keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38695704/supported-privacy-an-essential-principle-for-end-of-life-care-for-children-and-families-in-the-picu
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ashleigh E Butler, Tracy A Pasek, Tara-Jane Clark, Elizabeth G Broden
Caring for children and their families at the end-of-life is an essential but challenging aspect of care in the PICU. During and following a child's death, families often report a simultaneous need for protected privacy and ongoing supportive presence from staff. Balancing these seemingly paradoxical needs can be difficult for PICU staff and can often lead to the family feeling intruded upon or abandoned during their end-of-life experience. In this "Pediatric Critical Care Medicine Perspectives" piece, we reframe provision of privacy at the end-of-life in the PICU and describe an essential principle that aims to help the interprofessional PICU team simultaneously meet these two opposing family needs: "Supported Privacy...
May 1, 2024: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38694176/prenatal-decision-making-in-patients-with-limited-english-proficiency-what-factors-are-involved
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalie Schelbar, Olivia Pruss, Maria Alonso-Luaces, Faith Butler
INTRODUCTION: A comprehensive definition of culture encompasses shared norms, beliefs, expectations, language, and customs, all of which are crucial considerations when working with patients with limited English proficiency (LEP). In this study, the authors examined how language, external influences, and patient-provider relational factors associated with decisional conflict in prenatal care patients. METHODS: The authors conducted a cross-sectional study to assess decisional conflict related to postpartum contraception, elective induction, and newborn feeding methods...
2024: Kansas Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38693029/biomechanical-and-ergonomic-risks-associated-with-cervical-musculoskeletal-dysfunction-amongst-surgeons-a-systematic-review
#3
REVIEW
K O'Reilly, J M McDonnell, S Ibrahim, J S Butler, J D Martin-Smith, J B O'Sullivan, R T Dolan
INTRODUCTION: Surgeons are at high risk of developing musculoskeletal symptoms due to a range of factors including, maladaptive positioning and surgical ergonomics. Cervical muscle strain and biomechanical load is most prevalent due to repetitive motions and prolonged static neck positioning. This issue is apparent through reports of prevalence between 10 and 74.4% among surgeons. The aim of this systematic review is to provide an objective assessment of the clinical evidence available and a descriptive analysis of the effects of kinematics and surgical ergonomics on the prevalence of surgeons' cervical musculoskeletal pain...
April 30, 2024: Surgeon: Journal of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Ireland
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38692308/the-common-variable-immunodeficiency-igm-repertoire-narrowly-recognizes-erythrocyte-and-platelet-glycans
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carole Le Coz, Melissa Trofa, Dorothy L Butler, Samuel Yoon, Tian Tian, Whitney Reid, Emylette Cruz Cabrera, Ainsley V C Knox, Caroline Khanna, Kathleen E Sullivan, Jennifer Heimall, Patricia Takach, Olajumoke O Fadugba, Monica Lawrence, Soma Jyonouchi, Hakon Hakonarson, Andrew D Wells, Steven Handler, Karen B Zur, Vinodh Pillai, Jeffrey C Gildersleeve, Neil Romberg
BACKGROUND: Autoantibody-mediated cytopenias (AICs) regularly occur in profoundly IgG-deficient common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) patients. The isotypes, antigenic targets, and origin(s) of their disease-causing autoantibodies are unclear. OBJECTIVE: To determine reactivity, clonality and provenance of AIC-associated IgM autoantibodies in CVID patients. METHODS: We utilized glycan arrays, patient erythrocytes, and platelets to determine targets of CVID IgM autoantibodies...
April 29, 2024: Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38690656/women-with-a-history-of-preeclampsia-exhibit-accelerated-aging-and-unfavorable-profiles-of-senescence-markers
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sonja Suvakov, Lisa E Vaughan, Santosh Parashuram, Yvonne S Butler Tobah, Muthuvel Jayachandran, Andrea Kattah, Alanna M Chamberlain, Suzette J Bielinski, Natasa Milic, Vesna D Garovic
BACKGROUND: Senescence, a mechanism of cellular aging, which is characterized by irreversible proliferation arrest and a proinflammatory secretory phenotype, has been documented in women with preeclampsia. As cellular senescence can persist and progress, we postulated that it is associated with accelerated aging phenotype and accumulation of comorbidities in women with a history of preeclampsia. METHODS: We included a cohort of women with a history of preeclampsia (n=40) age- and parity-matched to a group of referent women with normotensive pregnancies (n=40)...
May 1, 2024: Hypertension
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38690644/are-minimally-verbal-autistic-children-s-modality-and-form-of-communication-associated-with-parent-responsivity
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chelsea La Valle, Lue Shen, Lindsay K Butler, Helen Tager-Flusberg
Prior work examined how minimally verbal (MV) children with autism used their gestural communication during social interactions. However, interactions are exchanges between social partners. Examining parent-child social interactions is critically important given the influence of parent responsivity on children's communicative development. Specifically, parent responses that are semantically contingent to the child's communication plays an important role in further shaping children's language learning. This study examines whether MV autistic children's (N = 47; 48-95 months; 10 females) modality and form of communication are associated with parent responsivity during an in-home parent-child interaction (PCI)...
May 1, 2024: Autism Research: Official Journal of the International Society for Autism Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38689822/the-potential-role-of-chronic-pain-and-the-polytrauma-clinical-triad-in-predicting-prodromal-pd-a-cross-sectional-study-of-u-s-veterans
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lee E Neilson, Nadir M Balba, Jonathan E Elliott, Gregory D Scott, Scott D Mist, Matthew P Butler, Mary M Heinricher, Miranda M Lim
INTRODUCTION: The research criteria for prodromal Parkinson disease (pPD) depends on prospectively validated clinical inputs with large effect sizes and/or high prevalence. Neither traumatic brain injury (TBI), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), nor chronic pain are currently included in the calculator, despite recent evidence of association with pPD. These conditions are widely prevalent, co-occurring, and already known to confer risk of REM behavior disorder (RBD) and PD. Few studies have examined PD risk in the context of TBI and PTSD; none have examined chronic pain...
2024: Clinical parkinsonism & related disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38689763/looking-after-bubba-for-all-our-mob-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-community-experiences-and-perceptions-of-stillbirth
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Luciana Massi, Carolyn Lewis, Skye Stewart, Diana Jans, Rupesh Gautam, Lina Jalloub, Anneka Bowman, Philippa Middleton, Sue Vlack, Frances M Boyle, Carrington Shepherd, Vicki Flenady, Deanna Stuart-Butler, Kym M Rae
The stillbirth rate among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and communities in Australia is around double that of non-Indigenous women. While the development of effective prevention strategies during pregnancy and improving care following stillbirth for women and families in communities has become a national priority, there has been limited progress in stillbirth disparities. With community permission, this study aimed to gain a better understanding of community experiences, perceptions, and priorities around stillbirth...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38689605/impact-of-long-covid-on-health-related-quality-of-life-an-opensafely-population-cohort-study-using-patient-reported-outcome-measures-openprompt
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Oliver Carlile, Andrew Briggs, Alasdair D Henderson, Ben F C Butler-Cole, John Tazare, Laurie A Tomlinson, Michael Marks, Mark Jit, Liang-Yu Lin, Chris Bates, John Parry, Sebastian C J Bacon, Iain Dillingham, William A Dennison, Ruth E Costello, Alex J Walker, William Hulme, Ben Goldacre, Amir Mehrkar, Brian MacKenna, Emily Herrett, Rosalind M Eggo
BACKGROUND: Long COVID is a major problem affecting patient health, the health service, and the workforce. To optimise the design of future interventions against COVID-19, and to better plan and allocate health resources, it is critical to quantify the health and economic burden of this novel condition. We aimed to evaluate and estimate the differences in health impacts of long COVID across sociodemographic categories and quantify this in Quality-Adjusted Life-Years (QALYs), widely used measures across health systems...
May 2024: The Lancet regional health. Europe
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38689390/having-more-tender-than-swollen-joints-is-associated-with-worse-patient-reported-outcomes-in-patients-with-early-ra
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charis F Meng, Yvonne C Lee, Orit Schieir, Marie-France Valois, Margaret A Butler, Gilles Boire, Glen Hazlewood, Carol Hitchon, Edward Keystone, Diane Tin, Carter Thorne, Louis Bessette, Janet Pope, Susan J Bartlett, Vivian P Bykerk
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: In patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), high tender-swollen joint differences (TSJDs) have been associated with worse outcomes. A better understanding of the phenotype and impact of high TSJD on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in early RA may lead to earlier personalized treatment targeting domains that are important to patients today. Our objectives were to evaluate the impact of TSJD on updated PROs in patients with early RA over 1 year and to determine differences in associations by joint size...
May 1, 2024: Journal of Clinical Rheumatology: Practical Reports on Rheumatic & Musculoskeletal Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38684515/pregnancy-complications-and-childhood-mental-health-is-the-association-modified-by-sex-or-adverse-social-circumstances-findings-from-the-growing-up-in-ireland-national-infant-cohort-study
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Butler, Mary Clarke, Michelle Spirtos, Linda M O' Keeffe, Niamh Dooley
Specific pregnancy complications, socioeconomic position and sex have all been independently associated with child mental health outcomes, but their combined effects remain unclear. We examined whether total number of complications experienced in the pregnancy associated with mental health at 5 and 9-years, and whether this varied by sex or adverse social circumstances. Pregnancy complications were self-reported at 9-months post-natally from a list of 16 complications. Parents completed the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) when their child was 5 and 9-years...
April 29, 2024: Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38679510/evaluation-of-operating-room-inefficiencies-and-their-impact-on-operating-room-duration-using-a-surgical-app
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dimitrios I Athanasiadis, Sara Monfared, Lava Timsina, Jake Whiteside, Ambar Banerjee, Annabelle Butler, Dimitrios Stefanidis
BACKGROUND: Efficient utilization of the operating room (OR) is essential. Inefficiencies are thought to cause preventable delays. Our goal was to identify OR incidents causing delays and estimate their impact on the duration of various general surgery procedures. MATERIALS: Three trained observers prospectively collected intraoperative data using the ExplORer Surgical app, a tool that helped capture incidents causing delays. The impact of each incident on case duration was assessed using multivariable analysis...
April 24, 2024: American Journal of Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38673228/magnetic-resonance-study-of-bulky-cvd-diamond-disc
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander Shames, Alexander Panich, Lonia Friedlander, Haim Cohen, James Butler, Raymond Moreh
Diamonds produced using chemical vapor deposition (CVD) have found many applications in various fields of science and technology. Many applications involve polycrystalline CVD diamond films of micron thicknesses. However, a variety of optical, thermal, mechanical, and radiation sensing applications require more bulky CVD diamond samples. We report the results of a magnetic resonance and structural study of a thick, sizable polycrystalline CVD diamond disc, both as-prepared and treated with e-beam irradiation/high-temperature annealing, as well as gamma irradiation...
April 18, 2024: Materials
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38672174/analysing-the-combined-effects-of-radiotherapy-and-chemokine-receptor-5-antagonism-complementary-approaches-to-promote-t-cell-function-and-migration-in-oesophageal-adenocarcinoma
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Davern, Cillian O' Donovan, Noel E Donlon, Eimear Mylod, Caoimhe Gaughan, Anshul Bhardwaj, Andrew D Sheppard, Dara Bracken-Clarke, Christine Butler, Narayanasamy Ravi, Claire L Donohoe, John V Reynolds, Joanne Lysaght, Melissa J Conroy
The presence of an immunosuppressive tumour microenvironment in oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) is a major contributor to poor responses. Novel treatment strategies are required to supplement current regimens and improve patient survival. This study examined the immunomodulatory effects that radiation therapy and chemokine receptor antagonism impose on T cell phenotypes in OAC with a primary goal of identifying potential therapeutic targets to combine with radiation to improve anti-tumour responses. Compared with healthy controls, anti-tumour T cell function was impaired in OAC patients, demonstrated by lower IFN-γ production by CD4+ T helper cells and lower CD8+ T cell cytotoxic potential...
April 8, 2024: Biomedicines
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38671997/behavioral-and-psychiatric-disorders-in-syndromic-autism
#15
REVIEW
Ann C Genovese, Merlin G Butler
Syndromic autism refers to autism spectrum disorder diagnosed in the context of a known genetic syndrome. The specific manifestations of any one of these syndromic autisms are related to a clinically defined genetic syndrome that can be traced to certain genes and variants, genetic deletions, or duplications at the chromosome level. The genetic mutations or defects in single genes associated with these genetic disorders result in a significant elevation of risk for developing autism relative to the general population and are related to recurrence with inheritance patterns...
March 30, 2024: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38670855/challenges-and-facilitators-in-repeated-bio-behavioural-surveys-for-blood-borne-virus-infections-in-australian-prisons
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rugi Bah, Yumi Sheehan, Xiaoying Li, Nicola Price, Tony Butler, Gregory J Dore, Jason Grebely, Andrew R Lloyd, Behzad Hajarizadeh
BACKGROUND: Prison-based blood-borne virus (BBV) surveillance is essential for evaluation of prevention and treatment programs for high-risk populations, such as people who inject drugs who are over-represented amongst those incarcerated. Regular triennial surveillance has been in place in Australian prisons for almost two decades, but has been focused to date only on new prison entrants. Recently, the Australian Hepatitis and risk survey in prisons (AusHep study) was established to provide improved surveillance via an expanded bio-behavioural survey representative of all people in prison, including those sentenced and those on remand...
April 25, 2024: International Journal on Drug Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38670691/primary-prevention-of-cardiovascular-disease-for-people-living-with-human-immunodeficiency-virus
#17
REVIEW
Christopher B Fox, Kristine Butler, Devon Flynn
People living with HIV (PLWH) have a risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) that is 1.5 to 2 times higher than the general population owing to traditional risk factors, HIV-mediated factors like chronic inflammation and immune dysfunction, and exposure to antiretroviral therapy. Currently available CVD risk estimation calculators tend to underestimate risk in PLWH but can be useful when an individual's HIV history is considered. Improving modifiable risks is the primary intervention for reducing CVD risk in PLWH...
June 2024: Nursing Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38670253/referral-and-beyond-restructuring-the-kidney-transplant-process-to-support-greater-access-in-the-united-states
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine R Butler, Peter P Reese, Xingxing S Cheng
Advocates for improved equity in kidney transplant in the US have recently focused efforts on initiatives to increase referral for transplant evaluation. However, because donor kidneys remain scarce, increased referrals are likely to result in an increasing number of patients proceeding through the evaluation process without ultimately receiving a kidney. Unfortunately, the process of referral and evaluation can be highly resource-intensive for patients, families, transplant programs, and payers. Patients and families may incur out-of-pocket expenses and be required to complete testing and treatments that they might not have chosen in the course of routine clinical care...
April 24, 2024: American Journal of Kidney Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38669537/reduction-in-constitutively-activated-auditory-brainstem-microglia-in-aging-and-alzheimer-s-disease
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tracy Butler, Xiuyuan Wang, Gloria Chiang, Ke Xi, Sumit Niogi, Lidia Glodzik, Yi Li, Qolamreza Ray Razlighi, Liangdong Zhou, Seyed Hani Hojjati, Ilker Ozsahin, Xiangling Mao, Thomas Maloney, Emily Tanzi, Nesrine Rahmouni, Cécile Tissot, Firoza Lussier, Sudhin Shah, Dikoma Shungu, Ajay Gupta, Mony De Leon, P David Mozley, Tharick Pascoal, Pedro Rosa-Neto
BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology is considered to begin in the brainstem, and cerebral microglia are known to play a critical role in AD pathogenesis, yet little is known about brainstem microglia in AD. Translocator protein (TSPO) PET, sensitive to activated microglia, shows high signal in dorsal brainstem in humans, but the precise location and clinical correlates of this signal are unknown. OBJECTIVE: To define age and AD associations of brainstem TSPO PET signal in humans...
April 19, 2024: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease: JAD
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38668039/access-to-oncology-medicines-in-canada-consensus-forum-for-recommendations-for-improvement
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandeep R Sehdev, Nigel S B Rawson, Olexiy I Aseyev, Catriona J Buick, Marcus O Butler, Scott Edwards, Sharlene Gill, Joanna M Gotfrit, Cyrus C Hsia, Rosalyn A Juergens, Mita Manna, Joy S McCarthy, Som D Mukherjee, Stephanie L Snow, Silvana Spadafora, David J Stewart, Jason R Wentzell, Ralph P W Wong, Pawel G Zalewski
Patient access to new oncology drugs in Canada is only possible after navigating multiple sequential systemic checkpoints for national regulatory approval, health technology assessment (HTA) and collective government price negotiation. These steps delay access and prevent health care providers from being able to prescribe optimal therapy. Eighteen Canadian oncology clinicians from the medicine, nursing and pharmacy professions met to develop consensus recommendations for defining reasonable government performance standards around process and timeliness to improve Canadian cancer patients' access to best care...
March 29, 2024: Current Oncology
keyword
keyword
120434
1
2
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.