559 research outputs found

    Ethische kwesties in de mondzorg voor kwetsbare ouderen

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    Voor kwetsbare ouderen is vaak intensieve preventieve en curatieve mondzorg nodig ten behoeve van de kwaliteit van leven. Door fysieke en cognitieve beperkingen van de oudere kunnen behandelingen niet altijd lege artis uitgevoerd worden, wat tot praktische problemen leidt. Hieraan gerelateerd doen zich morele vragen voor. Mondzorg voor kwetsbare ouderen kan, zelfs met beperkingen, bijdragen aan hoge kwaliteit van leven als deze ethische kwesties vaker expliciet daarin betrokken worden. Daarmee zal ook de morele druk van ethische kwesties op de zorgverlener worden verlicht. Het gaat veelal om ‘alledaagse’ ethische kwesties, waarvoor de betrokkenen met elkaar oplossingen kunnen vinden in open overleg in een zorgethische benadering. Dat laatste betekent gerichtheid op ‘de goede dingen goed doen’ met inbegrip van alle relevante aspecten van de persoon en de omgeving. Voorwaarden zijn onder andere inbedding van de mondzorg in de zorg voor ouderen en voor zorgverleners betrokkenheid bij de oudere en kennis en vaardigheden om te reflecteren

    Agreement between oral contraceptive users and prescribers: implications for case-control studies

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    Case-control studies examining the effects of oral contraceptives (OC) are prone to misclassification bias due to errors in assessment of OC use. Concern about inaccurate exposure histories has increased since current studies require women to recall OC use over prolonged periods of time. In preparation for a case-control study of breast cancer and OC use, an investigation was carried out to assess agreement between women's lifetime histories of OC use (covering a period of up to 20 years) and prescribers' records. OC histories were obtained during personal interview with 218 women who had used OC at some point in their lives (127 breast cancer patients, 91 controls). Recall was aided by an album with color photographs of all OC marketed in the Netherlands from 1962 onwards (n = 65), and a calendar that covered the women's life span from date of birth to menopause. The participants were asked for the names of all physicians who prescribed OC for them. The rate of response from the prescribers was high (94%), but only half of the forms provided useful information. Patient-prescriber agreement on brand names (including dosage) was 70%. About half of the women agreed with their prescribers on starting dates to within less than a year's difference. Approximately the same percentage of agreement was found for stopping dates. Multiple linear regression indicated that agreement on brand names and dates of usage was lower for women of low socioeconomic status, for healthy women (as compared to breast cancer patients) and for periods of pill use that had to be recalled from the more distant past. Agreement on total duration of use was high enough to permit testing of a moderately strong duration-response relationship in a case-control study

    Slavery as a national crime: Defining Britishness in Encounters with the Flying Dutchman

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    Early British gothic fiction has often been analyzed in terms of the religious, political and cultural oppositions it helps to construct between Britain and the European continent, in particular in Catholic countries like France and Spain. One could argue that the cultural work of Gothic in these cases is to (re)define cultural differences between spaces that are geographically already separate. This division of territorial space is obviously much less clear at sea, and so this raises the question if and how national boundaries and identities are being upheld and transgressed in nautical Gothic. The figure of the Flying Dutchman, the ghostly captain doomed to sail the world seas forever, provides and interesting case study for exploring this issue of constructing such national identities. Nineteenth century British culture demonstrates a persistent preoccupation with the ghostly Dutchman. Numerous adaptations and manifestations of the Dutchman in British poetry, fiction, popular song and drama attest to the often problematic ‘Doppelgänger dilemmas’ (Rubright) the Flying Dutchman presents to a British audience: part of his frightening quality is that he is too close for comfort. In my article I will analyze representations of the Flying Dutchman in two British dramas (Fitzball & Taylor), a novel (Marryat), as well as some British poems and songs (1820-1860) in connection to encounters at sea and in the colonies. I will argue that in British nautical gothic the Flying Dutchman often serves as a projection screen for racist attitudes and pro-slavery opinions, but that British characters in these texts do not always succeed in warding off these attitudes

    An evaluation of the density functional approach in the zero order regular approximation for relativistic effects: Magnetic interactions in small metal compounds

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    The density functional approach was evaluated for electron spin resonance (ESR) parameters in the relativistic zero order regular approximation in small metal compounds. The effects of spin-orbit coupling and spin polarization on the magnetic hyperfine interaction were investigated. It was shown that relativistic effects in the calculation of the hyperfine parameters were large not only for the heavy metals but also for ligands bound to heavy elements due to secondary effects

    International changes in end-of-life practices over time: a systematic review.

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    BACKGROUND: End-of-life policies are hotly debated in many countries, with international evidence frequently used to support or oppose legal reforms. Existing reviews are limited by their focus on specific practices or selected jurisdictions. The objective is to review international time trends in end-of-life practices. METHODS: We conducted a systematic review of empirical studies on medical end-of-life practices, including treatment withdrawal, the use of drugs for symptom management, and the intentional use of lethal drugs. A search strategy was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, Sociological Abstracts, PAIS International, Worldwide Political Science Abstracts, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences and CINAHL. We included studies that described physicians' actual practices and estimated annual frequency at the jurisdictional level. End-of-life practice frequencies were analyzed for variations over time, using logit regression. RESULTS: Among 8183 references, 39 jurisdiction-wide surveys conducted between 1990 and 2010 were identified. Of those, 22 surveys used sufficiently similar research methods to allow further statistical analysis. Significant differences were found across surveys in the frequency of treatment withdrawal, use of opiates or sedatives and the intentional use of lethal drugs (X 2  > 1000, p < 0.001 for all). Regression analyses showed increased use of opiates and sedatives over time (p < 0.001), which could reflect more intense symptom management at the end of life, or increase in these drugs to intentionally cause patients' death. CONCLUSION: The use of opiates and sedatives appears to have significantly increased over time between 1990 and 2010. Better distinction between practices with different legal status is required to properly interpret the policy significance of these changes. Research on the effects of public policies should take a comprehensive look at trends in end-of-life practice patterns and their associations with policy changes

    Existential Loneliness and end-of-life care: A Systematic Review

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    Contains fulltext : 88662.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Patients with a life-threatening illness can be confronted with various types of loneliness, one of which is existential loneliness (EL). Since the experience of EL is extremely disruptive, the issue of EL is relevant for the practice of end-of-life care. Still, the literature on EL has generated little discussion and empirical substantiation and has never been systematically reviewed. In order to systematically review the literature, we (1) identified the existential loneliness literature; (2) established an organising framework for the review; (3) conducted a conceptual analysis of existential loneliness; and (4) discussed its relevance for end-of-life care. We found that the EL concept is profoundly unclear. Distinguishing between three dimensions of EL-as a condition, as an experience, and as a process of inner growth-leads to some conceptual clarification. Analysis of these dimensions on the basis of their respective key notions-everpresent, feeling, defence; death, awareness, difficult communication; and inner growth, giving meaning, authenticity-further clarifies the concept. Although none of the key notions are unambiguous, they may function as a starting point for the development of care strategies on EL at the end of life.1 april 201

    Side branch healing patterns of the Tryton dedicated bifurcation stent: a 1-year optical coherence tomography follow-up study

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    The bare-metal Tryton Side Branch (SB) Stent™ (Tryton Medical, Durham, NC, USA) is used with a drug-eluting stent (DES) in the main branch (MB) to treat bifurcation lesions. It is argued that a drug-eluting Tryton-version is needed to improve clinical outcomes, although previous registries have shown good clinical results. More insights in neo-intimal hyperplasia (NIH) growth patterns of the Tryton treatment strategy are needed to decide if and where to drug-coat the stent. Ten patients returned for follow-up angiography (mean follow-up time 393 ± 103 days) and optical coherence tomography (OCT) pullbacks from the MB were obtained in all patients and from the SB in six patients. A per-strut analysis showed an uncovered strut rate of 0.7 % and an incompletely-apposed strut rate of 0.8 %. Most incompletely-apposed struts were found at the bifurcation region, in the luminal half facing towards the SB. Mean NIH thickness in the proximal MB, distal MB and SB were 0.14 ± 0.11, 0.19 ± 0.11, and 0.34 ± 0.19 mm, respectively, with a variety of growth patterns observed in the SB. We found good vascular healing of the DES in the MB, while healing was less favourably in the SB part. Furthermore, we observed a variety of NIH growth patterns in this SB part and more studies are needed to investigate the relation between growth patterns and clinical outcomes

    X-ray tomography for fully-3D time-resolved reconstruction of bubbling fluidized beds

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    A new X-ray computed tomography technique for the purpose of imaging fluidized beds is presented. It consists of an experimental set-up with three stationary X-ray source and flat panel detector pairs, a geometric calibration and data processing workflow, and an image reconstruction algorithm. The technique enables sparse-angular tomographic reconstruction in large 3D regions of fluidized beds at framerates up to 200 Hz, and therefore images bubbles along their whole trajectories through the volume. It allows for a unique analysis of bubble dynamics in fluidized beds, including bubble velocities, bubble transformations, i.e., time evolution of the bubble distributions in space, and bubble\xe2\x80\x93bubble interactions. In this article, we first analyze the main limitation of the technique, the sparse angular resolution, through numerical simulations. We then test the experimental set-up through imaging a series of phantoms. Lastly, we demonstrate results from a Geldart B bubbling fluidized bed
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