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Effect of low-sodium salt substitutes on blood pressure, detected hypertension, stroke and mortalityHernandez, Adrian V., Emonds, Erin E., Chen, Brett A., Zavala-Loayza, Alfredo J., Thota, Priyaleela, Pasupuleti, Vinay, Roman, Yuani M., Bernabe-Ortiz, Antonio, Miranda, J. Jaime 01 June 2019 (has links)
Objective A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to assess the efficacy of low-sodium salt substitutes (LSSS) as a potential intervention to reduce cardiovascular (CV) diseases. Methods Five engines and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched from inception to May 2018. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) enrolling adult hypertensive or general populations that compared detected hypertension, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), overall mortality, stroke and other CV risk factors in those receiving LSSS versus regular salt were included. Effects were expressed as risk ratios or mean differences (MD) and their 95% CIs. Quality of evidence assessment followed GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) methodology. Results 21 RCTs (15 in hypertensive (n=2016), 2 in normotensive (n=163) and 4 in mixed populations (n=5224)) were evaluated. LSSS formulations were heterogeneous. Effects were similar across hypertensive, normotensive and mixed populations. LSSS decreased SBP (MD-7.81 mm Hg, 95% CI-9.47 to-6.15, p<0.00001) and DBP (MD-3.96 mm Hg, 95% CI-5.17 to-2.74, p<0.00001) compared with control. Significant increases in urinary potassium (MD 11.46 mmol/day, 95% CI 8.36 to 14.55, p<0.00001) and calcium excretion (MD 2.39 mmol/day, 95% CI 0.52 to 4.26, p=0.01) and decreases in urinary sodium excretion (MD-35.82 mmol/day, 95% CI-57.35 to-14.29, p=0.001) were observed. Differences in detected hypertension, overall mortality, total cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose or BMI were not significant. Quality of evidence was low to very low for most of outcomes. Conclusions LSSS significantly decreased SBP and DBP. There was no effect for detected hypertension, overall mortality and intermediate outcomes. Large, long-term RCTs are necessary to clarify salt substitute effects on clinical outcomes. / Wellcome Trust / Revisión por pares
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Brief, Non-Pharmacological, Interventions for Pediatric Anxiety: Meta-Analysis and Evidence Base StatusJanuary 2019 (has links)
abstract: There is a need to reinvent evidence-based interventions (EBIs) for pediatric anxiety problems to better address the demands of real-word service delivery settings and achieve public health impact. The time- and resource-intensive nature of most EBIs for youth anxiety has frequently been noted as a barrier to the utilization of EBIs in community settings, leading to increased attention towards exploring the viability of briefer, more accessible protocols. Principally, this research reports between-group effect sizes from brief-interventions targeting pediatric anxiety and classifies each as well-established, probably efficacious, possibly efficacious, experimental, or questionable. brief interventions yielded an overall mean effect size of 0.19 on pediatric anxiety outcomes from pre to post. Effect sizes varied significantly by level of intervention: Pre to post-intervention effects were strongest for brief-treatments (0.35), followed by brief-targeted prevention (0.22), and weakest for brief-universal prevention (0.09). No participant or other intervention characteristic emerged as significant moderators of effect sizes. In terms of standard of evidence, one brief intervention is well-established, and five are probably efficacious, with most drawing on cognitive and behavioral change procedures and/or family systems models. At this juncture, the minimal intervention needed for clinical change in pediatric anxiety points to in-vivo exposures for specific phobias (~3 hours), cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) with social skills training (~3 hours), and CBT based parent training (~6 hours, eight digital modules with clinician support). This research concludes with a discussion on limitations to available brief EBIs, practice guidelines, and future research needed to capitalize on the viability of briefer protocols in enhancing access to, and impact of, evidence-based care in the real-world. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2019
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Spatiotemporal Variation in Space Use by Eastern Wild Turkeys in MississippiOgawa, Ryo 08 December 2017 (has links)
Spatiotemporal variation in animal space use is critical for understanding how individual animals respond to changes in resource availability across space and time. My study was aimed to: 1) determine functional responses of habitat selection by eastern wild turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) across 7 study sites in Mississippi; and 2) determine the effect of temporal vegetation variation on order-II habitat selection by wild turkeys over 12 years. I developed resource selection functions using radio telemetry location data. Individual-specific coefficients of order-III habitat selection for forest were related inversely to forest availability in meta-regressions. Yearly coefficients of order-II habitat selection for forest were related inversely to the mean normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) in April, but the coefficients for open fields were related positively to coefficient of variation in the NDVI from March to May. Wild turkeys exhibited functional responses of habitat selection to spatiotemporal forest availability across Mississippi.
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Does Quality Management Practice Influence Performance in the Healthcare Industry?Xie, Heng 08 1900 (has links)
This research examines the relationship between quality management (QM) practices and performance in the healthcare industry via the conduct of three studies. The results of this research contribute both to advancing QM theory as well as in developing a unique text mining method that is illustrated by examining QM in the healthcare industry. Essay 1 explains the relationship between operational performance and QM practices in the healthcare industry. This study analyzed the findings from the literature using meta-analysis. We applied confirmatory semantic analysis (CSA) to examine the Baldrige winners' applications. Essay 2 examines the benefits associated with an effective QM program in the healthcare industry. This study addressed the research question about how effective QM practice results in improved hospital performance. This study compares the performance of Baldrige Award-winning hospitals with matching hospitals, state average, and national average. The results show that the Baldrige Award can lead to an increase in patient satisfaction in certain periods. Essay 3 discusses the contribution of an online clinic appointment system (OCAS) to QM practices. An enhanced trust model was built on understanding the mechanism of patients' trust formation in the OCAS. Understanding the determinants related to patients' trust and willingness to use OCAS can provide valuable guidance for medical institutions to establish health information technology-based services in the quality service improvement programs. This research has three significant contributions. First, this research analyzes the role of QM practices in the healthcare industry. Second, this research attempts to develop a unique text mining method. Third, this research provides a validated trust model and contributes to the body of research on the trust of healthcare information technology.
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Estimating the Population Standard Deviation based on the Sample Range for Non-normal DataLi, Yufeng January 2023 (has links)
Recently, an increasing number of researchers have attempted to overcome the constraints of size and scope in individual medical studies by estimating the overall treatment effects based on a combination of studies. A commonly used method is meta-analysis which combines results from multiple studies. The population standard deviation in primary studies is an essential quantitative value which is absent sometimes, especially when the outcome has a skewed distribution. Instead, the sample size and the sample range of the whole dataset is reported. There are several methods to estimate the standard deviation of the data based on the sample range if we assume the data are normally distributed. For example: Tippett Method2, Ramirez and Cox Method3, Hozo et al Method4, Rychtar and Taylor Method5, Mantel Method6, Sokal and Rohlf Method7 as well as Chen and Tyler Method8. Only a few papers provide a solution for estimating the population standard deviation of non-normally distributed data. In this thesis, some other distributions, which are commonly used in clinical studies, will be simulated to estimate the population standard deviation by using the methods mentioned above. The performance and the robustness of those methods for different sample sizes and different distribution parameters will be presented. Also, these methods will be evaluated on real-world datasets. This article will provide guidelines describing which methods perform best with non-normally distributed data. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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Personalized Prediction of Alzheimer's Disease and Its Treatment Effects by Donepezil: An Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis of Eight Randomized Controlled Trials / 個人特性に基づいたアルツハイマー病の予後予測モデルの構築およびドネペジルによる治療効果の推定―8つのランダム化比較試験の個々の参加者データを用いたメタアナリシス―Yoshida, Kazufumi 23 May 2023 (has links)
京都大学 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(社会健康医学) / 甲第24807号 / 社医博第131号 / 新制||社医||12(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院医学研究科社会健康医学系専攻 / (主査)教授 中山 健夫, 教授 山本 洋介, 教授 髙橋 良輔 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Public Health / Kyoto University / DFAM
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Comparison of Rotational with Orbital Atherectomy During Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for Coronary Artery Calcification: A Systematic Review and Meta-AnalysisSawant, Abhishek C., Panchal, Hemang, Radadiya, Dhruvil, Pomakov, Alexander, Tse, Gary, Liu, Tong, Sridhara, Srilekha, Rodriguez, Janelle, Prakash, Meghana Prakash Hiriyur, Kanwar, Nidhi, Kumar, Arnav, Banerjee, Kinjal, Wiesner, Philipp, Pershad, Ashish 01 April 2020 (has links)
Background: Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) outcomes for patients with significant calcification have been consistently inferior compared to patients without significant calcification. Procedural success and long-term outcomes after PCI have been worse in patients with severe coronary calcium. Objective: A Bayesian meta-analysis of outcomes comparing rotational atherectomy (RA) with orbital atherectomy (OA) was performed. Methods: PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library databases were searched through 30th November 2018 and identified 4 observational studies. Results: The primary end-point, Major Adverse Cardiac Event (MACE) composing of death, MI and stroke at 1 year was more likely with RA (OR = 1.61; 95% CI: 1.11–2.33; p = 0.01) as compared to OA. The driver of the difference in MACE between the two groups was a statistically significant difference in mortality favoring OA (OR = 4.65; 95% CI: 1.36–15.87; p = 0.01). Peri-procedural MI, the other component of the primary end-point was 1.3 times more likely in the RA arm (OR = 1.35; 95% CI 0.95–1.92; p-0.09) and was not statistically different between the groups. The odds of a vascular complication were not different in the two groups (OR = 1.26; 95% CI: 0.73–2.17; p = 0.41). In an adjusted Bayesian analysis, mortality (OR = 3.69; 95% CI: 0.30–38.51), MACE (OR = 1.68; 95% CI: 0.55–5.49), MI (OR = 1.42; 95% CI: 0.50–4.29) and dissections/perforations (OR = 0.38; 95% CI: 0.10–1.38) were not different in RA and OA groups. Conclusion: Our study is the first published Bayesian meta-analysis comparing MACE and peri-procedural outcomes in RA compared to OA. These findings lay the foundation for a randomized comparison between the two competing technologies.
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Circulating Levels of CTRP3 in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Compared to Controls: A Systematic Review and Meta-AnalysisMoradi, Nariman, Najafi, Mohammad, Sharma, Tanmay, Fallah, Soudabeh, Koushki, Mehdi, Peterson, Jonathan M., Meyre, David, Fadaei, Reza 01 November 2020 (has links)
Growing evidence suggests that adipokines may be therapeutic targets for cardiometabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). C1q TNF Related Protein 3 (CTRP3) is a newly discovered adipokine which shares properties with adiponectin. The literature about the association between circulating levels of CTRP3 and T2DM has been conflicting. The present study reassessed the data on circulating CTRP3 levels in T2DM patients compared to controls through a systematic review and meta-analysis. A literature search was performed in Medline, Embase, Scopus, and Web of science to identify studies that measured circulating CTRP3 levels in T2DM patients and controls. The search identified 124 studies of which 59 were screened for title and abstract and 13 were subsequently screened at the full text stage and 12 studies included into the meta-analysis. Subgroup analyses, depending on the presence of T2DM complications, matching for BMI, age, and cut off value of fasting blood sugar and HOMA-IR, were performed. The results show that circulating CTRP3 levels are negatively associated with T2DM status (SMD: −0.837; 95% CI: (−1.656 to −0.017); p = 0.045). No publication bias was identified using the Begg's rank correlation and Egger's linear regression tests (P = 1 and P = 0.44, respectively). Meta-regression demonstrated significant association between CRTP3 levels with BMI (slope: 0.11; 95% CI: 0.04–0.19; p = 0.001) and sex (slope: −0.07; 95% CI: −0.12 to −0.01; p = 0.008). The present systematic review and meta-analysis evidences a negative association between circulating level of CTRP3 and T2DM status. BMI and sex may modify this association.
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The Effects of Parent-Implemented Language Interventions on Child Linguistic Outcomes: A Meta-AnalysisHeidlage, Jodi K., Cunningham, Jennifer E., Kaiser, Ann P., Trivette, Carol M., Barton, Erin E., Frey, Jennifer R., Roberts, Megan Y. 01 January 2020 (has links)
Intervening early is important to minimize persistent difficulties in language and related domains in young children with or at-risk for language impairment (LI; Rescorla, 2009). Because language is first learned in caregiver–child interactions, parent-implemented interventions are potentially an important early intervention for children with or at-risk for LI. Previous meta-analyses have examined outcomes of parent-implemented interventions for children with primary and secondary LI, but have not included children at-risk for LI due to low SES. A systematic review of the literature identified 25 randomized controlled trials of parent-implemented language interventions examining linguistic outcomes for young children. Studies included 1734 participants (M = 3.7 years) with or at-risk for LI due to low SES. Results of these meta-analyses indicated modest improvements in expressive vocabulary and small improvements in expressive language for children with or at-risk for LI. The effect size for expressive vocabulary outcomes was significant for shared book reading interventions (g = 0.37, 95% CI [0.15–0.59]) and interventions implemented in play and/or routines (g = 0.50, 95% CI [0.05–0.95]). The effect size for expressive language was significant (g = 0.42, 95% CI [0.19–0.65]), but not for receptive language (g = 0.07, ns), and the effect size for receptive vocabulary was not significant (g = 0.18, ns). Sub-group analyses for expressive vocabulary and expressive language indicated moderate to large significant effects for children with or at-risk for primary LI and smaller, non-significant effects for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. Findings are generally consistent with a previous meta-analysis (Roberts and Kaiser, 2011), indicating parent-implemented language interventions may have positive effects on linguistic outcomes for young children with or at-risk for LI. Limited measures of parent training procedures and varied measures of parent outcomes limited the analysis of how child outcomes were achieved.
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Epidemiology of Parvovirus B19 and Anemia Among Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Meta-AnalysisThongprayoon, Charat, Khoury, Nadeen J., Bathini, Tarun, Aeddula, Narothama Reddy, Boonpheng, Boonphiphop, Lertjitbanjong, Ploypin, Watthanasuntorn, Kanramon, Leeaphorn, Napat, Chesdachai, Supavit, Torres-Ortiz, Aldo, Kaewput, Wisit, Bruminhent, Jackrapong, Mao, Michael A., Cheungpasitporn, Wisit 01 July 2020 (has links)
Background: Persistent anemia has been described in kidney transplant (KTx) recipients with parvovirus B19 virus infection. However, the epidemiology of parvovirus B19 and parvovirus B19-related anemia after KTx remains unclear. We conducted this systematic review (1) to investigate the incidence of parvovirus B19 infection after KTx and (2) to assess the incidence of parvovirus B19 among KTx patients with anemia. Materials and Methods: A systematic review was conducted in EMBASE, MEDLINE, and Cochrane databases from inception to March 2019 to identify studies that reported the incidence rate of parvovirus B19 infection and/or seroprevalence of parvovirus B19 in KTx recipients. Effect estimates from the individual studies were extracted and combined using random-effects, generic inverse variance method of DerSimonian and Laird. The protocol for this systematic review is registered with PROSPERO (no. CRD42019125716). Results: Nineteen observational studies with a total of 2108 KTx patients were enrolled. Overall, the pooled estimated seroprevalence of parvovirus B19 immunoglobulin G was 62.2% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 45.8%-76.1%). The pooled estimated incidence rate of positive parvovirus B19 DNA in the 1st year after KTx was 10.3% (95% CI: 5.5%-18.4%). After sensitivity analysis excluded a study that solely included KTx patients with anemia, the pooled estimated incidence rate of positive parvovirus B19 DNA after KTx was 7.6% (95% CI: 3.7%-15.0%). Among KTx with anemia, the pooled estimated incidence rate of positive parvovirus B19 DNA was 27.4% (95% CI: 16.6%-41.7%). Meta-regression analysis demonstrated no significant correlations between the year of study and the incidence rate of positive parvovirus B19 DNA (P = 0.33). Egger's regression asymmetry test was performed and demonstrated no publication bias in all analyses. Conclusion: The overall estimated incidence of positive parvovirus B19 DNA after KTX is 10.3%. Among KTx with anemia, the incidence rate of positive parvovirus B19 DNA is 27.4%. The incidence of positive parvovirus B19 DNA does not seem to decrease overtime.
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