24,455 research outputs found
Interventions targeted at primary care practitioners to improve the identification and referral of patients with co-morbid obesity: a realist review protocol
<b>Background </b>Obesity is one of the most significant public health challenges in the developed world. Recent policy has suggested that more can be done in primary care to support adults with obesity. In particular, general practitioners (GPs) and practice nurses (PNs) could improve the identification and referral of adults with obesity to appropriate weight management services. Previous interventions targeted at primary care practitioners in this area have had mixed results, suggesting a more complex interplay between patients, practitioners, and systems. The objectives of this review are (i) to identify the underlying āprogramme theoryā of interventions targeted at primary care practitioners to improve the identification and referral of adults with obesity and (ii) to explore how and why GPs and PNs identify and refer individuals with obesity, particularly in the context of weight-related co-morbidity. This protocol will explain the rationale for using a realist review approach and outline the key steps in this process. <p></p>
<b>Methods</b> Realist review is a theory-led approach to knowledge synthesis that provides an explanatory analysis aimed at discerning what works, for whom, in what circumstances, how, and why. In this review, scoping interviews with key stakeholders involved in the planning and delivery of adult weight management services in Scotland helped to inform the identification of formal theories - from psychology, sociology, and implementation science - that will be tested as the review progresses. A comprehensive search strategy is described, including scope for iterative searching. Data analysis is outlined in three stages (describing context-mechanism-outcome configurations, exploring patterns in these configurations, and developing and testing middle-range theories, informed by the formal theories previously identified), culminating in the production of explanatory programme theory that considers individual, interpersonal, and institutional/systems-level components. <p></p>
<b>Discussion </b>This is the first realist review that we are aware of looking at interventions targeted at primary care practitioners to improve the weight management of adults with obesity. Engagement with stakeholders at an early stage is a unique feature of realist review. This shapes the scope of the review, identification of candidate theories and dissemination strategies. The findings of this review will inform policy and future interventions. Systematic review registration PROSPERO CRD4201400939
Inference for Partially Observed Multitype Branching Processes and Ecological Applications
Multitype branching processes with immigration in one type are used to model
the dynamics of stage-structured plant populations. Parametric inference is
first carried out when count data of all types are observed. Statistical
identifiability is proved together with derivation of consistent and
asymptotically Gaussian estimators for all the parameters ruling the population
dynamics model. However, for many ecological data, some stages (i.e. types)
cannot be observed in practice. We study which mechanisms can still be
estimated given the model and the data available in this context. Parametric
inference is investigated in the case of Poisson distributions. We prove that
identifiability holds for only a subset of the parameter set depend- ing on the
number of generations observed, together with consistent and asymptotic
properties of estimators. Finally, simulations are performed to study the
behaviour of the estimators when the model is no longer Poisson. Quite good
results are obtained for a large class of models with distributions having mean
and variance within the same order of magnitude, leading to some stability
results with respect to the Poisson assumption.Comment: 31 pages, 1 figur
Position-specific induction of ectopic limbs in non-regenerating blastemas on axolotl forelimbs.
Ectopic retinoic acid (RA) has been hypothesized to reprogram the positional identity of cells in developing and regenerating limbs to a single positional value corresponding to the posterior-ventral-proximal (PVPr) position on the limb. We tested this hypothesis by using RA to reprogram the information of blastema cells that were induced to form at different positions around the limb circumference. We observed that RA treatment of blastemas in anterior and dorsal locations, but not posterior and ventral locations, resulted in the induction of complete ectopic limbs. These position-specific differences in limb induction are probably due to differences in the positional disparity between the RA-reprogrammed blastema cells and the cells at the periphery of the wound. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that RA treatment reprograms the information in blastema cells to the PVPr position on the limb, since anterior and dorsal positions have the largest disparity and posterior and ventral have the smallest disparity from the PVPr identity
The role of primary care in adult weight management: qualitative interviews with key stakeholders in weight management services
Background:
Primary care has a key role to play in the prevention and management of obesity, but there remain barriers to engagement in weight management by primary care practitioners. The aim of this study was to explore the views of key stakeholders in adult weight management services on the role of primary care in adult weight management.
Methods:
Qualitative study involving semi-structured interviews with nine senior dietitians involved in NHS weight management from seven Scottish health boards. Transcripts were analysed using an inductive thematic approach.
Results:
A range of tensions were apparent within three key themes: weight management service issues, the role of primary care, and communication with primary care. For weight management services, these tensions were around funding, the management model of obesity, and how to configure access to services. For primary care, they were around what primary care should be doing, who should be doing it, and where this activity should fit within wider weight management policy. With regard to communication between weight management services and primary care, there were tensions related to the approach taken (locally adapted versus centralised), the message being communicated (weight loss versus wellbeing), and the response from practitioners (engagement versus resistance).
Conclusions:
Primary care can do more to support adult weight management, but this requires better engagement and communication with weight management services, to overcome the tensions highlighted in this study. This, in turn, requires more secure, sustained funding. The example of smoking cessation in the UK, where there is a network of well-resourced NHS Stop Smoking Services, accessible via different means, could be a model to follow
Modeling Turbulent Flow in Stirred Tanks with CFD: The Influence of the Modeling Approach, Turbulence Model and Numerical Scheme
Single phase turbulent flow in a tank stirred by a down- and an up-pumping pitched blade turbine has been
simulated using CFD. The effect of the modeling approach, discretization scheme and turbulence model on mean
velocities, turbulent kinetic energy and global quantities, such as the power and circulation numbers, has been
investigated. The results have been validated by LDV data. The stationary and time-dependent modeling
approaches were found to have little effect on the turbulent flow, however the choice of the numerical scheme
was found to be important, especially for the predicted turbulent kinetic energy. A first order method was found
to highly underestimate LDV data compared with higher order methods. The type of the turbulence model was
limited to the k-e and RNG models due to convergence difficulties encountered with a Reynolds Stress Model
(RSM) and there was found to be little effect of these models on the mean flow and turbulent kinetic energy.
This latter quantity was found to be largely under predicted in the discharge region of the down-pumping
impeller in comparison with LDV data. Better agreement was found for the up-pumping pitched blade turbine.
Estimated power numbers were found generally to be in good agreement for the down- and up-pumping data.
However, the circulation number tended to be over predicted by about 30% and 40% for the down- and uppumping
agitators, respectively
MASH1 activates expression of the paired homeodomain transcription factor Phox2a, and couples pan-neuronal and subtype-specific components of autonomic neuronal identity
We have investigated the genetic circuitry underlying the determination of neuronal identity, using mammalian peripheral autonomic neurons as a model system. Previously, we showed that treatment of neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) with bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) leads to an induction of MASH1 expression and consequent autonomic neuronal differentiation. We now show that BMP2 also induces expression of the paired homeodomain transcription factor Phox2a, and the GDNF/NTN signalling receptor tyrosine kinase c-RET. Constitutive expression of MASH1 in NCSCs from a retroviral vector, in the absence of exogenous BMP2, induces expression of both Phox2a and c-RET in a large fraction of infected colonies, and also promotes morphological neuronal differentiation and expression of pan-neuronal markers. In vivo, expression of Phox2a in autonomic ganglia is strongly reduced in Mash1 -/- embryos. These loss- and gain-of-function data suggest that MASH1 positively regulates expression of Phox2a, either directly or indirectly. Constitutive expression of Phox2a, by contrast to MASH1, fails to induce expression of neuronal markers or a neuronal morphology, but does induce expression of c-RET. These data suggest that MASH1 couples expression of pan-neuronal and subtype-specific components of autonomic neuronal identity, and support the general idea that identity is established by combining subprograms involving cascades of transcription factors, which specify distinct components of neuronal phenotype
Double Bottom Line Progress Report: Assessing Social Impact in Double Bottom Line Ventures, Methods Catalog
Outlines methods for social entrepreneurs and their investors to define, measure and communicate social impact and return in early-stage ventures
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