81 research outputs found
Accessing the literature: using bibliographic databases to find journal articles. Part 1
Research in primary dental care, recertification, continuing professional development, lifelong learning, peer review and quality healthcare are all informed by the published literature. Dental practitioners can find out about reliable and up-to-date information available in the published literature by searching bibliographic databases. Published in two parts, this article describes the databases relevant to clinical dental practice and explains the generic skills required to search them effectively, focusing on MEDLINE, the database most relevant for the majority of dental practitioners, which is freely available via the World Wide Web (WWW). The article differentiates between sensitivity (maximum recall) and specificity (relevance of recall), and suggests how to identify a manageable number of relevant citations, how to save the citations, and how to obtain the full text. In part 2, the article concludes by alerting readers to some of the limitations and pitfalls of database-searching
What is the role of the film viewer? The effects of narrative comprehension and viewing task on gaze control in film
Film is ubiquitous, but the processes that guide viewers' attention while viewing film narratives are poorly understood. In fact, many film theorists and practitioners disagree on whether the film stimulus (bottom-up) or the viewer (top-down) is more important in determining how we watch movies. Reading research has shown a strong connection between eye movements and comprehension, and scene perception studies have shown strong effects of viewing tasks on eye movements, but such idiosyncratic top-down control of gaze in film would be anathema to the universal control mainstream filmmakers typically aim for. Thus, in two experiments we tested whether the eye movements and comprehension relationship similarly held in a classic film example, the famous opening scene of Orson Welles' Touch of Evil (Welles & Zugsmith, Touch of Evil, 1958). Comprehension differences were compared with more volitionally controlled task-based effects on eye movements. To investigate the effects of comprehension on eye movements during film viewing, we manipulated viewers' comprehension by starting participants at different points in a film, and then tracked their eyes. Overall, the manipulation created large differences in comprehension, but only produced modest differences in eye movements. To amplify top-down effects on eye movements, a task manipulation was designed to prioritize peripheral scene features: a map task. This task manipulation created large differences in eye movements when compared to participants freely viewing the clip for comprehension. Thus, to allow for strong, volitional top-down control of eye movements in film, task manipulations need to make features that are important to narrative comprehension irrelevant to the viewing task. The evidence provided by this experimental case study suggests that filmmakers' belief in their ability to create systematic gaze behavior across viewers is confirmed, but that this does not indicate universally similar comprehension of the film narrative
Selenium Treatment and Chagasic Cardiopathy (STCC): study protocol for a double-blind randomized controlled trial
Background: Heart disease progression occurs in 30% of patients with chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infection.
Supplementation with selenium (Se) in animal model of T. cruzi infection produced promising results. There is
evidence that patients with Chagas heart disease have lower Se levels than healthy individuals and patients with T.
cruzi infection without of cardiac disease. The aim of this investigation is to estimate the effect of Se treatment on
prevention of heart disease progression in patients with chagasic cardiopathy.
Methods: The Selenium Treatment and Chagasic Cardiopathy trial is a superiority, double-blind, placebo-controlled,
randomized clinical trial. The eligibility criteria are as follows: (1) a Chagas disease diagnosis confirmed by serology;
(2) segmental, mild or moderate global left ventricular systolic dysfunction; and (3) age between 18 and 65 years.
The exclusion criteria are as follows: (1) pregnancy, (2) diabetes mellitus, (3) tobacco use, (4) alcohol abuse,
(5) evidence of nonchagasic heart disease, (6) depression, (7) dysphagia with evidence of food residues in the
esophagus, (8) dysphagia with weight loss higher than 15% of usual weight in the last four months and/or (9)
conditions that may result in low protocol adherence. The intervention will be 100 μg of sodium selenite once daily
for 365 consecutive days compared to placebo. The following are the primary outcomes to be measured: (1) the
trajectories of the left ventricular ejection fraction in the follow-up period; (2) reduction of heart disease progression
rates, with progression defined as a 10% decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction; and (3) rate of hospital
admissions attributable to dysrhythmia, heart failure or stroke due to Chagas disease. One hundred thirty patients
will be randomly allocated into either the intervention or placebo group at a ratio of 1:1. The sequence allocation
concealment and blinding were planned to be conducted with the strategy of numbered boxes. Both patients and
health-care providers will remain blinded to the intervention groups during the 5 years of follow-up.
Discussion: If Se treatment reduces the progression of Chagas cardiopathy, the inclusion of this micronutrient in
the daily diet can improve the therapeutic regimen for this neglected tropical disease at low cost
The ongoing impacts of hepatitis C - a systematic narrative review of the literature
Extent: 13p.BackgroundMany countries have developed, or are developing, national strategies aimed at reducing the harms associated with hepatitis C infection. Making these strategies relevant to the vast majority of those affected by hepatitis C requires a more complete understanding of the short and longer term impacts of infection. We used a systematic approach to scope the literature to determine what is currently known about the health and psychosocial impacts of hepatitis C along the trajectory from exposure to ongoing chronic infection, and to identify what knowledge gaps remain.MethodsPubMed, Current Contents and PsychINFO databases were searched for primary studies published in the ten years from 2000-2009 inclusive. Two searches were conducted for studies on hepatitis C in adult persons focusing on: outcomes over time (primarily cohort and other prospective designs); and the personal and psychosocial impacts of chronic infection. All retrieved studies were assessed for eligibility according to specific inclusion/exclusion criteria, data completeness and methodological coherence. Outcomes reported in 264 included studies were summarized, tabulated and synthesized.ResultsInjecting drug use (IDU) was a major risk for transmission with seroconversion occurring relatively early in injecting careers. Persistent hepatitis C viraemia, increasing age and excessive alcohol consumption independently predicted disease progression. While interferon based therapies reduced quality of life during treatment, improvements on baseline quality of life was achieved post treatment--particularly when sustained viral response was achieved. Much of the negative social impact of chronic infection was due to the association of infection with IDU and inflated assessments of transmission risks. Perceived discrimination was commonly reported in health care settings, potentially impeding health care access. Perceptions of stigma and experiences of discrimination also had direct negative impacts on wellbeing and social functioning.ConclusionsHepatitis C and its management continue to have profound and ongoing impacts on health and social well being. Biomedical studies provided prospective information on clinical aspects of infection, while the broader social and psychological studies presented comprehensive information on seminal experiences (such as diagnosis and disclosure). Increasing the focus on combined methodological approaches could enhance understanding about the health and social impacts of hepatitis C along the life course.Emma R Miller, Stephen McNally, Jack Wallace, Marisa Schlichthors
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