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Book
Stérilisation à la vapeur : développement et validation
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2014 Publisher: Bruxelles: UCL. Faculté de pharmacie et des sciences biomédicales,

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Given the complexity of the industrial tool and rapidly changing regulations. The validation strategy has become today an organizational approach of primary importance in any pharmaceutical industry. In this context, the validation of an autoclave must be a rigorous process that has four steps : design qualification : is a functional analysis of the equipment with a clear and precise expression of need. This step usually results in the etablishment of functional specifications and technical specifications. Installation qualification : set of tests to prove that the equipment and installation meet the requirements specified in the technical specifications. Operational qualification : all tests which prove that the equipment meets the requirements expressed in the functional specification. After these tests, the performance qualification, which merges with the validation itself can be started. It is a validation of all charges will be processed by autoclave. Etant donné la complexité de l 'outil industriel et l'évolution rapide de la réglementation, la stratégie de validation est devenue, aujourd'hui, une approche organisationnelle de première importance au sein de toute industrie pharmaceutique.Dans ce cadre, la validation d'un autoclave doit se faire selon une démarche rigoureuse qui se décline en quatre étapes :Qualification de conception : consiste en une analyse fonctionnelle de l'équipement avec une expression claire et précise du besoin. Cette étape se solde généralement par l 'établissement des cahiers des charges fonctionnel et technique.Qualification d'installation: ensemble des tests qui prouvent que l'équipement et son installation répondent aux besoins exprimés dans les cahier des charges technique. Qualification opérationnelle : ensemble des tests qui prouvent que l'équipement répond aux besoins exprimés dans le cahier des charges fonctionnel. Au terme de ces essais, la qualification des performances, qui se confond avec la validation proprement dite peut alors commencée. Elle consiste en une validation de toutes les charges qui seront traitées en routine par l'autoclave en question.


Book
Interventions de pharmacie clinique réalisées dans deux hôpitaux universitaires : analyse de l'importance clinique, des informations requises, et messages à en tirer pour une validation pharmaceutique
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2015 Publisher: Bruxelles: UCL. Faculté de pharmacie et des sciences biomédicales,

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Nowadays the patient's comfort is one of the main concerns of any medical team. So giving them the right dose of the best medicine for the shortest possible period of time is the major challenge taken up by clinical pharmacists.This study aims at highlighting strategies to analyze prescriptions from the hospital pharmacy and at emphasizing the importance of implementing clinical pharmacy services in each care unit of the hospital.A prospective observational study was conducted in two Belgian university hospitals (CHU Dinant-Godinne and Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc in Brussels). At first, clinical pharmacists were asked to detail the interventions they had performed over a week. They also had to mention ail the information they had needed for each of them. The impact of these pharmacists' interventions was then assessed by two investigators using the ranking system developed by Hatoum and colleagues.A total of 271 clinical interventions were analyzed. 64 % of them are significant. The main drug classes involved in these interventions are gastrointestinal drugs ( l), minerals, vitamins and tonies (2), central nervous system drugs (3) and antibiotics (4). Drugs treating blood disorders are often used in interventions having major clinical relevance. 25 % of the interventions Jed by clinical pharmacists in care units could be performed by the hospital pharmacy. On the one hand, the patients ' blood samples enable clinical pharmacists to access serum creatinine values and antibiograms - two elements which would be essential to check prescriptions. On the other hand, the patients ' medical history, evolution and medical report coming from Intensive Care Units should be taken into account to keep good medical records.This study provides clinical pharmacists with guidelines to enable them to work either in a care unit or in the hospital pharmacy. However, it would be interesting to carry out similar studies in other hospitals to corroborate our results.


Book
Advances of Spectrometric Techniques in Food Analysis and Food Authentication Implemented with Chemometrics
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Year: 2020 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Given the continuous consumer demand for products of high quality and specific origin, there is a great tendency toward the application of multiple instrumental techniques for the complete characterization of foodstuffs or related natural products. Spectrometric techniques usually offer a full and rapid screenshot of a product’s composition and properties by the determination of specific biomolecules such as sugars, minerals, polyphenols, volatile compounds, amino acids, and organic acids. The present Special Issue aimed firstly to enhance the advances of the application of spectrometric techniques such as gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC-MS), inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), Raman spectroscopy, or any other spectrometric technique, in the analysis of foodstuffs such as meat, milk, cheese, potatoes, vegetables, fruits/fruit juices, honey, olive oil, chocolate, and other natural products. An additional goal was to fill the gap between food composition/food properties/natural product properties and food/natural product authenticity, using supervised and nonsupervised chemometrics.


Book
Advances of Spectrometric Techniques in Food Analysis and Food Authentication Implemented with Chemometrics
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Year: 2020 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

Given the continuous consumer demand for products of high quality and specific origin, there is a great tendency toward the application of multiple instrumental techniques for the complete characterization of foodstuffs or related natural products. Spectrometric techniques usually offer a full and rapid screenshot of a product’s composition and properties by the determination of specific biomolecules such as sugars, minerals, polyphenols, volatile compounds, amino acids, and organic acids. The present Special Issue aimed firstly to enhance the advances of the application of spectrometric techniques such as gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC-MS), inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), Raman spectroscopy, or any other spectrometric technique, in the analysis of foodstuffs such as meat, milk, cheese, potatoes, vegetables, fruits/fruit juices, honey, olive oil, chocolate, and other natural products. An additional goal was to fill the gap between food composition/food properties/natural product properties and food/natural product authenticity, using supervised and nonsupervised chemometrics.


Book
Advances of Spectrometric Techniques in Food Analysis and Food Authentication Implemented with Chemometrics
Author:
Year: 2020 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

Given the continuous consumer demand for products of high quality and specific origin, there is a great tendency toward the application of multiple instrumental techniques for the complete characterization of foodstuffs or related natural products. Spectrometric techniques usually offer a full and rapid screenshot of a product’s composition and properties by the determination of specific biomolecules such as sugars, minerals, polyphenols, volatile compounds, amino acids, and organic acids. The present Special Issue aimed firstly to enhance the advances of the application of spectrometric techniques such as gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC-MS), inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), Raman spectroscopy, or any other spectrometric technique, in the analysis of foodstuffs such as meat, milk, cheese, potatoes, vegetables, fruits/fruit juices, honey, olive oil, chocolate, and other natural products. An additional goal was to fill the gap between food composition/food properties/natural product properties and food/natural product authenticity, using supervised and nonsupervised chemometrics.

Keywords

Research & information: general --- characterization --- beekeepers’ honey --- minerals --- inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) --- chemometrics --- HPTLC --- LC–HRMS --- PCA --- metabolomics --- Arbutus unedo --- antioxidant activities --- honey variety --- honey code --- HS-SPME/GC-MS --- data handling --- data bank --- fluorescence --- rapeseed oil --- multiway analysis --- parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) --- multivariate regression --- caffeine --- 16-O-methylcafestol --- kahweol --- furfuryl alcohol --- tetramethylsilane (TMS) --- magnetic resonance spectroscopy --- validation studies --- hyperspectral imaging --- jowl meat --- minced pork --- meat adulteration --- visualization --- oilseeds --- Caatinga --- native --- spectrometry --- honey --- adulteration --- feature variable --- partial least square regression --- laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy --- mushroom --- Pleurotus --- glucan --- ergosterol --- mid-infrared spectroscopy --- FTIR --- spectroscopy --- prediction --- coffee --- meat --- Pleurotus mushrooms --- characterization --- beekeepers’ honey --- minerals --- inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) --- chemometrics --- HPTLC --- LC–HRMS --- PCA --- metabolomics --- Arbutus unedo --- antioxidant activities --- honey variety --- honey code --- HS-SPME/GC-MS --- data handling --- data bank --- fluorescence --- rapeseed oil --- multiway analysis --- parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) --- multivariate regression --- caffeine --- 16-O-methylcafestol --- kahweol --- furfuryl alcohol --- tetramethylsilane (TMS) --- magnetic resonance spectroscopy --- validation studies --- hyperspectral imaging --- jowl meat --- minced pork --- meat adulteration --- visualization --- oilseeds --- Caatinga --- native --- spectrometry --- honey --- adulteration --- feature variable --- partial least square regression --- laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy --- mushroom --- Pleurotus --- glucan --- ergosterol --- mid-infrared spectroscopy --- FTIR --- spectroscopy --- prediction --- coffee --- meat --- Pleurotus mushrooms


Book
Social Media and Public Health: Opportunities and Challenges
Authors: ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Social media has the potential to provide rapid insights into unfolding public health emergencies such as infectious disease outbreaks. They can also be drawn upon for rapid, survey-based insights into various health topics. Social media has also been utilised by medical professionals for the purposes of sharing scholarly works, international collaboration, and engaging in policy debates. One benefit of using social media platforms to gain insight into health is that they have the ability to capture unfiltered public opinion in large volumes, avoiding the potential biases introduced by surveys or interviews. Social media platforms can also be utilised to pilot surveys, for instance, though the use of Twitter polls. Social media data have also been drawn upon in medical emergencies and crisis situations as a public health surveillance tool. A number of software and online tools also exist, developed specifically to aide public health research utilising social media data. In recent years, ethical issues regarding the retrieval and analysis of data have also arisen.

Keywords

Public health & preventive medicine --- social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q&amp --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission


Book
Social Media and Public Health: Opportunities and Challenges
Authors: ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

Social media has the potential to provide rapid insights into unfolding public health emergencies such as infectious disease outbreaks. They can also be drawn upon for rapid, survey-based insights into various health topics. Social media has also been utilised by medical professionals for the purposes of sharing scholarly works, international collaboration, and engaging in policy debates. One benefit of using social media platforms to gain insight into health is that they have the ability to capture unfiltered public opinion in large volumes, avoiding the potential biases introduced by surveys or interviews. Social media platforms can also be utilised to pilot surveys, for instance, though the use of Twitter polls. Social media data have also been drawn upon in medical emergencies and crisis situations as a public health surveillance tool. A number of software and online tools also exist, developed specifically to aide public health research utilising social media data. In recent years, ethical issues regarding the retrieval and analysis of data have also arisen.


Book
Social Media and Public Health: Opportunities and Challenges
Authors: ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

Social media has the potential to provide rapid insights into unfolding public health emergencies such as infectious disease outbreaks. They can also be drawn upon for rapid, survey-based insights into various health topics. Social media has also been utilised by medical professionals for the purposes of sharing scholarly works, international collaboration, and engaging in policy debates. One benefit of using social media platforms to gain insight into health is that they have the ability to capture unfiltered public opinion in large volumes, avoiding the potential biases introduced by surveys or interviews. Social media platforms can also be utilised to pilot surveys, for instance, though the use of Twitter polls. Social media data have also been drawn upon in medical emergencies and crisis situations as a public health surveillance tool. A number of software and online tools also exist, developed specifically to aide public health research utilising social media data. In recent years, ethical issues regarding the retrieval and analysis of data have also arisen.

Keywords

Public health & preventive medicine --- social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q&amp --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission --- social media --- disordered eating behaviours --- body image --- female --- university students --- telemedicine --- carbon dioxide --- air pollutants --- vehicle emissions --- primary care --- machine learning --- teleconsultation --- remote consultation --- classification --- public health --- short video --- social network --- TAM --- cost analysis --- health technology assessment --- provider-to-provider telemedicine --- telehealth --- economic analysis --- questionnaires and surveys --- validation studies --- health personnel --- electronic nicotine delivery systems --- smoking --- twitter --- poor doctor-patient relationship --- healthcare consultation --- mobile context --- computer-mediated communication --- point-of-care systems --- ultrasonography --- traffic-related pollution --- primary health care --- acceptability of health care --- surveys and questionnaires --- health communication --- Spanish official medical colleges --- stakeholders --- Twitter --- systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) --- network analysis --- topic modeling --- text analysis --- online media --- vaccination --- social marketing --- stroke --- prehospital emergency care --- training --- stroke code --- large vessel occlusion --- prehospital scales --- hearing loss --- latent topic --- LDA --- social Q&amp --- A --- public voice --- public health emergency --- policy evolution --- product innovation --- cooperative governance --- COVID-19 --- coronavirus --- masks --- transmission


Book
Nursing and Society
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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The year 2020 is considered by the World Health Organization to be the International Year of the Nurse and Midwife. This book supports the visibility of the contribution of nurses to society. We have included 30 articles on high-quality original research or reviews that provide solid new discoveries that expand current knowledge.

Keywords

Medicine --- chronic pain --- hallux valgus --- musculoskeletal diseases --- psychology --- learning management system --- higher education --- nursing --- data mining --- career development --- counselling --- cultural perspective --- decision-making process --- East Asian perspective --- filial piety --- nursing education --- nursing shortage --- nursing student --- turnover --- social support --- patient satisfaction --- chronic disease --- family --- homeless --- parenting --- parents --- vulnerable population --- workplace violence --- mental healthcare nurses --- secondary traumatic stress --- burnout --- nursing license --- job demands --- job control --- work–life balance --- nurses --- nurse manager --- competence --- core competencies --- governance --- leadership --- nursing research --- Delphi method --- consensus --- Spain --- Alzheimer’s disease --- comorbidity --- older adults --- elderly --- fibromyalgia --- stigma --- illness uncertainty --- scoping review --- qualitative research --- happiness --- job crafting --- work environment --- turnover intention --- hierarchical clustering --- fatigue --- sleep --- clinical skills --- COVID-19 --- healthcare providers --- implementation --- interpersonal skills --- perception --- telemedicine --- training --- video consultation --- cardiopulmonary resuscitation --- chest compression --- method --- experiential learning --- observation --- CPR --- pandemics --- students --- teaching --- education --- distance --- schools --- Life Changing Events --- clinical placements --- emergency hospital service --- intensive care units --- nursing care --- nursing education research --- nursing students --- circadian rhythm --- chronotype --- midwives --- Morningness–Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ) --- near misses --- rhythms desynchronization --- risk of medication errors --- shift work --- frailty --- foot deformities --- foot diseases --- foot pain --- integrated care --- social care --- health care --- older people --- person centered care --- lumbar radiculopathy --- neurodynamic tension tests --- orthopedic tension tests --- magnetic resonance --- daylight saving time (DST) --- desynchronization --- chronobiology --- spontaneous delivery --- midwifery --- obstetrics --- multiple sclerosis --- physical activity --- resilience --- sense of coherence --- coping --- child --- parent --- congenital heart disease --- heart surgery --- content analysis --- cross-border care --- transitions --- personal satisfaction --- surveys and questionnaires --- validation studies --- primary care --- workplace --- quality of health care --- nurse’s role --- coronary disease --- cardiac rehabilitation --- health education --- quality of life --- self-care --- cannabis --- adolescents --- stress --- social network analysis --- network --- friendship --- care pathway --- integrated health care --- long-term care --- activities of daily living --- Barthel index --- SARS-CoV-2 --- gender-based violence --- abuse --- survival --- resilient --- chronic pain --- hallux valgus --- musculoskeletal diseases --- psychology --- learning management system --- higher education --- nursing --- data mining --- career development --- counselling --- cultural perspective --- decision-making process --- East Asian perspective --- filial piety --- nursing education --- nursing shortage --- nursing student --- turnover --- social support --- patient satisfaction --- chronic disease --- family --- homeless --- parenting --- parents --- vulnerable population --- workplace violence --- mental healthcare nurses --- secondary traumatic stress --- burnout --- nursing license --- job demands --- job control --- work–life balance --- nurses --- nurse manager --- competence --- core competencies --- governance --- leadership --- nursing research --- Delphi method --- consensus --- Spain --- Alzheimer’s disease --- comorbidity --- older adults --- elderly --- fibromyalgia --- stigma --- illness uncertainty --- scoping review --- qualitative research --- happiness --- job crafting --- work environment --- turnover intention --- hierarchical clustering --- fatigue --- sleep --- clinical skills --- COVID-19 --- healthcare providers --- implementation --- interpersonal skills --- perception --- telemedicine --- training --- video consultation --- cardiopulmonary resuscitation --- chest compression --- method --- experiential learning --- observation --- CPR --- pandemics --- students --- teaching --- education --- distance --- schools --- Life Changing Events --- clinical placements --- emergency hospital service --- intensive care units --- nursing care --- nursing education research --- nursing students --- circadian rhythm --- chronotype --- midwives --- Morningness–Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ) --- near misses --- rhythms desynchronization --- risk of medication errors --- shift work --- frailty --- foot deformities --- foot diseases --- foot pain --- integrated care --- social care --- health care --- older people --- person centered care --- lumbar radiculopathy --- neurodynamic tension tests --- orthopedic tension tests --- magnetic resonance --- daylight saving time (DST) --- desynchronization --- chronobiology --- spontaneous delivery --- midwifery --- obstetrics --- multiple sclerosis --- physical activity --- resilience --- sense of coherence --- coping --- child --- parent --- congenital heart disease --- heart surgery --- content analysis --- cross-border care --- transitions --- personal satisfaction --- surveys and questionnaires --- validation studies --- primary care --- workplace --- quality of health care --- nurse’s role --- coronary disease --- cardiac rehabilitation --- health education --- quality of life --- self-care --- cannabis --- adolescents --- stress --- social network analysis --- network --- friendship --- care pathway --- integrated health care --- long-term care --- activities of daily living --- Barthel index --- SARS-CoV-2 --- gender-based violence --- abuse --- survival --- resilient


Book
Nursing and Society
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Bookmark

Abstract

The year 2020 is considered by the World Health Organization to be the International Year of the Nurse and Midwife. This book supports the visibility of the contribution of nurses to society. We have included 30 articles on high-quality original research or reviews that provide solid new discoveries that expand current knowledge.

Keywords

Medicine --- chronic pain --- hallux valgus --- musculoskeletal diseases --- psychology --- learning management system --- higher education --- nursing --- data mining --- career development --- counselling --- cultural perspective --- decision-making process --- East Asian perspective --- filial piety --- nursing education --- nursing shortage --- nursing student --- turnover --- social support --- patient satisfaction --- chronic disease --- family --- homeless --- parenting --- parents --- vulnerable population --- workplace violence --- mental healthcare nurses --- secondary traumatic stress --- burnout --- nursing license --- job demands --- job control --- work–life balance --- nurses --- nurse manager --- competence --- core competencies --- governance --- leadership --- nursing research --- Delphi method --- consensus --- Spain --- Alzheimer’s disease --- comorbidity --- older adults --- elderly --- fibromyalgia --- stigma --- illness uncertainty --- scoping review --- qualitative research --- happiness --- job crafting --- work environment --- turnover intention --- hierarchical clustering --- fatigue --- sleep --- clinical skills --- COVID-19 --- healthcare providers --- implementation --- interpersonal skills --- perception --- telemedicine --- training --- video consultation --- cardiopulmonary resuscitation --- chest compression --- method --- experiential learning --- observation --- CPR --- pandemics --- students --- teaching --- education --- distance --- schools --- Life Changing Events --- clinical placements --- emergency hospital service --- intensive care units --- nursing care --- nursing education research --- nursing students --- circadian rhythm --- chronotype --- midwives --- Morningness–Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ) --- near misses --- rhythms desynchronization --- risk of medication errors --- shift work --- frailty --- foot deformities --- foot diseases --- foot pain --- integrated care --- social care --- health care --- older people --- person centered care --- lumbar radiculopathy --- neurodynamic tension tests --- orthopedic tension tests --- magnetic resonance --- daylight saving time (DST) --- desynchronization --- chronobiology --- spontaneous delivery --- midwifery --- obstetrics --- multiple sclerosis --- physical activity --- resilience --- sense of coherence --- coping --- child --- parent --- congenital heart disease --- heart surgery --- content analysis --- cross-border care --- transitions --- personal satisfaction --- surveys and questionnaires --- validation studies --- primary care --- workplace --- quality of health care --- nurse’s role --- coronary disease --- cardiac rehabilitation --- health education --- quality of life --- self-care --- cannabis --- adolescents --- stress --- social network analysis --- network --- friendship --- care pathway --- integrated health care --- long-term care --- activities of daily living --- Barthel index --- SARS-CoV-2 --- gender-based violence --- abuse --- survival --- resilient

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