155 results match your criteria: "Novia University of Applied Sciences Ekenaes Finland.[Affiliation]"

Person-centered home-based rehabilitation for persons with Parkinson's disease: A scoping review.

Int J Nurs Stud

November 2019

Faculty of Pedagogy and Welfare Studies, Department of Health Science, Åbo Akademi University, Strandgatan 2, 65100, Vasa, Finland; Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, University of South-Eastern Norway, PO 235, 3603, Kongsberg, Norway.

Background: Due to vague, initial symptoms, persons with Parkinson's disease (PD) usually receive a definitive diagnosis after a prolonged period of time. At the time of diagnosis, they have already experienced limitations in activities of daily living and quality of life and are thus in need of immediate rehabilitation.

Objective: To describe the existing knowledge on the rehabilitation of persons with PD suitable to a home environment and to describe the person-centeredness, interprofessionality and clinical effectiveness of existing rehabilitation activities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Annual variation in predation risk is related to the direction of selection for brain size in the wild.

Sci Rep

August 2019

Environmental and Marine Biology, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Åbo Akademi University, Artillerigatan 6, FI-20520, Turku, Finland.

The direction of predator-mediated selection on brain size is debated. However, the speed and the accuracy of performing a task cannot be simultaneously maximized. Large-brained individuals may be predisposed to accurate but slow decision-making, beneficial under high predation risk, but costly under low risk.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Older individuals often use primary health care services, but these services face issues like limited accessibility and continuity of care, prompting the exploration of introducing geriatric nurse practitioners (GNPs) in Scandinavia to address these challenges.
  • The study involved 25 interviews with healthcare professionals and older adults to analyze current challenges in providing care for older patients, highlighting the potential roles and capabilities of GNPs in managing complex health needs.
  • Findings suggest that implementing GNPs in Scandinavian primary health care is feasible, though factors such as clarity on their roles and the level of competence needed play a significant role in successful integration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to describe nurses' experiences of working in home health care and their suggestions for the development of this public health-care sector, interviews with 18 home health-care nurses were analyzed with qualitative thematic content analysis. The nurses perceived the working shifts either affirmative or non-affirmative, depending on the contextual and organizational factors affecting nurses' workload. The more the nurses perceived they could influence their work, the more engaged they were in patient-related nursing activities, patient-centeredness, collaboration, and forward planning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comparison of boreal acid sulfate soil microbial communities in oxidative and reductive environments.

Res Microbiol

December 2019

Centre for Ecology and Evolution in Microbial Model Systems (EEMiS), Linnaeus University, SE-39182 Kalmar, Sweden.

Due to land uplift after the last ice age, previously stable Baltic Sea sulfidic sediments are becoming dry land. When these sediments are drained, the sulfide minerals are exposed to air and can release large amounts of metals and acid into the environment. This can cause severe ecological damage such as fish kills in rivers feeding the northern Baltic Sea.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many animals build new nests every breeding season instead of saving time by reusing old ones. One hypothesis is that nest reuse leads to increased predation risk if predators memorize nest locations and revisit these sites. Here we examine patterns in the prevalence of facultative nest reuse.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: A mobile cooperation intervention was developed to facilitate the cooperation of nursing students with nurse teacher and to improve the students' clinical learning outcomes. The intervention consisted of training in a mobile application's functionality and its use during clinical practicum cooperation procedures.

Objectives: To describe the development of a mobile application for student-teacher cooperation and to examine the acceptability of the mobile cooperation intervention for advancing intervention development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intact ecosystems are being lost or modified worldwide, and many animal species are now forced to live in altered landscapes. A large amount of scientific studies have focused on understanding direct effects of habitat alterations on species occurrence, abundance, breeding success, and other life history aspects. Much less attention has been placed on understanding how habitat alterations impact on the physiology of species, e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Objective Structured Clinical Examination in evolving nurse practitioner education: A study of students' and examiners' experiences.

Nurse Educ Pract

May 2019

Department of Nursing and Health Sciences, University of South-Eastern Norway, Drammen, Norway; Faculty of Education and Welfare Studies, Åbo Akademi University, Vasasa, Finland.

Assessment of advanced clinical competence is essential for safe practice and achieving international standards for nurse practitioners. It is of particular interest for countries that have recently been introduced to advanced nursing roles to investigate examination forms that ensure quality in nurse practitioner education. The aim of this study was to explore and describe the nurse practitioner students' and examiners' experiences with Objective Structured Clinical Examination, which is an exam form for assessing clinical competence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Eco-physiological responses of copepods and pteropods to ocean warming and acidification.

Sci Rep

March 2019

Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, Costa Mesa, CA, 92626, USA.

We compare physiological responses of the crustacean copepod Calanus pacificus and pelagic pteropod mollusk Limacina helicina to ocean temperatures and pH by measuring biomarkers of oxidative stress, antioxidant defences, and the activity of the respiratory electron transport system in organisms collected on the 2016 West Coast Ocean Acidification cruise in the California Current System. Copepods and pteropods exhibited strong but divergent responses in the same habitat; copepods had higher oxygen-reactive absorbance capacity, glutathione-S-transferase, and total glutathione content. The ratio between reduced to oxidised glutathione was higher in copepods than in pteropods, indicating lower oxidative stress in copepods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this scoping review was to describe the state of knowledge on professional care at home with regard to different perspectives on patient-centredness, content of care, interprofessional collaboration, competence framework and effectivity. A scoping review, n = 35 papers, from four databases (EBSCO, CINAHL, Medline, Swemed) were reviewed between May and August 2018 using the terms: hospital-at-home, hospital-in-the-home, advanced home healthcare, hospital-based home care or patient-centered medical home. Criteria for inclusion in this review included full text papers, published between 2001 and 2018, in English, Swedish or Finnish.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Scrutinizing assortative mating in birds.

PLoS Biol

February 2019

Department of Behavioural Ecology and Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen, Germany.

It is often claimed that pair bonds preferentially form between individuals that resemble one another. Such assortative mating appears to be widespread throughout the animal kingdom. Yet it is unclear whether the apparent ubiquity of assortative mating arises primarily from mate choice ("like attracts like"), which can be constrained by same-sex competition for mates; from spatial or temporal separation; or from observer, reporting, publication, or search bias.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Indirect DNA extraction method suitable for acidic soil with high clay content.

MethodsX

February 2018

Centre for Ecology and Evolution in Microbial Model Systems (EEMiS), Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden.

DNA extraction is an essential procedure when investigating microbial communities in environmental samples by sequencing technologies. High clay soils can be problematic as DNA adsorbs to the clay particles and can thereby be preserved from lysed, non-viable cells for a substantial period of time. In order to accurately estimate the intact and living microbial community in the soil, extracellular DNA from dead, remnant bacterial cells needs to be removed prior to DNA extraction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

People frequently attribute adverse symptoms to particular buildings when exposure to pollutants is low, within nonhazardous levels. Our aim was to characterize building-related intolerance (BRI) in the general population. Data were derived from two population-based questionnaire surveys, the Västerbotten and Österbotten Environmental Health Study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: We investigated the association between hyperacusis and aspects of psychosocial work environment in a general population. The objectives were to investigate (1) prevalence and characteristics (among age, sex, access to social support at home, education, smoking, physical exercise, and perceived general health) of hyperacusis in a general working population and (2) associations between hyperacusis and psychosocial factors in the work environment. The psychosocial work aspects included effort, reward, overcommitment, worry, and social and emotional support.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Shared environmental effects bias phenotypic estimates of assortative mating in a wild bird.

Biol Lett

July 2018

Department of Biology, University of Turku, University Hill, 20014 Turku, Finland.

Assortative mating is pervasive in wild populations and commonly described as a positive correlation between the phenotypes of males and females across mated pairs. This correlation is often assumed to reflect non-random mate choice based on phenotypic similarity. However, phenotypic resemblance between mates can also arise when their traits respond plastically to a shared environmental effect creating a (within-pair) residual correlation in traits.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Establishing a Europe-wide foundation for high quality midwifery education: The role of the European Midwives Association (EMA).

Midwifery

September 2018

Department of Women and Children's Health, School of Life Course Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, United Kingdom.

A cornerstone of European policy involves freedom of movement of individuals between member countries, which applies equally to those who use and provide maternity care. To promote and support safe, high quality maternity care, minimum standards for midwifery education and practice have been published, including Directives EEC/80/154 and EEC/80/155 which support the recognition of professional qualifications. These Directives established a minimum standard for midwifery education, including the duration and content of theoretical and practical education.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The evidence of negative impacts of agricultural pesticides on non-target organisms is constantly growing. One of the most widely used group of pesticides are neonicotinoids, used in treatments of various plants, e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intermittent breeding may be adaptive for long-lived species subjected to large accessory reproductive costs, but it may also reflect reduced adaptation to the environment, reducing population growth. Nevertheless, environmental influences on breeding propensity, particularly that of predation risk, remain poorly understood and difficult to study, because non-breeders are typically not identified. Female eiders Somateria mollissima from the Baltic Sea provide an excellent testbed, because nesting females have been exposed to intensifying predation and growing male bias that may increase female harassment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

On a daily basis, planktonic organisms migrate vertically and thus experience widely varying conditions in their physico-chemical environment. In the Gulf of Finland, these changes are larger than values predicted by climate change scenarios predicted for the next century (up to 0.5 units in pH and 5°C in temperature).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In contrast to theoretical predictions of even adult sex ratios, males are dominating in many bird populations. Such bias among adults may be critical to population growth and viability. Nevertheless, demographic mechanisms for biased adult sex ratios are still poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chemical and microbiological evaluation of novel chemical treatment methods for acid sulfate soils.

Sci Total Environ

June 2018

Centre for Ecology and Evolution in Microbial Model Systems (EEMiS), Linnaeus University, SE-39231 Kalmar, Sweden. Electronic address:

Naturally occurring sulfide rich deposits are common along the northern Baltic Sea coast that when exposed to air, release large amounts of acid and metals into receiving water bodies. This causes severe environmental implications for agriculture, forestry, and building of infrastructure. In this study, we investigated the efficiency of ultrafine-grained calcium carbonate and peat (both separately and in combination) to mitigate acid and metal release.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comorbidity of Airway Inflammatory Diseases in Chemical and Building-Related Intolerance.

J Occup Environ Med

April 2018

Department of Psychology, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden (Dr Claeson, Ms Andersson, Mr Wikdahl, Dr Nordin); and YH Novia/Novia University of Applied Sciences, Vaasa, Finland (Dr Nyback).

Objectives: This study investigated comorbidity in chemical intolerance (CI) and building- related intolerance (BRI) with (i) chronic sinusitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, allergic and nonallergic asthma and allergic rhinitis, and (ii) airway inflammatory symptoms.

Methods: Data from two population-based questionnaire surveys, the Västerbotten and Österbotten Environmental Health Studies, were used. The participants were categorized as CI or BRI and referents, and binary logistic regression analysis was applied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF