Background: Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing is not recommended as a population screening measure for prostate cancer. PSA testing is nevertheless widespread and is associated with harm due to false-positive test results, overdiagnosis and economic costs.
Aims: This study sought to document the exposure of patients to PSA testing over a decade in a general medical practice setting.
Background: Actinic keratoses (AKs) are present on sun-exposed sites and are considered precursors of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma. A better understanding of the experiences of patients with this condition may improve patient-provider relationships and guide the introduction of shared decision-making (SDM) to treatment decisions.
Objectives: To develop a patient decision aid (PDA) for field treatment of multiple AKs in line with the International Patient Decision Aid Standards (IPDAS) by (i) characterizing the burden and lived experiences of patients with multiple AKs, (ii) understanding the decisional needs of patients requiring field treatment, and (iii) exploring clinician preferences regarding field treatment for multiple AKs.
Australas Psychiatry
February 2024
Objective: This study aimed to determine the extent to which people admitted to a private psychiatric inpatient unit access and utilise the gymnasium and individualised coaching with an exercise physiologist (EP).
Methods: An audit of the medical record of 100 consecutive discharges and 60 individuals referred to an EP during the audit period was undertaken. Selected demographic information, physical health status, psychiatric diagnosis and routinely collected outcome data were extracted from files.
Background: For Indigenous Peoples the disparities in health status are largely associated with the direct social determinants of invasion and colonisation, marginalisation, intergenerational traumas, and lack of conscious government policy to address these ongoing effects. There is currently limited evidence in the literature on what Cultural Safety practices mean in acute care settings.
Objective: We aimed to understand the extent and type of evidence in relation to current knowledge and evidence regarding Cultural Safety practices for Indigenous Peoples in acute care settings.
Research on the effects of animal diet on consumer liking of beef has yielded conflicting results. Currently it is unknown whether dynamic changes occur in liking during consumption of beef. This study applied a combination of traditional and temporal (free and structured) liking methods to determine consumer liking of beef derived from animals that were fed grain (GF), grass silage plus grain (SG) or grazed grass (GG) during finishing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF