Publications by authors named "F H Adler"

Article Synopsis
  • This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a mobile app designed to assist dairy cattle farmers in managing and preventing bovine fasciolosis, comparing it with a printed brochure.* -
  • Conducted on 37 organic dairy farms in Bavaria, the study involved interviews before and after using either the app or brochure, revealing that participants found both tools helpful in improving their management strategies.* -
  • Participants expressed a strong interest in continuing to use these tools for animal health management, suggesting that mobile apps can enhance veterinary practices in managing cattle health issues.*
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Article Synopsis
  • Infections in dairy cows significantly affect animal health and the livestock industry, with anthelmintic resistance highlighting the need for sustainable control strategies that consider farmer characteristics like attitude and personality.
  • The study employed the HEXACO model of personality to analyze how farmers' traits relate to on-farm seropositivity for endoparasites, using data collected through interviews about farm management and structure.
  • Results indicated that factors like pasture access, farmer conscientiousness, and attitudes towards animal health are critical for understanding parasite prevalence, underscoring the role of farmer traits in implementing effective livestock management practices.
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The current dogma in cancer biology contends that cancer is an identity problem: mutations in a cell's DNA cause it to "go rogue" and proliferate out of control. However, this largely ignores the role of cell-cell interaction and fails to explain phenomena such as cancer reversion, the existence of cancers without mutations, and foreign-body carcinogenesis. In this proof-of-concept paper, we draw on criminology to propose that cancer may alternatively be conceptualized as a relational problem: Although a cell's genetics is essential, the influence of its interaction with other cells is equally important in determining its phenotype.

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Cancer incidence increases rapidly with age, typically as a polynomial. The somatic mutation theory explains this increase through the waiting time for enough mutations to build up to generate cells with the full set of traits needed to grow without control. However, lines of evidence ranging from tumour reversion and dormancy to the prevalence of presumed cancer mutations in non-cancerous tissues argue that this is not the whole story, and that cancer is also an ecological process, and that mutations only lead to cancer when the systems of control within and across cells have broken down.

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