Academic literature on the topic 'Cardiovascular discourse'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cardiovascular discourse"

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Gonsalves, Christine A., and Kerry R. McGannon. "Constructing women’s heart health and risk: A critical discourse analysis of cardiovascular disease portrayals on Facebook by a US non-profit organization." Journal of Health Psychology 25, no. 13-14 (August 27, 2018): 2317–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359105318796187.

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Women’s cardiovascular disease portrayals were explored on Facebook by the US non-profit organization Women’s Heart Alliance and public users in February 2017. Portrayals were explored using critical discourse analysis which also identified subject positions. Women’s cardiovascular disease was constructed within two central discourses: achieving health equity and healthism, with the following subject positions: altruistic fighters, health activists, and compliant patients and consumers. These findings affirmed and resisted problematic forms of cardiovascular disease risk reduction. Recommendations are made using discursive resources and subject positions within social media forms as concrete entry points of resistance and change to raise women’s cardiovascular disease awareness.
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Logan, Jeongok G., and Debra J. Barksdale. "Allostasis and allostatic load: expanding the discourse on stress and cardiovascular disease." Journal of Clinical Nursing 17, no. 7b (July 2008): 201–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2702.2008.02347.x.

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Mendes, David José Murteira, Irene Pimenta Rodrigues, Carlos F. Baeta, and Carlos Solano-Rodriguez. "Extended Clinical Discourse Representation Structure for Controlled Natural Language Clinical Decision Support Systems." International Journal of Reliable and Quality E-Healthcare 4, no. 2 (April 2015): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrqeh.2015040101.

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To support an end to end Question and Answering system to help the clinical practitioners in a cardiovascular healthcare environment, an extended discourse representation structure CIDERS is introduced. This extension of the well-known DRT (Discourse Representation Theory) structures, go beyond single text representation extending them to embrace the general clinical history of a given patient. Introduced is a proposed and developed ontology framework, Ontology for General Clinical Practice, enhancing the currently available state-of-the-art ontologies for medical science and for the cardiovascular specialty, It's shown the scientific and philosophical reasons of its present dual structure with a deeply expressive (SHOIN) terminological base (TBox) and a highly computable (EL++) assertions knowledge base (ABox).
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Subramanian, S., D. J. Corsi, M. A. Subramanyam, and G. Davey Smith. "Jumping the gun: the problematic discourse on socioeconomic status and cardiovascular health in India." International Journal of Epidemiology 42, no. 5 (April 5, 2013): 1410–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyt017.

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Offermann, Stefan. "“Now even Television is Promoting Health?” On the Intertwined History of Television and Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in the German Democratic Republic, 1950s–1970s." Gesnerus 76, no. 2 (November 6, 2019): 247–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.24894/gesn-en.2019.76012.

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This paper argues that the historical trajectories of television and cardiovascular disease prevention in the German Democratic Republic are interlocking. These diseases were largely understood as caused by an unhealthy modern lifestyle. Healthcare experts were convinced that health education was an effective strategy to persuade the population to follow a healthy lifestyle. With its rise as a new mass medium, health educators increasingly relied on television as a means to put their message across. Yet the new medium itself was a target of health education measures as excessive TV consumption was considered a potential threat to cardiovascular health. This article deals with the history of health-related problematizations of TV consumption. In the 1950s and early 1960s, during an animated discourse on the strain of a modern lifestyle television was considered a potential source of overstimulation of the nervous system. As this article argues, this interpretation was undermined by a modified concept of TV consumption within the discourse of empirical audience research.
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Gupta, P. C., and M. S. Pednekar. "Re: Jumping the gun: the problematic discourse on socioeconomic status and cardiovascular health in India." International Journal of Epidemiology 43, no. 1 (January 4, 2014): 276–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyt244.

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Diamond, George A., and Sanjay Kaul. "An Orwellian Discourse on the Meaning and Measurement of Noninferiority." American Journal of Cardiology 99, no. 2 (January 2007): 284–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2006.07.090.

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Wilson, Ria, Mary Louise Adams, and Kyra E. Pyke. "Inclusion of female participants in cardiovascular research: a case study of Ontario NSERC-funded programs." Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism 45, no. 8 (August 2020): 911–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/apnm-2019-0693.

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This study explored inclusion of female participants in Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant (NSERC-DG)-funded human cardiovascular research at Ontario universities between 2010–2018. Ninety-six publications were examined and 4 principal investigators were interviewed. Females were excluded/underrepresented in 63% of publications with 49% male-only and 5% female-only samples. The sex-bias appears to be explained by dependence on research knowledge and methodologies that maintain and reproduce a firmly established discourse of the male norm. Novelty Female participants were underrepresented in NSERC DG-funded cardiovascular research at Ontario universities between 2010–2018.
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Dugan, Eunice, Rick Ferraro, Carine Hamo, Daniel Ambinder, and Amit Goyal. "The CardioNerds #CardsJC: How Twitter Journal Clubs Elevate the Scientific Discourse." Journal of Cardiac Failure 27, no. 9 (September 2021): 1034–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cardfail.2021.04.012.

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Fillmore, David. "Iatrogenic Vascular Injury: A Discourse on Surgical Technique." Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology 3, no. 3 (August 1992): 466. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1051-0443(92)71991-5.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cardiovascular discourse"

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Longo, Sueli. "A CONSTRUÇÃO DE UM DISCURSO SOBRE NUTRIÇÃO E SAÚDE CARDIOVASCULAR: ANÁLISE DA REVISTA SAÚDE É VITAL." Universidade Metodista de São Paulo, 2013. http://tede.metodista.br/jspui/handle/tede/649.

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Made available in DSpace on 2016-08-03T12:29:41Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Sueli Longo.pdf: 2166844 bytes, checksum: fea6827146075062190d934af65adb84 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2013-04-10
A educação em saúde é um tema que requer atenção de todos. O cenário atual da qualidade de saúde da população nos convida a refletir sobre mudanças que visem a construir um panorama mais saudável. Conhecer a trajetória que o alimento, o corpo e a saúde percorreram no decorrer da história nos remete a necessidade de compreender as representações socioeconômicas e culturais que estes conquistaram e como se tornaram mercadorias altamente vendáveis e que despertam o desejo na sociedade de consumidores. Este trabalho tem por objetivo analisar as estratégias discursivas utilizadas nos textos publicados na seção nutrição da Revista Saúde é Vital, cuja temática seja nutrição e doenças cardiovasculares, no sentido de buscar entender como esse discurso construído pode contribuir com o processo de educação nutricional da população. Por meio da análise do discurso da missão, carta ao leitor, capas das revistas, índices de objetividade e subjetividade presentes nas matérias selecionadas constatou-se que as estratégias discursivas contribuem com o processo educativo. No entanto, para que a educação nutricional seja sólida faz-se necessário que o conhecimento não seja fragmentado. Educar não é informar. Educar é ensinar a pensar. Pensar não é ter as informações. Pensar é o que se faz com as informações.
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Books on the topic "Cardiovascular discourse"

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Huanlin, Wu, ed. Xin pi xiang guan lun yu xin xue guan ji bing = discourse on the heart-spleen relationship in cardiovascular diseases. Beijing Shi: Ren min wei sheng chu ban she, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cardiovascular discourse"

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Mendes, David José Murteira, Irene Pimenta Rodrigues, and César Fonseca. "Clinical Decision Support Systems Question and Answering." In Research Anthology on Decision Support Systems and Decision Management in Healthcare, Business, and Engineering, 543–54. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-9023-2.ch026.

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A question answering system to help clinical practitioners in a cardiovascular healthcare environment to interface clinical decision support systems can be built by using an extended discourse representation structure, CIDERS, and an ontology framework, Ontology for General Clinical Practice. CIDERS is an extension of the well-known DRT (discourse representation theory) structures, intending to go beyond single text representation to embrace the general clinical history of a given patient represented in an ontology. The Ontology for General Clinical Practice improves the currently available state-of-the-art ontologies for medical science and for the cardiovascular specialty. The chapter shows the scientific and philosophical reasons of its present dual structure with a deeply expressive (SHOIN) terminological base (TBox) and a highly computable (EL++) assertions knowledge base (ABox). To be able to use the current reasoning techniques and methodologies, the authors made a thorough inventory of biomedical ontologies currently available in OWL2 format.
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Mendes, David José Murteira, Irene Pimenta Rodrigues, and César Fonseca. "Clinical Decision Support Systems Question and Answering." In Global Implications of Emerging Technology Trends, 146–57. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-4944-4.ch009.

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A question answering system to help clinical practitioners in a cardiovascular healthcare environment to interface clinical decision support systems can be built by using an extended discourse representation structure, CIDERS, and an ontology framework, Ontology for General Clinical Practice. CIDERS is an extension of the well-known DRT (discourse representation theory) structures, intending to go beyond single text representation to embrace the general clinical history of a given patient represented in an ontology. The Ontology for General Clinical Practice improves the currently available state-of-the-art ontologies for medical science and for the cardiovascular specialty. The chapter shows the scientific and philosophical reasons of its present dual structure with a deeply expressive (SHOIN) terminological base (TBox) and a highly computable (EL++) assertions knowledge base (ABox). To be able to use the current reasoning techniques and methodologies, the authors made a thorough inventory of biomedical ontologies currently available in OWL2 format.
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Lux, Joseph Z., and Harold W. Goforth. "HIV, AIDS, and Medical Multimorbid Illnesses." In Handbook of AIDS Psychiatry. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195372571.003.0014.

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Since the introduction of combination antiretroviral therapy, clinicians have seen a sharp decrease in the incidence of many HIV-associated comorbidities, and patients with access and adherence to combination antiretroviral therapy are living longer and healthier lives. However, the frequency of endocrine, metabolic, cardiovascular, renal, dermatological, neoplastic, hepatic, renal, pulmonary, and gastrointestinal multimorbid medical conditions remains very significant and in some cases is increasing. Although the incidence of particular HIV-associated comorbidities such as cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis has declined considerably, it remains a significant source of distress and suffering for persons with AIDS. This chapter is not intended to provide a lengthy discourse on each topic addressed, but rather be a general overview that will give the reader a basic working knowledge of multimorbid medical conditions and enhance the understanding of associated psychiatric complications and psychological distress. For a summary of these conditions and their respective features and treatment, see Table 10.1. HIV and AIDS have been associated with a wide spectrum of endocrine abnormalities that underscore the complex relationships between immunological, endocrinological, and psychological systems. Endocrinopathies are great mimickers of psychiatric disorders, manifesting in some cases as disturbances of mood, sleep, appetite, thought process, energy level, or general sense of well-being. Endocrinopathies may present insidiously or abruptly, in either case with potentially tragic consequences when misdiagnosed as psychopathology. Prompt recognition of reversible alterations in endocrine function is essential to prevent unnecessary morbidity and mortality. An understanding of the complex interactions between endocrine and psychological systems may improve recognition and treatment of endocrinopathies, diminish suffering, and enhance quality of life and longevity in persons with HIV and AIDS. Many studies have demonstrated alterations in adrenal function in patients with HIV and AIDS. Associated infections and tumors, as well as direct invasion of the adrenal glands by the virus, partly explain these changes. Patients are also commonly prescribed drugs that alter steroid synthesis or metabolism; for example, ketoconazole decreases steroid synthesis, megesterol acetate suppresses pituitary secretion of corticotropin, and rifampin increases p450 activity, leading to increased metabolism of cortisol.
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C. Webb, Edward. "Cis/Trans-Fatty Acid Content of Red Meats and the Related Effects on Meat Quality and Human Health." In Meat and Nutrition. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.96726.

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Red meats are often criticized as unhealthy based on their perceived high-fat content and saturated fatty acid composition. Uncertainties about the fatty acid composition and trans-fatty acid contents may discourage consumers to eat red meat, especially those living with non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, hypertension and obesity (e.g. the metabolic syndrome). Previous studies have investigated the factors that influence the fat content and fatty acid composition of red meats, including the effects of species, age, nutrition, sex, production systems and growth promotants in animals, but the trans-fatty acid content of red meat has not been well studied to date. The purpose of this chapter is to review the fat content and fatty acid composition of red meats, with specific reference to its cis/trans-fatty acid content. Representative samples of beef sirloin steaks (n = 60) and lamb loin chops (n = 80) (the lumbar part of the longissimus dorsi muscle) were collected from carcasses from several randomly selected abattoirs in the Gauteng region of South Africa for proximate and fatty acid analyses. Results from this study confirm that the intramuscular fat content of red meats is low compared to most fat-containing processed foods. The lean component of beef and lamb contain a trivial proportion of TFA’s, consisting of vaccenic acid, rumenic acid and conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) isomers. The CLA’s in red meat are beneficial due to their antioxidant and anti-carcinogenic properties, so they should not strictly be considered in the TFA definition. This means that the TFA’s in red meats are negligible and pose no harm to human health. Labelling of red meats should be improved to convey this information to consumers.
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