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Institution

University of the Visayas

EducationCebu City, Philippines
About: University of the Visayas is a education organization based out in Cebu City, Philippines. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Competence (human resources). The organization has 53 authors who have published 37 publications receiving 140 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nursing education and nursing research will change to encompass a differentiated demand for professional nursing practice with, and not for, robots in healthcare.

78 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Tandon et al. linked the relevance of the crisis to psychiatry as it has effects on mental health (Tandon, 2020) and listed anxiety and stigma and their proliferation as contextual effects of misinformation, uncertainty, hesitation to "disclose or seek help,’ fear, and unawareness about health promoting strategies.

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Jun 2019-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The confirmed seropositivity of T. gondii in Cebu, Philippines, in the present study implies the endemicity of toxoplasmosis in this area and highlights the need for routine testing and increased public awareness.
Abstract: Toxoplasma gondii is a single-celled intracellular apicomplexan parasite that causes toxoplasmosis. It is capable of infecting humans and nearly all warm-blooded animals including pigs, but cats are the only known definitive host. This ubiquitous zoonotic pathogen can cause abortion, stillbirth and fetal abnormalities, and has been associated with mental and behavioral changes in humans. Acute infection is potentially fatal in immunocompromised individuals. The present study aimed to assess the Toxoplasma seroprevalence in pigs, humans and cats after its initial reported detection in pigs about three decades ago in Cebu, Philippines. A total of 924 humans, 104 cats and 514 slaughter pigs were tested for antibodies against T. gondii using a commercial latex agglutination test. The results revealed positive detection rates of 26.3% (244/924) for humans, 42.3% (44/104) for cats and 13.4% (69/514) for slaughter pigs. Statistical analyses revealed that the area (P = 0.004), cat ownership (P = 0.020), the frequency of contact with cats (P 0.05). This study is the first report of the serological detection of T. gondii in humans and cats in Cebu, Philippines, and the first assessment of the prevalence of the parasite in pigs in the area since its initial detection in 1982. This is also the first report documenting the seropositivity of T. gondii in pregnant women in the country. The confirmed seropositivity of T. gondii in Cebu, Philippines, in the present study implies the endemicity of toxoplasmosis in this area and highlights the need for routine testing and increased public awareness.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first report of B. vogeli infection in dogs in the Philippines and monophyletic grouping of Philippine sequences with the registered A. platys Genbank sequences was revealed.

10 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The study showed that C. lentillifera extract may have a potential anticoagulant property due to its component SP, and showed a positive significant correlation (multiple R = 0.9450, R2 =0.8931) implying dose-dependent anticoAGulant potential.
Abstract: Background: Anticoagulants have been used in the treatment of several circulatory diseases and thrombotic disorders, and in the blood sampling for hematologic analysis. Sulfated polysaccharides (SP), which have anticoagulant properties, are found in most seaweeds, including Caulerpa spp. Objective: The study generally aimed to evaluate the potential anticoagulant property of Caulerpa lentillifera. Methodology: The whole plant of fresh C. lentillifera was washed thoroughly with distilled water and manually expressed to obtain the extract. C. lentillifera extract was tested in two phases. Phase one utilized nine male albino rabbits, which were randomly and equally allocated into three groups: (1) negative control (oral distilled water and subsequent in vitro mixing of extracted blood with normal saline solution), (2) positive control (oral aspirin and subsequent in vitro mixing of extracted blood with normal saline solution), and (3) experimental group (oral distilled water and in vitro mixing of extracted blood with C. lentillifera extract). Blood coagulation was evaluated by measuring the clotting time using the slide and tube methods. In phase two, peripheral blood from three apparently healthy adult dogs were used. Blood collection was performed thrice. In each collection, the sample was divided into five aliquots: (1) negative control (normal saline solution), (2) positive control (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid [EDTA]), and (3-5) experimental treatments at 0.1, 0.15, and 0.2 ml of C. lentillifera extract. Coagulation was evaluated by measuring the clotting time using the tube method. Results: Phase one results revealed significant differences on the clotting time between the negative and the positive and experimental groups (P 0.05). In phase two, all blood samples mixed with EDTA did not clot, while the negative control had an average clotting time of 2.01 min. Blood mixed with 0.2 ml of C. lentillifera extract had the longest coagulation time (15.49 min). Simple linear regression revealed a positive significant correlation (multiple R = 0.9450, R2 = 0.8931, P = 0.02) implying dose-dependent anticoagulant potential. The study showed that C. lentillifera extract may have a potential anticoagulant property due to its component SP.

9 citations


Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20223
20201
20193
20182
20176