Drug Aware is an intervention providing schools with resources and support by involving “whole school communities”, which includes young people, parents/carers, teachers and other school staff, as well as partners such as drug services and the police.
Mentor’s Quality Assurance services provide guidance and tools to support local capacity building through developing and strengthening sustainable prevention networks at a local level. The alcohol and drug education review in Brighton and Hove not only allowed Mentor to work closely with schools to understand the current capacity and expertise, but also made links and developed strategies to strengthen communication and collaboration with other relevant actors within the community.
Young people's mental health - where we have been and where we are going - Ma...NIHR CLAHRC West Midlands
Prof Max Birchwood's presentation on early interventions in youth mental health for the CLAHRC WM Scientific Advisory Group meeting, 9th June 2015, Birmingham, UK
Drug Aware is an intervention providing schools with resources and support by involving “whole school communities”, which includes young people, parents/carers, teachers and other school staff, as well as partners such as drug services and the police.
Mentor’s Quality Assurance services provide guidance and tools to support local capacity building through developing and strengthening sustainable prevention networks at a local level. The alcohol and drug education review in Brighton and Hove not only allowed Mentor to work closely with schools to understand the current capacity and expertise, but also made links and developed strategies to strengthen communication and collaboration with other relevant actors within the community.
Young people's mental health - where we have been and where we are going - Ma...NIHR CLAHRC West Midlands
Prof Max Birchwood's presentation on early interventions in youth mental health for the CLAHRC WM Scientific Advisory Group meeting, 9th June 2015, Birmingham, UK
Slideshare for the young peoples workshop for voluntary and community sector agencies in Hertfordshire, organised by Hertfordshire Public Health Service. There is also a word data pack
In a webinar in the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Using What Works to Improve Child Well-Being series, an expert panel discusses how the Youth Experience Survey, one of the key tools in the Evidence2Success framework, generates data on risk and protective factors that help communities address problems for youth before they start.
Thisis an introduction to the Social Research Group, a division of Market Solutions Pty. Ltd. - a social and market research company located in Melbourne Victoria. It provides an introduction to the Social Research Group and showcases some recent projects.
The webinar, “Getting to Permanence: The Practices of High-Performing Child Welfare Agencies,” highlights the importance of prioritizing family relationships and ensuring children and teens in foster care have enduring connections to loving, nurturing adults in their lives.
Violence is the number #2 cause of death of our children. 2nd only to car accidents. Its time to do something about it. The time to act is now. Can you help? Will you help?
Contact me if you'd like to support Leave Out Violence. http://leaveoutviolence.org/newyork/
Leave Out ViolencE (aka LOVE), was created to attack the issue of violence from the inside out, and at a level where we are most vulnerable: with our youth, our kids, our children. LOVE is compassionate; designed for both victim and perpetrator. It has to be, for that is the cycle - and circle - of violence.
The program works peer-to-peer, kid-to-kid, perp-to-perp. It works on many levels: social, societal, educational (the program is built inside of NYC public schools). LOVE is a rare organization because LOVE is helping solve the violence issue – by teaching kids how to eliminate violence from their lives.
In the end, the answer is complex: Its cultural, behavioral, societal, social. Its not just guns, and its not just mental health. Its everything. But facts don't lie. Countries like Japan, Scotland or the greater UK have practically eliminated gun violence (in terms of both raw numbers and percentage). Part of their solution is strict gun control. And the results speak for themselves and those nations should be proud that so many lives have been saved. Facts don't lie. The US has more gun related deaths than the next 22 nations COMBINED. Guns are a huge part of this problem, but are clearly NOT the only part. Other than guns, what is so vastly different in the US versus every where else in the world (meaning ALL other civilized, first world, high income nations)? Are we really just the sickest nation? Have all these countries solved the mental heath issues? Do they regulate video games? Have they solved the poverty issue? Have they solved the broken family issue? Do they ban violent movies? Do they have extremely high rates of church attendance? The answer is no. They haven't and they don't.
It's time to Act: Sign a petition. Write a letter to your congressman. Donate to Leave Out Violence. Volunteer. Speak up. Speak out. Ask your principal what their plan is. Help. Seize this moment with your action. Do something. Together we can stand up to violence.
Can you help? Will you help? Contact me if you'd like to support Leave Out Violence. http://leaveoutviolence.org/newyork/
Slideshare for the young peoples workshop for voluntary and community sector agencies in Hertfordshire, organised by Hertfordshire Public Health Service. There is also a word data pack
In a webinar in the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Using What Works to Improve Child Well-Being series, an expert panel discusses how the Youth Experience Survey, one of the key tools in the Evidence2Success framework, generates data on risk and protective factors that help communities address problems for youth before they start.
Thisis an introduction to the Social Research Group, a division of Market Solutions Pty. Ltd. - a social and market research company located in Melbourne Victoria. It provides an introduction to the Social Research Group and showcases some recent projects.
The webinar, “Getting to Permanence: The Practices of High-Performing Child Welfare Agencies,” highlights the importance of prioritizing family relationships and ensuring children and teens in foster care have enduring connections to loving, nurturing adults in their lives.
Violence is the number #2 cause of death of our children. 2nd only to car accidents. Its time to do something about it. The time to act is now. Can you help? Will you help?
Contact me if you'd like to support Leave Out Violence. http://leaveoutviolence.org/newyork/
Leave Out ViolencE (aka LOVE), was created to attack the issue of violence from the inside out, and at a level where we are most vulnerable: with our youth, our kids, our children. LOVE is compassionate; designed for both victim and perpetrator. It has to be, for that is the cycle - and circle - of violence.
The program works peer-to-peer, kid-to-kid, perp-to-perp. It works on many levels: social, societal, educational (the program is built inside of NYC public schools). LOVE is a rare organization because LOVE is helping solve the violence issue – by teaching kids how to eliminate violence from their lives.
In the end, the answer is complex: Its cultural, behavioral, societal, social. Its not just guns, and its not just mental health. Its everything. But facts don't lie. Countries like Japan, Scotland or the greater UK have practically eliminated gun violence (in terms of both raw numbers and percentage). Part of their solution is strict gun control. And the results speak for themselves and those nations should be proud that so many lives have been saved. Facts don't lie. The US has more gun related deaths than the next 22 nations COMBINED. Guns are a huge part of this problem, but are clearly NOT the only part. Other than guns, what is so vastly different in the US versus every where else in the world (meaning ALL other civilized, first world, high income nations)? Are we really just the sickest nation? Have all these countries solved the mental heath issues? Do they regulate video games? Have they solved the poverty issue? Have they solved the broken family issue? Do they ban violent movies? Do they have extremely high rates of church attendance? The answer is no. They haven't and they don't.
It's time to Act: Sign a petition. Write a letter to your congressman. Donate to Leave Out Violence. Volunteer. Speak up. Speak out. Ask your principal what their plan is. Help. Seize this moment with your action. Do something. Together we can stand up to violence.
Can you help? Will you help? Contact me if you'd like to support Leave Out Violence. http://leaveoutviolence.org/newyork/
How Mentor works with young people to inspire and support them to achieve their full potential, and how we work with parents, carers, schools, youth groups and other partners.
These PowerPoint presentations are intended for use by crime prevention practitioners who bring their experience and expertise to each topic. The presentations are not intended for public use or by individuals with no training or expertise in crime prevention. Each presentation is intended to educate, increase awareness, and teach prevention strategies. Presenters must discern whether their audiences require a more basic or advanced level of information.
NCPC welcomes your input and would like your assistance in tracking the use of these topical presentations. Please email NCPC at trainings@ncpc.org with information about when and how the presentations were used. If you like, we will also place you in a database to receive updates of the PowerPoint presentations and additional training information. We encourage you to visit www.ncpc.org to find additional information on these topics. We also invite you to send in your own trainer notes, handouts, pictures, and anecdotes to share with others on www.ncpc.org.
There is growing global recognition that violence against women and violence against children, and in particular intimate partner violence against women and violence against children by parents or caregivers, intersect in different ways. As global evidence of and interest in these intersections continue to grow, strategies are needed to enhance collaborations across these fields and thus ensure the best outcomes for both women and children. In response, the Sexual Violence Research Initiative (SVRI), the UNICEF Innocenti – Global Office of Research and Foresight, and the UNDP/UNFPA/UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction hosted by WHO’s Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health, partnered to coordinate a global participatory process to identify research priorities that relate to the intersections between violence against children and violence against women.
While priorities are important, the way in which these priorities are determined is also crucial, especially for ownership, contextualization and use. Inclusive, participatory research-setting, such as used in this work, serves to promote a diversity of voices – especially from low- and middle-income countries which have historically lacked representation – and minimize the risk of bias when establishing research priorities.
This report describes the process used to determine the priorities for research on the intersections between violence against children and violence against women, and the top 10 research questions identified.
Early Intervention: Improving Access to Mental Health by 2020 [Presentations]Sarah Amani
Most mental illnesses begin in adolescence or early adulthood – the vital time in life when we establish our independence. Mental illness can derail this process with long-lasting effects. We know that the earlier we can engage a young person in treatment the better their outcomes – but young people are the least likely to seek help from mental health services. This is not helped by the separation of services at age 18.
The good news is that we know that early intervention makes a difference in getting young people well and keeping them well. Early intervention teams have been established for psychosis in England for the last 12 years. Psychosis is a serious mental illness affecting 1-2% of the population, with about 500 new cases every year in the Oxford AHSN area.
Early intervention in psychosis is a specialist, community-based service providing medical, psychological and family-based treatments. It helps get young people back to work or education and keeps an eye out for any early signs of relapse so that they can be prevented. Early intervention teams are highly valued by young people and their families. They also save the health service money by keeping people well and getting them back to work.
The Early intervention in mental health network will make sure that this best practice is in place across the Oxford AHSN region with the highest standard of care provided everywhere. We also aim to spread this early intervention model across other conditions (such as eating disorders, personality disorder, autistic spectrum conditions) to help more young people.
World class research is being undertaken in Oxford AHSN and across England into early psychosis – both into the causes and to trial new treatments. We aim to make this research available to every patient being seen by our early intervention teams. We will also look to develop new innovations and technologies that could improve the experience of young people receiving mental healthcare.
Improving Schools-Based Drug and Alcohol EducationMentor
This presentation was given at the Primary Care and Public Health 2016 Conference. It explores effective ways to improve school-based alcohol and drug education, ensuring the use and promotion of evidence based practice.
Better evidence for law enforcement and public health. Law Enforcement and ...John Middleton
Better evidence for better law enforcement and public health Professor John Middleton, President, the Association of Schools of Public Health in the European Region191019 middletonj phd presentation vr 3
191019 middletonj phd presentation vr 3
Redefining Relationships between Citizens, Communities and Services and Diffe...Mentor
Our new Chief Executive Michael O'Toole made a presentation at the Capita Conference 'Managing Demand in Public Services' held in London on 21st October 2014.
aids conference 2016, hiv and aids, hiv interventions, hope program, kenya, nope kenya, people living with hiv, uptake of hiv testing and adherence to hiv treatme
aids conference 2014, hiv and aids, hiv interventions, hope program, kenya, nope kenya, people living with hiv, uptake of hiv testing and adherence to hiv treatmement
Using Social Media to Support Youth Healthy Sexual BehaviorYTH
Erin Wright of the mHealth Impact Laboratory at the Colorado School of Public Health, provides an overview of Just/Us, a study to analyze the impact of social networking sites to effectively support healthy sexual behavior for young people. Presented at YTH Live 2014 session "Social Media for Sexual Health Outreach."
Hosted by Mentoring Partnership of Minnesota on October 30, 2012.
The Mentoring Best Practices Research Project, funded by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), is being conducted in collaboration with Global Youth Justice and the National Partnership for Juvenile Services.
20240412 middletonj ASPHER war curriculum.pptxJohn Middleton
A short presentation for the ASPHER webinar, for Global Public Health Week 73. ASPHER’s Core Curriculum Programme (CCP): what are the needs for teaching the role of public health in preventing and responding to armed conflict?
Prevention, Recovery, Rehabilitation
A life in public health, influences and chunesJohn Middleton
A presentation for the Associaiton of Schools of public Health in the European Region, ASSETS summer school, Brussels, July 3-6th 2023. covering a career in public health, major influences on my practice, and musical references to public health 20230711 middletonj assets very final.pptx
A healthy state? Geopolitical threats to safety and health John Middleton
A presentation to the first European conference of Law Enforcement and Public Health, Umea Sweden, May 22nd-24th 2023; on geopolitical trends and concerns for policing and public health improvement
20230625 middletonj LEPH UMEA healthy State delivered presentation.pptx
A presentation for the ASPHER and University of Bielefeld in the series, 'Public Health in the Times of War '
20221125-4.5 final delivered militarism and health.pptx
20221125-4.5 final delivered militarism and health.pptx
The perspective on Public Health Curricula Accreditationand international r...John Middleton
A presentation on the work of ASPHER the Association of Schools of public Health in the European Region, and APHEA, the Agency for Public Health Education Accreditation, for the congress National Des Medicine Saude Public (Portugal, November 3rd 2022)
ASPHER's ambition in climate change and health educationJohn Middleton
A presentation for the launch of the ASPHER Climate change and health education EU Health Policy Platform network 202207 ASPHER middletonj climate change and health long version.pptx
Climate change as a high risk factor for health John Middleton
Presentation for the World Committee for lifelong learning (CMA) 4th conference debate at the Cite Des Metiers, Paris, June 22nd 2022
20220622 CMA middletonj climate change and health long version.pptx
Presentation to the Norfolk Medical and Surgical Society, January 21st 2022 on the current state of the pandemic worldwide and in the UK and other global and planetary threats to health and how to 'plan for an outbreak of health'
20220125middleton medchi
Planning for an outbreak of health? Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemicJohn Middleton
Presentation for Jagellonian University Krakov, Poland, Institute of Public Health 30th anniversary celebration congress, October 708th 2021. 211007 middletonj krakow vr 2
Presentation for the Grand European Symposium: Training, Research and Innovation in the Europe of Health”, on September 30th 2021, The Sorbonne Grand Amphitheater
210923 middletonj sorbonne vr2
Die Zukunft ist rosig, die Zukunft ist die öffentliche GesundheitJohn Middleton
The future's bright, the future is public health. Presentation to the MPH students introductory course Bielefeld University School of public Health, October 11th 2021. 211011 2 middleton j bielefeld main
The best job in the world: A past, and a future in public health John Middleton
A description of my career in public health today including lessons from local, national and international public health and the current COVID-19 pandemic. Presentation for the Coventry University BSc in public health employability course, October 25th 2021.
211025 middleton coventry final
COVID-19: What went right, what went wrong and how do we learn from this? John Middleton
Look at UK English and European experience during the COVID-19 pandemic. Successes and failures. Presentation for a meeting of the Centre for Health and Development (CHAD) University of Staffordshire. Centre via recorded lecture, Thursday, 28 October 2021 12:00 211027 4 definitive middleton chad conference final
Video presentation also to be available online
A presentation on my life in public health and vaccinations- from measles in the West Midlands of England, 1983-2014 to COVID-19 in Europe, 2020-now, implications for the public health community and vaccines manufactures including the vaccine TRIPS waiver. Presentation to a Spanish public health and vaccines forum, October 18th 2021 211018 middleton spanish vaccines and industry presentation 1 version recorded
Planning for an outbreak of health? Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemicJohn Middleton
Planning for an outbreak of health? Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic Presentation to a meeting of the Alliance International Science Organisations,Univversity fo Belgrade and Chinese Academy of Sciences, online, September 23rd 2021
210923 middletonj anso conference beograd
The urgent need to train students to be global advocates and activists : plan...John Middleton
Presentation for the Escuela de Salud Pública de México (ESPM), part of the Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública (INSP). 100 year celebration, April 22nd 2021. INSP210422 middletonj insp vr3
A review of global health issues, highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic and suggestions for improvement of health in a post pandemic world. Presentation for the Mongolian National University of Medicine School of public Health, April 16th 2021
210415 long version middleton j mongolia ph conference
Title: Sense of Taste
Presenter: Dr. Faiza, Assistant Professor of Physiology
Qualifications:
MBBS (Best Graduate, AIMC Lahore)
FCPS Physiology
ICMT, CHPE, DHPE (STMU)
MPH (GC University, Faisalabad)
MBA (Virtual University of Pakistan)
Learning Objectives:
Describe the structure and function of taste buds.
Describe the relationship between the taste threshold and taste index of common substances.
Explain the chemical basis and signal transduction of taste perception for each type of primary taste sensation.
Recognize different abnormalities of taste perception and their causes.
Key Topics:
Significance of Taste Sensation:
Differentiation between pleasant and harmful food
Influence on behavior
Selection of food based on metabolic needs
Receptors of Taste:
Taste buds on the tongue
Influence of sense of smell, texture of food, and pain stimulation (e.g., by pepper)
Primary and Secondary Taste Sensations:
Primary taste sensations: Sweet, Sour, Salty, Bitter, Umami
Chemical basis and signal transduction mechanisms for each taste
Taste Threshold and Index:
Taste threshold values for Sweet (sucrose), Salty (NaCl), Sour (HCl), and Bitter (Quinine)
Taste index relationship: Inversely proportional to taste threshold
Taste Blindness:
Inability to taste certain substances, particularly thiourea compounds
Example: Phenylthiocarbamide
Structure and Function of Taste Buds:
Composition: Epithelial cells, Sustentacular/Supporting cells, Taste cells, Basal cells
Features: Taste pores, Taste hairs/microvilli, and Taste nerve fibers
Location of Taste Buds:
Found in papillae of the tongue (Fungiform, Circumvallate, Foliate)
Also present on the palate, tonsillar pillars, epiglottis, and proximal esophagus
Mechanism of Taste Stimulation:
Interaction of taste substances with receptors on microvilli
Signal transduction pathways for Umami, Sweet, Bitter, Sour, and Salty tastes
Taste Sensitivity and Adaptation:
Decrease in sensitivity with age
Rapid adaptation of taste sensation
Role of Saliva in Taste:
Dissolution of tastants to reach receptors
Washing away the stimulus
Taste Preferences and Aversions:
Mechanisms behind taste preference and aversion
Influence of receptors and neural pathways
Impact of Sensory Nerve Damage:
Degeneration of taste buds if the sensory nerve fiber is cut
Abnormalities of Taste Detection:
Conditions: Ageusia, Hypogeusia, Dysgeusia (parageusia)
Causes: Nerve damage, neurological disorders, infections, poor oral hygiene, adverse drug effects, deficiencies, aging, tobacco use, altered neurotransmitter levels
Neurotransmitters and Taste Threshold:
Effects of serotonin (5-HT) and norepinephrine (NE) on taste sensitivity
Supertasters:
25% of the population with heightened sensitivity to taste, especially bitterness
Increased number of fungiform papillae
Acute scrotum is a general term referring to an emergency condition affecting the contents or the wall of the scrotum.
There are a number of conditions that present acutely, predominantly with pain and/or swelling
A careful and detailed history and examination, and in some cases, investigations allow differentiation between these diagnoses. A prompt diagnosis is essential as the patient may require urgent surgical intervention
Testicular torsion refers to twisting of the spermatic cord, causing ischaemia of the testicle.
Testicular torsion results from inadequate fixation of the testis to the tunica vaginalis producing ischemia from reduced arterial inflow and venous outflow obstruction.
The prevalence of testicular torsion in adult patients hospitalized with acute scrotal pain is approximately 25 to 50 percent
Ethanol (CH3CH2OH), or beverage alcohol, is a two-carbon alcohol
that is rapidly distributed in the body and brain. Ethanol alters many
neurochemical systems and has rewarding and addictive properties. It
is the oldest recreational drug and likely contributes to more morbidity,
mortality, and public health costs than all illicit drugs combined. The
5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(DSM-5) integrates alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence into a single
disorder called alcohol use disorder (AUD), with mild, moderate,
and severe subclassifications (American Psychiatric Association, 2013).
In the DSM-5, all types of substance abuse and dependence have been
combined into a single substance use disorder (SUD) on a continuum
from mild to severe. A diagnosis of AUD requires that at least two of
the 11 DSM-5 behaviors be present within a 12-month period (mild
AUD: 2–3 criteria; moderate AUD: 4–5 criteria; severe AUD: 6–11 criteria).
The four main behavioral effects of AUD are impaired control over
drinking, negative social consequences, risky use, and altered physiological
effects (tolerance, withdrawal). This chapter presents an overview
of the prevalence and harmful consequences of AUD in the U.S.,
the systemic nature of the disease, neurocircuitry and stages of AUD,
comorbidities, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, genetic risk factors, and
pharmacotherapies for AUD.
Lung Cancer: Artificial Intelligence, Synergetics, Complex System Analysis, S...Oleg Kshivets
RESULTS: Overall life span (LS) was 2252.1±1742.5 days and cumulative 5-year survival (5YS) reached 73.2%, 10 years – 64.8%, 20 years – 42.5%. 513 LCP lived more than 5 years (LS=3124.6±1525.6 days), 148 LCP – more than 10 years (LS=5054.4±1504.1 days).199 LCP died because of LC (LS=562.7±374.5 days). 5YS of LCP after bi/lobectomies was significantly superior in comparison with LCP after pneumonectomies (78.1% vs.63.7%, P=0.00001 by log-rank test). AT significantly improved 5YS (66.3% vs. 34.8%) (P=0.00000 by log-rank test) only for LCP with N1-2. Cox modeling displayed that 5YS of LCP significantly depended on: phase transition (PT) early-invasive LC in terms of synergetics, PT N0—N12, cell ratio factors (ratio between cancer cells- CC and blood cells subpopulations), G1-3, histology, glucose, AT, blood cell circuit, prothrombin index, heparin tolerance, recalcification time (P=0.000-0.038). Neural networks, genetic algorithm selection and bootstrap simulation revealed relationships between 5YS and PT early-invasive LC (rank=1), PT N0—N12 (rank=2), thrombocytes/CC (3), erythrocytes/CC (4), eosinophils/CC (5), healthy cells/CC (6), lymphocytes/CC (7), segmented neutrophils/CC (8), stick neutrophils/CC (9), monocytes/CC (10); leucocytes/CC (11). Correct prediction of 5YS was 100% by neural networks computing (area under ROC curve=1.0; error=0.0).
CONCLUSIONS: 5YS of LCP after radical procedures significantly depended on: 1) PT early-invasive cancer; 2) PT N0--N12; 3) cell ratio factors; 4) blood cell circuit; 5) biochemical factors; 6) hemostasis system; 7) AT; 8) LC characteristics; 9) LC cell dynamics; 10) surgery type: lobectomy/pneumonectomy; 11) anthropometric data. Optimal diagnosis and treatment strategies for LC are: 1) screening and early detection of LC; 2) availability of experienced thoracic surgeons because of complexity of radical procedures; 3) aggressive en block surgery and adequate lymph node dissection for completeness; 4) precise prediction; 5) adjuvant chemoimmunoradiotherapy for LCP with unfavorable prognosis.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE.pdfAnujkumaranit
Artificial intelligence (AI) refers to the simulation of human intelligence processes by machines, especially computer systems. It encompasses tasks such as learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and language understanding. AI technologies are revolutionizing various fields, from healthcare to finance, by enabling machines to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence.
Pulmonary Thromboembolism - etilogy, types, medical- Surgical and nursing man...VarunMahajani
Disruption of blood supply to lung alveoli due to blockage of one or more pulmonary blood vessels is called as Pulmonary thromboembolism. In this presentation we will discuss its causes, types and its management in depth.
Flu Vaccine Alert in Bangalore Karnatakaaddon Scans
As flu season approaches, health officials in Bangalore, Karnataka, are urging residents to get their flu vaccinations. The seasonal flu, while common, can lead to severe health complications, particularly for vulnerable populations such as young children, the elderly, and those with underlying health conditions.
Dr. Vidisha Kumari, a leading epidemiologist in Bangalore, emphasizes the importance of getting vaccinated. "The flu vaccine is our best defense against the influenza virus. It not only protects individuals but also helps prevent the spread of the virus in our communities," he says.
This year, the flu season is expected to coincide with a potential increase in other respiratory illnesses. The Karnataka Health Department has launched an awareness campaign highlighting the significance of flu vaccinations. They have set up multiple vaccination centers across Bangalore, making it convenient for residents to receive their shots.
To encourage widespread vaccination, the government is also collaborating with local schools, workplaces, and community centers to facilitate vaccination drives. Special attention is being given to ensuring that the vaccine is accessible to all, including marginalized communities who may have limited access to healthcare.
Residents are reminded that the flu vaccine is safe and effective. Common side effects are mild and may include soreness at the injection site, mild fever, or muscle aches. These side effects are generally short-lived and far less severe than the flu itself.
Healthcare providers are also stressing the importance of continuing COVID-19 precautions. Wearing masks, practicing good hand hygiene, and maintaining social distancing are still crucial, especially in crowded places.
Protect yourself and your loved ones by getting vaccinated. Together, we can help keep Bangalore healthy and safe this flu season. For more information on vaccination centers and schedules, residents can visit the Karnataka Health Department’s official website or follow their social media pages.
Stay informed, stay safe, and get your flu shot today!
New Directions in Targeted Therapeutic Approaches for Older Adults With Mantl...i3 Health
i3 Health is pleased to make the speaker slides from this activity available for use as a non-accredited self-study or teaching resource.
This slide deck presented by Dr. Kami Maddocks, Professor-Clinical in the Division of Hematology and
Associate Division Director for Ambulatory Operations
The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, will provide insight into new directions in targeted therapeutic approaches for older adults with mantle cell lymphoma.
STATEMENT OF NEED
Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a rare, aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) accounting for 5% to 7% of all lymphomas. Its prognosis ranges from indolent disease that does not require treatment for years to very aggressive disease, which is associated with poor survival (Silkenstedt et al, 2021). Typically, MCL is diagnosed at advanced stage and in older patients who cannot tolerate intensive therapy (NCCN, 2022). Although recent advances have slightly increased remission rates, recurrence and relapse remain very common, leading to a median overall survival between 3 and 6 years (LLS, 2021). Though there are several effective options, progress is still needed towards establishing an accepted frontline approach for MCL (Castellino et al, 2022). Treatment selection and management of MCL are complicated by the heterogeneity of prognosis, advanced age and comorbidities of patients, and lack of an established standard approach for treatment, making it vital that clinicians be familiar with the latest research and advances in this area. In this activity chaired by Michael Wang, MD, Professor in the Department of Lymphoma & Myeloma at MD Anderson Cancer Center, expert faculty will discuss prognostic factors informing treatment, the promising results of recent trials in new therapeutic approaches, and the implications of treatment resistance in therapeutic selection for MCL.
Target Audience
Hematology/oncology fellows, attending faculty, and other health care professionals involved in the treatment of patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL).
Learning Objectives
1.) Identify clinical and biological prognostic factors that can guide treatment decision making for older adults with MCL
2.) Evaluate emerging data on targeted therapeutic approaches for treatment-naive and relapsed/refractory MCL and their applicability to older adults
3.) Assess mechanisms of resistance to targeted therapies for MCL and their implications for treatment selection
Prix Galien International 2024 Forum ProgramLevi Shapiro
June 20, 2024, Prix Galien International and Jerusalem Ethics Forum in ROME. Detailed agenda including panels:
- ADVANCES IN CARDIOLOGY: A NEW PARADIGM IS COMING
- WOMEN’S HEALTH: FERTILITY PRESERVATION
- WHAT’S NEW IN THE TREATMENT OF INFECTIOUS,
ONCOLOGICAL AND INFLAMMATORY SKIN DISEASES?
- ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ETHICS
- GENE THERAPY
- BEYOND BORDERS: GLOBAL INITIATIVES FOR DEMOCRATIZING LIFE SCIENCE TECHNOLOGIES AND PROMOTING ACCESS TO HEALTHCARE
- ETHICAL CHALLENGES IN LIFE SCIENCES
- Prix Galien International Awards Ceremony
Knee anatomy and clinical tests 2024.pdfvimalpl1234
This includes all relevant anatomy and clinical tests compiled from standard textbooks, Campbell,netter etc..It is comprehensive and best suited for orthopaedicians and orthopaedic residents.
Maxilla, Mandible & Hyoid Bone & Clinical Correlations by Dr. RIG.pptx
141007middletonj evidence based crime prevention vr 2
1. Prevention of crime and violence:
evidence based crime prevention – a
public health imperative
John Middleton
Vice President, UK Faculty of Public Health
2nd
International conference on Law Enforcement
and Health, Amsterdam , October 6th
-8th
2014
2. • Experience of 18 years working with the ‘Safer
Sandwell’ crime and disorder partnership
• What works ? And why does it matter
• The Campbell collaboration
• West Midlands Crimegrip ®
• Knowledge transfer in the Collaboration for
applied health research (CLARHC)
• What should the police expect form health ?
• And what should health expect from the
police?
9. Campbell collaboration
International review of
best available research
evidence on most
effective social and
educational interventions
to prevent crime and
improve educational,
social and health
outcomes
www.campbellcollaborationwww.campbellcollaboration..
orgorg
10. West Midlands Crimegrip
• Early years interventions
• Mild to moderate behaviour disturbance in
children
• Peer education and interactive education
programmes of drugs education
• Harm reduction approaches to drug treatment
and rehabilitation
• Cognitive behavioural approaches to offender
rehabilitation
• Streetlighting
• CCTV
• Restorative justice
• Alcohol brief interventions
• Scared straight
®
11.
12. 00 1010 2020 3030 4040 5050 6060 7070
Did homework at age 15Did homework at age 15
In program for mental impairmentIn program for mental impairment
IQ at 5 90 or moreIQ at 5 90 or more
9th %ile or better in school at 149th %ile or better in school at 14
Average or better literacy at 19Average or better literacy at 19
Data from the High/Scope Perry preschool project. Bars represent percentage in each of theData from the High/Scope Perry preschool project. Bars represent percentage in each of the
two groups. The difference in major educational performance findings between program andtwo groups. The difference in major educational performance findings between program and
non-program children is significant.non-program children is significant.
ProgramProgram No programNo program
13. 00 2020 4040 6060 8080
5 or more arrests by age 275 or more arrests by age 27
Soc.Services ever in previous 10 yearsSoc.Services ever in previous 10 years
High school graduateHigh school graduate
Home owner at age 27Home owner at age 27
$2000 or more monthly pay$2000 or more monthly pay
Further data from the High/Scope Perry preschool project. Benefits from the programFurther data from the High/Scope Perry preschool project. Benefits from the program
continue to be seen in adulthood. Bars represent percentages of each of the groups Thecontinue to be seen in adulthood. Bars represent percentages of each of the groups The
difference between program and non-program children is significant.difference between program and non-program children is significant.
ProgramProgram No programNo program
20. Crimegrip® report: Youth programmesCrimegrip® report: Youth programmes
Big brother, big sister; Quantum opportunities programme
The level of commitment and caring nature of staff on programmes.
Together with the degree of personal contact and skill at relating to
adolescents.
• Programmes incorporating more elements of the youth development
framework show more positive outcomes
Young people should be involved in programme design from idea
generation to implementation
• The programme activities should have a creative output. For
example, a performance, team record or newspaper.
• Crucial dimensions of programmes are the quality of adult-
adolescent relationships, family involvement and skill development.
• Youth development programmes should be supported by staff
training, certification programmes, and regional professional
development centres.
21. Crimegrip® report: youth programmes
The longer young people participate in programmes, and
the greater the duration of the programmes themselves,
the better the outcome.
• Let the young people drive the pace and activities. Do not
attempt to change the “mentee”.
• Young people are seen as resources to be developed, not
as problems to be managed
• Programmes should create family-like environments in
which adolescents feel safe and contain facilities which
are perceived as “places of hope”.
• Programmes should have opportunities for active
participation and set adolescents real challenges
Peer education role
22. Drugs education programmes (Tobler and Stratton
review )
Young people are seen as
resources to be
developed, not as
problems to be managed
Programmes should have
opportunities for active
participation and set
adolescents real
challenges
Peer education role
23.
24.
25. West Midlands Crimegrip®
No: ‘Scared straight’
No: didactic drugs education lectures in
schools by uniformed staff eg. ‘DARE’
No: driver education for under 17s
No: CCTV- except for car parks!
39. Alcohol –what works?
• Good information systems
• Shared intelligence applied to licensing decisions
Alcohol brief interventions
Random static roadside breath testing
Combined interventions of the Holder Community Trial namely
Responsible beverage training for bar staff
Restriction on under age sales
School and community alcohol education programmes
Drink driving controls
Point of sale and labelling alcohol information
Increasing real price of alcohol
Minimum unit price of alcohol
National restrictions on watershed advertising and alcohol sponsorship
National or international alcohol information labelling
47. UK Responsibility deal has
failed to deliver - control of
advertising and marketing to
young people
Been used to delay regulatory
and fiscal actions - increasing
real price of alcohol
Bringing in minimum unit price
as has been done now in British
Columbia, Saskatchewan and
soon in South Africa
48.
49.
50.
51. ‘Evidence-based crime reduction’
further actions
Home visiting expansion and support for young parents (the
Family Nurse Partnership )
Environmental designing out crime and the Sandwell Healthy
urban Development Unit
20 mph zones
Domestic violence strategy and investment
Shared protocols for domestic violence, drug and alcohol and
children’s safeguarding
Multiagency safeguarding hub
‘Hotspots policing’- ‘tasking’?
60. Neighbourhood policing :
Real time information
Neighbourhood tasking
Prompt response to
Anti- social behaviour
and
Environmental crime
61. Birmingham /Warwick Collaboration for
Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care
Knowledge management strand-getting research
into practice
62. ‘Evidence-based crime reduction’ : next steps
Reactivate Crimegrip® through knowledge management
strand of CLARHC?
Create a crime, social welfare and education, ‘healthy
public policy’ trials unit?
Sandwell test for multiagency safeguarding hub
Sandwell commitment to high quality trial on
universal parenting offer
Sandwell commitment to domestic violence strategy
with arrest, victim and perpetrator services
63.
64.
65. Prof Cynthia Lum ,
George Mason
University, Virginia
Crime
Evidence
based
policing
matrix
72. Acknowledgements , declaraation of interests
• John Middleton has been supported in this work by grants from the West
Midlands Branch of the Home Office 2001-2005; the National Institute of
Health Research through the Collaboration for Leadership in Applied
Health Research and Care (CLARHC) 2008-2014, and through the funding
and support of Sandwell primary care trust, Sandwell Metropolitan
Borough Council and West Midlands Police in Safer Sandwell
Partnership.
• The views expressed are his own.
• Thanks to Prof Richard Lilford, Sir Iain Chalmers, Gavin Butler formerly
WM Home Office and all those involved in Crimegrip, CLARHC and the
Safer Sandwell Partnership
75. Crimegrip® review alcohol and brief interventions
i) Wilk A, Jenson N, Havighurst, T.
"Meta-analysis of Randomised Control Trails
Addressing Brief Interventions in Heavy Alcohol Drinkers."
Journal of General Internal Medicine 1997; 12(5) 274-83.
ii) Poikolainen K.
"Effectiveness of Brief Interventions to Reduce
Alcohol Intake in Primary Care Populations;
A Meta-analysis" Preventive medicine 1999; 28: 503-9
iii) Beich A, Thorsen T, Rollnick S.
"Screening in Brief Intervention Trials Targeting Excessive
Drinkers in General Practice; Systematic Review and
Metaanalysis” BMJ 2003; 327
85. Crimegrip® review: Alcohol and brief interventions- ConclusionCrimegrip® review: Alcohol and brief interventions- Conclusion
•Brief interventions are an effective initiative to reduce alcohol misuse
•BIs should be more widely available at GP surgeries, hospitals (esp A&E).
•The evidence for very brief interventions is weak.
•The potential for delivery of BI's in other settings (eg the workplace)
should be explored,
•as should the precise characteristics and elements of the most successful
BI's.
•There is no direct evidence relating brief interventions to crime reduction.
•It remains intuitive that the earlier treatment of individuals with alcohol
problems will reduce crime and needs to be further tested,
•for example in properly constructed studies of alcohol arrest referral
schemes,
•and in setting up long term follow up for brief intervention schemes in
primary care.
86. October 27th 2006 Birmingham University
Evidence based criminology: J Middleton
87. Holder et al: Community trials
Responsible beverage training
Restricted outlets and sales to minors
Community and schools education
programmes
Drink driving controls
Labelling and point of sale information
88.
89.
90.
91. UK Responsibility deal has
failed to deliver - control of
advertising and marketing to
young people
Been used to delay regulatory
and fiscal actions - increasing
real price of alcohol
Bringing in minimum unit price
as has been done now in British
Columbia, Saskatchewan and
soon in South Africa