77 results on '"Cooper, Ryan"'
Search Results
2. America's Climate and Economy Are on the Ballot: The Biden-Harris administration sowed the seeds of a green American economy. A second Trump term would poison them.
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Cooper, Ryan
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CLIMATOLOGY , *ACHIEVEMENT tests , *CARBON emissions , *CHIPS & Science Act (U.S.) ,INFLATION Reduction Act of 2022 - Abstract
The article presents the discussion on Biden administration's strong climate policy record, noting its significant accomplishments despite narrow Senate margins. Topics include the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, and the CHIPS and Science Act; and alongside new regulations aimed at reducing carbon emissions.
- Published
- 2024
3. The Cooperative That Could: How S Group became Finland's most dominant retailer.
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Cooper, Ryan
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GROCERY industry , *LOCAL delivery services , *COOPERATION - Abstract
The article discusses the success of S Group, a cooperative network and one of the largest companies in Finland, owning a significant portion of the grocery market. The article explores how S Group's history, cooperative structure, and focus on member benefits have contributed to its remarkable achievement.
- Published
- 2023
4. Pain Machine.
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COOPER, RYAN
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SPECIAL elections , *HEALTH insurance exchanges , *DEMOCRATS (United States) , *REPUBLICANS , *PARLIAMENTARY practice , *NATIONAL health insurance , *HEALTH care reform - Abstract
Cohn shows how repeated failures by both Democrats and Republicans to get a decent policy through our rickety 18th-century constitutional structure led to the strategy that produced Obamacare, formally known as the Affordable Care Act - a policy that improved our system in many ways but also entrenched some of its worst elements. When it comes to Obamacare, Cohn details how congressional Democrats designed their effort around the lessons they had learned from all the previous failures and partial successes. As Cohn notes, the Obama administration picked this Republican model partly because it to coax some support from the GOP, which both Obama and anxious Democratic moderates badly wanted as cover. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
5. INTO THE MAW.
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COOPER, RYAN
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STAGNATION (Economics) , *CLEARINGHOUSES , *REAL estate bubbles , *MORTGAGE-backed securities , *REDEMPTION of securities , *INVESTMENT banking - Abstract
Books & the Arts When Barack Obama took office, he faced the biggest combination of crisis and opportunity that any incoming president had since Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The former is a brutal and devastating indictment of Obama's strategic missteps as he confronted the crisis, while the latter attempts an apologia for the Bush-Obama crisis management strategy that inadvertently confirms Hundt's key points. The Obama administration not only accepted Paulson's priority of saving Wall Street but also chose to sacrifice those ordinary Americans whose problems were caused by the banks but who now threatened their future stability. Obama could have driven the big banks into bankruptcy and forced the Fed to take action. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
6. Abandon the Acid-Fast Bacilli Smear for Patients With TB on Effective Treatment.
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Cooper, Ryan, Williams, Margaret, and Fennelly, Kevin P.
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TUBERCULOSIS , *THERAPEUTICS , *SPUTUM - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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7. THE BEST TAX SYSTEM ON EARTH.
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Cooper, Ryan
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TAXATION , *PAYMENT systems , *BANKING industry , *INCOME tax , *EMPLOYEE benefits , *PAYROLL services - Abstract
The article explores the tax system in the Faroe Islands, a part of the Kingdom of Denmark. It attributes the economic wealth of Faroe Islands to its fishing industry and aquaculture industry that led to the implementation of internal quotas and trade agreements and establishment of the Landsbanski Føroya national bank. It describes the islands's tax system which covers income monitoring, consolidation of government benefit payments, centralized payroll processing and bank-centered system.
- Published
- 2022
8. The Case Against Judicial Review.
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Cooper, Ryan
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CIVIL rights , *POLITICAL persecution , *POLITICAL change , *JUDICIAL review , *JUDICIAL power , *POLITICAL questions & judicial power - Abstract
The article discusses the American freedom and self-government dealt by the Supreme Court of U.S. Topics include the role of Democrats to bring the Supreme Court to heel, reasons of judicial despotism found in U.S., and inexorable march of tradition and timidity on the part of the government's other branches has given this pack of conservative apparatchiks.
- Published
- 2022
9. Why Were Inflation Hawks Wrong?
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COOPER, RYAN
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UNEMPLOYMENT , *INFLATION forecasting , *PHILLIPS curve , *SUPPLY chain disruptions , *ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
The article discusses the inflation predictions of Larry Summers and the flaws in his proposed solution of mass unemployment, highlighting the disconnect between theory and reality. Topics include the Phillips Curve model's failure to explain contemporary inflation, the role of supply chain disruptions in inflation, and the need for more direct tools to address economic challenges.
- Published
- 2024
10. The relationship between lifestyle habits and obesity among students in the Eastern province of Saudi Arabia: using the Arab Teens Lifestyle (ATLS) questionnaire.
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Woodman, Alexander, Coffey, Margaret, Cooper-Ryan, Anna-Mary, and Jaoua, Nizar
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DIETARY patterns , *FOOD habits , *ARABS , *SEDENTARY behavior , *SCREEN time - Abstract
Background: The Arab Teens Lifestyle (ATLS) questionnaire was an initiative to assess the lifestyle habits influencing obesity rates in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, including physical activity (PA) patterns, sedentary and eating behaviours. Since its implementation, the ATLS questionnaire has been used in several studies among different age groups and populations. This instrument has not previously been administered among the university students of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, where the obesity rates are the highest in the country. This research was the first that aimed to identify lifestyle habits influencing the rates of obesity among 18-25-year-old university students in the Eastern Province of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) using the ATLS questionnaire. Methods: Quantitative cross-sectional research among n = 426 students of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia using the ATLS questionnaire. Results: Out of n = 426 participants, n = 200 (47%) were categorised (using body mass index) as normal weight; n = 113 (26.5%) were overweight, and n = 73 (17.1%) were obese. The findings showed that most of the nutritional, PA, and sedentary behavioural factors (e.g., screen time) in the questionnaire were not associated with obesity status amongst the participants. In the obese group, more of the males that consumed fruits, French fries, cakes, sweets and doughnuts more than three times per week were likely to be obese, which was not the case for females. Conclusion: The reported lifestyles of the students could potentially lead to long-term negative health effects, which is of concern given the rising rates of overweight, obesity, and obesity-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) among the Kingdom's adult and ageing population. Further studies are recommended to explore the knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions of Saudi students in the Eastern Province in relation to PA, sedentary behaviours, and dietary habits, along with their views on how these can be improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Sex education against the algorithm: the algorithmically enforced deplatforming of YouTube sex edutainment.
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Garwood-Cross, Lisa, Light, Ben, Cooper-Ryan, Anna Mary, and Vasilica, Cristina
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SEX education , *YOUNG adults , *DIGITAL technology , *EDUCATIONAL entertainment , *ALGORITHMIC bias - Abstract
Deplatforming of sexual content has increased across social media, usually operationalized by commercially charged, and algorithmically enforced, platform policies. This paper extends work on the algorithmic deplatforming of sex through the case study of how sex education content, or ‘sex edutainment’ on YouTube, is impacted by the platform’s algorithmic structures. Enrolling actor-network theory, we demonstrate the delegation work YouTube enacts through algorithms by presenting empirical findings from a multi-method study examining the assemblage of YouTube, sex edutainment influencers, and young people. The findings highlight that despite YouTube’s curated platform imaginary as an amplifier of voices, algorithmic delegation of platform governance creates significant barriers for influencers creating sex edutainment on YouTube. Although not contravening YouTube’s policies, influencers regularly battle demonetization, age-restrictions and algorithmic bias. This undermines the benefits of sex edutainment by limiting access to content, creates precarious financial environments for influencers and risks erosion of audience trust. Meanwhile, algorithms designed to protect users enact this governance without adequately protecting influencers themselves, predominantly women and LGBTQ+ individuals, from harm. Despite YouTube’s veneer of democratization, the social discourses and protectionist narratives that have destabilized traditional sex education efforts permeate our digital environments and can be seen in the algorithmic enactment of YouTube’s policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The impact of public transport on the health of work commuters: a systematic review.
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Norgate, Sarah H., Cooper-Ryan, A. M., Lavin, S., Stonier, C., and Cooper, C. L.
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SALIVA analysis , *HEALTH status indicators , *HYDROCORTISONE , *MENTAL health , *SLEEP , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *TRANSPORTATION , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *WELL-being - Abstract
Although the public transport (PT) commute can form a substantial part of the working day, there is a significant gap in our understanding of how it influences health of those who engage in it. The purpose of this systematic review was to therefore generate evidence from 1972 about the extent to which the PT commute (involving train, bus, subway, tram, or metro) impacts on the mental health, physical health and well-being of the working people. We identified 47 studies in English worldwide involving an empirical quantitative focus which met the inclusion criteria. Of these, 23 studies involved over 500 participants. Although initial multi-modal comparisons showed impact on sickness rate, self-rated health complaints, perceived stress level and reduction in sleep, a more homogeneous analysis of rail commuters showed elevation in salivary cortisol, perceived stress, and affective reactions to crowding. Findings also revealed a bias towards use of endogenous self-report measures. On this basis, we argue that it would be of benefit to test theoretical models to account for more objective measures of job and commuting stress. Recommendations were made for flexible working agendas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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13. Mycobacterium chimaera Encephalitis Following Cardiac Surgery: A New Syndrome.
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Lau, Darren, Cooper, Ryan, Chen, Justin, Sim, Valerie L, McCombe, Jennifer A, Tyrrell, Gregory J, Bhargava, Ravi, Adam, Benjamin, Chapman, Erin, Croxen, Matthew A, Garady, Cherif, Antonation, Kym, Landeghem, Frank K H van, Ip, Shannon, and Saxinger, Lynora
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COGNITION disorders , *DEATH , *ENCEPHALITIS , *CARDIAC surgery , *MYCOBACTERIAL diseases - Abstract
We report the cases of 3 patients with fatal, disseminated Mycobacterium chimaera infections following cardiac surgeries. Progressive neurocognitive decline and death were explained by active granulomatous encephalitis, with widespread involvement of other organs. This syndrome is clinically elusive and, thus, may have caused deaths in prior reported series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. The Cure for Hate Speech Is Not More Speech.
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Cooper, Ryan
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UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *FREEDOM of speech , *ACADEMIC freedom - Abstract
A literary criticism of the book "It's Not Free Speech: Race, Democracy, and the Future of Academic Freedom," by Michael Bérubé and Jennifer Ruth is presented. It examines universities and colleges as a culture war battleground in the U.S., the authors' argument that free speech and academic freedom are identical, and the authors' solution to approaching academic freedom.
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- 2022
15. ANTI-SYNTHETASE SYNDROME: INTERSTITIAL LUNG DISEASE AS INITIAL MANIFESTATION AND DIAGNOSTIC CHALLENGE OF A CLINICALLY VARIABLE DISORDER.
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COOPER, RYAN T, ZEMAN, JOSEPH E, and HOLTZCLAW, ARTHUR
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INTERSTITIAL lung diseases , *SYNDROMES - Published
- 2023
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16. How Big Pharma Rigged the Patent System.
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Cooper, Ryan
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- 2023
17. WHY DID YOU VOTE?
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COOPER, RYAN
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UNITED States presidential election, 2016 , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2019
18. SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN.
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COOPER, RYAN
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NONFICTION - Published
- 2018
19. Supercharging Green Public Power: The president's signature climate bill is a huge deal for publicly owned electricity. But it will take work to unlock its potential.
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Cooper, Ryan
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ELECTRICITY , *INFLATION forecasting , *TAX credits , *ADMINISTRATIVE law , *BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
The article presents the discussion on climate bill having a huge deal for publicly owned electricity. Topics include Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) being remembered as a major accomplishment of the Biden administration and the Democratic Congress; and monetizing the tax credits instead of depending on contracting with a privately owned company realizing the value of the tax credits.
- Published
- 2023
20. THE LAST POPULIST.
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COOPER, RYAN
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NONFICTION - Published
- 2017
21. In Pennsylvania, Democrats' Suburban Strategy Is Being Put to the Test.
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Cooper, Ryan
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CAMPAIGN management , *REPUBLICANS - Abstract
The article examines the fate of the U.S. Democratic Party's suburban strategy in Pennsylvania. Topics discussed include the political races in the state, the issues facing the Democrats in the state compared to the Republicans, results of U.S. President Joe Biden's votes in the state during the presidential election, the critical role of the state in the elections in 2022, and the reasons behind the weak performance of Biden in the state in terms of votes.
- Published
- 2022
22. Effects of drought and pluvial periods on fish and zooplankton communities in prairie lakes: systematic and asystematic responses.
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Starks, Elizabeth, Cooper, Ryan, Leavitt, Peter R., and Wissel, Björn
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DROUGHTS & the environment , *FISH communities , *ZOOPLANKTON , *LAKES , *HYDROLOGY - Abstract
The anticipated impacts of climate change on aquatic biota are difficult to evaluate because of potentially contrasting effects of temperature and hydrology on lake ecosystems, particularly those closed-basin lakes within semiarid regions. To address this shortfall, we quantified decade-scale changes in chemical and biological properties of 20 endorheic lakes in central North America in response to a pronounced transition from a drought to a pluvial period during the early 21st century. Lakes exhibited marked temporal changes in chemical characteristics and formed two discrete clusters corresponding to periods of substantially different effective moisture (as Palmer Drought Severity Index, PDSI). Discriminant function analysis ( DFA) explained 90% of variability in fish assemblage composition and showed that fish communities were predicted best by environmental conditions during the arid interval ( PDSI <−2). DFA also predicted that lakes could support more fish species during pluvial periods, but their occurrences may be limited by periodic stress due to recurrent droughts and physical barriers to colonization. Zooplankton taxonomic assemblages in fishless lakes were resilient to short-term changes in meteorological conditions, and did not vary between drought and deluge periods. Conversely, zooplankton taxa in fish-populated lakes decreased substantially in biomass during the wet interval, likely due to increased zooplanktivory by fish. The powerful effects of such climatic variability on hydrology and the strong subsequent links to water chemistry and biota indicate that future changes in global climate could result in significant restructuring of aquatic communities. Together these findings suggest that semiarid lakes undergoing temporary climate shifts provide a useful model system for anticipating the effects of global climate change on lake food webs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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23. A microdevice for rapid optical detection of magnetically captured rare blood pathogens.
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Cooper, Ryan M., Leslie, Daniel C., Domansky, Karel, Jain, Abhishek, Yung, Chong, Cho, Michael, Workman, Sam, Super, Michael, and Ingber, Donald E.
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PATHOGENIC microorganisms , *BLOOD , *BIOCHIPS , *MICROMETRY , *MICROFLUIDICS , *MINIATURE electronic equipment , *MICROBIOLOGY , *CHEMICAL biology - Abstract
Sepsis diagnosis requires development of methods to identify rare pathogen cells in small samples of human blood. Magnetic beads functionalized with pathogen-binding ligands have been used to rapidly isolate microbes from blood; however, it is commonly difficult to optically detect the captured species because the excess numbers of beads required for pathogen binding physically interfere with light transmission after they have been concentrated. Here we describe a microdevice that uses microfluidics combined with optimized magnetic field concentrators and magnetic beads coated with a generic blood opsonin to efficiently capture unknown blood pathogens and spread them into a thin layer suitable for automated optical detection. Using this device, we have been able to detect fungal pathogens in less than three hours after sample collection compared to days with current technology, and with an extremely high sensitivity (<1 cell mL−1 of human blood). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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24. High-Strength Chemical-Vapor-Deposited Graphene and Grain Boundaries.
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Lee, Gwan-Hyoung, Cooper, Ryan C., An, Sung Joo, Lee, Sunwoo, van der Zande, Arend, Petrone, Nicholas, Hammerberg, Alexandra G., Lee, Changgu, Crawford, Bryan, Oliver, Warren, Kysar, Jeffrey W., and Hone, James
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- *
CHEMICAL vapor deposition , *GRAPHENE crystallography , *CRYSTAL grain boundaries , *TRANSMISSION electron microscopy , *NANOINDENTATION tests , *GRAIN size , *ELASTICITY , *THIN films testing , *STIFFNESS (Mechanics) - Abstract
Pristine graphene is the strongest material ever measured. However, large-area graphene films produced by means of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) are polycrystalline and thus contain grain boundaries that can potentially weaken the material. We combined structural characterization by means of transmission electron microscopy with nanoindentation in order to study the mechanical properties of CVD-graphene films with different grain sizes. We show that the elastic stiffness of CVD-graphene is identical to that of pristine graphene if postprocessing steps avoid damage or rippling. Its strength is only slightly reduced despite the existence of grain boundaries. Indentation tests directly on grain boundaries confirm that they are almost as strong as pristine. Graphene films consisting entirely of well-stitched grain boundaries can retain ultrahigh strength, which is critical for a large variety of applications, such as flexible electronics and strengthening components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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25. Nonlinear elastic behavior of two-dimensional molybdenum disulfide.
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Cooper, Ryan C., Changgu Lee, Marianetti, Chris A., Xiaoding Wei, Hone, James, and Kys'ar, Jeffrey W.
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DISULFIDES synthesis , *MOLYBDENUM compounds , *FINITE element method , *NONLINEAR functional analysis , *STRENGTH of materials , *ATOMIC force microscopy - Abstract
This research explores the nonlinear elastic properties of two-dimensional molybdenum disulfide. We derive a thermodynamically rigorous nonlinear elastic constitutive equation and then calculate the nonlinear elastic response of two-dimensional MoS2 with first-principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The nonlinear elastic properties are used to predict the behavior of suspended monolayer MoS2 subjected to a spherical indenter load at finite strains in a multiple-length-scale finite element analysis model. The model is validated experimentally by indenting suspended circular MoS2 membranes with an atomic force microscope. We find that the two-dimensional Young's modulus and intrinsic strength of monolayer MoS2 are 130 and 16.5 N/rn, respectively. The results approach Griffith's predicted intrinsic strength limit of σint ∼ E/9, where E is the Young's modulus. This study reveals the predictive power of first-principles density functional theory in the derivation of nonlinear elastic properties of two-dimensional MoS2. Furthermore, the study bridges three main gaps that hinder understanding of material properties: DFT to finite element analysis, experimental results to DVf, and the nanoscale to the microscale. In bridging these three gaps, the experimental results validate the DFF calculations and the multiscale constitutive model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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26. Interactive effects of chemical and biological controls on food-web composition in saline prairie lakes.
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Cooper, Ryan N. and Wissel, Björn
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- *
SALT lakes , *OSMOREGULATION , *PHYSIOLOGICAL control systems , *INVERTEBRATE communities , *SALINITY , *ZOOPLANKTON , *FOOD chains - Abstract
Salinity is restricting habitatability for many biota in prairie lakes due to limited physiological abilities to cope with increasing osmotic stress. Yet, it remains unclear how salinity effects vary among major taxonomic groups and what role other environmental parameters play in shaping food-web composition. To answer these questions, we sampled fish, zooplankton and littoral macroinvertebrates in 20 prairie lakes (Saskatchewan, Canada) characterized by large gradients in water chemistry and lake morphometry. We showed that salinity thresholds differed among major taxonomic groups, as most fishes were absent above salinities of 2 g L-1, while littoral macroinvertebrates were ubiquitous. Zooplankton occurred over the whole salinity range, but changed taxonomic composition as salinity increased. Subsequently, the complexity of fish community (diversity) was associated with large changes in invertebrate communities. The directional changes in invertebrate communities to smaller taxa indicated that complex fish assemblages resulted in higher predation pressure. Most likely, as the complexity of fish community decreased, controls of invertebrate assemblages shifted from predation to competition and ultimately to productivity in hypersaline lakes. Surprisingly, invertebrate predators did not thrive in the absence of fishes in these systems. Furthermore, the here identified salinity threshold for fishes was too low to be a result of osmotic stress. Hence, winterkill was likely an important factor eliminating fishes in low salinity lakes that had high productivity and shallow water depth. Ultimately, while salinity was crucial, intricate combinations of chemical and biological mechanisms also played a major role in controlling the assemblages of major taxonomic groups in prairie lakes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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27. Hierarchical regulation of pelagic invertebrates in lakes of the northern Great Plains: a novel model for interdecadal effects of future climate change on lakes.
- Author
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WISSEL, BJÖRN, COOPER, RYAN N., LEAVITT, PETER R., and PHAM, SAMANTHA V.
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ENDORHEIC lakes , *CLIMATE change , *INVERTEBRATES , *SALINITY , *DROUGHTS - Abstract
Endorheic lakes of the northern Great Plains encompass a wide range of environmental parameters (e.g., salinity, pH, DOC, Ca, nutrients, depth) that vary 1000-fold among sites and through the past 2000 years due to variation in basin hydrology and evaporative forcing. However, while many environmental parameters are known to individually influence zooplankton diversity and taxonomic composition, relatively little is known of the hierarchical relationships among potential controls or of how regulatory mechanisms may change in response to climate variation on diverse scales. To address these issues, we surveyed 70 lakes within a 100 000 km prairie region to simulate the magnitude of environmental change expected to occur over 100-1000 years and to quantify the unique and interactive effects of diverse environmental parameters in regulating pelagic invertebrate community structure at that scale. Multivariate analyses showed that salinity was the principal correlate of changes in invertebrate composition among lakes, with a sequential loss of taxa between salinities of 4 and 50 g total dissolved solids L until one to two species predominated in highly saline systems. In contrast, changes in the concentrations of Ca and other mineral nutrients exerted secondary controls of invertebrate assemblages independent of salinity, whereas lake depth provided a tertiary regulatory mechanism structuring species composition. In contrast to these large-scale hierarchical patterns, seasonal surveys (May, July, September) of a subset of 21 lakes in each of 2003-2005 revealed that annual meteorological variation had no measurable effect on pelagic invertebrates, despite large differences in temperature, precipitation, and evaporation arising from regional droughts. Together these findings show that pelagic invertebrate communities in saline lakes are resilient to interannual variability in climate, but suggest that lakes of the northern Great Plains may provide a sensitive model to forecast centennial effects of future climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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28. Renal Disease Associated with Antiretroviral Therapy in the Treatment of HIV.
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Cooper, Ryan D. and Tonelli, Marcello
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KIDNEY disease risk factors , *THERAPEUTIC complications , *HIGHLY active antiretroviral therapy , *HIV infections , *THERAPEUTICS , *DISEASE progression , *OPPORTUNISTIC infections , *NEPHROTOXICOLOGY - Abstract
The introduction of potent combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) in the treatment of HIV infection has permitted reliable control of disease progression and has markedly improved survival among people with HIV. As a result, health care providers and patients have shifted clinical priorities; whereas once delaying opportunistic illness was a primary focus, increasing emphasis is now placed on preventative health, management of comorbid chronic disease and avoiding long-term toxicities of ART. Although renal disease is common in people with HIV, renal disease specifically due to ART remains relatively rare. Still, as the use of ART continues to increase, health care providers are likely to encounter this potentially serious complication with increasing frequency. Distinguishing ART-related nephrotoxicity from the myriad of other potential causes of renal disease in people with HIV is important in order to avoid unnecessary discontinuation of an appropriate ART regimen. This review focuses on the early recognition of renal disease associated with ART and suggests strategies for management and prevention. Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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29. Systematic Review and Meta-analysis: Renal Safety of Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate in HIV-Infected Patients.
- Author
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Cooper, Ryan D., Wiebe, Natasha, Smith, Nathaniel, Keiser, Philip, Naicker, Saraladevi, and Tonelli, Marcello
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ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *HIV-positive persons , *ACUTE kidney failure , *NEPHROTOXICOLOGY , *PROTEINURIA , *FAMILIAL hypophosphatemia , *BONE fractures , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *META-analysis - Abstract
Background. The efficacy of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) as part of combination antiretroviral treatment (ART) has been demonstrated in several randomized, controlled trials. However, an increasing number of case reports suggest that TDF use may be associated with significant nephrotoxicity. Our objective was to determine the renal safety of TDF-containing ART regimens for HIV-infected individuals. Methods. MEDLINE, EMBASE, Global Health, Scopus, Biosis Previews, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and existing systematic reviews were searched. Prospective studies comparing TDF-containing with non-TDF containing ART regimens were selected for inclusion. We extracted data on study characteristics, participant characteristics, therapeutic interventions, renal function, bone density, and fracture rates. Results. A total of 17 studies (including 9 randomized, controlled trials) met the selection criteria. Median sample size was 517 participants. Constituent ART regimens were diverse. There was a significantly greater loss of kidney function among the TDF recipients, compared with control subjects (mean difference in calculated creatinine clearance, 3.92 mL/min; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.13-5.70 mL/min), as well as a greater risk of acute renal failure (risk difference, 0.7%; 95% CI, 0.2-1.2). There was no evidence that TDF use led to increased risk of severe proteinuria, hypophosphatemia, or fractures. Conclusions. Although TDF use was associated with a statistically significant loss of renal function, the clinical magnitude of this effect was modest. Our findings do not support the need to restrict TDF use in jurisdictions where regular monitoring of renal function and serum phosphate levels is impractical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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30. CRECIMIENTO PRO POBRE EN CHILE.
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Contreras, Dante, Cooper, Ryan, and Nei1son, Christopher
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POVERTY research , *POOR people , *INCOME , *ECONOMIC expansion ,ECONOMIC conditions in Chile, 1988- - Abstract
Using panel data for the years 1996 to 2001 and cross section data for the years 1990 and 2003, this article evaluates how and if Chilean growth has been "pro poor". Two methods are used. First, the 'Growth Incidence Curve" is estimated to study how income distribution has changed. Second, the relationship between the level of household per capita income in 1996 and its growth between 1996 and 2001 is estimated using parametric and non-parametric methods. The results indicate that economic growth has significantly reduced poverty during the period analyzed, but that evidence of income convergence is found only for the poorest half of the income distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
31. Step length and required friction in walking
- Author
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Cooper, Ryan C., Prebeau-Menezes, Leif M., Butcher, Michael T., and Bertram, John E.A.
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WALKING , *AEROBIC exercises , *GROUND reaction forces (Biomechanics) , *BIOPHYSICS - Abstract
Abstract: The effect of step length on minimum required coefficient of friction (μ R) during a walking step was isolated from other features that influence the mechanics of foot contact (such as speed). Ground reaction force (GRF) from defined step lengths at consistent forward speed was used to calculate μ R, required coefficent of friction. Some individuals walked in a manner that generated a μ R that was 50% larger than others, in spite of being restricted to the same speed, step length and step frequency. Unshod subjects had greater μ R compared to shod subjects except at the shortest step lengths. Understanding the dynamic interaction of applied vertical and horizontal forces is necessary to develop strategies to effectively evaluate unsafe circumstances, or modify behavior and develop safer equipment (at home and/or in the workplace) to deal with adverse footing environments. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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32. Multistage Magnetic Particle Separator II. Classification of Ferromagnetic Particles.
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Cooper, Ryan P., Doyle, John F., Dunn, D. Scott, Vellinger, John C., and Todd, Paul
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FERROMAGNETISM , *MAGNETIZATION , *ETHYLENE glycol , *COMPOSITE materials , *MAGNETIC suspension , *MEDICAL equipment - Abstract
A multistage magnetic particle separator was designed and built. The objective of multistage magnetic separation is the collection of particles in liquid suspension according to their net magnetization. The multistage separator was tested in experiments in which suspensions of an iron-carbon composite particulate in poly(ethylene glycol) were used as feed and in which particles were collected in up to nine fractions according to magnetophoretic mobility. In these experiments particles were aligned in a cylindrical container at a common distance below the top of the container by magnetic levitation using a horizontal bipolar“elevator” electromagnet. After the electromagnet was switched off particles were further levitated by a cylindrical permanent“capture” magnet into a capture chamber directly above and in fluid contact with the container in which the particulate was aligned. After a selected period of time(1–20 min) the capture chamber containing particles that were levitated into it was sheared away from the sample chamber. This process can be repeated up to 15 times using capture chambers in a rotating plate. By changing the time period and capture magnet strength each successive capture results in the collection of particles having decreasing net magnetization based on susceptibility of the particulate material and volume of magnetic material per particle. The test material used in this study was a ferromagnetic particulate consisting of an iron-carbon microcomposite. The separation of a heterogeneous particulate suspension into nine subcategories was demonstrated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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33. Free Money for Everyone.
- Author
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Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
FEDERAL Reserve monetary policy , *AGGREGATE demand , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *INDUSTRIAL productivity ,UNITED States economy, 2009-2017 ,UNITED States gross domestic product - Abstract
The article explores the need for a monetary policy that would jump-start the U.S. economy. Congress is urged to give the Federal Reserve a tool to adopt a policy with aggregate demand as the key economic idea. Other topics discussed include the movement of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) from 1947 to 2014 and the relationship between unemployment and productivity.
- Published
- 2014
34. How the West Was Reinvented.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMY (Linguistics) , *RECREATION , *TOURISM , *MINES & mineral resources - Abstract
The article discusses the recreation of the western economy that is considered to be largely revolves around the tourism than around mining of coal, oil and gas. Topics discussed include the opposition by citizens of Escalante who were eager for the extra jobs and wage growth to the former U.S. President Bill Clinton, views of outfitting businessman Grant Johnson and the factors responsible for the rapid growth of the economy.
- Published
- 2014
35. Characterization of Mycobacterium orygis, Mycobacterium bovis, and Mycobacterium caprae Infections in Humans in Western Canada.
- Author
-
Riopel, Nicholas D, Long, Richard, Heffernan, Courtney, Tyrrell, Gregory J, Shandro, Cary, Li, Vincent, Islam, Md Rashedul, Stobart, Michael, Sharma, Meenu K, Soualhine, Hafid, and Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
MYCOBACTERIUM bovis , *MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis , *MYCOBACTERIAL diseases , *ANIMAL diseases , *TUBERCULOSIS in cattle - Abstract
Epidemiologic research on zoonotic tuberculosis historically used Mycobacterium bovis as a surrogate measure; however, increased reports of human tuberculosis caused by other animal-associated Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex members like Mycobacterium orygis necessitates their inclusion. We performed a retrospective cohort study including persons infected with any animal-lineage M tuberculosis complex species in Alberta, Canada, from January 1995 to July 2021, identifying 42 patients (20 M bovis , 21 M orygis , 1 M caprae). Demographic, epidemiologic, and clinical characteristics were compared against persons with culture-confirmed M tuberculosis infection. The proportion of culture-positive infections caused by M orygis increased continuously from 2016 to 2020. Significantly more females at a higher median age were impacted by M orygis , with all patients originating from South Asia. Mycobacterium bovis caused significantly more extrapulmonary disease and disproportionately impacted young females, particularly those pregnant or postpartum. All infections were acquired abroad. These findings can aid in developing targeted public health interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Real Problem With Asset Managers.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
NONFICTION - Published
- 2023
37. Reformish Conservatives.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
REFORMS , *CROSS-cultural differences - Abstract
The article presents the profiles of reformists who are suggesting change in policies for the Republican Party. A background is provided emphasizing the difference in the reform periods of the two parties and the cultural gap between the reformist-writer-intellectuals and their base of voters. Information on these reformists include a brief biography, issues they focus on, and some notable facts about them. These reformists are identified to include Josh Barro, Bruce Bartlett, and David Brooks.
- Published
- 2013
38. OBAMA'S TOP 50 ACCOMPLISHMENTS.
- Author
-
Glastris, Paul, Cooper, Ryan, and Hu, Siyu
- Subjects
- *
ACHIEVEMENT , *WAR , *AUTOMOTIVE fuel consumption standards ,DODD-Frank Wall Street Reform & Consumer Protection Act - Abstract
The article lists the top 50 accomplishments of U.S. President Barack Obama which includes the passing of the Wall Street reform, the ending of the war in Iraq, and the raising of fuel efficiency standards.
- Published
- 2012
39. Good News First, Bad News Never.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
SCANDALS , *VOLUNTEERS ,FEDERAL government of the United States - Abstract
The article discusses hidden scandals involving the Peace Corps, an American volunteer program run by the U.S. federal government. It suggests that the Peace Corps has made some oversights in terms of employee placements in various posts. It also focuses on the Peace Corps's difficulties in admitting their mistakes, the funding cuts that they face, and their dwindling number of volunteers.
- Published
- 2012
40. Comment on "Ideal strength and phonon instability in single-layer MoS2".
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan C., Kysar, Jeffrey W., and Marianetti, Chris A.
- Subjects
- *
PHONONS , *DENSITY functional theory - Abstract
Li's paper [Phys. Rev. B 85, 235407 (2012)] presents density functional theory (DFT) results of stress as a function of different strain states. The work of Cooper et al. [Phys. Rev. B 87, 035423 (2013)] performs the same DFT calculations as part of an investigation into the nonlinear elastic properties of MoS2. Some of the DFT results of Li are substantially different from our recently published paper, Cooper et al. [Phys. Rev. B 87, 035423 (2013)]. Although both papers agree on states of equibiaxial stress, there is substantial disagreement on states of uniaxial tensile stress. In this Comment we show that our DFT computations are properly executed and consistent across three different DFT codes, including the one used by Li. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. I WAS WRONG ABOUT THE REFORMISH CONSERVATIVES.
- Author
-
COOPER, RYAN
- Subjects
- *
UNITED States elections , *REPUBLICANS - Abstract
A personal narrative is presented in which the author discusses how he wrongly interpreted conservative radicalization and failed to anticipate Republicans winning a blowout victory in the 2014 midterms election.
- Published
- 2019
42. Composting Pilot Expands In North Carolina School District.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
FOOD waste recycling , *WASTE recycling - Abstract
The article discusses food waste recycling programs for composting started by Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) waste stream in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina in partnership with the organization Mecklenburg County Solid Waste (MCSW). Topics discussed include views of Derrick Harris, an Environmental Supervisor at MCSW, on food waste produced by CMS schools, processing of soiled paper and napkins collected at schools and views of Rusty Fuller, CMS' Director of Custodial Services, on this. INSET: Scaling Up Composting In Charlotte.
- Published
- 2015
43. Responsible use of rifampin in Canada is threatened by irresponsible shortages.
- Author
-
Houston, Adam R., Cooper, Ryan, and Khan, Faiz Ahmad
- Subjects
- *
SCARCITY , *TUBERCULOSIS , *ETHAMBUTOL - Abstract
Rifampin is the cornerstone of care for active TB disease, forming part of all first-line treatment regimens,[3] as well as a valuable treatment for latent TB infection. Canada has already recognized the vital importance of sustainable access to crucial TB drugs in lower-income countries, becoming the largest single-country donor for first-line drugs like rifampin to the Global Drug Facility, a global bulk procurer of TB medicines.[8] Given the looming threat to both public health and patient care, we call on the Canadian government to devote similar effort and resources to ensuring continuous access at home, both through stronger regulatory measures to prevent domestic drug shortages and the authorization of alternative sources for TB drugs such as the Global Drug Facility. 8 Project profile - global drug facility: provision of anti-tuberculosis drugs.. Ottawa: Government of Canada. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rifampin-resistant/multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis in Alberta, Canada: Epidemiology and treatment outcomes in a low-incidence setting.
- Author
-
Edwards, Brett D., Edwards, Jenny, Cooper, Ryan, Kunimoto, Dennis, Somayaji, Ranjani, and Fisher, Dina
- Subjects
- *
MULTIDRUG-resistant tuberculosis , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *TUBERCULOSIS , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *PATIENT compliance , *SUBSTANCE abuse relapse - Abstract
Treatment of rifampin-monoresistant/multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB) requires long treatment courses, complicated by frequent adverse events and low success rates. Incidence of RR/MDR-TB in Canada is low and treatment practices are variable due to the infrequent experience and challenges with drug access. We undertook a retrospective cohort study of all RR/MDR-TB cases in Alberta, Canada from 2007–2017 to explore the epidemiology and outcomes in our low incidence setting. We performed a descriptive analysis of the epidemiology, treatment regimens and associated outcomes, calculating differences in continuous and discrete variables using Student's t and Chi-squared tests, respectively. We identified 24 patients with RR/MDR-TB. All patients were foreign-born with the median time to presentation after immigration being 3 years. Prior treatment was reported in 46%. Treatment was individualized. All patients achieved sputum culture conversion within two months of treatment initiation. The median treatment duration after culture conversion was 18 months (IQR: 15–19). The mean number of drugs utilized during the intensive phase was 4.3 (SD: 0.8) and during the continuation phase was 3.3 (SD: 0.9) and the mean adherence to medications was 95%. Six patients completed national guideline-concordant therapy, with many patients developing adverse events (79%). Treatment success (defined as completion of prescribed therapy or cure) was achieved in 23/24 patients and no acquired drug resistance or relapse was detected over 1.8 years of median follow-up. Many cases were captured upon immigration assessment, representing important prevention of community spread. Despite high rates of adverse events and short treatment compared to international guidelines, success in our cohort was very high at 96%. This is likely due to individualization of therapy, frequent use of medications with high effectiveness, intensive treatment support, and early sputum conversion seen in our cohort. There should be ongoing exploration of treatment shortening with well-tolerated, efficacious oral agents to help patients achieve treatment completion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Resource‐use, body condition and parasite load metrics indicate contrasting health of stocked and native game fishes in Canadian prairie lakes.
- Author
-
Nanayakkara, Lushani, Starks, Elizabeth R., Cooper, Ryan N., Chow, Sydney, Leavitt, Peter R., and Wissel, Björn
- Subjects
- *
NATIVE fishes , *FORAGE fishes , *PIKE , *WALLEYE (Fish) , *YELLOW perch - Abstract
This study evaluated the status of native and stocked fish species in 13 prairie lakes in central Canada over eight years (2007–14) using three metrics: resource‐use (benthic versus pelagic carbon via stable isotopes); body condition (relative weight index Wr); and parasite load (cestode gut enumerations). Analyses included game and non‐game fishes, like naturally occurring northern pike, Esox lucius L., and yellow perch, Perca flavescens Mitchill, but focused on stocked walleye, Sander vitreus (Mitchill) because it supports a robust recreational fishery. Walleye and northern pike were significantly more reliant on benthic carbon than yellow perch or forage fishes (p < 0.05), but this reliance was not associated with any measured environmental variables for any species. In lakes with game fishes, forage fishes exhibited higher reliance on benthic energy, possibly due to predator avoidance strategy, particularly yellow perch. Walleye body condition index was consistently lower (<95–105) than values exhibited by the other two game fishes (81–139), and parasites were only common in walleye and associated with lake‐water salinity (r2 = 0.93, p < 0.05) and sex (p < 0.05). Based on the results, the most desirable game fish, walleye, appears less resilient to environmental variability than northern pike and yellow perch, making this species more susceptible to impacts of future climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Incidence, treatment, and outcomes of isoniazid mono-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections in Alberta, Canada from 2007-2017.
- Author
-
Edwards, Brett D., Edwards, Jenny, Cooper, Ryan, Kunimoto, Dennis, Somayaji, Ranjani, and Fisher, Dina
- Subjects
- *
MYCOBACTERIAL diseases , *MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis , *MULTIDRUG-resistant tuberculosis , *FISHER exact test , *MULTIDRUG resistance , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Isoniazid resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Hr-TB) is the most frequently encountered TB resistance phenotype in North America but limited data exist on the effectiveness of current therapeutic regimens. Ineffective treatment of Hr-TB increases patient relapse and anti-mycobacterial resistance, specifically MDR-TB. We undertook a multi-centre, retrospective review of culture-positive Hr-TB patients in Alberta, Canada (2007–2017). We assessed incidence and treatment outcomes, with a focus on fluoroquinolone (FQ)-containing regimens, to understand the risk of unsuccessful outcomes. Rates of Hr-TB were determined using the mid-year provincial population and odds of unsuccessful treatment was calculated using a Fisher's Exact test. One hundred eight patients of median age 37 years (IQR: 26–50) were identified with Hr-TB (6.3%), 98 of whom were able to be analyzed. Seven percent reported prior treatment. Rate of foreign birth was high (95%), but continent of origin did not predict Hr-TB (p = 0.47). Mean compliance was 95% with no difference between FQ and non-FQ regimens (p = 1.00). Treatment success was high (91.8%). FQ-containing regimens were frequently initiated (70%), with no difference in unsuccessful outcomes compared to non-FQ-containing regimens (5.8% vs. 13.8%, OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.1–2.3, p = 0.23). Only one patient (1%) utilizing a less common non-FQ-based regimen including two months of pyrazinamide developed secondary multidrug resistance. Unsuccessful treatment was low (<10%) relative to comparable literature (~15%) and showed similar outcomes for FQ and non-FQ-based regimens and no deficit to those using intermittent fluoroquinolones in the continuation phase of treatment. Our findings are similar to recent data, however prospective, randomized trials of adequate power are needed to determine the optimal treatment for Hr-TB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Steady Growth At Virginia Composting Facility.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
COMPOST industry , *FOOD industrial waste , *ORGANIC waste recycling , *COMPOSTING - Abstract
The article reports that entrepreneur Eric Walter builds a composting company called Black Bear Composting company. It states that Black Bear began a commercial and residential food scraps collection service, accepts food-soiled paper and compostable plastic products. It mentions that Black Bear teams up with the largest source separated organics composting facility in Virginia and Black Bear has been collaborating with pilot-scale residential food waste program in Charlottesville, Virginia.
- Published
- 2015
48. Charities' use of Twitter: exploring social support for women living with and beyond breast cancer.
- Author
-
Ure, Cathy, Galpin, Adam, Cooper-Ryan, Anna Mary, and Condie, Jenna
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL support , *BREAST cancer , *SOCIAL networks , *CHARITIES - Abstract
Twitter is one social media platform that enables those experiencing breast cancer to access support from others. This study explores how cancer charities provide support to women living with and beyond breast cancer (LWBBC) through their Twitter feeds. Seven hundred and seventy-two tweets from seven purposively sampled cancer charities were used to explore Twitter posts made relating to social support. Two questions were posed: (1) what type of support is positioned by cancer charities on Twitter for women LWBBC and (2) what themes emerge from tweet content pertaining to support for women LWBBC? Using a peer-reviewed typology of 'social support' [Rui, J., Chen, Y., & Damiano, A. (2013). Health organizations providing and seeking social support: A twitter-based content analysis. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, And Social Networking, 16(9), 669–673. doi:], a deductive content analysis was utilised to identify informational, instrumental or emotional social support tweets (n = 199). Over half (56%) of tweets offered informational support; 27% provided or sought instrumental support and 18% related to emotional support. Interestingly, 74.3% (n = 573) of tweets were not related to providing or seeking social support. An inductive qualitative thematic analysis of the 199 tweets identified the focus (i.e., themes) of support. Three themes were identified: (1) raising awareness, (2) focusing on the future and (3) sharing stories. Cancer charities predominantly use Twitter to signpost women to informational resources and to seek instrumental support to meet charitable objectives. As the number of women LWBBC continues to increase, this study provides valuable insight into how charities represent themselves on Twitter in relation to the social support needs of women LWBBC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Capitalism’s Nine Lives.
- Author
-
Cooper, Ryan
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2020
50. Is Our Economists Learning?
- Author
-
COOPER, RYAN
- Subjects
- *
BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) , *FREE enterprise , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2019
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