keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38640489/promises-and-perils-of-big-data-philosophical-constraints-on-chemical-ontologies
#21
REVIEW
Rebekah Duke, Ryan McCoy, Chad Risko, Julia R S Bursten
Chemistry is experiencing a paradigm shift in the way it interacts with data. So-called "big data" are collected and used at unprecedented scales with the idea that algorithms can be designed to aid in chemical discovery. As data-enabled practices become ever more ubiquitous, chemists must consider the organization and curation of their data, especially as it is presented to both humans and increasingly intelligent algorithms. One of the most promising organizational schemes for big data is a construct termed an ontology...
April 19, 2024: Journal of the American Chemical Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38640479/how-a-national-organization-works-in-partnership-with-people-who-have-lived-experience-in-mental-health-improvement-programs-protocol-for-an-exploratory-case-study
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ciara Robertson, Carina Hibberd, Ashley Shepherd, Gordon Johnston
BACKGROUND: This is a research proposal for a case study to explore how a national organization works in partnership with people with lived experience in national mental health improvement programs. Quality improvement is considered a key solution to addressing challenges within health care, and in Scotland, there are significant efforts to use quality improvement as a means of improving health and social care delivery. In 2016, Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS) established the improvement hub, whose purpose is to lead national improvement programs that use a range of approaches to support teams and services...
April 19, 2024: JMIR Research Protocols
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38639541/new-antibiotics-for-resistant-infections-what-happens-after-approval
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Howard-Anderson, Helen W Boucher
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 19, 2024: Annals of Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38638306/methods-for-integrating-trials-and-non-experimental-data-to-examine-treatment-effect-heterogeneity
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carly Lupton Brantner, Ting-Hsuan Chang, Trang Quynh Nguyen, Hwanhee Hong, Leon Di Stefano, Elizabeth A Stuart
Estimating treatment effects conditional on observed covariates can improve the ability to tailor treatments to particular individuals. Doing so effectively requires dealing with potential confounding, and also enough data to adequately estimate effect moderation. A recent influx of work has looked into estimating treatment effect heterogeneity using data from multiple randomized controlled trials and/or observational datasets. With many new methods available for assessing treatment effect heterogeneity using multiple studies, it is important to understand which methods are best used in which setting, how the methods compare to one another, and what needs to be done to continue progress in this field...
November 2023: Statistical Science: a Review Journal of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637960/supporting-rehabilitation-practice-for-covid-19-recovery-a-descriptive-qualitative-analysis-of-allied-health-perspectives
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tanis Van Laake, Danielle Hitch
ObjectiveThe study aimed to explore the perspective of healthcare workers on the resources they need to provide quality rehabilitation for people recovering from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection.MethodsA descriptive qualitative approach using reflexive thematic analysis was employed. Focus groups and interviews were performed with nine healthcare workers (one intensive care unit physiotherapist, one respiratory therapist and seven occupational therapists) with experience treating patients recovering from COVID-19 infection within hospital and in the community...
April 19, 2024: Australian Health Review: a Publication of the Australian Hospital Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637447/impact-of-macronutrients-intake-on-glycemic-homeostasis-of-preterm-infants-evidence-from-continuous-glucose-monitoring
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Silvia Guiducci, Giulia Res, Luca Bonadies, Federica Savio, Sabrina Brigadoi, Elena Priante, Daniele Trevisanuto, Eugenio Baraldi, Alfonso Galderisi
Nutritional intake could influence the blood glucose profile during early life of preterm infants. We investigated the impact of macronutrient intake on glycemic homeostasis using continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). We analyzed macronutrient intake in infants born ≤ 32 weeks gestational age (GA) and/or with birth weight ≤ 1500 g. CGM was started within 48 h of birth and maintained for 5 days. Mild and severe hypoglycemia were defined as sensor glucose (SG) < 72 mg/dL and <47 mg/dL, respectively, while mild and severe hyperglycemia were SG > 144 mg/dL and >180 mg/dL...
April 18, 2024: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637095/inflammatory-breast-cancer-as-surgical-oncologists-what-can-we-do
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hatem Bouzaiene, Fatma Saadallah, Hanen Bouaziz, Olfa Jaidane, Jamel Ben Hassouna, Tarak Dhieb, Khaled Rahal
Breast cancer surgery is the primary treatment for early-stage breast cancer. However, inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), with its specific presentation characterized by skin invasion, is unfit for primary surgery. According to the different guidelines, the management of IBC is trimodal with the coordination of oncologists, surgeons, and radiation therapists. Advances in breast cancer imaging and the development of more targeted therapies make new challenges for this aggressive cancer. This chapter aims to provide an update on the role of surgery in IBC...
2024: International Review of Cell and Molecular Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636953/for-tuberculosis-not-to-screen-or-not-to-screen-but-who-and-how
#28
EDITORIAL
Maha Reda Farhat, Karen Rita Jacobson
Active case finding leveraging new molecular diagnostics and chest X-rays with automated interpretation algorithms is increasingly being developed for high-risk populations to drive down tuberculosis incidence. We consider why such an approach did not deliver a decline in tuberculosis prevalence in Brazilian prison populations and what to consider next.
April 18, 2024: Clinical Infectious Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636945/parental-rights-or-parental-wrongs-parents-metacognitive-knowledge-of-the-factors-that-influence-their-school-choice-decisions
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Trent N Cash, Daniel M Oppenheimer
School choice initiatives-which empower parents to choose which schools their children attend-are built on the assumptions that parents know what features of a school are most important to their family and that they are capable of focusing on the most important features when they make their decisions. However, decades of psychological research suggest that decision makers lack metacognitive knowledge of the factors that influence their decisions. We sought to reconcile this discrepancy between the policy assumptions and the psychological research...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38635718/interferon-%C3%AE-and-infectious-diseases-lessons-and-prospects
#30
REVIEW
Jean-Laurent Casanova, John D MacMicking, Carl F Nathan
Infectious diseases continue to claim many lives. Prevention of morbidity and mortality from these diseases would benefit not just from new medicines and vaccines but also from a better understanding of what constitutes protective immunity. Among the major immune signals that mobilize host defense against infection is interferon- γ (IFN- γ ), a protein secreted by lymphocytes. Forty years ago, IFN- γ was identified as a macrophage-activating factor, and, in recent years, there has been a resurgent interest in IFN- γ biology and its role in human defense...
April 19, 2024: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634964/unexplained-residual-risk-in-type-2-diabetes-how-big-is-the-problem
#31
REVIEW
Sivaram Neppala, Jemema Rajan, Eric Yang, Ralph A DeFronzo
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: What is new? Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality in type 2 diabetes (T2D) individuals. Of the major risk factors for CVD, less than 10% of T2D people meet the American Diabetes Association/American Heart Association recommended goals of therapy. The present review examines how much of the absolute cardiovascular (CV) risk in type 2 diabetes patients can be explained by major CV intervention trials. RECENT FINDINGS: Multiple long-term cardiovascular (CV) intervention trials have examined the effect of specific target-directed therapies on the MACE endpoint...
April 18, 2024: Current Cardiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634892/early-neurological-signs-in-infants-identified-through-neonatal-screening-for-sma-do-they-predict-outcome
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marika Pane, Giulia Stanca, Chiara Ticci, Costanza Cutrona, Roberto De Sanctis, Matteo Pirinu, Giorgia Coratti, Concetta Palermo, Beatrice Berti, Daniela Leone, Michele Sacchini, Margherita Cerboneschi, Lavinia Fanelli, Giulia Norcia, Nicola Forcina, Anna Capasso, Gianpaolo Cicala, Laura Antonaci, Martina Ricci, Maria Carmela Pera, Chiara Bravetti, Maria Alice Donati, Elena Procopio, Emanuela Abiusi, Alessandro Vaisfeld, Roberta Onesimo, Francesco Danilo Tiziano, Eugenio Mercuri
Neonatal screening for SMA has allowed the identification of infants who may present with early clinical signs. Our aim was to establish whether the presence and the severity of early clinical signs have an effect on the development of motor milestones. Infants identified through newborn screening were prospectively assessed using a structured neonatal neurological examination and an additional module developed for the assessment of floppy infants. As part of the follow-up, all infants were assessed using the HINE-2 to establish developmental milestones...
April 18, 2024: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634890/predicting-community-acquired-bloodstream-infection-in-infants-using-full-blood-count-parameters-and-c-reactive-protein-a-machine-learning-study
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lieke Brouwer, Robert Cunney, Richard J Drew
Early recognition of bloodstream infection (BSI) in infants can be difficult, as symptoms may be non-specific, and culture can take up to 48 h. As a result, many infants receive unneeded antibiotic treatment while awaiting the culture results. In this study, we aimed to develop a model that can reliably identify infants who do not have positive blood cultures (and, by extension, BSI) based on the full blood count (FBC) and C-reactive protein (CRP) values. Several models (i.e. multivariable logistic regression, linear discriminant analysis, K nearest neighbors, support vector machine, random forest model and decision tree) were trained using FBC and CRP values of 2693 infants aged 7 to 60 days with suspected BSI between 2005 and 2022 in a tertiary paediatric hospital in Dublin, Ireland...
April 18, 2024: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634889/association-between-viral-infection-and-bronchopulmonary-dysplasia-in-preterm-infants-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#34
REVIEW
Xin Guo, Defei Ma, Rui Li, Ruolin Zhang, Yanping Guo, Zhangbin Yu, Cheng Chen
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is the most common serious complication of very preterm infants (VPI) or very low birth weight (VLBW) infants. Studies implicate viral infections in etiopathogenesis. The aim of this study was to summarize the relationship between viral infections and BPD through a systematic review and meta-analysis. We searched PubMed, Embase, the Web of Science Core Collection, and the Cochrane Database on December 19, 2023. We included observational studies that examined the association between viral infections and BPD in preterm infants...
April 18, 2024: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634418/barriers-to-healthcare-access-and-experiences-of-stigma-findings-from-a-coproduced-long-covid-case-finding-study
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Donna Clutterbuck, Mel Ramasawmy, Marija Pantelic, Jasmine Hayer, Fauzia Begum, Mark Faghy, Nayab Nasir, Barry Causer, Melissa Heightman, Gail Allsopp, Dan Wootton, M Asad Khan, Claire Hastie, Monique Jackson, Clare Rayner, Darren Brown, Emily Parrett, Geraint Jones, Rowan Clarke, Sammie Mcfarland, Mark Gabbay, Amitava Banerjee, Nisreen A Alwan
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Long Covid is often stigmatised, particularly in people who are disadvantaged within society. This may prevent them from seeking help and could lead to widening health inequalities. This coproduced study with a Community Advisory Board (CAB) of people with Long Covid aimed to understand healthcare and wider barriers and stigma experienced by people with probable Long Covid. METHODS: An active case finding approach was employed to find adults with probable, but not yet clinically diagnosed, Long Covid in two localities in London (Camden and Merton) and Derbyshire, England...
April 2024: Health Expectations: An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632910/governance-for-planetary-health-equity-the-planetary-health-equity-hothouse-project
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S Friel, C Hunnisett, C A Faerron Guzmán, M Arthur
BACKGROUND: Planetary health equity (PHE) is defined here as equitable good health in a stable Earth system. PHE is arguably in crisis. Human-made climate change is damaging global populations through hotter temperatures, wildfires, and more severe and frequent storms, flooding, and landslides. A tsunami of health inequities will result from this, as pre-existing health conditions and inequities in living and working conditions ensure that socially disadvantaged groups and people in low-income and middle-income countries are disproportionately affected by climate change...
April 2024: Lancet. Planetary Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632795/ionic-plasmon-polariton-in-application-to-neurosignaling
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J E Jacak, W A Jacak
The diffusive ion current is insufficient to explain the fast saltatory conduction observed in myelinated axons and in pain-sensing C fibers in the human nervous system, where the stimulus signal exhibits a velocity two orders of magnitude greater than the upper limit of ion diffusion velocity, even when the diffusion is accelerated by myelin, as in the discrete cable model including the Hodgkin-Huxley mechanism. The agreement with observations has been achieved in a wave-type model of stimulus signal kinetics via synchronized ion local density oscillations propagating as a wave in axons periodically corrugated by myelin segments in myelinated axons, or by periodically distributed rafts with clusters of Na^{+} channels in C fibers...
March 2024: Physical Review. E
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632707/decolonizing-impact-through-the-culture-centered-approach-to-health-communication-mobilizing-communities-to-transform-the-structural-determinants-of-health
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohan J Dutta, Satveer Kaur-Gill, Selina Metuamate
In this issue, we outline the central tenets of the culture-centered approach to health communication. What does the culture-centered approach address when suggesting the co-creation of voice infrastructures? What is the theory's methodological emphasis for mobilizing and transforming structures that shape health inequalities for communities at the margins? Drawing on examples of culture-centered interventions in over fifty communities spread across 17 countries and three continents, a large number of them housed under the umbrella of the Center for Culture-centered Approach to Research and Evaluation (CARE) at Massey University in Aotearoa, New Zealand, we articulate the communicative processes (referring to actionable sources and targets of communicative action) that shape the building of voice infrastructures mobilizing toward structural transformation...
April 17, 2024: Health Communication
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632674/in-vitro-bactericidal-activity-of-biogenic-copper-oxide-nanoparticles-for-neisseria-gonorrhoeae-with-enhanced-compatibility-for-human-cells
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bianca de Melo Santana, Giovana Marchini Armentano, Dayana Agnes Santos Ferreira, Camila Simões de Freitas, Marcela Sorelli Carneiro-Ramos, Amedea Barozzi Seabra, Myron Christodoulides
Resistance to antibiotics and antimicrobial compounds is a significant problem for human and animal health globally. The development and introduction of new antimicrobial compounds are urgently needed, and copper oxide nanoparticles (CuO NPs) have found widespread application across various sectors including biomedicine, pharmacy, catalysis, cosmetics, and many others. What makes them particularly attractive is the possibility of their synthesis through biogenic routes. In this study, we synthesized biogenic green tea (GT, Camellia sinensis )-derived CuO NPs (GT CuO NPs) and examined their biophysical properties, in vitro toxicity for mammalian cells in culture, and then tested them against Neisseria gonorrhoeae , an exemplar Gram-negative bacterium from the World Health Organization's Priority Pathogen List...
April 17, 2024: ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38631891/early-prehabilitation-reduces-admissions-and-time-in-hospital-in-patients-with-newly-diagnosed-lung-cancer
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iain Phillips, Maria Deans, Abi Walton, Mahéva Vallet, Julie Mencnarowksi, Debbie McMillan, Catriona Peacock, Peter Hall, Fiona O'Brien, Mark Stares, Melanie Mackean, Tracie Plant, Robert Grecian, Lindsey Allan, Rebecca Petrie, Duncan Blues, Suraiya Haddad, Colin Barrie
OBJECTIVES: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the UK. Prehabilitation aims to maximise patient fitness and minimise the negative impact of anticancer treatment. What constitutes prehabilitation before non-surgical anticancer treatment is not well established. We present data from a pilot project of Early prehabilitation In lung Cancer. METHODS: All new patients with likely advanced lung cancer were offered prehabilitation at respiratory clinic, if fit for further investigation...
April 17, 2024: BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care
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