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- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Adeloye, Davies; Elneima, Omer; Daines, Luke; Poinasamy, Krisnah; Quint, Jennifer K.; Walker, Samantha; Brightling, Chris E.; Siddiqui, Salman; Hurst, John R.; Chalmers, James D.; +7 moreAdeloye, Davies; Elneima, Omer; Daines, Luke; Poinasamy, Krisnah; Quint, Jennifer K.; Walker, Samantha; Brightling, Chris E.; Siddiqui, Salman; Hurst, John R.; Chalmers, James D.; Pfeffer, Paul E.; Novotny, Petr; Drake, Thomas M.; Heaney, Liam G.; Rudan, Igor; Sheikh, Aziz; De Soyza, Anthony;Country: Netherlands
Persistent ill health after acute COVID-19—referred to as long COVID, the post-acute COVID-19 syndrome, or the post-COVID-19 condition—has emerged as a major concern. We undertook an international consensus exercise to identify research priorities with the aim of understanding the long-term effects of acute COVID-19, with a focus on people with pre-existing airways disease and the occurrence of new-onset airways disease and associated symptoms. 202 international experts were invited to submit a minimum of three research ideas. After a two-phase internal review process, a final list of 98 research topics was scored by 48 experts. Patients with pre-existing or post-COVID-19 airways disease contributed to the exercise by weighting selected criteria. The highest-ranked research idea focused on investigation of the relationship between prognostic scores at hospital admission and morbidity at 3 months and 12 months after hospital discharge in patients with and without pre-existing airways disease. High priority was also assigned to comparisons of the prevalence and severity of post-COVID-19 fatigue, sarcopenia, anxiety, depression, and risk of future cardiovascular complications in patients with and without pre-existing airways disease. Our approach has enabled development of a set of priorities that could inform future research studies and funding decisions. This prioritisation process could also be adapted to other, non-respiratory aspects of long COVID.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishAuthors:GORDON, A.L.; SPILSBURY, K.; Achterberg, W.P.; ADAMS, R.; JONES, L.; GOODMAN, C.;GORDON, A.L.; SPILSBURY, K.; Achterberg, W.P.; ADAMS, R.; JONES, L.; GOODMAN, C.;
handle: 1887/3566682
Country: NetherlandsLong-term care homes play an essential role within health and social care. Successful measures to support older people at home for longer have led to increased prevalence of disability, frailty and cognitive impairment in those who live in care homes over the last two decades. The need for care home places is projected to increase for the next two decades. Modern care homes provide care for people who are predominantly over 80, have multiple long-term conditions, take multiple medicines, are physically dependent and live with cognitive impairment. Residents do better when services recognise the contributions of staff and care home providers rather than treating residents as individual patients living in a communal setting. There is a strong case given residents' frailty, multimorbidity and disability, that care should be structured around Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA). Care should be designed to allow opportunities for multiprofessional teams to come together for CGA, particularly if healthcare professionals are based outside care homes. Good data about care homes and residents are central to efforts to deliver high quality care-in some countries, these data are collected but not collated. Collating such data is a priority. Care home staff are under-recognised and underpaid-parity of pay and opportunity with NHS staff is the bare minimum to ensure that the best are recruited and retained in the sector. During the COVID-19 pandemic, residents and relatives have frequently been left out of decisions about policies that affect them, and better consultation is needed to deliver high quality care.
add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Huang, Futao; Craciun, Daniela; de Wit, Hans;Huang, Futao; Craciun, Daniela; de Wit, Hans;Country: Netherlands
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Dórea, Fernanda C.; Vergne, Timothée; Brennan, Marnie; Schaik, Gerdien van; Barrett, Damien; Carmo, Luís Pedro; Robinson, Philip A.; Brodbelt, Dave C.; McIntyre, K. Marie;Dórea, Fernanda C.; Vergne, Timothée; Brennan, Marnie; Schaik, Gerdien van; Barrett, Damien; Carmo, Luís Pedro; Robinson, Philip A.; Brodbelt, Dave C.; McIntyre, K. Marie;Country: Netherlands
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Alemanno, A.; Bialasiewicz, L.;Alemanno, A.; Bialasiewicz, L.;Country: Netherlands
This article discusses some of the challenges posed by the introduction of COVID-19 certificates as a privileged tool for opening up mobility and access in order to restore a semblance of normality to social life. While at present there is no international consensus either on how - or why - such certificates should be used or on how they should be designed and applied, a growing number of countries have already introduced COVID-19 certificates in one form or another. Yet the scientific community as well as the World Health Organisation (WHO) have expressed caution, noting that such certificates might disproportionately discriminate against people on the basis of race, religion and socioeconomic background, as well as on the basis of age due to the sequencing of the vaccine rollout. Indeed, while the new COVID-19 certificates may appear to promise a magical solution enabling us to free up global mobility and reopen economies, they actually risk creating new borders and new forms of inequality through an exclusionary sorting and profiling mechanism that delimits "safe" from "unsafe" bodies, based on differential access to "immuno-privilege"- but also differential forms of "bio-securitisation". They also provide an illusion of pandemic safety - assuring citizens that through the "fetish" of the certificate "safe travel" can magically be reinstated. Securing territories and populations has always been, in Foucauldian terms, a matter of "making a division between good and bad circulation and maximizing the good circulation by diminishing the bad". We can therefore reasonably expect growing contestation, including before courts, around COVID-19 certificates in their different national and international iterations, as their inherently discriminatory nature and other unintended consequences such as those stemming from the use of persuasive - as opposed to the more traditional coercive - governmental power begin to unfold in their performative trajectory.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2020Closed Access EnglishAuthors:De Vries, Anita; Brenninkmeijer, V.; van Vuuren, Tinka; De Cuyper, Nele; Leerstoel Taris; Work and Organizational Psychology: Occupational Health Psychology;De Vries, Anita; Brenninkmeijer, V.; van Vuuren, Tinka; De Cuyper, Nele; Leerstoel Taris; Work and Organizational Psychology: Occupational Health Psychology;Country: Netherlands
De COVID-19-pandemie en de daarmee gepaard gaande maatregelen hebben een enorme impact op onze samenleving. Naast directe gevolgen voor onze gezondheid en ons psychologisch welbevinden, zijn er belangrijke consequenties op het gebied van werk en inkomen. Ook al weten we niet hoe toekomstige ontwikkelingen rondom het virus eruit zullen zien, COVID-19 kan nu al beschouwd worden als een game changer die de manier waarop werknemers en organisaties opereren ingrijpend heeft veranderd.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Mugabushaka, A.-M.; Eck, N.J.P. van; Waltman, L.R,;Mugabushaka, A.-M.; Eck, N.J.P. van; Waltman, L.R,;
handle: 1887/3514533
Country: Netherlandsadd Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Gifford, Rachel; Westra, Daan; van de Baan, Frank; Ruwaard, Dirk; Zijlstra, Fred R.H.; Poesen, Lieze; Fleuren, Bram;Gifford, Rachel; Westra, Daan; van de Baan, Frank; Ruwaard, Dirk; Zijlstra, Fred R.H.; Poesen, Lieze; Fleuren, Bram;Publisher: Academy of ManagementCountry: Netherlands
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Toniolo, Sofia; Scarioni, Marta; di Lorenzo, Francesco; Hort, Jakub; Georges, Jean; Tomic, Svetlana; Nobili, Flavio; Frederiksen, Kristian Steen; Bonanni, Laura;Toniolo, Sofia; Scarioni, Marta; di Lorenzo, Francesco; Hort, Jakub; Georges, Jean; Tomic, Svetlana; Nobili, Flavio; Frederiksen, Kristian Steen; Bonanni, Laura;Country: Netherlands
Cognitive impairment following SARS-CoV-2 infection is being increasingly recognized as an acute and possibly also long-term sequela of the disease. Direct viral entry as well as systemic mechanisms such as cytokine storm are thought to contribute to neuroinflammation in these patients. Biomarkers of COVID-19-induced cognitive impairment are currently lacking, but there is some limited evidence that SARS-CoV-2 could preferentially target the frontal lobes, as suggested by behavioral and dysexecutive symptoms, fronto-temporal hypoperfusion on MRI, EEG slowing in frontal regions, and frontal hypometabolism on 18F-FDG-PET. Possible confounders include cognitive impairment due to hypoxia and mechanical ventilation and post-traumatic stress disorder. Conversely, patients already suffering from dementia, as well as their caregivers, have been greatly impacted by the disruption of their care caused by COVID-19. Patients with dementia have experienced worsening of cognitive, behavioral, and psychological symptoms, and the rate of COVID-19-related deaths is disproportionately high among cognitively impaired people. Multiple factors, such as difficulties in remembering and executing safeguarding procedures, age, comorbidities, residing in care homes, and poorer access to hospital standard of care play a role in the increased morbidity and mortality. Non-pharmacological interventions and new technologies have shown a potential for the management of patients with dementia, and for the support of their caregivers.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishCountry: Netherlands
After two years of COVID-19 we all know that communicating through a flat screen is exhausting. Since long before that, professor Pablo Cesar has been focussing his research on highly realistic volumetric video conferencing which will allow smooth, natural, communication and collaboration – making remoteness a thing of the past.
62 Research products, page 1 of 7
Loading
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Adeloye, Davies; Elneima, Omer; Daines, Luke; Poinasamy, Krisnah; Quint, Jennifer K.; Walker, Samantha; Brightling, Chris E.; Siddiqui, Salman; Hurst, John R.; Chalmers, James D.; +7 moreAdeloye, Davies; Elneima, Omer; Daines, Luke; Poinasamy, Krisnah; Quint, Jennifer K.; Walker, Samantha; Brightling, Chris E.; Siddiqui, Salman; Hurst, John R.; Chalmers, James D.; Pfeffer, Paul E.; Novotny, Petr; Drake, Thomas M.; Heaney, Liam G.; Rudan, Igor; Sheikh, Aziz; De Soyza, Anthony;Country: Netherlands
Persistent ill health after acute COVID-19—referred to as long COVID, the post-acute COVID-19 syndrome, or the post-COVID-19 condition—has emerged as a major concern. We undertook an international consensus exercise to identify research priorities with the aim of understanding the long-term effects of acute COVID-19, with a focus on people with pre-existing airways disease and the occurrence of new-onset airways disease and associated symptoms. 202 international experts were invited to submit a minimum of three research ideas. After a two-phase internal review process, a final list of 98 research topics was scored by 48 experts. Patients with pre-existing or post-COVID-19 airways disease contributed to the exercise by weighting selected criteria. The highest-ranked research idea focused on investigation of the relationship between prognostic scores at hospital admission and morbidity at 3 months and 12 months after hospital discharge in patients with and without pre-existing airways disease. High priority was also assigned to comparisons of the prevalence and severity of post-COVID-19 fatigue, sarcopenia, anxiety, depression, and risk of future cardiovascular complications in patients with and without pre-existing airways disease. Our approach has enabled development of a set of priorities that could inform future research studies and funding decisions. This prioritisation process could also be adapted to other, non-respiratory aspects of long COVID.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishAuthors:GORDON, A.L.; SPILSBURY, K.; Achterberg, W.P.; ADAMS, R.; JONES, L.; GOODMAN, C.;GORDON, A.L.; SPILSBURY, K.; Achterberg, W.P.; ADAMS, R.; JONES, L.; GOODMAN, C.;
handle: 1887/3566682
Country: NetherlandsLong-term care homes play an essential role within health and social care. Successful measures to support older people at home for longer have led to increased prevalence of disability, frailty and cognitive impairment in those who live in care homes over the last two decades. The need for care home places is projected to increase for the next two decades. Modern care homes provide care for people who are predominantly over 80, have multiple long-term conditions, take multiple medicines, are physically dependent and live with cognitive impairment. Residents do better when services recognise the contributions of staff and care home providers rather than treating residents as individual patients living in a communal setting. There is a strong case given residents' frailty, multimorbidity and disability, that care should be structured around Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA). Care should be designed to allow opportunities for multiprofessional teams to come together for CGA, particularly if healthcare professionals are based outside care homes. Good data about care homes and residents are central to efforts to deliver high quality care-in some countries, these data are collected but not collated. Collating such data is a priority. Care home staff are under-recognised and underpaid-parity of pay and opportunity with NHS staff is the bare minimum to ensure that the best are recruited and retained in the sector. During the COVID-19 pandemic, residents and relatives have frequently been left out of decisions about policies that affect them, and better consultation is needed to deliver high quality care.
add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Huang, Futao; Craciun, Daniela; de Wit, Hans;Huang, Futao; Craciun, Daniela; de Wit, Hans;Country: Netherlands
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Dórea, Fernanda C.; Vergne, Timothée; Brennan, Marnie; Schaik, Gerdien van; Barrett, Damien; Carmo, Luís Pedro; Robinson, Philip A.; Brodbelt, Dave C.; McIntyre, K. Marie;Dórea, Fernanda C.; Vergne, Timothée; Brennan, Marnie; Schaik, Gerdien van; Barrett, Damien; Carmo, Luís Pedro; Robinson, Philip A.; Brodbelt, Dave C.; McIntyre, K. Marie;Country: Netherlands
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Alemanno, A.; Bialasiewicz, L.;Alemanno, A.; Bialasiewicz, L.;Country: Netherlands
This article discusses some of the challenges posed by the introduction of COVID-19 certificates as a privileged tool for opening up mobility and access in order to restore a semblance of normality to social life. While at present there is no international consensus either on how - or why - such certificates should be used or on how they should be designed and applied, a growing number of countries have already introduced COVID-19 certificates in one form or another. Yet the scientific community as well as the World Health Organisation (WHO) have expressed caution, noting that such certificates might disproportionately discriminate against people on the basis of race, religion and socioeconomic background, as well as on the basis of age due to the sequencing of the vaccine rollout. Indeed, while the new COVID-19 certificates may appear to promise a magical solution enabling us to free up global mobility and reopen economies, they actually risk creating new borders and new forms of inequality through an exclusionary sorting and profiling mechanism that delimits "safe" from "unsafe" bodies, based on differential access to "immuno-privilege"- but also differential forms of "bio-securitisation". They also provide an illusion of pandemic safety - assuring citizens that through the "fetish" of the certificate "safe travel" can magically be reinstated. Securing territories and populations has always been, in Foucauldian terms, a matter of "making a division between good and bad circulation and maximizing the good circulation by diminishing the bad". We can therefore reasonably expect growing contestation, including before courts, around COVID-19 certificates in their different national and international iterations, as their inherently discriminatory nature and other unintended consequences such as those stemming from the use of persuasive - as opposed to the more traditional coercive - governmental power begin to unfold in their performative trajectory.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2020Closed Access EnglishAuthors:De Vries, Anita; Brenninkmeijer, V.; van Vuuren, Tinka; De Cuyper, Nele; Leerstoel Taris; Work and Organizational Psychology: Occupational Health Psychology;De Vries, Anita; Brenninkmeijer, V.; van Vuuren, Tinka; De Cuyper, Nele; Leerstoel Taris; Work and Organizational Psychology: Occupational Health Psychology;Country: Netherlands
De COVID-19-pandemie en de daarmee gepaard gaande maatregelen hebben een enorme impact op onze samenleving. Naast directe gevolgen voor onze gezondheid en ons psychologisch welbevinden, zijn er belangrijke consequenties op het gebied van werk en inkomen. Ook al weten we niet hoe toekomstige ontwikkelingen rondom het virus eruit zullen zien, COVID-19 kan nu al beschouwd worden als een game changer die de manier waarop werknemers en organisaties opereren ingrijpend heeft veranderd.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Mugabushaka, A.-M.; Eck, N.J.P. van; Waltman, L.R,;Mugabushaka, A.-M.; Eck, N.J.P. van; Waltman, L.R,;
handle: 1887/3514533
Country: Netherlandsadd Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Gifford, Rachel; Westra, Daan; van de Baan, Frank; Ruwaard, Dirk; Zijlstra, Fred R.H.; Poesen, Lieze; Fleuren, Bram;Gifford, Rachel; Westra, Daan; van de Baan, Frank; Ruwaard, Dirk; Zijlstra, Fred R.H.; Poesen, Lieze; Fleuren, Bram;Publisher: Academy of ManagementCountry: Netherlands
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2021Closed Access EnglishAuthors:Toniolo, Sofia; Scarioni, Marta; di Lorenzo, Francesco; Hort, Jakub; Georges, Jean; Tomic, Svetlana; Nobili, Flavio; Frederiksen, Kristian Steen; Bonanni, Laura;Toniolo, Sofia; Scarioni, Marta; di Lorenzo, Francesco; Hort, Jakub; Georges, Jean; Tomic, Svetlana; Nobili, Flavio; Frederiksen, Kristian Steen; Bonanni, Laura;Country: Netherlands
Cognitive impairment following SARS-CoV-2 infection is being increasingly recognized as an acute and possibly also long-term sequela of the disease. Direct viral entry as well as systemic mechanisms such as cytokine storm are thought to contribute to neuroinflammation in these patients. Biomarkers of COVID-19-induced cognitive impairment are currently lacking, but there is some limited evidence that SARS-CoV-2 could preferentially target the frontal lobes, as suggested by behavioral and dysexecutive symptoms, fronto-temporal hypoperfusion on MRI, EEG slowing in frontal regions, and frontal hypometabolism on 18F-FDG-PET. Possible confounders include cognitive impairment due to hypoxia and mechanical ventilation and post-traumatic stress disorder. Conversely, patients already suffering from dementia, as well as their caregivers, have been greatly impacted by the disruption of their care caused by COVID-19. Patients with dementia have experienced worsening of cognitive, behavioral, and psychological symptoms, and the rate of COVID-19-related deaths is disproportionately high among cognitively impaired people. Multiple factors, such as difficulties in remembering and executing safeguarding procedures, age, comorbidities, residing in care homes, and poorer access to hospital standard of care play a role in the increased morbidity and mortality. Non-pharmacological interventions and new technologies have shown a potential for the management of patients with dementia, and for the support of their caregivers.
- Other research product . Other ORP type . 2022Closed Access EnglishCountry: Netherlands
After two years of COVID-19 we all know that communicating through a flat screen is exhausting. Since long before that, professor Pablo Cesar has been focussing his research on highly realistic volumetric video conferencing which will allow smooth, natural, communication and collaboration – making remoteness a thing of the past.