422 results
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2. Post hip fracture orthogeriatric care—a Canadian position paper addressing challenges in care and strategies to meet quality indicators.
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Khan, Aliya A., AbuAlrob, Hajar, Al-alwani, Hatim, Ali, Dalal S., Almonaei, Khulod, Alsarraf, Farah, Bogoch, Earl, Dandurand, Karel, Gazendam, Aaron, Juby, Angela G., Mansoor, Wasim, Marr, Sharon, Morgante, Emmett, Myslik, Frank, Schemitsch, Emil, Schneider, Prism, Thain, Jenny, Papaioannou, Alexandra, and Zalzal, Paul
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KEY performance indicators (Management) , *HIP fractures , *POSTOPERATIVE care , *MEDICAL care costs , *DISEASES , *OSTEOPOROSIS , *CLINICAL medicine , *HEALTH care teams , *ORTHOPEDICS , *ELDER care - Abstract
Introduction: Osteoporosis is a major disease state associated with significant morbidity, mortality, and health care costs. Less than half of the individuals sustaining a low energy hip fracture are diagnosed and treated for the underlying osteoporosis. Objective: A multidisciplinary Canadian hip fracture working group has developed practical recommendations to meet Canadian quality indicators in post hip fracture care. Methods: A comprehensive narrative review was conducted to identify and synthesize key articles on post hip fracture orthogeriatric care for each of the individual sections and develop recommendations. These recommendations are based on the best evidence available today. Conclusion: Recommendations are anticipated to reduce recurrent fractures, improve mobility and healthcare outcomes post hip fracture, and reduce healthcare costs. Key messages to enhance postoperative care are also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Global Research on Osteoarthritis During 1994–2023: A Scientometric Assessment of Publications and Citations.
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Vaishya, Raju, Gupta, Brij Mohan, Mamdapur, Ghouse Modin Nabeesab, Kappi, Mallikarjun M, and Vaish, Abhishek
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SERIAL publications , *DATABASES , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *PERIODICAL articles , *CITATION analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *AUTHORSHIP , *ALTMETRICS , *OSTEOARTHRITIS , *MEDICAL research , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *IMPACT factor (Citation analysis) , *MEDICAL writing , *PUBLISHING , *MEDICAL literature , *ENDOWMENT of research - Abstract
Introduction: This study presents a global research scenario in the broad domain of osteoarthritis (OA) research, using quantitative and qualitative publication and citation indicators. Methods: The study is based on 45,368 global publications, sourced from the Scopus bibliographical database, covering three decades (1994–2023). We studied the performance of the top 12 developed and top 12 developing countries. The key countries, organizations and authors at national and international levels were identified. The broad subject areas and key journals contributing to global OA research were delineated, besides identifying the broad characteristics of highly cited papers in the field. Results: The United States and China were the most productive countries, while the Netherlands and Canada made the largest citation impact. Harvard Medical School and the University of Sydney made the most contribution, while Boston University and Pfizer Inc., USA registered the highest citation impact. Hunter DJ and Guermazi A were the most productive authors, while Lohmander LS, and Hochberg MC registered the highest citation impact. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage (n = 4879) and Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases (n = 786) published the maximum papers, while Arthritis and Rheumatism and Nature Reviews Rheumatology registered the largest citation impact. The highly cited papers with 100 or more citations constituted 6.25% of the total publications. Conclusions: There has been a systematic growth of publications on OA. The research on OA was mainly done in developed countries, with the maximum publications coming from the United States of America, China and Canada. The most impactful publications on OA were from the Netherlands, Canada and the United States of America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. "I Think Peer Support Helps to Demystify People Who Have Mental Health Issues and Helps to Remove That Stigma": Exploring the Defining Characteristics and Related Challenges of Youth Peer Support Through Participatory Research.
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Halsall, Tanya, Daley, Mardi, Hawke, Lisa D., Henderson, Jo, Wilson, Anne, and Matheson, Kimberly
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MENTAL illness prevention , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *RESEARCH funding , *FOCUS groups , *AFFINITY groups , *INTERVIEWING , *WORK environment , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *ACTION research , *SOCIAL support , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Despite the emerging body of literature on the benefits of youth peer support, there is also evidence that peer support can have unintended negative impacts on peers themselves. It is important to explore what aspects of the peer role contribute to these difficulties in order to mitigate risks. This paper uses a participatory approach to examine the unique attributes of youth peer practice and the related challenges. We conducted semi-structured interviews and focus groups with both peer and non-peer staff from a community-based youth mental health program that provides peer support services (N = 29). Thematic analyses were completed using QSR NVivo. Analyses capture the defining features and related challenges of the peer support role (self-disclosure, boundaries, role confusion and dynamic recovery), and risk factors that affect peers (stigma, exposure to harm and burnout). This paper contributes to the literature on peer support as well as youth participatory evaluation. The findings will be useful to support the development of improved organizational contexts for peer practice and more effective peer support programming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Compromise on Parenting and Family Violence? Reforms to Canada's Divorce Act.
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Leckey, Robert
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DOMESTIC violence , *LAW reform , *DOMESTIC relations , *DIVORCE law - Abstract
This paper contributes to international feminist debates on shared parenting and family violence via reforms to Canada's Divorce Act, in force since 2021. Looking backwards, it reviews parliamentary debates and early judicial discussions. The documentary review reads the reforms as an unstable compromise between calls from feminist voices and experts on family violence and from groups representing fathers. Family violence is now defined broadly and declared relevant to children's welfare. But language in the statute may undermine its seriousness. Exposing the tensions underlying these reforms is useful for Canadian participants in family justice and for scholars, practitioners, and policymakers elsewhere, exemplifying the promise and perils of reform in this area. Looking ahead, the paper offers recommendations to higher courts. Appellate judges should read rules on contact with both parents and parental cooperation in the light of the new recognition of family violence, taking the latter as an overarching objective of the statute. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Abstracts of the Papers Presented at the 103rd Annual Meeting of the Potato Association of America Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada July 27- 31, 2019.
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DROUGHT tolerance , *FUMIGATION , *POTATOES , *PLANT breeding - Abstract
The lack of yield response to the N-fertilizer strategies highlights the importanceproper timing of N-fertilizer application for potatoes which will allow reduction of N-fertilizer rate without compromising tuber yield. Two potato cultivars (Vigor and Lady Claire) were used in this study and potato tubers were collected from a potato farm in Alberta, Canada. A thorough understanding of such changes is required to optimize quality and yield potential.. A study consisting of five contrasting potato cultivars was undertaken to investigate the physiological and biochemical response of potato cultivars to N rate in terms of tuber dry matter accumulation, partitioning and quality. One method for reducing N loss to the environment is growing potatoes that require less added N. Identifying Nitrogen Use Efficient (NUE) potato varieties and characterizing their response to N stress are necessary steps to breeding for NUE in potato. Three potato-based cropping sequences, wheat-potato-wheat, canola-potato-wheat, and fababean-potato-wheat were evaluated under irrigation at the Canada-Manitoba Crop Diversification Centre at Carberry, Manitoba, Canada. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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7. Abandonment: The Two Sides of Industrial Decay in Mill Creek Ravine.
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Stewart, Haeden E.
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *INDUSTRIAL sites , *SPROUTS - Abstract
Using the example of an industrial site in Edmonton, Alberta, this paper argues that industrial ruins represent instantiations of abstract abandonment, a kind of real abstraction that directly articulates to the logic of capital. Drawing from excavations of the industrial ruins of Mill Creek Ravine, one of the first industrial areas in Edmonton, this paper reveals how sites of abstract abandonment congeal critical histories of both abandonment and its afterlives. The history of these ruins, and the communities that emerged after they were abandoned materialize the failures of capitalist fantasies, as well as the sprouts that grow in its cracks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. A Balancing Act When Children Are Young: Women's Experiences in Shared Parenting Arrangements as Survivors of Domestic Violence.
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Archer-Kuhn, Beth, Hughes, Judith, Saini, Michael, Tam, Dora, Beltrano, Natalie, and Still, Marni
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CHILD care , *RESEARCH methodology , *DOMESTIC violence , *INTERVIEWING , *EXPERIENCE , *PARENTING , *HEALTH literacy , *QUALITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PARENT-child relationships , *THEMATIC analysis , *EMOTIONS , *SOCIAL services , *DIVORCE - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to add to the research literature and begin to fill the gap in knowledge about shared parenting arrangements for women with young children and who have experienced domestic violence (DV), in three Canadian provinces; Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario. Method: This paper reports on the qualitative findings from a mixed methods study on shared parenting from women with children ages 4 and under. Twenty women participated in one-on-one individual interviews through electronic platform utilizing Zoom. Thematic analysis is used to analyze the data. Results: Despite efforts to not exclusively recruit women who had experienced domestic violence (DV) from their former partner, all participants identified as survivors of DV and ongoing survivors of DV, specifically, coercive controlling behaviours. Five themes describe the women's experiences of shared parenting with young children: 1) walking a tight-rope; 2) navigating post-separation relationships; 3) emotional realities of shared parenting; 4) shared parenting outcomes; and, 5) structural challenges. Conclusions: This paper not only adds to the significant and longstanding gap in knowledge directly from women with children ages 4 and under in shared parenting relationships, and who have experienced DV, and also helps to inform social service and legal actors. It is timely with the amendments to the Divorce Act in Canada which now includes DV as a factor in determining the best interests of the child. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. A novel flexible exponent power-X family of distributions with applications to COVID-19 mortality rate in Mexico and Canada.
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Shah, Zubir, Khan, Dost Muhammad, Khan, Imad, Ahmad, Bakhtiyar, Jeridi, Mouna, and Al-Marzouki, Sanaa
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MONTE Carlo method , *AKAIKE information criterion , *ORDER statistics , *DEATH rate , *COVID-19 , *MAXIMUM likelihood statistics , *EXPONENTS - Abstract
This paper aims to introduce a novel family of probability distributions by the well-known method of the T–X family of distributions. The proposed family is called a "Novel Generalized Exponent Power X Family" of distributions. A three-parameters special sub-model of the proposed method is derived and named a "Novel Generalized Exponent Power Weibull" distribution (NGEP-Wei for short). For the proposed family, some statistical properties are derived including the hazard rate function, moments, moment generating function, order statistics, residual life, and reverse residual life. The well-known method of estimation, the maximum likelihood estimation method is used for estimating the model parameters. Besides, a comprehensive Monte Carlo simulation study is conducted to assess the efficacy of this estimation method. Finally, the model selection criterion such as Akaike information criterion (AINC), the correct information criterion (CINC), the Bayesian information criterion (BINC), the Hannan–Quinn information criterion (HQINC), the Cramer–von-Misses (CRMI), and the ANDA (Anderson–Darling) are used for comparison purpose. The comparison of the NGEP-Wei with other rival distributions is made by Two COVID-19 data sets. In terms of performance, we show that the proposed method outperforms the other competing methods included in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Similar But Different: Intimate Partner Violence Experienced by Women and Men.
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Roebuck, Benjamin S., McGlinchey, Diana, Lysova, Alexandra V., Hastie, Kristine, and Taylor, Marissa
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SELF-evaluation , *SOCIAL media , *INTIMATE partner violence , *SEX crimes , *MENTAL health , *HELP-seeking behavior , *EXPERIENCE , *DOMESTIC violence , *CRIMINAL justice system , *GENDER-based violence - Abstract
Purpose: Research on intimate partner violence (IPV) is generally focused on female survivors. However, in Canada, about half of all self-reported victims of IPV are men and 1 in 5 calls to police for domestic violence are for male victims. This paper takes a comparative approach to understanding survivors' experiences of IPV. Methods: Across Canada, 110 female and 45 male survivors of IPV were recruited through media, social media, and listservs for a survey and interviews in 2017. Results: Findings indicate areas of similarity (healthcare needs; difficulty accessing formal support; fear of false accusations) and areas of difference (availability of formal support; types of violence experienced most often; interactions with the justice system). Women and men reported similar types of IPV, with women experiencing higher rates of sexual violence, stalking, and damage to property. Women and men reported similar physical and mental health consequences following IPV. Men were less satisfied than women with the response of the justice system, and both female and male participants encountered gender bias within the justice system. Some women reported being turned away from services that were at their maximum capacity, and men reported difficulty identifying IPV-related services for male survivors. Conclusions: Findings can be used by frontline service providers and the justice system to ensure that services are gender-inclusive and gender-sensitive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Voices of Experience: Development of the Flourishing Practice Model of Capabilities of Intimate Partner Violence Specialists.
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Scott, Katreena L., Baker, Linda, Jenney, Angelique, Lopez, Jenna, Straatman, Anna-Lee, Pietsch, Nicole, Cullen, Olivia, Antwi-Mansah, Diamond, Jones, Karia, Ajibolade, Abi, Alcedo, Yennelys, Augusta-Scott, Tod, Bartko, Trish, Brenton, Angie, Brock, Deena, Burke, Diana, Buttery, Michelle, Carrier, Renee Claude, Castillo, Clara, and Champagne, Claudia
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MATHEMATICAL models , *INTIMATE partner violence , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *THEORY , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists - Abstract
Purpose : People experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV) often seek, or are referred to, specialized service providers such as shelter workers, counsellors in programs for children exposed to IPV, and facilitators for men's behaviour change programs. This paper discusses the process of collaborating with service providers and survivors across Canada to articulate the often-unrecognized knowledge and skills of IPV specialists. Methods: Work included a scoping review and analysis of 140 academic and practice papers, interviews with 62 expert service providers, eight Delphi-method surveys and over 70 hours of collaborative discussion with expert working groups of experienced service providers and survivors. Results: Areas of knowledge and skill were drafted based on the review of literature and analysis of interviews with experienced service providers, then rated in Delphi surveys, and discussed by expert working groups. Consensus was reached on the Flourishing Practice Model which identifies nine areas of capability shared across IPV specialists, as well as unique knowledge and skills used to support and collaborate with survivors, recognize and respond to infant, child and youth experiences of violence and intervene to end abusive behaviours. The "stem" recognizes the critical role of IPV specialist organizations and leaders in supporting service providers' capabilities. "Blank petals" are included to signify expertise that has not yet been documented and to recognize ongoing growth. Conclusions: The combination of methods and processes allowed for the integration of research and practice knowledge with survivor and service provider voices to gain deeper insight into the knowledge and skills of IPV specialists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Regulating cancer risk prediction: legal considerations and stakeholder perspectives on the Canadian context.
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Moreno, Palmira Granados, Knoppers, Terese, Zawati, Ma'n H., Lang, Michael, Knoppers, Bartha M., Wolfson, Michael, Nabi, Hermann, Dorval, Michel, Simard, Jacques, and Joly, Yann
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MEDICAL equipment , *DISEASE risk factors , *SOFTWARE frameworks , *MONOGENIC & polygenic inheritance (Genetics) , *MEDICAL laws , *MEDICAL software - Abstract
Risk prediction models hold great promise to reduce the impact of cancer in society through advanced warning of risk and improved preventative modalities. These models are evolving and becoming more complex, increasingly integrating genetic screening data and polygenic risk scores as well as calculating risk for multiple types of a disease. However, unclear regulatory compliance requirements applicable to these models raise significant legal uncertainty and new questions about the regulation of medical devices. This paper aims to address these novel regulatory questions by presenting an initial assessment of the legal status likely applicable to risk prediction models in Canada, using the CanRisk tool for breast and ovarian cancer as an exemplar. Legal analysis is supplemented with qualitative perspectives from expert stakeholders regarding the accessibility and compliance challenges of the Canadian regulatory framework. While the paper focuses on the Canadian context, it also refers to European and U.S. regulations in this domain to contrast them. Legal analysis and stakeholder perspectives highlight the need to clarify and update the Canadian regulatory framework for Software as a Medical Device as it applies to risk prediction models. Findings demonstrate how normative guidance perceived as convoluted, contradictory or overly burdensome can discourage innovation, compliance, and ultimately, implementation. This contribution aims to initiate discussion about a more optimal legal framework for risk prediction models as they continue to evolve and are increasingly integrated into landscape for public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Paper submitted for the nineth international drainage workshop (ICID).
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Stämpfli, Nicolas and Madramootoo, Chandra
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CORN , *PRODUCTION (Economic theory) , *WATER table , *PRODUCTION management (Manufacturing) , *SUBIRRIGATION , *MANAGEMENT , *SOILS & climate , *IRRIGATION - Abstract
The environmental benefits of water table management (WTM), as a method to reduce nitrate pollution, are well known. However, there are few published studies on the effects of WTM on water use efficiency (WUE). This paper highlights the agronomic interest of WTM for increasing WUE of irrigated grain corn production. A field study was conducted in 2001 and 2002 at a large scale WTM research facility in Québec, Canada. The region experienced periods of drought during the two growing seasons. This study shows that, by keeping the water table at 0.80 m below the soil surface, there were on average 35% increases in grain corn yields, compared to conventional free drainage. The WUEs obtained with WTM (5.1 kg m−3 in 2001 and 7.1 kg m−3 in 2002) indicate that the method is generally more water efficient than conventional sprinkler and furrow irrigation. The WUE of WTM also compares well with that of water conservation methods such as alternate furrow irrigation and deficit sprinkler irrigation. Moreover, WTM requires low inputs in terms of equipment, energy, and labour, because it makes use of existing subsurface drainage systems, which are widespread in Eastern Canada due to the region's soils and climate, and because of its design, which does not necessitate high-pressure pumps and allows for automated management. Hence, WTM appears to be an interesting alternative to conventional irrigation methods due to its combined environmental and agronomical benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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14. Health Disparities for Canada's Remote and Northern Residents: Can COVID-19 Help Level the Field?
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Gillespie, Judy
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ONLINE education , *HEALTH services accessibility , *RURAL conditions , *POPULATION geography , *HEALTH equity , *COVID-19 pandemic , *TELEMEDICINE , *HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
This paper reviews major structural drivers of place-based health disparities in the context of Canada, an industrialized nation with a strong public health system. Likelihood that the COVID-19 pandemic will facilitate rejuvenation of Canada's northern and remote areas through remote working, advances in online teaching and learning, and the increased use of telemedicine are also examined. The paper concludes by identifying some common themes to address healthcare disparities for northern and remote Canadian residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Population-Based Screening Using Low-Dose Chest Computed Tomography: A Systematic Review of Health Economic Evaluations.
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Behr, Carina M., Oude Wolcherink, Martijn J., IJzerman, Maarten J., Vliegenthart, Rozemarijn, and Koffijberg, Hendrik
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MEDICAL screening , *CHRONIC obstructive pulmonary disease , *EARLY detection of cancer - Abstract
Background: Chest low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) is a promising technology for population-based screening because it is non-invasive, relatively inexpensive, associated with low radiation and highly sensitive to lung cancer. To improve the cost-effectiveness of lung cancer screening, simultaneous screening for other diseases could be considered. This systematic review was conducted to analyse studies that published evidence on the cost-effectiveness of chest LDCT screening programs for different diseases. Methods: Scopus and PubMed were searched for English publications (1 January 2011–22 July 2022) using search terms related to screening, computed tomography and cost-effectiveness. An additional search specifically searched for the cost-effectiveness of screening for lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or cardiovascular disease. Included publications should present a full health economic evaluation of population screening with chest LDCT. The extracted data included the disease screened for, model type, country context of screening, inclusion of comorbidities or incidental findings, incremental costs, incremental effects and the resulting cost-effectiveness ratio amongst others. Reporting quality was assessed using the 2022 Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) checklist. Results: The search yielded 1799 unique papers, of which 43 were included. Most papers focused on lung cancer screening (n = 40), and three were on coronary calcium scoring. Microsimulation was the most commonly applied modelling type (n = 16), followed by life table analysis (n = 10) and Markov cohort models (n = 10). Studies reflected the healthcare context of the US (n = 15), Canada (n = 4), the UK (n = 3) and 13 other countries. The reported incremental cost-effectiveness ratio ranged from US$10,000 to US$90,000/quality-adjusted life year (QALY) for lung cancer screening compared to no screening and was US$15,900/QALY–US$45,300/QALY for coronary calcium scoring compared to no screening. Discussion: Almost all health economic evaluations of LDCT screening focused on lung cancer. Literature regarding the health economic benefits of simultaneous LDCT screening for multiple diseases is absent. Most studies suggest LDCT screening is cost-effective for current and former smokers aged 55–74 with a minimum of 30 pack-years of smoking history. Consequently, more evidence on LDCT is needed to support further cost-effectiveness analyses. Preferably evidence on simultaneous screening for multiple diseases is needed, but alternatively, on single-disease screening. Registration of systematic review: Prospective Register of Ongoing Systematic Reviews registration CRD42021290228 can be accessed https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=290228. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Propelling the Global Advancement of School Mental Health.
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Weist, Mark D., Hoover, Sharon A., Daly, Brian P., Short, Kathy H., and Bruns, Eric J.
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MENTAL health , *MENTAL health promotion , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health facilities , *WELL-being - Abstract
Rates of mental health problems and disorders in children and youth have been increasing for at least three decades, and these have escalated due to the pandemic and multiple other societal stressors. It is increasingly recognized that students and families frequently struggle to receive needed care through traditional locations such as specialty mental health centers. Upstream mental health promotion and prevention strategies are gaining support as a public health approach to supporting overall population well-being, better utilizing a limited specialty workforce, and reducing illness. Based on these recognitions, there has been a progressive and escalating movement toward the delivery of mental health support to children and youth "where they are," with a prominent and more ecologically valid environment being schools. This paper will provide a brief review of the escalating mental health needs of children and youth, advantages of school mental health (SMH) programs in better meeting these needs, example model SMH programs from the United States and Canada, and national and international SMH centers/networks. We conclude with strategies for further propelling the global advancement of the SMH field through interconnected practice, policy, and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Mental Health of Canadian Military-Connected Children: A Qualitative Study Exploring the Perspectives of Service Providers.
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Hill, Shannon, Williams, Ashley, Khalid-Khan, Sarosh, Reddy, Pappu, Groll, Dianne, Rühland, Lucia, and Cramm, Heidi
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LIFESTYLES , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MILITARY medicine , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *FAMILIES of military personnel , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *PARENT-child relationships , *CONTENT analysis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
The military lifestyle can be defined by a triad of unique stressors: frequent relocation, parental absence, and risk of injury, illness and/or death of a serving member. Research has suggested that this unique triad of stressors can impact the mental health of children and youth living in military families. However, research focusing on the mental health of children and youth living in military families overwhelmingly focuses on the American context. Due to key contextual differences, it is unclear to what extent the American findings are representative of military-connected children and youth living in other geographical contexts, such as Canada. A large qualitative study was conducted to explore the mental health of military-connected children in Canada from three perspectives: child, parent, and service provider. This paper reports on the service provider findings. Using individual semi-structured interviews, data were collected from 11 service providers. Data analysis was guided by qualitative content analysis. Two main themes emerged: (1) the mental health of children living in military families may be impacted by the military lifestyle stressors, and (2) the mental health of children living in military families can be impacted by the accessibility and availability of mental health services. While this qualitative study builds upon recent Canadian work that has considered the service provider perspective, additional research is needed to better understand the experiences of service providers who support military-connected children and youth. Highlights: American research shows that the military lifestyle factors can impact the mental health of military-connected children. The mental health of military-connected children has yet to be extensively explored in Canada. The mental health of children living in Canadian military families may be impacted by the military lifestyle stressors. The mental health of Canadian military-connected children can be impacted by the accessibility and availability of mental health services. Our findings can help build capacity and knowledge for service providers who support Canadian military-connected children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Multi-technique approach for estimating groundwater transit time through the saturated zone of an unconfined granular aquifer in Quebec, Canada.
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Miled, Chaima, Chesnaux, Romain, Walter, Julien, Boumaiza, Lamine, and Paré, Maxime C.
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AQUIFERS , *GROUNDWATER , *GROUNDWATER management , *GROUNDWATER sampling , *GROUNDWATER recharge , *GROUNDWATER flow , *FARM management , *AQUIFER pollution - Abstract
Agricultural activities can generate contaminants that enter underlying granular aquifers and become transported within the groundwater to adjacent streams. This paper reports on estimation of the transit time of groundwater through a saturated granular unconfined aquifer in an agricultural region of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec (Canada). A multi-technique approach is applied, integrating analytical, hydrogeochemical, and numerical methods—to determine groundwater flow from a recharge (wetland) to discharge zone (groundwater seep). Fieldwork observations, including borehole drilling, soil/groundwater sampling, and piezometers, were combined with laboratory measurements of soil hydrogeological properties and stable (δ18OH2O and δ2HH2O)/radioactive (3H) isotopes in the collected groundwater. The Dupuit–Forchheimer-based analytical method used here estimated a groundwater transit time of 7.75 years, whereas the hydrogeochemical-based and three-dimensional FEFLOW numerical method produced estimates of 7.34 and 7.27 years, respectively. The similarity of the three estimates highlights the robustness of the approach, which integrates field data to produce accurate assessments of groundwater transit time. This multi-technique approach will help in the sustainable management of groundwater resources and for preparing effective environmental plans for agricultural practices in areas underlain by aquifers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Nurse practitioners in the emergency department: a discussion paper.
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Drummond, Alan J. and Bingley, Michael
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NURSE practitioners , *EMERGENCY medical services , *NURSES , *NURSING , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
Explores the role of nurse practitioners (NP) in the emergency department (ED) in Canada. Definition of NP; Special groups commonly referred to as NPs; International perspectives on ED nurse practitioners; Educational requirements for ED service; Benefits and pitfalls of ED nurse practitioners; Real imperative for introducing nurse practitioners in the ED; Barriers to the introduction of NPs into the ED.
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- 2003
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20. Celebrating and Preserving Educational Technology History in Canada: the AMTEC History Project.
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Janes, Diane, Ives, Cindy, and Crowley, Chris
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HISTORY of technology , *CANADIAN history , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *TEACHING aids , *COMMUNICATION in education - Abstract
This paper examines the roots of the Association for Media and Technology in Education (AMTEC) in Canada and its connections to global educational technology and media organizations including the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT). The AMTEC History Project, which is preserving memories, voices and documents related to the field of educational technology in Canada, celebrates the 50th anniversary of AMTEC in the context of the 100th anniversary of AECT. Generations of AECT leaders had a substantive influence on the history of AMTEC. Interviews with memory keepers as part of this history project revealed the importance of communication, collaboration, networking, persistence, and a learning mindset for those engaged as educational technologists, as they navigated change. Students, academics, and practitioners of educational technology may benefit from lessons learned by the Canadian pioneers of multi-media instruction and research collected in this project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Fracture definitions in observational osteoporosis drug effects studies that leverage healthcare administrative (claims) data: a scoping review.
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Konstantelos, N., Rzepka, A. M., Burden, A. M., Cheung, A. M., Kim, S., Grootendorst, P., and Cadarette, S. M.
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EVALUATION of medical care , *CINAHL database , *DIPHOSPHONATES , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *HIP fractures , *ULNA injuries , *HEALTH insurance reimbursement , *OSTEOPOROSIS , *HUMERUS , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDLINE , *BONE fractures , *RADIUS fractures , *VERTEBRAL fractures , *FEMORAL fractures - Abstract
Summary: Healthcare administrative (claims) data are commonly utilized to estimate drug effects. We identified considerable heterogeneity in fracture outcome definitions in a scoping review of 57 studies that estimated osteoporosis drug effects on fracture risk. Better understanding of the impact of different fracture definitions on study results is needed. Purpose: Healthcare administrative (claims) data are frequently used to estimate the real-world effects of drugs. Fracture incidence is a common outcome of osteoporosis drug studies. We aimed to describe how fractures are defined in studies that use claims data. Methods: We searched MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), CINAHL (EBSCO), and gray literature for studies published in English between 2000 and 2020 that estimated fracture effectiveness (hip, humerus, radius/ulna, vertebra) or safety (atypical fracture of the femur, AFF) of osteoporosis drugs using claims data in Canada and the USA. Literature searches, screening and data abstraction were completed independently by two reviewers. Results: We identified 57 eligible studies (52 effectiveness, 3 safety, 2 both). Hip fracture was the most common fracture site studied (93%), followed by humerus (66%), radius/ulna (59%), vertebra (61%), and AFF (9%). Half (n = 29) of the studies did not indicate specific data sources, codes, or cite a validation paper. Of the papers with sufficient detail, heterogeneity in fracture definitions was common. The most common definition within each fracture site was used by less than half of the studies that examined effectiveness (12 definitions in 29 hip fracture papers, 8 definitions in 17 humerus papers, 8 definitions in 13 radius/ulna papers, 9 definitions in 15 vertebra papers), and 3 definitions among 4 AFF papers. Conclusion: There is ambiguity and heterogeneity in fracture outcome definitions in studies that leverage claims data. Better transparency in outcome reporting is needed. Future exploration of how fracture definitions impact study results is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. The Rise of the Mailbox Rule and Formation of Contracts in English, US and Canadian Law.
- Author
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Kovac, Mitja
- Subjects
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CONTRACTS , *COMPARATIVE law , *JURISDICTION - Abstract
The proper interpretation of offers and acceptances has, despite their undisputable role in the formation of contracts, received relatively little theoretical and comparative analysis in recent years. The notorious legal question of when a contract is considered to have been formed is a fundamental concept in all legal systems, yet its nature remains poorly understood and controversial. Moreover, recent doctrinal and jurisprudential developments in English, French, US, German, and Canadian law of contracts call for further systematic assessment of this fascinating topic. This paper seeks to provide a systematic comparative evaluation of the disparate doctrines governing offer and acceptance and the consequential formation of contracts in English, US, German, French, and Canadian law of contracts. While employing well-defined normative criteria of justice and wealth-maximization, it identifies the aspects of suboptimal reliance, rent-seeking, cost-avoidance, and opportunistic revocations and provides a set of economically inspired arguments for justification of the mailbox rule. The paper is an attempt to determine how much new light the comparative analysis of law can shed on the puzzling issues of offer and acceptance so as to help clarify them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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23. Predicting health outcomes in dogs using insurance claims data.
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Debes, Christian, Wowra, Johannes, Manzoor, Sarosh, and Ruple, Audrey
- Subjects
- *
PET health insurance , *INSURANCE claims , *MACHINE learning , *DOGS , *FORECASTING , *PETS - Abstract
In this paper we propose a machine learning-based approach to predict a multitude of insurance claim categories related to canine diseases. We introduce several machine learning approaches that are evaluated on a pet insurance dataset consisting of 785,565 dogs from the US and Canada whose insurance claims have been recorded over 17 years. 270,203 dogs with a long insurance tenure were used to train a model while the inference is applicable to all dogs in the dataset. Through this analysis we demonstrate that with this richness of data, supported by the right feature engineering, and machine learning approaches, 45 disease categories can be predicted with high accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. Absent and Problematic: The Representation of Fathers in the Program Policies of Organizations that Provide Family-Centred Services in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.
- Author
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Webb, Jessica M., Giles, Audrey R., and Darroch, Francine. E.
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FATHERHOOD , *MASCULINITY , *PARENTING education , *PATIENT participation , *FAMILY health , *FATHERS , *FAMILY-centered care , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis software , *FAMILY services , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Parenting education interventions and parenting programs are important for health promotion efforts among children and families; however, the majority of parenting programs are directed towards and attended by mothers. This is problematic because research has consistently demonstrated that fathers' active participation in the family can have a positive influence on mothers' well-being, children's self-esteem, success in school, and interpersonal relationships. In this paper, using an intersectional poststructuralist framework, document analysis, and Bacchi and Goodwin's "What's the problem represented to be" approach (WPR), we analyzed the program policies of 12 organizations that provide family-centred services in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. We identified the following three discourses: organizations strive to be client-centred and provide choices; organizations want to empower their participants; and women need safe place to raise their families. Our analysis revealed that fathers are absent or represented as problems in program policies, and that this has consequences for not only fathers but also mothers and children. Highlights: Dominant discourses of gender are upheld through the exclusion of fathers in program policies. The exclusion of fathers in policies produces them as either absent/problematic and can adversely affect families. Organizations uphold damaging discourses of masculinity that can undermine efforts to prioritize the needs of mothers. Changing language in policies may help family-centred organizations shift services and better support families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. Medical Assistance in Dying: A Review of Related Canadian News Media Texts.
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Brassolotto, Julia, Manduca-Barone, Alessandro, and Zurbrigg, Paige
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ASSISTED suicide , *PUBLIC opinion , *FEDERAL legislation , *HEALTH equity - Abstract
Medical assistance in dying (MAiD) was legalized in Canada in 2016. Canadians' opinions on the service are nuanced, particularly as the legislation changes over time. In this paper, we outline findings from our review of representations of MAiD in Canadian news media texts since its legalization. These stories reflect the concerns, priorities, and experiences of key stakeholders and function pedagogically, shaping public opinion about MAiD. We discuss this review of Canadian news media on MAiD, provide examples of four key themes we identified (vulnerability, autonomy, dignity, and human rights), and discuss their implications for health policy and equity. Though key stakeholders share the values of autonomy, dignity, and human rights, they appeal to them in diverse ways, sometimes with conflicting policy demands. These representations offer a useful gauge of how views about MAiD continue to shift alongside changes in federal legislation. These stories can influence related policies, respond to the powerful voices that shape MAiD legislation, and have the potential to change national conversations. Our analysis adds to the existing body of scholarship on MAiD by examining post-Bill C-7 news media, identifying related health equity issues and tensions, and discussing potential impacts of MAiD's representations in news media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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26. "Working on a Shoestring": Critical Resource Challenges and Place-Based Considerations for Telehealth in Northern Saskatchewan, Canada.
- Author
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Leader, Joelena, Bighead, Charles, Hunter, Patricia, and Sanderson, Roderick
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- *
ABORIGINAL Canadians , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SOCIAL support , *STRATEGIC planning , *RURAL conditions , *COMMUNITY health services , *INTERNET access , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DECISION making , *TELEMEDICINE , *BIOETHICS - Abstract
Rural, remote, and northern Indigenous communities in Canada frequently face limited access to healthcare services with ongoing physician and staff shortages, inadequate infrastructure, and resource challenges. These healthcare gaps have produced significantly poorer health outcomes for people living in remote communities than those living in southern and urban regions who have timely access to care. Telehealth has played a critical role in bridging long-standing gaps in accessing healthcare services by connecting patients and providers across distance. While the adoption of telehealth in Northern Saskatchewan is growing, its initial implementation faced several barriers related to limited and stretched human and financial resources, infrastructure challenges such as unreliable broadband, and a lack of community involvement and engaged decision-making. Emerging ethical issues during the initial implementation of telehealth in community contexts have been wide ranging including concerns around privacy that have also shaped patients' experiences and particularly the need to consider place and space within rural contexts. Drawing from a qualitative study with four Northern Saskatchewan communities, this paper offers critical perspectives on the resource challenges and place-based considerations that are shaping telehealth in the Saskatchewan context and provides recommendations and lessons learned that could inform other Canadian regions and countries. This work responds to the ethics of tele-healthcare in rural communities in Canada and contributes perspectives of community-based service providers, advisors, and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. Applying a science-forward approach to groundwater regulatory design.
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Curran, Deborah, Gleeson, Tom, and Huggins, Xander
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- *
GROUNDWATER , *RIGHT to water , *DESIGN failures , *INDIGENOUS rights , *WATER rights - Abstract
Groundwater sustainability is challenged by the difference between legal and scientific understanding of groundwater, as well as the lack of focused attention to regulatory design in the literature on groundwater institutions, governance and management. The purpose of this paper is to use the scientific characteristics of groundwater to direct the necessary elements of regulatory design for this unique element. Developing interdisciplinary language that could be applied in any jurisdiction or region, the article describes seven groundwater characteristics as processes, functions, qualities, physical sustainability, scale, information and data, and physical state. Using these characteristics of groundwater embeds the scientific understanding of groundwater into regulatory design and enables the expression of new values such as Indigenous rights to water. Applying these scientific characteristics to a case study of new groundwater regulation in a subnational jurisdiction in the Global North—British Columbia (BC), Canada—highlights the failure of regulatory design even in a well-resourced jurisdiction where environmental regulation is the norm. Groundwater in BC is extremely heterogeneous in process and function, with low observation density and undefined sustainability goals where regulations are applied uniformly. Looking forward, three recommendations can be drawn using the scientific characteristics of groundwater to improve regulatory design in BC: defining sustainability goals and ecological thresholds; regionalizing and prioritizing; and long-term planning. This science-forward and interdisciplinary approach has implications for states with customary water entitlements and multiple legal orders. It also provides practitioners with an interdisciplinary language that can be useful for assessing current and future regulatory design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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28. Distributed access control for information-centric networking architectures using verifiable credentials.
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Alzahrani, Bander, Fotiou, Nikos, Albeshri, Aiiad, Almuhaimeed, Abdullah, and Alsubhi, Khalid
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- *
STORE location , *SOFTWARE-defined networking , *TRUST , *ACCESS control - Abstract
Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is an emerging paradigm that allows users to retrieve content items securely, independently of their location. Therefore, an item may be stored in a location outside the administrative realm of its owner (e.g., cache, CDN node). In this paper, we propose a solution that allows these 3rd party storage nodes to verify that a user is authorized to access a a particular content item. We consider an SDN-based ICN deployment and we leverage Verifiable Credentials to build chains of trust, as well as to express users' capabilities. With our solution, users can prove authorization using a single message that can be integrated into a content request. Additionally, verifying entities do not have to store any secret. Our solutions support delegation, and it is lightweight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. A logarithmically amortising temperature effect for supervised learning of wheat solar disinfestation of rice weevil Sitophilus oryzae (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) using plastic bags.
- Author
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Abdelsamea, Mohammed M., Gaber, Mohamed Medhat, Ali, Aliyuda, Kyriakou, Marios, and Fawki, Shams
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- *
RICE weevil , *SUPERVISED learning , *INSECT pests , *TEMPERATURE effect , *BEETLES , *BROMOMETHANE , *WHEAT , *GRAIN - Abstract
This work investigates the effectiveness of solar heating using clear polyethylene bags against rice weevil Sitophilus oryzae (L.), which is one of the most destructive insect pests against many strategic grains such as wheat. In this paper, we aim at finding the key parameters that affect the control heating system against stored grain insects while ensuring that the wheat grain quality is maintained. We provide a new benchmark dataset, where the experimental and environmental data was collected based on fieldwork during the summer in Canada. We measure the effectiveness of the solution using a novel formula to describe the amortising temperature effect on rice weevil. We adopted different machine learning models to predict the effectiveness of our solution in reaching a lethal heating condition for insect pests, and hence measure the importance of the parameters. The performance of our machine learning models has been validated using a 10-fold cross-validation, showing a high accuracy of 99.5% with 99.01% recall, 100% precision and 99.5% F1-Score obtained by the Random Forest model. Our experimental study on machine learning with SHAP values as an eXplainable post-hoc model provides the best environmental conditions and parameters that have a significant effect on the disinfestation of rice weevils. Our findings suggest that there is an optimal medium-sized grain amount when using solar bags for thermal insect disinfestation under high ambient temperatures. Machine learning provides us with a versatile model for predicting the lethal temperatures that are most effective for eliminating stored grain insects inside clear plastic bags. Using this powerful technology, we can gain valuable information on the optimal conditions to eliminate these pests. Our model allows us to predict whether a certain combination of parameters will be effective in the treatment of insects using thermal control. We make our dataset publicly available under a Creative Commons Licence to encourage researchers to use it as a benchmark for their studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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30. Increasing incidence of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a 17-year population-based study.
- Author
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Paudel, Yuba Raj, Sommerfeldt, Mark, and Voaklander, Don
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- *
ANTERIOR cruciate ligament surgery , *ANTERIOR cruciate ligament injuries , *AGE groups - Abstract
Purpose: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are one of the most frequently studied injuries in orthopedic care and research. However, limited epidemiological data are available in Canada regarding trend and distribution of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). In this paper, our purpose was to assess trends of ACLR between 2002/03 and 2018/19 by age, sex, season of surgery, and location (inpatient vs outpatient) of surgery. Methods: In this descriptive epidemiological study of retrospective data available from Alberta Ministry of Health, we report annual incidence of ACLR between 2002/03 until 2018/19 among Albertans aged 10 years and older. Information was collected by authors from physician claims database for primary ACLR and revision ACLR and linked with other databases. Incidence proportions (number of ACLR/100,000 population) were calculated and compared by age category and gender over the study period. Results: A total of 28,401 primary ACLR and 2085 revision ACLR were identified during the study period. Age-standardized annual incidence of primary ACLR increased from 40.6 to 51.2 per 100,000 population aged 10 years and older. Average annual increase in ACLR incidence was higher among females (1.8% per years) compared to males (0.96% per year). The overall peak incidence and peak incidence among males was observed in 20–29 year age group, whereas peak incidence in females was observed in 10–19 years of age. The number of ACLR in females outnumbers those among males for 10–19 year age group. Generally, a lower proportion of ACLR were conducted in summer compared to other seasons. Primary ACLR conducted in outpatient setting increased from 72% in 2002/03 to 97% in 2018/19. Conclusion: The incidence of ACLR is increasing in Alberta, especially among females and among younger cohorts under 20 years of age. This information can help clinicians to provide patient education and policy-makers to design and implement targeted ACL injury prevention programs. Level of evidence: Level III. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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31. Who's Going to Keep Us Safe? Surviving Domestic Violence and Shared Parenting During Covid-19.
- Author
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Archer-Kuhn, Beth, Hughes, Judith, Saini, Michael, Still, Marni, Beltrano, Natalie, and Tam, Dora
- Subjects
- *
SAFETY , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *CO-parents , *RESEARCH methodology , *DOMESTIC violence , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL isolation , *RESEARCH funding , *THEMATIC analysis , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *DIVORCE , *CONTROL (Psychology) - Abstract
This paper discusses the experiences during COVID-19 of mothers who have young children, are survivors of domestic violence and who share parenting to highlight the further unsafe situations survivors of violence and their children were placed in during the pandemic. Part of a larger mixed methods study, these participants (n = 19) from three Canadian provinces, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario, engaged in virtual individual one-on-one interviews via zoom. Using thematic analysis, four themes emerged from the data: 1) increased use of coercive controlling behaviors; 2) fear of the unknown; 3) lack of supports; and, 4) finding balance. Direct quotes are used to highlight the meaning of each theme. We outline the challenges these women have that are in addition to those experienced by many during COVID-19 times (increased stress, isolation, disconnect from supports, financial challenges). These include managing the shared parenting arrangements with a former abusive partner who used the pandemic as a further opportunity for coercive controlling behaviors under the guise of the public health order. The mothers were left to manage the difficult exchanges with a former abusive partner and unknown circumstances of the pandemic without guidance and support from legal actors. There will need to be a prioritization of the safety of mothers and their children in post-divorce parenting arrangements both during times of a community lockdown such as during the pandemic and also during non-pandemic times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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32. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 30th Annual Meeting of the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback.
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- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *BIOFEEDBACK training - Abstract
Presents the abstracts of scientific paper presented at the 30th Annual Meeting of the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback in Vancouver, British Columbia.
- Published
- 1999
33. Measuring Stigma Towards People with Opioid Use Problems: Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Opening Minds Provider Attitudes Towards Opioid-Use Scale (OM-PATOS).
- Author
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Knaak, Stephanie, Patten, Scott, and Stuart, Heather
- Subjects
- *
CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *EXPLORATORY factor analysis , *SOCIAL stigma , *FACTOR analysis , *FACTOR structure - Abstract
Many countries are experiencing an ongoing opioid crisis characterized by high rates of opioid use problems, overdose, poisoning, and death. Stigma has been identified as a central problem for seeking and receiving quality services from health providers and first respondents. The Mental Health Commission of Canada developed a scale that could be used to measure stigma in this population, as no such scale currently exists. This paper provides the results of psychometric testing of this new scale, known as the Opening Minds Provider Attitudes Towards Opioid-Use Scale (OM-PATOS), using exploratory (EFA) and confirmatory (CFA) factor analysis. EFA findings showed a 15 item 2-factor solution, with subscales of 'attitudes' (6 items) and 'behaviours/motivation to help' (9 items). The confirmatory factor analysis provided some preliminary confirmation of the factor structure suggested by the exploratory analyses, but further research with larger samples is needed to fully confirm the factor structure. Overall, results support the use of the 15-item scale with health professionals and first responders, with factors used for descriptive value rather than as calculated subscales until further research can be completed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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34. Large deformation dynamic analysis of progressive failure in layered clayey slopes under seismic loading using the particle finite element method.
- Author
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Wang, Liang, Zhang, Xue, and Tinti, Stefano
- Subjects
- *
FINITE element method , *LANDSLIDES , *FAILURE analysis , *FAILURE mode & effects analysis , *TSUNAMI warning systems , *DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) - Abstract
This paper presents the failure analysis of layered clayey slopes with emphasis on the combined effect of the clay's weakening behavior and the seismic loading using the particle finite element method (PFEM). Diverse failure mechanisms have been disclosed via the PFEM modelling when the strain-weakening behavior of clay is concerned. In contrast to a single layered slope exhibiting either a shallow or a deep failure mode, a layered slope may undergo both failure modes with a time interval in between. Seismic loadings also enlarge the scale of slope failure in clays with weakening behavior. The failure of a real layered slope (i.e. the 1988 Saint-Adelphe landslide, Canada) triggered by the Saguenay earthquake is also studied in this paper. The simulation results reveal that the choice of the strain-softening value controls the slip surface of the landslide and the amplification effect is important in the triggering of the landslide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Identity-Related Factors Affecting the Mental Health of African Immigrant Youth Living in Canada.
- Author
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Olawo, Omolola, Pilkington, Beryl, and Khanlou, Nazilla
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health , *CULTURAL identity , *TELEPHONE interviewing , *SOCIAL support , *CRITICAL theory - Abstract
In countries like Canada with significant immigrant populations, immigrant youth can have various experiences that impact their identity and mental health outcomes. This paper presents findings from a study that examined the perceptions of mental health among African immigrant youth living in Canada and the factors that affect their mental health outcomes, including identity-related factors. An interpretive description design was used and eight participants were recruited. Data were gathered through in-person and phone interviews. The paper focuses on the migration factors that affect African immigrant youths' mental health. Three subthemes emerged from participants' experiences: (a) social support; (b) discrimination and othering; and (c) identity and cultural shock. Using critical theory and intersectionality, the study showed that African immigrant youths' identity and mental health were influenced by deeper socio-political and historical factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Interpolation of Precipitation Extremes on a Large Domain Toward IDF Curve Construction at Unmonitored Locations.
- Author
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Jalbert, Jonathan, Genest, Christian, and Perreault, Luc
- Subjects
- *
GAUSSIAN Markov random fields , *RAINFALL frequencies , *FLOOD control , *INTERPOLATION , *RAINFALL intensity duration frequencies , *WATER management , *FLOODS , *CURVES - Abstract
An intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) curve describes the relationship between rainfall intensity and duration for a given return period and location. Such curves are obtained through frequency analysis of rainfall data and commonly used in infrastructure design, flood protection, water management, and urban drainage systems. However, they are typically available only in sparse locations. Data for other sites must be interpolated as the need arises. This paper describes how extreme precipitation of several durations can be interpolated to compute IDF curves on a large, sparse domain. In the absence of local data, a reconstruction of the historical meteorology is used as a covariate for interpolating extreme precipitation characteristics. This covariate is included in a hierarchical Bayesian spatial model for extreme precipitations. This model is especially well suited for a covariate gridded structure, thereby enabling fast and precise computations. As an illustration, the methodology is used to construct IDF curves over Eastern Canada. An extensive cross-validation study shows that at locations where data are available, the proposed method generally improves on the current practice of Environment and Climate Change Canada which relies on a moment-based fit of the Gumbel extreme-value distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Salinity indicators in sediment through the fluvial-to-marine transition (Fraser River, Canada).
- Author
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Dashtgard, Shahin E., Wang, Aihua, Pospelova, Vera, Wang, Pei-Ling, La Croix, Andrew, and Ayranci, Korhan
- Subjects
- *
SEAWATER , *SALINITY , *DINOFLAGELLATE cysts , *SEDIMENTS , *SALINE waters , *COASTAL sediments - Abstract
Many sediment attributes have been proposed as proxies for determining salinity conditions under which sediment is deposited, and six attributes (Sr/Ba-HAc, Sr/Ba-NH4Ac, δ13Corg, C/N, and the relative abundances and concentrations of dinoflagellate cysts) are compared here. In this paper, sediment attributes from the Fraser River Delta, Canada and surrounding coastal areas are compared by depositional position along the fluvial-to-marine transition, by salinity, and by sedimentological characteristics. Along the fluvial-to-marine transition, most attributes exhibit distinct trends between parts of the river that experience sustained marine water (saltwater) influence over seasonal and tidal timeframes, and parts that experience only freshwater or periodic saltwater influence. No attributes are reliable indicators of depositional position where saltwater incursion is short lived or where water is fresh. Where marine influence is sustained, Sr/Ba-HAc and Sr/Ba-NH4Ac are the most reliable positional indicators along the fluvial-to-marine transition. When compared strictly to salinity, Sr/Ba-HAc, Sr/Ba-NH4Ac, and δ13Corg all correlate predictably except in delta front and prodelta settings. Our data show that all six sediment attributes are heavily impacted by river-derived sedimentation, and it is not appropriate to compare values from strongly river-influenced settings (e.g., deltas) with those from weakly river-influenced settings (e.g., bays and estuaries). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Intimate Partner Violence and COVID-19 in Rural, Remote, and Northern Canada: Relationship, Vulnerability and Risk.
- Author
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Moffitt, Pertice, Aujla, Wendy, Giesbrecht, Crystal J., Grant, Isabel, and Straatman, Anna-Lee
- Subjects
- *
INTIMATE partner violence , *SAFETY , *HEALTH services accessibility , *RURAL conditions , *DOMESTIC violence , *VIOLENCE , *GENDER , *VICTIMS , *HOUSING , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
In rural, remote, and northern parts of Canada, the pre-existing vulnerability and risk for intimate partner violence has been exacerbated by COVID-19. The purpose of this commentary is to identify the unique impact of COVID-19 on intimate partner violence both in terms of the bearing on those experiencing abuse and on the service sector in rural, remote and northern communities where the rates of intimate partner violence and intimate partner femicide pre-pandemic are higher than in larger cities. The recommendations offered in this paper include enhanced safety planning, alternate housing for victims fleeing violence, and suggestions for service providers. We also offer ways to move forward with further research in the COVID-19 era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Cumulative and independent effects of experiences of social adversity on support for violent radicalization during the COVID-19 pandemic: the mediating role of depression.
- Author
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Miconi, Diana, Levinsson, Anna, Frounfelker, Rochelle L., Li, Zhi Yin, Oulhote, Youssef, and Rousseau, Cécile
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG adults , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL support , *RADICALISM , *DEPRESSED persons , *CRITICAL literacy - Abstract
Purpose: Social adversity experiences have increased during the pandemic and are potential risk factors for both depression and support for violent radicalization (VR). However, the cumulative and independent effects of various social adversity experiences on support for VR have yet to be explored. This paper examines the cumulative and independent effects of COVID- and non-COVID-related discrimination, exposure to violence, traditional and cyberbullying victimization on support for VR. In addition, we investigate whether depression mediates the relationship between these forms of social adversity and support for VR. Methods: A total of 6003 young adults (Mage = 27, SDage = 4.40, range 18–35) living in metropolitan areas in Canada responded to an online survey. We used multivariable regression models, controlling for socio-demographic characteristics, to infer covariate adjusted associations between social adversity measures and support for VR. Additionally, we conducted a formal mediation analysis to estimate the proportion mediated by depression. Results: There was a cumulative relationship between experiences of social adversity and support for VR (β = 1.52; 95% CI: 1.32, 1.72). COVID-related discrimination and cyberbullying victimization were independently associated with stronger support for VR. Depression partially mediated the effect of cumulative social adversity, COVID-related discrimination and cyberbullying on support for VR. Conclusion: Prevention programs during the present pandemic should prioritize decreasing discrimination and providing psychosocial support to depressed young adults who experience social adversity. Practitioners should prioritize developing programs that foster digital literacy skills and critical thinking among young adults to address the concerning impact of cyberbullying on support for VR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Scholarship, management, and leadership in academic administration: The case of Canadian university presidents and provosts.
- Author
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Lavigne, Eric, Cowley, Summer, and Sá, Creso M.
- Subjects
- *
SCHOLARSHIPS , *UNIVERSITY & college administration , *COLLEGE presidents , *JOB advertising , *STAKEHOLDERS , *EDUCATIONAL leadership - Abstract
In the last three decades, Canadian universities have grown in size and complexity and undergone deep transformations. Meanwhile, who should be appointed as highest-ranking administrative officers and what they ought to be doing once appointed has remained hotly debated. This paper examines how Canadian universities' understanding and framing of their presidents and provosts in job advertisements has changed over this last thirty-year period. Our study analysed 153 job advertisements published between 1987 and 2017 to determine how these positions were portrayed over time. The analysis relied on a conceptualization of academic administration as a combination of scholarship, management, and leadership roles. Overall, the findings show an important shift in the symbolic language used to describe these positions, shifts which appear to be linked to Canadian universities' increasing use of recruiting firms. Presidents, first depicted as respected scholars, are now portrayed as charismatic heroes, while depictions of provosts have remained largely stable, focusing on their administrative support roles. Overall, the findings suggest that popular, if unrealistic, heroic depictions of Canadian university senior administrators are becoming prevalent in the crafting of job advertisements. Recognizing how these in turn shape how stakeholders understand these positions, greater attention should be given to the crafting of these key role signals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. An Empirical Validation Method for Narrowing the Range of Poverty Thresholds.
- Author
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Notten, Geranda and Kaplan, Julie
- Subjects
- *
EMPIRICAL research , *POVERTY , *ERROR analysis in mathematics , *MEASUREMENT errors , *POVERTY rate - Abstract
Determining the threshold separating poor from non-poor populations is one of the most influential choices when measuring poverty. Commonly used selection criteria leave considerable room for discretion or are not appropriate as academic standards. This vacuum in academic guidance leads to arbitrary and/or ideologically driven choices. This can greatly influence the measurement of a societal phenomenon, and thus research and public policy decisions over a period that extends well beyond the mandate of those making that threshold decision. This paper sets out an empirical validation method that contributes to reducing the range of thresholds and thereby aids decision-makers in making that normative decision. Our method uses an absolute concept of empirical validity and requires that the microdata for measuring poverty hold additional information closely associated with poverty. The method builds on insights from theory on measurement error that, for any given threshold, some persons are wrongly identified as poor (false positives) and others are wrongly identified as not poor (false negatives), and that the reduction of one error can only be attained by increasing the other. Our method uses the additional microdata to disaggregate the population into (likely) false positives and (likely) false negatives and analyzes marginal changes in this composition as the poverty threshold becomes stricter. Using Canadian data, we show that this approach substantially narrows the range of thresholds for two unidimensional poverty indicators, namely a material deprivation and an income poverty indicator. The underlying principle of the method extends to other (unidimensional) social indicators. The analysis itself can also serve other purposes, such as deepening our understanding of poverty and the cost-effectiveness of policies to reduce it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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42. Comparison Between Ground, Helicopter, and Unmanned Aircraft System Magnetic Datasets: A Case Study from the Abitibi Greenstone Belt, Canada.
- Author
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Cunningham, Michael, Samson, Claire, Laliberté, Jeremy, Goldie, Mark, Wood, Alan, and Birkett, David
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GREENSTONE belts , *DRONE aircraft , *HELICOPTERS , *INSPECTION & review , *SIGNAL-to-noise ratio , *DATA quality - Abstract
This paper presents a direct platform-to-platform comparison of ground, helicopter, and unmanned aircraft system (UAS) magnetic data acquired over a 4.96 km2 prospective gold area in the Abitibi Greenstone Belt of the Canadian Precambrian Shield. Qualitative comparison focused on visual inspection of residual and gradient magnetic maps, focusing mainly on features associated with iron formations. Quantitative comparison employed maps of cell-by-cell absolute difference, percent difference, and coherence, as well as three global image similarity parameters: the structural similarity index, the mean squared error, and the peak signal-to-noise ratio. The qualitative comparison revealed that lateral continuity along the dominant E–W structural geological trend was better captured in the ground and UAS data than in the helicopter data. The UAS data had the additional advantage over the ground data of having undergone minimal processing. The quantitative comparison metrics were the same between all three datasets. This study showed that UAS technology is delivering the same data quality as traditional survey techniques in addition being an attractive economic and safety choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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43. Measurement invariance of the Seattle Angina Questionnaire in coronary artery disease.
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Lawal, Oluwaseyi A., Awosoga, Oluwagbohunmi, Santana, Maria J., James, Matthew T., Wilton, Stephen B., Norris, Colleen M., Lix, Lisa M., and Sajobi, Tolulope T.
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CORONARY disease , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *STANDARD deviations , *ACUTE coronary syndrome - Abstract
Purpose: The Seattle Angina Questionnaire (SAQ) is a widely used patient-reported measure of health status in patients with coronary artery disease. Comparisons of SAQ scores amongst population groups and over time rely on the assumption that its factorial structure is invariant. This study evaluates the measurement invariance of the SAQ across different demographic and clinical groups and over time. Methods: Data were obtained from the Alberta Provincial Project on Outcome Assessment in Coronary Heart Disease registry, a registry of patients who received coronary angiogram in Alberta, Canada. The study cohort consists of adult patients who completed the paper-based version of the 16-item Canadian version of the SAQ (SAQ-CAN) 2 weeks and 1-year post-coronary angiogram between 2009 and 2016. Multi-group confirmatory factor analysis was used to assess configural, weak, strong, and strict measurement invariance across age groups, sex, angina type, treatment, and over time. Model fit was assessed using the comparative fit index and root mean square error of approximation. Results: Of the 8101 patients included in these analysis, 1300 (16.1%) were at least 75 years old, while 1755 (21.7%) were female, 5154 (63.6%) were diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome, 1177 (14.5%) received coronary artery bypass graft treatment, and 3279 had complete data on the SAQ-CAN at both occasions. There was evidence of strict invariance across age, sex, and angina type, and treatment groups, but partial strict invariance was established over time. Conclusion: SAQ-CAN can be used to compare the health status of coronary artery disease patients across population groups and over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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44. Retirement Time and the Temporalities of the Migratory Life Course.
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Hepburn, Shamette
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LIFE course approach , *RETIREMENT , *MARKET exit , *LABOR market , *RETIREMENT communities - Abstract
Research has shown that forms of inequality are increasing in Canada. However, one often-overlooked form has been the inequality of retirement time, which is the period between labour market exit and the end of the life course. Divergences that persist in retirement time present opportunities for scrutiny given that they often mirror other forms of inequality across the life course. While racialized immigrants are reported to be less successful in the Canadian labour market, very little is known about their lived experiences navigating retirement time after they exit the labour market. This paper utilizes data from 20 Jamaican Canadian retirees (aged 60 and older) that follows their retirement time experiences after long-term labour market participation in Canada, in order to provide the first qualitative study focused on this significant life transition. Underscoring both precarity and agency as important facets of Jamaican Canadians' retirement time and later life, the paper highlights the interconnections of earlier life course trajectories, livelihood strategies, and their fears of perceived improvidence. It contributes to emergent scholarship on Jamaica's ageing diaspora, who are among growing cohorts of ageing Caribbean immigrants in Canada. Importantly, it foregrounds their strategic responses to the risks and opportunities that contour this lesser-researched phase of the migratory life course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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45. Arctic Athabaskan Council's petition to the Inter-American Commission on human rights and climate change—business as usual or a breakthrough?
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Szpak, Agnieszka
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CLIMATE change , *HUMAN rights , *LEGAL reasoning , *PETITIONS , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
In 2013, the Arctic Athabaskan Council representing the Arctic Athabaskan peoples filed a petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. The Council sought relief for violations of their rights resulting from rapid Arctic warming and melting caused by emissions of black carbon by Canada. The aim of the paper is to show legal complaints and arguments of a particular indigenous people, Arctic Athabaskans—arguments intended to enforce Canada's obligation to reduce or eliminate black carbon emissions, which negatively affect numerous rights of indigenous Athabaskans. Additionally, the article will point to the new legal developments and potential success of those arguments and litigation itself. The article analyses issues at the intersection of human rights, indigenous peoples and climate change. The concluding remarks attempt to answer the research questions and offer some reflections on the potential to protect indigenous peoples' rights offered by this type of advocacy strategy and, more specifically, the petition in particular. The research method adopted is that of legal-institutional analysis as well as content analysis of relevant literature (analysis of the discourse). This paper moves forward existing climate litigation literature which focuses on human rights. As Osofsky and Peel (2018) highlight, human rights-based climate litigation is a new development in the field, and this paper expands it further. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
- Full Text
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46. Performance-based funding for higher education: how well does neoliberal theory capture neoliberal practice?
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Dougherty, Kevin J. and Natow, Rebecca S.
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OUTCOME-based education , *FUNDING formulas (Education) , *EDUCATIONAL finance , *NEOLIBERALISM , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Neoliberal theories—whether the new public management, principal-agent theory, or performance management—have provided the rationale for sweeping reforms in the governance and operation of higher education. This paper expands our understanding of neoliberal theory and practice by examining a leading neoliberal reform: performance-based funding (PBF) for higher education in the USA, Europe, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere. Our analysis of PBF examines not only its impacts but also its origins and implementation. Neoliberal theory has been used not only prospectively to design and argue for certain public policies but also retrospectively to analyse the origins and implementation of neoliberal policy. Hence, this paper examines this retrospective neoliberal analysis in order to determine how well neoliberal theory helps us understand the origins and implementation of neoliberal policy: in this case, the socio-political forces that gave rise to PBF; and the political and organizational features of the processes by which PBF was implemented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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47. Innovation in mining: what are the challenges and opportunities along the value chain for Latin American suppliers?
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Calzada Olvera, Beatriz
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VALUE chains , *MINING methodology , *MINES & mineral resources , *SUPPLIERS , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *SUPPLY chains - Abstract
The mining industry, considered a traditional and conservative industry with respect to innovation, finds itself at a turning point due to the increasingly complex challenges, such as declining ore grades. These challenges have created an imperative to innovate. Parallel to the above, several digital innovations are being implemented in many mining operations across the globe. Not only do these provide solutions to the existing problems but also radically transform mining processes, increasing efficiency, profitability, and the ability to comply with stricter regulations. The incorporation of mature and incipient technologies into the mining industry has opened up many opportunities for long-established firms as well as knowledge-based start-ups. This includes potential suppliers in countries where mining accounts for a significant share of the GDP but the development of productive linkages remains suboptimal, as in Latin American countries. While in recent years, some suppliers in Latin America have made important contributions to increasing innovation in the mining industry, most suppliers in the region have not been able to do so. This paper provides an overview of the innovation paradigm of the mining sector from a global perspective, i.e., how innovation processes take place in countries with a long-established technological leadership in the mining sector, such as Australia and Canada. Given the importance of suppliers in this process, a special attention is paid to innovation in various stages of the supply chain. This is in order to provide a departure point for identifying windows of opportunity for equipment and service suppliers in Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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48. Advice from Canadian Mothers Who Express Human Milk: An Interpretive Description Qualitative Study.
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Bigalky, Jodie, Dietrich Leurer, Marie, McCabe, Janet, Mackey, April, Laczko, Dana, and Deobald, Virginia
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LACTATION , *WORK environment , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *ARTIFICIAL feeding , *SOCIAL support , *PROBLEM solving , *BREAST milk , *INTERVIEWING , *HELP-seeking behavior , *QUALITATIVE research , *INFANT nutrition , *HEALTH literacy , *BREASTFEEDING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DATA analysis software , *EMPLOYMENT reentry - Abstract
Objectives: Human milk expression has become an increasingly common means for providing milk to an infant, with women expressing to address breastfeeding problems or to allow for flexible feeding options. This study explored the experiences and recommendations of mothers who expressed human milk, with this paper reporting on the advice mothers would offer to other mothers to address common challenges. Methods: Interpretive description was used in this qualitative project. Using purposive sampling, mothers of infants aged 0–24 months who expressed human milk were recruited to participate from two health regions in western Canada. Individual, audio-taped interviews were completed with 35 women. NVIVO™ software was used for data analysis. Results: Mothers reported the desire to offer experiential advice to other mothers navigating milk expression and encouraged other mothers to seek guidance from health care professionals such as lactation consultants, peer support online, and from family and friends. Experiential knowledge shared included: (a) product recommendations, (b) expression tips, (c) support for workplace expression, (d) encouragement to seek help, and (e) moral support. Conclusions: Healthcare professionals should include evidence-based expression information as part of routine lactation support, while recognizing the importance of mother-to-mother knowledge transfer and emotional support. Services that assist mothers to determine and access pumps appropriate to their unique breastfeeding needs and goals should be offered, and the opportunity for peer support through creation of, or referral to, appropriate in-person or online support groups should be made available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Influence of Religiosity and Spirituality on Health in Canada: A Systematic Literature Review.
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Litalien, Manuel, Atari, Dominic Odwa, and Obasi, Ikemdinachi
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NON-communicable diseases , *ONLINE information services , *WELL-being , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *SPIRITUALITY , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *HEALTH status indicators , *SEX distribution , *HEALTH behavior , *MEDLINE , *ETHNIC groups , *RELIGION - Abstract
The association between religion and health has been the subject of growing interest in academia. However, limited reviews of such studies in Canada exist. The paper systematically reviews and synthesizes existing literature on the relationship between spirituality and health in Canada. Available general databases such as: Medline; Web of Science, PubMed, Sociological abstract, Social Service Abstracts, Google scholar, Humanities International Index, JSTOR, CPI.Q Canadian Periodicals, and American Theological Library Association were searched for the period between 2000 and April 2019 inclusive. Collected data were then systematically analysed for common themes about spirituality and health in Canada. In total, 151 articles were found, but only 128 had relevance with the study objectives. Overall, the analysis showed that religion and spirituality do influence health behaviours, and well-being. However, more gender-based studies need to be conducted to tease out the differences in religion/spirituality and health across different genders, and ethnic groups in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Teaching Online in an Ethic of Hospitality: Lessons from a Pandemic.
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Heringer, Rebeca
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COVID-19 pandemic , *ONLINE education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SOCIAL distancing - Abstract
With the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, teaching online became a norm for universities in Canada. Besides the challenges of teaching topics that may be impossible to be taught online, a major issue that the mandatory physical distancing brought is the relationality between teachers and students. In order to investigate how educators were making sense of such changes, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 12 education professors across Canada. In light of Derrida's and Ruitenberg's ethic of hospitality, this paper explores how the abrupt shift to online education unveiled the nature and challenges of hospitable education, especially in the online context. The implications of online instruction to professors' relationality, however, are also instrumental in illuminating the complexities and ambiguities of a teacher's responsibility even in what could be considered the "normal circumstances" of face-to-face instruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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