392 research outputs found
Social Semiotics: Theorising Meaning Making
This chapter outlines a theoretical framework to account for practices of meaning making in health care and sets out an agenda for clinical educational research. It shows how meaning making pervades all aspects of clinical work and how it can be explored and made explicit within a framework derived from social semiotics. The chapter illustrates how the framework produces accounts of the ways in which clinicians make sense of and interact with the world, in situations where they give, review, and imagine care. It explores how clinicians interpret, and communicate through, human bodies, tools, and technologies, giving meaning to, and expressing meaning through, distinct material forms. In so doing, the chapter begins to render visible the semiotic skills that clinicians develop to prepare for, provide, and evaluate clinical care
Conditioning the soil microbiome through plant–soil feedbacks suppresses an aboveground insect pest
Plant science
After-life effects: Living and dead invertebrates differentially affect plants and their associated above- and belowground multitrophic communities
Plant science
Antibiotic use varies substantially among adults: a cross-national study from five European Countries in the ARITMO project (vol 43, pg 453, 2015)
Identification of receptor-type protein tyrosine phosphatase μ as a new marker for osteocytes
Osteocytes are the predominant cells in bone, where they form a cellular network and display important functions in bone homeostasis, phosphate metabolism and mechanical transduction. Several proteins strongly expressed by osteocytes are involved in these processes, e.g., sclerostin, DMP-1, PHEX, FGF23 and MEPE, while others are upregulated during differentiation of osteoblasts into osteocytes, e.g., osteocalcin and E11. The receptor-type protein tyrosine phosphatase µ (RPTPμ) has been described to be expressed in cells which display a cellular network, e.g., endothelial and neuronal cells, and is implied in mechanotransduction. In a capillary outgrowth assay using metatarsals derived from RPTPμ-knock-out/LacZ knock-in mice, we observed that the capillary structures grown out of the metatarsals were stained blue, as expected. Surprisingly, cells within the metatarsal bone tissue were positive for LacZ activity as well, indicating that RPTPμ is also expressed by osteocytes. Subsequent histochemical analysis showed that within bone, RPTPμ is expressed exclusively in early-stage osteocytes. Analysis of bone marrow cell cultures revealed that osteocytes are present in the nodules and an enzymatic assay enabled the quantification of the amount of osteocytes. No apparent bone phenotype was observed when tibiae of RPTPμ-knock-out/LacZ knock-in mice were analyzed by μCT at several time points during aging, although a significant reduction in cortical bone was observed in RPTPμ-knock-out/LacZ knock-in mice at 20 weeks. Changes in trabecular bon
Belowground DNA-based techniques: untangling the network of plant root interactions
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Systemic antibiotic prescribing to paediatric outpatients in 5 European countries: A population-based cohort study
Background: To describe the utilisation of antibiotics in children and adolescents across 5 European countries based on the same drug utilisation measures and age groups. Special attention was given to age-group-specific distributions of antibiotic subgroups, since comparison in this regard between countries is lacking so far.Methods: Outpatient paediatric prescriptions of systemic antibiotics during the years 2005-2008 were analysed using health care databases from the UK, the Netherlands, Denmark, Italy and Germany. Annual antibiotic prescription rates per 1,000 person years were estimated for each database and stratified by age (≤4, 5-9, 10-14, 15-18 years). Age-group-specific distributions of antibiotic subgroups were calculated for 2008.Results: With 957 prescriptions per 1000 person years, the highest annual prescription rate in the year 2008 was found in the Italian region Emilia Romagna followed by Germany (561), the UK (555), Denmark (481) and the Netherlands (294). Seasonal peaks during winter months were most pronounced in countries with high utilisation. Age-group-specific use varied substantially between countries with regard to total prescribing and distributions of antibiotic subgroups. However, prescription rates were highest among children in the age group ≤4 years in all countries, predominantly due to high use of broad s
Long-term effects of treatment and response in patients with chronic hepatitis C on quality of life. An international, multicenter, randomized, controlled study
Background: Hepatitis C decreases health related quality of life (HRQL) which is further diminished by antiviral therapy. HRQL improves after successful treatment. This trial explores the course of and factors associated with HRQL in patients given individualized or standard treatment based on early treatment response (Ditto-study).
Methods: The Short Form (SF)-36 Health Survey was administered at baseline (n = 192) and 24 weeks after the end of therapy (n = 128).
Results: At baseline HRQL was influenced by age, participating center, severity of liver disease and income. Exploring the course of HRQL (scores at follow up minus baseline), only the dimension general health increased. In this dimension patients with a relapse or sustained response differed from non-responders. Men and women differed in the dimension bodily pain. Treatment schedule did not influence the course of HRQL.
Conclusions: Main determinants of HRQL were severity of liver disease, age, gender, participating center and response to treatment. Our results do not exclude a more profound negative impact of individualized treatment compared to standard, possibly caused by higher doses and extended treatment duration in the individualized group. Antiviral therapy might have a more intense and more prolonged negative impact on females
Transcribing screen-capture data : the process of developing a transcription system for multi-modal text-based data
Transcription of audio data is widespread in qualitative research, with transcription of video data also becoming common. Online data is now being collected using screen-capture or video software, which then needs transcribing. This paper draws together literature on transcription of spoken interaction and highlights key transcription principles, namely reflecting the methodological approach, readability, accessibility, and usability. These principles provide a framework for developing a transcription system for multi-modal text-based data. The process of developing a transcription system for data from Facebook chat is described and reflected on. Key issues in the transcription of multi-modal text-based data are discussed, and examples provided of how these were overcome when developing the transcription system
'Use of antipsychotics in children and adolescents: a picture from the ARITMO population-based European cohort study'
Aims. Prevalence of the use of antipsychotics (APs) in the paediatric population is globally
increasing. The aim of this study was to describe multinational trends and patterns in AP
use in children and adolescents in Europe.
Methods. This was a dynamic retrospective cohort study comprising all children and adolescents
(⩽18 years of age). Data were extracted from five population-based electronic healthcare databases in Europe (Denmark, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and United Kingdom) from 2000
to 2010. Yearly prevalence and incidence of AP use was expressed per 1000 person-years (PYs).
Results. Prevalence increased from 1.44 to 3.41/1000 PYs (2008) in Denmark and from 2.07
to 4.35/1000 PYs in the NL (2009), moderately increased from 2.8 to 3.24/1000 in UK (2009)
and from 1.53 to 1.74/1000 PYs in Germany (2008) and remained low from 0.61 to 0.34/1000
PYs in Italy (2010). Similarly, incidence rates increased from 0.69 to 1.52/1000 PYs in
Denmark and from 0.86 to 1.49/1000 PYs in the NL, stabilised from 2.29 to 2.37/1000 PYs
in the UK and from 0.79 to 0.80/1000 PYs in Germany and remained low from 0.32 to
0.2/1000 PYs in Italy. AP use was highest in 15–18 year olds and in boys compared to
girls. Yet, the use observed in the 5–9 year olds was found to be comparatively high in the
NL. Prescriptions of second generation APs, especially risperidone, were privileged but the
first generation APs were still prescribed in the youngest.
Conclusions. A steady increase in AP use in children and adolescents was observed essentially
in the NL and Denmark. The use in Germany and Italy was lowest among countries. The use
of APs under 9 years of age underlines their off-label use and should be carefully monitored as
the risk/benefit ratio of these medications remains unclear in young children. AP use was
altogether lower in Europe as compared to that reported in North America
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