keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627716/experiences-of-support-for-people-who-access-voluntary-community-and-social-enterprise-vcse-organisations-for-self-harm-a-qualitative-study-with-stakeholder-feedback
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joe Hulin, Vyv Huddy, Phillip Oliver, Jack Marshall, Aarti Mohindra, Brigitte Delaney, Caroline Mitchell
BACKGROUND: Prevalence of self-harm In England is rising, however contact with statutory services remains relatively low. There is growing recognition of the potential role voluntary, community and social enterprise sector (VCSE) organisations have in the provision of self-harm support. We aimed to explore individuals' experiences of using these services and the barriers and facilitators to accessing support. METHODS: Qualitative, online interviews with 23 adults (18+) who have accessed support from VCSE organisations for self-harm in the Yorkshire and the Humber region were undertaken...
April 16, 2024: BMC Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627700/transitioning-to-sustainable-climate-resilient-healthcare-insights-from-a-health-service-staff-survey-in-australia
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea Huang, Susan Monro Cooke, Christine Garsden, Carol Behne, Erika Borkoles
BACKGROUND: More than 80 countries, including Australia, have made commitments to deliver climate-resilient and low carbon healthcare. Understanding how healthcare workers view their own and their organization's efforts to achieve sustainable and climate-resilient healthcare practice is vital to inform strategies to accelerate that transition. METHODS: We conducted an online staff survey in a large state government hospital-and-health-service organisation in Queensland, Australia, to ascertain attitudes and practices towards environmentally sustainable, climate-resilient healthcare, and views about the organizational support necessary to achieve these goals in their workplace...
April 16, 2024: BMC Health Services Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627570/distinct-alterations-in-white-matter-properties-and-organization-related-to-maternal-treatment-initiation-in-neonates-exposed-to-hiv-but-uninfected
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ndivhuwo Magondo, Ernesta M Meintjes, Fleur L Warton, Francesca Little, Andre J W van der Kouwe, Barbara Laughton, Marcin Jankiewicz, Martha J Holmes
HIV exposed-uninfected (HEU) infants and children are at risk of developmental delays as compared to HIV uninfected unexposed (HUU) populations. The effects of exposure to in utero HIV and ART regimens on the HEU the developing brain are not well understood. In a cohort of 2-week-old newborns, we used diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) tractography and graph theory to examine the influence of HIV and ART exposure in utero on neonate white matter integrity and organisation. The cohort included HEU infants born to mothers who started ART before conception (HEUpre ) and after conception (HEUpost ), as well as HUU infants from the same community...
April 17, 2024: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627446/spatiotemporal-atmospheric-in-situ-carbon-dioxide-data-over-the-indian-sites-data-perspective
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mahesh Pathakoti, Mahalakshmi D V, Sreenivas G, Arun Shamrao Suryavanshi, Alok Taori, Yogesh Kant, Raja P, Rajashree Vinod Bothale, Prakash Chauhan, Rajan K S, P R Sinha, Naveen Chandra, Vinay Kumar Dadhwal
In the current study, atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2 ) data covering multiple locations in the Indian subcontinent are reported. This data was collected using a dedicated ground-based in-situ network established as part of the Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (CAP-IGBP) of the Climate and Atmospheric Processes of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). Data are collected over Ponmudi, Ooty, Sriharikota, Gadanki, Shadnagar, Nagpur, and Dehradun during 2014-2015, 2017-2020, 2012, 2011-2015, 2014-2017, 2017 and 2008-2011, respectively...
April 16, 2024: Scientific Data
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38627099/locum-doctor-working-and-quality-and-safety-a-qualitative-study-in-english-primary-and-secondary-care
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jane Ferguson, Gemma Stringer, Kieran Walshe, Thomas Allen, Christos Grigoroglou, Darren M Ashcroft, Evangelos Kontopantelis
BACKGROUND: The use of temporary doctors, known as locums, has been common practice for managing staffing shortages and maintaining service delivery internationally. However, there has been little empirical research on the implications of locum working for quality and safety. This study aimed to investigate the implications of locum working for quality and safety. METHODS: Qualitative semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted with 130 participants, including locums, patients, permanently employed doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals with governance and recruitment responsibilities for locums across primary and secondary healthcare organisations in the English NHS...
April 16, 2024: BMJ Quality & Safety
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626981/how-do-people-living-with-obesity-who-use-obesity-services-perceive-healthcare-professionals-representation-of-the-disease-on-social-media-an-interpretative-phenomenological-analysis
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sean Maher, Joseph McHugh, Michael Crotty, Susie Birney, Jean O'Connell, Francis Finucane, Muirne Spooner
OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to explore how people living with obesity who use obesity services perceive healthcare professionals' (HCPs) online representation of the disease on social media. By exploring their perspective, we aimed to develop a framework to inform good practice around social media use for HCPs. DESIGN: This was a qualitative study using a phenomenological framework. Following in-depth semi-structured interviews, analysis was undertaken to identify superordinate themes relating to how HCPs portray living with obesity online...
April 15, 2024: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626968/trends-and-determinants-of-clinical-staff-retention-in-the-english-nhs-a-double-retrospective-cohort-study
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giuseppe Moscelli, Catia Nicodemo, Melisa Sayli, Marco Mello
OBJECTIVES: To investigate how demographic, contractual and organisational factors are related to the retention of hospital workers in the English NHS. The study will specifically examine the trends in age-retention profiles. DESIGN: A double retrospective cross-cohort study using administrative data on senior and specialty doctors, nurses and midwives who were included in the 2009 and 2014 payrolls of all English NHS hospital Trusts. These individuals were tracked over time until 2019 to examine the associations between sociodemographic characteristics and the retention of hospital workers in each cohort...
April 16, 2024: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626955/systematic-radar-analysis-of-responses-to-the-open-ended-question-in-the-culture-of-care-barometer-survey-of-a-dutch-hospital
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susanne M Maassen, Lotte Spruit-van Bentvelzen, Anne Marie J W M Weggelaar-Jansen, Hester Vermeulen, Catharina J van Oostveen
OBJECTIVES: Systematically measuring the work environment of healthcare employees is key to continuously improving the quality of care and addressing staff shortages. In this study, we systematically analyse the responses to the one open-ended question posed in the Dutch version of the Culture of Care Barometer (CoCB-NL) to examine (1) if the responses offered new insights into healthcare employees' perceptions of their work environment and (2) if the original CoCB had any themes missing...
April 15, 2024: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626937/improving-appropriate-use-of-intravenous-albumin-results-of-a-single-centre-audit-and-multifaceted-intervention
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Corey M Forster, Shannon Halls, Sabrina Allarakhia, Dimpy Modi, Wiley Chung, Kendra Derry, Genevieve Digby, Jennifer Flemming, John McGugan, Heather Mackulin, Steven Montague, Stephanie Sibley, Samuel A Silver, Angela Sirosky-Yanyk, Andrew Stevens, Kerstin de Wit, Liying Zhang, Jeannie Callum
BACKGROUND: Intravenous albumin has limited indications supported by randomised controlled trials, yet it is often prescribed for indications not supported by evidence. AIM: To reduce unnecessary transfusion of albumin. INTERVENTIONS: Under the leadership of a multidisciplinary quality improvement team, evidence-based recommendations were disseminated in tandem with a new electronic order set, an educational strategy, qualitative interviews with prescribers and a return policy change to reduce wastage...
April 15, 2024: BMJ Open Quality
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626610/contextual-determinants-of-guideline-based-family-support-during-end-of-life-cancer-care-and-subsequent-bereavement-care-a-cross-sectional-survey-of-registered-nurses
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Riguzzi, Qëndresa Thaqi, Anja Lorch, David Blum, Simon Peng-Keller, Rahel Naef
PURPOSE: In end-of-life cancer care, 10-20% of bereaved family members experience adverse mental health effects, including prolonged grief disorder. Despite great efforts, evidence-based recommendations to support their grieving process and well-being are often not successfully adopted into routine clinical care. This study identified facilitators and barriers using implementation science methodology. METHODS: 81 registered nurses working in cancer care from four hospitals and three home care services in Switzerland assessed their current family support practices in end-of-life care and bereavement care...
March 27, 2024: European Journal of Oncology Nursing: the Official Journal of European Oncology Nursing Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626321/pandemics-intellectual-property-and-our-economy-a-worldview-analysis-of-canada-s-role-in-compromising-global-access-to-covid-19-vaccines
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ben Brisbois, Katrina Plamondon, David Walugembe, Rodrigo Curty Pereira, Christine Edet, Jenna Dixon, Roojin Habibi, Mohammad Karamouzian, Ronald Labonté, Srinivas Murthy, Vardit Ravitsky
Despite self-congratulatory rhetoric, Canada compromised COVID-19 vaccine equity with policies impeding a proposed global waiver of vaccine intellectual property (IP) rules. To learn from Canada's vaccine nationalism we explore the worldview - a coherent textual picture of the world - in a sample of Government of Canada communications regarding global COVID-19 vaccine sharing. Analysed documents portray risks and disparities as unrelated to the dynamics and power relations of the Canadian and international economies...
January 2024: Global Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626207/spatio-temporal-spread-of-artemisinin-resistance-in-southeast-asia
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer A Flegg, Sevvandi Kandanaarachchi, Philippe J Guerin, Arjen M Dondorp, Francois H Nosten, Sabina Dahlström Otienoburu, Nick Golding
Current malaria elimination targets must withstand a colossal challenge-resistance to the current gold standard antimalarial drug, namely artemisinin derivatives. If artemisinin resistance significantly expands to Africa or India, cases and malaria-related deaths are set to increase substantially. Spatial information on the changing levels of artemisinin resistance in Southeast Asia is therefore critical for health organisations to prioritise malaria control measures, but available data on artemisinin resistance are sparse...
April 16, 2024: PLoS Computational Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626070/high-uptake-of-covid-19-vaccines-among-healthcare-workers-in-urban-uganda
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nasimu Kyakuwa, Geofrey Kimbugwe, Flavia Nakanjako, Hamza Kalute, Simon Mpooya, Christine Atuhairwe, Laurent Perez, Bernard Kikaire
OBJECTIVES: The aim of the study was to describe the facilitators, barriers to and level of uptake of COVID-19 vaccines among healthcare workers in primary healthcare facilities in an urban setting in Uganda. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study among HCWs in private and public health facilities in Entebbe municipality between July 2021 and August 2021. Data was collected using a structured questionnaire that was shared, via an online link, to consented participants...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626068/antimicrobial-resistance-in-bacterial-wound-skin-soft-tissue-and-surgical-site-infections-in-central-eastern-southern-and-western-africa-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Edward J M Monk, Timothy P W Jones, Felix Bongomin, Winnie Kibone, Yakobo Nsubuga, Nelson Ssewante, Innocent Muleya, Lauryn Nsenga, V Bhargavi Rao, Kevin van Zandvoort
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a major global threat and AMR-attributable mortality is particularly high in Central, Eastern, Southern and Western Africa. The burden of clinically infected wounds, skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) and surgical site infections (SSI) in these regions is substantial. This systematic review reports the extent of AMR from sampling of these infections in Africa, to guide treatment. It also highlights gaps in microbiological diagnostic capacity. PubMed, MEDLINE and Embase were searched for studies reporting the prevalence of Staphylococcus aureus, Eschericheria coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter baumannii in clinically infected wounds, SSTI and SSI in Central, Eastern, Southern or Western Africa, and studies reporting AMR from such clinical isolates...
2024: PLOS Glob Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625952/developing-feasible-and-acceptable-strategies-for-integrating-the-use-of-patient-reported-outcome-measures-proms-in-gender-affirming-care-an-implementation-study
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rakhshan Kamran, Liam Jackman, Anna Laws, Melissa Stepney, Conrad Harrison, Abhilash Jain, Jeremy Rodrigues
OBJECTIVE: Use CFIR guidance to create comprehensive, evidence-based, feasible, and acceptable gender-affirming care PROM implementation strategies. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS: A 3-Phase participatory process was followed to design feasible and acceptable strategies for integrating PROMs in gender-affirming care. In Phase 1, barriers and enablers to PROM implementation for gender-affirming care were identified from a previous systematic review and our prior qualitative study...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625825/biological-treatment-approach-to-inflammatory-bowel-disease-is-similar-in-academic-and-nonacademic-centres-prime-time-for-decentralisation-of-inflammatory-bowel-disease-care
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katja Tepeš, Jurij Hanžel, David Štubljar, Karin Strmšek, Luka Erjavec, Eva Supovec, Zala Jagodic, Mirjam Končan, Jan Grosek, Jurij Aleš Košir, Aleš Tomažič, Urška Kogovšek, Gregor Norčič, Renata Šibli, Marija Žnidaršič, Tadeja Pačnik Vižintin, Barbara Sodin, Janez Breznik, Vanesa Anderle Hribar, Andreja Ocepek, Cvetka Pernat Drobež, Nejc Bukovnik, Andrej Zafošnik, Tamara Marušič, Nataša Jurečič Brglez, Maja Denkovski, Nataša Smrekar, Gregor Novak, Matic Koželj, Tina Kurent, Jože Simonič, Špela Pintar, Borut Štabuc, David Drobne
BACKGROUND: With the increasing number of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients, it is difficult to manage them within specialised IBD teams in academic medical centres: many are therefore treated in nonacademic IBD centres. It is unclear whether the time to introducing biologics is the same in both settings. AIM: We aimed to compare treatment approach with biologics in academic vs. nonacademic centres. METHODS: We analysed Slovenian national IBD registry data (UR-CARE Registry, supported by the European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation), which included 2 academic (2319 patients) and 4 nonacademic IBD (429 patients) centres...
April 2, 2024: European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625562/imaging-extrachromosomal-dna-ecdna-in-cancer
#37
REVIEW
Karin Purshouse, Steven M Pollard, Wendy A Bickmore
Extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) are circular regions of DNA that are found in many cancers. They are an important means of oncogene amplification, and correlate with treatment resistance and poor prognosis. Consequently, there is great interest in exploring and targeting ecDNA vulnerabilities as potential new therapeutic targets for cancer treatment. However, the biological significance of ecDNA and their associated regulatory control remains unclear. Light microscopy has been a central tool in the identification and characterisation of ecDNA...
April 16, 2024: Histochemistry and Cell Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625124/adaptiveness-for-online-learning-conceptualising-online-learning-dexterity-from-higher-education-students-experiences
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joyce Hwee Ling Koh, Ben Kei Daniel, Angela C Greenman
Online learning dexterity, or the ability to effortlessly adapt to online learning situations, has become critical since the COVID-19 pandemic, but its processes are not well-understood. Using grounded theory, this study develops a paradigm model of online learning dexterity from semi-structured interviews with 32 undergraduate and postgraduate students from a university in New Zealand. Through students' online learning experiences during the pandemic from 2020 to 2021, online learning dexterity is found to be how students make online learning 'just as good' as face-to-face learning by creating and adjusting five learning manoeuvres according to developing online learning circumstances...
May 13, 2023: N Z J Educ Stud
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38625112/above-and-beyond-a-grounded-theory-of-aotearoa-new-zealand-high-school-teachers-perspectives-on-international-study-tours
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Donna O'Donnell, Mark Orams, Heike Schänzel
This paper addresses the dearth of research into the roles high school teachers play in organising and leading international study tours offered by high schools in New Zealand (prior to the COVID-19 pandemic). The aim of this paper is to provide insights into the motivations and experiences of teachers involved in these tours. A grounded theory approach was used, and qualitative data were collected via face-to-face interviews with eight teachers forming the basis of the development of a theory which proposes that both navigating and negotiating learning experiences are key aspects of the teacher's role...
May 19, 2023: N Z J Educ Stud
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38623886/keep-or-drop-multidimensional-control-systems-in-professional-organisations-evidence-on-the-use%C3%A2-of-the-balanced-scorecard-in-healthcare
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Prenestini, Stefano Calciolari, Arianna Rota
PURPOSE: During the 1990s, Italian healthcare organisations (HOs) underwent a process of corporatisation, and the most innovative HOs introduced the balanced scorecard (BSC) to address the need for broader accountability. Currently, there is a limited understanding of the dynamics and outcomes of such a process. Therefore, this study aims to explore whether the BSC is still considered an effective performance management tool and analyse the factors driving and hindering its evolution and endurance in public and non-profit HOs...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Health Organization and Management
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