Publications by authors named "M A Woodhouse"

Background: Current nursing and midwifery rosters are based on guidelines which may no longer adequately meet the needs of health services or staff and often result in decreased job satisfaction, poor health and wellbeing, and high turnover. Little is known about the rostering needs and preferences of contemporary nurses and midwives in Australia. The aim of this study was to identify the rostering concerns, needs and preferences of nurses and midwives, and co-design acceptable, equitable and feasible rostering principles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Efforts to capture and analyze maize nucleotide diversity have ranged widely in scope, but differences in reference genome version and software algorithms used in these efforts inhibit comparison, and these data are generally not available in an easy-to-use visualization platform for quick access and analysis. To address these issues, The Maize Genetics and Genomics Database has collaborated with maize researchers to offer variant data from a diverse set of 1,498 inbred lines, traditional varieties, and teosintes through a standardized variant-calling pipeline against version 5 of the B73 reference genome. The output was filtered for mapping quality, completeness, and linkage disequilibrium, and annotated based on variant effects relative to the B73 RefGen_v5 gene annotations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To codesign a theoretically underpinned, healthcare practitioner-mediated, tailored intervention to support housebound older patients and their lay carers to adopt pressure ulcer prevention behaviours.

Design: Theoretical domains framework informed codesign.

Setting: One geographical area in the UK, spanning several community National Health Service Trusts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction Appendiceal neoplasms are more prevalent in patients ≥ 40 years old who present with complicated appendicitis, especially if managed conservatively. Routine interval appendicectomy is not recommended. Follow-up bowel screening using both a CT scan and colonoscopy is recommended.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Topoisomerase II (topo II) enzymes are essential enzymes known to resolve topological entanglements during DNA processing. Curiously, while yeast expresses a single topo II, humans express two topo II isozymes, topo IIα and topo IIβ, which share a similar catalytic domain but differ in their intrinsically disordered C-terminal domains (CTDs). During mitosis, topo IIα and condensin I constitute the most abundant chromosome scaffolding proteins essential for chromosome condensation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF