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The outputs of the second step were tested by (3) feedback from three external international experts in ontologies and (4) application of the prototype upper-level BCIO to annotating published reports; this informed the final development of the upper-level BCIO. Results The final upper-level BCIO specifies 42 entities, including the BCI scenario, elaborated across 21 entities and 7 relationship types, and the BCI evaluation study comprising 10 entities and 9 relationship types. BCI scenario entities include the behaviour change intervention (content and delivery), outcome behaviour, mechanism of action, and its context, which includes population and setting. These entities have corresponding entities relating to the planning and reporting of interventions and their evaluations. Conclusions The upper level of the BCIO provides a comprehensive and systematic framework for representing BCIs, their contexts and their evaluations.Background Dengue is a disease of major global importance. While most symptomatic infections are mild, a small proportion of patients progress to severe disease with risk of hypovolaemic shock, organ dysfunction and death. In the absence of effective antiviral or disease modifying drugs, clinical management is solely reliant on supportive measures. Obesity is a growing problem among young people in Vietnam and is increasingly recognised as an important risk factor for severe dengue, likely due to alterations in host immune and inflammatory pathways. Metformin, a widely used anti-hyperglycaemic agent with excellent safety profile, has demonstrated potential as a dengue therapeutic in vitro and in a retrospective observational study of adult dengue patients with type 2 diabetes. This study aims to assess the safety and tolerability of metformin treatment in overweight and obese dengue patients, and investigate its effects on several clinical, immunological and virological markers of disease severity. Methods Th th 2020).The iatrogenic wound is defined as infection, necrosis, or defect of the skin and deep soft tissue resulting from a medical procedure. At present, the main factors causing iatrogenic wounds include surgery, radiotherapy, interventional therapy, and drugs etc. Iatrogenic wounds are attributed to iatrogenic injuries that are in accordance with ethics, laws, and relevant regulations, and the degree of these injuries is within an acceptable range. Medical staff can reduce the incidence of iatrogenic wounds and the degree of injury by improving medical technology and responsibility in medical procedures. Iatrogenic wounds can be repaired and the patient's physical and mental health can be restored with targeted medical treatment. How to effectively prevent and treat iatrogenic wounds so as to minimize the degree of iatrogenic injuries to patients needs further exploration. To sum up, the purpose to publish this special topic in this issue is to arouse the peer's attention to the prevention and treatment of iatrogenic wounds.In shock stage of extensive burns, the hemodynamics shows inherent and continuously dynamic changes, which gradually transits from " low output and high resistance" in early shock stage to " high output and low resistance" in the stage of edema reabsorption, with significant time-dependence. Normal values of hemodynamic parameters are not the endpoint of resuscitation for burn shock. To pursue the normalization of hemodynamic in shock stage will lead to excessive resuscitation. Urine output per hour is still the " gold standard" for burn shock resuscitation. Dynamic observation of hemodynamic variables can assist clinical treatment, and has more significant roles in refractory shock, cases combined with injuries of heart, lung or kidney, and special populations of the elderly and children.The elucidation of plant health status requires quantifying multiple molecular metabolism markers. Until now, the extraction of these biomarkers is performed independently, with different extractions and protocols. This approach is inefficient, since it increases laboratory time, amount of sample, and could introduce biases or difficulties when comparing data. To limit these drawbacks, we introduce a versatile protocol for quantifying seven of the most commonly analysed biomarkers (photosynthetic pigments, free amino acids, soluble sugars, starch, phenolic compounds, flavonoids and malondialdehyde) covering substantial parts of plant metabolism, requiring only a minimum sample amount and common laboratory instrumentation. The procedures of this protocol rely on classic methods that have been updated to allow their sequential use, increasing reproducibility, sensibility and easiness to obtain quantitative results. Our method has been tested and validated over an extended diversity of organisms (Arabidopsis thaliana, Solanum lycopersicum, Olea europaea, Quercus ilex, Pinus pinaster and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii), tissues (leaves, roots and seeds) and stresses (cold, drought, heat, ultraviolet B and nutrient deficiency). Its application will allow increasing the number of parameters that can be monitored at once while decreasing sample handling and consequently, increasing the capacity of the laboratory.

Patients may seek health care services from various providers during treatment. These providers could serve in a network (affiliated) or practice separately (unaffiliated). Thus, using secure and reliable health information exchange (HIE) mechanisms would be critical to transfer sensitive personal health information (PHI) across distances. Studying patients' perceptions and opinions about exchange mechanisms could help health care providers build more complete HIEs' databases and develop robust privacy policies, consent processes, and patient education programs.

Due to the exploratory nature of this study, we aim to shed more light on public perspectives (benefits, concerns, and risks) associated with the four data exchange practices in the health care sector.

In this study, we compared public perceptions and expectations regarding four common types of exchange mechanisms used in the United States (i.e., traditional, direct, query-based, patient-mediated exchange mechanisms). AG-1024 concentration Traditional is an exchange through fax, paper mailing, or phone calls, direct is a provider-to-provider exchange, query-based is sharing patient data with a central repository, and patient-mediated is an exchange mechanism in which patients can access data and monitor sharing.

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