1,571 research outputs found
A 3D assessment and feedback tool for Ankylosing Spondylitis from the perspective of healthcare professionals
To investigate the utility of 3D visualization technology to augment assessment and feedback for Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS), a visualization prototype was developed, and both subjective and objective measures of current assessment instruments were compared. To verify and establish a base-line for the prototype’s effectiveness, motion data and measurement data from a healthy adult in a laboratory environment were collected. To validate the prototype, a qualitative evaluation was undertaken using multiple methods including a pilot study, focus groups, and individual interviews. Research subjects comprised physiotherapists in clinical practice and academia and content analysis of their responses was used to substantiate the findings. The prototype enhanced both assessment and feedback of AS from the physiotherapist’s perspective and they believed it to be superior to the current methods used in practice for assessing the condition and in documenting variations for subsequent treatment. The physiotherapists believed that such a system had potential to encourage multidisciplinary working, and to be patient-centric, both with respect to the process of treatment and with regard to the convenience it offered to patients in managing their own condition. 3D visualization of AS symptoms and its treatment via exercise is a valuable technique as demonstrated by the prototype system
Teaching periodontal pocket charting to dental students: a comparison of computer assisted learning and traditional tutorials
AIM: The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of a computer assisted learning (CAL) programme with that of traditional small group tutorials in teaching theoretical and practical aspects of periodontal pocket charting. METHOD: Sixty-one third year undergraduate dental students were randomized to either receive a tutorial or to work through the CAL programme. Students using the CAL programme completed questionnaires relating to previous computer experience and the ease of use of the programme. All students were assessed immediately after the intervention by means of a confidence log, a practical exercise and a further confidence log. They were assessed again three weeks later by means of a confidence log and a multiple-choice written test. RESULTS: There were very few significant differences between groups for any of the assessments used. However, subjective comments indicated that students occasionally felt disadvantaged if they had not received a tutorial. CONCLUSION: CAL and traditional teaching methods are equally effective in teaching periodontal pocket charting to undergraduate dental students
Improving Community Advisory Board Engagement In Precision Medicine Research To Reduce Health Disparities
Community Advisory Boards (CABs) are used in efforts to reduce health disparities; however, there is little documentation in the literature regarding their use in precision medicine research. In this case study, an academic-CAB partnership developed a questionnaire and patient educational materials for two precision smoking cessation interventions that involved use of genetic information. The community-engaged research (CEnR) literature provided a framework for enhancing benefits to CAB members involved in developing research documents for use with a low-income, ethnically diverse population of smokers. The academic partners integrated three CEnR strategies: 1) in-meeting statements acknowledging their desire to learn from community partners, 2) in-meeting written feedback to and from community partners, and 3) a survey to obtain CAB member feedback post-meetings. Strategies 1 and 2 yielded modifications to pertinent study materials, as well as suggestions for improving meeting operations that were then adopted, as appropriate, by the academic partners. The survey indicated that CAB members valued the meeting procedure changes which appeared to have contributed to improvements in attendance and satisfaction with the meetings. Further operationalization of relevant partnership constructs and development of tools for measuring these aspects of community-academic partnerships is warranted to support community engagement in precision medicine research studies
Adding Behavioral Economics Field Experiments to the Industry Studies Toolkit: Predicting Truck Driver Job Exits in a High Turnover Setting
The Truckers and Turnover Project is an intensive case study of a single firm and its employees which matches proprietary
personnel and operational data to new information collected by the researchers to create a two-year panel study of a large
subset of new hires. The project’s most distinctive innovation is the data collection process, which combines traditional
survey instruments with behavioral economics experiments used to measure individual participant characteristics. The
survey data include information on demographics, risk and loss aversion, time preference, planning, non-verbal IQ, and the
MPQ personality profile. The data collected by behavioral economics experiments include risk and loss aversion, time
preferences (discount rates), backward induction ability, patience, and the preference for cooperation in a social dilemma
setting. Subjects are being followed over two years of their work lives. Among the major design goals are to discover the
extent to which the survey and experimental measures are correlated, and whether and how much predictive power, with
respect to key on-the-job outcome variables, is added by the behavioral measures. The panel study of new hires is being
carried out against the backdrop of a second research component, the development of a more conventional in-depth
statistical case study of the cooperating firm and its employees. This is a high-turnover service industry setting, and the focus
is on the use of survival analysis to model the flow of new employees into and out of employment, and on the correct
estimation of the tenure-productivity curve for new hires, accounting for the selection effects of the high turnover
Face processing limitation to own species in primates: a comparative study in brown capuchins, Tonkean macaques and humans
Most primates live in social groups which survival and stability depend on
individuals' abilities to create strong social relationships with other group
members. The existence of those groups requires to identify individuals and to
assign to each of them a social status. Individual recognition can be achieved
through vocalizations but also through faces. In humans, an efficient system
for the processing of own species faces exists. This specialization is achieved
through experience with faces of conspecifics during development and leads to
the loss of ability to process faces from other primate species. We hypothesize
that a similar mechanism exists in social primates. We investigated face
processing in one Old World species (genus Macaca) and in one New World species
(genus Cebus). Our results show the same advantage for own species face
recognition for all tested subjects. This work suggests in all species tested
the existence of a common trait inherited from the primate ancestor: an
efficient system to identify individual faces of own species only
The risk of cardiac failure following metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty
Aims
The aim of this study was to determine whether patients with metal-on-metal (MoM)
arthroplasties of the hip have an increased risk of cardiac failure compared with those with
alternative types of arthroplasties (non-MoM).
Patients and Methods
A linkage study between the National Joint Registry, Hospital Episodes Statistics and records
of the Office for National Statistics on deaths was undertaken. Patients who underwent
elective total hip arthroplasty between January 2003 and December 2014 with no past history
of cardiac failure were included and stratified as having either a MoM (n = 53 529) or a nonMoM
(n = 482 247) arthroplasty. The primary outcome measure was the time to an
admission to hospital for cardiac failure or death. Analysis was carried out using data from
all patients and from those matched by propensity score.
Results
The risk of cardiac failure was lower in the MoM cohort compared with the non-MoM cohort
(adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) 0.901; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.853 to 0.953). The risk of
cardiac failure was similar following matching (aHR 0.909; 95% CI 0.838 to 0.987) and the
findings were consistent in subgroup analysis.
Conclusion
The risk of cardiac failure following total hip arthroplasty was not increased in those in
whom MoM implants were used, compared with those in whom other types of prostheses
were used, in the first seven years after surgery.
Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2018;100-B:20–
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"Engaging with birth stories in pregnancy: a hermeneutic phenomenological study of women's experiences across two generations"
BACKGROUND: The birth story has been widely understood as a crucial source of knowledge about childbirth. What has not been reported is the effect that birth stories may have on primigravid women's understandings of birth. Findings are presented from a qualitative study exploring how two generations of women came to understand birth in the milieu of other's stories. The prior assumption was that birth stories must surely have a positive or negative influence on listeners, steering them towards either medical or midwifery-led models of care.
METHODS: A Heideggerian hermeneutic phenomenological approach was used. Twenty UK participants were purposively selected and interviewed. Findings from the initial sample of 10 women who were pregnant in 2012 indicated that virtual media was a primary source of birth stories. This led to recruitment of a second sample of 10 women who gave birth in the 1970s-1980s, to determine whether they were more able to translate information into knowledge via stories told through personal contact and not through virtual technologies
RESULTS: Findings revealed the experience of 'being-in-the-world' of birth and of stories in that world. From a Heideggerian perspective, the birth story was constructed through 'idle talk' (the taken for granted assumptions of things, which come into being through language). Both oral stories and those told through technology were described as the 'modern birth story'. The first theme 'Stories are difficult like that', examines the birth story as problematic and considers how stories shape meaning. The second 'It's a generational thing', considers how women from two generations came to understand what their experience might be. The third 'Birth in the twilight of certainty,' examines women's experience of Being in a system of birth as constructed, portrayed and sustained in the stories being shared.
CONCLUSIONS: The women pregnant in 2012 framed their expectations in the language of choice, whilst the women who birthed in the 1970s-1980s framed their experience in the language of safety. For both, however, the world of birth was the same; saturated with, and only legitimised by the birth of a healthy baby. Rather than creating meaningful understanding, the 'idle talk' of birth made both cohorts fearful of leaving the relative comfort of the 'system', and of claiming an alternative birth
Predicting microbial water quality with models: Over-arching questions for managing risk in agricultural catchments
The application of models to predict concentrations of faecal indicator organisms (FIOs) in environmental systems plays an important role for guiding decision-making associated with the management of microbial water quality. In recent years there has been an increasing demand by policy-makers for models to help inform FIO dynamics in order to prioritise efforts for environmental and human-health protection. However, given the limited evidence-base on which FIO models are built relative to other agricultural pollutants (e.g. nutrients) it is imperative that the end-user expectations of FIO models are appropriately managed. In response, this commentary highlights four over-arching questions associated with: (i) model purpose; (ii) modelling approach; (iii) data availability; and (iv) model application, that must be considered as part of good practice prior to the deployment of any modelling approach to predict FIO behaviour in catchment systems. A series of short and longer-term research priorities are proposed in response to these questions in order to promote better model deployment in the field of catchment microbial dynamics
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