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Edington, Jacqueline, Geekie, Moira, Carter, Robin, Benfield, Lisa, Fisher, Karen, Ball, Madeleine, and Mann, Jim
British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Edition) . 2/7/1987, Vol. 294 Issue 6568, p333-336. 4p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts.
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LOW-fat diet and BLOOD cholesterol
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Examines the effect of dietary cholesterol on plasma cholesterol concentration in subjects following low fat diet in Great Britain. Ratio of polyunsaturated to saturated fatty acids; Comparison of the cholesterol concentration among subjects; Importance of dietary cholesterol for the reduction of saturated fats.
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2. NEWS & Political Review. [1992]
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Kingman, Sharon, Yamauchi, Masaya, Dorozynski, Alexander, Swan, Norman, McBride, Gail, Karcher, Helmut L., Godlee, Fiona, Annis, Jacqueline, Gloag, Daphne, Lowry, Stella, Warden, John, Dyer, Clare, Williams, Robin, Greenhill, Sally, and Greenhill, Richard
BMJ: British Medical Journal (International Edition) . 3/7/92, Vol. 304 Issue 6827, p591. 6p. 4 Black and White Photographs, 1 Diagram.
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MEDICINE, FETAL tissue research, POPULATION & the environment, FETAL death, and POLITICAL science
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Presents global developments on the political aspects of medicine as of March 1992. Progress on fetal tissue research and transplants in Australia, Europe, and the United States; Increase in human population; Disposal of fetuses and fetus remains.
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Scull, Christopher, Ager, Barry, Bourn, Robert, Cameron, Esther, Clogg, P. W., Creighton, John, Edwards, Glynis, Gelling, Margaret, Gilmour, Brian, Harman, Mary, Henry, Pippa, Holgate, Robin, Huntley, Jacqueline P., Johnson, Paul, Linford, Neil, Marlow, C. A., Mortimer, Catherine, Mudd, Andrew, Odenstedt, Bengt, and Page, R. I.
- Archaeological Journal; 1992, Vol. 149, p124-281, 158p, 13 Black and White Photographs, 66 Diagrams, 12 Charts, 2 Graphs, 2 Maps
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Geophysical survey and excavation have demonstrated that iron age settlement features and early Anglo-Saxon burials discovered during road construction in 1983 were part o[ an extensive multi-period site, now a Scheduled Ancient Monument. This paper presents the results of the archaeological investigations. The bulk of the report is concerned with the early Anglo-Saxon burials, which included a grave containing a balance, weights and runic inscription. The evidence for late mesolithic, neolithic -- early bronze age, iron age and post-medieval activity is also discussed, and the site is considered in its regional and wider context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Ferris, Jacqueline and Room, Robin
Alcohol Health & Research World . 1993, Vol. 17 Issue 3, p235. 7p. 1 Chart.
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BEER, INTERNATIONAL economic relations, and INTERNATIONAL trade
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Demonstrates how United States and Canadian controls on the alcohol market affect public health. US-Canadian alcohol control; Public health implications; How the trade agreements (GATT, FTA, NAFTA) work; Trade disputes since 1985; The larger meaning of the disputes; Chronology of the US-Canada beer dispute; Glossary; Summary.
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Room, Robin, Bondy, Susan J., and Ferris, Jacqueline
Addiction . Apr1995, Vol. 90 Issue 4, p499-513. 16p. 4 Charts, 5 Graphs.
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ALCOHOL drinking
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In a national sample of 11 634 Canadians aged 15 years and above, risk curves for harm to six life-areas from one's own drinking and for assault by another drinker rose steadily with the respondent's volume of alcohol consumption. While drinking five or more drinks on an occasion at least once a month substantially raised the risk at a given volume of drinking, the risk rose with volume even among those not regularly drinking five or more drinks. These relationships remained in logistic regressions which controlled for gender, age and educational level. Younger respondents, those without higher education and men reported more harm for a given level of their own drinking although differences by gender disappeared above one-third of one drink per day. Three sets of guidelines for low-risk drinking-two from Canada, and one generally used in Britain-were compared in terms of the proportions of respondents reporting harm from their own drinking among those who had kept within the guideline in the previous 7 days' drinking. More restrictiveness in the guidelines was associated with substantial reductions in reported drinking-related harm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Halsey, Neal A., Coberly, Jacqueline S., Desormeaux, Julio, Atkinson, Joan, Moulton, Lawrence H., Contave, Mireil, Johnson, Michael, Davis, Homer, Geiter, Lawrence, Johnson, Erica, Huebner, Robin, Boulos, Reginald, and Chaisson, Richard E.
Lancet . 3/14/1998, Vol. 351 Issue 9105, p786. 7p. 1 Diagram, 5 Charts, 3 Graphs.
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TUBERCULOSIS prevention, MEDICAL care of HIV-positive persons, ISONIAZID, PTERIDINES, and DRUG efficacy
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Studies the effectiveness of isoniazid versus rifampicin with pyrazinamide for prevention of tuberculosis in HIV-1 positive individuals. Methods for comparing efficacy of the chemoprophylaxis regimens; Findings; Interpretation. INSET: Disease categories.
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7. Anger-Related Traits and Response to Interpersonal Conflict Among New York City Traffic Agents. [1998]
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Brondolo, Elizabeth, Masheb, Robin, Stores, Jacqueline, Stockhammer, Tanya, Tunick, Wendy, Melhado, Elizabeth, Karlin, William A., Schwartz, Joseph, Harburg, Ernest, and Contrada, Richard J.
Journal of Applied Social Psychology . 11/16/98, Vol. 28 Issue 22, p2089-2118. 30p.
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PERSONALITY, ANGER, CITY traffic, AFRICAN Americans, AUTOMOBILE drivers, ATTITUDE (Psychology), and PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout
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This study evaluates the psychosocial correlates of anger-related traits. Participants include New York City traffic enforcement agents (TEAs), who issue summonses for vehicular and parking violations and are frequently confronted by angry motorists. This sample of TEAs is 53% African American and 57% female. Participants completed surveys at 2 points, 4 months apart, which measured attitudinal, affective, and expressive components of hostility and anger, as well as dimensions of workplace psychosocial response. Results indicate that trait anger-in was positively associated with frequency of conflict, anger intensity, and burnout in cross-sectional analyses; and positively associated with frequency of conflict in prospective analyses. Trait anger was positively associated with an increase in burnout over a 4-month period. These findings provide support for the transactional model of hostility and health and have implications for worksite interventions promoting cardiovascular health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Browne, Gina, Roberts, Jacqueline, Gafni, Amiram, Byrne, Carolyn, Weir, Robin, Majumdar, Basanti, and Watt, Susan
Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice . Dec1999, Vol. 5 Issue 4, p367-385. 19p.
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COMMUNITY health services, NATIONAL health insurance, and MEDICAL care
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A series of 12 studies (five historic cohort and seven randomized trials) examined clients in community settings in Southern Ontario suffering from a variety of chronic physical and mental health conditions. These studies are appraised using a framework for evaluating possible outcomes of economic evaluation. In the 12 studies, sample composition and size varied. Each study was designed to quantify the well-being outcomes and expenditures associated with different community-based approaches to care provided in the context of a system of national health insurance. As a collective, these studies represent increasing methodological rigour. Multiple-perspective client well-being outcome measures were used. In two studies, caregiver burden also was analysed. A common approach to quantification and evaluation of expenditures for service consumption was used in all 12 studies. The nature of community-based health services (health vs. disease care orientation) was found to have direct and measurable impact on total expenditures for health service utilization and client well-being outcomes. In most cases, a recurring pattern of equal or better client outcomes, yet lower expenditures for use of community based health services, was associated with well-integrated health oriented services. Integrated services aimed at factors which determine health are superior when compared to individual, fragmented, disease oriented, and focused approaches to care. The main lessons from the 12 studies are that it is as or more effective and as or less expensive to offer complete, proactive, community health services to persons living with chronic circumstance than to provide focused, on-demand, piecemeal services. Complete services would have a psychosocial and mental health focus included with the physical care approach. Furthermore, people with coexisting risk factors (age, living arrangements, mental distress and problem-solving ability) are the ones who most benefit at lower expense... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Toomes, Carmel, James, Jacqueline, Wood, A. Joseph, Wu, Chu Lee, McCormick, Derek, Lench, Nicholas, Hewitt, Chelsee, Moynihan, Leanne, Roberts, Emma, Woods, C. Geoffrey, Markham, Alexander, Wong, Melanie, Widmer, Richard, Ghaffar, Khaled Abdul, Pemberton, Michael, Hussein, Ibtessam Ramzy, Temtamy, Samia A., Davies, Robin, and Read, Andrew P.
Nature Genetics . Dec99, Vol. 23 Issue 4, p421. 4p.
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PERIODONTAL disease and KERATOSIS
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Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome, or keratosis palmoplantaris with periodontopathia (PLS, MIM 245000), is an autosomal recessive disorder that is mainly ascertained by dentists because of the severe periodontitis that afflicts patients. Both the deciduous and permanent dentitions are affected, resulting in premature tooth loss. Palmoplantar keratosis, varying from mild psoriasiform scaly skin to overt hyperkeratosis, typically develops within the first three years of life. Keratosis also affects other sites such as elbows and knees. Most PLS patients display both periodontitis and hyperkeratosis. Some patients have only palmoplantar keratosis or periodontitis, and in rare individuals the periodontitis is mild and of late onset. The PLS locus has been mapped to chromosome 11q14-q21 (refs 7-9). Using homozygosity mapping in eight small consanguineous families, we have narrowed the candidate region to a 1.2-cM interval between DllS4082 and D11S931. The gene (CTSC) encoding the lysosomal protease cathepsin C (or dipeptidyl aminopeptidase I) lies within this interval. We defined the genomic structure of CTSC and found mutations in all eight families. In two of these families we used a functional assay to demonstrate an almost total loss of cathepsin C activity in PLS patients and reduced activity in obligate carriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Resnicow, Ken, Soler, Robin, Braithwaite, Ronald L., Ahluwalia, Jasjit S., and Butler, Jacqueline
Journal of Community Psychology . May2000, Vol. 28 Issue 3, p271-290. 20p.
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SUBSTANCE abuse prevention, ETHNICITY, MEDICAL communication, ETHNIC groups, PATHOLOGICAL psychology, and SOCIAL psychology
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The rationale for targeted and tailored substance use prevention programs derives from essentially three observations: 1) differences in substance use prevalence rates across racial/ethnic groups; 2) differences in the prevalence of the risk factors for substance use across racial/ethnic groups; and 3) differences in the predictors of substance use across groups. This article provides a model for understanding cultural sensitivity as it pertains to substance use prevention. Cultural sensitivity is defined by two dimensions, surface and deep structure. Surface structure involves matching intervention materials and messages to observable, “superficial” characteristics of a target population. This may involve using people, places, language, product brands, music, food, locations, and clothing familiar to, and preferred by, the target audience. Surface structure refers to how well interventions fit within a specific culture. Deep structure involves incorporating the cultural, social, historical, environmental, and psychologic forces that influence the target health behavior in the proposed target population. For example, peer influences may exert a greater influence on substance use initiation among White and Hispanic than among African American youth, while parental influences may be stronger among African Americans. Whereas surface structure generally increases the "receptivity" or "acceptance" of messages, deep structure conveys salience. Techniques for developing culturally sensitive interventions, borrowed from social marketing and health communication theory, are described. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Schmidt, Silke, Barcellos, Lisa F., DeSombre, Karen, Rimmler, Jacqueline B., Lincoln, Robin R., Bucher, Patricia, Saunders, Ann M., Lai, Eric, Martin, Eden R., Vance, Jeffery M., Oksenberg, Jorge R., Hauser, Stephen L., Pericak-Vance, Margaret A., and Haines, Jonathan L.
American Journal of Human Genetics . Mar2002, Vol. 70 Issue 3, p708. 10p.
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GENETICS of multiple sclerosis, APOLIPOPROTEIN E, GENETIC polymorphisms, and GENETICS of disease susceptibility
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Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the central nervous system, with a complex etiology that includes a strong genetic component. The contribution of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) has been established in numerous genetic linkage and association studies. In addition to the MHC, the chromosome 19q13 region surrounding the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene has shown consistent evidence of involvement in MS when family-based analyses were conducted. Furthermore, several clinical reports have suggested that the APOE-4 allele may be associated with more-severe disease and faster progression of disability. To thoroughly examine the role of APOE in MS, we genotyped its functional alleles, as well as seven single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located primarily within 13 kb of APOE, in a data set of 398 families. Using family-based association analysis, we found statistically significant evidence that an SNP haplotype near APOE is associated with MS susceptibility (P = .005 ). An analysis of disease progression in 614 patients with MS from 379 families indicated that APOE-4 carriers are more likely to be affected with severe disease (P = .03 ), whereas a higher proportion of APOE-2 carriers exhibit a mild disease course (P = .02 ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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12. Myogenic reactivity is reduced in small renal arteries isolate from relaxin-treated rats. [2002]
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Novak, Jacqueline, Ramirez, Rolando J.J., Gandley, Robin E., Sherwood, O. David, and Conrad, Kirk P.
American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology . Aug2002, Vol. 52 Issue 2, pR349. 7p. 5 Graphs.
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RELAXIN, RAT physiology, RENAL artery, MYOGENESIS, and MESENTERIC artery
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Presents information on a study which investigated whether myogenic reactivity of small renal and mesenteric arteries is reduced in relaxin-treated rats. Methodology; Impact of relaxin on myogenic reactivity; Link between denudation of endothelium and myogenic reactivity; Role of nitric oxide in the reduction of myogenic activity.
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Caro, Bertrand, Le Poul, Pascal, Robin-Le Guen, Françoise, Saillard, Jean-Yves, Kahlal, Samia, Moinet, Claude, Le Poul, Nicolas, and Vaissermann, Jacqueline
Tetrahedron . Sep2002, Vol. 58 Issue 37, p7519. 12p.
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CONDENSATION, PYRYLIUM compounds, and CARBANIONS
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The condensation reaction between γ-unsubstituted pyrylium salts and carbanions of Fischer-type carbene complexes allowed the synthesis of new γ-methylenepyran carbene complexes. NMR data, single crystal X-ray analysis, and DFT calculations suggest that these complexes have a partial pyrylium character due to the π electron-accepting ability of the carbenic fragment and to the electron-releasing properties of the methylenepyran part. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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Lokman, B. Christien, Joosten, Vivi, Hovenkamp, Jacqueline, Gouka, Robin J., Verrips, C. Theo, and van den Hondel, Cees A.M.J.J.
Journal of Biotechnology . Jun2003, Vol. 103 Issue 2, p183. 8p.
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XYLANASES and ASPERGILLUS
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The heterologous production of Arthromyces ramosus peroxidase (ARP) was analysed in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus awamori under control of the inducible endoxylanase promoter. Secretion of active ARP was achieved up to 800 mg l−1 in shake flask cultures. Western blot analysis showed that an rARP product of the correct molecular weight was produced. In contrast to several other studies about heterologous production of heme containing peroxidases, our results suggest that in A. awamori no heme limitation exists during overproduction of ARP. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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Peggy Lévy, Hélène Robin, France Bertrand, Michel Kornprobst, and Jacqueline Capeau
Journal of Cellular Physiology . Dec2003, Vol. 197 Issue 3, p336. 12p.
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CELL differentiation, APOPTOSIS, FATTY acids, and PROTEINS
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We previously reported that the enterocytic differentiation of human colonic Caco-2 cells correlated with alterations in integrin signaling. We now investigated whether differentiation and apoptosis of Caco-2 cells induced by the short-chain fatty acid butyrate (NaBT) was associated with alterations in the integrin-mediated signaling pathway with special interest in the expression and activity of focal adhesion kinase (FAK), of the downstream phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI 3-kinase)Akt pathway and in the role of the nuclear factor κB (NF-κB). NaBT increased the level of sucrase. It induced apoptosis as shown by: (1) decreased Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL proteins and increased Bax protein; (2) activation of caspase-3; and (3) increased shedding of apoptotic cells in the medium. This effect was associated with defective integrin-mediated signaling as shown by: (1) down-regulation of β1 integrin expression; 2) decreased FAK expression and tyrosine phosphorylation; (3) concerted alterations in cytoskeletal and structural focal adhesions proteins (talin, ezrin); and (4) decreased FAK ability to associate with PI 3-kinase. However, in Caco-2 cells, β1-mediated signaling failed to be activated downstream of FAK and PI 3-kinase at the level of Akt. Transfection studies show that NaBT treatment of Caco-2 cells promoted a significant activation of the NF-κB which was probably involved in the NaBT-induced apoptosis. Our results indicate that the prodifferentiating agent NaBT induced apoptosis of Caco-2 cells probably through NF-κB activation together with a defective β1 integrin-FAK-PI 3-kinase pathways signaling. J. Cell. Physiol. 197: 336347, 2003© 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Reid, Michael A., Flores-Otero, Jacqueline, and Davis, Robin L.
Journal of Neuroscience . 1/21/2004, Vol. 24 Issue 3, p733-742. 10p. 4 Color Photographs, 1 Black and White Photograph, 5 Graphs.
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NEURONS, ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, SENSORY receptors, HAIR cells, and COCHLEA
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Type I and type II spiral ganglion neurons convey auditory information from the sensory receptors in the cochlea to the CNS. The numerous type I neurons have been extensively characterized, but the small population of type II neurons with their unmyelinated axons are undetectable with most recording methods. Despite the paucity of information about the type II neurons, it is clear that they must have a significant role in sound processing because they innervate the large number of outer hair cells that are critical for maintaining normal responses to stimuli. To elucidate the function of type II neurons, we have developed an approach for studying their electrophysiological features in vitro. Type II neurons obtained from postnatal day 6-7 mice displayed distinctly different firing properties than type I neurons. They showed slower accommodation, lower action potential thresholds, and more prolonged responses to depolarizing current injection than the type I neurons. These differences were most evident in neurons from the basal, high-frequency region of the cochlea. The basal type I neurons displayed uniformly fast firing features, whereas the basal type II neurons showed particularly slow accommodation and responses to depolarization. Interestingly, neurons from the apical, low-frequency region of the cochlea showed the opposite trend. These data suggest that the type I and type II neurons have specialized electrophysiological characteristics tailored to their different roles in auditory signal processing. In particular, the type II neuron properties are consistent with cells in other sensory systems that receive convergent synaptic input for high-sensitivity stimulus detection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Frair, Jacqueline L., Nielsen, Scott E., Merrill, Evelyn H., Lele, Subhash R., Boyce, Mark S., Munro, Robin H. M., Stenhouse, Gordon B., and Beyer, Hawthorne L.
Journal of Applied Ecology . Apr2004, Vol. 41 Issue 2, p201-212. 12p.
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HABITAT selection, GLOBAL Positioning System, HABITATS, VEGETATION & climate, RADIO telemetry, and ANIMAL radio tracking
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Journal of Applied Ecology (2004) 41, 201–212 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Monkman, Shelley L, Andersen, Chad C, Nahmias, Claude, Ghaffer, Hasan, Bourgeois, Jacqueline M, Roberts, Robin S, Schmidt, Barbara, and Kirpalani, Haresh M
Critical Care Medicine . Dec2004, Vol. 32 Issue 12, p2471-2475. 5p.
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Objectives: To compare the effects of low vs. high tidal volume (Vt) with three positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) strategies on activated neutrophil influx into the lung.Design: Prospective, randomized controlled animal study.Setting: Animal laboratory in a university hospital.Subjects: Newborn piglets.Interventions: Surfactant-depleted piglets were randomized in littermate pairs; to PEEP of either 0 (zero end-expiratory pressure [ZEEP]; n = 6), 8 cm H2O (PEEP 8; n = 5), or 1 cm H2O above the lower inflection point (LIP) (PEEP>LIP; n = 6). Within each pair piglets were randomized to a low VT (5-7 mL/kg) or high VT strategy (17-19 mL/kg). After 4 hrs of mechanical ventilation, 18-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) was injected and positron emission tomography scanning was performed.Measurements and Main Results: VT and PEEP changes on influx constants of 18FDG were assessed by analysis of variance. A within-litter comparison of Vt was nonsignificant (p = .50). A between-litter comparison, ordered in linear trend rank, from ZEEP, to PEEP 8, to PEEP>LIP, showed a strong effect of PEEP on influx constant (p = .019).Conclusions: PEEP set above the LIP on the inspiratory limb of the pressure-volume curve affords a stronger lung protection than VT strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Williams, Peter, Narciso, Lea, Browne, Gina, Roberts, Jacqueline, Weir, Robin, and Gafni, Amiram
AIDS Education & Prevention . Apr2005, Vol. 17 Issue 2, p119-130. 12p. 6 Charts.
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MENTAL depression, QUALITY of life, PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation, HIV-positive persons, AIDS patients, and SOCIAL services
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Examines the prevalence of depression, and its association with quality–of–life, coping strategies, social support, and use of health and social services among people living with HIV and AIDS in Ontario. Indication of the prevalence of depression; Increase of the use of crisis health care and related services among subjects; Improvement of the quality of life through expanding the capacity of medical workers to recognize and address depression.
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Hassig, Robin Ackley, Balogh, Leeni, Bandy, Margaret, Doyle, Jacqueline Donaldson, Gluck, Jeannine Cyr, Lindner, Katherine Lois, Reich, Barbara, and Varner, Douglas
Journal of the Medical Library Association . Apr2005, Vol. 93 Issue 2, p282-283. 2p.
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BOOKS, LIBRARIES, INFORMATION science, HEALTH services administration, HEALTH of physicians, and MEDICAL care
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The article presents a special report on the book "Standards for Hospital Libraries 2002." The 2004 revisions of the book include an expansion of standard 6, which is a glossary definition of "library," and updates to the bibliography. The expanded standard 6 defines appropriate resources, technology, and services that must be provided. The updates to the bibliography include the latest edition of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals, the Medical Library Association policy statement on the role of expert searching in health sciences libraries, and updates of some Website addresses. The librarian uses a variety of tools and techniques, both formal and informal, to assess the knowledge-based information needs of the hospital and medical staff. The needs assessment should address the timeliness of information services and document delivery. In response, resources and services are made available to meet those identified needs.
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