U.S. President signed the ‘Foundations for Evidence-based Policy Making Act’ into law. A USAID (US Agency for International Development) study looked at 43 blockchain projects and companies claiming to have solved various problems using distributed ledgers. The study found that almost no company was willing to share their results and MERL (monitoring, evaluation, research and learning) processes. Other observational data revealed that 80–90% of blockchain-based token offering projects failed to deliver on their promises, a prediction also made by Vitalik Buterin, the founder of Ethereum blockchain, in 2017. The concept of evidence-based blockchain (EBB) was first introduced by Naqvi in 2018. We conducted an evaluation of 517 blockchain firms against PCIO framework of evidence-based practice: Problem – Comparison – Intervention and Outcomes. We define the fundamentals of EBB (Ask, Acquire, Appraise, Apply, Assess), provide a review of the literature on EBB, report findings of our study and propose an Assessment Framework of Evidence Based Blockchain.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Challenges of Stroke Care in Rural & District General Hospitals; A United Kingdom National Health Service Perspective
- Author
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Eman Abdus Sami and Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
challenges ,holistic ,stroke service ,Medicine - Abstract
Stroke Medicine being an independent and recognised sub-specialty in the United Kingdom, is faced with unique challenges across District and Rural Hospitals. Delivering a comprehensive stroke service in the rural areas requires collaborative team work, effective communication, pre planning and efficient leadership. In this article we have summarized these challenges and shared some proposals for future development of a holistic and integrated Stroke Service in district hospitals across United Kingdom.
- Published
- 2020
8. Full Text PDF of The JBBA, Volume 3 Issue 1, May 2020
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Full Text PDF of The JBBA, Volume 3 Issue 1, May 2020
- Published
- 2020
9. Conference Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain International Scientific Conference ISC2020
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Conference Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain International Scientific Conference ISC2020, held in Edinburgh on 11 March 2020.
- Published
- 2020
10. Interview with Chrissa McFarlane
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
JBBA ,Blockchain ,Healthcare ,Cryptocurrencies ,Patientory ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Full Text PDF of JBBA Vol 1, Issue 2, Dec 2018
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Blockchain ,JBBA ,Britsih Blockchain ,Research ,Bitcoin ,Distributed Ledger ,Cybersecurity ,Cryptocurrency ,ethereum ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Complete PDF of all contents of The JBBA, Volume 1, Issue 2, December 2018.
- Published
- 2018
12. Interview with Andreas M. Antonopoulos
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
JBBA ,Bitcoin ,blockchain ,cryptography ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Medical Education on the Blockchain
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi and Mureed Hussain
- Subjects
blockchain ,medical education ,decentralised applications ,credentialing ,CPD ,certification ,learning ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
The traditional medical education ecosystems* are largely centralised and confined to the boundaries of academic institutions [1]. Rather than promoting efficiency and global forward thinking, a number of medical institutions have become inwardly focused, confining themselves to their own institutional rules and frameworks [2,3]. In the past two years, the utility of blockchain in the higher education setting has been extensively studied [4]. A blockchain is essentially a distributed, immutable, trustworthy, decentralised database that keeps an irreversible, time-stamped record of the transfer of value between users for every operation that has ever been carried out on its network [5]. This has traditionally been used in cryptocurrency transactions, however, with the rise of blockchain based Decentralised Applications (DApps), the potential benefits of this ground-breaking technology in higher education are now being explored [6]. Although still in the early developmental stages, blockchain holds promising potential for use in medical education. Some of these are budding hypothesis while in other areas, we have witnessed real, tangible progress [7]. This article analyses the potential use cases for blockchain deployment in medical education ecosystems, to improve the efficiency, security, functionality, and effectiveness of existing infrastructures [8]. We conclude the essay by proposing how blockchain can eliminate the growing problem of fraudulent academic accreditations.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Full Text PDF of JBBA Vol 1, Issue 1, July 2018
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
JBBA ,Blockchain ,Research ,British Blockchain ,BBA ,DLT ,Distributed Ledger ,Cryptocurrency ,Bitcoin ,Ethereum ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Full Text, JBBA Vol 1, Issue 1, July 2018.
- Published
- 2018
15. Full Text PDF of The JBBA, Volume 2 Issue 2, October 2019
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Full Text PDF JBBA, Volume 2 Issue 2, October 2019
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Full Text PDF of The JBBA Vol 2, Issue 1, May 2019
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Full Text PDF of JBBA Vol 2, Issue 1, May 2019
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Editorial, Volume 1, Issue 2, December 2018
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Editorial, Volume 1, Issue 2, December 2018
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Full Text PDF of The JBBA: Vol 1, Issue 1, July 2018
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Inaugural edition of the Journal of the British Blockchain Association: World's first peer reviewed journal devoted to Blockchain Technology & and Cryptocurrencies that is available both in-print, and online.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Building the Future of EU: Moving forward with International Collaboration on Blockchain
- Author
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Bill Buchanan and Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
A blockchain enabled ‘Digital Single Economy” can act as a catalyst for growth and could provide a platform where borderless innovative practices will thrive and create a true collaborative global economy, with shared goals and objectives for the benefit of wider community. A society where digital economy flourishes irrespective of geopolitical ideologies and where a technology like Blockchain holds transformative potential to unite the nations together. The UK currently has strong collaborations around blockchain including with the British Blockchain Association which aims to integrate with the EU on the adoption of Blockchain based methods around a range of application areas. However, at the core of these alliances must be the promotion of technology which link industry, the public sector, and academia, whilst also integrating key stakeholders, such as law enforcement, finance, health care, professional bodies and the legal industry.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Building the Future of EU: Moving forward with International Collaboration on Blockchain
- Author
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William J Buchanan and Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Blockchain ,Digital ,EU ,Brexit ,Europe ,UK ,Britain ,Economy ,DLT ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
A blockchain enabled ‘Digital Single Economy” can act as a catalyst for growth and could provide a platform where borderless innovative practices will thrive and create a true collaborative global economy, with shared goals and objectives for the benefit of wider community. A society where digital economy flourishes irrespective of geopolitical ideologies and where a technology like Blockchain holds transformative potential to unite the nations together. The UK currently has strong collaborations around blockchain including with the British Blockchain Association which aims to integrate with the EU on the adoption of Blockchain based methods around a range of application areas. However, at the core of these alliances must be the promotion of technology which link industry, the public sector, and academia, whilst also integrating key stakeholders, such as law enforcement, finance, health care, professional bodies and the legal industry.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain International Scientific Conference ISC2020
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain international Scientific Conference ISC2020.
22. Metaverse for Public Good: Embracing the Societal Impact of Metaverse Economies
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Materials Chemistry ,Media Technology ,Forestry - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Open Access Blockchain and Cryptoasset Research: Why it matters now more than ever before
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Medical Education on the Blockchain
- Author
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Mureed Hussain and Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,blockchain ,Cryptocurrency ,Medical education ,Blockchain ,certification ,learning ,Higher education ,business.industry ,CPD ,Trustworthiness ,Software deployment ,lcsh:Technology (General) ,lcsh:T1-995 ,credentialing ,T1-995 ,Use case ,decentralised applications ,Business ,medical education ,Technology (General) ,Accreditation - Abstract
The traditional medical education ecosystems* are largely centralised and confined to the boundaries of academic institutions [1]. Rather than promoting efficiency and global forward thinking, a number of medical institutions have become inwardly focused, confining themselves to their own institutional rules and frameworks [2,3]. In the past two years, the utility of blockchain in the higher education setting has been extensively studied [4]. A blockchain is essentially a distributed, immutable, trustworthy, decentralised database that keeps an irreversible, time-stamped record of the transfer of value between users for every operation that has ever been carried out on its network [5]. This has traditionally been used in cryptocurrency transactions, however, with the rise of blockchain based Decentralised Applications (DApps), the potential benefits of this ground-breaking technology in higher education are now being explored [6]. Although still in the early developmental stages, blockchain holds promising potential for use in medical education. Some of these are budding hypothesis while in other areas, we have witnessed real, tangible progress [7]. This article analyses the potential use cases for blockchain deployment in medical education ecosystems, to improve the efficiency, security, functionality, and effectiveness of existing infrastructures [8]. We conclude the essay by proposing how blockchain can eliminate the growing problem of fraudulent academic accreditations.
- Published
- 2018
25. Effects of fluoxetine on functional outcomes after acute stroke (FOCUS) : a pragmatic, double-blind, randomised, controlled trial
- Author
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Martin Dennis, Gillian Mead, John Forbes, Catriona Graham, Maree Hackett, Graeme J Hankey, Allan House, Stephanie Lewis, Erik Lundström, Peter Sandercock, Karen Innes, Carol Williams, Jonathan Drever, Aileen Mcgrath, Ann Deary, Ruth Fraser, Rosemary Anderson, Pauli Walker, David Perry, Connor Mcgill, David Buchanan, Yvonne Chun, Lynn Dinsmore, Emma Maschauer, Amanda Barugh, Shadia Mikhail, Gordon Blair, Ingrid Hoeritzauer, Maggie Scott, Greig Fraser, Katherine Lawrence, Alison Shaw, Judith Williamson, David Burgess, Malcolm Macleod, Dan Morales, Frank Sullivan, Marian Brady, Ray French, Frederike Van Wijck, Caroline Watkins, Fiona Proudfoot, Joanna Skwarski, Diane Mcgowan, Rachael Murphy, Seona Burgess, William Rutherford, Katrina Mccormick, Ruaridh Buchan, Allan Macraild, Ruth Paulton, Adnan Fazal, Pat Taylor, Ruwan Parakramawansha, Neil Hunter, Jack Perry, John Bamford, Dean Waugh, Emelda Veraque, Caroline Bedford, Mary Kambafwile, Luis Idrovo, Linetty Makawa, Paula Smalley, Marc Randall, Tharani Thirugnana-Chandran, Ahamad Hassan, Richard Vowden, Joanne Jackson, Ajay Bhalla, Anthony Rudd, Chi Kai Tam, Jonathan Birns, Charlotte Gibbs, Leonie Lee Carbon, Elizabeth Cattermole, Katherine Marks, Angela Cape, Lisa Hurley, Sagal Kullane, Nigel Smyth, Charlotte Eglinton, Jennifer Wilson, Elio Giallombardo, Angela Frith, Paul Reidy, Matthew Pitt, Lucy Sykes, Deborah Dellafera, Victoria Croome, Lauriane Kerwood, Mirea Hancevic, Christina Narh, Carley Merritt, John Duffy, Duncan Cooke, Juliet Willson, Ali Ali, Aaizza Naqvi, Christine Kamara, Helen Bowler, Simon Bell, Tracy Jackson, Kirsty Harkness, Kathy Stocks, Suzanna Duty, Clare Doyle, Geoffrey Dunn, Keith Endean, Fiona Claydon, Emma Richards, Jo Howe, Ralf Lindert, Arshad Majid, Katy Dakin, Ahmad Maatouk, Luke Barron, Madana Meegada, Pratap Rana, Anand Nair, Christine Brighouse-Johnson, Jill Greig, Myint Kyu, Sanjeev Prasad, Matthew Robinson, Irfan Alam, Belinda Mclean, Lindsay Greenhalgh, Zenab Ahmed, Christine Roffe, Susan Brammer, Carole Beardmore, Kay Finney, Adrian Barry, Paul Hollinshead, Jeanette Grocott, Holly Maguire, Indira Natarajan, Jayan Chembala, Ranjan Sanyal, Sue Lijko, Nenette Abano, Alda Remegoso, Phillip Ferdinand, Stephanie Stevens, Resti Varquez, Chelsea Causley, Adrian Butler, Philip Whitmore, Caroline Stephen, Racquel Carpio, Joanne Hiden, Girish Muddegowda, Hayley Denic, Jane Sword, Ross Curwen, Martin James, Paul Mudd, Fiona Hall, Julie Cageao, Samantha Keenan, Caroline Roughan, Hayley Kingwell, Anthony Hemsley, Christoph Lohan, Sue Davenport, Angela Bowring, Tamika Chapter, Max Hough, David Strain, Karin Gupwell, Keniesha Miller, Anita Goff, Ellie Cusack, Shirley Todd, Rebecca Partridge, Georgiana Jennings, Kevin Thorpe, Jacquelyn Stephenson, Kelly Littlewood, Mark Barber, Fiona Brodie, Steven Marshall, Derek Esson, Irene Coburn, Caroline Mcinnes, Fiona Ross, Emma Bowie, Heather Barcroft, Victoria Withers, Laura Miller, Paul Willcoxson, Michelle Donninson, Richard Evans, Di Daniel, John Coyle, Michael Keeling, Peter Wanklyn, Mark Elliott, John Wightman, Elizabeth Iveson, Natasha Dyer, Anne-Marie Porteous, Monica Haritakis, Mandy Ward, Lucy Doughty, Lisa Carr, Mark O Neill, Cosmas Anazodo, Paul Wood, Poppy Cottrell, Cheryl Donne, Romina Rodriguez, Ruhail Mir, Jax Westmoreland, Judith Bell, Christopher Emms, Lorraine Wright, Pearl Clark Brown, Elizabeth Bamford, Andrew Stanners, Mike Carpenter, Prabal Datta, Richard Davey, Ann Needle, Marjorie Jane Eastwood, Fathima Zeena Razik, Imran Ghouri, Gavin Bateman, Judy Archer, Venkatesh Balasubramanian, Richard Bowers, Julie Ball, Louise Benton, Linda Jackson, Julie Ellam, Kate Norton, Paul Guyler, Terry Dowling, Sharon Tysoe, Paula Harman, Ashish Kundu, Ololade Omodunbi, Thayalini Loganathan, Stuart Chandler, Shanas Noor, Anwer Siddiqui, Amber Siddiqui, Swapna Kunhunny, Devesh Sinha, Martin Sheppard, Sindhu Rashmi, Elena France, Rajalakshmi Orath Prabakaran, Laura Wilson, Amiirah Ropun, Shyam Kelavkar, Kheng Xiong Ng, Lucy Kamuriwo, Sweni Shah, David Mangion, Camen Constantin, Luigi De Michele Hock, Anne Hardwick, Jayne Borley, Skarlet Markova, Kimberley Netherton, Tara Lawrence, Jo Fletcher, Rebecca Spencer, Helen Palmer, Claire Cullen, Dolores Hamill, Ramesh Durairaj, Zoe Mellor, Tanya Fluskey, Diane Wood, Alison Keeling, Victoria Hankin, Jennifer Peters, Daniela Shackcloth, Thant Hlaing, Rebecca Tangney, Jordan Ewing, Melanie Harrison, Sarah Stevenson, Victoria Sutton, Mohamed Soliman, Julia Hindle, Elizabeth Watson, Claire Hewitt, Susie Butler, Ibrahim Wahishi, Sarwat Arif, Amy Fields, Jagdish Sharma, Rose Brown, Caroline Taylor, Sarah Bell, Simon Leach, Chris Patterson, Sophia Khan, Helen Wilson, Joanne Price, Hawraman Ramadan, Stuart Maguire, Ruth Bellfield, Michaela Hooley, Umair Hamid, Waqar Gaba, Robina Ghulam, Leslie Masters, Outi Quinn, Lakshmanan Sekaran, Margaret Tate, Niaz Mohammed, Kiranjit Bharaj, Frances Justin, Rajan Pattni, Lanka Alwis, Sakthivel Sethuraman, Rianne Robinson, Lianne Eldridge, Susan Mintias, Meena Chauhan, Chi-Kai Tam, Jeremias Palmones, Clare Holmes, Lucy Belle Guthrie, Mairead Osborn, Lindsay Ball, Sarah Caine, Amy Steele, Peter Murphy, Nikki Devitt, Jayne Leonard, Ronak Patel, Ian Penwarden, Emily Dodd, Amy Holloway, Pauline Baker, Samantha Clarke, Sandra Williams, Lindsey Dow, Roland Wynn-Williams, James Kennedy, Rachel Teal, Ursula Schulz, Gary Ford, Philip Mathieson, Ian Reckless, Ana Deveciana, Paige Mccann, Gillian Cluckie, Geoffrey Howell, Jonathan Ayer, Barry Moynihan, Rita Ghatala, Brian Clarke, Geoffrey Cloud, Bhavini Patel, Usman Khan, Nia Al-Samarrai, Sarah Trippier, Neha Chopra, Temi Adedoyin, Fran Watson, Val Jones, Liqun Zhang, Lillian Choy, Rebecca Williams, Natasha Clarke, Adrian Blight, Kate Kennedy, Alice Dainty, Johann Selvarajah, Dheeraj Kalladka, Bharath Cheripelli, Wilma Smith, Fiona Moreton, Angela Welch, Xuya Huang, Elizabeth Douglas, Audrey Lush, Nicola Day, Salwa El Tawil, Karen Montgomery, Helen Hamilton, Doreen Ritchie, Sankaranarayanan Ramachandra, Kirsty Mcleish, Kamy Thavanesan, Sathyabama Loganathan, Josh Roberts, Chantel Cox, Sarah Orr, Alison Hogan, Divya Tiwari, Gail Hann, Barbara Longland, Owen David, Jo Bell, Catherine Ovington, Emily Rogers, Rachel Bower, Marketa Keltos, David Cohen, Joseph Devine, Lankantha Alwis, Lucy Southworth, Laura Burgess, Matilda Lang, Bhavna Badiani, Fenglin Guo, Anne Oshodi, Emmanuelle Owoyele, Norah Epie, Anette David, Mushiya Mpelembue, Rajaram Bathula, Mudhar Abdul-Saheb, Angela Chamberlain, Varthi Sudkeo, Khalid Rashed, Barbara Williams-Yesson, Joanne Board, Sarah De Bruijn, Clare Buckley, Sarah Board, Joanna Allison, Elizabeth Keeling, Tracey Duckett, Dave Donaldson, Carinna Vickers, Claire Barron, Linda Balian, Jodhi Wilson, Adam Edwards, Timothy England, Amanda Hedstrom, Elizabeth Bedford, Margaret Harper, Elina Melikyan, Wendy Abbott, Kashmira Subramanian, Marie Goldsworthy, Meena Srinivasan, Angela Yeomans, Denise Donaldson, Frances Hurford, Riquella Chapman, Sana Shahzad, Nicki Motherwell, Louise Tonks, Rachel Young, Usman Ghani, Indranil Mukherjee, Dipankar Dutta, Mudhar Obaid, Pauline Brown, Fiona Davis, Deborah Ward, Jennifer Turfrey, Bethan Cartwright, Bilal Topia, Judith Spurway, Kayleigh Collins, Rehana Bakawala, Chloe Hughes, Susan Oconnell, Linda Hill, Kausik Chatterjee, Tim Webster, Syed Haider, Pamela Rushworth, Fiona Macleod, Arumugam Nallasivan, Charlotte Perkins, Edel Burns, Sandra Leason, Tom Carter, Samantha Seagrave, Eman Sami, Lisa Armstrong, Syed Naseem Naqvi, Muhammad Hassan, Sharron Parkinson, Samantha Mawer, Gillian Darnbrook, Carl Booth, Brigid Hairsine, Matthew Smith, Sue Williamson, Fiona Farquhar, Bernard Esisi, Tim Cassidy, Gavin Mankin, Beverley Mcclelland, Maria Bokhari, David Sproates, Elliot Epstein, Steve Hurdowar, Ruth Blackburn, Nazran Sukhdeep, Saika Razak, Khalid Osman, Amina Hashmi, Natasha Upton, Frances Harrington, Gillian Courtauld, Christine Schofield, Linda Lucas, Katja Adie, Kirsty Bond, Abhijit Mate, Jo Skewes, Ali James, Carolyn Brodie, Matthew Johnson, Linda Allsop, Emma Driver, Karina Harris, Mark Drake, Sam Ellis, Bev Maund, Emma Thomas, Kimberley Moore, Matthew Burn, Adam Hamilton, Shageetha Mahalingam, Amulya Misra, Farrah Reid, Adrienne Benford, Derek Hilton, Lorraine Hazell, Keziah Ofori, Anne Louise Thomas, Moncy Mathew, Sonia Dayal, Iona Burn, Kenneth Fotherby, Karla Jennings-Preece, Angela Willberry, Debbie Morgan, Donna Butler, Gurminder Sahota, Kelly Kauldhar, Nasar Ahmad, Angela Stevens, Saugata Das, David Bruce, Yogish Pai, Khin Nyo, Lynsey Stephenson, Richard Nendick, Gill Rogers, Mahesh Dhakal, Sofia Dima, Ellen Brown, Susan Clayton, Penny Gamble, Muhammad Naeem, Rachel Hayman, Rachel Burnip, Philip Earnshaw, David Hargroves, Barbara Ransom, Hannah Rudenko, Ibrahim Balogun, Kirsty Griffiths, Kim Mears, Tom Webb, Linda Cowie, Tessa Hammond, Audrey Thomson, Daniela Ceccarelli, Navraj Chattha, Eva Beranova, Anna Verrion, Andrew Gillian, Natasha Schumacher, Anna Bahk, Susannah Walker, Vera Cvoro, Nicola Chapman, Susan Pound, Rebecca Cain, Sean Mcauley, Mandy Couser, Maria Simpson, Athan Tachtatzis, Khalil Ullah, Don Sims, Rachael Jones, Jonathan Smith, Rebecca Tongue, Mark Willmot, Claire Sutton, Edward Littleton, Jattinder Khaira, Susan Maiden, James Cunningham, Carole Green, Yin-May Chin, Michelle Bates, Katherine Ahlquist, Ingrid Kane, Joanna Breeds, Tenesa Sargent, Laura Latter, Alexandra Pitt Ford, Nicola Gainsborough, Tom Levett, Philip Thompson, Emma Barbon, Angela Dunne, Simon Hervey, Suzanne Ragab, Tracy Sandell, Christine Dickson, Judith Dube, Sharon Power, Nick Evans, Beverley Wadams, Savina Elitova, Beth Aubrey, Tatiana Garcia, James Mcilmoyle, Carol Jeffs, Christina Dickinson, Anis Ahmed, Sanjeev Kumar, Julie Frudd, Charlotte Armer, Andrew Potter, Stacey Donaldson, Joanne Howard, Kirsty Jones, Saikat Dhar, David Collas, Saul Sundayi, Lynn Denham, Deepali Oza, Elaine Walker, Mohit Bhandari, Sissy Ispoglou, Rachel Evans, Kamel Sharobeem, Elaine Walton, Steven Shanu, Anne Hayes, Jennifer Howard-Brown, Steven Billingham, Nic Weir, Vanessa Pressly, Emma Wood, Gabriella Howard, Holly Burton, Pam Crawford, Shuna Egerton, Sue Evans, Jasmine Hakkak, Janet Andrews, Rebecca Lampard, Christopher Allen, Ashleigh Walters, Rasha Said, James Richard Marigold, Sau-Mon Tsang, Robyn Creeden, Chloe Cox, Simon Smith, Imogen Gartrell, Fiona Smith, Colin Jenkins, Joanna Pryor, Andrew Hedges, Fiona Price, Linda Moseley, Lily Mercer, Claire Hughes, Abul Azim, Julie White, Milena Krasinska-Chavez, Shaun Chaplin, James Curtis, Deepwant Singh, Javed Imam, Anne Nicolson, Sajid Alam, Simon Whitworth, Lisa Wood, Elizabeth Warburton, Siobhan Kelly, Joanne Mcgee, Hugh Markus, Denish Chandrasena, Derek Hayden, Juliana Sesay, Helen Hayhoe, Mark Bolton, Jane Macdonald, Jenny Mitchell, Charlotte Farron, Elaine Amis, Diana Day, Ainsley Culbert, Ailene Espanol, Niamh Hannon, Dominic Handley, Sarah Finlay, Sarah Crisp, Lynne Whitehead, Jobbin Francis, Janice Oconnell, Emily Osborne, Rod Beard, Ramesh Krishnamurthy, Langanani Mokoena, Naweed Sattar, Min Myint, Michelle Edwards, Andrew Smith, Paul Corrigan, Anthony Byrne, Joanne Blackburn, Caroline Mcghee, Amanda Smart, Fiona Donaldson, Claire Copeland, Jill Wilson, Rhona Scott, Paul Fitzsimmons, Paula Lopez, Mark Wilkinson, Aravindakshan Manoj, Penelope Cox, Leona Trainor, Glyn Fletcher, Lisa Denny, Karen Kavanagh, Hannah Allsop, Hedley Emsley, Sulaiman Sultan, Alison Mcloughlin, Benjamin Walmsley, Louise Hough, Shakeel Ahmed, Donna Doyle, Bindu Gregary, Sonia Raj, Kirubananthan Nagaratnam, Neelima Mannava, Nyla Haque, Norma Shields, Kate Preston, Geraldine Mason, Kirsty Short, Gemma Lumsdale, Giulia Uitenbosch, Ugnius Sukys, Stacey Valentine, David Jarrett, Kerry Dodsworth, Mary Wands, Nisa Khan, Jane Tandy, Catrin Watkinson, Wendy Golding, Rebecca Butler, Max Williams, Yasmin Davies, Keith Yip, Claire James, Anne Suttling, Aditya Maney, Giles Edward Gamble, Adam Hague, Bethan Charles, Sujata Blane, Beatriz Duran, Caroline Lambert, Katherine Stagg, Robert Whiting, Jane E Homan, Sarah Brown, Malik Hussain, Miriam Harvey, Libby Graham, Leanne Foote, Catherine Lane, Liz (Joan) Kemp, Joy Rowe, Helen Durman, Jayne Foot, Lucy Brotherton, Nicholas Hunt, Corinne Pawley, Alison Whitcher, Patrick Sutton, Susan Mcdonald, Denys Pak, Alison Wiltshire, Jennifer Jagger, Anthony K Metcalf, Gail Louise Healey, Joyce Balami, Clare Marie Self, Melissa Crofts, Annie Chakrabarti, Chit Hmu, Garth Ravenhill, Charmaine Grimmer, Thandar Soe, Jocelyn Keshet-Price, Margaret Langley, Ian Potter, Pui-Lin Tam, Mary Joan Macleod, Patricia Cooper, Michael Christie, Janice Irvine, Faye Annison, David Christie, Celia Meneses, Amber Johnson, Anu Joyson, Sandra Nelson, Vicky Taylor, John Reid, Rebecca Clarke, Jacqueline Furnace, Heather Gow, Youssif Abousleiman, Tania Beadling, Sally Collins, Stuart Jones, Jessica Purcell, Samantha Bloom, Shelly Goshawk, Marcial Landicho, Sivatharshini Sangaralingham, Yasmin Begum, Sherree Mutton, Elangovan Munuswamy Vaiyapuri, Jane Allen, Jemma Lowe, Martin Hughes, Ivan Wiggam, Sarah Cuddy, Suzanne Tauro, Brian Wells, Azlisham Mohd Nor, Nicola Persad, Maggie Kalita, Stuart Weatherby, Claire Brown, Adrian Pace, Daniel Lashley, Mike Marner, Marie Weinling, Natasha Wilmshurst, Darren Waugh, Anna Mucha, Alex Shah, John Baker, Jacqueline Westcott, Richard Cowan, Evangelos Vasileiadis, Samira Mumani, Anthea Parry, Cathy Mason, Melinda Holden, Katerina Petrides, Tomoko Nishiyama, Hina Mehta, Manju Krishnan, Dacey Lynne, Lisa Thomas, Connor Lynda, Catherine Hughes, Clare Clements, Rhys Williams, Tal Anjum, Storton Sharon, Susan Tucker, Paul Jones, Deanne Colwill, Helen Thompson Jones, Dinesh Chadha, Mark Fairweather, Deborah Walstow, Rosanna Fong, Stuart Johnston, Christine Almadenboyle, Sarah Ross, Shona Carson, Priya Nair, Emily Tenbruck, Mairi Stirling, Aparna Pusalkar, Hannah Beadle, Kelly Chan, Puneet Dangri, Asaipillai Asokanathan, Anita Rana, Sunita Gohil, Mark Massyn, Prabhu Aruldoss, Angela Cook, Karen Crabtree, Sura Dabbagh, Toby Black, Caroline Clarke, Denise Mead, Ruth Fennelly, Alpha Anthony, Linda Nardone, Victoria Dimartino, Michele Tribbeck, David Broughton, Dinesh Tryambake, Lynn Dixon, Agnieszka Skotnicka, Jane Thompson, Sarah Whitehouse, Andrew Sigsworth, Jason Wong, Arunkumar Annamalai, Julie Pagan, Brendan Affley, Caroline Sunderland, Lynda Goldenberg, Atif Khan, Peter Wilkinson, Raad Nari, Lucy Abbott, Emma Young, Amritpal Shakhon, Sally Lock, Jack Stewart, Rita Pereira, Margaret Dsouza, Sally Dunn, Anne-Marie Mckenna, Nina Cron, Michelle Kidd, Grace Hull, Kerry Bunworth, Graham Drummond, Karim Mahawish, Nicola Hayes, Lynne Connell, Jennifer Simpson, Helen Penney, Shuja Punekar, Joanne Nevinson, William Wareing, Jacqueline Ward, Richard Greenwood, Duncan Austin, Azra Banaras, Carolin Hogan, Thomas Corbett, Nnebuife Oji, Emma Elliott, Maria Brezitski, Nathalie Passeron, Laura Howaniec, Caroline Watchurst, Krishna Patel, Renuka Erande, Rahi Shah, Nabarun Sengupta, Maria Metiu, Celia Gonzalez, Sarah Funnell, Jordi Margalef, Gillian Peters, Indra Chadbourn, Ramachandran Sivakumar, Rajesh Saksena, Jane Ketley-O'donel, Richard Needle, Elaine Chinery, Alison Wright, Sue Cook, Joseph Ngeh, Harald Proeschel, Paige Cook, Pauline Ashcroft, Simon Sharpe, Stephanie Jones, Damian Jenkinson, Deborah Kelly, Holly Bray, Gunaratnam Gunathilagan, Sally Jones, Sorrell Tilbey, Saidu Abubakar, Joseph Vassallo, Dee Leonard, Lucy Orrell, Aziz Hasan, Asif Khan, Sulmaaz Qamar, Susan Graham, Emma Hewitt, Jennifer Awolesi, Muhammad Haque, Alissa Kent, Elizabeth Bradshaw, Martin Cooper, Inez Wynter, Anoja Rajapakse, Joumana Janbieh, Abu M Nasar, Lynne Wade, Linda Otter, Steve Haigh, Jamie-Rae Burgoyne, Rebecca Boulton, Andrew Boulton, Rayessa Rayessa, Emma Clarkson, Horne Rhian, Amy Fleming, Kim Mitchelson, Vicki Lowthorpe, Ahmed Abdul-Hamid, Phil Jones, Claire Duggan, Abigail Hynes, Emma Nurse, Syed Abid Raza, Sarah Jones, Udaya Pallikona, Bleddyn Edwards, Geraint Morgan, Kirsty Dennett, Helen Tench, Ronda Loosley, Toby Trugeon-Smith, Rhian Jones, Richard Williams, Donna Robson, Sunanda Mavinamane, Sanjeevi Meenakshisundaram, Lalitha Ranga, Sharon Dealing, Andrew Hill, Margaret Hargreaves, Tom Smith, Julie Bate, Linda Harrison, Ramanathan Kirthivasan, Emma Cannon, Joanne Topliffe, Rebecca Keskeys, Sarah Williams, Fiona Mcneela, Frances Cairns, Thomas James, Amanda Lyle, Sheela Shah, George Zachariah, Lauren Fergey, Susan Smolen, Lucy Cooper, Elizabeth Bohannan, Siddiq Omer, Sageet Amlani, Nadia Hunter, Melissa Hawkes-Blackburn, Giosue Gulli, Alice Peacocke, Justine Amero, Maria Burova, Ottilia Speirs, Steph Levy, Lynda Francis, Susan Holland, Sean Brotheridge, Helen Lyon, Christine Hare, Samantha Jackson, Lorraine Stephenson, Samer Al Hussayni, James Featherstone, Agness Bwalya, Arun Singh, M N Goorah, Jamie Walford, Angela Bell, Christine Kelly, Darren Rusk, Deborah Sutton, Farzana Patel, Stephen Duberley, Kathryn Hayes, Lorraine Hunt, Ahmed El Nour, Sacha Honour, Chloe Box, Simon Dyer, Lynne Brown, Kerry Elliott, Emma Temlett, John Paterson, Rosie Furness, Shelli Young, Enoch Orugun, Chris Brewer, Sarah Thornthwaite, Hannah Crowther, Rachel Glover, Moe Sein, Kashif Haque, Elspeth Gibson, Sam Wong, Karen Rotchell, Karen Burton, Lisa Brookes, Linda Bailey, Chris Lindley, Abbi Murray, Karen Waltho, Maureen Holland, Pradeep Kumar, Purnima Harlekar, Laura Booth, Charlotte Culmsee, Jade Drew, Mohammad Khan, Nicola Mackenzie, Carmel Thomas, Jane Ritchie, James Barker, Michael Haley, Donna Cotterill, Lynne Lane, Christine Little, Dawn Simmons, Glenn Saunders, Harvey Dymond, Sarah Kidd, Rachel Warinton, Yara Neves-Silva, Branimir Nevajda, Michael Villaruel, Udayaraj Umasankar, Seema Patel, Anna Man, Natasha Christmas, Ravi Rangasamy, Richard Ladner, Georgina Butt, Wilson Alvares, Narasimha Gadi, Michael Power, Belinda Wroath, Kevin Dynan, David Wilson, Sarah Crothers, Catherine Leonard, Samantha Hagan, Geraldine Douris, Djamil Vahidassr, Alastair Thompson, Brian Gallen, Shirley Mckenna, Collette Edwards, Clare Mcgoldrick, Murdi Bhattad, Khalil Kawafi, Deborah Morse, Patricia Jacob, Lisa Turner, Narayanamoorti Saravanan, Linda Johnson, Sadie Humphrey, Robert Namushi, Ramesh Patel, Jemma Mclaughlin, Paul Omahony, Esther Osikominu, Chukwuka Orefo, Chisha Mcdonald, Esther Makanju, Tabindah Khan, Grace Appiatse, Helena Stone, Martia Augustin, Alicia Wardale, Maqsud Salehin, Duncan Bailey, Luciano Garcia-Alen, Latheef Kalathil, Sarah Tinsley, Taya Jones, Kelly Amor, Andrew Ritchings, Emma Margerum, Jane Horton, Richard Miller, Nireekshana Gautam, Julie Meir, Amaryl Jones, Janet Putteril, Mirella Lepore, Rachel Gallifent, Laura-Louise Arundell, Catherine Mcredmond, Alicia Goulding, Vivek Nadarajan, Julia Laurence, Su Fung Lo, Sabina Melander, Paul Nicholas, Elizabeth Woodford, Gillian Mckenzie, Vietland Le, Jacolene Crause, Robert Luder, Maneesh Bhargava, Girish Bhome, Venetia V Johnson, Dara Chesser, Hayley Bridger, Elodie Murali, Jon Scott, Susan Morrison, Amy Burns, Julie Graham, Madeline Duffy, Khalid Ali, Emma Pitcher, Jane Gaylard, Julie Newman, Sunil Punnoose, Sarah Besley, Kirtan Purohit, Amy Rees, Mark Davy, Osman Chohan, Muhammad Fozan Khan, Rachel Walker, Vicky Murray, Charlotte Bent, Susan Oakley, Cassilda Peixoto, Suzanne Jones, Gaybrielle Livingstone, Fiona Butler, Sally Bradfield, Laura Gordon, Jenneke Schmit, Anika Wijewardane, Tineke Edmunds, Rebecca Wills, Catherine Medcalf, Lucia Argandona, Larissa Cuenoud, Hanna Hassan, Esther Erumere, Aidan Ocallaghan, Patrick Gompertz, Ozlem Redjep, Grace Auld, Anna Song, Tillana Tarkas, Hashim Kabash, Rumbi Hungwe, University of St Andrews. Sir James Mackenzie Institute for Early Diagnosis, University of St Andrews. Population and Behavioural Science Division, and University of St Andrews. School of Medicine
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RM ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Neurologi ,NDAS ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Placebo ,Minimisation (clinical trials) ,Article ,B700 ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,Modified Rankin Scale ,law ,Fluoxetine ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,R2C ,Acute stroke ,business.industry ,~DC~ ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Stroke ,RC Internal medicine ,BDC ,business ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,RC ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Results of small trials indicate that fluoxetine might improve functional outcomes after stroke. The FOCUS trial aimed to provide a precise estimate of these effects.Methods: FOCUS was a pragmatic, multicentre, parallel group, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial done at 103 hospitals in the UK. Patients were eligible if they were aged 18 years or older, had a clinical stroke diagnosis, were enrolled and randomly assigned between 2 days and 15 days after onset, and had focal neurological deficits. Patients were randomly allocated fluoxetine 20 mg or matching placebo orally once daily for 6 months via a web-based system by use of a minimisation algorithm. The primary outcome was functional status, measured with the modified Rankin Scale (mRS), at 6 months. Patients, carers, health-care staff, and the trial team were masked to treatment allocation. Functional status was assessed at 6 months and 12 months after randomisation. Patients were analysed according to their treatment allocation. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN83290762.Findings: Between Sept 10, 2012, and March 31, 2017, 3127 patients were recruited. 1564 patients were allocated fluoxetine and 1563 allocated placebo. mRS data at 6 months were available for 1553 (99·3%) patients in each treatment group. The distribution across mRS categories at 6 months was similar in the fluoxetine and placebo groups (common odds ratio adjusted for minimisation variables 0·951 [95% CI 0·839–1·079]; p=0·439). Patients allocated fluoxetine were less likely than those allocated placebo to develop new depression by 6 months (210 [13·43%] patients vs 269 [17·21%]; difference 3·78% [95% CI 1·26–6·30]; p=0·0033), but they had more bone fractures (45 [2·88%] vs 23 [1·47%]; difference 1·41% [95% CI 0·38–2·43]; p=0·0070). There were no significant differences in any other event at 6 or 12 months.Interpretation: Fluoxetine 20 mg given daily for 6 months after acute stroke does not seem to improve functional outcomes. Although the treatment reduced the occurrence of depression, it increased the frequency of bone fractures. These results do not support the routine use of fluoxetine either for the prevention of post-stroke depression or to promote recovery of function.Funding: UK Stroke Association and NIHR Health Technology Assessment Programme.
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- 2019
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26. JBBA: Creating a Global Impact
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Naseem Naqvi
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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27. Blockchain Research: Engaging at Scale with the Communities that Matter
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Naseem Naqvi
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Blockchain ,Scale (ratio) ,Computer science ,Data science - Published
- 2019
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28. Challenges of Stroke Care in Rural & District General Hospitals; A United Kingdom National Health Service Perspective
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Naseem Naqvi and Eman Abdus Sami
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Teamwork ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Perspective (graphical) ,Rural district ,General Medicine ,Stroke care ,National health service ,03 medical and health sciences ,Kingdom ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Service (economics) ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Rural area ,0305 other medical science ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Stroke Medicine being an independent and recognised sub-specialty in the United Kingdom, is faced with unique challenges across District and Rural Hospitals. Delivering a comprehensive stroke service in the rural areas requires collaborative team work, effective communication, pre planning and efficient leadership. In this article we have summarized these challenges and shared some proposals for future development of a holistic and integrated Stroke Service in district hospitals across United Kingdom.
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- 2017
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29. Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for refractory Clostridium difficile toxin colitis in chronic kidney disease: case reports and literature review
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K. A. Abraham, C. W. Gradden, Christopher F. Wong, Naseem Naqvi, Hameed Anijeet, A. Waddington, T. Chandrasekar, and R. P. D. Cooke
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Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Clostridium difficile toxin A ,Case Report ,Clostridium difficile ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Clostridium Difficile Colitis ,refractory ,Metronidazole ,Intravenous Immunoglobulin Therapy ,Nephrology ,intravenous immunoglobulin ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,medicine ,Vancomycin ,Colitis ,Clostridium difficile colitis ,business ,chronic kidney disease ,medicine.drug ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Clostridium difficile toxin (CDT) colitis is the most common cause of infectious diarrhoea in hospitalized patients and is a frequent cause of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized patients. Failure to mount an immune response to CDT appears to be an important mechanism for recurrent diarrhoea [1, 2]. One of the factors associated with an increased risk for recurrence of CDT colitis is advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) [1]. There is anecdotal evidence of benefit from treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) in adults with refractory CDT colitis [3–7] following failure of standard treatment with metronidazole and vancomycin [8]. However, none of the cases reported have CKD. We report two cases of CKD patients with refractory CDT colitis, treated successfully with IVIG.
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- 2007
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30. Retraction: A novel observation of pubic osteomyelitis due to Streptococcus viridans after dental extraction: a case report
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Naseem Naqvi, Rizwana Naqvi, Sushmita Pearce, and Christopher Wong
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Medicine(all) ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pelvic girdle ,Groin ,Gait Disturbance ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Osteomyelitis ,lcsh:R ,Streptococcus viridans ,lcsh:Medicine ,Case Report ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Surgery ,Retraction ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Dental extraction ,Infective endocarditis ,Diffuse pain ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Introduction Pubic osteomyelitis should be suspected in athletic individuals with sudden groin pain, painful restriction of hip movements and fever. It is an infrequent and confusing disorder, which is often heralded by atypical gait disturbance and diffuse pain in the pelvic girdle. The most common pathogen is Staphylococcus aureus but, on occasions, efforts to identify infectious agents sometimes prove negative. Pubic osteomyelitis due to Streptococcus viridans has not been reported previously in the literature. Case presentation We describe the case of a fit 24-year-old athlete, who had a wisdom tooth extracted 2 weeks prior to the presentation, which could have served as a port of entry and predisposed the patient to transient bacteraemia. Conclusion S. viridans is well known for causing infective endocarditis of native damaged heart valves, but to the best of the authors' knowledge it has not been reported previously as a cause of pubic osteomyelitis. We believe that this case should alert physicians to the association between dental procedures and osteomyelitis of the pubis secondary to S. viridans.
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- 2009
31. Clinical audit
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Naseem Naqvi
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General Medicine - Published
- 2005
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32. ULTRAVIOLET SPECTRA AND ACID DISSOCIATION CONSTANTS OF SOME PYRAZYLMETHYL KETONES
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E.L. Amma, Quintus Fernando, Robert A. Levine, and Naseem Naqvi
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Chemistry ,General Engineering ,medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Photochemistry ,medicine.disease_cause ,Acid dissociation constant ,Spectral line ,Ultraviolet - Published
- 1961
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33. The Basic Strength of Pyrrole
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Naseem Naqvi and Quintus Fernando
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Polymer chemistry ,Pyrrole - Published
- 1960
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34. Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain International Scientific Conference ISC2020
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Naseem Naqvi
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lcsh:Technology (General) ,lcsh:T1-995 - Abstract
Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain international Scientific Conference ISC2020.
35. Full Text PDF of The JBBA, Volume 2 Issue 2, October 2019
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
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T1-995 ,Technology (General) - Abstract
Full Text PDF JBBA, Volume 2 Issue 2, October 2019
36. Interview with Chrissa McFarlane
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Naseem Naqvi
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Cryptocurrencies ,business.industry ,Universal design ,Medical record ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Internet privacy ,Interoperability ,Healthcare ,Data security ,Patientory ,Decentralization ,Dilemma ,Blockchain ,JBBA ,Health care ,lcsh:Technology (General) ,T1-995 ,lcsh:T1-995 ,Bureaucracy ,business ,Technology (General) ,media_common - Abstract
Despite incredible advancements over the last decade in converting paper healthcare records into digital, a vast majority of consumers lack timely access to their electronic medical records. Many people cannot manage and utilise their healthcare records any better than they could a decade ago or even three decades ago. While it can be easy for some to point the finger at the bureaucracy and red tape of healthcare institutions, the truth is that many of these institutions would like to share data with their patients but don’t have a secure and easy way to do this. This has been a challenging dilemma because many medical providers use different electronic health record (EHR) systems that do not talk to each other.. This becomes a significant problem as patients are often caught in the middle of the healthcare industry’s interoperability and without solutions that can provide secure, universal access to their healthcare data. In this interview, Chrissa McFarlane talks about how a Blockchain based healthcare solutions can empower patients, clinicians and healthcare organizations to readily harness meaningful data to make more effective and efficient treatment, and financial decisions, enabling real improvement opportunities as well as the safe access, store and transfer of information, thus improving care coordination while ensuring data security.
37. Building the Future of EU: Moving forward with International Collaboration on Blockchain
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Naseem Naqvi and Bill Buchanan
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Blockchain ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public sector ,DLT ,Law enforcement ,Economy ,Public administration ,Digital ,Geopolitics ,Europe ,Britain ,Promotion (rank) ,Transformative learning ,T1-995 ,Brexit ,UK ,Ideology ,Digital economy ,EU ,business ,Technology (General) ,media_common - Abstract
A blockchain enabled ‘Digital Single Economy” can act as a catalyst for growth and could provide a platform where borderless innovative practices will thrive and create a true collaborative global economy, with shared goals and objectives for the benefit of wider community. A society where digital economy flourishes irrespective of geopolitical ideologies and where a technology like Blockchain holds transformative potential to unite the nations together. The UK currently has strong collaborations around blockchain including with the British Blockchain Association which aims to integrate with the EU on the adoption of Blockchain based methods around a range of application areas. However, at the core of these alliances must be the promotion of technology which link industry, the public sector, and academia, whilst also integrating key stakeholders, such as law enforcement, finance, health care, professional bodies and the legal industry.
38. Evidence-Based Blockchain: Findings from a Global Study of Blockchain Projects and Start-up Companies
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Naseem Naqvi and Mureed Hussain
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Intervention (law) ,Evidence-based practice ,Blockchain ,business.industry ,Control (management) ,Agency (sociology) ,Ledger ,T1-995 ,Observational study ,Accounting ,Business ,International development ,Technology (General) - Abstract
Evidence-based applications of resources remain one of the greatest challenges faced by governments, businesses, and policymakers. The United States Government Accountability Office (GAO) evaluated ten large programs, which together cost more than $10 billion/year, through randomised control trials – the highest standard of evidence-based practice (EBP). The evaluation found that nine of them had ‘weak or no positive effects’ on their participants. Many programs were not evaluated at all. In January 2019, U.S. President signed the ‘Foundations for Evidence-based Policy Making Act’ into law. A USAID (US Agency for International Development) study looked at 43 blockchain projects and companies claiming to have solved various problems using distributed ledgers. The study found that almost no company was willing to share their results and MERL (monitoring, evaluation, research and learning) processes. Other observational data revealed that 80–90% of blockchain-based token offering projects failed to deliver on their promises, a prediction also made by Vitalik Buterin, the founder of Ethereum blockchain, in 2017. The concept of evidence-based blockchain (EBB) was first introduced by Naqvi in 2018. We conducted an evaluation of 517 blockchain firms against PCIO framework of evidence-based practice: Problem – Comparison – Intervention and Outcomes. We define the fundamentals of EBB (Ask, Acquire, Appraise, Apply, Assess), provide a review of the literature on EBB, report findings of our study and propose an Assessment Framework of Evidence Based Blockchain.
39. Full Text PDF of The JBBA, Volume 3 Issue 1, May 2020
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
lcsh:Technology (General) ,lcsh:T1-995 - Abstract
Full Text PDF of The JBBA, Volume 3 Issue 1, May 2020
40. Conference Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain International Scientific Conference ISC2020
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
lcsh:Technology (General) ,lcsh:T1-995 - Abstract
Conference Proceedings of 2nd Blockchain International Scientific Conference ISC2020, held in Edinburgh on 11 March 2020.
41. Full Text PDF of JBBA Vol 1, Issue 2: December 2018
- Author
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Naseem Naqvi
- Subjects
lcsh:Technology (General) ,lcsh:T1-995 - Abstract
Complete PDF of all contents of The JBBA, Volume 1, Issue 2, December 2018
42. EDITORIAL, 11th Issue of The JBBA, May 2023
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Professor Dr Naseem Naqvi
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Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
EDITORIAL, 11th Issue of The JBBA, May 2023
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- 2023
43. Metaverse for Public Good: Embracing the Societal Impact of Metaverse Economies
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Professor Dr Naseem Naqvi
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Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
The metaverse is internet’s next tectonic shift. Currently, there are approximately 400 million monthly users of the collection of worlds that make up the metaverse, with projected growth to 5 billion users worldwide by the end of the decade This is expected to drive a total addressable metaverse market of $8–13 trillion by 2030. According to Statista, 15% of the world’s digital economy has already shifted to the metaverse and many “world’s first” metaverse initiatives have been launched over the past two years. The potential applications of a metaverse for public services are vast, including remote governance, service delivery, virtual public spaces, enhanced transparency and accountability, increased social connectedness, improved access to information and education, new job opportunities, innovative forms of entertainment and creativity, and improved accessibility, to name a few. This article explores the practical applications of the metaverse for citizens and some multidisciplinary use cases from around the world. We also examine the national metaverse strategies and opportunities as well as challenges of the metaverse ecosystems, including its potential impact on society and public services. Finally, we propose some recommendations for policymakers and governments to construct forward-thinking metaverse economies.
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- 2023
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44. Editorial , 10th Issue of The JBBA Nov 2022 (Vol 5, Issue 2)
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Professor Dr Naseem Naqvi FBBA
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Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
Editorial , 10th Issue of The JBBA, Nov 2022 (Vol 5, Issue 2)
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- 2022
45. Open Access Blockchain and Cryptoasset Research: Why it Matters Now More Than Ever Before
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Professor Dr Naseem Naqvi FBBA
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Technology (General) ,T1-995 - Abstract
In this interview to The JBBA, Professor Naseem Naqvi sheds light on the significance of open access and open science for the advancement and adoption of Blockchain and cryptoassets.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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