320 research outputs found
A qualitative study of primary care professionalsâ views of case finding for depression in patients with diabetes or coronary heart disease in the UK
<p>Background
Routinely conducting case finding (also commonly referred to as screening) in patients with chronic illness for depression in primary care appears to have little impact. We explored the views and experiences of primary care nurses, doctors and managers to understand how the implementation of case finding/screening might impact on its effectiveness.</p>
<p>Methods
Two complementary qualitative focus group studies of primary care professionals including nurses, doctors and managers, in five primary care practices and five Community Health Partnerships, were conducted in Scotland.</p>
<p>Results
We identified several features of the way case finding/screening was implemented that may lead to systematic under-detection of depression. These included obstacles to incorporating case finding/screening into a clinical review consultation; a perception of replacing individualised care with mechanistic assessment, and a disconnection for nurses between management of physical and mental health. Far from being a standardised process that encouraged detection of depression, participants described case finding/screening as being conducted in a way which biased it towards negative responses, and for nurses, it was an uncomfortable task for which they lacked the necessary skills to provide immediate support to patients at the time of diagnosis.</p>
<p>Conclusion
The introduction of case finding/screening for depression into routine chronic illness management is not straightforward. Routinized case finding/screening for depression can be implemented in ways that may be counterproductive to engagement (particularly by nurses), with the mental health needs of patients living with long term conditions. If case finding/screening or engagement with mental health problems is to be promoted, primary care nurses require more training to increase their confidence in raising and dealing with mental health issues and GPs and nurses need to work collectively to develop the relational work required to promote cognitive participation in case finding/screening.</p>
HETE Observations of the Gamma-Ray Burst GRB030329: Evidence for an Underlying Soft X-ray Component
An exceptionally intense gamma-ray burst, GRB030329, was detected and
localized by the instruments on board the High Energy Transient Explorer
satellite (HETE) at 11:37:14 UT on 29 March 2003. The burst consisted of two
\~10s pulses of roughly equal brightness and an X-ray tail lasting >100s. The
energy fluence in the 30-400 keV energy band was 1.08e-4 erg/cm2, making
GRB030329 one of the brightest GRBs ever detected. Communication of a 2 arcmin
error box 73 minutes after the burst allowed the rapid detection of a
counterpart in the optical, X-ray, radio and the ensuing discovery of a
supernova with most unusual characteristics. Analyses of the burst lightcurves
reveal the presence of a distinct, bright, soft X-ray component underlying the
main GRB: the 2-10 keV fluence of this component is ~7e-6 erg/cm2. The main
pulses of GRB030329 were preceded by two soft, faint, non-thermal bumps. We
present details of the HETE observations of GRB030329.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, to be published in ApJ 617, no. 2 (10 December
2004). Referee comments have been incorporated; results of improved spectral
analysis are include
Full potential LAPW calculation of electron momentum density and related properties of Li
Electron momentum density and Compton profiles in Lithium along , and directions are calculated using Full-Potential Linear
Augmented Plane Wave basis within generalized gradient approximation. The
profiles have been corrected for correlations with Lam-Platzman formulation
using self-consistent charge density. The first and second derivatives of
Compton profiles are studied to investigate the Fermi surface breaks. Decent
agreement is observed between recent experimental and our calculated values.
Our values for the derivatives are found to be in better agreement with
experiments than earlier theoretical results. Two-photon momentum density and
one- and two-dimensional angular correlation of positron annihilation radiation
are also calculated within the same formalism and including the
electron-positron enhancement factor.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures TO appear in Physical Review
HETE-2 Observation of two gamma-ray bursts at z > 3
GRB 020124 and GRB 030323 constitute half the sample of gamma-ray bursts with
a measured redshift greater than 3. This paper presents the temporal and
spectral properties of these two gamma-ray bursts detected and localized with
HETE-2. While they have nearly identical redshifts (z=3.20 for GRB 020124, and
z=3.37 for GRB 030323), these two GRBs span about an order of magnitude in
fluence, thus sampling distinct regions of the GRB luminosity function. The
properties of these two bursts are compared with those of the bulk of the GRB
population detected by HETE-2. We also discuss the energetics of GRB 020124 and
GRB 030323 and show that they are compatible with the Epeak - Eiso relation
discovered by Amati et al. (2002). Finally, we compute the maximum redshifts at
which these bursts could have been detected by HETE-2 and we address various
issues connected with the detection and localization of high-z GRBs.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Ap
Global Characteristics of X-Ray Flashes and X-Ray-Rich GRBs Observed by HETE-2
We describe and discuss the global properties of 45 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs)
observed by HETE-2 during the first three years of its mission, focusing on the
properties of X-Ray Flashes (XRFs) and X-ray-rich GRBs (XRRs). We find that the
numbers of XRFs, XRRs, and GRBs are comparable. We find that the durations and
the sky distributions of XRFs and XRRs are similar to those of GRBs. We also
find that the spectral properties of XRFs and XRRs are similar to those of
GRBs, except that the values of the peak energy of the
burst spectrum in , the peak energy flux \Fp, and the energy
fluence of XRFs are much smaller -- and those of XRRs are smaller -- than
those of GRBs. Finally, we find that the distributions of all three kinds of
bursts form a continuum in the [(2-30 keV),(30-400) keV]-plane, the
[(2-400 keV), ]-plane, and the [(50-300 keV),
]-plane. These results provide strong evidence that all three
kinds of bursts arise from the same phenomenon.Comment: 33 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Ap
Search for a new gauge boson in the Experiment (APEX)
We present a search at Jefferson Laboratory for new forces mediated by
sub-GeV vector bosons with weak coupling to electrons. Such a
particle can be produced in electron-nucleus fixed-target scattering and
then decay to an pair, producing a narrow resonance in the QED trident
spectrum. Using APEX test run data, we searched in the mass range 175--250 MeV,
found no evidence for an reaction, and set an upper limit of
. Our findings demonstrate that fixed-target
searches can explore a new, wide, and important range of masses and couplings
for sub-GeV forces.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, references adde
The social cognition of medical knowledge, with special reference to childhood epilepsy
This paper arose out of an engagement in medical communication courses at a Gulf university. It deploys a theoretical framework derived from a (critical) sociocognitive approach to discourse analysis in order to investigate three aspects of medical discourse relating to childhood epilepsy: the cognitive processes that are entailed in relating different types of medical knowledge to their communicative context; the types of medical knowledge that are constituted in the three different text types analysed; and the relationship between these different types of medical knowledge and the discursive features of each text type. The paper argues that there is a cognitive dimension to the human experience of understanding and talking about one specialized from of medical knowledge. It recommends that texts be studied in medical communication courses not just in terms of their discrete formal features but also critically, in terms of the knowledge which they produce, transmit and reproduce
Spectral Lag Relations in GRB Pulses Detected with HETE-2
Using a pulse-fit method, we investigate the spectral lags between the
traditional gamma-ray band (50-400 keV) and the X-ray band (6-25 keV) for 8
GRBs with known redshifts (GRB 010921, GRB 020124, GRB 020127, GRB 021211, GRB
030528, GRB 040924, GRB 041006, GRB 050408) detected with the WXM and FREGATE
instruments aboard the HETE-2 satellite. We find several relations for the
individual GRB pulses between the spectral lag and other observables, such as
the luminosity, pulse duration, and peak energy (Epeak). The obtained results
are consistent with those for BATSE, indicating that the BATSE correlations are
still valid at lower energies (6-25 keV). Furthermore, we find that the photon
energy dependence for the spectral lags can reconcile the simple curvature
effect model. We discuss the implication of these results from various points
of view.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for the publication in PASJ (minor
corrections
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