625 research outputs found
Long-term prevalence and predictors of prolonged grief disorder amongst bereaved cancer caregivers: A cohort study
Context: The short-term impact of prolonged grief disorder (PGD) following bereavement is well documented. The longer term sequelae of PGD however are poorly understood, possibly unrecognized, and may be incorrectly attributed to other mental health disorders and hence undertreated.
Objectives: The aims of this study were to prospectively evaluate the prevalence of PGD three years post bereavement and to examine the predictors of long-term PGD in a population-based cohort of bereaved cancer caregivers.
Methods: A cohort of primary family caregivers of patients admitted to one of three palliative care services in Melbourne, Australia, participated in the study (n = 301). Sociodemographic, mental health, and bereavement-related data were collected from the caregiver upon the patient\u27s admission to palliative care (T1). Further data addressing circumstances around the death and psychological health were collected at six (T2, n = 167), 13 (T3, n = 143), and 37 months (T4, n = 85) after bereavement.
Results: At T4, 5% and 14% of bereaved caregivers met criteria for PGD and subthreshold PGD, respectively. Applying the total PGD score at T4, linear regression analysis found preloss anticipatory grief measured at T1 and self-reported coping measured at T2 were highly statistically significant predictors (both p \u3c 0.0001) of PGD in the longer term.
Conclusion: For almost 20% of caregivers, the symptoms of PGD appear to persist at least three years post bereavement. These findings support the importance of screening caregivers upon the patient\u27s admission to palliative care and at six months after bereavement to ascertain their current mental health. Ideally, caregivers at risk of developing PGD can be identified and treated before PGD becomes entrenched
Comparing Analysis Frames for Visual Data Sets: Using Pupil Views Templates to explore perspectives of learning
A key challenge of visual methodology is how to combine large-scale qualitative data sets with epistemologically acceptable and rigorous analysis techniques. The authors argue that a pragmatic approach drawing on ideas from mixed methods is helpful to open up the full potential of visual data. However, before one starts to “mix” the stages of analysis one needs to be aware of the strengths and weaknesses provided by the various qualitative and quantitative perspectives. This article therefore provides a methodological discussion based on empirical research experiences with one visual data set: Pupil Views Templates (Wall and Higgins). The authors investigate two different approaches to the analysis of these data: inductive and deductive processes. The two approaches are applied separately to the same data set and observations are made regarding the affordances and constraints of each process, and the findings and implications for developing visual analysis in this area are presented. The authors show how both processes provide useful insight, but without clear strategy as to how they can be combined to achieve the intent of the research, the true potential of visual data will remain unlocked
The role of emotion awareness and mood: somatic complaints and social adjustment in late childhood
Emotion awareness is a key concept related to different child adjustment outcomes. This relationship, influenced by mood, has been found in the preadolescent and adolescent population for somatic complaints. However, little is known in the case of younger children and when other adjustment outcomes are included. The objective of this work is to analyze the contribution of emotion awareness and mood upon different adjustment outcomes (somatic complaints, maladjustment, and peer sociometric status), in children aged 8-12 years old. Self-reported questionnaires and peer-nomination scales were administered to 1423 children (mean age = 9.8 years old). Results support the influence of emotion awareness reinforced by mood, not only upon somatic complaints, but also upon new indicators of personal and social maladjustment, within an age bracket that has not been considered previously. These results stress the importance of emotional abilities and the corresponding affective moods in children's daily life
AniRes2D: Anisotropic Residual-enhanced Diffusion for 2D MR Super-Resolution
Anisotropic low-resolution (LR) magnetic resonance (MR) images are fast to
obtain but hinder automated processing. We propose to use denoising diffusion
probabilistic models (DDPMs) to super-resolve these 2D-acquired LR MR slices.
This paper introduces AniRes2D, a novel approach combining DDPM with a residual
prediction for 2D super-resolution (SR). Results demonstrate that AniRes2D
outperforms several other DDPM-based models in quantitative metrics, visual
quality, and out-of-domain evaluation. We use a trained AniRes2D to
super-resolve 3D volumes slice by slice, where comparative quantitative results
and reduced skull aliasing are achieved compared to a recent state-of-the-art
self-supervised 3D super-resolution method. Furthermore, we explored the use of
noise conditioning augmentation (NCA) as an alternative augmentation technique
for DDPM-based SR models, but it was found to reduce performance. Our findings
contribute valuable insights to the application of DDPMs for SR of anisotropic
MR images.Comment: Accepted for presentation at SPIE Medical Imaging 2024, Clinical and
Biomedical Imagin
Factors associated with drug-related harms related to policing in Tijuana, Mexico
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>To assess factors associated with drug-related harms related to policing among injection drug users (IDUs) in Tijuana, Mexico.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>IDUs who were over 18 years old and had injected drugs within the last six months were recruited via respondent-driven sampling and underwent questionnaires and testing for HIV (human immunodeficiency virus), syphilis and TB (tuberculosis). Random effects logistic regression was used to simultaneously model factors associated with five drug-related harms related to policing practices in the prior six months (i.e., police led them to rush injections; affected where they bought drugs; affected locations where they used drugs; feared that police will interfere with their drug use; receptive syringe sharing).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Of 727 IDUs, 85% were male; median age was 38 years. Within the last 6 months, 231 (32%) of IDUs reported that police had led them to rush injections, affected where they bought or used drugs or were very afraid police would interfere with their drug use, or shared syringes. Factors independently associated with drug-related harms related to policing within the last six months included: recent arrest, homelessness, higher frequencies of drug injection, use of methamphetamine, using the local needle exchange program and perceiving a decrease in the purity of at least one drug.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>IDUs who experienced drug-related harms related to policing were those who were most affected by other micro and macro influences in the physical risk environment. Police education programs are needed to ensure that policing practices do not exacerbate risky behaviors or discourage protective behaviors such as needle exchange program use, which undermines the right to health for people who inject drugs.</p
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