15 research outputs found

    Patient views on asthma diagnosis and how a clinical decision support system could help:a qualitative study

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    Abstract Introduction Making a diagnosis of asthma can be challenging for clinicians and patients. A clinical decision support system (CDSS) for use in primary care including a patientā€facing mode, could change how information is shared between patients and healthcare professionalsĀ and improve the diagnostic process. Methods Participants diagnosed with asthma within the last 5 years were recruited from general practices across four UK regions. Inā€depth interviews were used to explore patient experiences relating to their asthma diagnosis and to understand how a CDSS could be used to improve the diagnostic process for patients. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed using a thematic approach. Results SeventeenĀ participants (12 female) undertook interviews, including 14 individuals and 3 parents of children with asthma. Being diagnosed with asthma was generally considered an uncertain process. Participants felt a lack of consultation time and poor communication affected their understanding of asthma and what to expect. Had the nature of asthma and the steps required to make a diagnosis been explained more clearly, patients felt their understanding and engagement in asthma selfā€management could have been improved. Participants considered that a CDSS could provide resources to support the diagnostic process, prompt dialogue, aid understanding and support shared decisionā€making. Conclusion Undergoing an asthma diagnosis was uncertain for patients if their ideas and concerns were not addressed by clinicians and were influenced by a lack of consultation time and limitations in communication. An asthma diagnosis CDSS could provide structure and an interface to prompt dialogue, provide visuals about asthma to aid understandingĀ and encourage patient involvement. Patient and Public Contribution Prespecified semistructured interview topic guides (young person and adult versions) were developed by the research team and piloted with members of the Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) group. Findings were regularly discussed within the research group and with PPI colleagues to aid the interpretation of data

    Clinician views on how clinical decision support systems can help diagnose asthma in primary care : a qualitative study

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    Funding This work was supported by Asthma & Lung UK under Grant AUK-PG-2018-404 and Chief Scientist Office under Grant CAF/17/01.Peer reviewe

    Lynx Mission Concept Status

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    Lynx is a concept under study for prioritization in the 2020 Astrophysics Decadal Survey. Providing orders of magnitude increase in sensitivity over Chandra, Lynx will examine the first black holes and their galaxies, map the large-scale structure and galactic halos, and shed new light on the environments of young stars and their planetary systems. In order to meet the Lynx science goals, the telescope consists of a high-angular resolution optical assembly complemented by an instrument suite that may include a High Definition X-ray Imager, X-ray Microcalorimeter and an X-ray Grating Spectrometer. The telescope is integrated onto the spacecraft to form a comprehensive observatory concept. Progress on the formulation of the Lynx telescope and observatory configuration is reported in this paper

    Constructing the eastern european other: The horsemeat scandal and the migrant other

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    The Horsemeat scandal in the UK in 2013 ignited a furore about consumer deception and the bodily transgression of consuming something so alien to the British psyche. The imagination of the horse as a noble and mythic figure in British history and sociological imagination was invoked to construct the consumption of horsemeat as a social taboo and an immoral proposition in the British media debates. This paper traces the horsemeat scandal and its media framing in the UK. Much of the aversion to horsemeat was intertextually bound with discourses of immigration, the expansion of the EU and the threat in tandem to the UK. Food as a social and cultural artefact laden with symbolic meaning and national pride became a platform to construct the ā€˜Otherā€™ ā€“ in this case the Eastern European Other. The media debates on the horsemeat scandal interwove the opening up of the EU and particularly UK to the influx of Eastern European migration. The horsemeat controversy in implicating the Eastern Europeans for the contamination of the supply chain became a means to not just construct the ā€˜Otherā€™ but also to entwine contemporary policy debates about immigration. This temporal framing of contemporary debates enables a nation to renew and contemporise its notions of ā€˜othernessā€™ while sustaining an historic social imaginary of itself

    Attitudes and Barriers to Pain Management in the Ageing Population

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    - There will be increased numbers of older adults in society in the next few decades. - Older adults are more likely to have pain problems and other co-morbidities. - Generally, pain is poorly managed in older adults, and this becomes worse when cognitive impairment exists. - The impact of chronic pain on older adults will be greater than that of their younger counterparts in terms of social isolation. - Attitudes and barriers to improved pain management exist in both the older adults themselves and their younger counterpart
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