Publications by authors named "H J Zwart"

Background: In recent years, human microbiome research has flourished and has drawn attention from both healthcare professionals and general consumers as the human microbiome is now recognized as having a significant influence on human health. This has led to the emergence of companies offering microbiome testing services. Some of these services are sold directly to the consumer via companies' websites or via medical laboratory websites.

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Article Synopsis
  • Human microbiomes play a crucial role in health by impacting metabolism, immune functions, and neurological processes, but their complete complexity is still not fully understood.
  • The definition of a "healthy" microbiome is controversial due to variations in microbial communities and the difficulty in establishing a standard definition for health across different individuals and conditions.
  • The article highlights progress in microbiome research and identifies gaps in knowledge, proposing a roadmap that utilizes epidemiological methods to better understand the relationship between microbiomes and health.
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Although microbiome signatures have been identified in various contexts (ie, pathogenesis of non-communicable diseases and treatment response), qualified microbiome-based biomarkers are currently not in use in clinical practice. The Human Microbiome Action consortium initiated a Delphi survey to establish a consensus on the needs, challenges, and limitations in developing qualified microbiome-based biomarkers. The questionnaire was developed by a scientific committee via literature review and expert interviews.

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Group authorship (also known as corporate authorship, team authorship, consortium authorship) refers to attribution practices that use the name of a collective (be it team, group, project, corporation, or consortium) in the authorship byline. Data shows that group authorships are on the rise but thus far, in scholarly discussions about authorship, they have not gained much specific attention. Group authorship can minimize tensions within the group about authorship order and the criteria used for inclusion/exclusion of individual authors.

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