14 results match your criteria: "Flinders University. GPO BOX 2100[Affiliation]"

Objective: The integration of end of life care into emergency work is gaining momentum, especially in Australia. Emergency doctors and nurses are increasingly required to make decisions regarding the provision of end of life care. The importance of end of life care for patients and their families in the emergency department is well documented, but ethical dilemmas that arise in end of life care provision are not widely researched.

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Increased sampling of genomes and populations across closely related species has revealed that levels of genetic exchange during and after speciation are higher than previously thought. One obvious manifestation of such exchange is strong cytonuclear discordance, where the divergence in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) differs from that for nuclear genes more (or less) than expected from differences between mtDNA and nuclear DNA (nDNA) in population size and mutation rate. Given genome-scale data sets and coalescent modeling, we can now confidently identify cases of strong discordance and test specifically for historical or recent introgression as the cause.

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Vortex fluidic induced mass transfer across immiscible phases.

Chem Sci

March 2022

Flinders Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University Bedford Park SA 5042 Australia

Mixing immiscible liquids typically requires the use of auxiliary substances including phase transfer catalysts, microgels, surfactants, complex polymers and nano-particles and/or micromixers. Centrifugally separated immiscible liquids of different densities in a 45° tilted rotating tube offer scope for avoiding their use. Micron to submicron size topological flow regimes in the thin films induce high inter-phase mass transfer depending on the nature of the two liquids.

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Adenosine and lidocaine (AL) combination dilates intimally damaged rat thoracic aortic rings and guinea pig mesenteric arteries: possible significance to cardiac surgery.

Am J Transl Res

June 2018

Heart, Trauma and Sepsis Research Laboratory, Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine, College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1 James Cook Drive, James Cook University Queensland 4811, Australia.

New pharmacotherapies are required to improve vessel graft protection and prevent vasoconstriction and spasm in CABG surgery. Previously we have studied adenosine (A) and lidocaine (L) relaxation in rat aortic rings, and reported a possible crosstalk between L relaxation and adenosine A receptor inhibition. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of AL combination compared to A and L alone on relaxation in intact and denuded rat aortic rings and in guinea-pig pressurized mesenteric arterial segments.

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Recognition of individuals within an animal population is central to a range of estimates about population structure and dynamics. However, traditional methods of distinguishing individuals, by some form of physical marking, often rely on capture and handling which may affect aspects of normal behavior. Photographic identification has been used as a less-invasive alternative, but limitations in both manual and computer-automated recognition of individuals are particularly problematic for smaller taxa (<500 g).

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Do workplace policies work? An examination of the relationship between alcohol and other drug policies and workers' substance use.

Int J Drug Policy

February 2016

National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction, Flinders University. GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia. Electronic address:

Background: There is growing interest in workplace policies as a strategy to prevent or manage alcohol and other drug (AOD) problems. This study is the first to explore the prevalence and impact of AOD policies in Australian workplaces using a nationally representative dataset.

Methods: A secondary analysis of the 2010 National Drug Strategy Household Survey was conducted (n=13,590).

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Transnational corporations (TNCs) are part of an economic system of global capitalism that operates under a neoliberal regime underpinned by strong support from international organisations such as the World Trade Organization, World Bank, and most nation states. Although TNCs have grown in power and influence and have had a significant impact on population health over the past three decades, public health has not developed an integrated research agenda to study them. This article outlines the shape of such an agenda and argues that it is vital that research into the public health impact of TNCs be pursued and funded as a matter of priority.

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Testing the acceptability of liquid fish oil in older adults.

Asia Pac J Clin Nutr

August 2011

Nutrition and Dietetics, Clinical and Molecular Medicine, Flinders University GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, South Australia 5000, Australia.

Inflammatory conditions likely to benefit from fish oil therapy are prevalent in older adults however acceptability in this group is uncertain. This study aimed to assess the palatability of a range of liquid fish oil concentrations, the frequency and extent of side effects, and to summarise any effects on adherence to fish oil therapy in older adults. One hundred patients (>=60 years) completed a randomised, single-blind palatability study, conducted in two parts.

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Treatment outcomes and predictors of drop out for problem gamblers in South Australia: a cohort study.

Aust N Z J Psychiatry

October 2010

Margaret Tobin Centre, Flinders Human Behaviour and Health Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry, Flinders University. GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, South Australia.

Objectives: Recent prevalence studies in Australia, the USA and Canada have estimated 1-2% of the adult population meet the diagnostic criteria for problem or pathological gambling. The Statewide Gambling Therapy Service (SGTS) provides treatment for problem gamblers in key metropolitan and rural regions in South Australia. The aims of this study were two-fold: to analyse the short and mid-term outcomes following treatment provided by SGTS and to identify factors associated with treatment drop-out.

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Background: Understanding the dispersal and genetic structure of invasive insects across islands is important for designing management plans that are appropriate at spatial and temporal scales. For invasive parasites, population dynamics are largely determined by the distribution and density of their host species. The introduced parasitic fly, Philornis downsi, parasitises nestlings of endemic birds on all major islands of the Galápagos archipelago.

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Isolation, characterization and multiplex polymerase chain reaction of novel microsatellite loci for the avian parasite Philornis downsi (Diptera: Muscidae).

Mol Ecol Resour

January 2008

School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia, Centre for Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity, University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.

An enrichment technique was used to isolate 11 di-, tri-, and tetra microsatellites for the parasitic fly Philornis downsi (Diptera: Muscidae). These loci were polymerase chain reaction amplified in singleplexes or two-plexes for P. downsi.

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Background: The major lineages of eusocial insects, the ants, termites, stingless bees, honeybees and vespid wasps, all have ancient origins (> or = 65 mya) with no reversions to solitary behaviour. This has prompted the notion of a 'point of no return' whereby the evolutionary elaboration and integration of behavioural, genetic and morphological traits over a very long period of time leads to a situation where reversion to solitary living is no longer an evolutionary option.

Results: We show that in another group of social insects, the allodapine bees, there was a single origin of sociality > 40 mya.

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Mercury in seafood: mechanisms of accumulation and consequences for consumer health.

Rev Environ Health

November 2007

Department of Environmental Health, School of Medicine, Flinders University GPO Box 2100 Adelaide, South Australia 5001.

Mercury is a largely uncontrollable heavy metal contaminant in that it is globally ubiquitous, and environmentally persistent. The element has the potential for global mobilization following liberation from environmental stores, which can occur as a consequence of either anthropogenic activities or natural processes. Furthermore, organic forms like methylmercury accumulate in biological tissues with an exceptionally long biological half-life, facilitating the magnification of this toxin along trophic food chains.

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The adsorption of cyanobacterial hepatoxins as a function of soil properties.

J Water Health

December 2005

Department of Environmental Health, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Science, Flinders University. GPO Box 2100, Adelaide 5001, Australia.

Cyanobacterial hepatotoxins present a risk to public health when present in drinking water supplies. Existing removal strategies, although efficient, are not economically viable or practical for remote Australian communities and developing nations. Bank filtration is a natural process and a potential low cost, toxin removal strategy.

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