1,297 research outputs found
Inclusion Chemistry of Thiazyl and Selenazyl Radicals in MIL-53(Al)
Host-guest interactions have recently become a growing area of study within the scientific community, where the intrinsic chemistry affiliated with the binding and activity of these interactions can be directly correlated to the applications these complexes possess, such as gas storage materials, sensors, activators, and in heterogeneous catalysis. In particular, inclusion complexes possessing radical guests offer the potential for strong communication between both the host and guest and/or the guest molecules themselves, where the nature of the host-guest interactions lead to the effects in which the host can modify the guest properties, or conversely, the guest affects the host structure. This presentation will describe the inclusion chemistry of 4-phenyl-1,2,3,5-dithiadiazolyl (PhDTDA) radical, and its selenium analogue (PhDSDA), into the porous metal-organic framework host MIL-53(Al). The inclusion of the PhDTDA and PhDSDA radicals into MIL-53(Al) was achieved through gas phase diffusion, and led to a colour change in the host from white to red and purple, respectively. The characterization of these inclusion complexes was confirmed through powder X-Ray diffraction and EPR spectroscopy. Reactivity studies of these radicals within the host framework will be discussed
Behaviour change interventions to influence antimicrobial prescribing: a cross-sectional analysis of reports from UK state-of-the-art scientific conferences
Background To improve the quality of antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) interventions the application of behavioural sciences supported by multidisciplinary collaboration has been recommended. We analysed major UK scientific research conferences to investigate AMS behaviour change intervention reporting. Methods Leading UK 2015 scientific conference abstracts for 30 clinical specialties were identified and interrogated. All AMS and/or antimicrobial resistance(AMR) abstracts were identified using validated search criteria. Abstracts were independently reviewed by four researchers with reported behavioural interventions classified using a behaviour change taxonomy. Results Conferences ran for 110 days with >57,000 delegates. 311/12,313(2.5%) AMS-AMR abstracts (oral and poster) were identified. 118/311(40%) were presented at the UKâs infectious diseases/microbiology conference. 56/311(18%) AMS-AMR abstracts described behaviour change interventions. These were identified across 12/30(40%) conferences. The commonest abstract reporting behaviour change interventions were quality improvement projects [44/56 (79%)]. In total 71 unique behaviour change functions were identified. Policy categories; âguidelinesâ (16/71) and âservice provisionâ (11/71) were the most frequently reported. Intervention functions; âeducationâ (6/71), âpersuasionâ (7/71), and âenablementâ (9/71) were also common. Only infection and primary care conferences reported studies that contained multiple behaviour change interventions. The remaining 10 specialties tended to report a narrow range of interventions focusing on âguidelinesâ and âenablementâ. Conclusion Despite the benefits of behaviour change interventions on antimicrobial prescribing, very few AMS-AMR studies reported implementing them in 2015. AMS interventions must focus on promoting behaviour change towards antimicrobial prescribing. Greater focus must be placed on non-infection specialties to engage with the issue of behaviour change towards antimicrobial use
Recommended from our members
The Differences in Antibiotic Decision-making Between Acute Surgical and Acute Medical Teams: An Ethnographic Study of Culture and Team Dynamics
Background
Cultural and social determinants influence antibiotic decision-making in hospitals. We investigated and compared cultural determinants of antibiotic decision-making in acute medical and surgical specialties.
Methods
An ethnographic observational study of antibiotic decision-making in acute medical and surgical teams at a London teaching hospital was conducted (August 2015âMay 2017). Data collection included 500 hours of direct observations, and face-to-face interviews with 23 key informants. A grounded theory approach, aided by Nvivo 11 software, analyzed the emerging themes. An iterative and recursive process of analysis ensured saturation of the themes. The multiple modes of enquiry enabled cross-validation and triangulation of the findings.
Results
In medicine, accepted norms of the decision-making process are characterized as collectivist (input from pharmacists, infectious disease, and medical microbiology teams), rationalized, and policy-informed, with emphasis on de-escalation of therapy. The gaps in antibiotic decision-making in acute medicine occur chiefly in the transition between the emergency department and inpatient teams, where ownership of the antibiotic prescription is lost. In surgery, team priorities are split between 3 settings: operating room, outpatient clinic, and ward. Senior surgeons are often absent from the ward, leaving junior staff to make complex medical decisions. This results in defensive antibiotic decision-making, leading to prolonged and inappropriate antibiotic use.
Conclusions
In medicine, the legacy of infection diagnosis made in the emergency department determines antibiotic decision-making. In surgery, antibiotic decision-making is perceived as a nonsurgical intervention that can be delegated to junior staff or other specialties. Different, bespoke approaches to optimize antibiotic prescribing are therefore needed to address these specific challenges
Promoting medical student engagement with antimicrobial stewardship through involvement in undergraduate research
The National Health Service recognises the importance of research, teaching, and training to the future success of the organisation and medical students are expected to qualify with the necessary clinical, professional, and academic skills to support this. There is a wide variation in the level of cross-specialty engagement with Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) & Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) research at UK and international state-of-the-art conferences, with a heterogeneous level of importance also attributed amongst undergraduate and postgraduate training pathways across clinical medicine. It therefore seems apparent that the AMS-AMR agenda needs to be promoted from within specialties, rather than being âpushedâ on them as an external agenda, to promote broad ownership and capacity within all clinical specialties that use antimicrobials. This must start early during undergraduate medical training. We investigated whether the use of an online platform designed to facilitate medical student research projects could be utilised to promote undergraduate engagement with AMSAMR at Imperial College School of Medicine between July 2015 and 2016. During this period 12 applicants were appointed to 11 of the 13 advertised projects. So far, students undertaking these projects have achieved: 1 peer-reviewed publication, 3 national oral presentations, 1 national prize, 1 international poster presentation, 3 national poster presentations, and 2 further manuscripts are currently under peer-review. Furthermore, despite the studentsâ broad career interests there has been a high retention rate with students requesting involvement in further AMS-AMR related activities. Further longitudinal assessment of this tool for promoting undergraduate engagement with AMS-AMR research is now being explored
Recommended from our members
Serious electronic games as behavioural change interventions in healthcare-associated infections and infection prevention and control: a scoping review of the literature and future directions
Background
The uptake of improvement initiatives in infection prevention and control (IPC) has often proven challenging. Innovative interventions such as âserious gamesâ have been proposed in other areas to educate and help clinicians adopt optimal behaviours. There is limited evidence about the application and evaluation of serious games in IPC. The purposes of the study were: a) to synthesise research evidence on the use of serious games in IPC to support healthcare workersâ behaviour change and best practice learning; and b) to identify gaps across the formulation and evaluation of serious games in IPC.
Methods
A scoping study was conducted using the methodological framework developed by Arksey and OâMalley. We interrogated electronic databases (Ovid MEDLINE, Embase Classicâ+âEmbase, PsycINFO, Scopus, Cochrane, Google Scholar) in December 2015. Evidence from these studies was assessed against an analytic framework of intervention formulation and evaluation.
Results
Nine hundred sixty five unique papers were initially identified, 23 included for full-text review, and four finally selected. Studies focused on intervention inception and development rather than implementation. Expert involvement in game design was reported in 2/4 studies. Potential game users were not included in needs assessment and game development. Outcome variables such as fidelity or sustainability were scarcely reported.
Conclusions
The growing interest in serious games for health has not been coupled with adequate evaluation of processes, outcomes and contexts involved. Explanations about the mechanisms by which game components may facilitate behaviour change are lacking, further hindering adoption
Supramolecular aggregation in dithia-arsoles: chlorides, cations and N-centred paddlewheels
The benzo-fused dithia-chloro-arsole derivative C6H4S2AsCl (1) is found to crystallise in the triclinic space group P[1 with combining macron] with 17 molecules in the asymmetric unit whereas the tolyl derivative, MeC6H3S2AsCl (2) is polymorphic with the ι-phase crystallising in the monoclinic space group P21/c with a single molecule in the asymmetric unit and the β-phase adopting a triclinic structure with two molecules in the asymmetric unit. Reaction of these dithia-chloro-arsole derivatives with LiN(SiMe3)2 in a 3 : 1 mole ratio afforded the unique paddlewheel structure (MeC6H4S2As)3N (4)
Neuroligins determine synapse maturation and function
Synaptogenesis, the generation and maturation of functional synapses between nerve cells, is an essential step in the development of neuronal networks in the brain. It is thought to be triggered by members of the neuroligin family of postsynaptic cell adhesion proteins, which may form transsynaptic contacts with presynaptic alpha- and beta-neurexins and have been implicated in the etiology of autism. We show that deletion mutant mice lacking neuroligin expression die shortly after birth due to respiratory failure. This respiratory failure is a consequence of reduced GABAergic/glycinergic and glutamatergic synaptic transmission and network activity in brainstem centers that control respiration. However, the density of synaptic contacts is not altered in neuroligin-deficient brains and cultured neurons. Our data show that neuroligins are required for proper synapse maturation and brain function, but not for the initial formation of synaptic contacts
System Dynamics modelling to formulate policy interventions to optimise antibiotic prescribing in hospitals
Š 2020 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Multiple strategies have been used in the National Health System (NHS) in England to reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing and consumption in order to tackle antimicrobial resistance. These strategies have included, among others, restricting dispensing, introduction of prescribing guidelines, use of clinical audit, and performance reviews as well as strategies aimed at changing the prescribing behaviour of clinicians. However, behavioural interventions have had limited effect in optimising doctorsâ antibiotic prescribing practices. This study examines the determinants of decision-making for antibiotic prescribing in hospitals in the NHS. A system dynamics model was constructed to capture structural and behavioural influences to simulate doctorsâ prescribing practices. Data from the literature, patient records, healthcare professional interviews and survey responses were used to parameterise the model. The scenario simulation shows maximum improvements in guideline compliance are achieved when compliance among senior staff is increased, combined with fast laboratory turnaround of blood cultures, and microbiologist review. Improving guideline compliance of junior staff alone has limited impact. This first use of system dynamics modelling to study antibiotic prescribing decision-making demonstrates the applicability of the methodology for design and evaluation of future policies and interventions.Peer reviewe
Recommended from our members
Missed opportunities for shared decision making in antimicrobial stewardship: The potential consequences of a lack of patient engagement in secondary care
Background: Within infectious diseases in secondary care, understanding of the potential for behavioural changes arising from patient involvement in antimicrobial decision making is lacking. Shared decision making is becoming part of international policy. The United States have passed it into legislation and the United Kingdom has implemented a number of national interventions across healthcare pathways. This study aims to understand the level of patient involvement in decision making around antimicrobial use in secondary care and the potential consequences associated with it. Methods & Materials: Fourteen members of the public who had received antimicrobials from secondary care in the preceding 12 months were recruited to participate in group interviews. Group interactions were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analysed. Results: Participants reported feelings of disempowerment during episodes of infection in secondary care. Information is currently communicated in a unilateral manner with individuals âtoldâ that they have an infection and will receive an antimicrobial (often unnamed), leading to loss of ownership, frustration, anxiety and ultimately distancing them from participation in decision making. This poor communication drives individuals to seek information from alternative sources, including on-line resources, which are associated with concerns over reliability and individualisation. This failure of communication and information provision from clinicians in secondary care influences individual's future ideas about infections and their management. This alters their future actions towards infections and antimicrobials and can drive non-adherence to prescribed antimicrobial regimes and loss-to-follow-up after discharge from secondary care. Conclusion: Current infection management and antimicrobial prescribing practices in secondary care may be failing to engage patients in the decision making process. It is vital that secondary care physicians do not view infection management episodes as discrete events, but as cumulative experiences which have the potential to drive future non-adherence to prescribed antimicrobial regimes and thus poor individual outcomes and antimicrobial resistance. This lesson is transferable to all settings of healthcare, where poor communication and information provision having the potential to influence future health seeking behaviours. We call for the development of clear, pragmatic mechanism to support healthcare professionals and patients engage in infection related decision making during consultations
- âŚ