Health Soc Care Deliv Res
September 2024
Background: Within outpatient services, a broad range of innovations are being pursued to better manage care and reduce unnecessary appointments. One of the least-studied innovations is Patient-Initiated Follow-Up, which allows patients to book appointments if and when they need them, rather than follow a standard schedule.
Objectives: To use routine national hospital data to identify innovations in outpatient services implemented, in recent years, within the National Health Service in England.
Objectives: To outline a methodology that enables the reconstruction of age-related disease risk in past societies.
Materials: Modern epidemiological evidence considering risk factors for age-related disease is combined with contextual information about an archaeological society of interest.
Methods: Data gathered is used to create a qualitative population-specific risk model for the disease of interest.
In addition to the role of skeletal muscle in movement and locomotion, muscle plays a critical role in a broad array of metabolic processes that can contribute to improved health or risk of disease. The age-associated loss of muscle has been termed sarcopenia. The muscle is the primary site of insulin-stimulated glucose disposal and the largest component of basal metabolic rate, directly and indirectly affects bone density, produces myokines with pleiotropic effect on muscle and other tissues including the brain, and stores essential amino acids essential for the maintenance of protein synthesis during periods of reduced food intake and stress.
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January 2024
A personal description and goodwill message is often the only form of communication a gamete recipient receives from the donor. However, the nature of the information gamete donors leave for recipients is not well understood. This Viewpoint article discusses a recent study published in this journal that makes a significant contribution to our understanding of this area of research and raises important questions for research going forward.
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