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1.
Behav Sci (Basel) ; 11(11)2021 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34821613

ABSTRACT

Cybersecurity (CS) is a contemporary field for research and applied study of a range of aspects from across multiple disciplines. A cybersecurity expert has an in-depth knowledge of technology but is often also recognized for the ability to view technology in a non-standard way. This paper explores how CS specialists are both a combination of professional computing-based skills and genetically encoded traits. Almost every human behavioral trait is a result of many genome variants in action altogether with environmental factors. The review focuses on contextualizing the behavior genetics aspects in the application of cybersecurity. It reconsiders methods that help to identify aspects of human behavior from the genetic information. And stress is an illustrative factor to start the discussion within the community on what methodology should be used in an ethical way to approach those questions. CS positions are considered stressful due to the complexity of the domain and the social impact it can have in cases of failure. An individual risk profile could be created combining known genome variants linked to a trait of particular behavior using a special biostatistical approach such as a polygenic score. These revised advancements bring challenging possibilities in the applications of human behavior genetics and CS.

2.
Contemp Nurse ; 23(1): 21-37, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17083317

ABSTRACT

Twenty retrospective patient case studies were collated in an acute care teaching hospital using a case note audit and in addition interviews were undertaken with 40 nursing staff following the deaths of these patients in order to: analyse the end of life care received; identify any deficits in care provision and to enable the nursing division to target any inadequacies in care found. Findings indicated that communication between medical and nursing staff and between nursing staff, patients and family around end of life issues continue to be poor and that discussions regarding NFR decisions occurred too close to death, creating unnecessary stress for both patients and families. Recommendations regarding palliative approaches in the acute care setting are detailed.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Communication , Decision Making , Kidney Failure, Chronic/psychology , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology , Palliative Care/psychology , Acute Disease , Adult , Advance Care Planning/standards , Female , Health Services Needs and Demand , Hospitals, Public , Hospitals, Teaching , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Male , Medical Staff, Hospital/psychology , Middle Aged , Nursing Audit , Nursing Methodology Research , Palliative Care/standards , Professional-Family Relations , Professional-Patient Relations , Qualitative Research , Retrospective Studies , South Australia
3.
Aust J Adv Nurs ; 24(2): 21-5, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17285832

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Palliative care has emerged as a specialist discipline in the past 25 years. However in relation to acute hospitals, a sense exists that patients who are receiving end of life care may not experience support which fully reflects appropriate palliative care management. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to analyse the end of life care received by patients in the acute wards of a busy teaching hospital. DESIGN: Retrospective analysis using multiple methods including: case note auditing and interviews of key staff was used to determine the quality of end of life support provided to an opportunistic sample of patients who died in acute care wards. SETTING: The research site is a 250 bed teaching hospital in South Australia. SUBJECTS: A medical record audit using an opportunistic sample of 20 recently deceased patients from acute wards was used. For each patient, interviews were also conducted with two nurses (n = 40) selected on the basis of having a major care involvement. MAIN OUTCOME: A range of strategies for enhancing the end of life care for patients in acute wards were determined, including support for application of a Palliative Care Advanced Disease Pathway. RESULTS: The lack of appropriate assessment and documentation indicates that major opportunities for enhanced service provision exist both in relation to physical care and even more significantly in relation to psychosocial and spiritual care. CONCLUSIONS: The end of life care provided for patients reviewed in this study indicates a far from ideal situation in the acute hospital wards of the research setting. An eagerness from the nurse participants in the study for tools and further support in their practice was noted and augurs well for future developments within the research site.


Subject(s)
Palliative Care , Hospitals, Teaching , Medical Audit , Nursing Care , Retrospective Studies , South Australia
4.
Int J Palliat Nurs ; 11(12): 632-6, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16415756

ABSTRACT

AIM: to explore discrepancies between nurses' knowledge and their documentation of issues of psychosocial, spiritual and cultural aspects of palliative care, evidenced clearly in recent nursing research into end-of-life care in an acute care, teaching hospital. DESIGN: the study involved a retrospective patient case-note audit of an opportunistic sample of 20 patients deceased recently and interviews of the two nurses most involved in the care of each patient (n=40). FINDINGS: this research indicates that nurses in acute care settings often recognize, sometimes explore, but infrequently document psychosocial, spiritual and cultural aspects of care. CONCLUSION: there is a strong need for: (1) education about both the impact of non-physical dimensions of patients' lives and the effective documentation of these dimensions; and (2) up-grading of documentation tools to better facilitate documentation of non-physical aspects of palliative care.


Subject(s)
Documentation , Holistic Nursing , Hospital Units/organization & administration , Nursing Audit , Nursing Records , Palliative Care , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Culture , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Nurse-Patient Relations , Retrospective Studies , South Australia , Spirituality
5.
Pain ; 47(2): 135-140, 1991 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1762806

ABSTRACT

Twenty-eight patients with severe pain due to cancer, who could no longer obtain acceptable pain relief from optimised doses of oral opioids, were entered into a study which compared pain relief, satisfaction with pain therapy and estimates of neuropsychological functioning during treatment with spinally administered (i.e., epidural and intrathecal) morphine as either repeated bolus doses or as a continuous infusion. These measures of efficacy and side effects were repeated every 2 weeks until either the patient died (82% of patients), withdrew from the study or were no longer able to complete the tests due to deterioration of their condition. The mean (range) duration of treatment was 169 (6-537) days for those patients receiving continuous infusion and 140 (28-378) days for those patients receiving repeated bolus doses. There was no significant difference in visual analogue pain scores, pain relief scores and satisfaction scores between the bolus and infusion groups. Furthermore, low pain scores and high pain relief scores indicated that both treatment modalities provided effective pain control. Similarly, there was no significant difference between the two groups in the various tests used to assess depression or neuropsychological function (i.e., memory, vigilance, attention and processing). There was a significantly greater degree of dose escalation in patients receiving continuous infusion compared to patients receiving repeated bolus doses. For 6 patients in the infusion group the catheter was sited in the intrathecal space, as the dose requirements by the epidural route exceeded the delivery capacity of the pump. For 4 patients in the bolus group the catheter was similarly sited, due to pain on injection and leakage/blockage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Analgesia, Epidural/methods , Morphine/administration & dosage , Neoplasms/complications , Pain, Intractable/drug therapy , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infusions, Parenteral , Injections, Spinal , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Pain, Intractable/etiology , Pain, Intractable/psychology , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Quality of Life , Time Factors
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