159 research outputs found
The measurement of mental fatigue following an overnight on-call duty among doctors using electroencephalogram
This study aimed to measure the spectral power differences in the brain rhythms among a group of hospital doctors before and after an overnight on-call duty. Thirty-two healthy doctors who performed regular on-call duty in a tertiary hospital in Sarawak, Malaysia were voluntarily recruited into this study. All participants were interviewed to collect relevant background information, followed by a self-administered questionnaire using Chalder Fatigue Scale and electroencephalogram test before and after an overnight on-call duty. The average overnight sleep duration during the on-call period was 2.2 hours (p<0.001, significantly shorter than usual sleep duration) among the participants. The mean (SD) Chalder Fatigue Scale score of the participants were 10.8 (5.3) before on-call and 18.4 (6.6) after on-call (p-value < 0.001). The theta rhythm showed significant increase in spectral power globally after an overnight on-call duty, especially when measured at eye closure. In contrast, the alpha and beta rhythms showed reduction in spectral power, significantly at temporal region, at eye closure, following an overnight on-call duty. These effects are more statistically significant when we derived the respective relative theta, alpha, and beta values. The finding of this study could be useful for development of electroencephalogram screening tool to detect mental fatigue
Pegylated granulocyte colony stimulating factor versus nonpegylated granulocyte colony stimulating factor for patients after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (Protocol)
This is the protocol for a review and there is no abstract. The objectives are as follows:
To compare the efficacy and safety of pegylated G-CSF versus non-pegylated G-CSF for patients after HSCT
Outcome effectiveness of the severe sepsis resuscitation bundle with addition of lactate clearance as a bundle item: a multi-national evaluation
10.1186/cc10469Critical Care155R22
Aleukemic bcr-abl positive granulocytic sarcoma
Granulocytic sarcoma (GS) can occur de novo or in association with intramedullary myeloid disorders.
With the advent of sophisticated molecular detection techniques to detect diagnostic genes such as bcrabl,
PML-RARAandCBFB/MYH11 in bone marrowor peripheral blood,many cases of the so called ‘primary’
GS are questionable. We report a case of primary GS where the tumor mass bcr-abl translocation was
demonstrated by fluorescent in situ hybridization in which there was no evidence of chronic myeloid
leukemia (CML). This is an important finding as it highlights the possibility that CML may present as a
sole extramedullary form, and illustrates potential treatment by tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Label-free biophysical markers from whole blood microfluidic immune profiling reveals severe immune response signatures
10.1002/smll.202006123SMALL171
Parental affordability and willingness to pay for universal masking amongst government school students in Kuching, Sarawak
Introduction: Financial affordability to purchase
commodities for disease prevention is an important public
health issue. The objective of this paper is to report the
financial affordability and willingness to pay amongst the
parents of government students for their children’s nonmedical mask use, using a newly created Household Face
Mask Affordability Questionnaire (MAQ).
Materials and Methods: This was a cross-sectional study
involving the parents or guardians of 50.6% (44/87)
government schools in the whole of Kuching Division of
Sarawak. The sampling method was multistage cluster
sampling, whereby stage one involved random sampling of
49.2% (30/61) primary schools and 53.8% (14/46) secondary
schools in the Kuching Division, followed by stage two
cluster sampling of one class per non-examination standard
in each randomly sampled school. All students in the
sampled classes were asked to bring a face-validated
questionnaire (MAQ) back home to be answered by one of
their parents or a guardian. A total of 2559 out of 3661
distributed questionnaires were collected, with a response
rate of 70%. The data collection period was between April
and June of 2022 so as the recall bias of the information
collected, especially on the actual spending on the face
masks for the school going students, was minimised. The
relevant summary statistics for self-perceived face masks
characteristics, face mask expenses, affordability and
willingness to pay were calculated. We regress separately
the monthly affordability and willingness to pay amount
against age, occupation, marital status, total number of
children, monthly income and monthly saving to build
predictive models for affordability and willingness to pay
amount per child per month.
Results: The average Scale-level Face Validity Indexes for all aspects of validity (clarity, comprehension, relevancy,
representativeness) are high (0.91 to 1.00) for MAQ. Most of
the respondents were mothers, married, working as private
employees with a mean age of 41 and belonged to the B40
and M40 group. The average monthly saving per family was
RM540, which was about 15% of the total income. The
average actual monthly spending to purchase face masks
for one child is RM24. On average, a family can afford to pay RM23.80 for one child per month to purchase face masks.
The willingness to pay for the same was RM25.27. The
median affordability, willingness to pay and actual spending
for face masks per child was RM16.67 per month. Taking
75th percentile as the reasonable maximum expenses per
child for face masks per month, the affordable amount by
most parents is RM30, with the willingness to pay at 10%
higher. Affordability to purchase a face mask is influenced
by the marital status, occupation, income, saving and the
number of dependent of the breadwinner of a household.
The most important face mask characteristics expected by
the parents are better filtration efficiency and easier
breathability.
Conclusion: The affordability and willingness to pay the
amount to purchase face masks amongst parents of
government students in Sarawak were RM30 and RM33 per
child per month, respectively
Systematic review of pre-clinical chronic myeloid leukaemia
The author would like to correct the error in the publication
of the original article. The corrected detail is given below
for your reading:
The first sentence in the last paragraph on page 481 in
‘‘Discussion’’ section under the subheading “Overall completeness
and applicability of evidence” should read as
“Clonal haematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP)
was first named in 2015 [27].
- …