8 results
Search Results
2. Reviews.
- Author
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Amirahmadi, Hooshang, Antoun, Richard T., Atkin, Muriel, Azimi, Fakhreddin, Behrooz, Maziar, Bill, James A., Cowen, Jill Sanchia, Danby, Miles, Faghfoory, Mohammad H., Gerami, Shahin, Ghanoonparvar, M. R., Haeri, Shahla, Kian, Azadeh, Marashi, Mehdi, Moghadam, Fatemeh E., Paper, Herbert H., Rahimieh, Nasrin, Esfahani, Hadi Salehi, Siavoshi, Sussan, and Vaziri, Haleh
- Abstract
Iranian Politics and Religious Modernism: The Liberation Movement of Iran Under the Shah and Khomeini , Houchang E. Chehabi, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1990, xiv + 342 pp. Debating Muslims: Cultural Dialogues in Postmodernity and Tradition , Michael M. J. Fischer and Mehdi Abedi, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1990, xxxvi + 564 pp., cloth $49.75, paper $23.50. Gnoseologiia sufizma , A. Mukhammedkhodzhaev, Dushanbe: Donish, 1990, 112 pp., 1.50 rubles. Liberal Nationalism in Iran: The Failure of a Movement , Sussan Siavoshi, Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1990, 196 pp., bibliography and index to p. 214, $24.50. The Iranian Revolution: Its Global Impact , ed. John L. Esposito, Miami: Florida International University Press, 1990, viii + 346 pp. Iran and the World: Continuity in a Revolutionary Decade , Shireen T. Hunter, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1990, pp. 254, $35.00 cloth, $14.95 paper. Miniature Painting in Ottoman Baghdad , Rachel Milstein, Islamic Art and Architecture No. 5., Costa Mesa, Calif.: Mazda publishers, 1990, 132 pp., 16 color plates, b & w illus., drawings, index, bibliography, no price listed. The Great Mosque of Isfahan , Oleg Grabar, London: I. B. Tauris and Company Ltd., 1990, 156 pp., £24.95. The State, Bureaucracy, and Revolution in Iran: Agrarian Reform and Politics , Ali Farazmand, New York: Praeger Publishers, 1989, 289 pp., $41.85. Acta Iranica: Encyclopédie permanente des études iraniennes 30, Iranica Varia: Papers In Honor of Professor Ehsan Yarshater , ed. D. Amin, M. Kashef, and A. S. Shahbazi, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1990, xxxii + 291 pp., with maps and photographs. Women of Deh Koh: Lives in an Iranian Village , Erika Friedl, Washington and London: Smithsonian Institute Press, 1989, 237 pp., no bibliography or index. Le Discours populaire de la révolution iranienne (2 volumes), Paul Vieille and Farhad Khosrokhavar, Paris: Contemporanéité, 1990, 275 pp. Iranian Drama, an Anthology , trans. from Persian, comp. and ed. M. R. Ghanoonparvar and John Green, Costa Mesa, Calif.: Mazda Publishers, 1989, xxix + 302 pp., $24.95. Labor Transfer and Economic Development: Theoretical Perspectives and Case Studies from Iran , Hassan Hakimian, Herefordshire, England: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1990, pp. xii + 206, $60.00. Iranian Jewry During the Afghan Invasion: The Kitab‐i Sar Guzasht of Babai b. Farhad — Text Edition and Commentary , Vera B. Moreen, Freiburger Islamstudien, Band XIV, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1990, x + 178 pp. Persian Literature , ed. Ehsan Yarshater, Columbia Lectures on Iranian Studies, no. 3, New York: The Persian Heritage Foundation; Bibliotheca Persica, 1988, xi + 562 pp. Oil, State and Industrialization in Iran , Massoud Karshenas, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990, pp. xviii + 308. On Islam and Shi'ism , Ahmad Kasravi, trans. M. R. Ghanoonparvar, intro. and ed. M. A. Jazayery, Costa Mesa, Calif.: Mazda Publishers, 1990, paper $14.95. Neither East Nor West: Iran, the Soviet Union, and the United States , ed. Nikki R. Keddie and Mark J. Gasiorowski, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1990, ix + 295 pp. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1991
- Full Text
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3. Taming COVID-19 by Regulation: An Opportunity for Self-Reflection
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Alberto Alemanno, Groupement de Recherche et d'Etudes en Gestion à HEC (GREGH), Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC Paris)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and HEC Paris Research Paper Series
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychological intervention ,Precautionary principle ,JEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K3 - Other Substantive Areas of Law ,03 medical and health sciences ,Emergency Regulation ,Political science ,Development economics ,Pandemic ,Natural (music) ,Worst-case scenarios ,Natural disaster ,0505 law ,media_common ,Government ,Risk Regulation ,030505 public health ,Cost–benefit analysis ,Corporate governance ,JEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K3 - Other Substantive Areas of Law/K.K3.K33 - International Law ,05 social sciences ,Cost-benefit analysis ,COVID-19 ,EU law ,Tradeoffs ,Risk regulation ,Surprise ,Editorial ,Risk vs risk ,Political economy ,Self-reflection ,Scale (social sciences) ,JEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K3 - Other Substantive Areas of Law/K.K3.K32 - Environmental, Health, and Safety Law ,Terrorism ,050501 criminology ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,0305 other medical science ,Safety Research ,Law ,Yet another - Abstract
The COVID-19 outbreak is not the first nor last series of recent real or potential catastrophes - be they natural disasters, terrorist attacks or pandemics - that have taken by surprise governments, globalised firms and the citizenry. 1Yet, due to its near-unprecedented impact on the highly interconnected but vulnerable systems that define the modern world, this pandemic has been testing our ability to govern risk more than any other crisis before. The last time the world responded to a global emerging disease epidemic of the scale of the current novel coronavirus without having access to vaccines was the 1918-1919 H1N1 influenza pandemic. 2Ironically, the measures mobilised today to counter COVID-19 - the so-called “non-pharmaceutical interventions” 3- are essentially the same as those deployed a century ago, and that despite significant social, technological as well as governance differences between 1918 and today. 4
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- 2020
4. Trends in self-reported past alcoholic beverage consumption and ethanol intake from 1950 to 1995 observed in eight European countries participating in the European Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)
- Author
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J. Linseisen, Françoise Clavel-Chapelon, Calogero Saieva, Heiner Boeing, Magritt Brustad, Aurelio Barricarte, Fabrizio Veglia, Matthias B. Schulze, P. H. M. Peeters, Nadia Slimani, C. Martínez Garcia, Göran Berglund, Ulrich Keil, Elio Riboli, Merethe Kumle, A. Papadimitrou, Kim Overvad, Pagona Lagiou, H. B. Bueno-De-Mesquita, Naomi E. Allen, Lars Weinehall, Kerstin Klipstein-Grobusch, Anne Tjønneland, Pietro Ferrari, Angela A. Mulligan, Vittorio Krogh, Anne C. M. Thiébaut, [Klipstein-Grobusch,K, Boeing,H, Schulze,MB] Department of Epidemiology, German Institute of Human Nutrition, Potsdam-Rehbrücke, Germany. [Slimani,N, Ferrari,P, Riboli,E] Unit of Nutrition and Cancer, International Agency for Cancer Research, Lyon, France. [Krogh,V] Epidemiology Unit, National Cancer Institute, Milan, Italy. [Keil,U] Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, University of Münster, German. [Overvad,K] Department of Epidemiology, University of Aarhus, Denmark. [Tjønneland,A] Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Danish Cancer Society, Copenhagen, Denmark. [Clavel-Chapelon,F, Thiébaut,A] INSERM, E3N–EPIC Group, Institute Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France. [Linseisen,J] Department of Clinical Epidemiology, German Cancer Research Centre, Heidelberg, Germany. [Lagiou,P, Papadimitrou,A] Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, School of Medicine, University of Athens, Greece. [Saieva,C] Molecular and Nutritional Epidemiology Unit, CSPO, Scientific Institute of Tuscany, Florence, Italy. [Veglia,F] Institute for Scientific Interchange Foundation, Turin, Italy. [Bueno-de-Mesquita,HB] Department for Chronic Disease Epidemiology, National Institute for Public Health and Environmental Protection, Bilthoven, The Netherlands. [Peeters,PHM] Julius Center for General Practice and Patient Oriented Research, University of Utrecht, The Netherland. [Kumle,M, Brustad,M] Institute of Community Medicine, University of Tromsø, Norway. [Martínez García,C] Andalusian School of Public Health, Granada, Spain. [Barricarte,A] Department of Epidemiology, Institute of Public Health of Navarra, Spain. [Berglund,G] Department of Medicine, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden. [Weinehal,G] Epidemiology, Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umea University, Sweden. [Mulligan,A] Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, UK. [Allen,N] Cancer Research UK, Cancer Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, UK., The work described in this paper was carried out with financial support of the ‘Europe Against Cancer’ Programme of the European Commission (SANCO), Ligue contre le Cancer (France), Société 3M (France), Mutuelle Générale de l’Education Nationale, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Institute Gustave Roussy, German Cancer Aid, German Cancer Research Centre, German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Danish Cancer Society, Health Research Fund (FIS) of the Spanish Ministry of Health, the Spanish Regional Governments of Andalucia, Asturias, Basque Country, Murcia and Navarra, Cancer Research UK, Medical Research Council, UK, Stroke Association, UK, British Heart Foundation, Department of Health, UK, Food Standards Agency, UK, Wellcome Trust, UK, Greek Ministry of Health, Greek Ministry of Education, Italian Association for Research on Cancer, Italian National Research Council, Dutch Ministry of Public Health,Welfare and Sports, Dutch Prevention Funds, LK Research Funds, Dutch ZON (Zorg Onderzoek Nederland), World Cancer Research Fund, Swedish Cancer Society, Swedish Scientific Council, Regional Government of Skane, Sweden, Norwegian Cancer Society, and Norwegian Research Council. Partial support for the publication of this supplement was provided by the Centre de Recherche et d’Information Nutritionnelles (CERIN).
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Male ,Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment::Investigative Techniques::Epidemiologic Methods::Epidemiologic Study Characteristics as Topic::Epidemiologic Studies::Case-Control Studies::Retrospective Studies [Medical Subject Headings] ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Wine ,Distribución por Edad ,Estudios Retrospectivos ,EPIC ,Consumo de Bebidas Alcohólicas ,Organisms::Eukaryota::Animals::Chordata::Vertebrates::Mammals::Primates::Haplorhini::Catarrhini::Hominidae::Humans [Medical Subject Headings] ,Recuerdo Mental ,Technology, Industry, Agriculture::Food and Beverages::Beverages::Alcoholic Beverages::Beer [Medical Subject Headings] ,Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment::Investigative Techniques::Epidemiologic Methods::Data Collection::Health Surveys::Population Surveillance [Medical Subject Headings] ,Medicine ,Masculino ,24-Hour dietary recall ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Adulto ,Femenino ,Vino ,Beer ,Geographicals::Geographic Locations::Europe [Medical Subject Headings] ,Time trends ,European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition ,Humanos ,Europe ,Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment::Investigative Techniques::Epidemiologic Methods::Epidemiologic Study Characteristics as Topic::Epidemiologic Studies::Cross-Sectional Studies [Medical Subject Headings] ,Disciplines and Occupations::Social Sciences::Demography::Sex Distribution [Medical Subject Headings] ,Population Surveillance ,Cerveza ,Female ,Distribución por Sexo ,Adult ,Alcohol Drinking ,Estudios Transversales ,Check Tags::Male [Medical Subject Headings] ,Psychiatry and Psychology::Psychological Phenomena and Processes::Mental Processes::Learning::Memory::Mental Recall [Medical Subject Headings] ,Spirits ,Age Distribution ,Environmental health ,Named Groups::Persons::Age Groups::Adult [Medical Subject Headings] ,Humans ,Europa (Continente) ,ddc:610 ,Disciplines and Occupations::Social Sciences::Demography::Age Distribution [Medical Subject Headings] ,Sex Distribution ,Retrospective Studies ,Consumption (economics) ,Ethanol ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Alcoholic beverage consumption ,Vigilancia de la Población ,Technology, Industry, Agriculture::Food and Beverages::Beverages::Alcoholic Beverages::Wine [Medical Subject Headings] ,EPIC study ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Check Tags::Female [Medical Subject Headings] ,Mental Recall ,Psychiatry and Psychology::Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms::Behavior::Drinking Behavior::Alcohol Drinking [Medical Subject Headings] ,Alcoholic beverages ,Ethanol intake ,business ,Cross-sectional analyses - Abstract
Objective:To describe the trends of self-reported past consumption of alcoholic beverages and ethanol intake from 1950 to 1995 within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC).Design:Data on consumption of beer/cider, wine and liqueur/spirits were obtained retrospectively at age 20, 30 and 40 years to calculate average consumption and ethanol intake for the time periods 1950–1975 (at age 20), 1960–1985 (at age 30) and 1970–1995 (at age 40). Regression analysis was conducted with the time period data to assess trends in past alcoholic beverage consumption and ethanol intake with time.Setting:The EPIC project.Subjects:In total, 392 064 EPIC participants (275 249 women and 116 815 men) from 21 study centres in eight European countries.Results:Generally, increases in beer/cider consumption were observed for most EPIC centres for 1950–1975, 1960–1985 and 1970–1995. Trends in wine consumption differed according to geographical location: downward trends with time were observed for men in southern European EPIC centres, upward trends for those in middle/northern European study centres. For women, similar but less pronounced trends were observed. Because wine consumption was the major contributor to ethanol intake for both men and women in most study centres, time trends for ethanol intake showed a similar geographical pattern to that of wine consumption.Conclusion:The different trends in alcoholic beverage consumption and ethanol intake suggest that information depicting lifetime history of ethanol intake should be included in analyses of the relationship between ethanol and chronic diseases, particularly in multi-centre studies such as EPIC.
- Published
- 2002
5. Association between COVID-19 testing uptake and mental disorders among adults in US post-secondary education, 2020-2021.
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Zhai Y and Du X
- Abstract
Summary: Fear and uncertainty have worsened mental health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 testing is essential yet underutilised, and many people may experience difficulties accessing testing if the US federal government fails to sustain the testing capacity. To date, limited evidence exists about the role of COVID-19 testing in mental health. We examined the associations of COVID-19 testing uptake with certain mental disorders, through a nationally representative cohort of adults in US post-secondary education ( N = 65 360). Adults with test-confirmed COVID-19 were at significantly lower risk than those with unconfirmed COVID-19 for severe depression, severe anxiety, eating disorders, and suicidal ideation. Findings suggest another potential benefit of public health efforts to encourage COVID-19 testing, namely promoting mental health.
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- 2022
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6. Real-World Data Analytics Fit for Regulatory Decision-Making.
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Schneeweiss S and Glynn RJ
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- Biomedical Research legislation & jurisprudence, Databases, Factual, Humans, United States, Biomedical Research methods, Data Analysis, Government Regulation, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Healthcare database analyses (claims, electronic health records) have been identified by various regulatory initiatives, including the 21
st Century Cures Act and Prescription Drug User Fee Act ("PDUFA"), as useful supplements to randomized clinical trials to generate evidence on the effectiveness, harm, and value of medical products in routine care. Specific applications include accelerated drug approval pathways and secondary indications for approved medical products. Such real-world data ("RWD") analyses reflect how medical products impact health outside a highly controlled research environment. A constant stream of data from the routine operation of modern healthcare systems that can be analyzed in rapid cycles enables incremental evidence development for regulatory decision-making. Key evidentiary needs by regulators include 1) monitoring of medication performance in routine care, including the effectiveness, safety and value; 2) identifying new patient strata in which a drug may have added value or unacceptable harms; and 3) monitoring targeted utilization. Four broad requirements have been proposed to enable successful regulatory decision-making based on healthcare database analyses (collectively, "MVET"): Meaningful evidence that provides relevant and context-informed evidence sufficient for interpretation, drawing conclusions, and making decisions; valid evidence that meets scientific and technical quality standards to allow causal interpretations; expedited evidence that provides incremental evidence that is synchronized with the decision-making process; and transparent evidence that is audible, reproducible, robust, and ultimately trusted by decision-makers. Evidence generation systems that satisfy MVET requirements to a high degree will contribute to effective regulatory decision-making. Rapid-cycle analytics of healthcare databases is maturing at a time when regulatory overhaul increasingly demands such evidence. Governance, regulations, and data quality are catching up as the utility of this resource is demonstrated in multiple contexts.- Published
- 2018
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7. Code Red: The Essential Yet Neglected Role of Emergency Care in Health Law Reform.
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Ossei-Owusu S
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- Economics, Hospital, Emigrants and Immigrants legislation & jurisprudence, Fees and Charges legislation & jurisprudence, Humans, Medically Uninsured legislation & jurisprudence, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Supreme Court Decisions, United States, Emergency Medical Services legislation & jurisprudence, Health Care Reform
- Abstract
The United States' health care system is mired in uncertainty. Public opinion on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ("ACA") is undeniably mixed and politicized. The individual mandate, tax subsidies, and Medicaid expansion dominate the discussion. This Article argues that the ACA and reform discourse have given short shrift to a more static problem: the law of emergency care. The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act of 1986 ("EMTALA") requires most hospitals to screen patients for emergency medical conditions and provide stabilizing treatment regardless of patients' insurance status or ability to pay. Remarkably, this law strengthened the health safety net in a country that has no universal health care. But it is an unfunded mandate that responded to the problem of emergency care in a flawed fashion and contributed to the supposed "free rider" problem that the ACA attempted to cure. But the ACA has also not been effective at addressing the issue of emergency care. The ACA's architects reduced funding for hospitals that serve a disproportionate percentage of the medically indigent but did not anticipate the Supreme Court's ruling in NFIB v. Sebelius, which made Medicaid expansion optional. Public and non-profit hospitals now face a scenario of less funding and potentially higher emergency room utilization due to continued uninsurance or underinsurance. Alternatives to the ACA have been insufficiently attentive to the importance of emergency care in our health system. This Article contends that any proposal that does not seriously consider EMTALA is incomplete and bound to produce some of the same problems that have dogged the American health care system for the past few decades. Moreover, the Article shows how notions of race, citizenship, and deservingness have filtered into this health care trajectory, and in the context of reform, have the potential to exacerbate existing health inequality. The paper concludes with normative suggestions on how to the mitigate EMTALA's problems in ways that might improve population health.
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- 2017
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8. Theorizing Race and Racism: Preliminary Reflections on the Medical Curriculum.
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Braun L
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- Curriculum standards, Health Status Disparities, Humans, Social Class, Social Justice, United States, Delivery of Health Care ethnology, Education, Medical standards, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Racism prevention & control
- Abstract
The current political economic crisis in the United States places in sharp relief the tensions and contradictions of racial capitalism as it manifests materially in health care and in knowledge-producing practices. Despite nearly two decades of investment in research on racial inequality in disease, inequality persists. While the reasons for persistence of inequality are manifold, little attention has been directed to the role of medical education. Importantly, medical education has failed to foster critical theorizing on race and racism to illuminate the often-invisible ways in which race and racism shape biomedical knowledge and clinical practice. Medical students across the nation are advocating for more critical anti-racist education that centers the perspectives and knowledge of marginalized communities. This Article examines the contemporary resurgence in explicit forms of white supremacy in light of growing student activism and research that privileges notions of innate differences between races. It calls for a theoretical framework that draws on Critical Race Theory and the Black Radical Tradition to interrogate epistemological practices and advocacy initiatives in medical education.
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- 2017
- Full Text
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