Walshe, Rory A Rouphail, Robert M Adamson, George CD Kelman, Ilan
The role that culture plays in the way different groups experience, respond to, and recover from disasters has been widely discussed. Yet, while there is a considerable (and growing) literature of case study evidence for the need to account for culture in disasters, comparatively few studies take a long-term perspective on cultural interactions wit...
Thompson, Edward John
Sheen, Patricia Rodriguez, Joseline Alcántara, Roberto Vargas, Johnny Grandjean, Louis Moore, David AJ Gilman, Robert H Zimic, Mirko
Most culture-based methods for tuberculosis diagnosis remain low-cost options for low- and mid-income countries. The MODS culture is a rapid and low-cost assay to diagnose tuberculosis and determine drug susceptibility. However, its implementation is limited due to the low accessibility to supplies required for the enriched medium. In this study, w...
Blandford, Ann Abdi, Sarah Aristidou, Angela Carmichael, Josie Cappellaro, Giulia Hussain, Rima Balaskas, Konstantinos
INTRODUCTION: Novel teleophthalmology technologies have the potential to reduce unnecessary and inaccurate referrals between community optometry practices and hospital eye services and as a result improve patients’ access to appropriate and timely eye care. However, little is known about the acceptability and facilitators and barriers to the implem...
Belk, Z Kahn, L Szendroi, K Yampolskaya, S
Bamiou, Doris-Eva
James, Edward Powell, Samuel Munro, Peter
We have previously demonstrated a novel interferometric multispeckle Fourier domain diffuse correlation spectroscopy system that makes use of holographic camera-based detection, and which is capable of making in vivo pulsatile flow measurements. In this work, we report on a systematic characterisation of the signal-to-noise ratio performance of our...
Lehnert, Thomas Röver, Christian Köpke, Sascha Rio, Jordi Chard, Declan Fittipaldo, Andrea V Friede, Tim Heesen, Christoph Rahn, Anne C
Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory and degenerative disease of the central nervous system with an increasing worldwide prevalence. Since 1993, more than 15 disease-modifying immunotherapies (DMTs) have been licenced and have shown moderate efficacy in clinical trials. Based on the heterogeneity of the disease and the partial eff...
Tindale, Lauren C Zhantuyakova, Almira Lam, Stephanie Woo, Michelle Kwon, Janice S Hanley, Gillian E Knoppers, Bartha Schrader, Kasmintan A Peacock, Stuart J Talhouk, Aline
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Individuals with proven hereditary cancer syndrome (HCS) such as BRCA1 and BRCA2 have elevated rates of ovarian, breast, and other cancers. If these high-risk people can be identified before a cancer is diagnosed, risk-reducing interventions are highly effective and can be lifesaving. Despite this evidence, the vast majority of Canadians with HCS a...
Wilke, C Lahiff, NJ Badihi, G Donnellan, E Hobaiter, C Machanda, ZP Mundry, R Pika, S Soldati, A Wrangham, RW
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A fundamental aspect of human communication is our ability to refer to external objects and events through both words and gestures (such as pointing), yet the evolutionary origins of such signals remain obscure. Apes, living in their natural environments, rarely or never point, but it has been claimed that male chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes schweinf...