Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

PDF

Marquette University

2017

Discipline
Keyword
Publication
Publication Type

Articles 121 - 141 of 141

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Nursing Students’ Perception Of The Stigma Of Mental Illness, Abir K. Bekhet, Carolyn J. Murrock, Qiyan Mu, Harpreet Singh-Gill Jan 2017

Nursing Students’ Perception Of The Stigma Of Mental Illness, Abir K. Bekhet, Carolyn J. Murrock, Qiyan Mu, Harpreet Singh-Gill

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Background: Mental health disorders are highly prevalent in the U.S. Nursing students’ perceptions regarding the stigma of mental illness will impact the quality of care delivered and the patients’ outcomes.

Method: Data was collected from 64 sophomore students. Five open ended questions were distributed to the students during the first class. All the surveys were collected by a volunteer student and were placed in the instructor’s mailbox in a sealed envelope.

Results: The results revealed three categories: students ‘perceptions of the causes of mental illness stigmatization, their own perception of mental illness, and their perception on how to break the …


Long Days Enhance Recognition Memory And Increase Insulin-Like Growth Factor 2 In The Hippocampus, Adriano Dellapolla, Ian Kloehn, Harshida Pancholi, Ben L. Callif, David Wertz, Kayla Rohr, Matthew M. Hurley, Kimberly Baker, Samer Hattar, Marieke R. Gilmartin, Jennifer A. Evans Jan 2017

Long Days Enhance Recognition Memory And Increase Insulin-Like Growth Factor 2 In The Hippocampus, Adriano Dellapolla, Ian Kloehn, Harshida Pancholi, Ben L. Callif, David Wertz, Kayla Rohr, Matthew M. Hurley, Kimberly Baker, Samer Hattar, Marieke R. Gilmartin, Jennifer A. Evans

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

Light improves cognitive function in humans; however, the neurobiological mechanisms underlying positive effects of light remain unclear. One obstacle is that most rodent models have employed lighting conditions that cause cognitive deficits rather than improvements. Here we have developed a mouse model where light improves cognitive function, which provides insight into mechanisms underlying positive effects of light. To increase light exposure without eliminating daily rhythms, we exposed mice to either a standard photoperiod or a long day photoperiod. Long days enhanced long-term recognition memory, and this effect was abolished by loss of the photopigment melanopsin. Further, long days markedly altered …


Immunohistochemical Analysis Of Il-1 Beta In The Discs Of Patients With Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Sean Pierce, Joseph Zacharias, William E. Cullinan, Lucia Noronha, Marcia Olandoski, Vinicius Tramontina, Carla Loreto, Rosalia Leonardi Jan 2017

Immunohistochemical Analysis Of Il-1 Beta In The Discs Of Patients With Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Sean Pierce, Joseph Zacharias, William E. Cullinan, Lucia Noronha, Marcia Olandoski, Vinicius Tramontina, Carla Loreto, Rosalia Leonardi

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose: Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) is a cytokine that participates in the regulation of immune responses and inflammatory reactions. It is hypothesized that IL-1 levels may be elevated in patients suffering from temporomandibular joint dysfunction. The purpose of this study was to determine the association of IL-1β expression with TMD using an immunohistochemical approach to evaluate the joint disc.

Materials and methods: A total of 39 human temporomandibular joint disc samples were collected, with 31 samples in the test group. Nineteen of the test group samples were from discs of patients with anterior disc displacement with reduction, and 12 …


Discharge Teaching, Readiness For Discharge, And Post-Discharge Outcomes In Parents Of Hospitalized Children, Marianne E. Weiss, Kathleen Sawin, Karen Gralton, Norah L. Johnson, Carol Klingbeil, Stacee M. Lerret, Shelly Malin, Olga Yakusheva, Rachel Schiffman Jan 2017

Discharge Teaching, Readiness For Discharge, And Post-Discharge Outcomes In Parents Of Hospitalized Children, Marianne E. Weiss, Kathleen Sawin, Karen Gralton, Norah L. Johnson, Carol Klingbeil, Stacee M. Lerret, Shelly Malin, Olga Yakusheva, Rachel Schiffman

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose

This study explored the sequential relationships of parent perceptions of the quality of their discharge teaching and nurse and parent perceptions of discharge readiness to post-discharge outcomes (parental post-discharge coping difficulty, readmission and emergency department visits).

Design/methods

In this secondary analysis of data from a longitudinal pilot study of family self-management discharge preparation, the correlational design used regression modeling with data from a convenience sample of 194 parents from two clinical units at a Midwest pediatric hospital. Data were collected on the day of discharge (Quality of Discharge Teaching Scale; Readiness for Hospital Discharge Scale), at 3 weeks post-discharge …


Addressing Traumatic Stress In The Acute Traumatically Injured Patient, Claire Frank, Kathryn Schroeter, Chris Shaw Jan 2017

Addressing Traumatic Stress In The Acute Traumatically Injured Patient, Claire Frank, Kathryn Schroeter, Chris Shaw

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Psychological injuries after an acute traumatic event are commonly overlooked. Currently within United States, there is no consistently utilized screening process that addresses traumatic stress within the acute trauma population. Roy's Adaptation Model guided this project, focusing on the idea that bedside nurses are at the frontline of providing early identification through nursing assessment. The purpose of this pilot study was to evaluate whether the implementation of the Primary Care-Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PC-PTSD) screening tool by bedside nurses would result in identifying more patients at risk for traumatic stress after an acute trauma as compared with the use of no …


Cesarean Deliveries And Maternal Weight Retention, Kandice A. Kapinos, Olga Yakusheva, Marianne E. Weiss Jan 2017

Cesarean Deliveries And Maternal Weight Retention, Kandice A. Kapinos, Olga Yakusheva, Marianne E. Weiss

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Background

Cesarean delivery accounts for nearly one-third of all births in the U.S. and contributes to an additional $38 billion in healthcare costs each year. Although Cesarean delivery has a long record of improving maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity, increased utilization over time has yielded public health concerns and calls for reductions. Observational evidence suggests Cesarean delivery is associated with increased maternal postpartum weight, which may have significant implications for the obesity epidemic. Previous literature, however, typically does not address selection biases stemming from correlations of pre-pregnancy weight and reproductive health with Cesarean delivery.

Methods

We used fetal malpresentation …


Complete Mouth Rehabilitation And Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease: Conventional And Contemporary Treatment Approaches, Vasilios Chronopoulos, Georgios Maroulakos, Konstantinos Tsoutis, Panagiota Stathopoulou, William W. Nagy Jan 2017

Complete Mouth Rehabilitation And Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease: Conventional And Contemporary Treatment Approaches, Vasilios Chronopoulos, Georgios Maroulakos, Konstantinos Tsoutis, Panagiota Stathopoulou, William W. Nagy

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

This report describes the diagnosis and prosthodontic management of 2 patients with a history of chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease and worn dentition. Different treatment approaches were used for oral rehabilitation. Use of conventional and contemporary restorative materials resulted in functional and esthetic prosthodontic rehabilitation with a favorable prognosis.

Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a “condition which develops when the reflux of stomach contents causes troublesome symptoms and/or complications." Reflux episodes can be intensified by dietary habits, smoking, physical exercise, and obstructive sleep apnea.Complications of GERD are regurgitation, chest pain, esophagitis, Barrett’s esophagus, esophageal adenocarcinoma, cough, asthma, and dental erosion.GERD is …


A Current Overview Of Materials And Strategies For Potential Use In Maxillofacial Tissue Regeneration, Hossein E. Jazayeri, Mohammadreza Tahriri, Mehdi Razavi, Kimia Khoshroo, Farahnaz Fahimipour, Erfan Dashtimoghadam, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Lobat Tayebi Jan 2017

A Current Overview Of Materials And Strategies For Potential Use In Maxillofacial Tissue Regeneration, Hossein E. Jazayeri, Mohammadreza Tahriri, Mehdi Razavi, Kimia Khoshroo, Farahnaz Fahimipour, Erfan Dashtimoghadam, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Lobat Tayebi

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Tissue regeneration is rapidly evolving to treat anomalies in the entire human body. The production of biodegradable, customizable scaffolds to achieve this clinical aim is dependent on the interdisciplinary collaboration among clinicians, bioengineers and materials scientists. While bone grafts and varying reconstructive procedures have been traditionally used for maxillofacial defects, the goal of this review is to provide insight on all materials involved in the progressing utilization of the tissue engineering approach to yield successful treatment outcomes for both hard and soft tissues. In vitro and in vivo studies that have demonstrated the restoration of bone and cartilage tissue with …


Dental Impressions: The Digital Alternative, Gary L. Stafford Jan 2017

Dental Impressions: The Digital Alternative, Gary L. Stafford

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


The Relationships Between Fluoride Intake Levels And Fluorosis Of Late‐Erupting Permanent Teeth, Pradeep Bhagavatula, Alexandra Curtis, Barbara Broffitt, Karin Weber-Gasparoni, John J. Warren, Steven M. Levy Jan 2017

The Relationships Between Fluoride Intake Levels And Fluorosis Of Late‐Erupting Permanent Teeth, Pradeep Bhagavatula, Alexandra Curtis, Barbara Broffitt, Karin Weber-Gasparoni, John J. Warren, Steven M. Levy

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Objectives

To examine the relationships between fluoride intake levels and fluorosis of late‐erupting permanent teeth.

Methods

The current study used information collected from 437 children in the longitudinal Iowa Fluoride Study. Participants' fluoride intake information was collected using questionnaires from birth to age 10 years. Estimated mean daily fluoride intake was categorized into low, moderate, and high intake tertiles for each age interval (2‐5, 5‐8, and 2‐8 years). Bivariate analyses were performed to study the relationships between self‐reported fluoride intake levels during three age intervals and dental fluorosis.

Results

For canines and second molars, the prevalence of mostly mild fluorosis …


Fertility Care Services, Richard Fehring Jan 2017

Fertility Care Services, Richard Fehring

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

The Catholic Church calls married couples to responsible parenthood; this includes both openness to new human life and the avoidance of pregnancy when serious reasons present themselves. Natural methods of family planning respect the dignity of the person and the integrity of the sexual act. They treat fertility as a natural process rather than a disease. Natural family planning (NFP) works with a woman’s menstrual cycle; it uses awareness of fertile and infertile times to achieve or avoid pregnancy and allows married couples, through their awareness, to respect and maintain both the unitive and the procreative aspects of the sexual …


Online Positive Thinking Training Intervention For Caregivers Of Individuals With Asd: Necessity, Acceptability And Feasibility, Abir K. Bekhet Jan 2017

Online Positive Thinking Training Intervention For Caregivers Of Individuals With Asd: Necessity, Acceptability And Feasibility, Abir K. Bekhet

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Background: More than 3.5 million people in the United States are diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Caring for children with ASD can be stressful and can be detrimental to the well-being of the caregivers (CGs). However, the adverse effects of caregiving on the well-being of CGs may be avoided with appropriate interventions. CGs of persons with ASD might benefit from a positive thinking training (PTT) intervention to help them cope with the stress of caregiving. However, the necessity, acceptability and feasibility for PTT in ASD CGs have not been studied.

Objective: To examine the necessity, acceptability and feasibility of …


Development And Psychometric Evaluation Of The Nurses Professional Values Scale-3, Darlene Weis, Mary Jane Schank Jan 2017

Development And Psychometric Evaluation Of The Nurses Professional Values Scale-3, Darlene Weis, Mary Jane Schank

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Background and Purpose: The Nurses Professional Values Scale-3 (NPVS-3) is an instrument derived from the American Nurses Association Code designed to measure nurses' professional values. The purpose of this study was to examine its psychometric properties. Methods: A random sample of 1,139 baccalaureate nursing students, graduate nursing students, and practicing nurses participated. The 28-item Likert-scale instrument was subjected to exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. Principal components analysis with varimax rotation and Kaiser normalization resulted in a 3-factor solution. Results: Findings supported internal consistency reliability of 3 factors with alpha coefficients from .80 to .91 and total scale coefficient of .94. …


Answering Wicked Questions: Dealing With Opposing Truths As A Nursing Associate Professor, Robert V. Topp, Patricia E. Hershberger, Marilyn Bratt Jan 2017

Answering Wicked Questions: Dealing With Opposing Truths As A Nursing Associate Professor, Robert V. Topp, Patricia E. Hershberger, Marilyn Bratt

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Nursing associate professors frequently are confronted with increasing responsibilities and fewer resources. These challenges commonly contribute to declines in job satisfaction and may result in departing academe. This article addresses these challenges by providing answers to four common “wicked questions” experienced by nursing associate professors: (a) How do I decline a request from a supervisor to take on additional responsibilities while continuing to support the mission of the school and advance my own scholarly productivity? (b) How do I handle the workload of multiple doctoral students with a variety of content areas that are different from my own and maintain …


Current Medical Research: Summer/Fall 2016, Richard J. Fehring, Qiyan Mu Jan 2017

Current Medical Research: Summer/Fall 2016, Richard J. Fehring, Qiyan Mu

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Examining The Relationship Between Clinical Judgment And Nursing Actions In Prelicensure Students, Andrea Stuedemann Fedko, Kristina Dreifuerst Jan 2017

Examining The Relationship Between Clinical Judgment And Nursing Actions In Prelicensure Students, Andrea Stuedemann Fedko, Kristina Dreifuerst

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Faculty frequently use the Lasater Clinical Judgment Rubric (LCJR) to identify students’ clinical judgment; however, it is unclear whether LCJR scores relate to appropriate nursing action. In a pilot study consisting of senior-level nursing students (N = 22), participants were scored on the LCJR and anticipated nursing actions, and results were analyzed using simple linear regression. There was a statistically significant correlation (r = 0.364) between clinical judgment and nursing action. Results suggest that total LCJR scores may be an indicator of the completion of indicated nursing action.


Effectiveness Of A Natural Family Planning Service Program, Richard Fehring, Mary Schneider Jan 2017

Effectiveness Of A Natural Family Planning Service Program, Richard Fehring, Mary Schneider

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose: The aims of this study were to determine and compare extended use-effectiveness of an online nurse-managed fertility education service program among women (and subgroups of women) seeking to avoid pregnancy.

Study Design and Methods: This was a 24-month prospective study of a university-based online Web site with 663 nonbreastfeeding women using an online charting system to avoid pregnancy. Participants tracked their fertility online with either cervical mucus monitoring, electronic hormonal fertility monitoring, or both fertility indicators. Unintended pregnancies were validated by professional nurses.

Results: Participants had a mean age of 30.4 years (SD = 6.3) and mean 1.7 children …


Preparing Family Caregivers To Recognize Delirium Symptoms In Older Adults After Elective Hip Or Knee Arthroplasty, Margaret J. Bull, Lesley Boaz, Mehdi Maadooliat, Mary E. Hagle, Lynn Gettrust, Maureen T. Greene, Sue Baird Holmes, Jane S. Saczynski Jan 2017

Preparing Family Caregivers To Recognize Delirium Symptoms In Older Adults After Elective Hip Or Knee Arthroplasty, Margaret J. Bull, Lesley Boaz, Mehdi Maadooliat, Mary E. Hagle, Lynn Gettrust, Maureen T. Greene, Sue Baird Holmes, Jane S. Saczynski

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Objectives

To test the feasibility of a telephone-based intervention that prepares family caregivers to recognize delirium symptoms and how to communicate their observations to healthcare providers.

Design

Mixed-method, pre–post quasi-experimental design.

Setting

A Midwest Veterans Affairs Medical Center and a nonprofit health system.

Participants

Forty-one family caregiver-older adult dyads provided consent; 34 completed the intervention.

Intervention

Four telephone-based education modules using vignettes were completed during the 3 weeks before the older adult's hospital admission for elective hip or knee replacement. Each module required 20 to 30 minutes.

Measurements

Interviews were conducted before the intervention and 2 weeks and 2 months …


Effect Of Sequence Of Simulated And Clinical Practicum Learning Experiences On Clinical Competency Of Nursing Students, Jamie Hansen, Marilyn Bratt Jan 2017

Effect Of Sequence Of Simulated And Clinical Practicum Learning Experiences On Clinical Competency Of Nursing Students, Jamie Hansen, Marilyn Bratt

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Two different sequences of blocks of simulated and clinical practicum learning experiences compared the clinical competency development of nursing students using a randomized crossover design. Competency was measured 3 times: after each block of simulated and clinical experiences and after a final simulated experience. No significant differences in competency scores between the 2 groups across the 3 time points were found. Using alternative models of clinical and simulation learning may help address barriers to the delivery of clinical education faced by schools of nursing


Authors' Response To Commentary By Drs Sueki And Achhnani On The Article, "Does Exercise Decrease Pain Via Conditioned Pain Modulation In Adolescents?", Stacy Stolzman, Marie K. Hoeger Bement Jan 2017

Authors' Response To Commentary By Drs Sueki And Achhnani On The Article, "Does Exercise Decrease Pain Via Conditioned Pain Modulation In Adolescents?", Stacy Stolzman, Marie K. Hoeger Bement

Physical Therapy Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


Exercise Increases Pressure Pain Tolerance But Not Pressure And Heat Pain Thresholds In Healthy Young Men, H. B. Vaegter, Marie K. Hoeger Bement, A. B. Madsen, J. Fridriksson, M. Dasa, T. Graven-Nielsen Jan 2017

Exercise Increases Pressure Pain Tolerance But Not Pressure And Heat Pain Thresholds In Healthy Young Men, H. B. Vaegter, Marie K. Hoeger Bement, A. B. Madsen, J. Fridriksson, M. Dasa, T. Graven-Nielsen

Physical Therapy Faculty Research and Publications

Background: Exercise causes an acute decrease in the pain sensitivity known as exercise-induced hypoalgesia (EIH), but the specificity to certain pain modalities remains unknown. This study aimed to compare the effect of isometric exercise on the heat and pressure pain sensitivity.

Methods: On three different days, 20 healthy young men performed two submaximal isometric knee extensions (30% maximal voluntary contraction in 3 min) and a control condition (quiet rest). Before and immediately after exercise and rest, the sensitivity to heat pain and pressure pain was assessed in randomized and counterbalanced order. Cuff pressure pain threshold (cPPT) and pain tolerance (cPTT) …