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result(s) for
"Rogers, Christine"
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From Producing to Reducing Trauma: A Call for \Trauma-Informed\ Research(ers) to Interrogate How Schools Harm Students
by
Petrone, Robert
,
Stanton, Christine Rogers
in
American Indian Students
,
At risk students
,
Biomedicine
2021
Although \"trauma-informed education\" has gained momentum across the United States in recent years, a question remains neglected by the research community: How can education research inform understandings of \"trauma-informed\" approaches when education itself is trauma-producing for many students? This article (1) explores limitations of trauma-informed educational scholarship, particularly its reliance on individualized, biomedical understandings of trauma; (2) articulates theoretical reconceptualizations for subsequent research to account for historical trauma and ways schools and research inflict harm on students; and (3) calls for expansion of relational, participatory, and humanizing methodologies. Overall, we argue for a shift from research that focuses on \"trauma-informed education\" to scholarship that enacts a sociohistorical trauma-reducing framework to more effectively interrogate the intersections of trauma, schooling, and research.
Journal Article
Projected Carbon Dioxide to Increase Grass Pollen and Allergen Exposure Despite Higher Ozone Levels
by
DaCosta, Michelle
,
Rogers, Christine A.
,
Stinson, Kristina A.
in
Air Pollutants
,
Air pollution
,
Allergens
2014
One expected effect of climate change on human health is increasing allergic and asthmatic symptoms through changes in pollen biology. Allergic diseases have a large impact on human health globally, with 10-30% of the population affected by allergic rhinitis and more than 300 million affected by asthma. Pollen from grass species, which are highly allergenic and occur worldwide, elicits allergic responses in 20% of the general population and 40% of atopic individuals. Here we examine the effects of elevated levels of two greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide (CO2), a growth and reproductive stimulator of plants, and ozone (O3), a repressor, on pollen and allergen production in Timothy grass (Phleum pratense L.). We conducted a fully factorial experiment in which plants were grown at ambient and/or elevated levels of O3 and CO2, to simulate present and projected levels of both gases and their potential interactive effects. We captured and counted pollen from flowers in each treatment and assayed for concentrations of the allergen protein, Phl p 5. We found that elevated levels of CO2 increased the amount of grass pollen produced by ∼50% per flower, regardless of O3 levels. Elevated O3 significantly reduced the Phl p 5 content of the pollen but the net effect of rising pollen numbers with elevated CO2 indicate increased allergen exposure under elevated levels of both greenhouse gases. Using quantitative estimates of increased pollen production and number of flowering plants per treatment, we estimated that airborne grass pollen concentrations will increase in the future up to ∼200%. Due to the widespread existence of grasses and the particular importance of P. pratense in eliciting allergic responses, our findings provide evidence for significant impacts on human health worldwide as a result of future climate change.
Journal Article
Audiologists should not fail with falls: A call to commit to prevention of falls in older adults
2021
Globally, falls are a serious economic and public health concern. While all age groups are impacted by falls, the threats to morbidity and mortality are most severe in older adults. Recent literature has linked hearing loss, and related issues such as an increase in sedentary behaviour, to a greater risk of falls. Therefore, this opinion article aims to raise audiologists’ awareness of falls in ageing patients or clients, and calls for change in terms of having these rehabilitation professionals embrace identification and management of fall risk.
Journal Article
Clinical balance assessment tools for children with hearing loss: a scoping review
2025
Balance dysfunction exists in children with hearing loss, especially sensorineural loss, impacting on cognitive development, socio-emotional development and literacy. However, there is limited assessment of balance in this population, which further impedes childhood development. The objective of this review was to identify clinical, low- technology and inexpensive tools used to evaluate balance in children with hearing loss. Methods: A scoping review method with reference to the JBI, was used where a search was conducted on electronic databases including, but not limited to, EBSCOHost, MEDLINE, PubMED, Web of Science and Wiley. In addition, grey literature and hand searches were also used. The review included children between 3 and 15 years of age with hearing loss. Results: A total of 68 articles were found where 27% of the tests were norm-referenced tests, 64% were criterion referenced tests and 9% could not be identified. Conclusion: Tests such as the Tandem gait test, Pediatric Balance Scale (PBS), Clinical Test of Sensory Interaction for Balance (mCTSIB)/Pediatric Version of Clinical Test for Sensory Interaction of Balance (P-CTSIB), Dynamic Gait Index and the Timed-up-and-Go were identified to be relatively inexpensive and low-technology clinical tools and have thus, been summarized in this review.
Journal Article
Nurses’ perspectives on inpatient falls in a large academic hospital in South Africa
2023
Background Falls risk assessment tools, including the Morse Falls Scale, have been used for years, and yet falls remain key adverse events in hospitals. Nurses are key role players in falls prevention and can champion patient safety. Objectives The aim of the study was to explore ward nurses’ attitudes, knowledge and practices regarding the use of falls risk assessment tools, institutional falls policy and falls prevention. Methods A survey design was used. All permanent ward nurses were eligible to participate, and a convenience sample was used. Results Nurses endorsed the Morse Falls Scale, recommended by institutional policy, as effective in reducing falls and indicated that incident reporting measured progress on monitoring fall events. Falls prevention training was scanty; however, nurses were keen for further education of falls. Conclusion Effective falls risk management needs to extend beyond promulgating policy and actively address nursing and patient education. Contribution This study adds to the sparse literature regarding nursing practice and falls prevention in a developing country. Recommendations for change have been made.
Journal Article
Constructions of the Real
by
Gough-Brady, Catherine
,
Munro, Kim
,
Burke, Liz
in
Documentary films
,
Documentary films-Production and direction
,
PERFORMING ARTS
2023
Constructions of the Real features a wide range of writing from non-fiction and documentary filmmakers who undertake theoretically informed practice and think through making. These global filmmakers and writers straddle the divide between the academy and industry and they reflect on, interrogate and explicate their filmmaking practices in relationship to questions of form, content, and process.
The book is in four sections. The first is on intimate, first-person works where memory and identity are explored. The second features responses to and interventions in historical and dominant relationships to place. The third explores multivarious forms of essay films. In the final section, filmmakers discuss the precarity of non-fiction filmmaking in its form and financial rewards. This book is anti-colonial, in that it offers diverse new voices and new practices promoting hybridity and experimentation and makes claims for knowledges that fall outside of traditional scholarship. This book presents the silenced and the marginalized.
It engages with current debates about the role of creative scholarship and makes a claim for non-fiction filmmaking as a knowledge-making practice for revealing, critiquing, and interpreting the world.
Contributors include Kaveh Abbasian, Judith Aston, Nicholas Andueza, Elisabeth Brun, Joanna Callaghan, Gerda Cammaer, Philip Cartelli, Lorena Cervera, Jill Daniels, Kath Dooley, Aggie Ebrahimi Bazaz, Andréa França, Catherine Gough-Brady, Robert Hardcastle, Alex Johnston, Elizabeth Miller, Ros Mortimer, Kim Munro, Minou Norouzi, Stefano Odorico, Rebecca Ora, Sheersha Perera, Christine Rogers, Isabel Seguí, Jeni Thornley and Masha Vlasova.
How Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke, Outdoor Air Pollutants, and Increased Pollen Burdens Influences the Incidence of Asthma
by
Rogers, Christine A.
,
London, Stephanie J.
,
Jaakkola, Maritta S.
in
Air Pollutants - toxicity
,
Air pollution
,
Allergens
2006
Asthma is a multifactorial airway disease that arises from a relatively common genetic background interphased with exposures to allergens and airborne irritants. The rapid rise in asthma over the past three decades in Western societies has been attributed to numerous diverse factors, including increased awareness of the disease, altered lifestyle and activity patterns, and ill-defined changes in environmental exposures. It is well accepted that persons with asthma are more sensitive than persons without asthma to air pollutants such as cigarette smoke, traffic emissions, and photochemical smog components. It has also been demonstrated that exposure to a mix of allergens and irritants can at times promote the development phase (induction) of the disease. Experimental evidence suggests that complex organic molecules from diesel exhaust may act as allergic adjuvants through the production of oxidative stress in airway cells. It also seems that climate change is increasing the abundance of aeroallergens such as pollen, which may result in greater incidence or severity of allergic diseases. In this review we illustrate how environmental tobacco smoke, outdoor air pollution, and climate change may act as environmental risk factors for the development of asthma and provide mechanistic explanations for how some of these effects can occur.
Journal Article
Recent warming by latitude associated with increased length of ragweed pollen season in central North America
by
Patz, Jonathan A
,
Filley, Warren
,
Fulford, George
in
Agricultural seasons
,
Air temperature
,
allergens
2011
A fundamental aspect of climate change is the potential shifts in flowering phenology and pollen initiation associated with milder winters and warmer seasonal air temperature. Earlier floral anthesis has been suggested, in turn, to have a role in human disease by increasing time of exposure to pollen that causes allergic rhinitis and related asthma. However, earlier floral initiation does not necessarily alter the temporal duration of the pollen season, and, to date, no consistent continental trend in pollen season length has been demonstrated. Here we report that duration of the ragweed (Ambrosia spp.) pollen season has been increasing in recent decades as a function of latitude in North America. Latitudinal effects on increasing season length were associated primarily with a delay in first frost of the fall season and lengthening of the frost free period. Overall, these data indicate a significant increase in the length of the ragweed pollen season by as much as 13-27 d at latitudes above approximately 44°N since 1995. This is consistent with recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projections regarding enhanced warming as a function of latitude. If similar warming trends accompany long-term climate change, greater exposure times to seasonal allergens may occur with subsequent effects on public health.
Journal Article
Protocol for a comparative cross-sectional study on characterisation of auditory impairment in sickle cell disease and sickle cell trait and its impact on health-related quality of life in Nigeria
by
Nnodu, Obiageli
,
Ibekwe, Titus S
,
Rogers, Christine
in
adult otolaryngology
,
anaemia
,
audiology
2024
IntroductionSickle cell disease (SCD) and sickle cell traits (SCT) are genetically inherited red blood cell disorders common among people of African descent. Nigeria has a high prevalence of SCD, with a prevalence of 2.28%–3% and SCT, 25%–30%. Poorly managed SCD and SCT can lead to sensorineural hearing loss and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) issues. This research aims to assess these possible complications of SCD and SCT in Nigeria.Methods and analysisThe study will use a comparative cross-sectional design at study power 80% to investigate the association between SCD/SCT, hearing impairment and HRQoL. Participants will be divided into two groups: a cohort and a control group. Hearing levels will be assessed through audiometric assessments and categorised by type and severity of hearing impairments using WHO classifications. HRQoL will also be assessed using WHO Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0. Statistical analyses will be performed using the SAS V.9.4, with parametric or non-parametric analysis depending on the distribution. Relationship between key variables will be determined via correlational tests, χ2, Fisher’s exact test and multivariable logistic regression analyses.Ethics and disseminationThe proposal has been fully reviewed and registered by the University of Cape Town’s Faculty of Health Sciences Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC REF 228/2022) and the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/PR/2020/08/007). Information dissemination will be through conferences, peer-review publication and personal communications. The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology statement will be followed in writing the manuscript.
Journal Article