31 research outputs found

    Health economic evaluation of a nurse-assisted online eye screening in home healthcare to reduce avoidable vision impairment (iScreen):study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial

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    Background: Among older people undiagnosed and untreated vision impairment and blindness are common. The leading causes are uncorrected refractive errors and cataracts. Vision problems are associated with a lower quality of life, several health problems, and a higher chance of falling accidents and fractures. To eliminate avoidable vision impairment and blindness, targeted eye screening programs are recommended. Older patients, receiving home healthcare, have not yet been considered as a population at risk who could benefit from eye screening. Methods: A cluster-randomized controlled trial will be conducted to investigate the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of online nurse-assisted eye screening in home healthcare, compared to care as usual, in reducing avoidable vision impairment. A healthcare and societal perspective will be used. The study will be performed in collaboration with several home healthcare organizations in the Netherlands. The online eye screening consists of near and distance visual acuity, followed by an Amsler grading test. Measurements in both groups will take place at baseline and after 6 and 12 months of follow-up. A total of 240 participants will be recruited. Older men and women (65 +), who receive home-based nursing and are cognitively able to participate, will be included. The primary outcome will be the change of two lines or more on the Colenbrander-1 M visual acuity chart between baseline and 12-month follow-up. Discussion: An eye screening for populations at risk contributes to the detection of undiagnosed and untreated vision impairment. This may reduce the health-related consequences of vision loss and the high economic burden associated with vision impairment. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06058637. Registered on 27 September 2023.</p

    Health economic evaluation of a nurse-assisted online eye screening in home healthcare to reduce avoidable vision impairment (iScreen): study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial

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    Background: Among older people undiagnosed and untreated vision impairment and blindness are common. The leading causes are uncorrected refractive errors and cataracts. Vision problems are associated with a lower quality of life, several health problems, and a higher chance of falling accidents and fractures. To eliminate avoidable vision impairment and blindness, targeted eye screening programs are recommended. Older patients, receiving home healthcare, have not yet been considered as a population at risk who could benefit from eye screening. Methods: A cluster-randomized controlled trial will be conducted to investigate the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of online nurse-assisted eye screening in home healthcare, compared to care as usual, in reducing avoidable vision impairment. A healthcare and societal perspective will be used. The study will be performed in collaboration with several home healthcare organizations in the Netherlands. The online eye screening consists of near and distance visual acuity, followed by an Amsler grading test. Measurements in both groups will take place at baseline and after 6 and 12 months of follow-up. A total of 240 participants will be recruited. Older men and women (65 +), who receive home-based nursing and are cognitively able to participate, will be included. The primary outcome will be the change of two lines or more on the Colenbrander-1 M visual acuity chart between baseline and 12-month follow-up. Discussion: An eye screening for populations at risk contributes to the detection of undiagnosed and untreated vision impairment. This may reduce the health-related consequences of vision loss and the high economic burden associated with vision impairment. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06058637. Registered on 27 September 2023

    The evaluation of an online nurse-assisted eye-screening tool in older adults receiving home healthcare

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    PURPOSE: To investigate the agreement between an online nurse-assisted eye-screening tool and reference tests in older adults receiving home healthcare and to collect user experiences. METHODS: Older adults (65+) receiving home healthcare were included. Home healthcare nurses assisted in administering the eye-screening tool at participants' homes. Approximately 2 weeks later, a researcher administered reference tests at participants' homes. Experiences from participants and home healthcare nurses were collected. Agreement in outcomes (distance and near visual acuity, with the latter being measured using two different optotypes, and macular problems) between the eye-screening tool and reference clinical testing was compared. A difference of less than ±0.15 logMAR was considered acceptable. RESULTS: A total of 40 participants were included. Here, we describe the results for the right eye; results for the left eye were similar. The mean difference between the eye-screening tool and reference tests for distance visual acuity was 0.02 logMAR. The mean difference between the eye-screening tool and reference tests using two different optotypes for near visual acuity was 0.06 and 0.03 logMAR, respectively. The majority of the individual data points were within the ±0.15 logMAR threshold (75%, 51% and 58%, respectively). The agreement between tests for macular problems was 75%. Participants and home healthcare nurses were generally satisfied with the eye-screening tool, although remarks for further improvements were made. CONCLUSIONS: The eye-screening tool is promising for nurse-assisted eye screening in older adults receiving home healthcare, with the mostly satisfactory agreement. After implementing the eye-screening tool in practice, cost-effectiveness needs to be investigated

    All-In-One: Advanced preparation of Human Parenchymal and Non-Parenchymal Liver Cells

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    BACKGROUND & AIMS: Liver cells are key players in innate immunity. Thus, studying primary isolated liver cells is necessary for determining their role in liver physiology and pathophysiology. In particular, the quantity and quality of isolated cells are crucial to their function. Our aim was to isolate a large quantity of high-quality human parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells from a single liver specimen. METHODS: Hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, and stellate cells were isolated from liver tissues by collagenase perfusion in combination with low-speed centrifugation, density gradient centrifugation, and magnetic-activated cell sorting. The purity and functionality of cultured cell populations were controlled by determining their morphology, discriminative cell marker expression, and functional activity. RESULTS: Cell preparation yielded the following cell counts per gram of liver tissue: 2.0+/-0.4x107 hepatocytes, 1.8+/-0.5x106 Kupffer cells, 4.3+/-1.9x105 liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, and 3.2+/-0.5x105 stellate cells. Hepatocytes were identified by albumin (95.5+/-1.7%) and exhibited time-dependent activity of cytochrome P450 enzymes. Kupffer cells expressed CD68 (94.5+/-1.2%) and exhibited phagocytic activity, as determined with 1mum latex beads. Endothelial cells were CD146+ (97.8+/-1.1%) and exhibited efficient uptake of acetylated low-density lipoprotein. Hepatic stellate cells were identified by the expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin (97.1+/-1.5%). These cells further exhibited retinol (vitamin A)-mediated autofluorescence. CONCLUSIONS: Our isolation procedure for primary parenchymal and non-parenchymal liver cells resulted in cell populations of high purity and quality, with retained physiological functionality in vitro. Thus, this system may provide a valuable tool for determining liver function and disease

    Body and Spirit

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    Wisse discusses the life and literature of Issac Leib Peretz and his influence on Jewish culture

    The Function of Memory : keeping body and soul together

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    The keynote speech author aims at exploring the function of memory as a vital element of conjunction in the disrupted and dislocated lives of American Jews. Then she focuses on the theme of memory in the works of American-Jewish writers and more precisely on Jacob Glatstein, a Yiddish poet, and Nobel-prize winner Saul Bellow.L’auteur de la conférence inaugurale explore le rôle fondamental de la mémoire en tant qu’ élément de cohésion spirituelle pour les Juifs américains, déracinés et menacés de dissolution identitaire. Elle analyse plus précisément le thème de la mémoire, ses évolutions d’une génération à l’autre et ses représentations dans l’œuvre de deux écrivains : Jacob Glatstein, poète yiddish, et Saul Bellow, prix Nobel de littérature.Wisse Ruth R. The Function of Memory : keeping body and soul together. In: Cahiers Charles V, n°36, juillet 2004. Figures de la mémoire dans la littérature et les arts juifs américains des XXe et XXIe siècles (En hommage à Rachel Ertel) pp. 9-29

    Politics and Art

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    Wisse discusses the life and literature of Issac Leib Peretz and his influence on Jewish culture

    Hope and Fear

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    Wisse discusses the life and literature of Issac Leib Peretz and his influence on Jewish culture

    The schlemihl as hero in Yiddish and American fiction

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    Note:The schlemihl is a Yiddish subspecies of the universal fool figure. Victim of endless misfortune, the schlemihl of Yiddish folk humor converts his losses to verbal advantage and his defeats into psychological victories. Yiddish storytellers, including Rabbi Nachman of Bratzlav, Mendele Mocher Sforim, Sholom Aleichem, and Isaac Bashevis Singer, created versions of the schlemihl-hero to explore the irony of a faith which could coexist with doubt. Irony was both a national and literary means of retaining trust in God and goodness while encountering barbaric forms of persecution. Though originally alies to America, Yiddish humor penetrated the general culture, particularly after World War II. American Jewish writers, like Saul Bellow and Bernard Malamud, used the schlemihl to explore the paradox of failure as success within a secular humanist culture. The schlemihl-stance coincided with the national mood for over a decade: it may not survive the sixties
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