Protein-polymer conjugates are increasingly viewed as promising avenues to producing industrial enzymes with high activity capable of withstanding potentially harsh reaction conditions, or to designing novel therapeutics with triggered release, controlled masking, or increased resistance to proteolytic degradation. Common among these applications are the desire to improve the stability of protein-polymer conjugates to unfolding by exposure to chemicals or thermal stress. Thus, assays that allow researchers to robustly and easily characterize protein-polymer conjugates by obtaining thermodynamic parameters for folding stand to play an important role in the development of improved protein-polymer conjugates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of methods are outlined for attaching functional polymers to proteins. Polymers with good control over structure, functionality, and composition can be created using reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. These polymers can be covalently linked to enzymes and proteins using either the "grafting-to" approach, where a preformed polymer is attached to the protein surface, or the "grafting-from" approach, where the polymer is grown from the protein surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF*The Flinders Medical Centre (FMC) Redesigning Care program began in November 2003; it is a hospital-wide process improvement program applying an approach called "lean thinking" (developed in the manufacturing sector) to health care. *To date, the FMC has involved hundreds of staff from all areas of the hospital in a wide variety of process redesign activities. *The initial focus of the program was on improving the flow of patients through the emergency department, but the program quickly spread to involve the redesign of managing medical and surgical patients throughout the hospital, and to improving major support services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF*Clinical process redesign is a successful improvement method that has been used to increase access to health services in 60 public hospitals across New South Wales, and at Flinders Medical Centre (FMC) in South Australia. *The method focuses on the patient journey as the primary improvement locus, and uses process mapping to identify the value-adding steps in that journey; it involves redesign teams identifying and eliminating non-value-adding steps to improve flow and reduce delays in access to emergency and elective care. *The method engages clinicians, managers, patients and carers, and delivers real gains in health care delivery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To assess the reliability (internal and interrater) and validity (concurrent) of a new interview measure for assessing patients' ability to cope with cancer, the Centre for Clinical Excellence in Urological Research Coping with Cancer Instrument (CCCI), and to determine whether there is an underlying structure to the various coping strategies used by patients with prostate cancer.
Methods: Eighty patients with prostate cancer were interviewed using the CCCI. The participants also completed measures of quality of life and anxiety and depression.