Aim: The study examined the relationships between psychological variables and sexual functioning in persons with lower limb amputations.Method: Sixty-five participants (n?=?49 males, n?=?16 females) with lower limb amputations completed a battery of self-report questionnaires regarding their current psychological well-being and their current sexual activity. Measures included the anxiety items on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, the Beck Depression Inventory – Second Edition, Body Image Quality of Life Inventory, Body Exposure Self-Consciousness during Intimate Situations and the Golombok-Rust Inventory of Sexual Satisfaction.Results: Half of all participants with lower limb amputations were not currently sexually active. Approximately 60% of those who were sexually active scored within the clinical range for overall sexual dysfunction. Overall levels of sexual dysfunction were associated with significantly higher levels of anxiety (r?=?0.40, p?0.005), depression (r?=?0.41, p?0.015) and body exposure self-consciousness during sexual activities (r?=?0.56, p?0.005). Body image self-consciousness during sexual activities was the strongest predictor of sexual dysfunction.Conclusions: Psychological challenges following limb loss are strongly associated with levels of sexual dysfunction. The study highlights the need for psychological and psychosexual assessment and intervention following limb loss to enhance sexual functioning and overall quality of life.
Implications for Rehabilitation
Only half of the participants with a lower limb amputation were sexually active. Over 60% of those who were sexually active reported clinical levels of sexual dysfunction. One third of the entire sample scored within the clinical range for depression and for anxiety.
Depression, anxiety and body image issues were significantly associated with sexual dysfunction in the current sample of individuals with lower limb amputation.
There is a need for psychosexual assessment following limb loss to ensure that appropriate and timely interventions are made available. Interventions that target the psychological factors related to sexual dysfunction are likely to improve overall quality of life for these individuals
While knowledge about the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) healthy schools model has been developed in recent years, process implementation and outcomes for school children have not improved in line with these advances. This deficit has become known as the ‘implementation gap’ and refers to the difference between the evidence of what works in theory and what is delivered in practice. The aim of this research was to evaluate the first implementation and impact of the WHO model among urban disadvantaged school children in Ireland from 2008 to 2012. A concurrent mixed methods study design was used. A process evaluation-mapped implementation and a three-year cohort study measured the impact. Data comprised of semi-structured interviews, focus groups and documentary analysis. Instruments included the Kidscreen-27 and the Child Depression Inventory (CDI). Over 600 children in five intervention and two comparison schools were recruited. The process evaluation revealed that top-down decision making based on the communities rather than each individual school’s needs and a lack of understanding of the concept of the whole school approach inhibited implementation. No significant differences were found between intervention and comparison of schools over three years post implementation. The successful implementation within an urban disadvantaged region requires not an analysis of the regional needs but a development of the individual school needs and sufficient lead-in time to ensure that each school is ready in terms of its understanding. Furthermore, healthy schools coordinators roles need to be clarified as facilitators of development and change rather than as unsustainable providers of health activities. 相似文献
There is increasing evidence that childhood vaccines have effects that extend beyond their target disease. The objective of this study was to assess the effects of routine childhood vaccines on bacterial carriage in the nasopharynx.
Methods
A cohort of children from rural Gambia was recruited at birth and followed up for one year. Nasopharyngeal swabs were taken immediately after birth, every two weeks for the first six months and then every other month. The presence of bacteria in the nasopharynx (Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus) was compared before and after the administration of DTP-Hib-HepB and measles-yellow fever vaccines.
Results
A total of 1,779 nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from 136 children for whom vaccination data were available. The prevalence of bacterial carriage was high: 82.2% S. pneumoniae, 30.6%, S.aureus, 27.8% H. influenzae. Carriage of H. influenzae (OR = 0.36; 95% CI: 0.13, 0.99) and S. pneumoniae (OR = 0.25; 95% CI: 0.07, 0.90) were significantly reduced after measles-yellow fever vaccination; while DTP-Hib-HepB had no effect on bacterial carriage.
Conclusions
Nasopharyngeal bacterial carriage is unaffected by DTP-Hib-HepB vaccination and reduced after measles-yellow fever vaccination. 相似文献
The limited Australian measures to reduce population sodium intake through national initiatives targeting sodium in the food supply have not been evaluated. The aim was, thus, to assess if there has been a change in salt intake and discretionary salt use between 2011 and 2014 in the state of Victoria, Australia. Adults drawn from a population sample provided 24 h urine collections and reported discretionary salt use in 2011 and 2014. The final sample included 307 subjects who participated in both surveys, 291 who participated in 2011 only, and 135 subjects who participated in 2014 only. Analysis included adjustment for age, gender, metropolitan area, weekend collection and participation in both surveys, where appropriate. In 2011, 598 participants: 53% female, age 57.1(12.0)(SD) years and in 2014, 442 participants: 53% female, age 61.2(10.7) years provided valid urine collections, with no difference in the mean urinary salt excretion between 2011: 7.9 (7.6, 8.2) (95% CI) g/salt/day and 2014: 7.8 (7.5, 8.1) g/salt/day (p = 0.589), and no difference in discretionary salt use: 35% (2011) and 36% (2014) reported adding salt sometimes or often/always at the table (p = 0.76). Those that sometimes or often/always added salt at the table and when cooking had 0.7 (0.7, 0.8) g/salt/day (p = 0.0016) higher salt excretion. There is no indication over this 3-year period that national salt reduction initiatives targeting the food supply have resulted in a population reduction in salt intake. More concerted efforts are required to reduce the salt content of manufactured foods, together with a consumer education campaign targeting the use of discretionary salt. 相似文献