Publications by authors named "R L McGhie"

Introduction: The topic of childhood vaccinations has become increasingly contentious, sparking debate, and creating challenging decisions for parents. This study aimed to explore the factors influencing COVID-19 vaccination decisions for parents of unvaccinated children and identify the most common reasons for not vaccinating children against COVID-19 in the U.S.

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Context: COVID-19 created unprecedented demand for palliative care at a time when in-person communication was highly restricted, straining efforts to care for patients and families.

Objectives: To qualitatively explore the challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic from the perspective of palliative care clinicians. Specifically we sought to: 1) Describe the strategies adopted by palliative care clinicians to cope with new challenges including patient and clinician isolation, prognostication of an emergent disease, and rapidly rising numbers of severely ill patients; 2) Identify additions or adjustments to in-person and system-related palliative care training, methods, and tools made during pandemics.

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A study was carried out in general practice to compare the effectiveness and tolerance of phentermine and diethylpropion in helping patients more than 20% above their desirable weight to lose weight. Patients were allocated at random to receive either one 30 mg capsule of phentermine (50 patients) or one 75 mg tablet of diethylpropion (49 patients) daily over a period of 12 weeks. They were also asked to restrict their calorie intake to 1500 calories per day.

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The relationship of doctors' assessments to their patients' self-assessments was examined in a double-blind comparison of Motipress and Anafranil in patients suffering from mixed anxiety/depressive states. Significant differences between doctors' ratings were revealed which were largely parallelled by their patients' self-ratings done independently, suggesting differences between subgroups of patients within the whole population. Appropriate statistical analyses eliminated these factors in the data and showed that they did not affect the conclusions of a conventional statistical analysis of the two treatment groups as a whole; there were no significant differences between the major improvements associated with each treatment.

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