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Institution

St. Catherine University

EducationSaint Paul, Minnesota, United States
About: St. Catherine University is a education organization based out in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Social work & Population. The organization has 1305 authors who have published 1682 publications receiving 22252 citations. The organization is also known as: Saint Catherine University & St. Kate's.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings indicate that resting hand splints are effective for pain relief and that persons with rheumatoid arthritis are more likely to prefer and comply with soft splint use for this purpose.
Abstract: Objectives This study compared soft versus hard resting hand splints on pain and hand function in 39 persons with rheumatoid arthritis. Splint preference was also evaluated to determine its effects on splint wear compliance. Method A repeated measures research design was used to compare the two experimental conditions, wearing a soft splint versus a hard splint on the dominant hand for 28 days at night only, and an unsplinted control period of 28 days. Results Arthritis pain was considerably less during both splinted periods when compared with the pretest. Subjects identified fewer joints as being painful during the soft splint condition than during the unsplinted condition. There were no significant differences among conditions on hand function measures. Splint preference was 57% for the soft splint, 33% for the hard splint, and 10% for no splint. Splint wear compliance was significantly better with the soft splint (82%) than with the hard splint (67%). Conclusion The findings indicate that resting hand splints are effective for pain relief and that persons with rheumatoid arthritis are more likely to prefer and comply with soft splint use for this purpose. Individualized splint prescription that focuses on client comfort and preference may enhance splint wear compliance.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Dried fruit consumption was associated with improved nutrient intakes, a higher overall diet quality score, and lower body weight/adiposity measures.

67 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The analysis suggests that a CD approach applied to DHS data from Nigeria provides infertility prevalence estimates comparable to other smaller studies in the same region, with potentially far-reaching implications for policies and programs intended to address reproductive health.
Abstract: Study question Can infertility prevalence be estimated using a current duration (CD) approach when applied to nationally representative Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data collected routinely in low- or middle-income countries? Summary answer Our analysis suggests that a CD approach applied to DHS data from Nigeria provides infertility prevalence estimates comparable to other smaller studies in the same region. What is known already Despite associations with serious negative health, social and economic outcomes, infertility in developing countries is a marginalized issue in sexual and reproductive health. Obtaining reliable, nationally representative prevalence estimates is critical to address the issue, but methodological and resource challenges have impeded this goal. Study design, size, duration This cross-sectional study was based on standard information available in the DHS core questionnaire and data sets, which are collected routinely among participating low-to-middle-income countries. Our research question was examined among women participating in the 2013 Nigeria DHS (n = 38 948). Among women eligible for the study, 98% were interviewed. Participants/materials, setting, methods We applied a CD approach (i.e. current length of time-at-risk of pregnancy) to estimate time-to-pregnancy (TTP) and 12-month infertility prevalence among women 'at risk' of pregnancy at the time of interview (n = 7063). Women who were 18-44 years old, married or cohabitating, sexually active within the past 4 weeks and not currently using contraception (and had not been sterilized) were included in the analysis. Estimates were based on parametric survival methods using bootstrap methods (500 bootstrap replicates) to obtain 95% CIs. Main results and the role of chance The estimated median TTP among couples at risk of pregnancy was 5.1 months (95% CI: 4.2-6.3). The estimated percentage of infertile couples was 31.1% (95% CI: 27.9-34.7%)-consistent with other smaller studies from Nigeria. Primary infertility (17.4%, 95% CI: 12.9-23.8%) was substantially lower than secondary infertility (34.1%, 95% CI: 30.3-39.3%) in this population. Overall estimates for TTP >24 or >36 months dropped to 17.7% (95% CI: 15.7-20%) and 11.5% (95% CI: 10.2-13%), respectively. Subgroup analyses showed that estimates varied by age, coital frequency and fertility intentions, while being in a polygynous relationship showed minimal impact. Limitations, reasons for caution The CD approach may be limited by assumptions on when exposure to risk of pregnancy began and methodologic assumptions required for estimation, which may be less accurate for particular subgroups or populations. Unrecognized pregnancies may have also biased our findings; however, we attempted to address this in our exclusion criteria. Limiting to married/cohabiting couples may have excluded women who are no longer in a relationship after being blamed for infertility. Although probably rare in this setting, we lack information on couples undergoing infertility treatment. Like other TTP measurement approaches, pregnancies resulting from contraceptive failure are not included, which may bias estimates. Wider implications of the findings Nationally representative estimates of TTP and infertility based on a clinical definition of 12 months have been limited within developing countries. This approach represents a pragmatic advance in our ability to measure and monitor infertility in the developing world, with potentially far-reaching implications for policies and programs intended to address reproductive health. Study funding/competing interests There are no competing interests and no financial support was provided for this study. Financial support for Open Access publication was provided by the World Health Organization.

67 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nutritional quality of menu offerings at fast-food restaurant chains included in this study increased over time, but further improvements are needed.

66 citations


Authors

Showing all 1311 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
William F. McDonough6927943476
Alan J. Dubinsky431537523
Thomas W. Kernozek381384365
Marla Reicks351623896
Virgil Mathiowetz32689098
Takeshi Otsuki28862545
Mary O. Hearst27712717
Len Marquart26963127
Raymond Hinnebusch251142248
E. Gil Clary22355933
Carol Pavlish2035880
Caroline Krafft191221512
Julie Miller Jones19551251
Anita Ho19521210
Daron E. Janzen18791297
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20229
202190
202053
201959
201854