keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36632061/here-i-am-why-don-t-you-answer-me-sensitivity-to-social-responsiveness-in-domestic-chicks
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Loconsole, Lucia Regolin
Newborn domestic chicks shortly exposed to a conspecific learn to recognize and prefer it over unfamiliar individuals. We assessed whether lack of physical contact or social feedback during familiarization affects affiliative preference, hypothesizing a crucial role of social responsiveness. Four-day-old chicks were tested for their preference between a familiar and an unfamiliar chick. In Exp. 1, we replicated the well-known preference for the familiar individual, even when (Exp. 2) a transparent glass prevented haptic interaction during familiarization...
January 20, 2023: IScience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36429463/-i-don-t-think-it-s-on-anyone-s-radar-the-workforce-and-system-barriers-to-healthcare-for-indigenous-women-following-a-traumatic-brain-injury-acquired-through-violence-in-remote-australia
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle S Fitts, Jennifer Cullen, Gail Kingston, Elaine Wills, Karen Soldatic
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women experience high rates of traumatic brain injury (TBI) as a result of violence. While healthcare access is critical for women who have experienced a TBI as it can support pre-screening, comprehensive diagnostic assessment, and referral pathways, little is known about the barriers for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women in remote areas to access healthcare. To address this gap, this study focuses on the workforce barriers in one remote region in Australia. Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted with 38 professionals from various sectors including health, crisis accommodation and support, disability, family violence, and legal services...
November 9, 2022: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36368036/-i-don-t-regret-it-at-all-it-s-just-i-wish-the-process-had-a-bit-more-humanity-to-it%C3%A2-%C3%A2-%C3%A2-a-bit-more-holistic-a-qualitative-community-led-medication-abortion-study-with-black-and-latinx-women-in-georgia-usa
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth A Mosley, Sequoia Ayala, Zainab Jah, Tiffany Hailstorks, Indya Hairston, Whitney S Rice, Natalie Hernandez, Kwajelyn Jackson, Marieh Scales, Mariana Gutierrez, Bria Goode, Sofia Filippa, Shani Strader, Mariana Umbria, Autumn Watson, Joya Faruque, Adeola Raji, Janae Dunkley, Peyton Rogers, Celeste Ellison, Kheyanna Suarez, Dázon Dixon Diallo, Kelli S Hall
Traditional family planning research has excluded Black and Latinx leaders, and little is known about medication abortion (MA) among racial/ethnic minorities, although it is an increasingly vital reproductive health service, particularly after the fall of Roe v. Wade . Reproductive justice (RJ) community-based organisation (CBO) SisterLove led a study on Black and Latinx women's MA perceptions and experiences in Georgia. From April 2019 to December 2020, we conducted key informant interviews with 20 abortion providers and CBO leaders and 32 in-depth interviews and 6 focus groups ( n  = 30) with Black and Latinx women...
December 2022: Sexual and reproductive health matters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36252568/understanding-and-overcoming-barriers-to-drink-counting
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leon Booth, Michelle I Jongenelis, Catherine Drane, Emily Brennan, Melanie Wakefield, Tanya Chikritzhs, Penelope Hasking, Simone Pettigrew
Objectives: Drink counting has been found to be an effective protective behavioral strategy (PBS) to reduce alcohol consumption. However, little is known about attitudes to this strategy and barriers and facilitators to its use. The aim of this study was to explicate these factors and draw comparisons with less efficacious PBSs. Method : In Stage 1, 1,703 Australian drinkers were surveyed about their perceptions of five PBSs ("Count the number of drinks you have," "Drink slowly rather than gulping or sculling," "Refuse an alcoholic drink you are offered because you don't really want it," "Avoid trying to 'keep up' or 'outdrink' others," and "Decide not to exceed a certain number of drinks")...
October 17, 2022: Substance Use & Misuse
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36183109/-i-don-t-go-to-funerals-anymore-how-people-who-use-opioids-grieve-drug-related-death-in-the-us-overdose-epidemic
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allison V Schlosser, Lee D Hoffer
BACKGROUND: Opioid-related overdose death is a public health epidemic in much of the USA, yet little is known about how people who use opioids (PWUO) experience overdose deaths in their social networks. We explore these experiences through a qualitative study of opioid-related overdose death bereavement among PWUO. METHODS: We recruited 30 adults who inject opioids from a syringe service program in the Midwestern USA and interviewed them using a semi-structured guide that addressed experiences of opioid use, opioid-related overdose, and overdose reversal via the medication naloxone...
October 1, 2022: Harm Reduction Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36050730/multidimensional-associations-between-nutrient-intake-and-healthy-ageing-in-humans
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alistair M Senior, Véronique Legault, Francis B Lavoie, Nancy Presse, Pierrette Gaudreau, Valérie Turcot, David Raubenheimer, David G Le Couteur, Stephen J Simpson, Alan A Cohen
BACKGROUND: Little is known about how normal variation in dietary patterns in humans affects the ageing process. To date, most analyses of the problem have used a unidimensional paradigm, being concerned with the effects of a single nutrient on a single outcome. Perhaps then, our ability to understand the problem has been complicated by the fact that both nutrition and the physiology of ageing are highly complex and multidimensional, involving a high number of functional interactions...
September 1, 2022: BMC Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35976810/covid-19-vaccination-uptake-in-441-socially-and-ethnically-diverse-pregnant-women
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fatima Husain, Veronica R Powys, Eleanor White, Roxanne Jones, Lucy P Goldsmith, Paul T Heath, Pippa Oakeshott, Mohammad Sharif Razai
OBJECTIVE: To explore COVID-19 vaccination uptake, facilitators and barriers in ethnically-diverse pregnant women. DESIGN AND SETTING: An anonymous quality improvement questionnaire survey exploring COVID-19 vaccination uptake, causes of vaccine hesitancy and trusted sources of information among pregnant women in two acute district general hospitals in England (Berkshire and Surrey) between 1.9.21 and 28.2.22. POPULATION: 441 pregnant women attending routine antenatal clinic appointments...
2022: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35925001/-i-don-t-really-know-where-i-stand-because-i-don-t-know-if-i-took-something-away-from-her-moral-injury-in-south-african-speech-language-therapists-and-audiologists-due-to-patient-death-and-dying
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nabeelah Nagdee, Victor Manuel de Andrade
BACKGROUND: Speech-language therapists and audiologists (SLT&As) may encounter difficulties when confronted with patient death and dying, which may conflict with their moral beliefs and result in moral injury. Furthermore, South African SLT&As practice in a country with a high mortality rate, which may add to the complexity of their experience. Moreover, they may be influenced by African philosophies promoting care, which might conflict with their experiences of patient death and dying...
August 4, 2022: International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35802694/-now-i-have-my-baby-so-i-don-t-go-anywhere-a-mixed-method-approach-to-the-everyday-and-young-motherhood-integrating-qualitative-interviews-and-passive-digital-data-from-mobile-devices
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ashley Hagaman, Damaris Lopez Mercado, Anubhuti Poudyal, Dörte Bemme, Clare Boone, Alastair van Heerden, Prabin Byanjankar, Sujen Man Maharjan, Ada Thapa, Brandon A Kohrt
The impacts of early pregnancy and young motherhood on everyday life, including interpersonal and individual behavior, are not well-known. Passive digital sensing on mobile technology including smartphones and passive Bluetooth beacons can yield information such as geographic movement, physical activity, and mother-infant proximity to illuminate behavioral patterns of a mother's everyday in Nepal. We contribute to mixed-methods research by triangulating passive sensing data (GPS, accelerometry, Bluetooth proximity) with multiple forms of qualitative data to characterize behavioral patterns and experiences of young motherhood in the first year postpartum...
2022: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35766172/development-and-psychometric-testing-of-the-heart-healthy-information-questionnaire
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jina Choo, Songwhi Noh, Jihyun Moon, Yura Shin
AIMS: This study aimed to develop a reliable and valid scale, i.e. the Heart-Healthy Information Questionnaire (HHIQ). METHODS AND RESULTS: The HHIQ was developed in three phases: (i) creating the item pool, (ii) conducting a preliminary evaluating the items, and (iii) refining the scale and evaluating psychometric properties. An initial item pool of 77 items with a 3-point True/False format with a 'Don't know' option was extracted from the literature review and 54 items reached content validity...
June 29, 2022: European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35672236/student-and-educator-experiences-of-an-integrated-medical-imaging-curriculum
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ray Ma, Alexandra McHaffie, Rathan M Subramaniam, Megan Anakin
INTRODUCTION: Medical imaging is integrated across all years in the medical programs at the Medical School, in our country. Little is known about this pedagogical approach from the perspective of those who participate in it. This study investigated how students and educators experience an integrated medical imaging curriculum. METHODS: One-on-one interviews were conducted with nine educators and three undergraduate medical students and analyzed using a reflexive thematic approach...
June 4, 2022: Academic Radiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35601888/don-t-miss-the-moment-a-systematic-review-of-ecological-momentary-assessment-in-suicide-research
#32
Liia Kivelä, Willem A J van der Does, Harriëtte Riese, Niki Antypa
Suicide and suicide-related behaviors are prevalent yet notoriously difficult to predict. Specifically, short-term predictors and correlates of suicide risk remain largely unknown. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) may be used to assess how suicidal thoughts and behaviors (STBs) unfold in real-world contexts. We conducted a systematic literature review of EMA studies in suicide research to assess (1) how EMA has been utilized in the study of STBs (i.e., methodology, findings), and (2) the feasibility, validity and safety of EMA in the study of STBs...
2022: Frontiers in digital health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35560619/the-role-of-b-cells-in-mediating-hypertension-in-preeclampsia-or-covid-19-infection-during-pregnancy
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Owen T Herrock, Lorena Amaral, Evangeline Deer, Nathan T Campbell, Sarah T Fitzgerald, Kathy T Cockrell, Babbette LaMarca
Preeclampsia (PE), new onset hypertension associated with placental ischemia during pregnancy, is associated with a pro-inflammatory state characterized by increased T Helper cells and B cells secreting agonistic autoantibodies against the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1-AA). We have previously shown that adoptive transfer of CD4+T cells from PE women causes a PE-like phenotype in immunodeficient (nude athymic) pregnant rats. Moreover, our lab has shown that depletion of B Cells or inhibition of AT1-AA, a product of B cell activation, attenuates hypertension in various rat models of PE...
May 2022: FASEB Journal: Official Publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35556564/model-for-calcium-dependent-activation-of-a-type-i-metacaspase-from-the-fungus-schizophyllum-commune
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timothy F Coyle, Kristin M Fox
Apoptosis or programmed cell death (PCD) is one of the most important cellular processes which functions to avoid the accumulation of mutations or damage within a cell. PCD has been extensively studied in eukaryotic cells, demonstrating that caspase proteins have a significant role in this process. However, unlike mammalian cells, caspase genes are absent in plants, fungi, and protozoa. Instead, these organisms contain homologous proteins known as metacaspases which have demonstrated similar proteolytic functions in aiding PCD...
May 2022: FASEB Journal: Official Publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35555031/eponyms-or-descriptive-terms-perspectives-from-allied-health-students
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Wisner, Jessica N Byram, Amanda J Meyer, Margaret A McNulty
INTRODUCTION: The debate whether to teach anatomical eponyms has lacked data regarding health student knowledge and perceptions. A common argument for retaining eponyms is that they are used regularly in health care. The objectives of this study were to assess the familiarity of allied health students (occupational therapy, OT; physical therapy, PT; physician assistant, PA) with eponyms prior to professional anatomy coursework and understand students' perceived utility of learning eponyms...
May 2022: FASEB Journal: Official Publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35474381/-i-don-t-like-uncertainty-i-like-to-know-how-and-why-uveal-melanoma-patients-consent-to-life-expectancy-prognostication
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephen L Brown, Peter L Fisher, Andrew Morgan, Cari Davies, Yasmin Olabi, Laura Hope-Stone, Heinrich Heimann, Rumana Hussain, Mary Gemma Cherry
BACKGROUND: Technological advances have led to cancer prognostication that is increasingly accurate but often unalterable. However, a reliable prognosis of limited life expectancy can cause psychological distress. People should carefully consider offers of prognostication, but little is known about how and why they decide on prognostication. Using uveal melanoma (UM) patients, we aimed to identify (i) how and why do people with UM decide to accept prognostication and (ii) alignment and divergence of their decision-making from conceptualizations of a 'well-considered' decision...
April 26, 2022: Health Expectations: An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35368505/-i-just-assume-they-don-t-know-that-i-m-the-doctor-gender-bias-and-professional-identity-development-of-women-residents
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taylor Stavely, Bisan A Salhi, Michelle D Lall, Amy Zeidan
Background: The increasing entry of women into medicine, a traditionally male-gendered institution, has revealed much about the gendered politics of medical practice. Women are required to negotiate conflicting gender-normative roles and expectations as they develop their professional identities. Relatively little is known with regard to the study of gender identity and professional development in emergency medicine (EM), with even fewer studies specifically examining women EM residents...
April 2022: AEM Education and Training
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35362339/-i-don-t-wanna-just-be-like-a-cog-in-the-machine-narratives-of-autism-and-skilled-employment
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dora M Raymaker, Mirah Sharer, Joelle Maslak, Laurie E Powers, Katherine E McDonald, Steven K Kapp, Ian Moura, Anna Furra Wallington, Christina Nicolaidis
Autistic people are less likely to be employed than the general population. Autistic people with skilled training (e.g. training for jobs in acting, plumbing, science, or social work) might be even less likely to get a good job in their field. Little is known about the experiences of autistic people in skilled employment or what employment success means to them. We interviewed 45 autistic people with skilled training in a wide range of fields, 11 job supervisors, and 8 topic experts. We asked them about their experiences, what they felt helped them to be successful at work, and what employment success means to them...
April 1, 2022: Autism: the International Journal of Research and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35112278/-i-don-t-want-to-spend-the-rest-of-my-life-only-going-to-a-gender-wellness-clinic-healthcare-experiences-of-patients-of-a-comprehensive-transgender-clinic
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joy L Lee, Monica Huffman, Nicholas A Rattray, Jennifer L Carnahan, J Dennis Fortenberry, Janine M Fogel, Michael Weiner, Marianne S Matthias
BACKGROUND: Transgender individuals are less likely to have had a primary care visit in the last year than cisgender individuals. While the importance of multidisciplinary clinics for transgender care has been established, little is known about the healthcare experiences of transgender patients with these clinics. OBJECTIVE: To describe how patients experience transgender clinics and how these experiences compare to those experiences in other settings. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-one adult patients of a gender health program...
February 2, 2022: Journal of General Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35024305/environmental-exposure-as-a-risk-modifying-factor-in-liver-diseases-knowns-and-unknowns
#40
REVIEW
Juliane I Beier, Gavin E Arteel
Liver diseases are considered to predominantly possess an inherited or xenobiotic etiology. However, inheritance drives the ability to appropriately adapt to environmental stressors, and disease is the culmination of a maladaptive response. Thus "pure" genetic and "pure" xenobiotic liver diseases are modified by each other and other factors, identified or unknown. The purpose of this review is to highlight the knowledgebase of environmental exposure as a potential risk modifying agent for the development of liver disease by other causes...
December 2021: Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica. B
keyword
keyword
169935
2
3
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.