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Dive into the research topics where Ingrid I. Riphagen is active.

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Featured researches published by Ingrid I. Riphagen.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2010

Occupational sitting and health risks: a systematic review

Jannique G.Z. van Uffelen; Jason Y.L. Wong; Josephine Y. Chau; Hidde P. van der Ploeg; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Nicholas D. Gilson; Nicola W. Burton; Genevieve N. Healy; Alicia A. Thorp; Bronwyn K. Clark; Paula Gardiner; David W. Dunstan; Adrian Bauman; Neville Owen; Wendy J. Brown

CONTEXT Emerging evidence suggests that sedentary behavior (i.e., time spent sitting) may be negatively associated with health. The aim of this study was to systematically review the evidence on associations between occupational sitting and health risks. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION Studies were identified in March-April 2009 by literature searches in PubMed, PsycINFO, CENTRAL, CINAHL, EMBASE, and PEDro, with subsequent related-article searches in PubMed and citation searches in Web of Science. Identified studies were categorized by health outcome. Two independent reviewers assessed methodologic quality using a 15-item quality rating list (score range 0-15 points, higher score indicating better quality). Data on study design, study population, measures of occupational sitting, health risks, analyses, and results were extracted. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS 43 papers met the inclusion criteria (21% cross-sectional, 14% case-control, 65% prospective); they examined the associations between occupational sitting and BMI (n=12); cancer (n=17); cardiovascular disease (CVD, n=8); diabetes mellitus (DM, n=4); and mortality (n=6). The median study-quality score was 12 points. Half the cross-sectional studies showed a positive association between occupational sitting and BMI, but prospective studies failed to confirm a causal relationship. There was some case-control evidence for a positive association between occupational sitting and cancer; however, this was generally not supported by prospective studies. The majority of prospective studies found that occupational sitting was associated with a higher risk of DM and mortality. CONCLUSIONS Limited evidence was found to support a positive relationship between occupational sitting and health risks. The heterogeneity of study designs, measures, and findings makes it difficult to draw definitive conclusions at this time.


Quality of Life Research | 2009

Development of a methodological PubMed search filter for finding studies on measurement properties of measurement instruments

Caroline B. Terwee; Elise P. Jansma; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Henrica C.W. de Vet

ObjectivesFor the measurement of patient-reported outcomes, such as (health-related) quality of life, often many measurement instruments exist that intend to measure the same construct. To facilitate instrument selection, our aim was to develop a highly sensitive search filter for finding studies on measurement properties of measurement instruments in PubMed and a more precise search filter that needs less abstracts to be screened, but at a higher risk of missing relevant studies.MethodsA random sample of 10,000 PubMed records (01-01-1990 to 31-12-2006) was used as a gold standard. Studies on measurement properties were identified using an exclusion filter and hand searching. Search terms were selected from the relevant records in the gold standard as well as from 100 systematic reviews of measurement properties and combined based on sensitivity and precision. The performance of the filters was tested in the gold standard as well as in two validation sets, by calculating sensitivity, precision, specificity, and number needed to read.ResultsWe identified 116 studies on measurement properties in the gold standard. The sensitive search filter was able to retrieve 113 of these 116 studies (sensitivity 97.4%, precision 4.4%). The precise search filter had a sensitivity of 93.1% and a precision of 9.4%. Both filters performed very well in the validation sets.ConclusionThe use of these search filters will contribute to evidence-based selection of measurement instruments in all medical fields.


Preventive Medicine | 2010

Are workplace interventions to reduce sitting effective? A systematic review

Josephine Y. Chau; Hidde P. van der Ploeg; Jannique G.Z. van Uffelen; Jason Y.L. Wong; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Genevieve N. Healy; Nicholas D. Gilson; David W. Dunstan; Adrian Bauman; Neville Owen; Wendy J. Brown

OBJECTIVE To systematically review the effectiveness of workplace interventions for reducing sitting. METHODS Studies published up to April 2009 were identified by literature searches in multiple databases. Studies were included if they were interventions to increase energy expenditure (increase physical activity or decrease sitting); were conducted in a workplace setting; and specifically measured sitting as a primary or secondary outcome. Two independent reviewers assessed methodological quality of the included studies, and data on study design, sample, measures of sitting, intervention and results were extracted. RESULTS Six studies met the inclusion criteria (five randomised trials and one pre-post study). The primary aim of all six was to increase physical activity; all had reducing sitting as a secondary aim. All used self-report measures of sitting; one specifically assessed occupational sitting time; the others used measures of general sitting. No studies showed that sitting decreased significantly in the intervention group, compared with a control or comparison group. CONCLUSION Currently, there is a dearth of evidence on the effectiveness of workplace interventions for reducing sitting. In light of the growing body of evidence that prolonged sitting is negatively associated with health, this highlights a gap in the scientific literature that needs to be addressed.


BMC Cancer | 2012

Physical and psychosocial benefits of yoga in cancer patients and survivors, a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Laurien M. Buffart; Jannique G.Z. van Uffelen; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Johannes Brug; Willem van Mechelen; Wendy J. Brown; M. J. M. Chinapaw

BackgroundThis study aimed to systematically review the evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and to conduct a meta-analysis of the effects of yoga on physical and psychosocial outcomes in cancer patients and survivors.MethodsA systematic literature search in ten databases was conducted in November 2011. Studies were included if they had an RCT design, focused on cancer patients or survivors, included physical postures in the yoga program, compared yoga with a non-exercise or waitlist control group, and evaluated physical and/or psychosocial outcomes. Two researchers independently rated the quality of the included RCTs, and high quality was defined as >50% of the total possible score. Effect sizes (Cohen’s d) were calculated for outcomes studied in more than three studies among patients with breast cancer using means and standard deviations of post-test scores of the intervention and control groups.ResultsSixteen publications of 13 RCTs met the inclusion criteria, of which one included patients with lymphomas and the others focused on patients with breast cancer. The median quality score was 67% (range: 22–89%). The included studies evaluated 23 physical and 20 psychosocial outcomes. Of the outcomes studied in more than three studies among patients with breast cancer, we found large reductions in distress, anxiety, and depression (d = −0.69 to −0.75), moderate reductions in fatigue (d = −0.51), moderate increases in general quality of life, emotional function and social function (d = 0.33 to 0.49), and a small increase in functional well-being (d = 0.31). Effects on physical function and sleep were small and not significant.ConclusionYoga appeared to be a feasible intervention and beneficial effects on several physical and psychosocial symptoms were reported. In patients with breast cancer, effect size on functional well-being was small, and they were moderate to large for psychosocial outcomes.


Maturitas | 2012

Physical activity monitoring by use of accelerometer-based body-worn sensors in older adults: A systematic literature review of current knowledge and applications

Kristin Taraldsen; Sebastien Chastin; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Beatrix Vereijken; Jorunn L. Helbostad

OBJECTIVES To systematically review the literature on physical activity variables derived from body-worn sensors during long term monitoring in healthy and in-care older adults. METHODS Using pre-designed inclusion and exclusion criteria, a PubMed search strategy was designed to trace relevant reports of studies. Last search date was March 8, 2011. STUDY SELECTION Studies that included persons with mean or median age of >65 years, used accelerometer-based body-worn sensors with a monitoring length of >24h, and reported values on physical activity in the samples assessed. RESULTS 1403 abstracts were revealed and 134 full-text papers included in the final review. A variety of variables derived from activity counts or recognition of performed activities were reported in healthy older adults as well as in in-care older adults. Three variables were possible to compare across studies, level of Energy Expenditure in kcal per day and activity recognition in terms of total time in walking and total activity. However, physical activity measured by these variables demonstrated large variation between studies and did not distinguish activity between healthy and in-care samples. CONCLUSION There is a rich variety in methods used for data collection and analysis as well as in reported variables. Different aspects of physical activity can be described, but the variety makes it challenging to compare across studies. There is an urgent need for developing consensus on activity monitoring protocols and which variables to report.


Quality of Life Research | 2009

Evaluation of the methodological quality of systematic reviews of health status measurement instruments

Lidwine B. Mokkink; Caroline B. Terwee; Paul W. Stratford; Jordi Alonso; Donald L. Patrick; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Dirk L. Knol; L.M. Bouter; Henrica C.W. de Vet

A systematic review of measurement properties of health-status instruments is a tool for evaluating the quality of instruments. Our aim was to appraise the quality of the review process, to describe how authors assess the methodological quality of primary studies of measurement properties, and to describe how authors evaluate results of the studies. Literature searches were performed in three databases. One hundred and forty-eight reviews were included. The purpose of included reviews was to identify health status instruments used in an evaluative application and to report on the measurement properties of these instruments. Two independent reviewers selected the articles and extracted the data. Reviews were often of low quality: 22% of the reviews used one database, the search strategy was often poorly described, and in many cases it was not reported whether article selection (75%) and data extraction (71%) was done by two independent reviewers. In 11 reviews the methodological quality of the primary studies was evaluated for all measurement properties, and of these 11 reviews only 7 evaluated the results. Methods to evaluate the quality of the primary studies and the results differed widely. The poor quality of reviews hampers evidence-based selection of instruments. Guidelines for conducting and reporting systematic reviews of measurement properties should be developed.


Palliative Medicine | 2011

Perceived barriers and facilitators for general practitioner-patient communication in palliative care: A systematic review

Willemjan Slort; Bart Schweitzer; Annette H. Blankenstein; Ebun Abarshi; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Michael A. Echteld; Neil K. Aaronson; H.E. van der Horst; Luc Deliens

While effective general practitioner (GP)–patient communication is required for the provision of good palliative care, barriers and facilitators for this communication are largely unknown. We aimed to identify barriers and facilitators for GP–patient communication in palliative care. In a systematic review seven computerized databases were searched to find empirical studies on GP–patient communication in palliative care. Fifteen qualitative studies and seven quantitative questionnaire studies were included. The main perceived barriers were GPs’ lack of availability, and patients’ and GPs’ ambivalence to discuss ‘bad prognosis’. Main perceived facilitators were GPs being available, initiating discussion about several end-of-life issues and anticipating various scenarios. Lack of availability and failure to discuss former mistakes appear to be blind spots of GPs. GPs should be more forthcoming to initiate discussions with palliative care patients about prognosis and end-of-life issues. Empirical studies are needed to investigate the effectiveness of the perceived barriers and facilitators.


Critical Reviews in Oncology Hematology | 2013

Effect of physical exercise on muscle mass and strength in cancer patients during treatment—A systematic review

Guro Birgitte Stene; Jorunn L. Helbostad; Trude R. Balstad; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Stein Kaasa; Line Merete Oldervoll

Cancer treatment and its side effects may cause muscle wasting. Physical exercise has the potential to increase muscle mass and strength and to improve physical function in cancer patients undergoing treatment. A systematic review was conducted to study the effect of physical exercise (aerobic, resistance or a combination of both) on muscle mass and strength in cancer patients with different type and stage of cancer disease. Electronic searches were performed up to January 11th 2012, identifying 16 randomised controlled trials for final data synthesis. The studies demonstrated that aerobic and resistance exercise improves upper and lower body muscle strength more than usual care. Few studies have assessed the effect of exercise on muscle mass. Most studies were performed in patients with early stage breast or prostate cancer. Evidence on the effect of physical exercise on muscle strength and mass in cancer patients with advanced disease is lacking. More exercise studies in patients with advanced cancer and at risk of cancer cachexia are warranted.


Cancer | 2012

18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography in assessment of myeloma-related bone disease: A systematic review

Danielle van Lammeren-Venema; Josien C. Regelink; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Sonja Zweegman; Otto S. Hoekstra; Josée M. Zijlstra

The goal of this study was to conduct a comparative analysis of whole body X‐ray (WBXR) and 18F‐fluoro‐deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18FDG PET) in staging and response assessment of multiple myeloma.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2013

Clinical tools to assess balance in children and adults with cerebral palsy: a systematic review

Rannei Sæther; Jorunn L. Helbostad; Ingrid I. Riphagen; Torstein Vik

We aimed to review tools used to assess balance in clinical practice in children and adults with cerebral palsy (CP), to describe their content and measurement properties and to evaluate the quality of the studies that have examined these properties. CINAHL, Embase, and PubMed/MEDLINE were searched. The COnsensus‐based Standards for selection of health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) was used to assess the ‘quality of studies’ and the Terwee criteria were used to assess the ‘result of studies’. Twenty‐two clinical balance tools were identified from 35 papers. The content and focus of the tools varied significantly. There was moderate or limited levels of evidence for most of the measurement properties of the tools; the strongest level of evidence was found for the Trunk Control Measurement Scale and the Level of Sitting Scale, in the category ‘maintain balance’, the Timed Up and Go and the Segmental Assessment of Trunk Control in the categories ‘achieve balance’ and ‘restore balance’ respectively. Information on responsiveness was scarce. Further studies providing better evidence for reliability and responsiveness for clinical balance tools are needed. In the meantime, results of studies evaluating effects of treatment of balance in individuals with CP should be interpreted with caution.

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Otto S. Hoekstra

VU University Medical Center

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Henrica C.W. de Vet

VU University Medical Center

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Jorunn L. Helbostad

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Harm van Tinteren

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Josée M. Zijlstra

VU University Medical Center

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L.M. Bouter

VU University Medical Center

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Wendy J. Brown

University of Queensland

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Arianne P. Verhagen

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Caroline B. Terwee

VU University Medical Center

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