Institution
University of Jordan
Education•Amman, Jordan•
About: University of Jordan is a education organization based out in Amman, Jordan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 7796 authors who have published 13764 publications receiving 213526 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Improve in population understanding about chronic kidney disease is needed to advance their awareness and practices to make appropriate decisions towards health promotion and better quality of life.
Abstract: Objective
To describe the knowledge, attitudes and practices of Jordanian patients with chronic illnesses towards prevention and early detection of chronic kidney disease.
Background
Patients with chronic illnesses such as hypertension and diabetes need to adopt healthy attitudes and practices and gain knowledge regarding prevention and early detection of kidney disease to decrease the prevalence of dialysis-related complications and costs.
Methods
A total of 740 patients were recruited from out-patients clinics in Jordan. Knowledge, attitudes and practices about kidney disease prevention and early detection were measured using the Chronic Kidney Disease Screening Index which was developed by the researcher and tested for validity and reliability.
Results
The results revealed that most of the participants have knowledge about kidney disease; however, half of them had wrong information related to signs and symptoms of chronic kidney disease. The majority of the participants were not aware about the importance of discovering health problems at early stages.
Conclusion and implications
Improvement in population understanding about chronic kidney disease is needed to advance their awareness and practices to make appropriate decisions towards health promotion and better quality of life.
Implication for policy development
Nurses need to be involved in development of protocols for screening and intervention programmes, taking into consideration the cultural issues and the financial status of individuals at risk for kidney disease. Governments should adopt a public health policy for chronic kidney disease that supports programmes for screening and programmes for improving public awareness for kidney disease prevention.
65 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, two types of inverse problems for diffusion equations involving Caputo fractional derivatives in time and fractional Sturm-Liouville operator for space are studied. But these inverse problems are proved to be ill-posed in the sense of Hadamard whenever an additional condition at the final time is given.
Abstract: In this research, we deal with two types of inverse problems for diffusion equations involving Caputo fractional derivatives in time and fractional Sturm-Liouville operator for space. The first one is to identify the source term and the second one is to identify the initial value along with the solution in both cases. These inverse problems are proved to be ill-posed in the sense of Hadamard whenever an additional condition at the final time is given. A new fractional Tikhonov regularization method is used for the reconstruction of the stable solutions. Under the a-priori and the a-posteriori parameter choice rules, the error estimates between the exact and its regularized solutions are obtained. To illustrate the validity of our study, we give numerical examples. A final note is utilized in the ultimate section.
65 citations
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TL;DR: An improvement in HbA1c, FBS, and lipid profile is demonstrated, in addition to self-reported medication adherence, diabetes knowledge, and diabetes self-care activities in patients with type 2 diabetes who received pharmaceutical care interventions.
Abstract: Aims The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of pharmaceutical care interventions on glycemic control and other health-related clinical outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes patients in Jordan. Methods A randomized controlled clinical trial was conducted on 106 patients with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes seeking care in the diabetes clinics at Jordan University Hospital. Patients were randomly allocated into control and intervention group. The intervention group patients received pharmaceutical care interventions developed by the clinical pharmacist in collaboration with the physician while the control group patients received usual care without clinical pharmacist's input. Fasting blood glucose and HbA1c were measured at the baseline, at three months, and six months intervals for both intervention and control groups. Results After the six months follow-up, mean of HbA1c and FBS of the patients in the intervention group decreased significantly compared to the control group patients ( P P Conclusions This study demonstrated an improvement in HbA1c, FBS, and lipid profile, in addition to self-reported medication adherence, diabetes knowledge, and diabetes self-care activities in patients with type 2 diabetes who received pharmaceutical care interventions. The results suggest the benefits of integrating clinical pharmacist services in multidisciplinary healthcare team and diabetes management in Jordan.
65 citations
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TL;DR: The FBDG consist of 14 simple and practical pieces of advice taking into consideration the sociocultural status and nutritional problems in the Arab Gulf countries and can be a useful tool in educating the public in healthy eating and prevention of diet-related chronic diseases.
Abstract: The concept of food-based dietary guidelines (FBDG) has been promoted by several international organizations. However, there are no FBDG for the countries in the Arab region. As the Arab Gulf countries share similar a socioeconomic and nutrition situation, an attempt was made to develop FBDG for these countries. This paper summarizes the steps taken to develope such guidelines by the Arab Center for Nutrition. The FBDG were developed through 6 steps: (1) determination of the purpose and goals for establishing FBDG, (2) characteristics of FBDG, (3) determination of the food consumption patterns, (4) review the current nutrition situation, (5) determination of the lifestyle patterns that are associated with diet-related diseases and (6) formulating the FBDG. The FBDG consist of 14 simple and practical pieces of advice taking into consideration the sociocultural status and nutritional problems in the Arab Gulf countries. The FBDG can be a useful tool in educating the public in healthy eating and prevention of diet-related chronic diseases.
65 citations
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TL;DR: Although a 5-day regimen of antibiotic prophylaxis in orthognathic surgery did not decrease the incidence of postoperative infection significantly, it may decrease the morbidity of the operation.
Abstract: A prospective, randomised, placebo-controlled double-blind clinical trial, compared short-term (1 day) and long-term (5 days) antibiotic prophylaxis after orthognathic surgery. Thirty four patients had single jaw or bimaxillary osteotomies and were given two perioperative doses of amoxycillin. Patients were then randomised to receive either placebo or amoxycillin for 5 days in a double-blind manner. Postoperatively the patients were monitored for infection by scoring a series of validated measurements of infection. In the postoperative period four patients required additional antibiotics in the short-term group and two in the long-term group (P = 0.67). Morbidity scores were higher in the short-term group, at 406 to 264 (P = 0.04), and when individual variables were compared there was a significant difference in the degree of swelling (P = 0.04). Although a 5-day regimen of antibiotic prophylaxis in orthognathic surgery did not decrease the incidence of postoperative infection significantly, it may decrease the morbidity of the operation.
65 citations
Authors
Showing all 7905 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Yousef Khader | 94 | 586 | 111094 |
Crispian Scully | 86 | 917 | 33404 |
Debra K. Moser | 85 | 558 | 27188 |
Pierre Thibault | 77 | 332 | 17741 |
Ali H. Nayfeh | 71 | 618 | 31111 |
Harold S. Margolis | 71 | 199 | 26719 |
Gerrit Hoogenboom | 69 | 560 | 24151 |
Shaher Momani | 64 | 301 | 13680 |
Robert McDonald | 62 | 577 | 17531 |
Kaarle Hämeri | 58 | 175 | 10969 |
James E. Maynard | 56 | 141 | 9158 |
E. Richard Moxon | 54 | 176 | 10395 |
Liam G Heaney | 53 | 234 | 8556 |
Stephen C. Hadler | 52 | 148 | 11458 |
Nicholas H. Oberlies | 52 | 262 | 9683 |