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Incident‐Based Storytelling in Service‐Learning: Dental Learners’ Experiences and Key Insights
Abstract Background Community service‐learning (CSL) is increasingly used in education to promote oral health equity and social responsibility; however, few studies have examined how reflective incident‐based storytelling narratives shape learner development within CSL contexts.
Abbas Jessani
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Introduction There is a growing, national need for properly trained dentists to provide special care dentistry to a transitioning, aging, and medically complex population. This study describes the implementation and initial impact of a novel academic‐community intervention designed to rapidly address this critical gap in provider training and ...
Dan Burch +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Things We Do for No Reason™: Prescribing gabapentinoids for pain
Abstract Gabapentin and pregabalin are among the most frequently prescribed medications in the United States, with gabapentin in the top 10 and pregabalin in the top 100. Despite FDA approval for only select neuropathic conditions, most use is for off‐label pain indications.
Niti G. Patel +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Emerging Issues for Counselors Applying Neuroscience With Black Clients: Avoiding Scientific Racism
ABSTRACT Neuroscience‐infused methods are heavily impacting the manner in which counselors, educators, and researchers approach working with clients and conducting research. While some scholars perceive neuroscience as scientifically objective and culturally neutral, that is not entirely true.
Isaac Burt
wiley +1 more source
Framing expectations in early HIV cure research [PDF]
Language used to describe clinical research represents a powerful opportunity to educate volunteers. In the case of HIV cure research there is an emerging need to manage expectations by using the term ‘experiment’. Cure experiments are proof-of-concept studies designed to evaluate novel paradigms to reduce persistent HIV-1 reservoirs, without any ...
Karine Dubé +2 more
exaly +3 more sources
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Clinical Interventions in HIV Cure Research
2018Research over the past decade has resulted in a much-improved understanding of how and where HIV persists in patients on otherwise suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART). It has become clear that the establishment of a latent infection in long-lived cells is the key barrier to curing HIV or allowing for sustained ART-free remission.
Rasmussen, Thomas Aagaard +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
Post-Treatment Controllers: Role in HIV “Cure” Research
Current HIV/AIDS Reports, 2016Descriptions of individuals who are able to control viral replication in the absence of antiretroviral therapy after receiving short-term therapy early in infection ("post-treatment controllers") has generated excitement and controversy within the field.
Leslie R, Cockerham +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Research Toward a Cure for Perinatal HIV
Clinics in PerinatologyIn virtually all people living with HIV-1 (PLWH), including children, HIV-1 integrates and becomes latent in CD4+ T cells, forming a latent HIV-1 reservoir that current antiretroviral drugs and immune surveillance mechanisms cannot target. This latent infection in CD4+ T cells renders HIV-1 infection lifelong and incurable.
Kristen, Kelly +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Ethics of HIV and hepatitis B cure research
Current Opinion in HIV and AIDS, 2020Purpose of review Achieving a cure for HIV or hepatitis B virus (HBV) is expected to have a range of salutary effects including eliminating the need for continued treatments, minimizing risk to sexual and injecting partners, reducing prevalence, and decreasing stigma.
openaire +2 more sources
Cure setbacks force HIV researchers to reset sights
Science, 2014Remission is seen as a more realistic goal.
openaire +1 more source

