372 research outputs found

    What Relationship Exists between Male Early-adolescent Ice Hockey Players' Beliefs about Aggression and Injuries and Penalty Minutes?

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    More than 30 million individuals between the ages of 6 and 21 are involved in non-scholastic sports activities and this has lead to an increase in injuries. One of the most common sports for injury is ice hockey. Even though critical rules and regulations are established, injuries still occur. Penalty minutes are assigned for the breach of the rules and regulations. The male early-adolescent belief about aggression may present a risk factor for injuries and penalty minutes. The purpose of this research project is to identify if a relationship exists between the beliefs about aggression of early-adolescent male ice hockey players and penalty minutes and injuries while engaged in game participation. The theoretical framework for this study was L.R. Huesmann's social cognitive theory. According to this theory, the adolescent reacts to a certain environmental cue by retrieving scripts called normative beliefs that are either acceptable or unacceptable. The method used for this study was a convenience sample of male early-adolescent ice hockey players. The setting was a local ice rink in mi-Michigan. Permission was obtained from the parents of the participants. Demographic data were collected regarding age, grade, level of play and positions. Injuries were self-reported by the ice hockey player and data were collected from coaches regarding penalty minutes on 30 players. The responding coaches were asked the type of coaching style whether North American style or European. There were a total 53 male early-adolescents between the ages of 12-14 who responded to recruitment and answered the Normative Beliefs Aggression Scale (NOBAGS). One adolescent was removed from the sample who because of female gender, resulting in a sample size n=53. All of the testing was performed at one local ice hockey rink. The mean age of the male early-adolescent ice hockey players in this study was 12.75 years (SD=.76). The average grade was 7th (range 6th -9th grade). More Bantam (n=40) ice hockey players responded to the questionnaire than Peewee (n=10) or Midget (n=3). Left or right wings were the position most represented in the study (n=24 or 45.3%). Defensemen were second with n=18 or 34.0%, centers were third (n=8 or 15 %) and goalies were last (n=3 or 5.7%). The coaching style (n = 3 coaches) was 100% North American style. A Pearson’s r was used to correlate the subscales, general approval of aggression, (GENAPAG), approval of retaliation of aggression (APPRETAG), and total approval of aggression (TOTAPPAG) of the NOBAGS questionnaire with the number of injuries and penalty minutes. The results found no significant difference between the subscales, GENAPAG p= .390, 122, APPRETAG p= .772, r=.772, and TOTAPPAG p= .565, r=.565 and injuries. The results support a significant correlation between the beliefs of aggression and penalty minutes (GENAPAG p=.000 r=.693, APPRETAG p= .030, r=391, and TOTAPPAG p= .001, r= .570). In practice, the nurse practitioner (NP) may utilize information regarding prevention of both injuries and unintentional injuries in the male early-adolescent and understand the role aggression may play. The NP in the role of an educator may provide these interventions at the primary care setting or offer teachings at the ice hockey rink.Master'sSchool of Health Professions and Studies: NursingUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/117805/1/Jaskiewicz.pd

    Influence of vibratory stress relief on residual stresses in weldments and mechanical properties of struktural steel joint

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    The welding process can join two similar materials with a bond that has mechanical properties comparable to the original material. Unfortunately, this process induces residual stresses in the weldment, which, if left untreated, can cause distortion of the part, premature fatigue failure or cracking along the weld. A post-weld heat treatment is the traditional method of relieving these stresses, but is costly and a time consuming process. Heat treatment is required for weldments, which have heavy fatigue loading since the post-weld heat treatment reduces the residual stresses in the weldment and generates more uniform mechanical properties. Vibratory stress relief (VSR) techniques could be used to substitute the heat treatment for these types of weldments and save time and money. The purpose of this paper is to provide a brief overview of the generation, measurement, and reduction of residual stresses. Residual stresses in the weld bead were measured by means of X-ray diffraction, ultrasonic technique and hole drilling methods. In addition, welded specimens were subjected to mechanical testing with purpose of determination of VSR effect on weld and heat-affected zone meta

    60. Factors detremining local control in patients (Pts) with locally advanced breast cancer (Labc) managed with radiotherapy (RT) as the primary locoregional treatment

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    IntroductionRT plays an important role in the management of LABC, yet clinical outcomes still remain far from satisfactory. The aim of this study was to evaluate retrospectively factors determining local control in a large series of consecutive LABC pts managed with RT as the primary locoregional treatment.Material and methodsThe records of 261 primarily inoperable LABC pts treated between 1991 and 1997 at two institutions: Medical University of Gdansk, Poland and Velindre NHS Trust, Cardiff, UK were analysed. All pts received megavoltage RT to the breast with two tangential fields, and the adjacent lymph node areas were irradiated using customised fields. Due to a large scale of RT doses and fractionation schedules, normalised total dose (NTD) was calculated for all patients using a linear quadratic model. In 241 pts RT constituted the only local treatment and the remaining 20 pts were subsequently subjected to mastectomy. Most pts received chemotherapy and/or endocrine therapy prior or after RT.ResultsWithin the median follow-up of 37 months, locoregional recurrence occurred in 95 of 251 evaluable pts (38%). Three-year and five-year locoregional-free survival rates were 59% and 48%, respectively. At multivariate analysis of variables predicting the risk of locoregional relapse, inflammatory carcinoma (

    Helicobacter pylori and cancer among adults in Uganda

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    Data from Africa on infection with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) are sparse. Therefore, as part of an epidemiological study of cancer in Uganda, we investigated the prevalence and determinants of antibodies against H. pylori among 854 people with different cancer types and benign tumours. Patients were recruited from hospitals in Kampala, Uganda, interviewed about various demographic and lifestyle factors and tested for antibodies against H. pylori. In all patients combined, excluding those with stomach cancer (which has been associated with H. pylori infection), the prevalence of antibodies was 87% (723/833) overall, but declined with increasing age (p = 0.02) and was lower among people who were HIV seropositive compared to seronegative (p <0.001). Otherwise, there were few consistent epidemiological associations. Among those with stomach cancer, 18/21 (86%) had anti-H. pylori antibodies (odds ratio 0.8, 95% confidence intervals 0.2–2.9, p = 0.7; estimated using all other patients as controls, with adjustment for age, sex and HIV serostatus). No other cancer site or type was significantly associated with anti-H. pylori antibodies. The prevalence of H. pylori reported here is broadly in accord with results from other developing countries, although the determinants of infection and its' role in the aetiology of gastric cancer in Uganda remain unclear

    Sensitivity of markers of DNA stability and DNA repair activity to folate supplementation in healthy volunteers

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    We have previously reported that supplementation with folic acid (1.2 mg day−1 for 12 week) elicited a significant improvement in the folate status of 61 healthy volunteers. We have examined effects of this supplement on markers of genomic stability. Little is known about the effect of folate supplementation on DNA stability in a cohort, which is not folate deficient. Preintervention, there was a significant inverse association between uracil misincorporation in lymphocyte DNA and red cell folate (P<0.05). In contrast, there were no associations between folate status and DNA strand breakage, global DNA methylation or DNA base excision repair (measured as the capacity of the lymphocyte extract to repair 8-oxoGua ex vivo). Folate supplementation elicited a significant reduction in uracil misincorporation (P<0.05), while DNA strand breakage and global DNA methylation remained unchanged. Increasing folate status significantly decreased the base excision repair capacity in those volunteers with the lowest preintervention folate status (P<0.05). Uracil misincorporation was more sensitive to changes in folate status than other measures of DNA stability and therefore could be considered a specific and functional marker of folate status, which may also be relevant to cancer risk in healthy people

    Differences in the composition of the bacterial element of the urinary tract microbiome in patients undergoing dialysis and patients after kidney transplantation

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    IntroductionThe development of molecular biology methods and their application in microbial research allowed the detection of many new pathogens that cause urinary tract infections (UTIs). Despite the advances of using new research techniques, the etiopathogenesis of UTIs, especially in patients undergoing dialysis and patients after kidney transplantation, is still not fully understood.MethodsThis study aimed to characterize and compare the composition of the bacterial element of the urinary tract microbiome between the groups of patients undergoing dialysis (n = 50) and patients after kidney transplantation (n = 50), with positive or negative urine culture, compared to healthy individuals (n = 50).ResultsAsymptomatic bacteriuria was observed in 30% of the urine cultures of patients undergoing dialysis and patients after kidney transplantation, with Escherichia coli as the most dominant microorganism (73%) detected with the use of classical microbiology techniques. However, differences in the bacterial composition of the urine samples between the evaluated patient groups were demonstrated using the amplicon sequencing. Finegoldia, Leptotrichia, and Corynebacterium were found to be discriminative bacteria genera in patients after dialysis and kidney transplantation compared to the control group. In addition, in all of urine samples, including those without bacteriuria in classical urine culture, many types of bacteria have been identified using 16S rRNA sequencing.DiscussionThe revealed microbial characteristics may form the basis in searching for new diagnostic markers in treatment of patients undergoing dialysis and patients after kidney transplantation

    Мастерство педагогического труда и мотивация учебной деятельности у студентов

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    Aim To gain insight into community nurses' experiences and how they make sense of the expertise they offer in their role Background Globally, the spotlight is currently on community nursing expertise because of the movement of hospital-based to community- based care. Caring for people at home is no longer solely concerned with prevention, but delivering complex care to patients who are acutely unwell or at the end of their life. Little is known about the distinct expertise of community nurses, or their contribution to patient outcomes. There is a need to examine expertise in this group in order to inform current and future care provision within community settings. Design A hermeneutic, phenomenological study. Method Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight community nurses in Scotland, UK, who hold an additional post-registration, professional qualification. Participants also kept audio-journals. Data were analysed using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis. Findings Participants described their expertise in three themes; negotiating a 'way in' to care, managing complexity, and 'thinking on your feet'. They did not refer to themselves as specialist practitioners, nor did they perceive that they were viewed as specialist by colleagues or management. They appeared to dismiss their range of expertise which included forming trusting relationships, anticipating care needs and problem-solving, enabling them to undertake complex care management. Conclusions Expertise of community nurses in this study is dynamic, contextualised and action-oriented enabling them to be creative problem-solvers. It reflects engagement with patients and families and all aspects of the setting where care is provided, rather than being solely an identifiable set of specialist skills, Relevance to clinical practice It is vital to recognize community-based expertise internationally, especially if current WHO aims for community-based health care are to be achieved. Highlighting this expertise contributes to current discourse and may be considered in education and practice reviews. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.sch_nur27pub4806pub3-

    The use of discrete choice experiments to inform health workforce policy: a systematic review.

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    BACKGROUND: Discrete choice experiments have become a popular study design to study the labour market preferences of health workers. Discrete choice experiments in health, however, have been criticised for lagging behind best practice and there are specific methodological considerations for those focused on job choices. We performed a systematic review of the application of discrete choice experiments to inform health workforce policy. METHODS: We searched for discrete choice experiments that examined the labour market preferences of health workers, including doctors, nurses, allied health professionals, mid-level and community health workers. We searched Medline, Embase, Global Health, other databases and grey literature repositories with no limits on date or language and contacted 44 experts. Features of choice task and experimental design, conduct and analysis of included studies were assessed against best practice. An assessment of validity was undertaken for all studies, with a comparison of results from those with low risk of bias and a similar objective and context. RESULTS: Twenty-seven studies were included, with over half set in low- and middle-income countries. There were more studies published in the last four years than the previous ten years. Doctors or medical students were the most studied cadre. Studies frequently pooled results from heterogeneous subgroups or extrapolated these results to the general population. Only one third of studies included an opt-out option, despite all health workers having the option to exit the labour market. Just five studies combined results with cost data to assess the cost effectiveness of various policy options. Comparison of results from similar studies broadly showed the importance of bonus payments and postgraduate training opportunities and the unpopularity of time commitments for the uptake of rural posts. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first systematic review of discrete choice experiments in human resources for health. We identified specific issues relating to this application of which practitioners should be aware to ensure robust results. In particular, there is a need for more defined target populations and increased synthesis with cost data. Research on a wider range of health workers and the generalisability of results would be welcome to better inform policy

    Improving local health through community health workers in Cambodia: challenges and solutions

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    Volunteer community health workers (CHWs) are an important link between the public health system and the community. The ‘Community Participation Policy for Health’ in Cambodia identifies CHWs as key to local health promotion and as a critical link between district health centres and the community. However, research on the challenges CHWs face and identifying what is required to optimise their performance is limited in the Cambodian context. This research explores the views of CHWs in rural Cambodia, on the challenges they face when implementing health initiatives

    Structure and magnetism in the bond-frustrated spinel ZnCr2Se4ZnCr_2Se_4

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    The crystal and magnetic structures of stoichiometric ZnCr2Se4ZnCr_2Se_4 have been investigated using synchrotron x-ray and neutron powder diffraction, muon spin relaxation (μSRμSR), and inelastic neutron scattering. Synchrotron x-ray diffraction shows a spin-lattice distortion from the cubic Fd3ˉmFd\bar3m spinel to a tetragonal I41/amdI4_1/amd lattice below TN=21KT_N = 21 K, where powder neutron diffraction confirms the formation of a helical magnetic structure with magnetic moment of 3.04(3)μB3.04(3) μ_B at 1.5 K, close to that expected for high-spin Cr3+Cr^{3+}. μSRμSR measurements show prominent local spin correlations that are established at temperatures considerably higher (100 μs^{-1}\)) muon relaxation rates are suggestive of rapid site hopping of the muons in static field. Inelastic neutron scattering measurements show a gapless mode at an incommensurate propagation vector of k = [000.4648(2)] in the low-temperature magnetic ordered phase that extends to 0.8 meV. The dispersion is modeled by a two-parameter Hamiltonian, containing ferromagnetic nearest-neighbor and antiferromagnetic next-nearest-neighbor interactions with a Jnnn/Jnn=0.337J_{nnn}/J_{nn} = -0.337
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