10 results match your criteria: "Author Affiliation: Metropolitan University College[Affiliation]"

Why people engage in a weight loss intervention at their workplace - a stratified case study.

BMC Public Health

January 2019

Department of Occupational Therapy, Institute of Physiotherapy and Occupational therapy, Metropolitan University College, Sigurdsgade 26, 2200, Copenhagen N, Denmark.

Background: The prevalence of obesity has increased significantly worldwide within the last decade. As obesity is recognised as a contributing factor when developing various health threatening chronic diseases, prevention initiatives focusing on weight loss are becoming more important. Because of the time spent at the workplace, workplaces can be optimal arenas for weight loss programs and these programs have been effective to decrease body weight.

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Background: Subacromial impingement syndrome (SIS) is a painful, and often long lasting, shoulder condition affecting patient function and quality of life. In a recent study, we observed major strength impairments in shoulder external rotation and abduction (~30%) in a population of patients with pronounced and long-lasting SIS. However, the current rehabilitation of such strength impairments may be inadequate, with novel rehabilitation programmes including exercise therapy only improving external rotation strength by 4-13%.

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Background: For more than 30 years policy action across sectors has been celebrated as a necessary and viable way to affect the social factors impacting on health. In particular intersectoral action on the social determinants of health is considered necessary to address social inequalities in health. However, despite growing support for intersectoral policymaking, implementation remains a challenge.

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Advancing 'real-world' trials that take account of social context and human volition.

Trials

November 2017

Bachelor's Degree in Global Nutrition and Health, Faculty of Health and Technology, Metropolitan University College, Sigurdsgade 26, Copenhagen N, 2200, Denmark.

Background: The recent paper in Trials by Porter and colleagues highlights the utility of applying a critical realism approach in randomised trials, an approach central to the Medical Research Council's (MRC) Framework for the Development and Evaluation of Complex Healthcare Interventions. The MRC framework offers a pragmatic step towards a more open systems approach that bridges randomised evaluation with social context and human agency in an effort to improve the generalisability of trial outcomes.

Main Body: The MRC framework has contributed to the proliferation of a more open systems approach in health research; however, the broader acceptance of the realist approach to health research does not seem to be emulated by norms in research fund allocation, which largely prioritises laboratory-based research.

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Using eHealth to Increase Autonomy Supportive Care: A Multicenter Intervention Study in Antenatal Care.

Comput Inform Nurs

February 2018

Author Affiliations: Department of Nutrition and Midwifery (Ms Johnsen), Metropolitan University College, Copenhagen; Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics (Ms Blom), Herlev Hospital; and Department of Public Health (Ms Lee and Ms Nørgaard), University of Southern Denmark, Odense.

eHealth solutions are increasingly implemented in antenatal care to enhance women's involvement. The main aim of this study was to evaluate women's assessment of autonomy supportive care during the antenatal care visits among low-risk pregnant women. An intervention study was conducted including a control group attending standard antenatal care and an intervention group having access to an eHealth knowledge base, in addition to standard care.

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Background: Healthcare professionals' person-centered communication skills are pivotal for successful group-based diabetes education. However, healthcare professionals are often insufficiently equipped to facilitate person-centeredness and many have never received post-graduate training. Currently, assessing professionals' skills in conducting group-based, person-centered diabetes education primarily focus on experts measuring and coding skills on various scales.

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The Patient-Healthcare Professional Relationship and Communication in the Oncology Outpatient Setting: A Systematic Review.

Cancer Nurs

August 2019

Author Affiliations: Institute of Nursing, Metropolitan University College, Copenhagen (Mss Prip and Møller); Departments of Oncology (Dr Nielsen and Ms Olsen) and Gastroenterology (Dr Danielsen), Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen; and University Hospitals Center for Health Research, Copenhagen University Hospital and University of Copenhagen (Dr Jarden), Denmark.

Background: Today, cancer care and treatment primarily take place in an outpatient setting where encounters between patients and healthcare professionals are often brief.

Objective: The aim of this study was to summarize the literature of adult patients' experiences of and need for relationships and communication with healthcare professionals during chemotherapy in the oncology outpatient setting.

Methods: The systematic literature review was carried out according to PRISMA guidelines and the PICO framework, and a systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, CINAHL, The Cochrane Library, and Joanna Briggs Institute Evidence Based Practice Database.

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Background: Pain and loss of function are cardinal symptoms associated with Subacromial impingement syndrome (SIS), while the presence and magnitude of deficits in strength and range of motion (ROM) are largely undescribed in non-athletic patients with SIS. Moreover, the relevance of impairments in strength and ROM to patient-reported shoulder function is not well described, even though testing of strength is recommended in clinical guidelines. The purpose of this study was, first, to investigate impairments in glenohumeral and scapulothoracic strength and in abduction and internal rotation ROM in patients with SIS.

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Although the use of technology is growing, little is known about how patients perceive technology in the form of tools used by health professionals. The prevailing view in the literature is that technology is cold, compared with the warm hands of nurses, but research regarding nurses' use of technology such as tablets is scarce. Even scarcer is research on how patients perceive the use of technological tools.

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Uptake and presentation of myelin basic protein by normal human B cells.

PLoS One

February 2016

Institute for Inflammation Research, Department of Infectious Diseases and Rheumatology, section 7521, Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.

B cells may play both pathogenic and protective roles in T-cell mediated autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS). These functions relate to the ability of B cells to bind and present antigens. Under serum-free conditions we observed that 3-4% of circulating B cells from healthy donors were capable of binding the MS-associated self-antigen myelin basic protein (MBP) and of presenting the immunodominant peptide MBP85-99, as determined by staining with the mAb MK16 recognising the peptide presented by HLA-DR15-positive cells.

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