431 research outputs found
Waiting for diagnostic colonoscopy: a qualitative exploration of screening participants’ experiences in a FIT-based colorectal cancer screening program
The LEAD trial - the effectiveness of a decision aid on decision making among citizens with lower educational attainment who have not participated in FIT-based colorectal cancer screening in Denmark: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Background: Colorectal cancer screening participation is a preference-sensitive choice, in which trade-offs between
benefits and harms must be made by individual citizens. Often the decision is made without any contact with healthcare
professionals. Citizens with lower educational attainment tend to participate less in colorectal cancer screening
than citizens with average educational attainment. Further, they tend to have lower levels of knowledge about
colorectal cancer screening. Providing lower educational attainment citizens with a targeted decision aid embracing
their diverse information needs might increase these citizens’ ability to make informed decisions. The aim of this trial is
to test the effectiveness of such a newly developed self-administered decision aid.
Methods: The LEAD (Lower Educational Attainment Decision aid) trial will be conducted as a two-arm randomized
controlled trial among 10,000 50–74-year-old citizens, resident in the Central Denmark Region not yet invited to take
up colorectal cancer screening. Citizens will receive a baseline questionnaire. Respondents will be allocated into the
intervention or the control groups. Citizens in the intervention group will receive the decision aid whereas the control
group will not. Those who return a stool sample within 45 days after receiving the screening invitation and those with
medium or higher educational attainment are excluded. Both groups will receive a follow-up questionnaire 90 days
after being invited to colorectal cancer screening.
A historic cohort consisting of 5000 50–74-year-old citizens resident in the Central Denmark Region, having received
their screening invitation in the beginning of 2017 will be included. This cohort will receive a follow-up questionnaire
6–9 months after they received the screening invitation.
Informed choice will be evaluated by assessing levels of knowledge, attitudes, and screening uptake. Analyses will be
conducted as intention-to-treat analyses. Additionally, differences between levels of worry and decisional conflict
between groups will be assessed as secondary outcomes
The Cost of Monitoring Alone
We compare the succinctness of two monitoring systems for properties of
infinite traces, namely parallel and regular monitors. Although a parallel
monitor can be turned into an equivalent regular monitor, the cost of this
transformation is a double-exponential blowup in the syntactic size of the
monitors, and a triple-exponential blowup when the goal is a deterministic
monitor. We show that these bounds are tight and that they also hold for
translations between corresponding fragments of Hennessy-Milner logic with
recursion over infinite traces.Comment: 22 page
Effectiveness of a decision aid for colorectal cancer screening on components of informed choice according to educational attainment: a randomised controlled trial
Background
The decision to take up colorectal cancer screening has to be made on informed grounds balancing benefits and harms. Self-administered decision aids can support citizens in making an informed choice. A self-administered web-based decision aid targeting citizens with lower educational attainment has been evaluated within the target population. However, the effectiveness in the general screening population remains unexplored. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a web-based decision aid for colorectal cancer screening on components of informed choice among previous non-participants in colorectal cancer screening.
Methods and findings
The study was designed as a parallel randomised controlled trial among non-participants in colorectal cancer screening in Central Denmark Region (men and women aged 53–74 years). Respondents to baseline and follow-up questionnaires comprised the study population (n = 1,723). The intervention group received the decision aid electronically along with the second reminder. The control group received only the second reminder. The main outcomes (knowledge, attitudes, uptake and decisional conflict) were obtained through questionnaires data and from the Danish Colorectal Cancer Screening Database.
The decision aid increased the uptake rate by 8 percentage points (95% CI: 3.4;12.6) but had no effect on either knowledge (scale score differences: 0.09; 95% CI: -0.05;0.24) or attitudes (0.45; 95% CI: -0.00;0.91). Decisional conflict decreased by 1.69 scale points (95% CI: -3.18;-0.20). The effect was similar across educational attainment levels.
Conclusions
The web-based decision aid offers a feasible way to provide individualised screening information in a "one size fits all" approach that may hold the potential to increase informed CRC screening uptake
Architecting Write-Back Caches and Scatter/Gather I/O
In recent years, much research has been de- voted to the exploration of interrupts; nevertheless, few have explored the study of courseware. Such a claim is usually a practical ambition but is supported by related work in the field. After years of technical research into the transistor, we prove the simulation of simulated annealing, demonstrates the confusing importance of artificial intelligence. In our research, we understand how DNS can be applied to the construction of the UNIVAC computer. This at first glance seems unexpected but is derived from known re- sults
The herbicide glyphosate is a weak inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase in rats
The current work evaluated the inhibitory potency of the herbicide glyphosate (GLP) on acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in male and female rat tissues. The AChE activity in brain was higher (p < 0.05) than those observed in kidney (females: 2.2-fold; males: 1.9-fold), liver (females: 6-fold; males: 6.9-fold) and plasma (females: 14.7-fold; males: 25.3-fold). Enzyme activities were higher in presence of 10 mM GLP compared to those measured at an equimolar concentration of the potent AChE inhibitor dichlorvos (DDVP). Moreover, IC50s for GLP resulted between 6 × 104- and 6.8 × 105-fold higher than those observed for DDVP. In conclusion, GLP is a weak inhibitor of AChE in rats.Fil: Larsen, Karen Elizabeth. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Tandil. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones CientÃficas. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Laboratorio de BiologÃa Celular y EcotoxicologÃa; ArgentinaFil: Lifschitz, Adrian Luis. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Tandil. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones CientÃficas. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Departamento de FisiopatologÃa. Laboratorio de FarmacologÃa; ArgentinaFil: Lanusse, Carlos Edmundo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Tandil. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones CientÃficas. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Departamento de FisiopatologÃa. Laboratorio de FarmacologÃa; ArgentinaFil: Virkel, Guillermo Leon. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Tandil. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comision de Investigaciones CientÃficas. Centro de Investigación Veterinaria de Tandil; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Departamento de FisiopatologÃa. Laboratorio de FarmacologÃa; Argentin
The association between health literacy and colorectal cancer screening uptake in a publicly funded screening program in Denmark: cross-sectional study
There are multiple reasons for not participating in colorectal cancer screening, but the role of health literacy in screening uptake is not well understood.
The aims of this study were to determine the association between health literacy and colorectal cancer screening uptake and to explore whether socioeconomic and -demographic characteristics and worry and attitude variables modify this association.
In a cross-sectional study, 10,030 53–74-year-old randomly selected citizens resident in Central Denmark Region received a questionnaire assessing health literacy using the European Health Literacy Survey Short Scale 16-item. Data on colorectal cancer screening uptake were obtained from the Danish Colorectal Cancer Screening database, and socioeconomic and -demographic data were linked from Statistics Denmark.
The response rate was 71% (n = 7142). Odds ratio (OR) for uptake was 1.06 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.96, 1.19) for problematic health literacy and 1.00 (95% CI: 0.87, 1.16) for inadequate health literacy, when using adequate health literacy as the reference value. The association was not modified by socioeconomic or -demographic characteristics, worry or attitude.
No association was found between health literacy and colorectal cancer screening uptake. Future research needs to clarify which dimensions of health literacy may predict screening uptake and how it is best measured
To what extent does climate explain variations in reported malaria cases in early 20th century Uganda?
Malaria case statistics were analysed for the period 1926 to 1960 to identify inter-annual variations in malaria cases for the Uganda Protectorate. The analysis shows the mid-to-late 1930s to be a period of increased reported cases. After World War II, malaria cases trend down to a relative minimum in the early 1950s, before increasing rapidly after 1953 to the end of the decade. Data for the Western Province confirm these national trends, which at the time were attributed to a wide range of causes, including land development and management schemes, population mobility, interventions and misdiagnosis. Climate was occasionally proposed as a contributor to enhanced case numbers, and unusual precipitation patterns were held responsible; temperature was rarely, if ever, considered. In this study, a dynamical malaria model was driven with available precipitation and temperature data from the period for five stations located across a range of environments in Uganda. In line with the historical data, the simulations produced relatively enhanced transmission in the 1930s, although there is considerable variability between locations. In all locations, malaria transmission was low in the late 1940s and early 1950s, steeply increasing after 1954. Results indicate that past climate variability explains some of the variations in numbers of reported malaria cases. The impact of multiannual variability in temperature, while only on the order of 0.5°C, was sufficient to drive some of the trends observed in the statistics and thus the role of climate was likely underestimated in the contemporary reports. As the elimination campaigns of the 1960s followed this partly climate-driven increase in malaria, this emphasises the need to account for climate when planning and evaluating intervention strategies
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