494 research outputs found

    Variation in cervical and breast cancer screening coverage in England: a cross-sectional analysis to characterise districts with atypical behaviour

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    This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. This article was published in BMJ Open following peer review and can also be viewed on the journal’s website at http://bmjopen.bmj.com

    Uptake of organic chemicals in plants:human exposure assessment

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    Pharmacognostic, Phytochemical and Pharmacological Evaluation of The Leaves of Citrullus Lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai, (Cucurbitaceae).

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    A plant is any plant which, in one or more of its organs, contains substances that can be used for therapeutic purposes, or which are precursors for semi-synthetic compounds. When a plant is designated as ‘medicinal’, it is implied that the said plant is useful as a drug or therapeutic agent or an active ingredient of a medicinal preparation. Medicinal plants may therefore be defined as a group of plants that possess some special properties or virtues that qualify them as articles of drugs and therapeutic agents, and are used for medicinal purposes. The present study entitled the “Pharmacognostic, Phytochemical and Pharmacological evaluation of the Leaves of Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai. (Cucurbitaceae)” focuses on a plant which is commonly available throughout India and traditionally used in treatment of various ailments. Studies on the leaves of Citrullus lanatus are still lacking. Hence to exploit its potential use prompted the present study to investigate the leaves of this plant with clear scientific protoco

    The application of strontium and oxygen isotope analysis to study land use and mobility patterns during the earlier Neolithic in England and Wales

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    The nature of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Britain has often been debated. This thesis represents the first application of strontium and oxygen isotope analysis to study land use and mobility during this period (c. 4000-3500 BC). Results of analysis of populations from a sample of long cairns and a causewayed enclosure complex are described and interpreted in relation to current archaeological evidence for the period. Limitations to the application of oxygen isotope analysis as a direct proxy for landscape use are identified. The potential of strontium isotope analysis to study the period is demonstrated and prospects for future development and application of this method are discussed

    Towards a tricorder: clinical, health economic, and ethical investigation of point-of-care artificial intelligence electrocardiogram for heart failure

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    Heart failure (HF) is an international public health priority and a focus of the NHS Long Term Plan. There is a particular need in primary care for screening and early detection of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) – the most common and serious HF subtype, and the only one with an abundant evidence base for effective therapies. Digital health technologies (DHTs) integrating artificial intelligence (AI) could improve diagnosis of HFrEF. Specifically, through a convergence of DHTs and AI, a single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) can be recorded by a smart stethoscope and interrogated by AI (AI-ECG) to potentially serve as a point-of-care HFrEF test. However, there are concerning evidence gaps for such DHTs applying AI; across intersecting clinical, health economic, and ethical considerations. My thesis therefore investigates hypotheses that AI-ECG is 1.) Reliable, accurate, unbiased, and can be patient self-administered, 2.) Of justifiable health economic impact for primary care deployment, and 3.) Appropriate across ethical domains for deployment as a tool for patient self-administered screening. The theoretical basis for this work is presented in the Introduction (Chapter 1). Chapter 2 describes the first large-scale, multi-centre independent external validation study of AI-ECG, prospectively recruiting 1,050 patients and highlighting impressive performance: area under the curve, sensitivity, and specificity up to 0·91 (95% confidence interval: 0·88–0·95), 91·9% (78·1–98·3), and 80·2% (75·5–84·3) respectively; and absence of bias by age, sex, and ethnicity. Performance was independent of operator, and usability of the tool extended to patients being able to self-examine. Chapter 3 presents a clinical and health economic outcomes analysis using a contemporary digital repository of 2.5 million NHS patient records. A propensity-matched cohort was derived using all patients diagnosed with HF from 2015-2020 (n = 34,208). Novel findings included the unacceptable reality that 70% of index HF diagnoses are made through hospitalisation; where index diagnosis through primary care conferred a medium-term survival advantage and long-term cost saving (£2,500 per patient). This underpins a health economic model for the deployment of AI-ECG across primary care. Chapter 4 approaches a normative ethical analysis focusing on equity, agency, data rights, and responsibility for safe, effective, and trustworthy implementation of an unprecedented at-home patient self-administered AI-ECG screening programme. I propose approaches to mitigating any potential harms, towards preserving and promoting trust, patient engagement, and public health. Collectively, this thesis marks novel work highlighting AI-ECG as tool with the potential to address major cardiovascular public health priorities. Scrutiny through complimentary clinical, health economic, and ethical considerations can directly serve patients and health systems by blueprinting best-practice for the evaluation and implementation of DHTs integrating AI – building the conviction needed to realise the full potential of such technologies.Open Acces

    Spatial-temporal analysis of endocrine disruptor pollution, neighbourhood stress, maternal age and related factors as potential determinants of birth sex ratio in Scotland

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    Background: The human secondary sex ratio has been the subject of long-standing medical, environmental and social scientific curiosity and research. A decline in male birth proportion in some industrialised countries is linked to endocrine disruption and is validated by some empirical studies. Increasing parental age and population stress and associated decreases in sex ratio have also been demonstrated. A thorough literature review of 123 relevant and diverse studies provides context for these assessments. Methods: A spatial-temporal investigation of birth sex ratio in Scotland and potential determinants of endocrine disruptor pollution, socio-economic factors including neighbourhood stress, deprivation, smoking, and maternal age, was conducted. This involved review of national and regional sex ratio time trends, and stratified/spatial analysis of such factors, including the use of GIS tools. Secondary data were sourced from Scottish Government web portals including Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics and the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency. Results: Regional differences in sex ratio between 1973 and 2010 are observed which likely lever the national male birth proportion downwards, with the region of poorest air quality from industrial emissions, the Forth Valley, displaying the greatest sex ratio reduction. Further analysis shows significant upwards skewing in sex ratio for the population cohort experiencing the least and 2nd most deprivation. Localised reductions in sex ratio for areas of high modelled endocrine disruptor pollution within the Central Region in Scotland are also displayed. Discussion: Limitations of the analyses include the danger of ecological fallacy in interpreting from area-based measurement and the simplified pollution modelling adopted. Despite this, and given elevated incidence of testicular cancer in Scottish regions mirrors the study’s results, tentative confirmation of the endocrine disruptor hypothesis can be substantiated. Further, elucidation on advanced parental age as a contributory factor to secondary sex ratio change is also given. Recommendations are made with respect to environmental monitoring and health protection, and preventative health strategies in Scotland
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