articles+ search results
48 articles+ results
1 - 48
-
Scull, Christopher, Ager, Barry, Bourn, Robert, Cameron, Esther, Clogg, P. W., Creighton, John, Edwards, Glynis, Gelling, Margaret, Gilmour, Brian, Harman, Mary, Henry, Pippa, Holgate, Robin, Huntley, Jacqueline P., Johnson, Paul, Linford, Neil, Marlow, C. A., Mortimer, Catherine, Mudd, Andrew, Odenstedt, Bengt, and Page, R. I.
- Archaeological Journal; 1992, Vol. 149, p124-281, 158p, 13 Black and White Photographs, 66 Diagrams, 12 Charts, 2 Graphs, 2 Maps
- Abstract
-
Geophysical survey and excavation have demonstrated that iron age settlement features and early Anglo-Saxon burials discovered during road construction in 1983 were part o[ an extensive multi-period site, now a Scheduled Ancient Monument. This paper presents the results of the archaeological investigations. The bulk of the report is concerned with the early Anglo-Saxon burials, which included a grave containing a balance, weights and runic inscription. The evidence for late mesolithic, neolithic -- early bronze age, iron age and post-medieval activity is also discussed, and the site is considered in its regional and wider context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Williams, Peter, Narciso, Lea, Browne, Gina, Roberts, Jacqueline, Weir, Robin, and Gafni, Amiram
- JANAC: Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care; Jul/Aug2005, Vol. 16 Issue 4, p50-63, 14p, 6 Charts
- Abstract
-
Community-based AIDS service organizations (CBAOs) direct services to multiple-needs people living with HIV/AIDS who are less likely to use mainstream health promotion services. As people live longer with HIV, the potential to enhance quality of life increases, yet little is known about who uses CBAOs or how this use affects other health and social services. This study of people living with AIDS in Ontario, Canada (n = 297) examined the demographic and health-related characteristics of people with AIDS who do and do not use CBAOs and their patterns of mainstream service utilization. It found that users of CBAOs were significantly less healthy, less able to sustain normal activities, and more often depressed. They reported physical disabilities significantly more often. Their quality of life was also lower along certain dimensions. They were significantly poorer and more reliant on government income supports. They consumed significantly more nonhospital health and social services and had significantly higher out-of-pocket costs. These results suggest CBAOs are being accessed appropriately by those most vulnerable. In an effort to strengthen CBAO capacity to recognize and address depression and physical health problems prevalent among their clients, links to other mainstream health promotion and social services is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
-
Blackman-Weinberg, Carol, Crook, Joan, Roberts, Jacqueline, and Weir, Robin
- Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation; Sep2005, Vol. 86 Issue 9, p1782-1787, 6p
- Abstract
-
Abstract: Blackman-Weinberg C, Crook J, Roberts J, Weir R. Longitudinal study of inpatients admitted to a general activation service: variables that predict discharge to a patient’s discharge goal location. Objective: To determine which sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of patients admitted to a general activation service (GAS) are predictive of discharge to patients’ discharge goal locations (DGLs). Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Rehabilitation and complex continuing care hospital in southern Ontario, Canada. Participants: Patients admitted from January 2000 to December 2002 (N=154). Intervention: The GAS. Main Outcome Measure: Patients indicated on their service applications where they wanted to be discharged. This is termed the DGL. Results: Fifty-three percent of the sample were discharged to their DGLs. Ninety-eight percent of these patients were discharged by 9 months. Eighty-seven percent who were discharged to their DGLs were discharged to their own home. Predictors of being discharged to the DGL were better activities of daily living scores, good vision, and having sufficient help at home. Expert clinician opinion of the likelihood of each patient being discharged to his/her DGL, based on initial assessment, was also predictive of each patient’s eventual discharge to his/her DGL. Conclusions: The GAS has a 53% success rate in discharging patients to their DGLs. Variables have been identified that should be useful in predicting whether patients will be discharged to their DGLs. Our findings are meaningful and informative in determining future admission criteria for the service. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Pappous, Athanasios, Cruz, Francisco, De Leseleuc, Eric, Marcellini, Anne, Recours, Robin, and Schmidt, Jacqueline
- Studies in Physical Culture & Tourism; 2006, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p69-77, 9p
- Subjects
-
PHYSICAL fitness, OLDER people, EXERCISE, and ATTITUDE (Psychology)
- Abstract
-
In Spain today, few studies have been carried out to provide sufficient information regarding the attitudes of older persons toward physical activity and exercise. The present study was designed to remedy this deficiency by adapting and validating the Older Person's Attitudes Toward Physical Activity and Exercise Questionnaire. Firstly, a panel of experts offered first hand evidence in support of the content validity of the Spanish adaptation of the questionnaire. Evidence regarding the viability of the instrument was obtained through a test-retest pilot study and with the use of internal consistency method. In line with theoretical expectations, respondents who reported more positive attitudes toward physical activity showed better adherence rates. Finally, recommendations for future replications are discussed, considering the fact that the data on predictive validity of the instrument was obtained only at correlational level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Deterding, Robin R., Wong, Shale, Faries, Glenn, Glover, Jacqueline J., Garrington, Timothy P., Wang, Michael, Anderson, Marsha S., and Krugman, Richard D.
- Journal of Pediatrics; Nov2007, Vol. 151 Issue 5, pS32-S36, 0p
- Abstract
-
The University of Colorado School of Medicine has developed an innovative 4-year undergraduate curriculum. As a strong advocate for education and curriculum reform, Dr M. Douglas Jones Jr. created an environment for pediatrics to flourish in this new curriculum. Pediatric content has increased in all years of the curriculum, and pediatric faculty have had greater opportunities to teach and seek career development in medical education. In this report, we review the process that led to curriculum reform, provide an overview of the new curriculum design, and highlight examples of the positive impact this process has had on education in pediatrics. We hope that sharing our experience, may benefit others in medical education. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Diop, Michel Bakar, Dubois-Dauphin, Robin, Tine, Emmanuel, Ngom, Abib, Destain, Jacqueline, and Thonart, Philippe
- Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Societe et Environnement; 2007, Vol. 11 Issue 4, p275-281, 7p, 1 Black and White Photograph, 6 Charts, 1 Graph
- Subjects
-
BACTERIOCINS, FERMENTED foods, LACTOCOCCUS lactis, ENTEROCOCCUS, and NUCLEOTIDE sequence
- Abstract
-
Copyright of Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Societe et Environnement is the property of Les Presses Agronomiques de Gembloux and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
-
Baker, Brenda, McGrath, Jacqueline, Lawson, Robin, Liverman, Theresa, and Cohen, Stephen
- Newborn & Infant Nursing Reviews; Sep2009, Vol. 9 Issue 3, p139-142, 4p
- Subjects
-
PREMATURE infants -- Hospital care, NURSING practice, HEALTH care teams, NEWBORN infant care, HEALTH outcome assessment, and BODY temperature regulation
- Abstract
-
Abstract: Late-preterm infants have unique nursing care needs that require attention for the infant to transition easily to the newborn phase of life. With limited physiological reserves to respond to stress, the focus of nursing care is early recognition of stress and conservation of reserves. Evaluating current nursing practices compared with evidence-based practices can reveal what may seem to be minor practices that can have significant negative effects on care of the late-preterm infant. Involving all members of the health care team to increase awareness of the issues surrounding this unique population can lead to staff development and united efforts that improve outcomes for the late-preterm infant. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Full text View on content provider's site
8. ASPAN's Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guideline for the Promotion of Perioperative Normothermia. [2009]
-
Hooper, Vallire D., Chard, Robin, Clifford, Theresa, Fetzer, Susan, Fossum, Susan, Godden, Barbara, Martinez, Elizabeth A., Noble, Kim A., O'Brien, Denise, Odom-Forren, Jan, Peterson, Corey, and Ross, Jacqueline
- Journal of PeriAnesthesia Nursing; Oct2009, Vol. 24 Issue 5, p271-287, 17p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Hooper, Vallire D., Chard, Robin, Clifford, Theresa, Fetzer, Susan, Fossum, Susan, Godden, Barbara, Martinez, Elizabeth A., Noble, Kim A., O’Brien, Denise, Odom-Forren, Jan, Peterson, Corey, Ross, Jacqueline, and Wilson, Linda
- Journal of PeriAnesthesia Nursing; Dec2010, Vol. 25 Issue 6, p346-365, 20p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Coulibaly, Ibourahema, Dubois-Dauphin, Robin, Danthine, Sabine, Majad, Lamia, Mejoub, Thami, Destain, Jacqueline, Béra, François, Wathelet, Jean-Paul, and Thonart, Philippe
- Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Societe et Environnement; 2011, Vol. 15 Issue 2, p287-299, 1p
- Subjects
-
LACTIC acid bacteria, CELL preservation, PROBIOTICS, FREEZE-drying, FREE radicals, FATTY acids, FLUIDIZATION, and ANTIOXIDANTS
- Abstract
-
Copyright of Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Societe et Environnement is the property of Les Presses Agronomiques de Gembloux and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Yabroff, K. Robin, Zapka, Jane, Klabunde, Carrie N., Yuan, Gigi, Buckman, Dennis W., Haggstrom, David, Clauser, Steven B., Miller, Jacqueline, and Taplin, Stephen H.
- Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention; Dec2011, Vol. 20 Issue 12, p2471-2479, 10p
- Abstract
-
The article discusses a research study on system strategies for supporting cancer screening in primary care practice in the U.S. Researchers assessed the systems strategies used for screening of 2,475 primary care physicians for colorectal cancer (CRC), cervical and breast cancer in 2007. Results showed that a comprehensive set of strategies were being used by only 10% of physicians and reports of cancer screening rates were mainly for Papanicolaou (Pap) smear testing and mammography.
12. Les entérocoques: avantages et inconvénients en biotechnologie (synthèse bibliographique). [2012]
-
Aguilar-Galvez, Ana, Dubois-Dauphin, Robin, Destain, Jacqueline, Campos, David, and Thonart, Philippe
- Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Societe et Environnement; 2012, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p67-67, 1p
- Subjects
-
ENTEROCOCCUS, BIOTECHNOLOGY, META-analysis, LACTIC acid bacteria, FOOD industry, SHELF-life dating of food, DRUG resistance in bacteria, and MICROBIAL virulence
- Abstract
-
Copyright of Biotechnologie, Agronomie, Societe et Environnement is the property of Les Presses Agronomiques de Gembloux and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Full text View on content provider's site
13. Abstract 52. [2013]
-
Jose, Pedro, Wang, Zheng, Sanada, Hironobu, Yoneda, Minoru, Zheng, Chnuyu, Williams, Scott, Bartlett, Jacqueline, White, Marquitta, Gordon, Lindsay, Liu, Monica, Konkalmatt, Prasad, Wang, Xiaoyan, Asico, Laureano, Villar, Van Anthony, Jones, John, Armando, Ines, Felder, Robin, and Eisner, Gilbert
- Hypertension (0194911X); 2013 Supplement, Vol. 62, p1-1, 1p
- Abstract
-
Human gene variants account for only a small proportion of essential hypertension in humans and have not been shown to produce hypertension in transgenic mice. The association between hypertension and 11 allelic variants of 8 candidate genes in humans (n=1074) was studied. We also evaluated the response to angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) in humans (n=681) and transgenic mice generated to express the human wild-type G protein-coupled receptor kinase 4γ (hGRK4γWT) or the 142V allele (hGRK4γ142V). hGRK4γ variants (R65L, A142V, and A486V) were associated with essential hypertension; hGRK4γ142V, by itself, predicted the hypertensive phenotype (60% accuracy); hGRK4γ142V also interacted with GNB3 and PAI-1. Human hypertensive carriers of hGRK4γ142V (n=68) had a greater decrease in systolic blood pressure (SBP mm Hg, 19.36, vs. 14.58, P=0.001) in response to ARBs than non-carrier (n=135) hypertensives. hGRK4γWT transgenic mice (anesthetized, n=42; conscious [n=12, day=118±0.8, night=131±1]) were normotensive while hGRK4γ142V mice (anesthetized, n=54;conscious [n=12, day=128±2, night=148±3]) had hypertension, increased renal AT1R expression due to decreased histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) activity, a greater pressor response to angiotensin II (1000 ng/kg/minX30’)(n=6-9/group, WT=Δ+14±4%, 142V=Δ+26±3%), and a greater fall in SBP with candesartan (2mg/kg/dayX4d) (n=7/group, WT=Δ-5±2%,142V=Δ-29±3%); deletion of Agtr1a normalized the high BP of hGRK4γ142V mice (n=5-13/group). To determine the role of renal HDAC1 on BP, HDAC1 was silenced with HDAC-siRNA. Renal-specific HDAC1, but not HDAC2, silencing increased SBP (HDAC1-siRNA=112±5; mock=91±2; P<0.004, n=5/group). The BP response to ARBs was greater in HDAC1-siRNA- than mock-treated mice. These studies show that hGRK4γ142V is associated with human essential hypertension, produces AT1R-sensitive hypertension in hGRK4γ142V transgenic mice, and predicts a greater decrease in BP in response to ARBs in humans with essential hypertension and hGRK4γ142V transgenic mice. This is the first demonstration of a concordance between rodents and humans for genetics, signaling pathway, and pharmacogenetics of essential hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Naidoo, Deshini, Van Wyk, Jacqueline, and Joubert, Robin
- South African Journal of Occupational Therapy; Dec2014, Vol. 44 Issue 3, p24-28, 5p
- Abstract
-
This study explores the perceptions of final year occupational therapy students at the University of KwaZulu Natal and their supervisors, regarding their preparedness to practice as well as their views about the efficacy of the undergraduate curriculum in accomplishing adequate levels of preparedness. Method: A qualitative design using focus groups and semi-structured interviews with students and clinical supervisors to obtain their views and backed up by an analysis of relevant documents of the Health Professions Council of SA and the World Federation of Occupational Therapists, the outcome of which formed the conceptual framework guiding analysis of the data from the interviews and focus groups. Results/findings: Both students and their supervisors felt they possessed adequate graduate competencies to prepare them for practice. Some concerns related to curriculum content, teaching methods, and relationships with lecturers and clinical supervisors emerged. Students’ level of professional confidence was directly influenced by their degree of enjoyment of the fieldwork practical and positive experiences related to this. Supervisors also reported that students display high levels of ethical awareness. Conclusions: the findings provide insights into understanding the relevance of current occupational therapy training specifically at UKZN but also of relevance to the rest of South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Pettersen, Jacqueline A., Fok, Alice C., and Robin Hsiung, Ging-Yuek
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Jul2015 Supplement, Vol. 11 Issue 7, pP358-P358, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Robin Hsiung, Ging-Yuek, Fok, Alice, and Pettersen, Jacqueline A.
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Jul2015 Supplement, Vol. 11 Issue 7, pP490-P490, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Chugani, Diane C., Chugani, Harry T., Wiznitzer, Max, Parikh, Sumit, Evans, Patricia A., Hansen, Robin L., Nass, Ruth, Janisse, James J., Dixon-Thomas, Pamela, Behen, Michael, Rothermel, Robert, Parker, Jacqueline S., Kumar, Ajay, Muzik, Otto, Edwards, David J., Hirtz, Deborah, and Autism Center of Excellence Network
- Journal of Pediatrics; Mar2016, Vol. 170, p45-53.e4, 1p
- Abstract
-
Objectives: To determine safety and efficacy of the 5HT1A serotonin partial agonist buspirone on core autism and associated features in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).Study Design: Children 2-6 years of age with ASD (N = 166) were randomized to receive placebo or 2.5 or 5.0 mg of buspirone twice daily. The primary objective was to evaluate the effects of 24 weeks of buspirone on the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) Composite Total Score. Secondary objectives included evaluating the effects of buspirone on social competence, repetitive behaviors, language, sensory dysfunction, and anxiety and to assess side effects. Positron emission tomography measures of tryptophan metabolism and blood serotonin concentrations were assessed as predictors of buspirone efficacy.Results: There was no difference in the ADOS Composite Total Score between baseline and 24 weeks among the 3 treatment groups (P = .400); however, the ADOS Restricted and Repetitive Behavior score showed a time-by-treatment effect (P = .006); the 2.5-mg buspirone group showed significant improvement (P = .003), whereas placebo and 5.0-mg buspirone groups showed no change. Children in the 2.5-mg buspirone group were more likely to improve if they had fewer foci of increased brain tryptophan metabolism on positron emission tomography (P = .018) or if they showed normal levels of blood serotonin (P = .044). Adverse events did not differ significantly among treatment groups.Conclusions: Treatment with 2.5 mg of buspirone in young children with ASD might be a useful adjunct therapy to target restrictive and repetitive behaviors in conjunction with behavioral interventions.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00873509. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Xingkuan Chen, Jacqueline Zi Mei Fong, Jianfeng Xu, Chengli Mou, Yunpeng Lu, Song Yang, Bao-An Song, and Yonggui Robin Chi
- Journal of the American Chemical Society; 6/15/2016, Vol. 138 Issue 23, p7212-7215, 4p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Naidoo, Deshini, Van Wyk, Jacqueline, and Joubert, Robin
- African Journal of Disability; 2017, Vol. 6 Issue 1, p1-12, 12p
- Subjects
-
OCCUPATIONAL therapy, PRIMARY care, MEDICAL rehabilitation, PHYSICAL therapy, and MEDICAL care
- Abstract
-
Background: Primary healthcare (PHC) is central to increased access and transformation in South African healthcare. There is limited literature about services required by occupational therapists in PHC. Despite policy being in place, the implementation of services at grassroots level does not always occur adequately. Objectives: This study aimed at gaining an understanding of the challenges of being disabled and the services required by occupational therapists (OTs) in rural communities in order to better inform the occupational therapy (OT) training curriculum. Method: An exploratory, descriptive qualitative design was implemented using purposive sampling to recruit 23 community healthcare workers from the uGu district. Snowball sampling was used to recruit 37 members of the uGu community, which included people with disability (PWD) and caregivers of PWDs. Audio-recorded focus groups and semi-structured interviews were used to collect data, which were thematically analysed. Ethical approval was obtained from the Biomedical and Research Ethics Committee of the University of KwaZulu-Natal (BE248/14). Results: Two main themes emerged namely: firstly, the challenges faced by the disabled community and secondly appropriate opportunities for intervention in PHC. A snapshot of the social and physical inaccessibility challenges experienced by the community was created. Challenges included physical and sexual abuse, discrimination and marginalisation. Community-based rehabilitation and ideas for health promotion and prevention were identified as possible strategies for OT intervention. Conclusion: The understanding of the intervention required by OT in PHC was enhanced through obtaining the views of various stakeholders' on the role. This study highlighted the gaps in community-based services that OTs should offer in this context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text
View/download PDF
-
Stanton, Tom, Harding, Robin, Gattone, Phil, Friedman, Daniel, Geiger, Angela, Devinsky, Orrin, Rosbeck, Kari Luther, Vogel-Farley, Vanessa, Meskis, Mary Anne, Singer, Alison, Miller, Amy Brin, Miller, Ilene, Gloss, David, French, Jacqueline A., Hesdorffer, Dale C., Smithson, W. Henry, and Harden, Cynthia
- Neurology; 11/21/2017, Vol. 89 Issue 21, p2213-2214, 2p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Mitchell, Ruth J., Hewison, Richard L., Fielding, Debbie A., Fisher, Julia M., Gilbert, Diana J., Hurskainen, Sonja, Pakeman, Robin J., Potts, Jacqueline M., and Riach, David
- Environmental Pollution; Apr2018, Vol. 235, p956-964, 9p
- Subjects
-
ATMOSPHERIC sulfur compounds, SULFUR deposits, CLIMATE change, GRASSLANDS, and PLANT communities
- Abstract
-
The predicted long lag time between a decrease in atmospheric deposition and a measured response in vegetation has generally excluded the investigation of vegetation recovery from the impacts of atmospheric deposition. However, policy-makers require such evidence to assess whether policy decisions to reduce emissions will have a positive impact on habitats. Here we have shown that 40 years after the peak of SO x emissions, decreases in SO x are related to significant changes in species richness and cover in Scottish Calcareous, Mestrophic, Nardus and Wet grasslands. Using a survey of vegetation plots across Scotland, first carried out between 1958 and 1987 and resurveyed between 2012 and 2014, we test whether temporal changes in species richness and cover of bryophytes, Cyperaceae, forbs, Poaceae, and Juncaceae can be explained by changes in sulphur and nitrogen deposition, climate and/or grazing intensity, and whether these patterns differ between six grassland habitats: Acid, Calcareous, Lolium , Nardus , Mesotrophic and Wet grasslands. The results indicate that Calcareous, Mesotrophic, Nardus and Wet grasslands in Scotland are starting to recover from the UK peak of SO x deposition in the 1970's. A decline in the cover of grasses, an increase in cover of bryophytes and forbs and the development of a more diverse sward (a reversal of the impacts of increased SO x ) was related to decreased SO x deposition. However there was no evidence of a recovery from SO x deposition in the Acid or Lolium grasslands. Despite a decline in NO x deposition between the two surveys we found no evidence of a reversal of the impacts of increased N deposition. The climate also changed significantly between the two surveys, becoming warmer and wetter. This change in climate was related to significant changes in both the cover and species richness of bryophytes, Cyperaceae, forbs, Poaceae and Juncaceae but the changes differed between habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
-
Thompson, Jacqueline M., Teasdale, Ben, Duncan, Sophie, van Emde Boas, Evert, Budelmann, Felix, Maguire, Laurie, and Dunbar, Robin I. M.
- Review of General Psychology; Jun2018, Vol. 22 Issue 2, p210-219, 10p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Auletta, Jeffery J., Sánchez, Pablo J., Meyer, Erin K., O'Donnell, Lynn C., Cassady, Kevin A., Ouellette, Christopher P., Hecht, Shaina, Diaz, Alejandro, Pavlek, Leeann R., Salamon, Douglas P., Gallagher, Christina L., Bradbury, Hillary, Welfley, Sarah L., Magers, Jacqueline, Armbruster, Debra L., Lamb, Margaret G., Nakkula, Robin J., Bosse, Kevin, and Lee, Dean A.
- Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology; Aug2019, Vol. 144 Issue 2, p594-594, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Han, Min, Dietz, Robin, Monaco, Sara, Xing, Juan, Cuda, Jacqueline, and Pantanowitz, Liron
- Journal of the American Society of Cytopathology; Sep2019, Vol. 8 Issue 5, pS54-S54, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Dietz, Robin, Xing, Juan, Monaco, Sara, Cuda, Jacqueline, and Pantanowitz, Liron
- Journal of the American Society of Cytopathology; Sep2019, Vol. 8 Issue 5, pS63-S63, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
26. Distinct serum biosignatures are associated with different tuberculosis treatment outcomes. [2019]
-
Ronacher, Katharina, Chegou, Novel N., Kleynhans, Léanie, Djoba Siawaya, Joel F., du Plessis, Nelita, Loxton, André G., Maasdorp, Elizna, Tromp, Gerard, Kidd, Martin, Stanley, Kim, Kriel, Magdalena, Menezes, Angela, Gutschmidt, Andrea, van der Spuy, Gian D., Warren, Robin M., Dietze, Reynaldo, Okwera, Alphonse, Thiel, Bonnie, Belisle, John T., and Cliff, Jacqueline M.
- Tuberculosis (14729792); Sep2019, Vol. 118, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
- Abstract
-
Biomarkers for TB treatment response and outcome are needed. This study characterize changes in immune profiles during TB treatment, define biosignatures associated with treatment outcomes, and explore the feasibility of predictive models for relapse. Seventy-two markers were measured by multiplex cytokine array in serum samples from 78 cured, 12 relapsed and 15 failed treatment patients from South Africa before and during therapy for pulmonary TB. Promising biosignatures were evaluated in a second cohort from Uganda/Brazil consisting of 17 relapse and 23 cured patients. Thirty markers changed significantly with different response patterns during TB treatment in cured patients. The serum biosignature distinguished cured from relapse patients and a combination of two clinical (time to positivity in liquid culture and BMI) and four immunological parameters (TNF-β, sIL-6R, IL-12p40 and IP-10) at diagnosis predicted relapse with a 75% sensitivity (95%CI 0.38–1) and 85% specificity (95%CI 0.75–0.93). This biosignature was validated in an independent Uganda/Brazil cohort correctly classifying relapse patients with 83% (95%CI 0.58–1) sensitivity and 61% (95%CI 0.39–0.83) specificity. A characteristic biosignature with value as predictor of TB relapse was identified. The repeatability and robustness of these biomarkers require further validation in well-characterized cohorts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Roszkowska, Natalia, Lazarus, Elizabeth, Bannon, Jacqueline Ann, Dowshen, Nadia, and Stevens, Robin
- Journal of Adolescent Health; 2020 Supplement, Vol. 66, pS1-S2, 2p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Pongracic, Jacqueline, Gagnon, Remi, Sussman, Gordon, Siri, Dareen, Oriel, Roxanne, Brown-Whitehorn, Terri, Green, Todd, Campbell, Dianne, Mukherjee, Robin, and Begin, Philippe
- Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology; Feb2020 Supplement, Vol. 145, pAB83-AB83, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
29. A Heart Failure Collaborative to Accelerate Improved Patient Outcomes in 3 Metro Markets. [2020]
-
Bolles, Michele, Kiser, Robin, Mallas-Serdynski, Lynn, O'Neill, Kathleen, Scharnott, Michelle, and Tomei, Jacqueline
- Heart & Lung; Mar2020, Vol. 49 Issue 2, p218-219, 2p
- Abstract
-
Nearly 6.5 million Americans are living with heart failure (HF), the leading cause of hospitalization among adults aged 65 and older. Despite advancements in medical therapy, HF patient outcomes remain of concern. HF readmission rates remain high and only half of patients diagnosed with heart failure are expected to live beyond 5 years of diagnosis. Increasing prevalence and poor outcomes provide significant opportunities for improvement. Hospital participation in a quality initiative designed to improve care by promoting adherence to the scientific guidelines, such as Get With the Guidelines®-Heart Failure (GWTG-HF), assists hospitals in effectively delivering high quality care to improve patient outcomes. The objective of this project is to form multidisciplinary collaboratives that will rapidly implement evidence-based guidelines to develop best practices that can be shared to improve heart failure patient outcomes. The AHA will lead a quality improvement initiative for transforming heart failure care in three major cities including Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Louis. • A retrospective review was conducted using GWTG-HF on measures with low adherence from participating hospitals in the metro markets. • Baseline data of specific HF measures from Quarter 1, 2018 were analyzed and to determine areas of improvement needed. • Using regional and 1:1 hospital meetings, AHA will lead a quality improvement initiative to transform HF patient care. • The HF project will focus on professional education, enhancing systems of care and facilitating the sharing of best practices. • The patient population will include patients from GWTG-HF with a principal/primary diagnosis of heart failure. The project goal within the 2-year timeframe of this initiative is to achieve 20% improvement from baseline data OR achieve AHA's 85% adherence threshold in each measure. AHA Quality staff will observe and monitor market-level data within GWTG-HF to uncover and recommend improvements, provide consultation to clinicians, deliver targeted training and resources such as webinars, conferences, toolkits, care pathways, educational materials and to foster best-practice sharing to address common barriers. Participating hospitals vary in size, discharge volume, GWTG participation tenure, FTE support and resources • *There is incomplete baseline date for the three thirty day follow up measures • Initiative implementation may vary slightly in 3 metro markets The two-year multi-city quality initiative will bring together multiple hospitals to share best practices, develop resources and analyze Get With The Guidelines data for performance improvement to accelerate heart failure patient outcomes. Further investigation is merited evaluating the effectiveness of quality collaboratives to enhance care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
30. Association Between HIV-Related Tweets and HIV Incidence in the United States: Infodemiology Study. [2020]
-
Stevens, Robin, Bonett, Stephen, Bannon, Jacqueline, Chittamuru, Deepti, Slaff, Barry, Browne, Safa K, Huang, Sarah, and Bauermeister, José A
- Journal of Medical Internet Research; Jun2020, Vol. 22 Issue 6, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p, 5 Charts
- Subjects
-
HIV infection epidemiology, RESEARCH, RESEARCH evaluation, SOCIAL media, RESEARCH methodology, DISEASE incidence, EVALUATION research, MEDICAL cooperation, COMPARATIVE studies, and RESEARCH funding
- Abstract
-
Background: Adolescents and young adults in the age range of 13-24 years are at the highest risk of developing HIV infections. As social media platforms are extremely popular among youths, researchers can utilize these platforms to curb the HIV epidemic by investigating the associations between the discourses on HIV infections and the epidemiological data of HIV infections.Objective: The goal of this study was to examine how Twitter activity among young men is related to the incidence of HIV infection in the population.Methods: We used integrated human-computer techniques to characterize the HIV-related tweets by male adolescents and young male adults (age range: 13-24 years). We identified tweets related to HIV risk and prevention by using natural language processing (NLP). Our NLP algorithm identified 89.1% (2243/2517) relevant tweets, which were manually coded by expert coders. We coded 1577 HIV-prevention tweets and 17.5% (940/5372) of general sex-related tweets (including emojis, gifs, and images), and we achieved reliability with intraclass correlation at 0.80 or higher on key constructs. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify the spatial patterns in posting HIV-related tweets as well as the relationships between the tweets and local HIV infection rates.Results: We analyzed 2517 tweets that were identified as relevant to HIV risk and prevention tags; these tweets were geolocated in 109 counties throughout the United States. After adjusting for region, HIV prevalence, and social disadvantage index, our findings indicated that every 100-tweet increase in HIV-specific tweets per capita from noninstitutional accounts was associated with a multiplicative effect of 0.97 (95% CI [0.94-1.00]; P=.04) on the incidence of HIV infections in the following year in a given county.Conclusions: Twitter may serve as a proxy of public behavior related to HIV infections, and the association between the number of HIV-related tweets and HIV infection rates further supports the use of social media for HIV disease prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Jack, Kirsten, Levett-Jones, Tracy, Ion, Robin, Pich, Jacqueline, Fulton, Roberta, Ylonen, Anna Mari, and Hamshire, Claire
- Nurse Education Today; Jul2020, Vol. 90, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
- Abstract
-
While much is known about nursing students' clinical placement experiences in general, less has been reported about their specific encounters with poor care delivery. A few small-scale qualitative studies have been undertaken, which suggest that nursing students do witness poor care but often decide not to act on what they see. This study sought to explore a wider international perspective on this issue. To explore nursing students' experiences of the care delivery practices witnessed during clinical placements and to provide descriptions of poor care. Nursing students from undergraduate pre-registration nursing programmes across three universities, two in the United Kingdom (UK) and one in Australia. A qualitative/quantitative survey design was utilised, and data were descriptively analysed. Two hundred and sixty-five students participated in the study. Overall the results were positive. Nevertheless, the participants did provide multiple and recurring examples of poor nursing care which related to a lack of compassion, poor communication, unkind and indifferent provision of personal care, and patient safety. Reporting of poor care was viewed as difficult and many participants highlighted potential repercussions should they take this course of action. This research provides contemporary international insights into care delivery practices from the perspective of a large number of nursing students. The results, although mainly positive, outline multiple examples of poor and ineffective practice. While the precise prevalence of these remains unknown, educators, practitioners and students should consider how best to address them when they occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
-
Fairhurst, Robin A., Knoepfel, Thomas, Buschmann, Nicole, Leblanc, Catherine, Mah, Robert, Todorov, Milen, Nimsgern, Pierre, Ripoche, Sebastien, Niklaus, Michel, Warin, Nicolas, Luu, Van Huy, Madoerin, Mario, Wirth, Jasmin, Graus-Porta, Diana, Weiss, Andreas, Kiffe, Michael, Wartmann, Markus, Kinyamu-Akunda, Jacqueline, Sterker, Dario, and Stamm, Christelle
- Journal of Medicinal Chemistry; 11/12/2020, Vol. 63 Issue 21, p12542-12573, 32p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Lee, Hyunwoo, Wiggermann, Vanessa, Rauscher, Alexander, Beg, Mirza Faisal, Popuri, Karteek, Tam, Roger, Lam, Kevin, Jacova, Claudia, Sossi, Vesna, Pettersen, Jacqueline, Benavente, Oscar R., and Hsiung, Ging‐Yuek Robin
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Dec2020 Supplement S11, Vol. 16 Issue 11, p1-2, 2p
- Abstract
-
Background: Vascular dementia (VaD) is often difficult to distinguish from Alzheimer's disease (AD).[O'Brien_2015] Areas of cognitive/clinical decline due to cerebrovascular diseases depend on the frequency and location of the lesions, and may overlap with those found in AD.[Suri_2014] Moreover, AD and cerebrovascular diseases frequently occur simultaneously, leading to heterogeneous 'mixed dementia (MixD)'.[Wang_2012][Langa_2004] It is unclear whether the presence of both neurodegenerative and cerebrovascular pathologies further aggravates dementia‐related imaging abnormalities. We investigated whether the lobar distribution of white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) on MRI differed among AD, VaD and MixD. Method: N=17 participants (cross‐sectional; subtypes:7 MixD/5 Subcortical VaD/5 AD; Sex: 11M/6F; Age: 75±8yrs) were scanned on a 3T Philips Achieva. T1‐weighted MP‐RAGE images were processed with Freesurfer 6.0. Areas of WMHs were segmented on Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery (3D‐FLAIR) images using a combination of intensity thresholding and manual correction. Left and right frontal, temporal, occipital and parietal lobes plus basal ganglia volumes were constructed using the Freesurfer segmentation outputs. Individual WMH masks were transformed to their respective T1‐weighted spaces, and the ratios of WMH volumes to different lobar volumes were calculated. Result: Average WMH volumes were (mean±SD) AD: 5191±4693mm3, MixD: 34680±17059mm3 (sig. greater than AD), SVaD: 20896±14920mm3 (n.s. from MixD or AD). We used a linear model to predict the ratios of WMH to lobar volumes from the diagnosis subtypes, adjusting for age and sex. A significant diagnosis‐subtype effect was found in both the left and right frontal lobes. (p=0.012 and 0.045, respectively). In the left frontal lobe, the proportion of WMHs was significantly greater in the MixD subgroup compared to the AD (p=0.0045) or the VaD (p=0.026) subtypes. In the right frontal lobe, the proportion was greater in the MixD subtype compared to the AD (p=0.018) but not compared to VaD (p=0.074) subtype. AD vs. VaD were not significantly different in either sides (p=0.5). Conclusion: The MixD subtype of our pilot study cohort was characterized by a significantly greater presence of WMHs in the frontal lobar areas. Future studies are warranted to investigate the characteristics of underlying tissue abnormalities that could be specific to the diagnosis subtypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Lee, Hyunwoo, Wiggermann, Vanessa, Rauscher, Alexander, Beg, Mirza Faisal, Popuri, Karteek, Tam, Roger, Lam, Kevin, Jacova, Claudia, Sossi, Vesna, Pettersen, Jacqueline, Benavente, Oscar R., and Hsiung, Ging‐Yuek Robin
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Dec2020 Supplement S11, Vol. 16 Issue 11, p1-2, 2p
- Abstract
-
Background: Alzheimer's disease (AD) with cerebrovascular disease is known as 'mixed' dementia (MixD).[Wang_2012][Langa_2004] MixD can have heterogeneous clinical/imaging presentations. This makes it difficult to distinguish MixD from AD or vascular dementia (VaD) using structural markers such as atrophy or white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes. [Suri_2014] We explored whether WM tissue properties on MRI, represented by R2* and diffusion‐tensor (DTI) images, could distinguish MixD from AD or VaD. Method: N=17 participants (cross‐sectional; 7 MixD/5 Subcortical VaD/5 AD; Sex: 11M/6F; Age: 75±8yrs) were scanned on a 3T Philips Achieva. WMHs were segmented on 3D‐Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery images. T1‐weighted MP‐RAGE images were segmented into the grey/white‐matters using SPM12. These outputs were combined to construct WMH and normal‐appearing WM (NAWM) masks. DTI images were processed using FSL. R2* images were computed using in‐house software. For each participant, the average R2*, fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MDf) values were calculated within the WMH and NAWM masks. Result: Average WMH volumes were (mean±SD) AD: 5191±4693mm3, MD: 34680±17059mm3 (p<.05 compared to AD), SVaD: 20896±14920mm3 (p>.05 compared to MixD or AD). A linear model was used to predict the measured R2*, FA or MDf values from the diagnosis subtypes, adjusting for age and sex. R2* results: Pairwise t‐tests revealed significantly lower R2* values within the WMHs compared to NAWM (all subtypes p<0.0005). MixD had significantly lower WMH R2* values compared to AD (p=0.01) or VaD (p=0.02) subgroups. DTI results: Pairwise t‐tests revealed significantly higher MDf values within the WMHs compared to NAWM (all subtypes p<0.009). FA values were significantly lower within the WMHs compared to NAWM for the MixD (p=0.0002) and VaD (p=0.03) but not the AD (p=0.09) subtype. Conclusion: Our MixD cohort was characterized by potentially disrupted fiber integrity (represented by decreased FA) and increased water content (represented by lower R2*) within the WMH areas. These abnormalities likely represent etiologies caused by both neurodegenerative and cerebrovascular factors. Future studies that incorporate measures of neurodegeneration or neuroinflammation, such as biofluid markers, may help to further characterize WM tissue abnormalities in MixD compared to those found in 'pure' AD or VaD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Lee, Hyunwoo, Wiggermann, Vanessa, Rauscher, Alexander, Beg, Mirza Faisal, Popuri, Karteek, Tam, Roger, Lam, Kevin, Liu‐Ambrose, Teresa, Dao, Elizabeth, Keridy, Walid Ahmed Al, Jacova, Claudia, Sossi, Vesna, Pettersen, Jacqueline, Benavente, Oscar R., and Hsiung, Ging‐Yuek Robin
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Dec2020 Supplement S11, Vol. 16 Issue 11, p1-2, 2p
- Abstract
-
Background: Increased burden of white‐matter hyperintensities (WMHs) on MRI is common among different types of dementia. WMHs can be caused by various underlying etiologies and are non‐specific markers of tissue abnormality. Therefore, global measures such as WMH burdens may not distinguish between degrees of cognitive impairment. We explored the associations between lobar‐specific WMH volumes and cognitive dysfunction across different dementia subtypes. Method: N=57 participants (7 Alzheimer's disease [AD]/5 subcortical vascular dementia [SVaD]/7 mixed dementia [MixD]/38 vascular cognitive impairment [VCI]; Sex:34M/23F; Age:73±8yrs; pooled from three independent studies) were scanned on 3T MRI. WMHs were segmented on 3D‐FLAIR (MixD/AD/SVaD) or dual‐echo PD/T2‐weighted (VCI) images. T1‐weighted images were processed with Freesurfer 6.0. Left and right frontal, temporal, occipital and parietal lobes plus basal ganglia volumes were constructed using the Freesurfer segmentation outputs. We calculated the proportion of WMH burden within each lobe, i.e. the ratio of lobar WMH volume over the lobar volume. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) was used as a measure of cognitive function. We used a general linear model to determine the association between the WMH/lobar volume ratios and the MoCA scores. Covariates included age, sex, and presence of AD‐related (yes for MixD/AD, no for rest) and vascular‐related conditions (yes for SVaD/VCI/MixD, no for AD). Additionally, we assessed the relationship between the MoCA scores and the ratio of total WMH burden over the whole‐brain parenchymal volume. Result: The model yielded a significant association between the MoCA scores and WMH/lobar ratios within the left (p=0.031) and the right (p=0.035) frontal lobes, with higher ratios predicting lower MoCA scores. The effect was not significant within the temporal, occipital, parietal lobes and the basal ganglia. The effect was insignificant at the whole‐brain level (p=0.08). Conclusion: We found a significant association between the frontal lobe WMH burden and the MoCA scores, especially sensitive to frontal executive functions. This suggests that region‐specific assessments of WMHs may provide improved imaging‐cognitive correlations over the global WMH burden. Future studies with more consistent imaging protocols and broader cognitive/clinical assessments are warranted to further characterize the relationship between WMHs and cognitive impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
36. "Feel the fear and do it anyway" ... nursing students' experiences of confronting poor practice. [2021]
-
Jack, Kirsten, Levett-Jones, Tracy, Ylonen, AnnaMari, Ion, Robin, Pich, Jacqueline, Fulton, Roberta, and Hamshire, Claire
- Nurse Education in Practice; Oct2021, Vol. 56, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
- Subjects
-
PATIENT advocacy, EMPATHY, INTERVIEWING, INTERNSHIP programs, UNDERGRADUATES, UNIVERSITIES & colleges, NURSING students, STUDENT attitudes, THEMATIC analysis, and BULLYING
- Abstract
-
The two aims of this study were, first, to explore nursing students' experiences and perspectives of reporting poor care and second, examine the process by which they raised concerns. The nursing literature is replete with studies which explore nursing students' experiences of clinical placement. However only a small number explore students experiences of challenging poor care and how this is enacted in the practice setting. Fourteen nursing students from undergraduate pre-registration nursing programs across three universities, two in the United Kingdom (UK) and one in Australia. This paper reports findings from narrative interviews about students' clinical experiences of reporting poor care. Data were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using a constant comparison approach. Emerging themes were identified, discussed and verified by the researchers. Four montages from the narratives highlight the overarching themes: bullying, patient advocacy, lack of empathy and poor care. They demonstrate how, driven by an ethical imperative, students speak up when they witness poor care despite the difficulties of doing so: in some cases, the students in this study were prepared to continue speaking out even when initial concerns were dismissed. Both practice and university teams have a responsibility to support students' development as ethical and courageous practitioners, able to recognize when care falls below an acceptable standard. • This paper highlights the vital role that students play in highlighting poor nursing care practices. • Nursing students are capable of reporting poor nursing care even when it might come at a cost to themselves. • Clinicians and academics must support students to challenge poor nursing care practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Phillips, Jacqueline, Palokas, Michelle, Christian, Robin, Harris, Janet, and Hinton, Elizabeth
- JBI Evidence Synthesis; Dec2021, Vol. 19 Issue 12, p3238-3267, 30p
-
Nicholas, Jacqueline, Belviso, Nick, Banerjee, Geentanjoli, Geremakis, Caroline, Avila, Robin, and Bodhinathan, Karthik
- Multiple Sclerosis & Related Disorders; Mar2022, Vol. 59, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Raafs, Anne G., Vos, Jacqueline L., Henkens, Michiel T.H.M., Slurink, Bram O., Verdonschot, Job A.J., Bossers, Daan, Roes, Kit, Gerretsen, Suzanne, Knackstedt, Christian, Hazebroek, Mark R., Nijveldt, Robin, and Heymans, Stephane R.B.
- JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging; Jun2022, Vol. 15 Issue 6, p1015-1026, 12p
- Abstract
-
The left atrium is an early sensor of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. Still, the prognostic value of left atrial (LA) function (strain) on cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) remains unknown. The goal of this study was to evaluate the prognostic value of CMR-derived LA strain in DCM. Patients with DCM from the Maastricht Cardiomyopathy Registry with available CMR imaging were included. The primary endpoint was the combination of sudden or cardiac death, heart failure (HF) hospitalization, or life-threatening arrhythmias. Given the nonlinearity of continuous variables, cubic spline analysis was performed to dichotomize. A total of 488 patients with DCM were included (median age: 54 [IQR: 46-62] years; 61% male). Seventy patients (14%) reached the primary endpoint (median follow-up: 6 [IQR: 4-9] years). Age, New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class >II, presence of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), LV ejection fraction (LVEF), LA volume index (LAVI), LV global longitudinal strain (GLS), and LA reservoir and conduit strain were univariably associated with the outcome (all P < 0.02). LA conduit strain was a stronger predictor of outcome compared with reservoir strain. LA conduit strain, NYHA functional class >II, and LGE remained associated in the multivariable model (LA conduit strain HR: 3.65 [95% CI: 2.01-6.64; P < 0.001]; NYHA functional class >II HR: 1.81 [95% CI: 1.05-3.12; P = 0.033]; and LGE HR: 2.33 [95% CI: 1.42-3.85; P < 0.001]), whereas age, N-terminal pro–B-type natriuretic peptide, LVEF, left atrial ejection fraction, LAVI, and LV GLS were not. Adding LA conduit strain to other independent predictors (NYHA functional class and LGE) significantly improved the calibration, accuracy, and reclassification of the prediction model (P < 0.05). LA conduit strain on CMR is a strong independent prognostic predictor in DCM, superior to LV GLS, LVEF, and LAVI and incremental to LGE. Including LA conduit strain in DCM patient management should be considered to improve risk stratification. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Martinez, Vanessa A., Betts, Robin K., Scruth, Elizabeth A., Buckley, Jacqueline D., Cadiz, Vilma R., Bertrand, Linda D., Paulson, Shirley S., Dummett, Brian Alex, Abhyankar, Stella S., Reyes, Vivian M., Hatton, Joeffrey R., Sulit, Reynaldo, and Liu, Vincent X.
- Joint Commission Journal on Quality & Patient Safety; Aug2022, Vol. 48 Issue 8, p370-375, 6p
41. Reply: Further Insights Into the Prognostic Value of Left Atrial Strain in Dilated Cardiomyopathy? [2022]
-
Raafs, Anne G., Henkens, Michiel T.H.M., Vos, Jacqueline L., Nijveldt, Robin, and Verdonschot, Job A.J.
- JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging; Dec2022, Vol. 15 Issue 12, p2156-2157, 2p
- Full text View on content provider's site
42. PART is part of SNAP‐MCI. [2022]
-
Wisse, Laura EM, Xie, Long, Lyu, Xueying, Das, Sandhitsu R., de Flores, Robin, Lane, Jacqueline, Yushkevich, Paul A., Wolk, David A., and Initiative, Disease Neuroimaging
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Dec2022 Supplement 6, Vol. 18 Issue 6, p1-4, 4p
- Abstract
-
Background: Mild Cognitive Impairment with Suspected non‐Alzheimer's Pathophysiology (SNAP‐MCI) represents a group of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) like neurodegeneration without beta‐amyloid pathology. While this group likely has a heterogeneous etiology, tau pathology, as in Primary Age‐Related Tauopathy (PART), has been hypothesized to play a major role. We investigate tau positron emission tomography (PET) uptake in the medial temporal lobe (MTL) in SNAP‐MCI and the association of MTL Tau‐PET uptake with structural measures and delayed recall in beta‐amyloid negative (A‐) MCI patients. Method: 237 MCI patients and 301 A‐ controls with available beta‐amyloid and tau PET and magnetic resonance images (within 200 days) were included. Baseline hippocampal volume and entorhinal cortex (ERC) and Brodmann areas (BA)35 thickness were obtained using an in‐house developed pipeline and annualized atrophy rates were estimated in an unbiased fashion using follow‐up MRIs within 4.5 years. Βeta‐amyloid status (A+/‐) was determined by a standard cut‐off (Florbetapir: 1.11; Florbetaben: 1.08) and neurodegeneration status (N+/‐) by hippocampal volumes, corrected for intracranial volume, using the 90th percentile of A+ AD patients as the cut‐off. Tau‐PET standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) in the ERC/BA35 was calculated. A composite z‐score of delayed recall at baseline and change over 2 years was obtained. Result: SNAP‐MCI had significantly higher ERC/BA35 Tau‐PET SUVR than A‐ controls (Table 1, corrected for age) and qualitatively higher than A‐N‐ MCI (p=0.10). ERC/BA35 Tau‐PET SUVR in A‐N‐ MCI was not significantly different from A‐ controls. In A‐ MCI patients, ERC/BA35 Tau‐PET SUVR was significantly associated with BA35 thickness and hippocampal, ERC and BA35 atrophy rates, corrected for beta‐amyloid PET SUVR (Table 2; Figure 1). MTL structural measures, but not ERC/BA35 Tau‐PET SUVR, were associated with cross‐sectional and longitudinal delayed recall measures (Table 3; Figure 2). Conclusion: SNAP‐MCI had elevated ERC/BA35 Tau‐PET SUVR and ERC/BA35 Tau‐PET SUVR was associated with MTL structural measures in A‐ MCI patients. This indicates that tau pathology might be an important driver of neurodegeneration in the absence of beta‐amyloid pathology, supporting the notion that PART contributes to SNAP‐MCI. Additionally, MTL structure was associated with memory performance, consistent with SNAP not being a benign condition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Yang, David, Best, John R., Chambers, Colleen, Feldman, Howard H., Pettersen, Jacqueline A, Henri‐Bhargava, Alexander, Lee, Philip E, Nygaard, Haakon B., Funnell, Clark R, Foti, Dean J, Hsiung, Ging‐Yuek Robin, and DeMarco, Mari L.
- Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Dec2022 Supplement 6, Vol. 18 Issue 6, p1-2, 2p
- Abstract
-
Background: While previous studies have demonstrated the effect of Alzheimer's disease (AD) CSF testing in changing diagnosis, we lack an understanding of how this testing affects clinical management. Therefore, we assessed changes in clinical management associated with AD CSF biomarker testing when ordered as part of routine clinical management. Method: The 'Investigating the Impact of Alzheimer's Disease Diagnostics in British Columbia' (IMPACT‐AD BC) study (NCT05002699) is a longitudinal study examining the impact of AD CSF testing on clinical management, personal utility and health care economics in British Columbia, Canada. After AD CSF testing was ordered as part of routine care (where the clinical scenario met the appropriate use criteria), the patient and their physician were eligible to participate in the study. The primary outcome was the change in management (pre‐ v. post‐biomarker results) in a composite measure including 1) AD drug therapy, 2) other relevant drug therapy, 3) other diagnostic procedures, and 4) referral or counselling. Result: Participants (n = 129) had a median age of 63 (IQR:58‐68); 49% were female. Cognitive impairment at baseline consisted of 7% with subjective cognitive impairment, 53% with mild cognitive impairment, and 40% with dementia. CSF biomarker profiles were consistent with an amyloid‐beta pathology (i.e., A+) in 72% of cases. Changes in clinical management because of testing occurred in 83% of cases including: referrals and counseling (57%), imaging (47%) and other diagnostic procedures (e.g., neuropsychological testing) (42%), and use of AD drug therapies (40%). For those with a non‐AD pre‐biomarkers diagnosis, 42% were changed to AD post‐biomarkers; for those with an AD pre‐biomarkers diagnosis, 18% were changed to non‐AD post‐biomarkers. Conclusion: This study has revealed substantial changes in clinical management as a direct result of AD CSF biomarker testing in routine care. An understanding of the implications of biomarker testing will in turn help us: improve appropriate utilization, understand the broader impacts on persons living with dementia and on the health care system, and prepare for expanded use of this testing with the availability of disease‐modifying therapeutics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Brown, Stewart, Bailey, Janice, Wang, Robin, Kemp, Jacqueline, Strawbridge, Martyn, Sheppard, Mary, Dayer, Mark J., and Furniss, Guy O.
- Heart Rhythm; 2023 Supplement, Vol. 20 Issue 5, pS117-S118, 2p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
LUTZ, JACQUELINE, PRATAP, ABHISHEK, LENZE, ERIC J., BESTHA, DURGA, LIPSCHITZ, JESSICA M., KARANTZOULIS, STELLA, VAIDYANATHAN, UMA, ROBIN, JESSICA, HORAN, WILLIAM, BRANNAN, STEPHEN, MITTOUX, AURELIA, DAVIS, MICHAEL C., LAKHAN, SHAHEEN E., and KEEFE, RICHARD
- Innovations in Clinical Neuroscience; Jul-Sep2023, Vol. 20 Issue 7-9, p40-46, 7p
- Abstract
-
Objective: Recruitment of a sufficiently large and representative patient sample and its retention during central nervous system (CNS) trials presents major challenges for study sponsors. Technological advances are reshaping clinical trial operations to meet these challenges, and the COVID-19 pandemic further accelerated this development. Method of Research: The International Society for CNS Clinical Trials and Methodology (ISCTM; www.isctm.org) Innovative Technologies for CNS Trials Working Group surveyed the state of technological innovations for improved recruitment and retention and assessed their promises and pitfalls. Results: Online advertisement and electronic patient registries can enhance recruitment, but challenges with sample representativeness, conversion rates from eligible prescreening to enrolled patients, data privacy and security, and patient identification remain hurdles for optimal use of these technologies. Electronic medical records (EMR) mining with artificial intelligence (AI)/machine learning (ML) methods is promising but awaits translation into trials. During the study treatment phase, technological innovations increasingly support participant retention, including adherence with the investigational treatment. Digital tools for adherence and retention support take many forms, including patient-centric communication channels between researchers and participants, real-time study reminders, and digital behavioral interventions to increase study compliance. However, such tools add technical complexities to trials, and their impact on the generalizability of results are largely unknown. Conclusion: Overall, the group found a scarcity of systematic data directly assessing the impact of technological innovations on study recruitment and retention in CNS trials, even for strategies with already high adoption, such as online recruitment. Given the added complexity and costs associated with most technological innovations, such data is needed to fully harness technologies for CNS trials and drive further adoption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Raafs, Anne G., Vos, Jacqueline L., Henkens, Michiel T.H.M., Verdonschot, Job A.J., Sikking, Maurits, Stroeks, Sophie, Gerretsen, Suzanne, Hazebroek, Mark R., Knackstedt, Christian, Nijveldt, Robin, and Heymans, Stephane R.B.
- JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging; Jul2023, Vol. 16 Issue 7, p991-992, 2p
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Martinez, Rebecca, Wiggins, Heather, Webb, Jacqueline, Claudson, Robin, and Barfield, Patricia
- Teaching & Learning in Nursing; Oct2023, Vol. 18 Issue 4, pe259-e263, 5p
- Abstract
-
• Simulation is an effective strategy to teach intraprofessional collaboration among undergraduate and graduate nursing students. • Students demonstrated a better understanding in nursing roles and team work following the simulated encounter. • The use of simulation in graduate and undergraduate nursing education can promote intraprofessional collaboration in practice. Nurse educators must be equipped to instruct nursing students on intraprofessional practice within primary care. A simulated primary care visit was piloted with graduate and undergraduate nursing students using telehealth technology and standardized patients. Students completed the Interprofessional Collaborative Competency Attainment Scale (ICCAS) , which revealed improvement in student perceived ability to communicate, collaborate, and understand the nursing roles and responsibilities. Simulating intraprofessional practice is a novel strategy to educate nurses for the primary care setting [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
-
Orihuela, Benazir, Dallo, Irina, Clinton, John, Strauch, Wilfried, Protti, Marino, Yani, Robin, Marroquín, Griselda, Sanchez, Jacqueline, Vega, Floribeth, Marti, Michèle, Massin, Frédérick, Böse, Maren, and Wiemer, Stefan
- International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction; Oct2023, Vol. 97, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
- Abstract
-
Central America has an elevated seismic risk, resulting from the vulnerability of the building stock and steady population growth. Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) aims to provide warning in advance of imminent shaking, allowing recipients to take action and reduce casualties during damaging motions. The Swiss Seismological Service (SED) has been collaborating with local seismic agencies to develop national EEW systems across Central America, which can potentially benefit nearly 47 million inhabitants. We conducted a public survey to comprehend the desire for EEW, the preferences for EEW attributes, and the current behaviour of people during earthquakes and the driving factors behind it. We recruited participants from Nicaragua (N = 513), Costa Rica (N = 1350), Guatemala (N = 559), and El Salvador (N = 491). In all four countries, participants consider it necessary to have an EEW system, are tolerant of false alerts, and are likely to react promptly to alerts. The desirable alert threshold is for low felt intensities, ranging between MMI III to IV. We found that a significant number of respondents already take protective action when earthquakes strike, and appropriate reactions are expected to increase when EEW is available. Our survey is unique in providing insights into the social dimension of EEW systems in low-income regions with high earthquake risk and where no operational EEW system yet exists. • A public survey conducted in Central America reveals strong enthusiasm for Earthquake Early Warning (EEW). The findings indicate that the public is tolerant to false alerts and is likely to react promptly to alerts. • The public reports experiencing significant and damaging shaking, consistent with strong events occurring in living memory. The survey shows the elevated seismic hazard and seismic vulnerability in Central America. • Recommended protective actions are already being practised across Central America and can be expected to increase when EEW becomes available. • Participants exhibit general awareness of the threat posed by earthquakes, for example through previous experience of damaging shaking, participations in preparedness planning and being aware of living in vulnerable housing. These examples influence whether people take protective actions and their opinion of EEW, including its perceived benefit, acceptable warning times, and tolerance for false, late and missed alerts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Full text View on content provider's site
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Guides
Course- and topic-based guides to collections, tools, and services.