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In the process of hospital planning and design, the ability to mitigate risk is imperative and practical as design decisions made early can lead to unintended downstream effects that may lead to patient harm. Simulation has been applied as a strategy to identify system gaps and safety threats with the goal to mitigate risk and improve patient outcomes. Early in the pre-construction phase of design development for a new free-standing children's hospital, Simulation-based Hospital Design Testing (SbHDT) was conducted in a full-scale mock-up. This allowed healthcare teams and architects to actively witness care providing an avenue to study the interaction of humans with their environment, enabling effectively identification of latent conditions that may lay dormant in proposed design features. In order to successfully identify latent conditions in the physical environment and understand the impact of those latent conditions, a specific debriefing framework focused on the built environment was developed and implemented. This article provides a rationale for an approach to debriefing that specifically focuses on the built environment and describes SAFEE, a debriefing guide for simulationists looking to conduct SbHDT.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7384892 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41077-020-00132-2 | DOI Listing |
Sci Justice
September 2025
Department of Analytical, Environmental and Forensic Sciences, Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, King's College London, 150 Stamford Street, London SE1 9NH, UK. Electronic address:
Wildlife poaching and the trade of wildlife items is a large area of illegal business that is alleged to be worth hundreds of billions of dollars. However, wildlife forensics remains an understudied field even though the consequences of poaching are catastrophic and can lead to the spread of zoonotic disease and a decrease in biodiversity. Even though fingermark analysis is cost-effective, easy to deploy in the field and has a long history of securing criminal convictions in court, wildlife forensics is mainly limited to DNA-based techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Justice
September 2025
Department of Police Administration, Daegu University, PO Box 38453, Daegu, South Korea; Department of Policing & Security, Rabdan Academy, PO Box 114646, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Electronic address:
Latent fingermark recovery from beverage containers is an important aspect of forensic investigations, yet the influence of substrate properties and beverage temperatures on fingermark development remains understudied. This exploratory study assessed the development and quality of latent fingermarks on disposable beverage cups made of nonporous plastic and semiporous paper using cyanoacrylate (CA) fuming, under conditions approximating a typical café environment. A total of 255 cups (107 plastic, 148 paper) were collected after participants consumed hot and iced beverages in a controlled classroom setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Cardiol
September 2025
Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, USA; University of Missouri-Kansas City's Healthcare Institute for Innovations in Quality, Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
Background: Clinical trials typically report average health status outcomes by treatment at single points in time, as opposed to participants' trajectories (or journeys) over time. Although ISCHEMIA (International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness with Medical and Invasive Approaches) demonstrated better mean health status at discrete times with an invasive treatment among those with baseline angina, the patterns of individual participants' angina over time are unknown.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to identify patterns of individual participants' angina over time after invasive or conservative management strategies for chronic coronary disease.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract
September 2025
Department of Experimental Medicine, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy; Diabetes Unit, Umberto 1 General Hospital, Rome, Italy.
Aims: To investigate liver disease and its risk factors in LADA compared to type 1 (T1D) and type 2 (T2D) diabetes.
Methods: Liver magnetic resonance (MR) and MR elastography were used to measure proton density fat fraction (PDFF) and stiffness in 31 people with LADA matched for gender, body mass index (BMI) and disease duration with 31 people with T2D, and for gender, BMI and age with 31 people with T1D. Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) was quantified by DXA.
JMIR Pediatr Parent
September 2025
Institute of Child and Adolescent Health, School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing, China.
Background: Adolescence is a critical transitional period between childhood and adulthood, marked by dramatic changes in physical and psychosocial health. Adolescents are vulnerable to both depression and adiposity, but how these conditions evolve over time from adolescence to early adulthood and whether sex differences exist remains unclear.
Objective: This study aims to first identify the population heterogeneity in the joint trajectories of depressive symptoms and BMI from adolescence to early adulthood and then explore the sex differences in the joint trajectories.