Sullivanconradsen5671
CONCLUSIONS The Na content of bread available in bakeries in the city of Maputo decreased in recent years despite the absence of a specific regulation in Mozambique.Critical psychiatry takes the position that 'mental illness' should not be reduced to 'brain disease'. Here I consider whether this particular stance is outdated in light of more recent exchanges on reductionism, which consider questions raised by new mental health sciences that seek truly integrative and specific biopsychosocial models of illness.Critical psychiatry is associated with anti-psychiatry and may therefore seem to be an embarrassing hangover from the 1970s. However, its essential position that functional mental illness should not be reduced to brain disease overlaps with historical debates in psychiatry more than is commonly appreciated. Three examples of non-reductive approaches, like critical psychiatry, in the history of psychiatry are considered.Williams syndrome is a multisystem, congenital disorder which is commonly associated with arterial stenoses supravalvar aortic stenosis and peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis. Venous abnormalities have not been previously reported in children with Williams syndrome. We present a case of a 3-year-old girl with Williams syndrome and diffuse venous ectasia as detected by MRI.OBJECTIVE The aim of this paper is to identify and develop a comprehensive conceptual framework using implementation science that can be applied to assess a nutrition intervention in a real-world setting. DESIGN We conducted a narrative review using electronic databases and a manual search to identify implementation science frameworks, models and theories published in peer-reviewed journals. We performed a qualitative thematic analysis of these publications to generate a framework that could be applied to nutrition implementation science. RESULTS Based on this review, we developed a comprehensive framework which we have conceptualised as an implementation science process that describes the transition from the use of scientific evidence through to scaling-up with the aim of making an intervention sustainable. OX04528 in vivo The framework consisted of three domains Domain i - efficacy to effectiveness trials, Domain ii - scaling-up and Domain iii - sustainability. These three domains encompass five components identifying an 'effective' intervention; scaling-up and implementation fidelity; course corrections during implementation; promoting sustainability of interventions and consideration of a comprehensive methodological paradigm to identify 'effective' interventions and to assess the process and outcome indicators of implementation. The framework was successfully applied to a nutrition implementation program in Bangladesh. CONCLUSIONS Our conceptual framework built from an implantation science perspective offers a comprehensive approach supported by a foundational and holistic understanding of its key components. This framework provides guidance for implementation researchers, policy-makers and programme managers to identify and review an effective intervention, to scale it up and to sustain it over time.In recent years, outbreaks of hand-foot-mouth disease (HFMD) in China, Singapore and other Western Pacific Region, involving millions of children, have become a big threat to public health. This study aimed to quantitatively assess all qualified studies and identify the risk factors for HFMD death. A systematic search of the databases PubMed, Medline, Embase and the Cochrane Library was performed. Study heterogeneity and publication bias were estimated. Seven case-control studies involving 1641 participants (634 died and 1007 survived) were included in the meta-analysis. Human enterovirus 71 infection, male, age ⩽3 years, vomiting, cyanosis, convulsion, duration of fever ⩾3 days, atypical rashes and abdominal distention were not significantly related to HFMD death (P ⩽ 0.05). Lethargy (odds ratio (OR) = 6.62; 95% CI 3.61-12.14; I2 = 0%; P less then 0.0001), pneumonoedema/pneumorrhagia (OR = 4.09; 95% CI 2.44-6.87; I2 = 0%; P less then 0.0001), seizures (OR = 6.85; 95% CI 2.37-19.74; I2 = 0%; P = 0.0004), dyspnoea (OR = 8.24; 95% CI 2.05-33.19; I2 = 83%; P = 0.003) and coma (OR = 3.76; 95% CI 1.85-7.67; I2 = 0%; P = 0.0003) were significantly associated with HFMD death, which were risk factors for HFMD death.Learning to mark for tense in a second language is notoriously difficult for speakers of a tenseless language like Chinese. In this study we test two reasons for these difficulties in Chinese-English sequential bilingual children (1) morphophonological transfer (i.e., avoidance of complex codas), and (2) interpretation of -ed as an aspect marker of completion, like the Mandarin -le. Mandarin-English bilingual children and age-matched monolinguals did a cartoon retell task. The verbs used in the stories were coded for accuracy in English, telicity, and suppliance of -ed or -le. The results were consistent with morphophonological transfer the bilingual children were more accurate with irregular past forms in English than regular forms. The results were also consistent with the bilingual children's interpretation of -ed as an aspect marker most of their production of -ed was on telic verbs. We discuss possible reasons for the children's interpretation of -ed as an aspect marker.BACKGROUND N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), a well-known marker of cardiac disease, may be elevated in acute infections and other non-cardiac diseases. The aim of this study was to evaluate NT-proBNP levels in cardiac and non-cardiac diseases and found out the patient's clinical status that affects the NT-proBNP levels. METHODS NT-proBNP levels were measured in three groups of children a cardiac disease group, an infectious disease group, and a non-cardiac, non-infectious disease group. RESULT In total, 348 children were enrolled, including 134 patients (38.5%) with cardiac disease, 170 patients (48.9%) with infectious disease, and 44 patients (12.6%) with non-cardiac, non-infectious disease. The NT-proBNP level of the cardiac disease group (median 548 pg/mL; range 5-35,000 pg/mL) was significantly higher than that of the infectious disease group (median 193 pg/mL; range 10-35,000 pg/mL) and the non-cardiac, non-infectious disease group (median 280 pg/mL; range 6-35,000 pg/mL). Regarding clinical status, the NT-proBNP levels were significantly higher in patients who needed mechanical ventilation support, oxygen therapy, or inotropic medication or had a change in mental status than in other patients.