714 research outputs found

    Health Libraries Australia Report for JEAHIL PD Day 2018

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    Evaluation of the LiveWell Method: Final Report

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    The LiveWell Method uses a practice-based framework to improve the quality of life for people living and working in long-term care settings, including assisted living and memory care. It is designed to improve teamwork, communication, and morale by helping staff organize, track, measure, and improve daily operations. This evaluation is informed by the LiveWell Method’s “bottom-up and top enabled” approach, which engages and empowers direct care staff and administrators to create a more democratic and transparent workplace. In addition, the evaluation included questions to assess LiveWell’s core values, such as creating care innovations, nurturing dignity, creating community, and honoring elders, as well as organizational frameworks such as “lean thinking” and “human-centered design,” and trauma-informed practices

    Uniform Sobolev, interpolation and geometric Calder\'on-Zygmund inequalities for graph hypersurfaces

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    In this note, our aim is to show that families of smooth hypersurfaces of Rn+1\mathbb R^{n+1} which are all C1C^1--close enough to a fixed compact, embedded one, have uniformly bounded constants in some relevant inequalities for mathematical analysis, like Sobolev, Gagliardo-Nirenberg and ``geometric'' Calder\'on-Zygmund inequalities. This technical result is quite useful, in particular, in the study of the geometric flows of hypersurfaces

    Relationship between pulmonary exacerbations and daily physical activity in adults with cystic fibrosis

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    The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between pulmonary exacerbations and physical activity (PA) in adults with cystic fibrosis (CF)

    Sports perception in young people. Survey in the Italian primary school and comparison with the Maltese school

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    Here below are the results of a comparative study on the perception of the sports practice in primary school by focusing on the possible differences between genders and classes, and assessing the difference of the sociologic aspects and the media.\ud \ud Studying, assessing and analyzing the issues related to physical activities offered to children of school age allows a deeper knowledge of the current psycho-physical condition of the child.\ud \ud It’s also important to know the cultural and social phenomena concerning young people which always represent, for better or for worse, the time they live in

    The Resident VIEW in Nursing Homes

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    This article presents the Resident VIEW (Voicing Importance, Experience, and Well-Being), a measure designed to learn directly from long-term care residents the extent to which they experience support that matters most to them. The Resident VIEW contains 63 items across eight domains developed through cognitive interviews with residents in different types of residential settings (e.g., nursing homes, assisted living, and adult foster care). Residents rate items on both importance and their experience. In total, 258 nursing home residents living in 32 Oregon nursing homes were selected through a two-stage random sampling design and participated in the study. Results demonstrate that what matters most to residents varies, emphasizing the value of asking residents directly about their preferences. The relationship between importance and experience differed by item. Residents who experienced support rated very important within some domains, reported better quality of life and reported lower levels of depressive symptoms than those who did not experience these things. The interaction between importance and experience, however, did not reach statistical significance, suggesting that positive experiences may provide benefit even in some areas that are not perceived as important by residents. Results underscore the value of incorporating the resident perspective into measure development in long-term care

    The Resident VIEW in Community- Based Care Residential Settings

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    The Resident VIEW is a measure of person-centered care (PCC) from residents’ perspectives and was previously studied in nursing homes. The current study presents descriptive data for the Resident VIEW in community-based care settings including assisted living, residential care (AL/RC), and adult foster homes (AFH). Using a two-stage sampling design, we recruited 31 AL/RC and 119 AFH in Oregon and completed face-to-face structured interviews with 227 and 195 residents, respectively. Residents provided ratings for both the importance of and their experience with 66 items that tapped into PCC practices in eight domains. Results are provided for each item, many of which are significantly associated with greater quality of life, better resident satisfaction, and fewer depressive symptoms, especially in the domains of personalized care and being treated like a person. Incongruence between importance and experience ratings indicate many residents experience unmet needs across multiple domains. The Resident VIEW performed well in different types of settings, providing an important tool for researchers and providers who wish to learn about the PCC experience from residents’ points of view

    Evaluation of two grass pollen extracts for immunotherapy by serum determinations of specific IgE and IgG4 antibodies towards purified Timothy grass pollen allergens (Phl p 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12) in patients undergoing hyposensitization treatment

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    ABSTRACTBackgroundThe diagnosis of allergic diseases with recombinant allergens allows us to detect antibodies specific for single allergens in extracts. The aim of the present study was to assess the early effect of grass pollen immunotherapy on IgE and IgG4 responses to eight purified grass pollen allergens in patients undergoing hyposensitization treatment.MethodsThe sera of 22 consecutive atopic individuals undergoing cluster regimen grass pollen immunotherapy were analyzed for IgE and IgG4 antibodies specific for grass pollen allergens (Phl p 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12). Two serum samples were taken, one before the start of therapy and one between 12 and 15 weeks after the first immunization. Immunotherapy was performed with two allergy vaccines comprising a standardized extract aluminum-adsorbed grass pollen mix and a standardized extract of grass pollen mix adsorbed onto calcium phosphate.ResultsOne treated patient showed a specific IgE conversion from negative (<0.35 kUA/L) to positive in the capsulated hydrophilic carrier polymer (CAP) test for Phl p 2, 1 and 4 (1.89, 0.84 and 0.68 kUA/L, respectively). The sera of 10 of 11 patients treated with alluminum-adsorbed grass pollen extract showed a significant increase in specific IgG4 towards natural Timothy grass pollen extract and purified allergens, as well as significant IgG4 levels towards Phl p 1 (P = 0.000238) Phl p 2 (P = 0.000289), Phl p 4 (P = 0.000585), Phl p 5 (P = 0.000364), Phl p 6 (P = 0.000346) and Phl p 11 (P = 0.039623; Mann–Whitney U-test) 12 weeks after the onset of immunotherapy. The sera of seven of 11 subjects treated with calcium phospate-adsorbed grass pollen extract had significant IgG4 levels against Timothy pollen allergens, as well as significant IgG4 titers against Phl p 1 (P = 0.004703), Phl p 4 (P = 0.000282), Phl p 5 (P = 0.015480), Phl p 6 (P = 0.013012) and Phl p 11 (P = 0.005178). Patients treated with aluminum-adsorbed grass pollen extract had higher levels of IgG4 towards Phl p 2, 4 and 6 and natural Timothy grass extract compared with patients treated with calcium phosphate-adsorbed grass pollen extract. Both the alluminum-adsorbed and calcium phosphate-adsorbed grass pollen extract allergy vaccines induced significant titers of specific IgG4 towards Phleum pratense pollen extract (P = 0.008376 and 0.01148, respectively).ConclusionsThese results indicate that grass pollen immunotherapy elicits an array of antibody specificities that reflect the allergen content and the potency of allergen extracts; this could be of pivotal importance to define optimal allergen extract doses

    Association between female reproductive health and mancozeb: systematic review of experimental models

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    Abstract: Mancozeb is a widely used fungicide approved for use in agriculture in many countries with long persistence in the environment and consequent bioaccumulation in tissues and biological fluids. Despite the large amount of studies published in recent years, the relationship between mancozeb exposure and female reproductive health is not fully elucidated. In order to summarize current evidence on mancozeb exposure and female reproductive disease, we performed a systematic review of literature. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were used to make this review. An adapted version of the National Toxicology Program’s Office of Health and Assessment and Translation (OHAT) framework was used to evaluate the risk of bias. Electronic search on two databases (PubMed and Scopus) was used to find experimental studies (in vitro and in vivo) on mancozeb exposure. The database search identified 250 scientific articles, 20 of which met our inclusion criteria. Selected data were then reviewed and summarized in tables. Overall, mancozeb represents a hazard for female reproductive health, with different mechanisms of action. Undoubtedly more experimental and epidemiological studies are required to definitively validate mancozeb as reproductive toxicant
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