Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
87
result(s) for
"Christensen, Julie M."
Sort by:
Distributed Health Literacy Among People With Intellectual Disability, Their Supporters and Healthcare Professionals: A Scoping Review
by
Harris‐Roxas, Ben
,
Barrington, Maryann
,
Trollor, Julian N.
in
Appraisal
,
Decision making
,
Environmental aspects
2026
Background Health literacy is associated with improved healthcare experiences and health outcomes and is influenced by the social context in which it occurs. People with intellectual disability face stark health inequalities, yet the health literacy concept is underexplored for this group. Little is known about how health literacy is co‐constructed between people with intellectual disability, supporters and healthcare professionals. Objective The aim is to understand the experiences of people with intellectual disability accessing, understanding, appraising and applying health information together with their supporters and healthcare professionals. Search Strategy This scoping review followed Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines. Articles were identified and retrieved from CINAHL, PsycINFO, PubMed and EMBASE. Articles were included if they were published between 2000 and the present and focussed on aspects of how people with intellectual disability accessed, understood, appraised or used information or the role that socio‐environmental influences, including support networks and healthcare professionals, have in this process. Data Extraction and Synthesis Two reviewers completed and full‐text screening, addressing any conflicts at each stage. Data were extracted and coded deductively, according to the integrated model of health literacy. Main Result Following search and screening, 90 articles were included for review. Interpretation of the evidence suggests that health literacy is a relational process between people with intellectual disability, support networks and healthcare professionals. Each group experiences particular barriers and facilitators to this process and is impacted by its wider social and environmental contexts. There was limited evidence about how personal characteristics might shape health literacy, particularly intersectional experiences. Discussion and Conclusions Health literacy is a social practice, with roles and responsibilities shared among people and systems. Healthcare and disability sectors can facilitate health literacy by creating environments that support shared access and use of health information, as well as facilitate choice and decision‐making. Patient or Public Contribution Collaboration with people with intellectual disability in scoping reviews is an emerging area. We gained the perspectives and feedback of colleagues with lived experience of intellectual disability for the design of the review and interpretation of the evidence. This included meeting with a Lived Experience Reference Group of seven people with intellectual disability to discuss our process and findings and receive their guidance. Their contributions supported how we interpreted the findings and reported the review.
Journal Article
Predictors of Acute Kidney Injury After Hip Fracture in Older Adults
by
Pressel, Eckart
,
Braüner Christensen, Julie
,
Haxholdt Lunn, Troels
in
Blood transfusions
,
Fractures
,
Kidneys
2020
Introduction:
This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of acute kidney injury (AKI) following hip fracture surgery in geriatric patients and to identify predictors for development of AKI with a focus on possible preventable risk factors.
Methods:
In this retrospective cohort study, we reviewed electronic medical records of all patients above 65 years of age who underwent hip fracture surgery at Copenhagen University Hospital, Bispebjerg, Denmark, in 2018. Acute kidney injury was assessed according to the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes guidelines. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to identify independent risk factors for AKI.
Results:
Postoperative AKI developed in 28.4% of the included patients (85/299). Acute kidney injury was associated with increased length of admission (11.3 vs 8.7 days, P < .001) and 30-day mortality (18/85 vs 16/214, P = .001). In multivariable analysis, higher age (odds ratio [OR]: 1.05, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.01-1.08, P = .004), heart disease (OR: 1.78, 95% CI: 1.01-3.11, P = .045), and postoperative blood transfusion (OR: 1.84, 95% CI: 1.01-3.36, P = .048) were associated with AKI. Moreover, a higher postoperative C-reactive protein (199.0 ± 99.9 in patients with AKI, 161.3 ± 75.2 in patients without AKI) and lower postoperative diastolic blood pressure were observed in patients developing AKI.
Discussion and Conclusion:
Acute kidney injury was common following hip fracture surgery and associated with longer admissions and increased mortality. Patients developing AKI were older and showed several postoperative similarities, including higher C-reactive protein, lower postoperative diastolic pressure, and the need for blood transfusion.
Journal Article
Healthy Weight Loss Maintenance with Exercise, Liraglutide, or Both Combined
2021
In this trial, adults with obesity without diabetes were randomly assigned, after an 8-week low-calorie diet, to 1 year of placebo, an exercise program, liraglutide, or exercise plus liraglutide. Combined treatment with exercise and liraglutide improved healthy weight loss maintenance more than either treatment alone.
Journal Article
Molecular cartography of the human skin surface in 3D
by
Bouslimani, Amina
,
Dorrestein, Kathleen
,
Dorrestein, Pieter C.
in
Adult
,
bacteria
,
Biological Sciences
2015
Significance The paper describes the implementation of an approach to study the chemical makeup of human skin surface and correlate it to the microbes that live in the skin. We provide the translation of molecular information in high-spatial resolution 3D to understand the body distribution of skin molecules and bacteria. In addition, we use integrative analysis to interpret, at a molecular level, the large scale of data obtained from human skin samples. Correlations between molecules and microbes can be obtained to further gain insights into the chemical milieu in which these different microbial communities live.
The human skin is an organ with a surface area of 1.5–2 m ² that provides our interface with the environment. The molecular composition of this organ is derived from host cells, microbiota, and external molecules. The chemical makeup of the skin surface is largely undefined. Here we advance the technologies needed to explore the topographical distribution of skin molecules, using 3D mapping of mass spectrometry data and microbial 16S rRNA amplicon sequences. Our 3D maps reveal that the molecular composition of skin has diverse distributions and that the composition is defined not only by skin cells and microbes but also by our daily routines, including the application of hygiene products. The technological development of these maps lays a foundation for studying the spatial relationships of human skin with hygiene, the microbiota, and environment, with potential for developing predictive models of skin phenotypes tailored to individual health.
Journal Article
Acquired Resistance to KRASG12C Inhibition in Cancer
2021
A study involving 38 patients who initially had a response to adagrasib or who had a long period of stable disease in response to the drug but then had progression yielded diverse mechanisms of acquired resistance in 45% of them. Unlike resistance to the tyrosine kinase inhibitors, the cancer cell uses many mechanisms to overcome the inhibition of KRAS.
Journal Article
Increased muscle activity during sleep and more RBD symptoms in H1N1-(Pandemrix)-vaccinated narcolepsy type 1 patients compared with their non-narcoleptic siblings
by
Lie, Benedicte A
,
Kornum, Birgitte R
,
Thorsby, Per M
in
Analysis
,
Histocompatibility antigens
,
HLA histocompatibility antigens
2023
Abstract
Study Objectives
Narcolepsy type 1 (NT1) is characterized by unstable sleep-wake and muscle tonus regulation during sleep. We characterized dream enactment and muscle activity during sleep in a cohort of post-H1N1 NT1 patients and their siblings, and analyzed whether clinical phenotypic characteristics and major risk factors are associated with increased muscle activity.
Methods
RBD symptoms and polysomnography m. tibialis anterior electromyographical signals [long (0.5–15 s); short (0.1–0.49 s)] were compared between 114 post-H1N1 NT1 patients and 89 non-narcoleptic siblings. Association sub-analyses with RBD symptoms, narcoleptic symptoms, CSF hypocretin-1 levels, and major risk factors [H1N1-(Pandemrix)-vaccination, HLA-DQB1*06:02-positivity] were performed.
Results
RBD symptoms, REM and NREM long muscle activity indices and REM short muscle activity index were significantly higher in NT1 patients than siblings (all p < 0.001). Patients with undetectable CSF hypocretin-1 levels (<40 pg/ml) had significantly more NREM periodic long muscle activity than patients with low but detectable levels (40–150 pg/ml) (p = 0.047). In siblings, REM and NREM sleep muscle activity indices were not associated with RBD symptoms, other narcolepsy symptoms, or HLA-DQB1*06:02-positivity. H1N1-(Pandemrix)-vaccination status did not predict muscle activity indices in patients or siblings.
Conclusion
Increased REM and NREM muscle activity and more RBD symptoms is characteristic of NT1, and muscle activity severity is predicted by hypocretin deficiency severity but not by H1N1-(Pandemrix)-vaccination status. In the patients’ non-narcoleptic siblings, neither RBD symptoms, core narcoleptic symptoms, nor the major NT1 risk factors is associated with muscle activity during sleep, hence not indicative of a phenotypic continuum.
Graphical Abstract
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Modeling chronic wasting disease transmission risk in mule deer related to habitat characteristics
by
DeVivo, Melia
,
Edmunds, David R.
,
Christensen, Erica M.
in
Animals
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Chronic wasting disease
2026
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease of cervids that spreads to uninfected individuals through direct transmission (contact with infected individuals), vertical transmission (from mother to offspring), or indirect transmission (exposure to contaminated environments). The risk of indirect transmission is unevenly distributed on the landscape, and risk levels are expected to be controlled by patterns of habitat use by infected and uninfected individuals as well as environmental properties that alter the length of time prions remain infectious and available for uptake. Despite evidence from controlled or laboratory studies identifying environmental properties likely to affect patterns of CWD prion locations on the landscape, it remains difficult to connect mechanisms to realized increased or decreased risk of disease transmission, and few studies have attempted to detect patterns of different CWD risk in different environments. Using data from GPS-collared mule deer in Wyoming that were CWD-tested annually, we constructed models predicting annual probability of disease transmission contingent on environmental properties extracted from GPS use points. We compared models that emphasized different pathways of disease transmission by including or excluding sets of covariates that described deer density, habitat selection, and covariates expected to affect prion persistence in the environment. Results indicated that key habitat characteristics often selected by mule deer, such as proximity to secondary roads, were also associated with higher risk of testing positive for CWD, which supports the hypothesis that disease risk was correlated to patterns of habitat use by deer. We also found increased risk associated with spatial properties that were not selected-for by deer, such as areas where topography collects moisture, suggesting that prion retention mechanisms also play a role in risk. Incorporating these spatially-varying risk factors into our understanding of CWD transmission and outbreak progression can support managers in designing data collection and disease management strategies.
Journal Article
Association Between Vegetation Size and Outcome in the Partial Oral Antibiotic Endocarditis Treatment Trial
2024
Step-down oral antibiotic therapy is associated with a non-inferior long-term outcome compared with continued intravenous antibiotic therapy in the treatment of left-sided infective endocarditis. We aimed to analyze whether step-down oral therapy compared with continued intravenous antibiotic therapy is also associated with a non-inferior outcome in patients with large vegetations (vegetation length ≥ 10 mm) or among patients who underwent surgery before step-down oral therapy. We included patients without presence of aortic root abscess at diagnosis from the POET (Partial Oral Antibiotic Endocarditis Treatment) study. Multivariable Cox regression analyses were used to find associations between large vegetation, cardiac surgery, step-down oral therapy, and the primary end point (composite of all-cause mortality, unplanned cardiac surgery, embolic event, or relapse of positive blood cultures during follow-up). A total of 368 patients (age 68 ± 12, 77% men) were included. Patients with large vegetations (n = 124) were more likely to undergo surgery compared with patients with small vegetations (n = 244) (65% vs 20%, p <0.001). During a median 1,406 days of follow-up, 146 patients reached the primary end point. Large vegetations were not associated with the primary end point (hazard ratio 0.74, 95% confidence interval 0.47 to 1.18, p = 0.21). Step-down oral therapy was non-inferior to continued intravenous antibiotic in all subgroups when stratified by the presence of a large vegetation at baseline and early cardiac surgery. Step-down oral therapy is safe in the presence of a large vegetation at diagnosis and among patients who underwent early cardiac surgery.
Journal Article
Physical and economic consequences of climate change in Europe
2011
Quantitative estimates of the economic damages of climate change usually are based on aggregate relationships linking average temperature change to loss in gross domestic product (GDP). However, there is a clear need for further detail in the regional and sectoral dimensions of impact assessments to design and prioritize adaptation strategies. New developments in regional climate modeling and physical-impact modeling in Europe allow a better exploration of those dimensions. This article quantifies the potential consequences of climate change in Europe in four market impact categories (agriculture, river floods, coastal areas, and tourism) and one nonmarket impact (human health). The methodology integrates a set of coherent, high-resolution climate change projections and physical models into an economic modeling framework. We find that if the climate of the 2080s were to occur today, the annual loss in household welfare in the European Union (EU) resulting from the four market impacts would range between 0.2-1%. If the welfare loss is assumed to be constant over time, climate change may halve the EU's annual welfare growth. Scenarios with warmer temperatures and a higher rise in sea level result in more severe economic damage. However, the results show that there are large variations across European regions. Southern Europe, the British Isles, and Central Europe North appear most sensitive to climate change. Northern Europe, on the other hand, is the only region with net economic benefits, driven mainly by the positive effects on agriculture. Coastal systems, agriculture, and river flooding are the most important of the four market impacts assessed.
Journal Article