Publications by authors named "Jardine R"

Background: This commentary article critically assesses the inclusion and recognition of young adults with lived and living experiences (YALLE) in academic publishing. Stemming from our involvement in a health research study, this analysis interrogates the disparity between the stated importance of YALLE contributions in health research and their actual recognition, specifically in academic publications, which serve as the principal "currency" in research. This tokenism limits the potential for their unique insights to substantially enrich the discourse and dissemination of knowledge.

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Background: This study describes the characteristics of men attending a primary health care screening initiative, determines the proportion of men who have elevated International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) scores and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, and determines any correlation between these scores as indicators for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) or prostate cancer.

Methods: Data were collected from all patient records during men's health screening initiatives that occurred in December 2018, January 2019, and March 2019 in Trinidad and Tobago. A total of 350 medical records were analyzed to record patient demographics, PSA levels, and IPSS scores.

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Background: This manuscript is coauthored by 15 young adult Patient RESearch partners (PARES) with lived and living mental health experiences and three institutional researchers across Canada involved in a patient-oriented research (POR) study called the HEARTS Study: Helping Enable Access and Remove Barriers To Support for Young Adults with Mental Health-Related Disabilities. We share our reflections, experiences and lessons learned as we grapple with the field of POR for its lack of clarity, hierarchical structures, internalized ableism, and accessibility challenges, among others. To mitigate the difficulties of POR, we started by laying the groundwork for equality by embracing the principle of Primus Inter Pares: First Among Equals as the foundation of our approach.

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Background: We conducted a systematic review to assess whether measles humoral immunity wanes in previously infected or vaccinated populations in measles elimination settings.

Methods: After screening 16 822 citations, we identified 9 articles from populations exposed to wild-type measles and 16 articles from vaccinated populations that met our inclusion criteria.

Results: Using linear regression, we found that geometric mean titers (GMTs) decreased significantly in individuals who received 2 doses of measles-containing vaccine (MCV) by 121.

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Background: Uganda has achieved a considerable reduction in childhood stunting over the past 2 decades, although accelerated action will be needed to achieve 2030 targets.

Objectives: This study assessed the national, community, household, and individual-level drivers of stunting decline since 2000, along with direct and indirect nutrition policies and programs that have contributed to nutrition change in Uganda.

Methods: This mixed-methods study used 4 different approaches to determine the drivers of stunting change over time: 1) a scoping literature review; 2) quantitative data analyses, including Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition and difference-in-difference multivariable hierarchical modeling; 3) national- and community-level qualitative data collection and analysis; and 4) analysis of key direct and indirect nutrition policies, programs, and initiatives.

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Background: Surgical intervention presents a fundamental therapeutic choice in the management of colorectal malignancies. Complications, the most serious one being anastomotic leak (AL), still have detrimental effects upon patients' morbidity and mortality. We aimed to assess whether NSAIDs, and their sub-categories, increase AL in colonic anastomoses and to identify whether this affects specific anastomotic sites.

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Background: Muslim majority countries have experienced a considerable burden of COVID-19 infection. However, there has been a relative lack of research comparing COVID-19 outbreaks and responses between Muslim-majority countries.

Aims: This study aimed to analyse COVID-19 burden, epidemiology and mitigation strategies in Muslim-majority countries.

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Purpose: Bone responds to mechanical loading by increasing bone mineral density (BMD) and/or bone area to enhance bone strength at the site of the greatest strain. Such localised adaptation has not been demonstrated at the spine. The aim of this study is to determine if BMD and/or bone mineral content (BMC) differs between dominant (ipsilateral to bowling/throwing arm) and non-dominant sides of the vertebrae in cricket fast bowlers, and whether this asymmetry differs according to stress fracture or disc injury history.

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Background: The burden of cardiovascular disease is expected to escalate in developing countries. However, studies and guidelines concerning atrial fibrillation (AF) are restricted to the developed world.

Objectives: To assess the treatment modalities of AF in South Africa.

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Objectives: : The significance of extrahepatic bile duct dilatation on ultrasound examination in jaundiced infants is often uncertain. We wished to clarify the diagnostic and prognostic significance of the present finding in neonatal conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia.

Patients And Methods: : We retrospectively enrolled all of the infants younger than 3 months with extrahepatic biliary dilatation > or =1.

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Superlattice formation in mixtures of hard-sphere colloids.

Phys Rev E Stat Phys Plasmas Fluids Relat Interdiscip Topics

July 2000

We report a detailed experimental study of the superlattice structures formed in dense binary mixtures of hard-sphere colloids. The phase diagrams observed depend sensitively on the ratio alpha=R(S)/R(L) of the radii of the small (S) and large (L) components. Mixtures of size ratio alpha=0.

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Genetic models were fitted to self-report data on frequency of alcohol consumption and average quantity consumed when drinking, from 3,810 adult Australian twin pairs. Frequency of consumption is determined both by an abstinence dimension, which is strongly influenced by shared environmental effects but not by genetic effects, and by an independent frequency dimension, which is influenced by genetic effects in both sexes and possibly by shared environmental affects in men. Quantity of alcohol consumed is likewise determined by an environmental abstinence dimension and by an independent and partly heritable quantity dimension.

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Routine exercise electrocardiography has been criticized for yielding too many so-called "false-positive" results. Recent studies in our institution indicate that evaluation of the time course behavior of ST segment and T wave (ST/T) changes after cessation of exercise differentiates ischemic from non-ischemic ("false-positive") stress electrocardiograms (SEs). Our method of assessing time course behavior is clarified.

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Oral sotalol was given to 64 patients (78% postinfarction) with recurrent, reentrant ventricular tachycardia (VT) during an average follow-up period of 19.7 months. Fifty-nine (92%) patients had previously experienced recurrent ventricular tachycardia, in spite of having received an average of three conventional antiarrhythmic drugs (13 had previously failed on other Class III drugs).

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Information about drinking practices has been obtained by questionnaire from 1,984 monozygotic and dizygotic adult female twin pairs from the Australian twin register, including 1,690 pairs where both twins have used alcohol. Statistical analyses of these data show that marital status is an important modifier of genetic effects on drinking habits. In young twins, aged 30 years or less, genetic differences between individuals account for only 31% of the variance in alcohol consumption of married respondents, but for 60% of the variance of unmarried respondents.

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Thirty-one patients with a variety of supraventricular tachyarrhythmias resistant to conventional anti-arrhythmic therapy were treated with flecainide acetate, a new class Ic antiarrhythmic drug. The mean follow-up period was 7 months. Control was attained in 19 patients (62%) initially, and the long-term success rate was 39%.

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Data from 2,903 adult same-sex twin pairs were analysed to investigate whether the genetic determinants of symptoms of panic are different from those underlying the neuroticism personality trait. Our results suggest that much of the genetic variation influencing the physical symptoms associated with panic is of the nonadditive type, perhaps due to dominance or epistasis. In both sexes these nonadditive genetic effects on physical symptoms influence the reporting of "feelings of panic".

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Late potentials are depolarizations which arise from areas of delayed ventricular activation and may indicate a propensity for ventricular tachycardia. Sixty-four subjects were assessed by non-invasive measurement. Late potentials were not present in 20 subjects with normal hearts nor in 6 patients with cardiac disease but with no evidence of ventricular tachycardia (VT).

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Data gathered in Australia and England on the social attitudes of spouses and twins are largely consistent with a genetic model for family resemblance in social attitudes. There is substantial assortative mating and little evidence of vertical cultural inheritance.

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Hypokalaemia commonly occurs in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and may be caused by elevated serum levels of adrenaline, allegedly by beta 2-adrenergic mediated influx of potassium (K) into cells. We investigated the effect on serum K of intravenous acebutolol (a relatively beta 1-selective agent) in 50 patients with AMI. Serum K was measured before and 1 hour after drug administration.

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