31 research outputs found
Novel study design to assess the utility of the copd assessment test in a primary care setting
The quality of a consultation provided by a physician can have a profound impact on the quality of care and
patient engagement in treatment decisions. When the COPD Assessment Test (CAT) was developed, one of its aims
was to aid the communication between physician and patient about the impact of COPD. We developed a novel
study design to assess this in a primary care consultation.
Primary care physicians across five countries in Europe conducted videoed consultations with six standardised
COPD patients (played by trained actors) which had patient-specific issues that the physician needed to identify
through questioning. Half the physicians saw the patients with the completed CAT, and half without. Independent
assessors scored the physicians on their ability to identify and address the patient-specific issues, review standard COPD aspects, their understanding of the case and their overall performance. This novel study design presented
many challenges which needed to be addressed to achieve an acceptable level of robustness to assess the utility of
the CAT. This paper discusses these challenges and the measures adopted to eliminate or minimise their impact on
the study results
Key stakeholder perceptions about consent to participate in acute illness research: a rapid, systematic review to inform epi/pandemic research preparedness
Background
A rigorous research response is required to inform clinical and public health decision-making during an epi/pandemic. However, the ethical conduct of such research, which often involves critically ill patients, may be complicated by the diminished capacity to consent and an imperative to initiate trial therapies within short time frames. Alternative approaches to taking prospective informed consent may therefore be used. We aimed to rapidly review evidence on key stakeholder (patients, their proxy decision-makers, clinicians and regulators) views concerning the acceptability of various approaches for obtaining consent relevant to pandemic-related acute illness research.
Methods
We conducted a rapid evidence review, using the Internet, database and hand-searching for English language empirical publications from 1996 to 2014 on stakeholder opinions of consent models (prospective informed, third-party, deferred, or waived) used in acute illness research. We excluded research on consent to treatment, screening, or other such procedures, non-emergency research and secondary studies. Papers were categorised, and data summarised using narrative synthesis.
Results
We screened 689 citations, reviewed 104 full-text articles and included 52. Just one paper related specifically to pandemic research. In other emergency research contexts potential research participants, clinicians and research staff found third-party, deferred, and waived consent to be acceptable as a means to feasibly conduct such research. Acceptability to potential participants was motivated by altruism, trust in the medical community, and perceived value in medical research and decreased as the perceived risks associated with participation increased. Discrepancies were observed in the acceptability of the concept and application or experience of alternative consent models. Patients accepted clinicians acting as proxy-decision makers, with preference for two decision makers as invasiveness of interventions increased. Research regulators were more cautious when approving studies conducted with alternative consent models; however, their views were generally under-represented.
Conclusions
Third-party, deferred, and waived consent models are broadly acceptable to potential participants, clinicians and/or researchers for emergency research. Further consultation with key stakeholders, particularly with regulators, and studies focused specifically on epi/pandemic research, are required. We highlight gaps and recommendations to inform set-up and protocol development for pandemic research and institutional review board processes
An Evaluation of Utility Ratepayer and Landowner Perceptions of a Payment for Ecosystem Services Program in the McKenzie River Basin
94 pagesThis
report
presents
the
results
of
two
surveys
conducted
as
a
part
of
a
research
project
analyzing
the
potential
for
utilities
and
corporations
to
support
payment
for
ecosystem
services
program.
The
research
included
a
survey
of
ratepayers
in
the
Eugene
Water
and
Electric
Board
service
area,
and
a
survey
of
landowners
with
river
frontage
in
the
McKenzie
River
Basin
(the
watershed
that
supplies
water
for
the
Eugene
Water
and
Electric
Board).Funding
for
this
report
was
provided
by
the
USDA
National
Institute
for
Food
and
Agriculture
(NIFA)
Grant
No.
2011-‐67023-‐30108
Impact on hemostatic parameters of interrupting sitting with intermittent activity
Introduction: Excessive sitting has been associated with an elevated risk of vascular conditions, particularly venous thrombosis. Interrupting sitting time with intermittent physical activity can reduce venous stasis; however, impacts on other aspects of thrombogenesis are less understood. Purpose: To examine the effects of interrupting sitting time on blood coagulation and blood volume parameters in sedentary, middle-age, overweight/obese adults (11 men and 8 women; age = 53.8 T 4.9 yr, body mass index = 31.2 T 4.1 kgImj2; mean T SD). Methods: The randomized three-period, three-treatment acute crossover trial consisted of uninterrupted sitting and sitting interrupted by 2-min bouts of either light- or moderate-intensity treadmill walking every 20 min. In each trial condition, blood samples were collected at baseline before the consumption of a standardized meal (j2 h) and postintervention (5 h). Results: Plasma fibrinogen increased from baseline with uninterrupted sitting (0.24 gILj1, 95% confidence interval = 0.13–0.34, P G 0.001). Lightintensity but not moderate-intensity activity breaks attenuated the increase by 0.17 gILj1 (95% confidence interval = 0.01–0.32, P G 0.05). There were no between-condition differences in prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, von Willebrandfactor, D-dimer, or platelet count. Uninterrupted sitting reduced plasma volume and increased hematocrit, hemoglobin, and red blood cell count; effects attenuated by both light- and moderate-intensity breaks (P G 0.05). White blood cell count increased with uninterrupted sitting and further increased with moderate-intensity breaks. Mean platelet volume increased with moderate-intensity but not lightintensity breaks or uninterrupted sitting. Conclusion: Uninterrupted sitting increased fibrinogen and reduced plasma volume, with associated increases in hemoglobin and hematocrit. Activity breaks attenuated these responses, indicative of an ameliorating influence on the procoagulant effects of uninterrupted sitting