7,519 research outputs found
“Thanks for letting us all share your mammogram experience virtually” : developing an online hub for cancer screening
Background:
The decision around whether to attend breast screening can often involve making sense of confusing and contradictory information on risks and benefits. The Word of Mouth Mammogram e-Network (WoMMeN) project was established to create an online resource to support decision making around breast screening. This paper presents data from our user-centred approach to engaging stakeholders (both health professionals and service-users) in the design of this online resource. Our novel approach involved creating a user-design group within Facebook to allow access to ongoing discussion between researchers, radiographers and existing and potential service-users.
Objective:
The current study had two objectives. The first was to examine the utility of an online user-design group for generating insight for the creation of online health resources. We sought to explore the advantages and limitations of this approach. The second objective was to analyse what women want from an online resource for breast screening information.
Methods:
We recruited a user-design group in Facebook, and also posted a survey within the group asking questions around design considerations for an online breast screening hub. Although the membership of the Facebook group varied over time, there were 71 members in the Facebook group at the end point of analysis. We next conducted framework analysis on 70 threads from Facebook and thematic analysis on the 23 survey responses. We focused additional analysis on how the themes were discussed by the different stakeholders within the context of the design group.
Results:
Two major themes were found across both the Facebook discussion and the survey data: ‘The power of information’, and ‘The hub as a place for communication and support’. Information was discussed as empowering, but also recognised as threatening. Communication and the sharing of experiences were deemed important but there was also recognition of potential miscommunication within online discussion. Health professionals and service-users expressed the same broad concerns, but also showed subtle differences. Importantly, the themes were triangulated between the Facebook discussions and the survey data, supporting the validity of an online user-design group.
Conclusions:
Online user-design groups afford a useful method for understanding stakeholder needs. In contrast to focus groups, they afford access to users from diverse geographical locations, and traverse time constraints allowing more considered follow-ups to responses. The use of Facebook provides a familiar and naturalistic setting for discussion. Whilst also acknowledging limitations in the sample, this approach has allowed us to understand the views of stakeholders in the user-centred design of the WoMMeN hub for breast screening
The holistic phase model of early adult crisis
The objective of the current study was to explore the structural, temporal and experiential manifestations of crisis episodes in early adulthood, using a holistic-systemic theoretical framework. Based on an analysis of 50 interviews with individuals about a crisis episode between the ages of 25 and 35, a holistic model was developed. The model comprises four phases: (1) Locked-in, (2) Separation/Time-out, (3) Exploration and (4) Rebuilding, which in turn have characteristic features at four levels—person-in-environment, identity, motivation and affect-cognition. A crisis starts out with a commitment at work or home that has been made but is no longer desired, and this is followed by an emotionally volatile period of change as that commitment is terminated. The positive trajectory of crisis involves movement through an exploratory period towards active rebuilding of a new commitment, but ‘fast-forward’ and ‘relapse’ loops can interrupt Phases 3 and 4 and make a positive resolution of the episode less likely. The model shows conceptual links with life stage theories of emerging adulthood and early adulthood, and it extends current understandings of the transitional developmental challenges that young adults encounter
New first trimester crown-rump length's equations optimized by structured data collection from a French general population
--- Objectives --- Prior to foetal karyotyping, the likelihood of Down's
syndrome is often determined combining maternal age, serum free beta-HCG,
PAPP-A levels and embryonic measurements of crown-rump length and nuchal
translucency for gestational ages between 11 and 13 weeks. It appeared
important to get a precise knowledge of these scan parameters' normal values
during the first trimester. This paper focused on crown-rump length. ---
METHODS --- 402 pregnancies from in-vitro fertilization allowing a precise
estimation of foetal ages (FA) were used to determine the best model that
describes crown-rump length (CRL) as a function of FA. Scan measures by a
single operator from 3846 spontaneous pregnancies representative of the general
population from Northern France were used to build a mathematical model linking
FA and CRL in a context as close as possible to normal scan screening used in
Down's syndrome likelihood determination. We modeled both CRL as a function of
FA and FA as a function of CRL. For this, we used a clear methodology and
performed regressions with heteroskedastic corrections and robust regressions.
The results were compared by cross-validation to retain the equations with the
best predictive power. We also studied the errors between observed and
predicted values. --- Results --- Data from 513 spontaneous pregnancies allowed
to model CRL as a function of age of foetal age. The best model was a
polynomial of degree 2. Datation with our equation that models spontaneous
pregnancies from a general population was in quite agreement with objective
datations obtained from 402 IVF pregnancies and thus support the validity of
our model. The most precise measure of CRL was when the SD was minimal
(1.83mm), for a CRL of 23.6 mm where our model predicted a 49.4 days of foetal
age. Our study allowed to model the SD from 30 to 90 days of foetal age and
offers the opportunity of using Zscores in the future to detect growth
abnormalities. --- Conclusion --- With powerful statistical tools we report a
good modeling of the first trimester embryonic growth in the general population
allowing a better knowledge of the date of fertilization useful in the
ultrasound screening of Down's syndrome. The optimal period to measure CRL and
predict foetal age was 49.4 days (9 weeks of gestational age). Our results open
the way to the detection of foetal growth abnormalities using CRL Zscores
throughout the first trimester
β2 integrin LFA1 mediates airway damage following neutrophil trans-epithelial migration during RSV infection
RSV bronchiolitis is the most common cause of infant hospital admissions, but there is limited understanding of the mechanisms of disease and no specific anti-viral treatment. Using a novel in vitro primary trans-epithelial neutrophil migration model and innovative imaging methods, we show that RSV infection of nasal airway epithelium increased neutrophil trans-epithelial migration and adhesion to infected epithelial cells, which is associated with epithelial cell damage, reduced ciliary beat frequency, but also a reduction in infectious viral load.
Following migration, RSV infection results in greater neutrophil activation, degranulation and release of neutrophil elastase into the airway surface media compared to neutrophils that migrated across mock-infected nasal epithelial cells. Blocking of the interaction between the ligand on neutrophils (the β2 integrin LFA-1) for intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) on epithelial cells reduced neutrophil adherence to RSV infected cells and epithelial cell damage to pre-infection levels, but did not reduce the numbers of neutrophils which migrated or prevent the reduction in infectious viral load.
These findings have provided important insights into the contribution of neutrophils to airway damage and viral clearance, which are relevant to pathophysiology of RSV bronchiolitis. This model is a convenient, quantitative pre-clinical model that will further elucidate mechanisms that drive disease severity and has utility in anti-viral drug discovery
A new hammer to crack an old nut : interspecific competitive resource capture by plants is regulated by nutrient supply, not climate
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Two-decade change in prevalence of cognitive impairment in the UK.
Identification of individuals at high risk of dementia has usually focused attention on the clinical concept of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which captures an intermediate state between normal cognitive ageing and dementia. In many countries age specific risk of dementia has declined, but whether this is also the case for subclinical cognitive impairment is unknown. This has important implications for prevention, planning and policy. Here we describe subclinical cognitive impairment and mild dementia prevalence changes, in the UK, over 2 decades. The Cognitive Function and Ageing Studies have examined the full spectrum of cognition, from normal to dementia, in representative populations of people aged ≥ 65 years in the UK over the last 2 decades 7635 participants were interviewed in CFAS I in Cambridgeshire, Newcastle, and Nottingham in 1991, with 1457 being diagnostically assessed. In the same geographical areas, the CFAS II investigators interviewed 7796 individuals in 2011. Using established criteria, the population was categorised into seven groups: no cognitive impairment, Mild cognitive Impairment (defined using consensus criteria), other cognitive impairment no dementia without functional impairment, OCIND with functional impairment, cognitive impairment (MMSE < 24 and no functional impairment), mild dementia (MMSE < 24 with functional impairment, not captured by CFAS dementia criteria), and CFAS dementia criteria. Multinomial logistic regression, adjusted for age and sex, was used to estimate the prevalence of impairment in both studies. Results were standardized to the age-sex specific UK and global population. There is a clear increase in the prevalence of other cognitive Impairment no Dementia (without functional impairment), with the purer MCI remaining stable. In the UK, mild dementia is estimated to fall from 520,704 cases (5.7%, 95% CI 3.8, 8.1) in 1991 to 315,142 (3.0%, 95% CI 2.4, 3.8) in 2011, cognitive impairment, has fallen from 1,225,984 (13.5%, 95% CI 10.1, 17.5) to 654,436 (6.3%, 95% CI 5.4, 7.3) cases. Using additional categories which reflect the continuum of cognitive decline and impairment in populations we see that the mildest dementia declines, but that there is stability in estimates of those who meet MCI criteria. Increases were found in the Other Cognitive Impairment no Dementia group. The decline observed in severe impairment thus seems to have resulted in larger proportions of the population in milder forms, seen alongside physical illnesses
Evolving surface finite element method for the Cahn-Hilliard equation
We use the evolving surface finite element method to solve a Cahn- Hilliard equation on an evolving surface with prescribed velocity. We start by deriving the equation using a conservation law and appropriate transport for- mulae and provide the necessary functional analytic setting. The finite element method relies on evolving an initial triangulation by moving the nodes according to the prescribed velocity. We go on to show a rigorous well-posedness result for the continuous equations by showing convergence, along a subse- quence, of the finite element scheme. We conclude the paper by deriving error estimates and present various numerical examples
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