149 Works

Review of evidence-based mentoring programmes for students with disabilities from 2010 to 2021

Paul Flynn & Adriana Cardinot

The mapping LGBTQ lives at NUI Galway - A pilot project

Declan Coogan & Kylie Kinsella

Food, Connection and Care: Perspectives of Service Providers in Alternative Education and Training Settings

Michelle Share & Marita Hennessy

Additional file 3 of What is the purpose of clinical trial monitoring?

Sharon B. Love, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Elizabeth Ward, Rebecca Haydock, Katie Keen, Katie Biggs, Gosala Gopalakrishnan, Lucy Marsh, Lydia O’Sullivan, Lisa Fox, Estelle Payerne, Kerenza Hood & Garry Meakin
Additional file 3. File giving a complete version of Table S3.

Additional file 3 of What is the purpose of clinical trial monitoring?

Sharon B. Love, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Elizabeth Ward, Rebecca Haydock, Katie Keen, Katie Biggs, Gosala Gopalakrishnan, Lucy Marsh, Lydia O’Sullivan, Lisa Fox, Estelle Payerne, Kerenza Hood & Garry Meakin
Additional file 3. File giving a complete version of Table S3.

Lessons learned from a pandemic: implications for a combined exercise and educational programme for medical students

Aubree Worobetz, ANDREW O'REGAN, Monica Casey, PETER HAYES, Mike O'Callaghan, Jane C. Walsh, Enrique Garcia Bengoechea, CATHERINE WOODS, DEIRDRE MCGRATH & LIAM GLYNN
Background: The ‘MED-WELL’ programme is a combined exercise and educational intervention designed to promote well-being among medical students and educate students about prescribing exercise as medicine in clinical practice. Due to COVID-19 public health restrictions of social distancing the ‘MED-WELL’ programme was ofered online instead of in-person in 2021. The aim of this study is to compare the experiences of participants in the ‘MED-WELL’ programme online to those that previously participated in the same programme...

Additional file 5 of Understanding the perspectives of recruiters is key to improving randomised controlled trial enrolment: a qualitative evidence synthesis

Nicola Farrar, Daisy Elliott, Catherine Houghton, Marcus Jepson, Nicola Mills, Sangeetha Paramasivan, Lucy Plumb, Julia Wade, Bridget Young, Jenny L. Donovan & Leila Rooshenas
Additional file 5. SoQF. GRADE CERQual Summary of Qualitative Findings.

Additional file 6 of Understanding the perspectives of recruiters is key to improving randomised controlled trial enrolment: a qualitative evidence synthesis

Nicola Farrar, Daisy Elliott, Catherine Houghton, Marcus Jepson, Nicola Mills, Sangeetha Paramasivan, Lucy Plumb, Julia Wade, Bridget Young, Jenny L. Donovan & Leila Rooshenas
Additional file 6. Full EP. GRADE CERQual full evidence profile.

Additional file 1 of The multimorbidity collaborative medication review and decision making (MyComrade) study: a pilot cluster randomised trial in two healthcare systems

Collette Kirwan, Lisa Hynes, Nigel Hart, Sarah Mulligan, Claire Leathem, Laura McQuillan, Marina Maxwell, Emma Carr, Kevin Roche, Scott Walkin, Caroline McCarthy, Colin Bradley, Molly Byrne, Susan M. Smith, Carmel Hughes, Maura Corry, Patricia M. Kearney, Geraldine McCarthy, Margaret Cupples, Paddy Gillespie, Anna Hobbins, John Newell, Liam Glynn, Davood Roshan, Carol Sinnott … & Andrew W. Murphy
Additional file 1. Recruitment [4, 22, 24, 36, 43, 51, 52].

Additional file 2 of The multimorbidity collaborative medication review and decision making (MyComrade) study: a pilot cluster randomised trial in two healthcare systems

Collette Kirwan, Lisa Hynes, Nigel Hart, Sarah Mulligan, Claire Leathem, Laura McQuillan, Marina Maxwell, Emma Carr, Kevin Roche, Scott Walkin, Caroline McCarthy, Colin Bradley, Molly Byrne, Susan M. Smith, Carmel Hughes, Maura Corry, Patricia M. Kearney, Geraldine McCarthy, Margaret Cupples, Paddy Gillespie, Anna Hobbins, John Newell, Liam Glynn, Davood Roshan, Carol Sinnott … & Andrew W. Murphy
Additional file 2. Incentives [6, 8, 17].

Additional file 1 of Understanding the perspectives of recruiters is key to improving randomised controlled trial enrolment: a qualitative evidence synthesis

Nicola Farrar, Daisy Elliott, Catherine Houghton, Marcus Jepson, Nicola Mills, Sangeetha Paramasivan, Lucy Plumb, Julia Wade, Bridget Young, Jenny L. Donovan & Leila Rooshenas
Additional file 1. ENTREQ. Required reporting statement for synthesis of qualitative research.

Additional file 1 of The effectiveness and acceptability of evidence synthesis summary formats for clinical guideline development groups: a mixed-methods systematic review

Melissa K. Sharp, Dayang Anis Binti Awang Baki, Joan Quigley, Barrie Tyner, Declan Devane, Kamal R. Mahtani, Susan M. Smith, Michelle O’Neill, Máirín Ryan & Barbara Clyne
Additional file 1. PRISMA checklist.

Additional file 2 of The effectiveness and acceptability of evidence synthesis summary formats for clinical guideline development groups: a mixed-methods systematic review

Melissa K. Sharp, Dayang Anis Binti Awang Baki, Joan Quigley, Barrie Tyner, Declan Devane, Kamal R. Mahtani, Susan M. Smith, Michelle O’Neill, Máirín Ryan & Barbara Clyne
Additional file 2. Search strategy results.

Additional file 4 of The effectiveness and acceptability of evidence synthesis summary formats for clinical guideline development groups: a mixed-methods systematic review

Melissa K. Sharp, Dayang Anis Binti Awang Baki, Joan Quigley, Barrie Tyner, Declan Devane, Kamal R. Mahtani, Susan M. Smith, Michelle O’Neill, Máirín Ryan & Barbara Clyne
Additional file 4. Quantitative findings.

A bayesian approach for imputation of censored survival data

Shirin Moghaddam, John Newell & John Hinde
A common feature of much survival data is censoring due to incompletely observed lifetimes. Survival analysis methods and models have been designed to take account of this and provide appropriate relevant summaries, such as the Kaplan–Meier plot and the commonly quoted median survival time of the group under consideration. However, a single summary is not really a relevant quantity for communication to an individual patient, as it conveys no notion of variability and uncertainty, and...

Is geotechnical education meeting industry demands? The Irish position

Bryan A. McCabe & D. T. Phillips

How do the mutations in PfK13 protein promote anti-malarial drug resistance?

Shikha Sharma & Md. Ehesan Ali
Plasmodium falciparum develops resistance to artemisinin upon exposure to the anti-malarial drug. Various mutations in the Plasmodium falciparum Kelch13 (PfK13) protein such as Y493H, R539T, I543T and C580Y have been associated with anti-malarial drug resistance. These mutations impede the regular ubiquitination process that eventually invokes drug resistance. However, the relationship between the mutation and the mechanism of drug resistance has not yet been fully elucidated. The comparative protein dynamics are studied by performing the classical...

Additional file 1 of What is the purpose of clinical trial monitoring?

Sharon B. Love, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Elizabeth Ward, Rebecca Haydock, Katie Keen, Katie Biggs, Gosala Gopalakrishnan, Lucy Marsh, Lydia O’Sullivan, Lisa Fox, Estelle Payerne, Kerenza Hood & Garry Meakin
Additional file 1. Sources used for the paper.

Additional file 2 of What is the purpose of clinical trial monitoring?

Sharon B. Love, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Elizabeth Ward, Rebecca Haydock, Katie Keen, Katie Biggs, Gosala Gopalakrishnan, Lucy Marsh, Lydia O’Sullivan, Lisa Fox, Estelle Payerne, Kerenza Hood & Garry Meakin
Additional file 2. Questions used in UKCRC Task and Finish Monitoring Group annual meeting 9 June 2021.

Additional file 2 of Understanding the perspectives of recruiters is key to improving randomised controlled trial enrolment: a qualitative evidence synthesis

Nicola Farrar, Daisy Elliott, Catherine Houghton, Marcus Jepson, Nicola Mills, Sangeetha Paramasivan, Lucy Plumb, Julia Wade, Bridget Young, Jenny L. Donovan & Leila Rooshenas
Additional file 2. Screening Form. Form used to aid reviewers when screening papers for inclusion.

Strategies for implementing pet robots in care homes and nursing homes for residents with dementia: protocol for a modified Delphi study

Wei Qi Koh, Dympna Casey, Viktoria Hoel & ELAINE TOOMEY
Background: Pet robots are a type of technology-based innovation that have shown positive psychosocial benefts for people with dementia in residential facilities, such as improving mood and social interaction and reducing agitation. Nevertheless, little is known about how pet robots can be implemented in care homes and nursing homes for dementia care in real-world practice. The objectives of this study are to (1) identify contextualised implementation strategies for implementing pet robots into care homes and...

Towards sharing task environments to support reproducible evaluations of interactive recommender systems

Andrea Barraza-Urbina & Mathieu d'Aquin

Economic and social costs of violence against women in Pakistan: Technical report

Nata Duvvury

Economic and social costs of violence against women in South Sudan: Technical report

Nata Duuvury

Introducing Dearcadh: A tradition in feminist academics and publishing

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Registration Year

  • 2023
    10
  • 2022
    70
  • 2021
    29
  • 2020
    36
  • 2019
    4

Resource Types

  • Text
    149

Affiliations

  • National University of Ireland, Galway
    149
  • University of Limerick
    23
  • University College Cork
    22
  • Trinity College Dublin
    21
  • Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
    18
  • Renal Association
    16
  • University of Liverpool
    16
  • University of Bristol
    16
  • University College Dublin
    14
  • Cork University Hospital
    13