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  1. Article ; Online: Should Noninvasive Ventilation Be Used in End-Stage Chronic Respiratory Failure to Reverse Hypercapnic Coma?

    Davies, John D

    Respiratory care

    2019  Volume 64, Issue 9, Page(s) 1169

    MeSH term(s) Acidosis, Respiratory ; Aged ; Coma ; Frail Elderly ; Humans ; Hypercapnia ; Noninvasive Ventilation
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-08-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Editorial ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 603252-7
    ISSN 1943-3654 ; 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    ISSN (online) 1943-3654
    ISSN 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    DOI 10.4187/respcare.07337
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: 2018 Year in Review: Noninvasive Respiratory Support.

    Davies, John D

    Respiratory care

    2019  Volume 64, Issue 9, Page(s) 1139–1145

    Abstract: Noninvasive respiratory support refers to strategies aimed at providing oxygenation and/or ventilation without the use of an artificial airway. These strategies include the use of standard oxygen delivery devices (face masks, low-flow nasal cannulas), ... ...

    Abstract Noninvasive respiratory support refers to strategies aimed at providing oxygenation and/or ventilation without the use of an artificial airway. These strategies include the use of standard oxygen delivery devices (face masks, low-flow nasal cannulas), noninvasive ventilation, and high-flow nasal cannula. Considerable interest has been generated recently as to which therapy provides the optimum noninvasive support. This review examined the important literature related to noninvasive respiratory support published in 2018.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Noninvasive Ventilation/trends ; Oxygen Inhalation Therapy/instrumentation ; Oxygen Inhalation Therapy/trends
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-08-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 603252-7
    ISSN 1943-3654 ; 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    ISSN (online) 1943-3654
    ISSN 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    DOI 10.4187/respcare.07170
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Noninvasive Respiratory Support at the End of Life.

    Davies, John D

    Respiratory care

    2019  Volume 64, Issue 6, Page(s) 701–711

    Abstract: Noninvasive respiratory support at the end of life is controversial, although it is becoming increasingly common. Supplemental oxygen is widely prescribed for palliative care and may help with hypoxemic respiratory failure. Noninvasive ventilation has a ... ...

    Abstract Noninvasive respiratory support at the end of life is controversial, although it is becoming increasingly common. Supplemental oxygen is widely prescribed for palliative care and may help with hypoxemic respiratory failure. Noninvasive ventilation has a well-established evidence-based role in the management of respiratory failure due to exacerbations of COPD and cardiogenic pulmonary edema. However, its role during palliative care is unclear, and evidence of support is limited. High-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy is a new strategy for which there is evidence to support its use for hypoxemic respiratory failure. However, any benefit of the use of high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy in the palliative setting is unknown at this time. This review examined evidence relating to the use of noninvasive respiratory support at the end of life.
    MeSH term(s) Cannula ; Humans ; Hypoxia/therapy ; Noninvasive Ventilation ; Oxygen Inhalation Therapy ; Palliative Care ; Respiratory Insufficiency/therapy ; Terminal Care
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-05-10
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 603252-7
    ISSN 1943-3654 ; 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    ISSN (online) 1943-3654
    ISSN 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    DOI 10.4187/respcare.06618
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Chemoselective Staudinger Reactivity of Bis(azido)phosphines Supported with a π-Donating Imidazolin-2-iminato Ligand.

    Lortie, John L / Davies, Matthew / Boyle, Paul D / Karttunen, Mikko / Ragogna, Paul J

    Inorganic chemistry

    2024  Volume 63, Issue 14, Page(s) 6335–6345

    Abstract: Synthesis and characterization of new P(III) and P(V) bis(azido)phosphines/phosphoranes supported by ... ...

    Abstract Synthesis and characterization of new P(III) and P(V) bis(azido)phosphines/phosphoranes supported by an
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-03-22
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1484438-2
    ISSN 1520-510X ; 0020-1669
    ISSN (online) 1520-510X
    ISSN 0020-1669
    DOI 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.4c00120
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: The Ongoing Question of Where Clinicians Should Place the Nebulizer in the Ventilator Circuit: This Time With Epoprostenol.

    Davies, John D

    Respiratory care

    2017  Volume 62, Issue 11, Page(s) 1504

    Language English
    Publishing date 2017
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Editorial ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 603252-7
    ISSN 1943-3654 ; 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    ISSN (online) 1943-3654
    ISSN 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    DOI 10.4187/respcare.05884
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: A 12-year-old male with localized, pink, tender papules.

    Davies, Olivia M T / Astle, John M / Harker-Murray, Paul D / Wanat, Karolyn A / Carlberg, Valerie M

    Pediatric dermatology

    2023  Volume 40, Issue 2, Page(s) 367–368

    MeSH term(s) Male ; Humans ; Child ; Skin Neoplasms ; Skin Abnormalities
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Case Reports ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 605539-4
    ISSN 1525-1470 ; 0736-8046
    ISSN (online) 1525-1470
    ISSN 0736-8046
    DOI 10.1111/pde.15167
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article ; Online: Orthopnea in Obese Adult Patients: Can It Be Quantified From Lung Function Testing?

    Davies, John D

    Respiratory care

    2016  Volume 61, Issue 8, Page(s) 1133–1134

    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Dyspnea ; Humans ; Lung ; Obesity ; Respiratory Function Tests
    Language English
    Publishing date 2016
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Editorial ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 603252-7
    ISSN 1943-3654 ; 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    ISSN (online) 1943-3654
    ISSN 0098-9142 ; 0020-1324
    DOI 10.4187/respcare.05057
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article ; Online: Practical utility of a head-mounted gaze-directed beamforming system.

    Culling, John F / D'Olne, Emilie F C / Davies, Bryn D / Powell, Niamh / Naylor, Patrick A

    The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

    2023  Volume 154, Issue 6, Page(s) 3760–3768

    Abstract: Assistive auditory devices that enhance signal-to-noise ratio must follow the user's changing attention; errors could lead to the desired source being suppressed as noise. A method for measuring the practical benefit of attention-following speech ... ...

    Abstract Assistive auditory devices that enhance signal-to-noise ratio must follow the user's changing attention; errors could lead to the desired source being suppressed as noise. A method for measuring the practical benefit of attention-following speech enhancement is described and used to show a benefit for gaze-directed beamforming over natural binaural hearing. First, participants watched a recorded video conference call between two people with six additional interfering voices in different directions. The directions of the target voices corresponded to the spatial layout of their video streams. A simulated beamformer was yoked to the participant's gaze direction using an eye tracker. For the control condition, all eight voices were spatially distributed in a simulation of unaided binaural hearing. Participants completed questionnaires on the content of the conversation, scoring twice as high in the questionnaires for the beamforming condition. Sentence-by-sentence intelligibility was then measured using new participants who viewed the same audiovisual stimulus for each isolated sentence. Participants recognized twice as many words in the beamforming condition. The results demonstrate the potential practical benefit of gaze-directed beamforming for hearing aids and illustrate how detailed intelligibility data can be retrieved from an experiment that involves behavioral engagement in an ongoing listening task.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Communication ; Cognition ; Computer Simulation ; Hearing Aids ; Signal-To-Noise Ratio
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-12-15
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 219231-7
    ISSN 1520-8524 ; 0001-4966
    ISSN (online) 1520-8524
    ISSN 0001-4966
    DOI 10.1121/10.0023961
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article: Text mining for disease surveillance in veterinary clinical data: part one, the language of veterinary clinical records and searching for words.

    Davies, Heather / Nenadic, Goran / Alfattni, Ghada / Arguello Casteleiro, Mercedes / Al Moubayed, Noura / Farrell, Sean O / Radford, Alan D / Noble, Peter-John M

    Frontiers in veterinary science

    2024  Volume 11, Page(s) 1352239

    Abstract: The development of natural language processing techniques for deriving useful information from unstructured clinical narratives is a fast-paced and rapidly evolving area of machine learning research. Large volumes of veterinary clinical narratives now ... ...

    Abstract The development of natural language processing techniques for deriving useful information from unstructured clinical narratives is a fast-paced and rapidly evolving area of machine learning research. Large volumes of veterinary clinical narratives now exist curated by projects such as the Small Animal Veterinary Surveillance Network (SAVSNET) and VetCompass, and the application of such techniques to these datasets is already (and will continue to) improve our understanding of disease and disease patterns within veterinary medicine. In part one of this two part article series, we discuss the importance of understanding the lexical structure of clinical records and discuss the use of basic tools for filtering records based on key words and more complex rule based pattern matching approaches. We discuss the strengths and weaknesses of these approaches highlighting the on-going potential value in using these "traditional" approaches but ultimately recognizing that these approaches constrain how effectively information retrieval can be automated. This sets the scene for the introduction of machine-learning methodologies and the plethora of opportunities for automation of information extraction these present which is discussed in part two of the series.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-23
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2834243-4
    ISSN 2297-1769
    ISSN 2297-1769
    DOI 10.3389/fvets.2024.1352239
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article: Alcohol-related brain damage: an umbrella (term) for the approaching post-COVID monsoon.

    Quelch, Darren / Roderique-Davies, Gareth / John, Bev

    Future healthcare journal

    2023  Volume 10, Issue 3, Page(s) 313–320

    Abstract: Individuals with alcohol-related brain damage (ARBD) represent a population whose healthcare needs often go unmet. This is the result of a lack of not only an awareness surrounding the condition by healthcare professionals, but also healthcare service ... ...

    Abstract Individuals with alcohol-related brain damage (ARBD) represent a population whose healthcare needs often go unmet. This is the result of a lack of not only an awareness surrounding the condition by healthcare professionals, but also healthcare service inclusion and delivery, more broadly. The Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and the associated lockdowns dramatically affected the accessibility and availability of addiction services globally, while also driving changes in alcohol consumption among the most vulnerable. In the absence of change, this culmination of increased high-risk drinking behaviour, lack of awareness by healthcare professionals and severely limited service delivery for individuals living with ARBD post COVID-19, represents a perfect storm that is rapidly approaching our health and care services world-wide. Collectively, this will reduce positive health outcomes in an already at-risk group.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-12-28
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 3016427-8
    ISSN 2514-6653 ; 2514-6645
    ISSN (online) 2514-6653
    ISSN 2514-6645
    DOI 10.7861/fhj.2023-0022
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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