224 research outputs found
'Singing for the Brain': a qualitative study exploring the health and well-being benefits of singing for people with dementia and their carers
Dementia has detrimental effects on cognitive, psychological and behavioural functioning, as well as significant impact on those who provide care. There is a need to find suitable psychosocial interventions to help manage the condition, enhance well-being, and to provide support for caregivers. This study explored the impact of Singing for the Brain™, an intervention based on group singing activities developed by The Alzheimer’s Society for people with dementia and their carers. This qualitative study used semi-structured interviews with people with dementia and their carers. Ten interviews involving 20 participants were analysed thematically. Social inclusiveness and improvements in relationships, memory and mood were found to be especially important to participants. As well as enjoying the sessions, participants found that attending Singing for the Brain™ helped in accepting and coping with dementia
Dementia and detectives: Alzheimer's disease in crime fiction
Fictional representations of dementia have burgeoned in recent years, and scholars have amply explored their double-edged capacity to promote tragic perspectives or normalising images of ‘living well’ with the condition. Yet to date, there has been only sparse consideration of the treatment afforded dementia within the genre of crime fiction. Focusing on two novels, Emma Healey’s Elizabeth is Missing and Alice LaPlante’s Turn of Mind, this article considers what it means in relation to the ethics of representation that these authors choose to cast as their amateur detective narrators women who have dementia. Analysing how their narrative portrayals frame the experience of living with dementia, it becomes apparent that features of the crime genre inflect the meanings conveyed. While aspects of the novels may reinforce problem-based discourses around dementia, in other respects they may spur meaningful reflection about it among the large readership of this genre
'Unlocking the door to being there'. The contribution of creative facilitators in supporting people living with dementia to engage with heritage settings
This article reports findings from the evaluation of ‘Sensory Palaces’, an innovative project developed by the charity Historic Royal Palaces (HRP), which looks after six of the United Kingdom’s unoccupied royal palaces. The Sensory Palaces (SP) project employs creative facilitators to support people living with dementia and their care partners in engaging with two of these sites; Hampton Court Palace, and Kew Palace. This paper focusses on the role and contribution of the creative facilitators in supporting people living with dementia to connect with these heritage spaces. It reports on data collected from facilitator interviews relating to the benefits of engaging together through sensory and creative methods to explore and share experiences of the palaces, drawing out important factors from the design, content and delivery of the sessions
Ethical implications of the perception and portrayal of dementia
yesThe way we perceive and portray dementia has implications for how we act towards people with
dementia and how we address the issue of dementia within society. As a multi-disciplinary
working group, established within the framework of the European Dementia Ethics Network
of Alzheimer Europe, we aimed to describe the different ways that people with dementia are
perceived and portrayed within society and to consider the moral implications of this. In the
current paper, we address perceptions of dementia as reflected in explanatory models of its cause
and nature, descriptions of characteristics of people with dementia, the use of language, media
portrayals and the views of people living with dementia. Academics and professionals could use
this exploration to reflect on their behaviour and their use of language regarding people
with dementiaThe taskforce’s work arises from the 2013 Work Plan of Alzheimer Europe, which received funding from the European Union in the framework of the Health Programme
Laser Machining by short and ultrashort pulses, state of the art and new opportunities in the age of the photons
An overview is given of the applications of short and ultrashort lasers in material processing. Shorter pulses reduce heat-affected damage of the material and opens new ways for nanometer accuracy. Even forty years after the development of the laser there is a lot of effort in developing new and better performing lasers. The driving force is higher accuracy at reasonable cost, which is realised by compact systems delivering short laser pulses of high beam quality. Another trend is the shift towards shorter wavelengths, which are better absorbed by the material and which allows smaller feature sizes to be produced. Examples of new products, which became possible by this technique, are given. The trends in miniaturization as predicted by Moore and Taniguchi are expected to continue over the next decade too thanks to short and ultrashort laser machining techniques. After the age of steam and the age of electricity we have entered the age of photons now
Use Of Wildlife Crossing Structures On Us Highway 93 On The Flathead Indian Reservation
In the 1990s, Montana Department of Transportation (MDT) proposed an expansion of U.S. Highway 93, in an area entirely within the Flathead Indian Reservation (FIR), home to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT). In December 2000, the CSKT, MDT, and Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) signed a memorandum of agreement that enabled its expansion. It included wildlife mitigation measures to both mitigate impacts to wildlife and natural processes associated with the widening of US93 as well as to address the safety of the traveling public. Mitigation measures include 41 fish and wildlife-crossing structures, including 40 underpasses and one overpass, wildlife fencing, jumpouts, and wildlife crossing guards across 56 mi of highway. Crossing structures were placed in areas that have a history of wildlife crossings and wildlife mortality, and/or locations where the surrounding landscape and land use was best suited for the crossing structures. Research is underway to determine the effectiveness of the mitigation (see www.mdt.mt.gov/research/ projects/env/wildlife_crossing.shtml). Between May 2008 and December 2009, eleven underpasses were monitored for wildlife use. Wildlife use of the structures was substantial with 3,000 deer crossings, 1500 coyote crossings, 300 bobcat crossings, 200 raccoon crossings, and 200 black bear crossings. Other species that used the crossings include mountain lion, elk, grizzly bear, moose, badger, river otter, muskrat, beaver, skunk, rabbit, and various bird species. For the wildlife mitigation measures to be considered successful, goals have been set by the CSKT, MDT, and FHWA, and more data need to be collected and analyzed before the researchers can conclude whether the mitigation measures have indeed reached those goals
Rights in mind: Thinking differently about dementia and disability
The aim of this paper is to argue for the utility of a relational model of disability, as a way of conceptualizing dementia. We explore whether dementia should be considered as a disability, and whether people with dementia might consider themselves as disabled people. We review examples of, and issues raised by, the political activism of people with dementia. We consider how language constructs dementia negatively. We discuss how the environment influences the experience of dementia. In conclusion, we show that a relational model of dementia lays the basis for a human rights approach to the condition, based on collaborative partnerships between people with dementia and people from other disability communities
The potential of painting: unlocking Disenfranchised Grief for people living with dementia
As part of the “Creative Well” programme at Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHN) North Wales, artist/researchers Megan Wyatt and Susan Liggett qualitatively investigated how painting can access a means of communication for people living with Dementia. In a workshop setting within a gallery environment at Ruthin Crafts Centre, participants living with dementia were facilitated on a one to one basis the opportunity to paint alongside the artist/researchers. The participants were from a wellestablished art group called “Lost in Art” that is managed by Denbighshire Arts Service.
During the workshops, a number of experiences were articulated. These included experiences of illness, crisis and loss. They were captured through observations, interviews, visual art and video to contribute to new understandings and models of engagement through art for people living with dementia and their carers.
Focusing on theory and practice in arts based research and the social sciences, this paper investigates the potential of painting to unlock experiences such as disenfranchised grief for people living with dementia. The conclusions do not measure how and if participants felt disenfranchised grief but rather provide an alternative to augment the body of knowledge surrounding how people living with dementia can communicate feelings of disenfranchised grief through painting.
Objective: In this presentation I aim to outline the main findings from the above paper that is to be published in an academic journal later in the year on Illness Crisis and Loss published by Sage
Recent advances in pulsed-laser deposition of complex-oxides
Pulsed-laser deposition (PLD) is one of the most promising techniques for the
formation of complex-oxide heterostructures, superlattices, and well-controlled
interfaces. The first part of this paper presents a review of several useful
modifications of the process, including methods inspired by combinatorial
approaches. We then discuss detailed growth kinetics results, which illustrate
that 'true' layer-by-layer (LBL) growth can only be approached, but not fully
met, even though many characterization techniques reveal interfaces with
unexpected sharpness. Time-resolved surface x-ray diffraction measurements show
that crystallization and the majority of interlayer mass transport occur on
time scales that are comparable to those of the plume/substrate interaction,
providing direct experimental evidence that a growth regime exists in which
non-thermal processes dominate PLD. This understanding shows how kinetic growth
manipulation can bring PLD closer to ideal LBL than any other growth method
available today.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures. Revie
Inequalities in public water supply fluoridation in Brazil: An ecological study
Background. The literature is scarce on the social and geographic inequalities in the access to and implementation of the fluoridation of public water supplies. This study adds knowledge to the Brazilian experience of the chronic privation of water and wastewater policies, access to potable water and fluoridation in the country. Thus, the aim of this study was to verify possible inequalities in the population's access to fluoridated drinking water in 246 Brazilian municipalities. Methods. The information on the process of water fluoridation in the municipalities and in the macro region in which each municipality is located was obtained from the national epidemiological survey which was concluded in 2003. The data relating to the human development index at municipal level (HDI-M) and access to mains water came from the Brazilian Human Development Atlas, whilst the size of the population was obtained from a governmental source. The Fisher exact test (P < 0.05) was employed to identify significant associations between the explanatory variables and their ability to predict the principal outcomes of interest to this study, namely the presence or absence of the water fluoridation process in the municipalities as well as the length of time during which this measure has been implemented. Linear regression was used to observe the associations between the relevant variables in a multivariate environment. Results. The results clearly showed that there is a relationship between municipalities with larger populations, located in more socio-economically advantaged regions and with better HDI-M, and where fluoridation is both present and has been implemented for a longer period of time (started before 1990). Conclusion. The findings suggest that the aim of treating water with fluoride may not be being adequately achieved, requiring more effective strategies so that access to this measure can be expanded equitably.81Hart, J.T., The inverse care law (1971) Lancet, 1 (7696), pp. 405-12. , 4100731Victora, C.G., Vaughan, J.P., Barros, F.C., Silva, A.C., Tomasi, E., Explaining trends in inequities: Evidence from Brazilian child health studies (2000) Lancet, 356 (9235), pp. 1093-98. , 10.1016/S0140-6736(00)02741-0 11009159Basting, R.T., Pereira, A.C., Meneghim, M.C., Evaluation of dental caries prevalence in students from Piracicaba, SP, Brazil, after 25 years of fluoridation of the public water supply (1997) Rev Odontol Univ São Paulo, 11 (4), pp. 287-92. , 10.1590/S0103-06631997000400010Lawrence, H.P., Sheiham, A., Caries progression in 12 to 16-year-old schoolchildren in fluoridated and fluoride-deficient areas in Brazil (1997) Community Dent Oral Epidemiol, 25 (6), pp. 402-11. , 10.1111/j.1600-0528.1997.tb01730.x 9429812Pereira, A.C., Mialhe, F.L., Bianchini, F.L.C., Prevalence of caries and dental floozies in scholars from cities with different fluoride concentrations in drinking water (2001) Rev Bras Odontol Sade Coletiva, 2 (1), pp. 34-9For Disease Control, C., Prevention, Achievementsin Public Health, 1900-1999: Fluoridation of drinking water to prevent dental caries (1999) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 48 (41), pp. 933-40For Disease Control, C., Prevention, Ten great public health achievements -United Sates, 1900-1999 (1999) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 48 (12), pp. 241-3. , 10220250American Health Organization, P., XV Directing Council of the Pan American Health Organization - Resolutions, 1964, , http://www.paho.org/English/GOV/CD/ftcd_15.htm(2003) The World Oral Health Report 2003, , http://www.who.int/oral_health, Geneva: WHOMcDonagh, M.S., Whiting, P.F., Wilson, P.M., Sutton, A.J., Chestnutt, I., Cooper, J., Misso, K., Kleijnen, J., Systematic review of water fluoridation (2000) BMJ, 321 (7265), pp. 855-9. , 11021861 10.1136/bmj.321.7265.855Bratthall, D., Hänsel-Petersson, G., Sundberg, H., Reasons for the caries decline: What do the experts believe? (1996) Eur J Oral Sci, 104 (4 PART 2), pp. 416-22. , 10.1111/j.1600-0722.1996.tb00104.x 8930592Narvai, P.C., Dental caries and fluorine: A twentieth century relation (2000) Cinc Sade Coletiva, 5 (2), pp. 381-92. , 10.1590/S1413-81232000000200011Peres, M.A., Fernandes, L.S., Peres, K.G., Inequality of water fluoridation in Southern Brazil - The inverse equity hypothesis revisited (2004) Soc Sci Med, 58 (6), pp. 1181-9. , 10.1016/S0277-9536(03)00289-2 14723912Peres, M.A., Antunes, J.L.F., Peres, K.G., Is water fluoridation effective in reducing inequalities in dental caries distribution in developing countries? (2006) Sozial und Präventiv Medizin, 51 (5), pp. 1-9Peres, K.G., Bastos, J.R., Mrdo, L., Relationship between severity of dental caries and social and behavioral factors in children (2000) Rev Saude Publica, 34 (4), pp. 402-8. , 10973161Maltz, M., Barbachan Silva, E.B., Relationship between caries, gingivitis and fluorosis and the socioeconomic status among school children (2001) Rev Saude Publica, 35 (2), pp. 170-6. , 11359204Moysés, S.J., Desigualdades em Sade Bucal e Desenvolvimento Humano: Um ensaio em preto, branco e alguns tons de cinza (2001) Rev Bras Odontol Sade Coletiva, 1 (1), pp. 7-17Patussi, M.P., Marcenes, W., Croucher, R., Sheiham, A., Social deprivation, income inequality, social cohesion and dental caries in Brazilian school children (2001) Soc Sci Med, 53 (7), pp. 915-25. , 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00391-9 11522137Antunes, J.L.F., Frazão, P., Narvai, P.C., Bispo, C.M., Pegoretti, T., Spatial analysis to identify differentials in dental needs by area-based measures (2002) Community Dent Oral Epidemiol, 30 (2), pp. 133-42. , 10.1034/j.1600-0528.2002.300207.x 12000354Peres, M.A., Peres, K.G., Antunes, J.L.F., Junqueira, S.R., Frazão, P., Narvai, P.C., The association between socioeconomic development at the town level and the distribution of dental caries in Brazilian children (2003) Rev Panam Salud Publica, 14 (3), pp. 149-57. , 10.1590/S1020-49892003000800001 14653902Antunes, J.L.F., Narvai, P.C., Nugent, Z.J., Measuring inequalities in the distribution of dental caries (2004) Community Dent Oral Epidemiol, 32 (1), pp. 41-8. , 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2004.00125.x 14961839Antunes, J.L.F., Peres, M.A., De Campos Mello, T.R., Waldman, E.A., Multilevel assessment of determinants of dental caries experience in Brazil (2006) Community Dent Oral Epidemiol, 34 (2), pp. 146-152. , 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2006.00274.x 16515679Narvai, P.C., Frazão, P., Roncalli, A.G., Antunes, J.L.F., Dental caries in Brazil: Decline, polarization, inequality and social exclusion (2006) Rev Panam Salud Publica, 19 (6), pp. 385-93. , 10.1590/S1020-49892006000600004 16968593Projeto, S.B., Brasil, Condiçes de sade bucal da população brasileira 2002-2003. Resultados principais (2004) Brasília-DF: Ministério da Sade, Secretaria de Atenção Sade, Departamento de Atenção Básica, Coordenação Nacional de Sade BucalCarmichael, C.L., Rugg-Gunn, A.J., French, A.D., Cranage, J.D., The effect of fluoridation upon the relationship between caries experience and social class in 5-year-old children in Newcastle and Northumberland in 1987 (1980) Br Dent J, 149 (6), pp. 163-7. , 10.1038/sj.bdj.4804479 6931610Bradnock, G., Marchment, M.D., Anderson, R.J., Social background, fluoridation and caries experience in 5-year-old population in the West Midlands (1984) Br Denl J, 156 (4), pp. 127-31. , 10.1038/sj.bdj.4805287 6584119Jones, C.M., Taylor, G.O., Whittle, J.G., Evans, D., Trotter, D.P., Water fluoridation, tooth decay in 5 years olds, and social deprivation measured by the Jarman score: Analysis of data from British dental surveys (1997) BMJ, 315 (7107), pp. 514-17. , 9329305Riley, J.C., Lennon, M.A., Ellwood, R.P., The effect of water fluoridation and social inequalities on dental caries in 5-year-old children (1999) Int Dent J, 28 (2), pp. 300-5. , 10342695Congresso Nacional, Brasil., Lei Federal no. de 19/09/1990 (1990) Diário Oficial da União 20 Set, p. 18055Morgenstern, H., Ecological studies (1998) Modern Epidemiology, pp. 459-80. , Baltimore: Lippincot Williamns & Wilkins Rothman K, Greenland S(2000) Informaçes de Sade: População Residente, , http://w3.datasus.gov.br/datasus/datasus.php?area= 359A1B379C6D0E0F359G23HIJd6L26M0N&VInclude=./site/infsaude.php, Departamento de Informática do Sistema nico de Sade (DATASUS)(2003) Atlas Do Desenvolvimento Humano No Brasil, Versão 1.0.0, , Programa das Naçes Unidas para o Desenvolvimento Brasília: PNUDLallo, R., Myburgh, N.G., Hobdell, M.H., Dental caries, socio-economic development and national oral health profiles (1999) Int Dent J, 49, pp. 196-202. , 10858754Baldani, M.H., Narvai, P.C., Antunes, J.L.F., Cárie dentária e condiçes scio-econômicas no Estado do Paraná, Brasil, 1996 (2002) Cad Sade Pblica, 18 (3), pp. 755-63. , 10.1590/S0102-311X2002000300024Qizilbash, M., On the Measurement of Human Development (2002) UNDP, , http://hdr.undp.org/docs/training/oxford/presentations/ Qizilbash_HDIcritique.pdfBurt, B.A., Fluoridation and social equity (2002) J Public Health Dent, 62 (4), pp. 195-200. , 10.1111/j.1752-7325.2002.tb03445.x 12474623For Disease Control, C., Prevention, Recommendation focusing fluoride to prevent and control dental caries in the United States (2001) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 50 (14), pp. 1-42Griffin, S.O., Jones, K., Tomar, S.L., An economic evaluation of community water fluoridation (2001) J Public Health Dent, 61 (2), pp. 78-86. , 10.1111/j.1752-7325.2001.tb03370.x 11474918Bleicher, L., Frota, F.H.S., Fluoretação da água: Uma questão de política pblica - O caso do Estado do Ceará (2006) Cin Sade Coletiva, 11 (1), pp. 71-8Frias, A.C., Narvai, P.C., Arajo, M.E., Zilbovicius, C., Antunes, J.L.F., Custo da fluoretação das águas de abastecimento pblico, estudo de caso -Município de São Paulo, Brasil, período de 1985-2003 (2006) Cad Sade Pblica, 22 (6), pp. 1237-46. , 10.1590/S0102-311X2006000600013Congresso Nacional, Brasil., (1974) Lei Federal No. 6.050, 3, p. 107. , Brasília: Departamento de Imprensa Nacional Atos do Poder Legislativo. Leis de Abril a JunhoDuarte, C.M.R., Eqüidade na legislação: Um princípio do sistema de sade brasileiro? (2000) Cin Sade Coletiva, 5 (2), pp. 443-63Whitehead, M., The concepts and principles of equity and health (1992) Int J Health Serv, 22 (3), pp. 429-45. , 10.2190/986L-LHQ6-2VTE-YRRN 164450
- …
