Publications by authors named "S Kwame Dance"

Medical students without a home orthopaedic surgery program face unique challenges due to the absence of institutional connections and mentorship opportunities. This review explores the hurdles faced by these students, including financial constraints, emotional strains, mentorship gaps, and networking hurdles. Drawing from empirical evidence and scholarly research, tailored advocacy strategies to empower these medical students pursuing orthopaedic surgery residency are proposed, including mentorship programs, financial assistance, psychosocial support, and community-building initiatives.

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Background: Unhealthy commodity industries (UCIs) engage in political practices to influence public health policy, which poses barriers to protecting and promoting public health. Such influence exhibits characteristics of a complex system. Systems thinking would therefore appear to be a useful lens through which to study this phenomenon, potentially deepening our understanding of how UCI influence are interconnected with one another through their underlying political, economic and social structures.

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Background: Interventions are needed to prevent and mitigate unhealthy commodity industry (UCI) influence on public health policy. Whilst literature on interventions is emerging, current conceptualisations remain incomplete as they lack considerations of the wider systemic complexities surrounding UCI influence, which may limit intervention effectiveness. This study applies systems thinking as a theoretical lens to help identify and explore how possible interventions relate to one another in the systems in which they are embedded.

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Article Synopsis
  • High densities of CD3 and CD8 T-cells in colorectal cancer are linked to better patient prognosis, but their effectiveness in predicting chemotherapy benefits remains unclear.
  • A study analyzed tumor tissue from 868 colorectal cancer patients and found that those with high-risk CD3/CD8 cell densities had recurrence rates twice as high as low-risk patients, consistently observed in both training and validation sets.
  • The findings suggest that while high-risk patients experience more recurrences, chemotherapy provides similar proportional benefits across both high- and low-risk groups, leading to updated treatment recommendations based on the CD3/CD8 cell density scores.
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