299 research outputs found
Lower body acceleration and muscular responses to rotational and vertical whole-body vibration of different frequencies and amplitudes
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this recordThe aim of this study was to characterise acceleration transmission and neuromuscular responses to rotational (RV) and vertical (VV) vibration of different frequencies and amplitudes.
Methods - 12 healthy males completed 2 experimental trials (RV vs. VV) during which vibration was delivered during either squatting (30°; RV vs. VV) or standing (RV only) with 20, 25, 30 Hz, at 1.5 and 3.0 mm peak-to-peak amplitude. Vibration-induced accelerations were assessed with triaxial accelerometers mounted on the platform and bony landmarks at ankle, knee, and lumbar spine.
Results At all frequency/amplitude combinations, accelerations at the ankle were greater during RV (all p < 0.03) with the greatest difference observed at 30 Hz 1.5 mm. Transmission of RV was also influenced by body posture (standing vs. squatting, p < 0.03). Irrespective of vibration type vibration transmission to all skeletal sites was generally greater at higher amplitudes but not at higher frequencies, especially above the ankle joint. Acceleration at the lumbar spine increased with greater vibration amplitude but not frequency and was highest with RV during standing.
Conclusions/Implications - The transmission of vibration during WBV is dependent on intensity and direction of vibration as well as body posture. For targeted mechanical loading at the lumbar spine, RV of higher amplitude and lower frequency vibration while standing is recommended. These results will assist with the prescription of WBV to achieve desired levels of mechanical loading at specific sites in the human body.London South Bank UniversityAge U
The Children and Young People's Health Partnership Evelina London Model of Care: process evaluation protocol
Introduction Children and young people (CYP) in the
UK have poor health outcomes, and there is increasing
emergency department and hospital outpatient use. To
address these problems in Lambeth and Southwark (two
boroughs of London, UK), the local Clinical Commissioning
Groups, Local Authorities and Healthcare Providers formed
The Children and Young People’s Health Partnership
(CYPHP), a clinical-academic programme for improving
child health. The Partnership has developed the CYPHP
Evelina London model, an integrated healthcare model that
aims to deliver effective, coordinated care in primary and
community settings and promote better self-management
to over approximately 90 000 CYP in Lambeth and
Southwark. This protocol is for the process evaluation of
this model of care.
Methods and analysis Alongside an impact evaluation,
an in-depth, mixed-methods process evaluation will
be used to understand the barriers and facilitators to
implementing the model of care. The data collected
mapped onto a logic model of how CYPHP is expected
to improve child health outcomes. Data collection and
analysis include qualitative interviews and focus groups
with stakeholders, a policy review and a quantitative
analysis of routine clinical and administrative data and
questionnaire data. Information relating to the context of
the trial that may affect implementation and/or outcomes
of the CYPHP model of care will be documented.
Ethics and dissemination The study has been reviewed
by NHS REC Cornwall & Plymouth (17/SW/0275). The
findings of this process evaluation will guide the scaling up
and implementation of the CYPHP Evelina London Model
of Care across the UK. Findings will be disseminated
through publications and conferences, and implementation
manuals and guidance for others working to improve child
health through strengthening health systems.
Trial registration number NCT03461848
Drug use among British Bangladeshis in London: a macro-structural perspective focusing on disadvantages contributing to individuals’ drug use trajectories and engagement with treatment services
Aims: The main aim of our study was to produce an understanding of factors contributing to drug-using trajectories among men and women from a Bangladeshi background living in East London.
Methods: Fifteen semi-structured, one-to-one interviews were conducted with male and female Bangladeshi drug users accessing treatment services. A macro-structural lens was adopted to interpret participants’ accounts of their drug use and explored the intersecting factors that at a micro, meso, and macro level impacted on their drug-using trajectories.
Findings: Problem drug use (heroin and crack cocaine) among participants was the result of inter-related factors such as their friendship networks and the embeddedness of drugs in drug-using networks, the structural disadvantages participants experienced, and the need for concealment of their drug use which impacted on participants’ effective utilisation of drug treatment services. Problem drug use was a functional way of responding to and dealing with social, economic, and cultural disconnection from mainstream institutions as participants faced severe multiple disadvantages engendering stigma and shame.
Conclusions: We propose a ‘life-focused’ intervention aimed at creating extra opportunities and making critically-needed resources available in the marginalised environment of the study’s participants, which are key to restoring and maintaining agency and sustaining well-being
Effectiveness of group body psychotherapy for negative symptoms of schizophrenia: multicentre randomised controlled trial
Background
Negative symptoms of schizophrenia have a severe impact on functional outcomes and treatment options are limited. Arts therapies are currently recommended but more evidence is required.
Aims
To assess body psychotherapy as a treatment for negative symptoms compared with an active control (trial registration:ISRCTN84216587).
Method
Schizophrenia out-patients were randomised into a 20-session body psychotherapy or Pilates group. The primary outcome was negative symptoms at end of treatment. Secondary outcomes included psychopathology, functional, social and treatment satisfaction outcomes at treatment end and 6-months later.
Results
In total, 275 participants were randomised. The adjusted difference in negative symptoms was 0.03 (95% CI –1.11 to 1.17), indicating no benefit from body psychotherapy. Small improvements in expressive deficits and movement disorder symptoms were detected in favour of body psychotherapy. No other outcomes were significantly different.
Conclusions
Body psychotherapy does not have a clinically relevant beneficial effect in the treatment of patients with negative symptoms of schizophreni
Measuring psychological health in the perinatal period: workshop consensus statement, 19 March 2013
This consensus statement is the result of an invited workshop funded by the society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology on Measuring Psychological Health in the Perinatal Period which was held in Oxford on the 19th March 2013. The details of those who participated in the workshop can be found at the end of the consensus statement. The workshop evolved out of recognition that a major limitation to research and practice in the perinatal period is identifying valid, reliable and clinically relevant measures of psychological health
The Regeneration Games: Commodities, Gifts and the Economics of London 2012
This paper considers contradictions between two concurrent and tacit conceptions of the Olympic ‘legacy’, setting out one conception that understands the games and their legacies as gifts alongside and as counterpoint to the prevailing discourse, which conceives Olympic assets as commodities. The paper critically examines press and governmental discussion of legacy, in order to locate these in the context of a wider perspective contrasting ‘gift’ and ‘commodity’ Olympics – setting anthropological conceptions of gift-based sociality as a necessary supplement to contractual and dis-embedded socioeconomic organizational assumptions underpinning the commodity Olympics. Costbenefit planning is central to modern city building and mega-event delivery. The paper considers the insufficiency of this approach as the exclusive paradigm within which to frame and manage a dynamic socio-economic and cultural legacy arising from the 2012 games
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