27 results match your criteria: "Waipapa Taumata Rau - The University of Auckland[Affiliation]"

Background: People experiencing homelessness access specialist palliative care late in their illness trajectory, if at all. There is also little evidence they receive generalist palliative care or are given opportunities to engage in Advance Care Planning. This qualitative study describes the central role of key workers in supporting access to healthcare in homeless communities and identifies implications for improving palliative care provision.

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Article Synopsis
  • Medical education publishing faces representation gaps due to epistemic injustice, which undermines the voices of certain groups in knowledge creation.
  • A diversity, equity, and inclusion working group has redefined rigor in peer review, aiming for a more equitable research system.
  • The journal's changes led to positive feedback on the peer review process and an increase in submissions from marginalized authors, highlighting the importance of allowing these authors to shape their narratives in knowledge production.
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Many of the implications of climate change for Aotearoa (New Zealand) remain unclear. To identify so-far unseen or understudied threats and opportunities related to climate change we applied a horizon-scanning process. First, we collated 171 threats and opportunities across our diverse fields of research.

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Adherence to New Zealand's Major Trauma Destination Policy: an audit of current practice.

N Z Med J

September 2024

Section of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Population Health, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Waipapa Taumata Rau | The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

Aim: To evaluate adherence to the New Zealand Major Trauma Destination Policy (MTDP). This audit assessed if, based on their injuries, Emergency Medical Services (EMS) attended major trauma cases were taken to the MTDP determined appropriate hospital. Findings will guide and further improve pre-hospital trauma care and associated patient outcomes.

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Background: Although disability inclusion in medical education is gaining interest internationally, scholarship and policy recommendations on this topic largely hail from the US, Canada, Australia and the UK. Existing scholarship, while calling for medical education to enact cultural and attitudinal change related to disability, has yet to exemplify how educators might critically examine their understandings.

Approach: As two medical educators and researchers, one based in New Zealand and the other based in Saudi Arabia, we took a duoethnographic approach to explore tensions, possibilities and assumptions regarding disability and disability inclusion in medical education.

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Aim: Little is known about the extent to which families in Aotearoa New Zealand are affected by long-term health conditions (HCs). This study aimed to explore the rates of nine selected HCs among New Zealand family members within the same household.

Method: Linked population and administrative health data were obtained for families living in the same household according to the 2013 New Zealand Census (N=1,043,172).

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Article Synopsis
  • Piper excelsum (kawakawa) has been used therapeutically by Māori in New Zealand and is now popular as a beverage and functional food ingredient, with this study focusing on how its chemicals are metabolized and excreted by humans.* -
  • Two studies were conducted: one with six male volunteers to assess the bioavailability of kawakawa tea metabolites and another with 30 volunteers to explore its impact on glucose metabolism, revealing 26 significant urinary metabolites linked to kawakawa tea consumption.* -
  • The findings indicate that various kawakawa compounds are bioavailable, undergoing metabolic changes in the body, with some metabolites being associated with specific components of the tea.*
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Major trauma in working-age adults in New Zealand.

N Z Med J

February 2024

Trauma Services, Auckland, Te Toka Tumai - Te Whatu Ora, New Zealand.

Aim: To describe the demographic and injury profile of major trauma among 20-65-year-old New Zealanders.

Methods: A retrospective analysis of routinely collected data from the New Zealand Major Trauma Registry for the period 1 July 2017 to 30 June 2020 was conducted. Sex, age and ethnicity-based rates were then calculated using census-based population estimates to compare the rates of injury across different demographic groups.

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Pirfenidone increases transverse tubule length in the infarcted rat myocardium.

Interface Focus

December 2023

Manaaki Manawa-The Centre for Heart Research, Department of Physiology, School of Medical and Health Sciences, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Waipapa Taumata Rau / The University of Auckland, Park Road, Grafton, Auckland, New Zealand.

Transverse (t)-tubule remodelling is a prominent feature of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). In our previous research, we identified an increased amount of collagen within the t-tubules of HFrEF patients, suggesting fibrosis could contribute to the remodelling of t-tubules. In this research, we tested this hypothesis in a rodent model of myocardial infarction induced heart failure that was treated with the anti-fibrotic pirfenidone.

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Gut-microbiome-derived metabolites, such as 4-Ethylphenol [4EP], have been shown to modulate neurological health and function. Although the source of such metabolites is becoming better understood, knowledge gaps remain as to the mechanisms by which they enter host circulation, how they are transported in the body, how they are metabolised and excreted, and the way they exert their effects. High blood concentrations of host-modified 4EP, 4-ethylphenol sulfate [4EPS], are associated with an anxiety phenotype in autistic individuals.

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Introduction: The outcomes of palliative radiation therapy (RT) for neuroendocrine neoplasms (NEN) are seldom reported. We investigated outcomes following palliative radiotherapy in a cohort of patients with NENs. We hypothesised that well-differentiated NEN will be less likely to have a clinical response than poorly differentiated NEN.

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Commentary: Imagining possibilities for JEDI in research.

Clin Teach

February 2024

Centre for Medical and Health Sciences Education, School of Medicine, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Waipapa Taumata Rau/The University of Auckland, Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland, New Zealand.

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Importance: Neonatal hypoglycemia is common, occurring in up to 50% of infants at risk for hypoglycemia (infant of diabetic mother [IDM], small for gestational age [SGA], large for gestational age [LGA], and preterm) and is associated with long-term neurodevelopmental impairment. Guidelines recommend screening infants at risk of hypoglycemia. The proportion of infants who require screening for neonatal hypoglycemia is unknown.

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Background: Zinc-biofortified potatoes have considerable potential to reduce zinc deficiency because of their low levels of phytate, an inhibitor of zinc absorption, and their high consumption, especially in the Andean region of Peru.

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to measure fractional and total zinc absorption from a test meal of biofortified compared with regular potatoes.

Methods: We undertook a single-blinded randomized crossover study (using Zn and Zn stable isotopes) in which 37 women consumed 500-g biofortified or regular potatoes twice a day.

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In 2020, the New Zealand (NZ) Parliament voted to decriminalise abortion. Although NZ's abortion law formally opposes sex selective abortions, there is considerable complexity in the gender politics of 'choice' and 'agency' in multi-ethnic societies, and interpretations of reproductive rights for ethnic minority women and for the girl child, respectively. This paper explores these complexities through the perspectives of reproductive and maternity care practitioners who are situated at the interface of legal systems, health service provision, and delivery of culturally sensitive care.

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Seven-colour multiplex immunochemistry/immunofluorescence and whole slide imaging of frozen sections.

J Immunol Methods

July 2023

School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; Maurice Wilkins Centre, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand. Electronic address:

Multiplex Immunochemistry/Immunofluorescence (mIHC/IF) aims to visualise multiple biomarkers in a single tissue section and is especially powerful when used on slide scanners coupled with digital analysis tools. mIHC/IF is commonly employed in immuno-oncology to characterise features of the tumour microenvironment (TME) and correlate them with clinical parameters to guide prognostication and therapy. However, mIHC/IF can be applied to a wide range of organisms in any physiological or disease context.

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Anthropogenic stressors, such as plastics and fishing, are putting coastal habitats under immense pressure. However, sound pollution from small boats has received little attention given the importance of sound in the various life history strategies of many marine animals. By combining passive acoustic monitoring, propagation modelling, and hearing threshold data, the impact of small-boat sound on the listening spaces of four coastal species was determined.

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Background: Yellow-fleshed potatoes biofortified with iron have been developed through conventional breeding, but the bioavailability of iron is unknown.

Objectives: Our objective was to measure iron absorption from an iron-biofortified yellow-fleshed potato clone in comparison with a nonbiofortified yellow-fleshed potato variety.

Methods: We conducted a single-blinded, randomized, crossover, multiple-meal intervention study.

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Despite the persistent dominance of a 'scientific psychology' paradigm in health psychology, the use of qualitative research continues to grow. Qualitative approaches are often based on fundamentally different values from (post)positivistempiricism, raising important considerations for quality, and whether qualitative work adheres to, and is judged by, appropriate publication standards. Thematic analysis (TA) has become a particularly popular method in qualitative health psychology, but poor practice is widespread.

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The chemical profiles of kawakawa () leaves were analysed through targeted and non-targeted LC-MS/MS. The phytochemical profile was obtained for both aqueous extracts representative of kawakawa tea and methanolic extracts. Sixty-four compounds were identified from eight leaf sources including phenylpropanoids, lignans, flavonoids, alkaloids and amides.

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Background: Skin grafting reflects a common dermatological procedure for closing skin defects. Patient education is important for managing expectation and optimising skin graft take. While health information is increasingly accessed on the internet, there are no existing studies assessing their quality.

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Towards a global framework for transport, health and health equity.

Environ Int

November 2022

World Health Organization, Av Appia 20, CH-1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland. Electronic address:

This study derives a generalised global framework for transport, health and health equity, based on a synthesis of 94 urban transport and health frameworks. The framework emphasises factors related to health equity, which are generally ignored in existing conceptual frameworks on the relationship between transport and health. While some factors such as travel behaviour were included in most reviewed frameworks, climate change and other macro-level factors were included in less than a quarter of frameworks, and health equity was included in less than 10%.

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