3,533 research outputs found
Therapeutic radiographers' perceptions of the barriers and enablers to effective smoking cessation support
Introduction: Tobacco smoking during and post radiotherapy is associated with increased treatment
toxicity and increased cancer related mortality. Routine delivery of smoking cessation advice is inconsistent
in practice. This study identifies the key barriers and facilitators to the provision of effective
smoking cessation conversations in radiotherapy practice.
Methods: A baseline questionnaire (n ¼ 43) was used to identify current practice, barriers and facilitators
to smoking cessation in radiotherapy and to inform a topic guide for follow up focus groups (n ¼ 5).
Ethical approval was obtained through the 4 NHS trusts and the Health Research Authority. Focus group
transcription was coded by two researchers.
Results: Therapeutic Radiographers initiate health behaviour conversations with patients; there are a
number of factors that facilitate the likelihood of a health behaviour conversation; indication that a
patient smokes anatomical site and presence of acute effects. Key barriers to smoking cessation provision
include; lack of training, limited knowledge, limitations as a result of poor clinical infrastructure, local
culture and perceptions that patients do not prioritise smoking cessation during treatment.
Conclusion: Therapeutic Radiographers have the motivation to provide smoking cessation advice,
however they require further training to develop knowledge and skills in relation to benefits of smoking
cessation and cessation strategies. Therapeutic Radiographers also expect that patients will respond
negatively to smoking cessation advice, and that this might be damaging to the therapeutic relationship.
Departmental culture and trust infrastructure can also significantly inhibit the provision of smoking
cessation in radiotherapy practice and further support to implement NICE guidance is required
In search of phylogenetic congruence between molecular and morphological data in bryozoans with extreme adult skeletal heteromorphy
peerreview_statement: The publishing and review policy for this title is described in its Aims & Scope. aims_and_scope_url: http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?show=aimsScope&journalCode=tsab20© Crown Copyright 2015. This document is the author's final accepted/submitted version of the journal article. You are advised to consult the publisher's version if you wish to cite from it
Spin Star as Switch for Quantum Networks
Quantum state transfer is an important task in quantum information
processing. It is known that one can engineer the couplings of a
one-dimensional spin chain to achieve the goal of perfect state transfer. To
leverage the value of these spin chains, a spin star is potentially useful for
connecting different parts of a quantum network. In this work, we extend the
spin-chain engineering problem to the problems with a topology of a star
network. We show that a permanently coupled spin star can function as a network
switch for transferring quantum states selectively from one node to another by
varying the local potentials only. Together with one-dimensional chains, this
result allows applications of quantum state transfer be applied to more general
quantum networks.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figur
The languages of peace during the French religious wars
The desirability of peace was a common topos in sixteenth-century political rhetoric, and the duty of the king to uphold the peace for the benefit of his subjects was also a long-established tradition. However, the peculiar circumstances of the French religious wars, and the preferred royal policy of pacification, galvanized impassioned debate among both those who supported and those who opposed confessional coexistence. This article looks at the diverse ways in which peace was viewed during the religious wars through an exploration of language and context. It draws not only on the pronouncements of the crown and its officials, and of poets and jurists, but also on those of local communities and confessional groups. Opinion was not just divided along religious lines; political imperatives, philosophical positions and local conditions all came into play in the arguments deployed. The variegated languages of peace provide a social and cultural dimension for the contested nature of sixteenth-century French politics. However, they could not restore harmony to a war-torn and divided kingdom
Estimation of an image derived input function with MR-defined carotid arteries in FDG-PET human studies using a novel partial volume correction method
Kinetic analysis of (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography data requires an accurate knowledge the arterial input function. The gold standard method to measure the arterial input function requires collection of arterial blood samples and is an invasive method. Measuring an image derived input function is a non-invasive alternative but is challenging due to partial volume effects caused by the limited spatial resolution of the positron emission tomography scanners. In this work, a practical image derived input function extraction method is presented, which only requires segmentation of the carotid arteries from MR images. The simulation study results showed that at least 92% of the true intensity could be recovered after the partial volume correction. Results from 19 subjects showed that the mean cerebral metabolic rate of glucose calculated using arterial samples and partial volume corrected image derived input function were 26.9 and 25.4 mg/min/100 g, respectively, for the grey matter and 7.2 and 6.7 mg/min/100 g for the white matter. No significant difference in the estimated cerebral metabolic rate of glucose values was observed between arterial samples and corrected image derived input function (p > 0.12 for grey matter and white matter). Hence, the presented image derived input function extraction method can be a practical alternative to noninvasively analyze dynamic (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose data without the need for blood sampling
HFE mutations, iron deficiency and overload in 10 500 blood donors
People with genetic haemochromatosis (GH) accumulate iron from excessive dietary absorption. In populations of northern European origin, over 90% of patients are homozygous for the C282Y mutation of the HFE gene. While about 1 in 200 people in the general population have this genotype the proportion who develop clinical haemochromatosis is not known. The influence of HFE genotype on iron status was investigated in 10 556 blood donors. The allele frequencies of the C282Y and H63D mutations were
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