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Two scales representing additional constructs deemed to be of high clinical import-negative attitude towards obesity and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder-were retained for Phase 2, for a total of eight scales. Overall, we concluded that Phase 1 had been successful at generating a comprehensive set of provisional scales for inclusion in Phase 2.

Unstable extra-articular proximal phalanx fractures are common injuries to the hand that are often treated by closed reduction and percutaneous pinning. Fracture-induced shortening of the proximal phalanx leads to an extensor lag at the proximal interphalangeal joint. We describe a biomechanical study in cadaver hands to compare the ability of each of three different pin configurations to resist shortening in unstable fractures.

Seventeen fresh frozen hands were disarticulated at the proximal ends of the metacarpals. The second, third, and fourth proximal phalanges were tested. A 5-mm section of bone was resected from the mid-shaft of proximal phalanx to simulate an unstable fracture. Three techniques were employed and randomized for each finger transmetacarpophalangeal joint pinning using 1 or 2 Kirschner wires (K-wires) and periarticular cross pinning using 2 K-wires. Compressive axial loads and energy at 1 mm, 2 mm, 3 mm, 4 mm, and 5 mm of subsidence were examined.

The forces and energy required to shorten the finger for each amount of subsidence were similar for all 3 pinning techniques and for all 3 finger types. Greater amounts of shortening were found to require larger forces.

Closed reduction and percutaneous pinning using any of the presented techniques is an adequate method of treatment for unstable proximal phalanx fractures. All of the techniques were equivalent in their ability to resist axial loading, regardless of the complexity of technique, the number of pins used, or finger that was pinned.

Closed reduction and percutaneous pinning using any of the presented techniques is an adequate method of treatment for unstable proximal phalanx fractures. All of the techniques were equivalent in their ability to resist axial loading, regardless of the complexity of technique, the number of pins used, or finger that was pinned.The Scale of Positive and Negative Experience (SPANE) is widely used to measure emotional experiences, but not much is known about its cross-cultural utility. The present study evaluated the measurement invariance of the SPANE across adult samples (N = 12,635; age range = 18-85 years; 58.2% female) from 13 countries (China, Colombia, Germany, Greece, India, Italy, Japan, Poland, Portugal, Serbia, Spain, Turkey, and the United States). Configural and partial scalar invariance of the SPANE were supported. Three items capturing specific negative emotions (sad, afraid, and angry) were found to be culturally noninvariant. Our findings suggest that the SPANE's positive emotion terms and general negative emotion terms (e.g., negative and unpleasant) might be more suitable for cross-cultural studies on emotions and well-being, whereas caution is needed when comparing countries using the SPANE's specific negative emotion items.Fremanezumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody (IgG2Δa) that selectively targets calcitonin gene-related peptide and is approved in Europe for migraine prevention in adults with ≥4 migraine days/month. The Pan-European Real Life (PEARL) study is a 24-month, prospective, observational study of fremanezumab in chronic or episodic migraine. End points include proportion of patients with ≥50% reduction in monthly migraine days during 6 months of treatment (primary); changes in monthly migraine days, disability scores and acute headache medication use; adherence and persistence; and effectiveness in patients switching from another calcitonin gene-related peptide pathway-targeting monoclonal antibody. PEARL is being conducted in approximately 100 centers in 11 European countries (estimated n = 1100). PEARL will generate important real-world data on effectiveness of fremanezumab and treatment patterns in patients with chronic migraine or episodic migraine.Madagascar is a high diversity hotspot in the world, and palms are highly represented with nearly 200 endemic species (Rakotoarinivo et al., 2014). Coconut tree (Cocos nucifera) could have been introduced in Madagascar by Austronesians around AD 400 or 700 (Beaujard, 2011). Sporadic coconut trees showing very severe wilt were observed in 2016 in three localities of the western and northern coast of the island Katsepy (Sample MG16-001), Antsohyhi (MG16-004 and MG16-005) and Ambaritsatrana (MG16-010). Symptoms correspond on a severe ascendant wilt of the leaves, associated with necrosis of the inflorescences and absence of nuts and death of all trees was confirmed eventually. We investigated the implication of phytoplasma because of the apparent similarity in the symptomatology with Coconut Lethal Yellowing Disease and Coconut Lethal Decline occurring in East Africa (Mpunami et al., 1999), and because the western coast of Madagascar faces the Mozambican channel only 400 km apart from areas along the East Africagned to 16SrIV group while the closest reference sequence AF509322, 16SrXXIV-A, shared only a similarity of 0.83 (Dev. 1). Occurrence of a phytoplasma associated with a lethal yellowing type syndrome in Madagascar could represent a dangerous threat to coconut crops that play an important socio-economic role in the coastal areas, but also to the many endemic palm species already on high extinction risk.Pearl millet (Cenchrus americanus L.) field-grown plants of cv. 7042S shown unusual water-soaked lesions on leaf tips spreading towards the leaf base from Manasagangothri region (12.31°N 76.61°E), Karnataka, a southern Indian state during March 2020. Later those infected plants showed extensive necrosis and typical leaf blight symptoms with 70% disease incidence and 59% severity. Surface sterilized (3 x 3 mm) infected leaf tissues were crushed in 1mL sterile distilled water and streaked onto nutrient agar media. Bright-yellowish, circular, mucoid single bacterial colonies (PPi-M1) with regular margin were recovered after 24 hours of incubation at 28oC, and the same bacterial colonies were used for further biochemical and molecular characterization. The isolate, PPi-M1 found as gram-negative rods, gelatin, starch hydrolysis negative, and catalase, indole production positive. The partial sequence of 16S rRNA gene (primers 27F/1492R) of the isolate PPi-M1 was amplified, sequenced, and curated sequence submitted will supplement future pearl millet breeding programs, and to our knowledge, this is the first report of P. s. subsp. indologenes inciting pearl millet leaf blight disease in India.Kalanchoe pinnata (Lam.) Pers. [syn. Bryophyllum pinnatum (Lam.) Oken] is an important medicinal agent in southern China. The succulent leaves of this plant are used in the treatment of cholera, bruises, uri-nary diseases and whitlow. In Oct. 2019, leaf spots were detected on K. pinnata plants in Chengmai County, Hainan Province, China. Lesions with brown to black margins were irregularly shaped and associated with leaf margins. Spots coalesced to form larger lesions (Fig. S1-A), with black pycnidia present in more mature lesions. Symptomatic K. pinnata were found with 10-20% incidence during the humid winters of Hainan Province. Leaf tissues of 10 symptomatic plants were collected and surface sterilized in 70% ETOH for 30s, 0.1% HgCl2 for 30 s, rinsed 3x with sterile distilled water for 30s, placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) amended with 30mg/L of kanamycin sulfate, and incubated at 25°C in the dark for 3-5 days. Four fungal isolates were obtained using a single-spore isolation method. The colonies were fal and morphological characteristics of the strain inoculated and could not be isolated from the controls fulfilling Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot on K. pinnata caused by D. longicolla in China. This disease is of concern since Phomopsis diseases are common in K. pinnata fields and can cause significant reduction in yield. References White, T. J., et al. 1990. Page 315 in PCR Protocols A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, CA. DOI 10.1016/0167-7799(90)90215-J Carbone, I., and Kohn, L. M. 1999. Mycologia. 91553. DOI 10.2307/3761358 Glass, N. L., and Donaldson, G. C. 1995. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 611323. DOI 10.1002/bit.260460112 Hobbs, T. W. et al. 1985. Mycologia. 77 535. DOI 10.2307/3793352.Vaccination is an important public health intervention, but its effectiveness depends upon the uptake of vaccination reaching sufficient levels to yield 'herd' immunity. While the majority of the UK hold positive attitudes about vaccination, some people, including health professionals, decline vaccinations. This article reviews the evidence relating to vaccine hesitancy, its underlying factors and the sociodemographic variations. A second article will review the evidence relating to strategies to address vaccine hesitancy and promote vaccination acceptance.COVID-19 provided significant challenges for community services and care homes. Residential and nursing care patients are considered highly vulnerable to the coronavirus due to their physical needs and environmental factors. Significant concern was raised with personal protective equipment (PPE) availability and appropriate training and support in local care homes. Members of the district nursing team and community services formed a team to deliver face to face training and support to care home workers to improve PPE adherence and reduce risks of transmission. Visits were offered to all 46 care homes in the locality and over 55 visits for teaching were performed in the first month. Challenges were faced with managing and prioritising frontline clinical duties. Feedback was overwhelmingly positive and care staff benefited from face-to-face delivery of education to support best practice.Florence Nightingale is credited with reforming the profession of nursing, and her teachings allowed nursing to be perceived as an almost exclusively female career. However, the long history of men's role in nursing before Nightingale is frequently ignored. PF-05221304 Males currently account for one in ten UK nurses, with that figure even less in community nursing, and the ones present receive differential treatment when it comes to hiring and promotion, career opportunities, and stigma associated with gender perceptions. This article attempts to gain a better understanding of the problems that face workforce planning with regards to the lack of men in community nursing.District nurses routinely visit and care for older patients who are prescribed multiple medicines. Older people living with multiple comorbidities and polypharmacy are commonly encountered in community nursing. It is important for nurses to recognise that regular medicines use and age-related physiological changes in older people place them at greater risk of medication-related harm. In order to understand this, an underpinning knowledge of the pharmacological principles relating to older people is required. This review will consider the effects of age-related changes and the impact of ageing on pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. The relationship between polypharmacy and identifying high-risk drugs and adverse drug events will be explored. Medicines use in older adults with multimorbidity including frailty will be discussed. The role of district nurses in supporting older people with medicines optimisation will be considered, with a focus on how the community nurse can contribute to reducing avoidable harm for patients.

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