7 research outputs found

    Scaling-up Health-Arts Programmes : the largest study in the world bringing arts-based mental health interventions into a national health service

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    The Scaling-up Health-Arts Programme: Implementation and Effectiveness Research (SHAPER) project is the world's largest hybrid study on the impact of the arts on mental health embedded into a national healthcare system. This programme, funded by the Wellcome Trust, aims to study the impact and the scalability of the arts as an intervention for mental health. The programme will be delivered by a team of clinicians, research scientists, charities, artists, patients and healthcare professionals in the UK's National Health Service (NHS) and the community, spanning academia, the NHS and the charity sector. SHAPER consists of three studies - Melodies for Mums, Dance for Parkinson's, and Stroke Odysseys - which will recruit over 800 participants, deliver the interventions and draw conclusions on their clinical impact, implementation effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. We hope that this work will inspire organisations and commissioners in the NHS and around the world to expand the remit of social prescribing to include evidence-based arts interventions

    Carboplatin versus two doses of cisplatin in combination with gemcitabine in the treatment of advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: Results from a British Thoracic Oncology Group randomised phase III trial.

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    BACKGROUND Platinum-based combination chemotherapy is standard treatment for the majority of patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The trial investigates the importance of the choice of platinum agent and dose of cisplatin in relation to patient outcomes. METHODS The three-arm randomised phase III trial assigned patients with chemo-na茂ve stage IIIB/IV NSCLC in a 1:1:1 ratio to receive gemcitabine 1250聽mg/m2 on days 1 and 8 of a 3-week cycle with cisplatin 80聽mg/m2 (GC80) or cisplatin 50聽mg/m2 (GC50) or carboplatin AUC6 (GCb6) for a maximum of four cycles. Primary outcome measure was survival time, aiming to test for a difference between treatment arms and also assess non-inferiority with pre-defined margin selected as hazard ratio (HR) of 1.2. Secondary outcome measures included response rate, adverse events and quality of life (QoL). FINDINGS The trial recruited 1363 patients. Survival time differed significantly across the three treatment arms (p聽=聽0.046) with GC50 worst with median 8.2 months compared to 9.5 for GC80 and 10.0 for GCb6. HRs (adjusted) for GC50 compared to GC80 was 1.13 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.99-1.29) and for GC50 compared to GCb6 was 1.23 (95% CI: 1.08-1.41). GCb6 was significantly non-inferior to GC80 (HR聽=聽0.93, upper limit of one-sided 95% CI 1.04). Adjusting for QoL did not change the findings. Best objective response rates were 29% (GC80), 20% (GC50) and 27% (GCb6), p聽<聽0.007. There were more dose reductions and treatment delays in the GCb6 arm and more adverse events (60% with at least one grade 3-4 compared to 43% GC80 and 30% GC50). INTERPRETATION In combination with gemcitabine, carboplatin at AUC6 is not inferior to cisplatin at 80聽mg/m2 in terms of survival. Carboplatin was associated with more adverse events and not with better quality of life. Cisplatin at the lower dose of 50聽mg/m2 has worse survival which is not compensated by better quality of life. CLINICALTRIALS. GOV IDENTIFIER NCT00112710. EUDRACT NUMBER 2004-003868-30. CANCER RESEARCH UK TRIAL IDENTIFIER CRUK/04/009

    Stripers, bailarinas ex贸ticas, er贸ticas: identidad e inmigraci贸n en la construcci贸n del Estado canadiense Stripers, erotic and exotic dancers: immigration and identity in the construction of the canadian nation-State

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    Este art铆culo presenta una discusi贸n sobre la migraci贸n de mujeres Latinoamericanas para trabajar en la industria del sexo en Canad谩, como bailarinas ex贸ticas, a trav茅s de visas temporales de trabajo. El objetivo es demostrar que esa migraci贸n se encuentra determinada en un contexto de relaciones desiguales de poder enmarcadas por las pol铆ticas migratorias canadienses, relaciones de explotaci贸n econ贸mica de Norte Am茅rica hacia Latinoam茅rica, construcciones raciales y racistas, y relaciones patriarcales de g茅nero, en el que el trabajo sexual es una de las pocas opciones laborales que tienen las mujeres.<br>This article discusses how the migration of Latin American women to work in the sex trade, specifically as exotic dancers, as temporary workers is framed within a specific context of Canadian immigration policies, uneven economic relationships between North America and Latin America, racial and racist constructions and sexist gender relations where sex work is one of the few working possibilities that women have
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