443 research outputs found

    10th Annual Georgia APBS Conference Program (2017)

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    Conference Progra

    2020 GAPBS Conference Program

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    Conference Progra

    Silent Scream? The Life Histories of People Living with HIV in the North East of England

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    A research report on the life histories of people living with HIV in the North East of England. This research was conducted for Body Positive North East, an HIV charity, and it highlights the unique, personal and individual lives of people living with HIV. The report gives recommendations for the future, highlighting issues within healthcare stigma, the need for HIV recognition in employment and the invisibility of HIV within public discourse

    Southeast Conference on PBIS Agenda 2019

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    Conference Agenda. Individual presentation records will be created by request or upon receipt of supporting presentation materials

    Student Loans, For-Profit Colleges, and Traditional Colleges: Some Things You Should Know Before Borrowing

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    Many students complete programs at for-profit colleges and launch new careers. However, many other students do not have such successful experiences, ending up without the career they envisioned and/or with large debts they cannot repay. This FAQ is designed to help prospective college students become better informed about student loans, particularly those used to finance education at for-profit institutions

    The standardization of immunohistochemical detection and interpretation of CD30 expression in lymphomas

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    CD30 can be expressed in a variety of lymphoma subtypes, among which classical Hodgkin lymphoma (CHL) and anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) are the most common ones. Recently, Brentuximab vedotin, the antibody-drug conjugate targeting CD30, has been approved in the treatment of patients with refractory and relapsed CHL and ALCL, and has achieved significant curative effect. However, whether CD30-targeted therapy could benefit patients with other types of lymphoma remains largely unknown. Accurate evaluation of the expression level of CD30 may thus have important guiding significance for the clinical trials and individualized treatment of patients with those lymphomas. To date, CD30 detection is mainly via immunohistochemical staining, however, with no unified and standardized process and interpretation method. We herein described the current status on CD30 testing, and explored the procedures of immunohistochemical detection and interpretation of the results through multicentric studies. A consensus was finally reached, which was based on the combination of our research results, literature review, experts’ experience, and internal discussion among the panel members, and might hopefully contribute to standardization of the immunohistochemical detection and interpretation of CD30 expression in lymphomas

    Keeping health facilities safe: one way of strengthening the interaction between disease-specific programmes and health systems.

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    The debate on the interaction between disease-specific programmes and health system strengthening in the last few years has intensified as experts seek to tease out common ground and find solutions and synergies to bridge the divide. Unfortunately, the debate continues to be largely academic and devoid of specificity, resulting in the issues being irrelevant to health care workers on the ground. Taking the theme 'What would entice HIV- and tuberculosis (TB)-programme managers to sit around the table on a Monday morning with health system experts', this viewpoint focuses on infection control and health facility safety as an important and highly relevant practical topic for both disease-specific programmes and health system strengthening. Our attentions, and the examples and lessons we draw on, are largely aimed at sub-Saharan Africa where the great burden of TB and HIV ⁄ AIDS resides, although the principles we outline would apply to other parts of the world as well. Health care infections, caused for example by poor hand hygiene, inadequate testing of donated blood, unsafe disposal of needles and syringes, poorly sterilized medical and surgical equipment and lack of adequate airborne infection control procedures, are responsible for a considerable burden of illness amongst patients and health care personnel, especially in resource-poor countries. Effective infection control in a district hospital requires that all the components of a health system function well: governance and stewardship, financing,infrastructure, procurement and supply chain management, human resources, health information systems, service delivery and finally supervision. We argue in this article that proper attention to infection control and an emphasis on safe health facilities is a concrete first step towards strengthening the interaction between disease-specific programmes and health systems where it really matters – for patients who are sick and for the health care workforce who provide the care and treatment

    Managing ‘difference’: understanding age diversity in practice

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    This article explores how human resource (HR) managers discuss, classify and justify age diversity as both a concept and practice within the UK. The findings from 33 in-depth interviews with HR managers reveal difficulty in translating age diversity as an abstract managerial concept into workfloor policy and practice. Whilst the managers sought to emphasise the role of culture in promoting diversity, there was a lack of evidence that this related to workfloor equality or activities that proactively challenge discrimination. Moreover, there was confusion over classifying older workers as ‘diverse’, and risking possible discriminatory practices which marginalised both the older workers and other employees. The conclusions discuss how the ambiguous concept of ‘difference’ which lies at the basis of understanding both diversity and discrimination caused tension when implementing older worker strategies, and how policy makers must provide clear measures concerning the intent, objectives and definitions surrounding age equality. It is argued that a move towards an action model of discrimination management may help to create a framework where diversity and discrimination can be mutually addressed

    Implementing the Peer Support Specialist Role: Youth Peer Support in Wraparound

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    This information brief provides an example of how one state has implemented and supported the Peer Support Specialist role for youth with serious mental health conditions. The brief covers aspects of training, coaching, supervision, role definition and financing; and describes a series of challenges and solutions

    Correlates of Poor Health among Orphans and Abandoned Children in Less Wealthy Countries: The Importance of Caregiver Health

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    BACKGROUND: More than 153 million children worldwide have been orphaned by the loss of one or both parents, and millions more have been abandoned. We investigated relationships between the health of orphaned and abandoned children (OAC) and child, caregiver, and household characteristics among randomly selected OAC in five countries. METHODOLOGY: Using a two-stage random sampling strategy in 6 study areas in Cambodia, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and Tanzania, the Positive Outcomes for Orphans (POFO) study identified 1,480 community-living OAC ages 6 to 12. Detailed interviews were conducted with 1,305 primary caregivers at baseline and after 6 and 12 months. Multivariable logistic regression models describe associations between the characteristics of children, caregivers, and households and child health outcomes: fair or poor child health; fever, cough, or diarrhea within the past two weeks; illness in the past 6 months; and fair or poor health on at least two assessments. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Across the six study areas, 23% of OAC were reported to be in fair or poor health; 19%, 18%, and 2% had fever, cough, or diarrhea, respectively, within the past two weeks; 55% had illnesses within the past 6 months; and 23% were in fair or poor health on at least two assessments. Female gender, suspected HIV infection, experiences of potentially traumatic events, including the loss of both parents, urban residence, eating fewer than 3 meals per day, and low caregiver involvement were associated with poorer child health outcomes. Particularly strong associations were observed between child health measures and the health of their primary caregivers. CONCLUSIONS: Poor caregiver health is a strong signal for poor health of OAC. Strategies to support OAC should target the caregiver-child dyad. Steps to ensure food security, foster gender equality, and prevent and treat traumatic events are needed
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