92 research outputs found
Simultaneous measurement of Young's modulus and Poisson's ratio at microscale with two-modes scanning microdeformation microscopy
International audienceIn this paper, we present a technique to simultaneously measure Young's modulus E and Poisson's ratio ν of an isotropic material at local scale in a single experiment. Using several flexural modes of vibration of the scanning microdeformation microscope, it is possible to decouple the contributions of E and ν from the first two resonant frequencies, thereby providing access to both the elastic parameters. The proposed approach is applied to SU8 thin films deposited on silicon substrates and provides values consistent with those from the literature
Assessment of left ventricular recovery in Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy using 2D strain echocardiography
Contre la désertification
De la convention internationale à l'élaboration participative des programmes d'action nationaux
Comme toutes les conventions internationales, la convention sur la désertification est un texte consensuel qui n'indique pas de façon explicite comment mettre en oeuvre toutes ses dispositions. Pourtant, chaque pays affecté est tenu d'élaborer et d'appliquer des programmes d'action nationaux qui doivent être appliqués par les acteurs les plus concernés, les communautés locales.
Cet ouvrage propose une démarche pour l'élaboration participative de ces programmes d'action. Il est la synthèse des résultats et des recommandations de la Conférence sous-régionale de vulgarisation de la Convention de lutte contre la désertification et de mise en oeuvre du Plan d'action du RIOD (Réseau international des ONG sur la désertification) en mai 1996. Cette conférence s'inscrivait dans une série de quatre rencontres sous-régionales préconisées afin de faire connaître la convention à un plus grand nombre d'acteurs.
Masse Lo - Yacine Diagne - Emmanuel Seck - Série Etudes et recherches n° 190-191
ISBN : 92-9130-0187 - Enda-Editions - Boîte Postale 3370 - Dakar - SENEGAL
Tél.: (221) 22-42-29
Télécopie : (221) 23-51-57
E-mail : [email protected].
Prix : 100 FF frais de port inclus pour les pays du Nord - 2 000 FCFA (frais de port : 800 FCFA) pour les pays du SudDe la convention international
Expanding the prevention armamentarium portfolio: A framework for promoting HIV-conversant communities within a complex, adaptive epidemiological landscape
The article describes a design journey that culminated in an HIV-Conversant Community Framework that is now being piloted in
the Limpopo Province of South Africa. The objective of the initiative is to reduce the aggregate community viral load by building
capacity at multiple scales that strengthens peoples’ HIV-related navigational skill sets—while simultaneously opening a ‘chronic
situation’ schema. The framework design is based upon a transdisciplinary methodological combination that synthesises ideas
and constructs from complexity science and the management sciences as a vehicle through which to re-conceptualise HIV
prevention. This resulted in a prototype that included the following constructs: managing HIV-prevention in a complex,
adaptive epidemiological landscape; problematising and increasing the scope of the HIV knowledge armamentarium through
education that focuses on the viral load and Langerhans cells; disruptive innovation and safe-fail probes followed by the
facilitation of path creations and pattern management implementation techniques. These constructs are underpinned by a
‘middle-ground’ prevention approach which is designed to bridge the prevention ‘fault line’, enabling a multi-ontology
conceptualisation of the challenge to be developed
Expression of Bcl-2 in node-negative breast cancer is associated with various prognostic factors, but does not predict response to one course of perioperative chemotherapy.
The aim of this study was to assess relationships between Bcl-2 expression, response to chemotherapy and a number of pathological and biological tumour parameters in premenopausal, lymph node-negative breast cancer patients. Expression of Bcl-2 was determined using immunohistochemistry on paraffin-embedded sections in a series of 441 premenopausal, lymph node-negative breast cancers of patients randomised to receive perioperative chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide) or no perioperative chemotherapy. Immunohistochemistry of Bcl-2 was evaluated by scoring both staining intensity (0-3) and number of positive cells (0-2). Using these scores tumours were grouped into categories 0-6. It was found that 9.2% of the tumours were completely negative (0), 17.2% weakly (1 + 2), 41.6% moderately (3 + 4) and 31.9% strongly positive (5 + 6) for Bcl-2. A positive correlation was found between high Bcl-2 expression and oestrogen (P < 0.001) and progesterone receptor positivity (P < 0.001) and low tumour grade (P < 0.001), whereas high Bcl-2 expression was negatively correlated with p53 (P < 0.001) and c-erb-B-2 positively (P < 0.001), high Ki-67 index (P < 0.001), mitotic index (P < 0.001) and large tumour size (P = 0.006). Patients with tumours expressing high levels of Bcl-2 (overall score 3-6) had a significantly better disease-free (P = 0.004) and overall (P = 0.009) survival. However, in a multivariate model this association no longer remained significant. There was a trend for an effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on disease-free survival both for patients with Bcl-2-positive (HR-0.61, 95% CI 0.35-1.06, P = 0.07) and negative (HR = 0.55, 95% CI 0.27-1.12, P = 0.09) breast tumours at a median follow-up of 49 months. The level of Bcl-2 expression does not seem to predict response to perioperative chemotherapy in premenopausal, lymph node-negative breast cancer patients. High levels of Bcl-2 are preferentially expressed in well-differentiated tumours and are associated with favourable prognosis. However, Bcl-2 expression is not an independent prognostic factor in this patient series
Re-envisioning health promotion: Thinking and acting salutogenically towards equity for historically resilient communities
This paper explores how the salutogenic theory can enable us to re-envision health promotion work with marginalized communities, towards an approach that acknowledges and honours their resilience. We use the three core concepts in Antonovsky’s salutogenic model of health – sense of coherence, generalized resistance resources and specific resistance resources – to explore the theory’s relevance to health equity, thus presenting new opportunities for how we might radically re-evaluate current health promotion approaches. We conclude that a more equitable health promotion requires increased participation of marginalized communities in shaping their futures and suggest a new model for historically grounded salutogenic health promotion.publishedVersio
Black Lives Matter in health promotion: moving from unspoken to outspoken
Racism is a public health crisis. Black communities (including Africans, the African diaspora and people of African descent) experience worse health outcomes as demonstrated by almost any measure of health and wellbeing—e.g. life expectancy; disease prevalence; maternal mortality rates. While health promotion has its foundation in promoting equity and social justice, it is clear that however well-intended, we are not affecting meaningful change for Black communities quickly enough. Through this article, we outline the intersection of social determinants of health and anti-Black racism. We describe how in the first 8 months of 2020 Black communities around the globe have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19, while also having to respond to new instances of police brutality. We assert that the time has come for health promotion to stop neutralizing the specific needs of Black communities into unspoken ‘good intentions’. Instead, we offer some concrete ways for the field to become outspoken, intentional and honest in acknowledging what it will take to radically shift how we promote health and wellbeing for Black people.publishedVersio
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District Health Managers' Perceptions of Supervision in Malawi and Tanzania.
Mid-level cadres are being used to address human resource shortages in many African contexts, but insufficient and ineffective human resource management is compromising their performance. Supervision plays a key role in performance and motivation, but is frequently characterised by periodic inspection and control, rather than support and feedback to improve performance. This paper explores the perceptions of district health management teams in Tanzania and Malawi on their role as supervisors and on the challenges to effective supervision at the district level. This qualitative study took place as part of a broader project, "Health Systems Strengthening for Equity: The Power and Potential of Mid-Level Providers". Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 20 district health management team personnel in Malawi and 37 council health team members in Tanzania. The interviews covered a range of human resource management issues, including supervision and performance assessment, staff job descriptions and roles, motivation and working conditions. Participants displayed varying attitudes to the nature and purpose of the supervision process. Much of the discourse in Malawi centred on inspection and control, while interviewees in Tanzania were more likely to articulate a paradigm characterised by support and improvement. In both countries, facility level performance metrics dominated. The lack of competency-based indicators or clear standards to assess individual health worker performance were considered problematic. Shortages of staff, at both district and facility level, were described as a major impediment to carrying out regular supervisory visits. Other challenges included conflicting and multiple responsibilities of district health team staff and financial constraints. Supervision is a central component of effective human resource management. Policy level attention is crucial to ensure a systematic, structured process that is based on common understandings of the role and purpose of supervision. This is particularly important in a context where the majority of staff are mid-level cadres for whom regulation and guidelines may not be as formalised or well-developed as for traditional cadres, such as registered nurses and medical doctors. Supervision needs to be adequately resourced and supported in order to improve performance and retention at the district level
Mixed method evaluation of the CEBHA+ integrated knowledge translation approach : a protocol
CITATION: Pfadenhauer, L. M., et al. 2021. Mixed method evaluation of the CEBHA+ integrated knowledge translation approach : a protocol. Health Research Policy and Systems, 19:7, doi:10.1186/s12961-020-00675-w.The original publication is available at https://health-policy-systems.biomedcentral.comBackground: The Collaboration for Evidence-based Healthcare and Public Health in Africa (CEBHA+) is a research
consortium concerned with the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of non-communicable diseases. CEBHA+ seeks
to engage policymakers and practitioners throughout the research process in order to build lasting relationships,
enhance evidence uptake, and create long-term capacity among partner institutions in Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda,
South Africa and Uganda in collaboration with two German universities. This integrated knowledge translation (IKT)
approach includes the formal development, implementation and evaluation of country specific IKT strategies.
Methods: We have conceptualised the CEBHA+ IKT approach as a complex intervention in a complex system. We
will employ a comparative case study (CCS) design and mixed methods to facilitate an in-depth evaluation. We will
use quantitative surveys, qualitative interviews, quarterly updates, and a policy document analysis to capture the process
and outcomes of IKT across the African CEBHA+ partner sites. We will conduct an early stage (early 2020) and a
late-stage evaluation (early 2022), triangulate the data collected with various methods at each site and subsequently
compare our findings across the five sites.
Discussion: Evaluating a complex intervention such as the CEBHA+ IKT approach is complicated, even more so
when undertaken across five diverse countries. Despite conceptual, methodological and practical challenges, our
comparative case study addresses important evidence gaps: While involving decision-makers in the research process
is gaining traction worldwide, we still know very little regarding (i) whether this approach really makes a difference
to evidence uptake, (ii) the mechanisms that make IKT successful, and (iii) relevant differences across socio-cultural
contexts. The evaluation described here is intended to provide relevant insights on all of these aspects, notably in
countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, and is expected to contribute to the science of IKT overall.https://health-policy-systems.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12961-020-00675-wPublisher's versio
Deconstructing hegemonic epistemologies: an urgent call for anti-racist scholarship for health promotion and Black lives
Process evaluation in the field: global learnings from seven implementation research hypertension projects in low-and middle-income countries
Background
Process evaluation is increasingly recognized as an important component of effective implementation research and yet, there has been surprisingly little work to understand what constitutes best practice. Researchers use different methodologies describing causal pathways and understanding barriers and facilitators to implementation of interventions in diverse contexts and settings. We report on challenges and lessons learned from undertaking process evaluation of seven hypertension intervention trials funded through the Global Alliance of Chronic Diseases (GACD).
Methods
Preliminary data collected from the GACD hypertension teams in 2015 were used to inform a template for data collection. Case study themes included: (1) description of the intervention, (2) objectives of the process evaluation, (3) methods including theoretical basis, (4) main findings of the study and the process evaluation, (5) implications for the project, policy and research practice and (6) lessons for future process evaluations. The information was summarized and reported descriptively and narratively and key lessons were identified.
Results
The case studies were from low- and middle-income countries and Indigenous communities in Canada. They were implementation research projects with intervention arm. Six theoretical approaches were used but most comprised of mixed-methods approaches. Each of the process evaluations generated findings on whether interventions were implemented with fidelity, the extent of capacity building, contextual factors and the extent to which relationships between researchers and community impacted on intervention implementation. The most important learning was that although process evaluation is time consuming, it enhances understanding of factors affecting implementation of complex interventions. The research highlighted the need to initiate process evaluations early on in the project, to help guide design of the intervention; and the importance of effective communication between researchers responsible for trial implementation, process evaluation and outcome evaluation.
Conclusion
This research demonstrates the important role of process evaluation in understanding implementation process of complex interventions. This can help to highlight a broad range of system requirements such as new policies and capacity building to support implementation. Process evaluation is crucial in understanding contextual factors that may impact intervention implementation which is important in considering whether or not the intervention can be translated to other contexts
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