14 research outputs found

    Improving Quality of Life and Connection Amongst Pediatric Oncology Patients and Their Families Through Art Therapy: A Literature Review

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    This literature review seeks to answer the question of how art therapy can be used to improve quality of life and connection between pediatric cancer patients and their families. This literature review also aims to connect art therapy with traditional medical interventions for pediatric cancer patients as a way to create more integrated and supportive care modality that children and their families can benefit from. With a significant amount of children and families being affected by cancer in the world today, it is important to not only focus on the physical health aspects, but the intersection of mental health as well as it pertains to navigating a new or ongoing cancer diagnosis. Art therapy allows for children and families to take a step back from stressful medical settings to focus inward and express emotions in a safe and contained way. Throughout the literature, important themes emerged about the use of art therapy to reduce stress and pain perception, as well as family art therapy to improve connection and communication with one another. The literature also revealed the importance of supportive care for the entire family system to facilitate overall improved mental health outcomes for the family, as well as improved physical health outcomes for the child. Findings from this literature review can be used to make recommendations for further research, as well as how art therapy may be applied to medical settings for pediatric cancer patients. One significant recommendation is the addition of an art therapist in hospital multidisciplinary teams, as well as making art supplies available to children and families in medical settings when an art therapist may be available

    Assessing relative resilience potential of coral reefs to inform management

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    International audienceEcological resilience assessments are an important part of resilience-based management (RBM) and can help prioritize and target management actions. Use of such assessments has been limited due to a lack of clear guidance on the assessment process. This study builds on the latest scientific advances in RBM to provide that guidance from a resilience assessment undertaken in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI). We assessed spatial variation in ecological resilience potential at 78 forereef sites near the populated islands of the CNMI: Saipan, Tinian/Aguijan, and Rota. The assessments are based on measuring indicators of resilience processes and are combined with information on anthropogenic stress and larval connectivity. We find great spatial variation in relative resilience potential with many high resilience sites near Saipan (5 of 7) and low resilience sites near Rota (7 of 9). Criteria were developed to identify priority sites for six types of management actions (e.g., conservation, land-based sources of pollution reduction, and fishery management and enforcement) and 51 of the 78 sites met at least one of the sets of criteria. The connectivity simulations developed indicate that Tinian and Aguijan are each roughly 10 × the larvae source that Rota is and twice as frequent a destination. These results may explain the lower relative resilience potential of Rota reefs and indicates that actions in Saipan and Tinian/Aguijan will be important to maintaining supply of larvae. The process we describe for undertaking resilience assessments can be tailored for use in coral reef areas globally and applied to other ecosystems

    Concert recording 2017-04-27

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    [Track 1]. Adoramus te, Christe / Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina -- [Track 2]. Ubi caritas / Maurice Duruflé -- [Track 3]. Three Hungarian folk songs. I. The handsome butcher II. Apple, apple III. The old woman / Matyas Seiber -- [Track 4]. He watching over Israel from Elijah / Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy -- [Track 5]. Ain\u27t got time to die / Hall Johnson

    Conservatively treated knee injury is associated with knee cartilage matrix degeneration measured with MRI-based T2 relaxation times: data from the osteoarthritis initiative

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    ObjectiveTo investigate the association of cartilage degeneration with previous knee injuries not undergoing surgery, determined by morphologic and quantitative 3-T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).Materials and methodsWe performed a nested cross-sectional study of right knee MRIs from participants in the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) aged 45-79 with baseline Kellgren-Lawrence score of 0-2. Cases were 142 right knees of patients with self-reported history of injury limiting the ability to walk for at least 2 days. Controls were 426 right knees without history of injury, frequency-matched to cases on age, BMI, gender, KL scores and race (1:3 ratio). Cases and controls were compared using covariate-adjusted linear regression analysis, with the outcomes of region-specific T2 mean, laminar analysis and heterogeneity measured by texture analysis to investigate early cartilage matrix abnormalities and the Whole-Organ Magnetic Resonance Imaging Score (WORMS) to investigate morphologic knee lesions.ResultsCompared to control subjects, we found significantly higher mean T2 values in the injury [lateral tibia (28.10 ms vs. 29.11 ms, p = 0.001), medial tibia (29.70 ms vs. 30.40 ms, p = 0.014) and global knee cartilage (32.73 ms vs. 33.29 ms, p = 0.005)]. Injury subjects also had more heterogeneous cartilage as measured by GLCM texture contrast, variance and entropy (p < 0.05 in 14 out of 18 texture parameters). WORMS gradings were not significantly different between the two groups (p > 0.05).ConclusionA history of knee injury not treated surgically is associated with higher and more heterogeneous T2 values, but not with morphologic knee abnormalities. Our findings suggest that significant, conservatively treated knee injuries are associated with permanent cartilage matrix abnormalities
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