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1.
Simul Healthc ; 2024 Jul 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38980670

RESUMO

SUMMARY STATEMENT: Medical students have traditionally practiced painful procedures such as intravenous (IV) line insertion on each other. Recently, there has been more emphasis on learning through simulation. Our study investigated students' attitudes regarding IV line insertion training, focusing on their anxiety, expectation to learn empathy, learning preference, and litigiousness. A 24-question survey was taken regarding anxiety and empathy when learning IV placement on each other versus on mannequins.Many students believed that they could learn empathy skills and better appreciate patient discomfort by learning IV placement through person-based practice. However, students who reported feeling anxious about having a student practice IV placement on them believed they were less likely to learn empathy through having a student practice IV insertion on them. The preferred method of learning painful procedures, such as IV placement, may be through a combination of simulation and person-based practice to mitigate anxiety while also enhancing empathy skills.

2.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 7806, 2020 05 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32385415

RESUMO

Humans are the only primate that walk bipedally with adducted hips, valgus knees, and swing-side pelvic drop. These characteristic frontal-plane aspects of bipedalism likely play a role in balance and energy minimization during walking. Understanding when and why these aspects of bipedalism evolved also requires an understanding of how each of these features are interrelated during walking. Here we investigated the relationship between step width, hip adduction, and pelvic list during bipedalism by altering step widths and pelvic motions in humans in ways that both mimic chimpanzee gait as well as an exaggerated human gait. Our results show that altering either step width or pelvic list to mimic those of chimpanzees affects hip adduction, but neither of these gait parameters dramatically affects the other in ways that lead to a chimpanzee-like gait. These results suggest that the evolution of valgus knees and narrow steps in humans may be decoupled from the evolution of the human-like pattern of pelvic list. While the origin of narrow steps in hominins may be linked to minimizing energetic cost of locomotion, the origin of the human-like pattern of pelvic list remains unresolved.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Ossos Pélvicos/fisiologia , Equilíbrio Postural/fisiologia , Caminhada/fisiologia , Animais , Marcha/fisiologia , Quadril/anatomia & histologia , Quadril/fisiologia , Humanos , Joelho/anatomia & histologia , Joelho/fisiologia , Ossos Pélvicos/anatomia & histologia , Primatas/anatomia & histologia , Primatas/fisiologia
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