Publications by authors named "Easton C"

Background: Service providers are experiencing mental health decline as they work to meet the needs of persons experiencing homelessness in a system that constrains their ability to help. Although moral distress is widely recognized in health care, the experience of moral distress in service providers working with people experiencing homelessness has not been explored in a scoping review.

Aim: To identify the range and nature of literature on moral distress among service providers working with persons experiencing homelessness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The oral microbiome-dependent nitrate (NO )-nitrite (NO )-nitric oxide (NO) pathway may help regulate blood pressure. NO -producing bacteria in subgingival plaque are reduced in relative abundance in patients with untreated periodontitis compared with periodontally healthy patients. In periodontitis patients, the NO -producing bacteria increase several months after periodontal treatment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Designing effective antifog coatings poses challenges in resisting physical and chemical damage, with persistent susceptibility to decomposition in aggressive environments. As their robustness is dictated by physicochemical structural features, precise control through unique fabrication strategies is crucial. To address this challenge, a novel method for crafting nanoscale antifog films with simultaneous directional growth and cross-linking is presented, utilizing solid-state continuous assembly of polymers via ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ssCAP).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study examined the relationships between the decision-making performances of soccer referees and markers of physiological load. Following baseline measurements and habituation procedures, 13 national-level male referees completed a novel Soccer Referee Simulation whilst simultaneously adjudicating on a series of video-based decision-making clips. The correctness of each decision was assessed in relation to the mean heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), minute ventilation (VE), perceptions of breathlessness (RPE-B) and local muscular (RPE-M) exertion and running speeds recorded in the 10-s and 60-s preceding decisions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nanosheet-based membranes have shown enormous potential for energy-efficient molecular transport and separation applications, but designing these membranes for specific separations remains a great challenge due to the lack of good understanding of fluid transport mechanisms in complex nanochannels. We synthesized reduced MXene/graphene hetero-channel membranes with sub-1-nm pores for experimental measurements and theoretical modeling of their structures and fluid transport rates. Our experiments showed that upon complete rejection of salt and organic dyes, these membranes with subnanometer channels exhibit remarkably high solvent fluxes, and their solvent transport behavior is very different from their homo-structured counterparts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Service restrictions refer to temporary or permanent bans of individuals from a program or an organization's services, and are widely used in emergency shelter systems. Limited research exists on how service restrictions unfold and their impacts on people experiencing homelessness. This qualitative study used in-depth interviews with timeline mapping to examine the antecedents and consequences of service restrictions from emergency shelters among people experiencing homelessness in two cities in Ontario, Canada.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * This study examined how social-cognitive factors like English proficiency and ethnicity influenced the effectiveness of MHL interventions among Grade 9 students in West Canada.
  • * Results showed that the intervention improved knowledge and help-seeking attitudes, with non-Chinese and native English speakers performing best, while also highlighting the impact of gender and demographic factors on mental health outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Meaningful activity participation has been identified as a key outcome of services designed to support individuals during and following homelessness. Little is known about the effectiveness of interventions for promoting this outcome. To identify the range and effectiveness of interventions on promoting meaningful activity participation among persons with experiences of homelessness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: COVID-19 restrictions created barriers to "business as usual" in healthcare but also opened the door to innovation driven by necessity. This manuscript (1) describes how ADVANCE, an in-person group perpetrator program to reduce intimate partner violence (IPV) against female (ex)partners by men in substance use treatment, was adapted for digitally-supported delivery (ADVANCE-D), and (2) explores the feasibility and acceptability of delivering ADVANCE-D to men receiving substance use treatment.

Methods: Firstly, the person-based approach and mHealth development framework were used to iteratively adapt ADVANCE for digitally-supported delivery including conceptualization, formative research, and pre-testing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study assesses how periodontitis affects the oral microbiota's ability to reduce nitrate to nitrite, which is crucial for oral health and nitric oxide production.
  • Analysis showed lower levels of nitrate-reducing bacteria in patients with periodontitis compared to healthy individuals, suggesting a link between these bacteria and periodontal health.
  • After periodontal treatment, patients exhibited improved nitrate-reducing capacity and an increase in beneficial bacteria, highlighting the potential impact of oral health on systemic conditions influenced by nitric oxide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microfluidic technology is applied across various research areas including organ-on-chip (OOC) systems. The main material used for microfluidics is polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), a silicone elastomer material that is biocompatible, transparent, and easy to use for OOC systems with well-defined microstructures. However, PDMS-based OOC systems can absorb hydrophobic and small molecules, making it difficult and erroneous to make quantitative analytical assessments for such compounds.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Driveline infections are a major complication of ventricular assist device (VAD) therapy. A newly introduced Carbothane driveline has preliminarily demonstrated anti-infective potential against driveline infections. This study aimed to comprehensively assess the anti-biofilm capability of the Carbothane driveline and explore its physicochemical characteristics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how the COVID-19 pandemic affected tuberculosis control efforts, specifically looking at the cascade of care for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) in a Midwest U.S. city.
  • It found a significant decline in monthly LTBI referrals and evaluations during the pandemic's first wave, with a shift towards more diagnoses made using interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) testing.
  • Despite these changes, treatment recommendation, acceptance, and completion rates for LTBI remained relatively stable before and during the pandemic, with certain demographic factors influencing treatment acceptance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Strategies for preventing and ending homelessness are frequently measured by their effectiveness on indices of tenancy sustainment. To shift this narrative, we conducted research to identify what is needed to "thrive" following homelessness from the perspectives of persons with lived experience in Ontario, Canada.

Methods: Conducted in the context of a community-based participatory research study aimed at informing the development of intervention strategies, we interviewed 46 persons living with mental illness and/or substance use disorder [ = 25 (54.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: This study sought to compare between metabolomic changes of human urine and plasma to investigate which one can be used as best tool to identify metabolomic profiling and novel biomarkers associated to the potential effects of ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

Method: A pilot study of metabolomic patterns of human plasma and urine samples from four adult healthy individuals at before (S1) and after (S2) exposure (UV) and non-exposure (UC) were carried out by using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS).

Results: The best results which were obtained by normalizing the metabolites to their mean output underwent to principal components analysis (PCA) and Orthogonal Partial least squares-discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA) to separate pre-from post-of exposure and non-exposure of UV.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Development of cost-effective and rapid diagnostic tools for COVID-19 remains essential, especially for monitoring asymptomatic cases.
  • A new nanochannel-based electrochemical biosensor detects the complete SARS-CoV-2 virus rather than just fragments, using polystyrene beads on gold electrodes.
  • This biosensor offers high sensitivity, with the ability to detect as low as 1 viral particle per mL, and can effectively differentiate between saliva samples containing the virus and those that do not.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Current speech-language pathology (SLP) services in Cambodia are limited in scope, service accessibility and integration into government systems. However, momentum is growing to develop an internationally recognised profession. This paper examines the depth and breadth of SLP support available to people with communication and/or swallowing difficulties in relation the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microneedle-based wearable sensors offer an alternative approach to traditional invasive blood-based health monitoring and disease diagnostics techniques. Instead of blood, microneedle-based sensors target the skin interstitial fluid (ISF), in which the biomarker type and concentration profile resemble the one found in the blood. However, unlike blood, interstitial fluid does not have the same pH-buffering capacity causing deviation of pH levels from the physiological range.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spontaneous electrical activity plays major roles in the development of cortical circuitry. This activity can occur highly localized regions or can propagate over the entire cortex. Both types of activity coexist during early development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Research aimed at identifying and evaluating approaches to homelessness has predominately focused on strategies for supporting tenancy sustainment. Fewer studies focus on strategies for enabling thriving following homelessness, and the perspectives of service providers and organisational leaders (SPOL) on this topic are rare. We conducted this study in the context of a community-based participatory research project in two cities in Ontario, Canada.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: A lack of diversity in the speech-language pathology profession is widely recognised internationally. The role of speech-language pathology education in reproduction of this homogeneity and as a barrier to diversification is little understood. The potential of blended online education to increase access to education and diversify the speech-language pathology profession is yet to be explored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The spatiotemporal representation of neural activity is influenced primarily by cortical state, fluctuating between persistent activity (PA) and slow wave activity (SWA) based on varying conditions and sedatives.
  • Neurophysiological experiments reveal that the variability of neuronal responses often contradicts the assumption of a constant underlying state, impacting how sensory stimuli are processed in the cortex.
  • Our findings indicate that sensory responses in the PA state are quick and consistent, while responses during SWA are more erratic and depend on prior activity, highlighting the importance of understanding these states for interpreting experimental results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Compared to men in the general population, men in substance use treatment are more likely to perpetrate intimate partner abuse (IPA). The ADVANCE group intervention for men in substance use treatment is tailored to address substance use and IPA in an integrated way. In a feasibility trial pre-COVID, men who received the ADVANCE intervention via face-to-face group delivery showed reductions in IPA perpetration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF