We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings.
To save content items to your account,
please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.
If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.
Find out more about saving content to .
To save content items to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org
is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings
on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part
of your Kindle email address below.
Find out more about saving to your Kindle.
Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations.
‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi.
‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.
This volume, the second volume in the Research Edition series of journals in Scotland, England and Ireland from the autumn of 1766 to May 1769.
The journals covered by the volume record much of Boswell's life as a young advocate during the first few years of his practice at the Scottish bar. The journals also record much information about Boswell's composition and publication of his instant best-seller, 'Account of Corsica', his involvement as a volunteer for the Douglas camp in the great Douglas Cause and his search for a wife. During Boswell's visits to London and Oxford in 1768, he produced some of his finest journal-writing, including details of memorable and significant conversations with Samuel Johnson. The manuscript journals in the volume have been printed to correspond to the originals as closely as is feasible in the medium of print.
Spatial analysis and disease mapping have the potential to enhance understanding of tuberculosis (TB) dynamics, whose spatial dynamics may be complicated by the mix of short and long-range transmission and long latency periods. TB notifications in Nam Dinh Province for individuals aged 15 and older from 2013 to 2022 were analyzed with a variety of spatio-temporal methods. The study commenced with an analysis of spatial autocorrelation to identify clustering patterns, followed by the evaluation of several candidate Bayesian spatio-temporal models. These models varied from simple assessments of spatial heterogeneity to more complex configurations incorporating covariates and interactions. The findings highlighted a peak in the TB notification rate in 2017, with 98 cases per 100,000 population, followed by a sharp decline in 2021. Significant spatial autocorrelation at the commune level was detected over most of the 10-year period. The Bayesian model that best balanced goodness-of-fit and complexity indicated that TB trends were associated with poverty: each percentage point increase in the proportion of poor households was associated with a 1.3% increase in TB notifications, emphasizing a significant socioeconomic factor in TB transmission dynamics. The integration of local socioeconomic data with spatio-temporal analysis could further enhance our understanding of TB epidemiology.
This editorial considers the value and nature of academic psychiatry by asking what defines the specialty and psychiatrists as academics. We frame academic psychiatry as a way of thinking that benefits clinical services and discuss how to inspire the next generation of academics.
Lough Hyne (LH) Marine Nature Reserve in Ireland is a globally recognised biodiversity hotspot that hosts mesophotic-like communities in shallow water, however, major changes have occurred to most of the rocky cliff (>6 m) communities in one or more events between 2010 and 2015. To provide insights into these changes, we compared the sponge assemblage composition on the undersides of different sized, shallow (<1 m) subtidal boulders between 2000 and 2022 at two sites in LH. We also measured sponge species richness at seven sites in 2018. We found that unlike earlier reports from the deeper subtidal reef sponge assemblages, there was no evidence for changes in sponge assemblage composition on the undersides of boulders at either site. We also found high levels of sponge species richness at all seven sites sampled in 2018. We did find differences in sponge assemblages between sites and for different boulder sizes, which we propose is a result of site-specific environmental conditions and disturbance and size–area relationships. Since we found no changes in the shallow subtidal sponge assemblages between 2000 and 2022, our results support the hypothesis that changes to the deeper subtidal sponge assemblages at LH are driven by local processes associated with deeper water in LH, potentially related to the seasonal oxythermocline that forms within LH. Given the national and global importance of LH, understanding the drivers of change is critical to determine if management actions can prevent any future alterations to the LH sponge assemblages and support wider mesophotic community management.
To make a valid will, a person should be able to understand the nature and consequences of doing so, the extent of their estate and the claims others may have on it. No disorder of mind should be present that would affect their testamentary decisions, and clinicians are therefore often asked to give an opinion on whether a person has testamentary capacity. This article discusses the legal issues involved, with reference to UK case law (in particular, the legal test of Banks v Goodfellow (1870)), and outlines the requirements of testamentary capacity assessment (including retrospective assessments), the clinician's responsibilities when requested by a solicitor to make an assessment of capacity (‘the golden rule’) and what they might expect if appearing in court to give expert witness regarding testamentary capacity. Fictitious case studies are presented illustrating certain points in testamentary capacity assessment.
In July 2021, Public Health Wales received two notifications of salmonella gastroenteritis. Both cases has attended the same barbecue to celebrate Eid al–Adha, two days earlier. Additional cases attending the same barbecue were found and an outbreak investigation was initiated. The barbecue was attended by a North African community’s social network. On same day, smaller lunches were held in three homes in the social network. Many people attended both a lunch and the barbecue. Cases were defined as someone with an epidemiological link to the barbecue and/or lunches with diarrhoea and/or vomiting with date of onset following these events. We undertook a cohort study of 36 people attending the barbecue and/or lunch, and a nested case-control study using Firth logistic regression. A communication campaign, sensitive towards different cultural practices, was developed in collaboration with the affected community. Consumption of a traditional raw liver dish, ‘marrara’, at the barbecue was the likely vehicle for infection (Firth logistic regression, aOR: 49.99, 95%CI 1.71–1461.54, p = 0.02). Meat and offal came from two local butchers (same supplier) and samples yielded identical whole genome sequences as cases. Future outbreak investigations should be relevant to the community affected by considering dishes beyond those found in routine questionnaires.
It is acknowledged that health technology assessment (HTA) is an inherently value-based activity that makes use of normative reasoning alongside empirical evidence. But the language used to conceptualise and articulate HTA's normative aspects is demonstrably unnuanced, imprecise, and inconsistently employed, undermining transparency and preventing proper scrutiny of the rationales on which decisions are based. This paper – developed through a cross-disciplinary collaboration of 24 researchers with expertise in healthcare priority-setting – seeks to address this problem by offering a clear definition of key terms and distinguishing between the types of normative commitment invoked during HTA, thus providing a novel conceptual framework for the articulation of reasoning. Through application to a hypothetical case, it is illustrated how this framework can operate as a practical tool through which HTA practitioners and policymakers can enhance the transparency and coherence of their decision-making, while enabling others to hold them more easily to account. The framework is offered as a starting point for further discussion amongst those with a desire to enhance the legitimacy and fairness of HTA by facilitating practical public reasoning, in which decisions are made on behalf of the public, in public view, through a chain of reasoning that withstands ethical scrutiny.
Homeless shelter residents and staff may be at higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, SARS-CoV-2 infection estimates in this population have been reliant on cross-sectional or outbreak investigation data. We conducted routine surveillance and outbreak testing in 23 homeless shelters in King County, Washington, to estimate the occurrence of laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and risk factors during 1 January 2020–31 May 2021. Symptom surveys and nasal swabs were collected for SARS-CoV-2 testing by RT-PCR for residents aged ≥3 months and staff. We collected 12,915 specimens from 2,930 unique participants. We identified 4.74 (95% CI 4.00–5.58) SARS-CoV-2 infections per 100 individuals (residents: 4.96, 95% CI 4.12–5.91; staff: 3.86, 95% CI 2.43–5.79). Most infections were asymptomatic at the time of detection (74%) and detected during routine surveillance (73%). Outbreak testing yielded higher test positivity than routine surveillance (2.7% versus 0.9%). Among those infected, residents were less likely to report symptoms than staff. Participants who were vaccinated against seasonal influenza and were current smokers had lower odds of having an infection detected. Active surveillance that includes SARS-CoV-2 testing of all persons is essential in ascertaining the true burden of SARS-CoV-2 infections among residents and staff of congregate settings.
The journals covered by this volume relate to periods between the autumn of 1766 and May 1769. It has been said that the years 1766 to 1769 were the happiest years of Boswell's life. During the first three of those years, Boswell commenced practice as an advocate at the Scottish Bar; wrote a major literary work, the Account of Corsica, which was an instant best-seller; became a tireless volunteer for the Douglas camp in the great Douglas Cause, the cause célèbre of eighteenth-century Scottish legal history; and started to give serious thought to finding a wife, while at the same time carrying on a passionate affair with his mistress. For much of that period Boswell displayed remarkable energy. During 1767, in particular, ‘there seems to have been no limit either to the amount of work he could perform or of pleasure he could encompass’. And during Boswell's visits to London and Oxford in 1768 he produced some of his finest journal-writing.
The Law
The journals covered by this volume are to a large extent a record of Boswell's life as a young advocate during the first few years of his practice. While many of the journal entries relate to matters other than the law, the annotations in this volume, where appropriate, concentrate unashamedly on Boswell's legal career. In the ‘trade edition’ volume of Boswell in Search of a Wife, which covers the period 1766 to 1769, Frank Brady observed that ‘complete annotation – such as full explication of Boswell's legal cases – has been reserved for the research edition’.
Although Boswell had no inclination to be a lawyer, his father, Alexander Boswell (1707–82), who was admitted advocate on 29 December 1729, appointed sheriff-depute of Wigtownshire in 1748 and appointed Lord of Session (as Lord Auchinleck) on 15 February 1754, was keen that Boswell follow him (and Lord Auchinleck's father before him) in becoming an advocate. After studying Arts at Edinburgh University from 1753 to 1758, Boswell studied civil law (that is, Roman law) from 1758 to 1760, first at Edinburgh University and then at Glasgow University.
[JB's journal broke off with his entry, in London, for 23 February 1766, eleven days after his return to London from his European travels, and would not be resumed until January 1767. He returned to Edinburgh about 7 March. The Court of Session's 1766 summer session ended on 11 August. The following day, JB and his father travelled from Edinburgh to Auchinleck for the autumn vacation. It seems likely that it was at Auchinleck that JB started to compile the following memoranda, notes and jottings.]
I remember I once maintained that the pleasure of mere pure Idleness was now & then very great. I was laughed at for this thought; & I began to think it absurd. However several years after I now find it authorised by Cicero lib: 2. De. Orat. ‘Mihi liber non videtur, qui non aliquando nihil agit: in qua permaneo sententia, meque cum huc veni, hoc ipsum nihil agere & plane cessare delectat.’
A man of refined taste and feelings is not to wonder when dull Common sense Mortals laugh at his qualitys. They do so as a clown would laugh at a picture of Raphael's or an air of Sassone’s, from mere ignorance.
[p. 2]
Voi erate felice di non say more foolishly e di veder poco female part &c. Vedete sta mattina Mr. Logan &c —
Pomfret Cakes to Mr Hugh —
Stanley's Switzerland
J. Tonson 1714.
[p. 3]
I am allways an Advocate in behalf of men who have a great deal of fancy; for I have experienced the advantages & the inconveniencies of it. Often when I was reading, inordinate Fancy has forced into my mind so many ideas, that when I closed the Book, I could not absolutely say what was in the Book & what not. Just so after having seen anything or heard any story a Man of fancy instantaneously sees many circumstances which would be an improvement. He rolls them in his mind & imperceptibly they are so mixed with the reality that He cannot distinguish which is which. I would therefore be cautious in receiving the relations of a Man of fancy; not because He wishes to tell a lie, but because He may very probably be mistaken.
Busy all day drawing Replies in the Forfar Elections.
Saturday 2 January
Went with my Father to Arniston. By the way talked of the antiquities & constitution of the Election law in Scotland. Found it difficult to fix my attention. But by degrees wrought my mind into a knowledge of the subject. Was amazed at my Fathers memory and patience. Well at Arniston. All old ideas had no longer any force, but the traces of them diversified and amused my thoughts. At night played Whist. Still had gloom, because I have never played at it when well, so as to get free of former prejudices. About 9 my father was taken ill with his old complaint. Thomas went express to Edinburgh. The President shewed a friendly concern which will ever make him be regarded by me. For some hours, my father was in agony. In the view of death he gave me the best & most affectionate advices. He spoke of Miss Blair as the Woman whom he wished I would marry. How strong was this. I was in terrible concern. He said if business did not succeed with me after his death, I should retire to the country. He charged me to take care of my brothers, to be a worthy man & keep up the character of the family. I firmly resolved to be as he wished, though in somewhat a different taste of life. I looked my watch a hundred times. A quarter before one Thomas arrived with the Catheter. In five minutes my father was easy. What a happy change! Went calmly to bed. It was an intense frost, & the ground was covered with snow.
Sunday 3 January
My father was quite easy. I went out for an hour with the President in his Chariot. Talked freely on the Douglas Cause. Heard how it struck him in its various points. Saw how foolish the suspicions against him were. Resolved to take men as I find them. Was assured by the President that I should do well as a Lawyer. Saw no difficulties in life. Saw that all depends on our frame of mind. Lord and Lady Hyndford were here.