Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Design" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Assessing the performance of a surface washing agent for oil removal from sand in cold environments Sui J; Bi H; Yue R; Fu H; Yang A; An C; 41544565
ENCS
2 A portrait of online gambling: a look at a transformation amid a pandemic Kairouz S; Savard AC; Murch WS; Dixon MR; Martin NB; Brodeur M; Dauphinais S; Ferland F; Hamel D; Dufour M; French M; Monson E; Van Mourik V; Morvannou A; 40770758
CONCORDIA
3 Prioritising methodological research questions for scoping reviews, mapping reviews and evidence and gap maps for health research: a protocol for PROSPECT Delphi study Pollock D; Hasanoff S; McBride G; Kanukula R; Tricco AC; Khalil H; Campbell F; Jia RM; Alexander L; Peters M; Vieira AM; Aromataris E; Nunn J; Saran A; Evans C; Godfrey C; Pieper D; de Moraes ÉB; Biesty L; Colquhoun H; Devane D; Toomey E; Clyne B; Davies E; Munn Z; 40759523
SOH
4 Advancements in Magnetorheological Foams: Composition, Fabrication, AI-Driven Enhancements and Emerging Applications Khodaverdi H; Sedaghati R; 40732777
ENCS
5 Domains of wheelchair users socio-emotional experiences: Design insights from a scoping review Rasoulivalajoozi M; Cucuzzella C; Farhoudi M; 40164524
CONCORDIA
6 Supporting parent capacity to manage pain in young children with cancer at home: Co-design and usability testing of the PainCaRe app Jibb LA; Liu W; Stinson JN; Nathan PC; Chartrand J; Alberts NM; Hashemi E; Masama T; Pease HG; Torres LB; Cortes HG; Kuczynski S; Liu S; La H; Fortier MA; 39473834
CONCORDIA
7 Exploring the glycoprotein washing fluid-assisted cleanup for the restoration of oil-contaminated shorelines with environmental integrity Sui J; Yue R; Bi H; Fu H; Yang A; Wang M; An C; 39260515
ENCS
8 EEG-based study of design creativity: a review on research design, experiments, and analysis Zangeneh Soroush M; Zeng Y; 39148896
ENCS
9 Editorial: World mental health day 2022: key drivers of risk to mental health services and innovative solutions Shen N; Jilka S; Sawchuk K; 39100959
PSYCHOLOGY
10 The impact of directed choice on the design of preventive healthcare facility network under congestion Vidyarthi N; Kuzgunkaya O; 24879402
JMSB
11 Self-consolidating concrete: Dataset on mixture design and key properties Amine El Mahdi Safhi 38533116
ENCS
12 Spatial experience of cancer inpatients in the oncology wards: A qualitative study in visual design aspects Cucuzzella C; Rasoulivalajoozi M; Farzamfar G; 38518630
CONCORDIA
13 Design Optimization of a Hybrid-Driven Soft Surgical Robot with Biomimetic Constraints Roshanfar M; Dargahi J; Hooshiar A; 38275456
ENCS
14 Loosely controlled experimental EEG datasets for higher-order cognitions in design and creativity tasks Zangeneh Soroush M; Zhao M; Jia W; Zeng Y; 38152489
ENCS
15 Design optimization and experimental evaluation of a large capacity magnetorheological damper with annular and radial fluid gaps Abdalaziz M; Sedaghati R; Vatandoost H; 37521729
ENCS
16 Refined design of ventilation systems to mitigate infection risk in hospital wards: Perspective from ventilation openings setting Ren C; Wang J; Feng Z; Kim MK; Haghighat F; Cao SJ; 37336354
ENCS
17 How to present work productivity loss results from clinical trials for patients and caregivers? A mixed methods approach L' Heureux J; McTaggart-Cowan H; Johns G; Chen L; Steiner T; Tocher P; Sun H; Zhang W; 37276772
JMSB
18 Functional Synthetic Biology Aldulijan I; Beal J; Billerbeck S; Bouffard J; Chambonnier G; Ntelkis N; Guerreiro I; Holub M; Ross P; Selvarajah V; Sprent N; Vidal G; Vignoni A; 37073284
BIOLOGY
19 Validation of desk-based audits using Google Street View® to monitor the obesogenic potential of neighbourhoods in a pediatric sample: a pilot study in the QUALITY cohort Roberge JB; Contreras G; Kakinami L; Van Hulst A; Henderson M; Barnett TA; 35346220
PERFORM
20 Incorporation of Optical Density into the Blending Design for a Biocement Solution Fukue M; Lechowicz Z; Fujimori Y; Emori K; Mulligan CN; 35269187
ENCS
21 Buy them out before they are built: evaluating the proactive acquisition of vacant land in flood-prone areas Atoba K; Newman G; Brody S; Highfield W; Kim Y; Juan A; 34887609
ENCS
22 Folding photopolymerized origami sheets by post-curing. He X, Matte CD, Kwok TH 33490875
ENCS
23 Contactless Capacitive Electrocardiography Using Hybrid Flexible Printed Electrodes. Lessard-Tremblay M, Weeks J, Morelli L, Cowan G, Gagnon G, Zednik RJ 32927651
ENCS
24 Birth weight is associated with adolescent brain development: A multimodal imaging study in monozygotic twins. Hayward DA, Pomares F, Casey KF, Ismaylova E, Levesque M, Greenlaw K, Vitaro F, Brendgen M, Rénard F, Dionne G, Boivin M, Tremblay RE, Booij L 32881198
PSYCHOLOGY
25 The Value in Science-Art Partnerships for Science Education and Science Communication. Zaelzer C 32616625
CONCORDIA
26 Exploring the biophysicochemical alteration of green alga Asterococcus superbus interactively affected by nanoparticles, triclosan and illumination. Xin X, Huang G, An C, Lu C, Xiong W 32473326
ENCS
27 Multidisciplinary Design Optimization of a Novel Sandwich Beam-Based Adaptive Tuned Vibration Absorber Featuring Magnetorheological Elastomer. Asadi Khanouki M, Sedaghati R, Hemmatian M 32422988
ENCS
28 Exploring the use of smartphones and tablets among people with visual impairments: Are mainstream devices replacing the use of traditional visual aids? Martiniello N, Eisenbarth W, Lehane C, Johnson A, Wittich W 31697612
PSYCHOLOGY
29 Birth weight discordance, DNA methylation, and cortical morphology of adolescent monozygotic twins. Casey KF, Levesque ML, Szyf M, Ismaylova E, Verner MP, Suderman M, Vitaro F, Brendgen M, Dionne G, Boivin M, Tremblay RE, Booij L 28032437
PSYCHOLOGY
30 An Adaptive Defect Weighted Sampling Algorithm to Design Pseudoknotted RNA Secondary Structures. Zandi K, Butler G, Kharma N 27499762
CSFG
31 Structure-Guided Directed Evolution of Glycosidases: A Case Study in Engineering a Blood Group Antigen-Cleaving Enzyme. Kwan DH 28935105
CSFG
32 Detection of abnormal resting-state networks in individual patients suffering from focal epilepsy: an initial step toward individual connectivity assessment. Dansereau CL, Bellec P, Lee K, Pittau F, Gotman J, Grova C 25565949
PERFORM

 

Title:How to present work productivity loss results from clinical trials for patients and caregivers? A mixed methods approach
Authors:L'Heureux JMcTaggart-Cowan HJohns GChen LSteiner TTocher PSun HZhang W
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37276772/
DOI:10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115999
Publication:Social science & medicine (1982)
Keywords:AbsenteeismCaregiverClinical trialsCommunicationEmployment status changesMixed methods designPatient-reported outcomesPresenteeismWork productivity loss
PMID:37276772 Category: Date Added:2023-06-05
Dept Affiliation: JMSB
1 School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia; 2206 E Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z3, Canada. Electronic address: jlheureux@cheos.ubc.ca.
2 Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University; Blusson Hall, Room, 11300, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5A 1S6, Canada; British Columbia Cancer Research Centre, 675 W 10th Avenue; Vancouver, British Columbia, V5Z 1L3, Canada. Electronic address: hcowan@ccrc.ca.
3 Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia; 2053 Main Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z2, Canada; John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, 1450 Guy Street, Montreal, Quebec, H3H 0A1, Canada. Electronic address: gary.johns@concordia.ca.
4 Patient Voices Network, 201-750 Pender Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6C 2T8, Canada.
5 Division of Infectious Diseases, Vancouver General Hospital, 2733 Heather Street, Rm C328 HP East, Vancouver, British Columbia, V5Z 3J5, Canada. Electronic address: tsteiner@mail.ubc.ca.
6 Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, 570-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6Z 1Y6, Canada.
7 Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, 570-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6Z 1Y6, Canada. Electronic address: hsun@hivnet.ubc.ca.
8 School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia; 2206 E Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z3, Canada; Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, 570-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6Z 1Y6, Canada; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia; 2405 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z3, Canada. Electronic address: wzhang@cheos.ubc.ca.

Description:

Objectives: From the perspectives of patients and caregivers, the objectives were: identifying which result presentations, describing work productivity loss (WPL) outcomes, are most understandable; measuring which presentations are important to report; and investigating which WPL outcomes are viewed as important alongside clinical trials results.

Methods: We used a four phased, sequential mixed methods design, guided by patient-oriented research engaging one patient partner. We conducted think-aloud interviews, in British Columbia/Canada, to review WPL results and our survey measuring the understandability and importance of the results, and importance of each WPL outcome. We surveyed a sample representing working Canadians. The findings were summarized and analyzed using linear and logistic regression. We conducted sub-group analyses; one was gender based. All regressions were conducted using generalized estimating equations.

Results: In our qualitative phases, 20 patients and caregivers were interviewed. Participants recommended for the results to be brief, simple, and represented visually. Then, 118 patients and 120 caregivers were surveyed. The results presented in days or cost yielded the highest understandability and importance to report. All WPL outcomes were identified as important to somewhat important to report by most. The associations indicated that the more understandable the result presentation was, the more likely it was to be rated as important. Age was the only factor significantly associated with selecting days or cost as the most important result.

Conclusion: Presenting WPL results in days and cost, using lay terms and visual supports, were viewed as easiest to understand and most important to report in clinical trials by patients and caregivers. Our findings are supportive of clinical trials standardizing the measurement of WPL to include all of its outcomes (absenteeism, presenteeism, employment status changes and total work productivity loss), in addition to tools assessing the comprehensiveness of WPL results to be provided to patients and caregivers.





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