27 research outputs found

    Mindfulness at Work: Positive Affect, Hope, and Optimism Mediate the Relationship Between Dispositional Mindfulness, Work Engagement, and Well-Being

    Get PDF
    Mindfulness has been described as a state of awareness characterized by refined attentional skills and a non-evaluative attitude toward internal and external events. Recently it has been suggested that higher levels of mindfulness may be beneficial in the workplace and first programs aiming to increase mindful awareness in occupational settings have been introduced. The current study underpins these developments with empirical evidence regarding the involved psychological processes, by investigating the relationship between dispositional mindfulness, work engagement and well-being in 299 adults in fulltime employment. As hypothesized, the results confirm that self-reported mindfulness predicts work engagement and general well-being. Furthermore, these relationships are mediated by positive job-related affect and psychological capital (hope, optimism, resiliency, and self-efficacy). Investigating mindfulness and psychological capital as multi-faceted concepts by means of structural equation modeling yielded a more precise picture. The ability to step back from automatic, habitual reactions to distress turned out to be the mindfulness facet most central for predicting work engagement and well-being. Furthermore, mindfulness exerts its positive effect on work engagement by increasing positive affect, hope, and optimism, which on their own and in combination enhance work engagement (full mediation). Well-being, on the other hand, is directly influenced by mindfulness, which exerts additional indirect influence via positive affect, hope and optimism (partial mediation). Although exploratory in nature, the results identify non-reactivity and non-judging as important mindfulness skills in the workplace

    Imagem em tuberculose pulmonar Pulmonary tuberculosis imaging

    No full text
    A tuberculose é uma doença de alta incidência e prevalência no Brasil. Sinais sugestivos de atividade ou seqüela da tuberculose podem ser obtidos através dos métodos de imagem. Na radiografia de tórax, a tuberculose pulmonar ativa pode manifestar-se sob a forma de consolidações, cavitações, padrões intersticiais (reticulares/retículo-nodulares), linfonodomegalias hilares ou mediastinais e derrame pleural. Imagens compatíveis com doença ativa, como nódulos centrolobulares de distribuição segmentar, cavidades de paredes espessas, espessamento de parede brônquica ou bronquiolar, bronquiectasias e linfonodomegalias, podem ser observadas pela tomografia computadorizada do tórax; cavidades de paredes finas, bronquiectasias de tração e estrias são imagens sugestivas de seqüela da doença, assim como o enfisema e o aspecto em mosaico do parênquima pulmonar. A cintilografia com o citrato de gálio-67 é um método complementar útil na detecção de processos infecciosos, incluindo a tuberculose, especialmente em pacientes imunossuprimidos. Estudos de inalação e perfusão pulmonar são utilizados na avaliação pré-operatória de pacientes com seqüelas de tuberculose ou tuberculose multirresistente. A tomografia por emissão de pósitrons utilizando a deoxiglicose marcada com o flúor-18 permite a detecção do processo inflamatório que ocorre na fase ativa da tuberculose e que pode persistir, em menor intensidade, após o término do tratamento. Métodos de imagem constituem importantes recursos para o diagnóstico e acompanhamento da tuberculose pulmonar.<br>Tuberculosis is a disease of high incidence and prevalence in Brazil. Imaging methods can reveal signs suggestive of tuberculosis activity or sequelae. Chest radiographs can reveal active lung tuberculosis through consolidations, cavitations, interstitial patterns (nodular and reticulo-nodular), mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy and pleural effusions. Images compatible with the active disease, such as centrilobular nodules segmentarily distributed, thick-walled cavities, thickened bronchial or bronchiolar walls, bronchiectasis and lymphadenopathy can be observed by computerized tomography. Thin-walled cavities, traction bronchiectasis, parenchymal bands, emphysema and mosaic pattern are signs suggestive of inactive disease. Gallium-67 citrate scyntigraphy is a complementary method useful in the detection of infectious diseases, including tuberculosis, especially in immunocompromised patients. Inhalation / perfusion analyses are used in the pre-operative assessment of patients carrying tuberculosis sequelaes and multiresistant tuberculosis. Positron emission tomography with fluorine-18 labeled deoxyglucose allows the detection of the inflammatory process that takes place during the active stage of tuberculosis and may persist, not so intense, after specific treatment is over. Imaging methods are valuable tools to be used in the diagnosis and follow up of pulmonary tuberculosis

    Standardization of the antibody-dependent respiratory burst assay with human neutrophils and Plasmodium falciparum malaria

    Get PDF
    The assessment of naturally-acquired and vaccine-induced immunity to blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum malaria is of long-standing interest. However, the field has suffered from a paucity of in vitro assays that reproducibly measure the anti-parasitic activity induced by antibodies in conjunction with immune cells. Here we optimize the antibody-dependent respiratory burst (ADRB) assay, which assesses the ability of antibodies to activate the release of reactive oxygen species from human neutrophils in response to P. falciparum blood-stage parasites. We focus particularly on assay parameters affecting serum preparation and concentration, and importantly assess reproducibility. Our standardized protocol involves testing each serum sample in singlicate with three independent neutrophil donors, and indexing responses against a standard positive control of pooled hyper-immune Kenyan sera. The protocol can be used to quickly screen large cohorts of samples from individuals enrolled in immuno-epidemiological studies or clinical vaccine trials, and requires only 6 μL of serum per sample. Using a cohort of 86 samples, we show that malaria-exposed individuals induce higher ADRB activity than malaria-naïve individuals. The development of the ADRB assay complements the use of cell-independent assays in blood-stage malaria, such as the assay of growth inhibitory activity, and provides an important standardized cell-based assay in the field
    corecore