130 research outputs found

    Nursing students\u27 and clinical teachers\u27 perceptions of effective teacher characteristics

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    Instructional and organisational strategies can improve students\u27 transfer of knowledge and skill to the workplace. Constraints on transfer include: 1. a shortage of teachers who can build transfer inlo programmes; and 2. time span (interval) between teaching of the task and transfer of learning. Fifteen nursing students and five clinical teachers from a university in Western Australia participated in the initial qualitative component of the study. These students and teachers were asked to list effective clinical teachers\u27 behaviours which were then compared with beaviours listed in the Rauen\u27s Clinical Instructor Characteristics Rating Scale (1974). Using a modified Rauen\u27s Scale, 200 students from second and third year of their training participated in the quantitative component. whereby questionnaires were completed to evaluate perceived effective clinical behaviours. as well as the teachers\u27 demonstration of the established effective teacher behaviours from Rauen\u27s Scale, The influences of student and teacher variables (such as age. gender. level oftraining. previous work experience, perception. teacher qualification. employment s!atus and involvement in teaching theory). as well as students\u27 perception of effectiveness of clinical facililation. was obtained by data analysis of the completed questionnaires, Correlational data obtained yielded insignificant relationships between student and teacher variables and the perception of effective clinical facilitation of learning. Overall, nursing students\u27 perceptions of effective clinical facilitation was significanty positive

    Lymph Node Metastasis in Differentiated Thyroid Cancers

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    Lymph node metastasis is common in differentiated thyroid cancers. Therapeutic neck dissection removes macroscopic nodal metastasis, reduces local recurrence, and facilitates cancer surveillance. On the other hand, microscopic nodal metastasis is also increasingly recognized as a potential cause of persistent disease or early recurrences. Prophylactic neck dissection, by removing microscopic nodal metastasis, has been proposed to reduce recurrence and prevent future reoperation. When cancer recurs, regional nodal recurrence is most common, and the management should be individualized. We hereby present a narrative review on the management of nodal metastasis in differentiated thyroid cancers

    Angiography-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve in Coronary Assessment: Current Developments and Future Perspectives

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    Coronary physiology assessment is an important factor in guiding myocardial revascularization. A growing body of research highlights the value of using fractional flow reserve, FFR and other pressure-based indicators for functional assessment of stable coronary stenoses. Invasive functional coronary assessment techniques have evolved from intracoronary wire-based to wire-free approaches as a result of technological advancements. In addition, several software programs on the market have been thoroughly investigated and validated against invasive FFR, and have shown good accuracy and correlation. However, use of FFR remains modest. Hence, this review provides an overview of angiography-based FFR solutions and compares their technologies. Additionally, a systematic scoping review was performed to understand the research landscape in wire-free coronary physiology assessment, to complement the narratives of existing FFR trials on wire-free FFR. Furthermore, future developments and strategies that could expand the use of wire-free computed coronary functional assessment in the Asia Pacific region are discussed

    The Effectiveness of Aromatherapy for Depressive Symptoms: A Systematic Review

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    Background. Depression is one of the greatest health concerns affecting 350 million people globally. Aromatherapy is a popular CAM intervention chosen by people with depression. Due to the growing popularity of aromatherapy for alleviating depressive symptoms, in-depth evaluation of the evidence-based clinical efficacy of aromatherapy is urgently needed. Purpose. This systematic review aims to provide an analysis of the clinical evidence on the efficacy of aromatherapy for depressive symptoms on any type of patients. Methods. A systematic database search was carried out using predefined search terms in 5 databases: AMED, CINHAL, CCRCT, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO. Outcome measures included scales measuring depressive symptoms levels. Results. Twelve randomized controlled trials were included and two administration methods for the aromatherapy intervention including inhaled aromatherapy (5 studies) and massage aromatherapy (7 studies) were identified. Seven studies showed improvement in depressive symptoms. Limitations. The quality of half of the studies included is low, and the administration protocols among the studies varied considerably. Different assessment tools were also employed among the studies. Conclusions. Aromatherapy showed potential to be used as an effective therapeutic option for the relief of depressive symptoms in a wide variety of subjects. Particularly, aromatherapy massage showed to have more beneficial effects than inhalation aromatherapy

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    ABSTRACT. Objective. To develop a list of 5 tests or treatments used in rheumatology that have evidence indicating that they may be unnecessary and thus should be reevaluated by rheumatology healthcare providers and patients. Methods. Using the Delphi method, a committee of 16 rheumatologists from across Canada and an allied health professional generated a list of tests, procedures, or treatments in rheumatology that may be unnecessary, nonspecific, or insensitive. Items with high content agreement and perceived relevance advanced to a survey of Canadian Rheumatology Association (CRA) members. CRA members ranked these top items based on content agreement, effect, and item ranking. A methodology subcommittee discussed the items in light of their relevance to rheumatology, potential effect on patients, and the member survey results. Five candidate items selected were then subjected to a literature review. A group of patient collaborators with rheumatic diseases also reviewed these items. Results. Sixty-four unique items were proposed and after 3 Delphi rounds, this list was narrowed down to 13 items. In the member-wide survey, 172 rheumatologists responded (36% of those contacted). The respondent characteristics were similar to the membership at large in terms of sex and geographical distribution. Five topics (antinuclear antibodies testing, HLA-B27 testing, bone density testing, bone scans, and bisphosphonate use) with high ratings on agreement and effect were chosen for literature review. Conclusion. The list of 5 items has identified starting points to promote discussion about practices that should be questioned to assist rheumatology healthcare providers in delivering high-quality care

    Immunogenic Eimeria tenella Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-Anchored Surface Antigens (SAGs) Induce Inflammatory Responses in Avian Macrophages

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    , but the ability of these proteins to stimulate immune responses in the chicken is unknown. infection. Concomitantly, treatment with rSAGs 4, 5 and 12 suppressed the expression of IL-12 and IFN-Ξ³ and elevated that of IL-10, suggesting that during infection these molecules may specifically impair the development of cellular mediated immunity. pathogenicity associated with the endogenous second generation stages

    MAPK ERK Signaling Regulates the TGF-Ξ²1-Dependent Mosquito Response to Plasmodium falciparum

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    Malaria is caused by infection with intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium that are transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes. Although a variety of anti-parasite effector genes have been identified in anopheline mosquitoes, little is known about the signaling pathways that regulate these responses during parasite development. Here we demonstrate that the MEK-ERK signaling pathway in Anopheles is controlled by ingested human TGF-Ξ²1 and finely tunes mosquito innate immunity to parasite infection. Specifically, MEK-ERK signaling was dose-dependently induced in response to TGF-Ξ²1 in immortalized cells in vitro and in the A. stephensi midgut epithelium in vivo. At the highest treatment dose of TGF-Ξ²1, inhibition of ERK phosphorylation increased TGF-Ξ²1-induced expression of the anti-parasite effector gene nitric oxide synthase (NOS), suggesting that increasing levels of ERK activation negatively feed back on induced NOS expression. At infection levels similar to those found in nature, inhibition of ERK activation reduced P. falciparum oocyst loads and infection prevalence in A. stephensi and enhanced TGF-Ξ²1-mediated control of P. falciparum development. Taken together, our data demonstrate that malaria parasite development in the mosquito is regulated by a conserved MAPK signaling pathway that mediates the effects of an ingested cytokine

    MI 48084-5353 (formerly Technical Fellow at General Motors Research), [email protected]. John R. Hauser is the Kirin Professor of Marketing

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    Abstract Researchers and practitioners devote substantial effort to targeting banner advertisements, but less effort on how to communicate with consumers once targeted. Morphing enables a website to learn (actively and near optimally) which banner advertisements to serve to each cognitive-style segment in order to maximize click-through, brand consideration, and purchase. Cognitive-style segments are identified automatically from consumers' clickstreams. This paper describes the first large-sample random-assignment field-test of banner morphing -over 100,000 consumers viewing over 450,000 banners on CNET.com. On relevant webpages, CNET's click-through rates almost doubled relative to control banners. We supplement the CNET field test with a focused experiment on an automotive information-andrecommendation website. The focused experiment replaces automated learning with a longitudinal design to test the premise of morph-to-segment matching. Banners matched to cognitive styles, as well as the stage of the consumer's buying process and body-type preference, significantly increase click-through rates, brand consideration, and purchase likelihood relative to a control. Together the field and the focused experiments demonstrate that matching cognitive styles provide significant benefits above and beyond more-traditional targeting. Such improved banner effectiveness has strategic implications for allocations among media

    MI 48084-5353 (formerly Technical Fellow at General Motors Research), [email protected]. John R. Hauser is the Kirin Professor of Marketing

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    Abstract Morphing enables a website to learn (actively and near optimally) which banner advertisements to serve to each cognitive-style segment in order to maximize outcome measures such as click-through, brand consideration, or purchase. Consumer segments are identified automatically from consumers' clickstream choices. Morphing works best on high-traffic websites with tens of thousands of visitors because large samples are necessary to reach steady state optimally. This paper describes the first large-sample random-assignment field test of banner morphing -over 100,000 consumers viewing over 450,000 banners on CNET.com. (Previously published morphing evaluations evaluated morphing website characteristics and were based on predictive simulations using only priming-study data.) On relevant webpages, CNET's clickthrough rates almost double relative to control banners. We supplement the CNET field test with a focused experiment on an automotive information-and-recommendation website. The focused experiment replaces automated learning with a longitudinal design which tests the premise of morph-to-segment matching. Banners matched to cognitive styles, as well as the stage of the consumer's buying process and body-type preference, significantly increase click-through rates, brand consideration, and purchase likelihood relative to a control
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