1,080 research outputs found

    Paralympic legacy: exploring the impact of the Games on the perceptions of young people with disabilities

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    The London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games aimed to deliver a legacy to citizens of the United Kingdom, which included inspiring a generation of young people to participate in sport. This study aimed to understand the legacy of the Paralympic Games for children with disabilities. Eight adolescents (11-16 years of age) with physical disabilities were interviewed about their perceptions of the Paralympic Games. Thematic analysis found three key themes which further our understanding about the Paralympic legacy. These were: Paralympians as role models; changing perceptions of disability and the motivating nature of the Paralympics. Findings demonstrate the Games were inspirational for children with disabilities, improving their self-perceptions. This is discussed in relation to previous literature and core recommendations are made

    Discrimination of prostate cancer cells and non-malignant cells using secondary ion mass spectrometry

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    This communication utilises Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) combined with multivariate analysis to obtain spectra from the surfaces of three closely related cell lines allowing their discrimination based upon mass spectral ions

    An economic evaluation of finding cases of hepatitis B and C infection in UK migrant populations

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    Factors affecting UK physically disabled children and young people participating in mainstream out-of-school activities: Focus on personal care and training

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    Aims of study: To ascertain what out-of-school activities C&YP currently engage in and to determine the facilitators and barriers to participatio

    Factors affecting UK physically disabled children and young people participating in mainstream out-of-school activities: the children, young people and family perspective

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    Aims of study: To ascertain what out-of-school activities C&YP currently engage in and to determine the facilitators and barriers to participatio

    A Bayesian approach to estimate changes in condom use from limited human immunodeficiency virus prevalence data.

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    Evaluation of large-scale intervention programmes against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is becoming increasingly important, but impact estimates frequently hinge on knowledge of changes in behaviour such as the frequency of condom use over time, or other self-reported behaviour changes, for which we generally have limited or potentially biased data. We employ a Bayesian inference methodology that incorporates an HIV transmission dynamics model to estimate condom use time trends from HIV prevalence data. Estimation is implemented via particle Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, applied for the first time in this context. The preliminary choice of the formulation for the time varying parameter reflecting the proportion of condom use is critical in the context studied, because of the very limited amount of condom use and HIV data available. We consider various novel formulations to explore the trajectory of condom use over time, based on diffusion-driven trajectories and smooth sigmoid curves. Numerical simulations indicate that informative results can be obtained regarding the amplitude of the increase in condom use during an intervention, with good levels of sensitivity and specificity performance in effectively detecting changes. The application of this method to a real life problem demonstrates how it can help in evaluating HIV interventions based on a small number of prevalence estimates, and it opens the way to similar applications in different contexts

    Investment case for eliminating mother-to-child transmission of syphilis: promoting better maternal and child health and stronger health systems

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    Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of syphilis (commonly referred to as “congenital syphilis”) is relatively simple to eliminate and it is inexpensive to detect and treat, making it a possible “easy win” in terms of cost, feasibility and speed of scale-up. Investing in screening and treatment for syphilis in pregnant women ranks as one of the most cost-effective antenatal interventions. Screening all pregnant women, using simple and low-cost technologies, is feasible, even in low-resource settings. Syphilis is easily cured with penicillin, and MTCT of syphilis is easily prevented when pregnant mothers with syphilis infection are identified early and treated promptly. Penicillin is off patent, widely available, on the World Health Organization (WHO) list of essential medicines and, above all, inexpensive
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