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1.
BMJ Paediatr Open ; 7(1)2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36948508

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess paediatric emergency department (PED) health professionals' confidence, experience and awareness in managing traumatic dental injuries (TDIs). DESIGN: A cross-sectional online survey. SETTING: PED at Alder Hey Children's Hospital and Birmingham Children's Hospital. RESULTS: 94 ED health professionals responded. One-third of responders (n=26) encounter children with dental trauma daily or weekly. TDI teaching during undergraduate training was received by 13% (n=12) of responders, and 32% (n=30) had never received training. Responders thought they would benefit from online resources and regular teaching on paediatric TDIs, in addition to an easy-to-use decision-making tool to signpost families.ED health professionals' confidence in giving advice to families following a TDI, and in recognising types of TDIs, was notably low; -79 and -76 Net Promotor Score, respectively.Responders' awareness of how to recognise and manage TDIs was varied. Majority were aware of the need to attempt to reimplant an avulsed permanent tooth, and the need to refer a child presenting with a complex permanent tooth injury to the oncall dentist. However, very few responders commented on the importance of follow-up. Responders also raised concerns about the lack of dental services to treat TDIs in children. CONCLUSIONS: There is a need to enhance dental trauma teaching for all ED health professionals who encounter TDIs to increase their confidence and enable them to triage and advise patients appropriately. Additionally, increased signposting for families to the appropriate service could in turn improve outcomes and experience for children who experience a TDI.


Subject(s)
Tooth Avulsion , Tooth Injuries , Humans , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Tooth Injuries/diagnosis , Tooth Injuries/therapy , Tooth Avulsion/therapy , Surveys and Questionnaires , Emergency Service, Hospital
2.
Front Vet Sci ; 9: 961537, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36425120

ABSTRACT

While equine obesity is understood by equine professionals to be a serious and widespread welfare problem, thus far approaches to reducing the prevalence of obesity in the UK's leisure horses have mainly been limited to educating owners about the dangers of obesity in their horses. In human health, approaches to behavior change encourage holistic thinking around human behavior, recognizing the importance of the connection between the individuals' knowledge, attitudes, habits, and the social and physical environments. This study used qualitative data from interviews with horse owners and professionals, open-access discussion fora and focus groups in order to collate extensive information about the factors shaping the UK's equine obesity crisis. The data were initially analyzed using a grounded theory method to determine the common themes, and were then analyzed using the COM-B model of behavior change, in order to identify areas where human behavior change might be better supported. The analysis highlighted the importance of a holistic approach to behavior change, since all areas of the COM-B were important in limiting owners' recognition of, and response to, equine obesity. For example, environments and social norms limited the likelihood of owners proactively managing horse weight, and owners also found it difficult to identify overweight horses, and evaluate the risks of long-term health issues as a result of weight, with short-term negative impacts of weight management. While interventions often aim to educate owners into changing their behavior, this analysis highlights the importance of creative and holistic approaches which work alongside the owners' motivations, while shaping the social and physical environments.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34299828

ABSTRACT

Dog bites are a health risk in a number of workplaces such as the delivery, veterinary and dog rescue sectors. This study aimed to explore how workers negotiate the risk of dog bites in daily interactions with dogs and the role of procedures in workplace safety. Participants who encounter dogs at work were recruited using snowball sampling. Ethnographic methods (interviews, focus group discussions, participant-observations) were used for data collection. All data were coded qualitatively into themes. Six themes describing dog bite risk management were identified: 'Surveillance of dogs'; 'Communicating risk; 'Actions taken to manage perceived risk'; 'Reporting bites and near-misses', 'Investigating bites and near-misses', and; 'Learning and teaching safety'. While the procedures described dog bite risk as objective, when interacting with dogs, participants drew on experiential knowledge and subjective judgment of risk. There was a discrepancy between risks that the procedures aimed to guard against and the risk participants were experiencing in the course of work. This often led to disregarding procedures. Paradoxically, procedures generated risks to individual wellbeing and sometimes employment, by contributing to blaming employees for bites. Dog bite prevention could be improved by clarifying definitions of bites, involving at risk staff in procedure development, and avoiding blaming the victim for the incident.


Subject(s)
Accidental Injuries , Bites and Stings , Animals , Bites and Stings/epidemiology , Dogs , Employment , Focus Groups , Humans , Workplace
4.
Equine Vet J ; 53(4): 752-762, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33002214

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Equine obesity is considered one of the most serious welfare concerns in UK leisure horses, yet little is known about how horse owners conceptualise their horse's weight as part of its health, or how they plan and carry out weight management. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to further our understanding of leisure horse owners' perceptions of equine health and awareness of excess fat in order to clarify our understanding of successful strategies for managing equine weight. STUDY DESIGN: This study used a qualitative research methodology. METHODS: Data comprised 16 threads from online UK equine discussion fora, 28 individual interviews with leisure horse owners, 19 interviews with equine professionals such as vets and nutritionists, and two focus groups with a further 21 horse owners. Data were anonymised and analysed using a grounded theory approach. RESULTS: Awareness of excess fat was a complex issue, with owners finding it difficult to differentiate equine obesity from the shape they thought the horse was "meant to be", particularly if the horse was a heavier breed such as a native pony or cob. Owners were not necessarily "aware" or "unaware" of fat, but instead equine body fat was constructed as an integral part of the equine body. For example, owners might say that they thought their horse was an ideal weight yet describe their horse's overall body shape as "like a Thelwell". When owners became aware of fat as a changeable part of the horse's body, and/or a threat to health, the presence of fat was articulated as a strong-willed adversary, and weight management was considered a "battle" or "war". Owners found weight management difficult because they perceived that it had immediate negative welfare implications for the horse, and this therefore interfered with their preferred ownership practices and the horse-human relationship. MAIN LIMITATIONS: Interview data are self-reported, and people may not always do what they say they do. CONCLUSIONS: This study has provided valuable insight into how owners conceptualise weight and weight management, yielding important information about communicating with owners about weight, tailoring weight management strategies, and promoting positive welfare.


Subject(s)
Horse Diseases , Animal Husbandry , Animals , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Horses , Leisure Activities , Obesity/therapy , Obesity/veterinary , Surveys and Questionnaires , United Kingdom
5.
Front Vet Sci ; 7: 557, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33088824

ABSTRACT

This article analyses the progress made in the UK with regard to tackling antibiotic "misuse and overuse" in food-producing animals. Moving beyond statistical realities, the paper examines how the UK's industry-led policy approach is shaping practice. Using a multi-sited ethnography situated in Actor Network Theory and Callon's sociology of markets, the UK dairy supply chain policies and practices were studied. Findings reveal that dairy industry policies only partially address the complex network of people, animals, and the environment in which dairy antibiotics circulate. Antibiotic "misuse and overuse" in agriculture is far from a behavioural matter, with solely farmers and veterinarians to blame. Instead, antibiotic use in food animals is embedded in complex economic networks that constrain radical changes in dairy husbandry management and antibiotic use on farms. More attention toward the needs of the dairy supply chain actors and wider environmental considerations is essential to reduce the dairy sector's dependency on antibiotics and support transition toward responsible farming in the UK.

6.
Sociol Ruralis ; 58(4): 765-785, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30449903

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this article is to provide an understanding of how different countries formulate and regulate antibiotic use in animals raised for human consumption. A comparative case study was undertaken, analysing historical documents from the 1950s to the 1990s from the UK, the first country to produce a scientific report on the public health risks of agricultural antibiotic use; and Sweden, the first country to produce legislation on the growth promotor use of antibiotics in food animals. Sheila Jasanoff's concepts of 'co-production' and 'political cultures' have been used to explore how both countries used different styles of scientific reasoning and justification of the risks of agricultural antibiotic use. It will be argued that national dynamics between policy, science and public knowledges co-produced different risk classifications and patterns of agricultural antibiotic use between both countries. UK's political culture used 'expert committees' to remove the issue from public debate and to inform agricultural antibiotic policies. In contrast, the Swedish 'consensus-oriented' political culture made concerns related to agricultural antibiotic use into a cooperative debate that included multiple discourses. Understanding how national policies, science and public knowledges interact with the risks related to agricultural antibiotic use can provide valuable insights in understanding and addressing countries agricultural use of antibiotics.

7.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 7147, 2018 05 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29740161

ABSTRACT

YouTube videos of dog bites present an unexplored opportunity to observe dog bites directly. We recorded the context of bites, bite severity, victim and dog characteristics for 143 videos and for 56 videos we coded human and dog behaviour before the bite. Perceived bite severity was derived from visual aspects of the bite. Associations between bite severity and victim, dog and context characteristics were analysed using a Bayesian hierarchical regression model. Human and dog behaviour before the bite were summarised with descriptive statistics. No significant differences in bite severity were observed between contexts. Only age of the victim was predictive of bite severity: adults were bitten more severely than infants and infants more severely than children. Non-neutral codes describing dog body posture and some displacement and appeasement behaviours increased approximately 20 seconds before the bite and humans made more tactile contacts with dogs 21 seconds before the bite. This analysis can help to improve understanding of context in which bites occur and improve bite prevention by highlighting observable human and dog behaviours occurring before the bite.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Bites and Stings/physiopathology , Video Recording , Accidents , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Bites and Stings/epidemiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Dogs , Female , Humans , Infant , Internet , Male , Risk Factors
8.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29215554

ABSTRACT

In the United Kingdom, following the emergence of Seoul hantavirus in pet rat owners in 2012, public health authorities tried to communicate the risk of this zoonotic disease, but had limited success. To explore this lack of engagement with health advice, we conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews with pet rat owners and analysed them using a grounded theory approach. The findings from these interviews suggest that rat owners construct their pets as different from wild rats, and by elevating the rat to the status of a pet, the powerful associations that rats have with dirt and disease are removed. Removing the rat from the contaminated outside world moves their pet rat from being 'out of place' to 'in place'. A concept of 'bounded purity' keeps the rat protected within the home, allowing owners to interact with their pet, safe in the knowledge that it is clean and disease-free. Additionally, owners constructed a 'hierarchy of purity' for their pets, and it is on this structure of disease and risk that owners base their behaviour, not conventional biomedical models of disease.


Subject(s)
Environmental Pollution , Ownership , Pets/psychology , Public Health , Zoonoses/transmission , Animals , Grounded Theory , Rats , United Kingdom , Zoonoses/psychology
9.
Health Place ; 48: 123-131, 2017 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29073482

ABSTRACT

People with a learning disability in the UK are increasingly choosing to spend their time on 'care farms' but there is limited research examining these spaces from their perspective. A qualitative research design was used to ask eighteen of these clients how care farms contributed to their health and wellbeing. For these participants care farms can be understood, using Fleuret and Atkinson's (2007) framework, as a 'space of wellbeing' and as a positive and life-enhancing space. Positive language was used by participants to describe the farms contrasting with ne gative language describing other spaces and activities. Farms were identified as contributing positively to mental and social wellbeing.


Subject(s)
Farms , Learning Disabilities/therapy , Mental Health , Adult , Humans , Learning Disabilities/psychology , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , United Kingdom
10.
J Vet Behav ; 10(6): 479-488, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26702271

ABSTRACT

Preventing dog bites is an increasingly important public health and political issue with implications for both human and animal health and welfare. Expert opinion is that most bites are preventable. Intervention materials have been designed to educate people on how to assess the body language of dogs, evaluate risk, and take appropriate action. The effectiveness of this approach is rarely evaluated and the incidence of dog bites is thought to be increasing. Is the traditional approach to dog bite prevention working as well as it should? In this novel, small scale qualitative study, the perceptions of victims regarding their dog bite experience were explored in-depth. The study recruited 8 female participants who had been bitten by a dog in the past 5 years. In-depth, one-to-one interviews were conducted, transcribed, and analyzed using thematic analysis. The findings indicate that dog bites may not be as easily preventable as previously presumed, and that education about dog body language may not prevent some types of dog bites. The reasons participants were bitten were multifaceted and complex. In some cases, there was no interaction with the dog before the bite so there was no opportunity to assess the situation and modify behavior around the dog accordingly. Identifying who was to blame, and had responsibility for preventing the bite, was straightforward for the participants in hindsight. Those bitten blamed themselves and/or the dog owner, but not the dog. Most participants already felt they had a theoretical knowledge that would allow them to recognize dog aggression before the dog bite, yet participants, especially those who worked regularly with dogs, routinely believed, "it would not happen to me." We also identified an attitude that bites were "just one of those things," which could also be a barrier prevention initiatives. Rather than being special to the human-canine relationship, the attitudes discovered mirror those found in other areas of injury prevention. A new approach to dog-bite prevention may now be required, drawing on other injury prevention strategies including awareness-raising and minimizing the damage caused by a bite when it happens.

12.
Br J Health Psychol ; 15(Pt 4): 921-39, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20392339

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Although a number of recent health promotion interventions targeted at men have recognized the plurality of masculinities and adopted multifaceted approaches, in the main there continues to be a reliance on stereotypes of gendered behaviour that focus on hegemonic masculinities and a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to health care. The present study sought to overcome this limitation. DESIGN: The present study used a qualitative design, in which data were analysed using framework analysis. METHOD: A total of 82 middle-aged and older men, in a socially deprived area of Britain, took part in focus groups about health promotion. RESULTS: Analysis of focus group transcripts revealed four key themes: (1) that the 'doing' of gender in relation to health must be seen as contingent and in constant flux; (2) that, despite stereotypes of typical behaviour, men were keen to engage with health care services; (3) that men felt there were a number of barriers to help seeking, but generally welcomed the opportunity to discuss their health care needs, and; (4) that they were keen to see the above themes translated into directed advertising and health information for men. CONCLUSION: These results have practical implications for the way in which health promotion interventions target men, which we discuss in conclusion.


Subject(s)
Health Promotion , Men's Health , Needs Assessment , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Adult , Aged , England , Focus Groups , Gender Identity , Humans , Male , Marketing of Health Services , Middle Aged , Patient Preference , Poverty , Professional-Patient Relations
13.
Public Health Nutr ; 13(5): 682-7, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20018135

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Although there is growing awareness of the impact of diet on health, little attention has been given to the food available in our sports stadia. We used a football club (Citygrene FC) - Citygrene is a fictional name - in the English Premier League as a case study to examine the attitudes of male and female football supporters to the food and drink available at their home stadium (Citygrene Stadium). DESIGN: The research design used five focus groups of male and female fans. The discourse was audiotaped, transcribed, coded and analysed for themes. SETTING: A football stadium in the English Premier League, England. SUBJECTS: The participants were season ticket holders drawn from two stands at Citygrene Stadium. RESULTS: The research showed a high level of dissatisfaction with the food and drink supplied. There were key differences in the views of the male and female participants in the focus groups, with the women more concerned about wider issues such as the lack of healthy food. Both men and women were aware of their role as consumers and felt that there was an opportunity for Citygrene to improve their catering profits, if they provided a better selection of food and drink and an improved service. CONCLUSIONS: The study shows that there is a demand for healthier food options (and a wider choice of food and drink in general), which may provide an economic opportunity for stadium and catering managers. In addition, a stadium may be considered a potential 'healthy setting', which can serve as a supportive environment for healthier food choices.


Subject(s)
Consumer Behavior , Food Services/standards , Food Supply/statistics & numerical data , Soccer , Adult , Attitude to Health , England , Female , Focus Groups , Food Services/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sex Distribution
14.
Health Place ; 13(4): 851-64, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17433755

ABSTRACT

The aim of this paper is to challenge assumptions that life in the English countryside is a healthy existence. This paper proposes that public health practitioners should consider the problems of stigma and social exclusion sometimes faced by individuals in rural areas. Using ethnographic research from a village in South East England the experiences of several individuals are examined to illustrate how stigma impacts on the health and well-being of those supposedly living in the rural idyll. It also argues for more ethnographic research to be conducted in health studies, particularly in rural areas, to gain deeper insight into health experiences.


Subject(s)
Prejudice , Rural Population , Social Environment , Social Isolation , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Anthropology, Cultural , Child , Child, Preschool , Cultural Characteristics , England , Female , Health Status , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Social Support
15.
J Public Health Med ; 24(3): 160-4, 2002 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12831083

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Eight regional public health observatories were launched in England in February 2000, to strengthen the availability and use of health information and to support efforts to tackle health inequalities at local level. This qualitative study was carried out by the Merseyside and Cheshire Zone of the North West Public Health Observatory to assess the needs of local users and producers of public health information. METHODS: Semi-structured in-depth interviews were carried out with 42 representatives of three major groups in Merseyside and Cheshire: community groups, public-health-related professionals in the local statutory and academic sectors, and information specialists within the National Health Service. RESULTS: Different groups of users and producers encountered different problems in accessing health information. Community groups had significant problems accessing and interpreting health information and were concerned about tokenism and the failure of professionals to recognize lay knowledge. Professionals experienced difficulties in accessing local information from outside their agency and had concerns over partnerships failing to work together to share information. The health information specialists stressed the danger of providing information without supporting intelligence, the difficulty of keeping track of the many local sources, and the importance of having access to local authority data sources. All three groups relied on their own networks in their search for information, and these should not be overlooked in any dissemination strategy. CONCLUSION: Information requires skilled interpretation to become policy-relevant public health intelligence. This research identified major problems in the communication of lay health knowledge and in the accessibility of public health intelligence.


Subject(s)
Community Health Planning , Public Health Informatics , Public Health Practice , Access to Information , England , Health Services Research , Humans , Information Dissemination , Interviews as Topic , Needs Assessment , Social Justice , Socioeconomic Factors
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