558 results on '"Mary Evans"'
Search Results
52. The Imagination of Evil: Detective Fiction and the Modern World
- Author
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Mary Evans and Mary Evans
- Published
- 2009
53. Association Between Change in Accelerometer-Measured and Self-Reported Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Disease in the Look AHEAD Trial
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John M, Jakicic, Robert I, Berkowitz, Paula, Bolin, George A, Bray, Jeanne M, Clark, Mace, Coday, Caitlin, Egan, Mary, Evans, John P, Foreyt, Janet E, Fulton, Frank L, Greenway, Edward W, Gregg, Helen P, Hazuda, James O, Hill, Edward S, Horton, Van S, Hubbard, Robert W, Jeffery, Karen C, Johnson, Ruby, Johnson, Steven E, Kahn, Anne, Kure, Wei, Lang, Cora E, Lewis, David M, Nathan, Jennifer, Patricio, Anne, Peters, Xavier, Pi-Sunyer, Henry, Pownall, W Jack, Rejeski, Monika, Safford, Kerry J, Stewart, Thomas A, Wadden, Michael P, Walkup, Rena R, Wing, and Holly, Wyatt
- Subjects
Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Adult ,Cardiovascular and Metabolic Risk ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Accelerometry ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Self Report ,Exercise - Abstract
OBJECTIVETo conduct post hoc secondary analysis examining the association between change in physical activity. Measured with self-report and accelerometry, from baseline to 1 and 4 years and cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in the Look AHEAD Trial.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSParticipants were adults with overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes with physical activity. Data at baseline and year 1 or 4 (n = 1,978). Participants were randomized to diabetes support and education or intensive lifestyle intervention. Measures included accelerometry-measured moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), self-reported physical activity, and composite (morbidity and mortality) CVD outcomes.RESULTSIn pooled analyses of all participants, using Cox proportional hazards models, each 100 MET-min/week increase in accelerometry-measured MVPA from baseline to 4 years was associated with decreased risk of the subsequent primary composite outcome of CVD. Results were consistent for changes in total MVPA (hazard ratio 0.97 [95% CI 0.95, 0.99]) and MVPA accumulated in ≥10-min bouts (hazard ratio 0.95 [95% CI 0.91, 0.98]), with a similar pattern for secondary CVD outcomes. Change in accelerometry-measured MVPA at 1 year and self-reported change in physical activity at 1 and 4 years were not associated with CVD outcomes.CONCLUSIONSIncreased accelerometry-measured MVPA from baseline to year 4 is associated with decreased risk of CVD outcomes. This suggests the need for long-term engagement in MVPA to reduce the risk of CVD in adults with overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes.
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- 2021
54. The Duality of Stigmatization: An Examination of Differences in Collateral Consequences for Black and White Sex Offenders
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Vanessa Woodward Griffin and Mary Evans
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White (horse) ,Collateral ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Duality (optimization) ,Criminology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Race (biology) ,Nothing ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Isolating particular groups of individuals is nothing novel within American society, and two prevalent examples of this are the historical and current treatment of Blacks and sex offenders. To date...
- Published
- 2019
55. Severe Pulmonary Disease Associated with Electronic-Cigarette–Product Use — Interim Guidance
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Dana Meaney-Delman, Mary Evans, Emily Kiernan, Kelly Holton, Sharon Tsay, Erin M. Parker, Cassandra M. Pickens, Sherif R. Zaki, Phillip P. Salvatore, Sarah Reagan-Steiner, Peter A. Briss, Christina A. Mikosz, Joshua G. Schier, Krista M. Powell, Kristy L. Marynak, Grant T. Baldwin, Brian S. Armour, Jennifer Adjemian, Debra Houry, Vikram Krishnasamy, Jennifer E. Layden, Brenna VanFrank, Karen A. Hacker, Jonathan Meiman, Elizabeth A. Courtney-Long, Jerry D. Thomas, Lucinda J. England, Brian A. King, Paul Melstrom, and David N. Weissman
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Lung Diseases ,Health (social science) ,Injury control ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Poison control ,Pulmonary disease ,Flavoring Agents ,Severity of Illness Index ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,law ,030225 pediatrics ,Interim ,Humans ,Medicine ,Full Report ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early release ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Vaping ,Heavy metals ,General Medicine ,United States ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Erratum ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,business ,Electronic cigarette - Abstract
On September 6, 2019, this report was posted as an MMWR Early Release on the MMWR website (https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr). As of August 27, 2019, 215 possible cases of severe pulmonary disease associated with the use of electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) products (e.g., devices, liquids, refill pods, and cartridges) had been reported to CDC by 25 state health departments. E-cigarettes are devices that produce an aerosol by heating a liquid containing various chemicals, including nicotine, flavorings, and other additives (e.g., propellants, solvents, and oils). Users inhale the aerosol, including any additives, into their lungs. Aerosols produced by e-cigarettes can contain harmful or potentially harmful substances, including heavy metals such as lead, volatile organic compounds, ultrafine particles, cancer-causing chemicals, or other agents such as chemicals used for cleaning the device (1). E-cigarettes also can be used to deliver tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the principal psychoactive component of cannabis, or other drugs; for example, "dabbing" involves superheating substances that contain high concentrations of THC and other plant compounds (e.g., cannabidiol) with the intent of inhaling the aerosol. E-cigarette users could potentially add other substances to the devices. This report summarizes available information and provides interim case definitions and guidance for reporting possible cases of severe pulmonary disease. The guidance in this report reflects data available as of September 6, 2019; guidance will be updated as additional information becomes available.
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- 2019
56. Vital Signs: Pharmacy-Based Naloxone Dispensing — United States, 2012–2018
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Tamara M. Haegerich, Jan L. Losby, Randall Young, Mary Evans, Gery P. Guy, and P Christopher M. Jones
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Drug overdose ,01 natural sciences ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,Naloxone ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Medical prescription ,Child ,Epidemics ,Aged ,Pharmacies ,Vital Signs ,business.industry ,010102 general mathematics ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Opioid use disorder ,Opioid overdose ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Substance abuse ,Prescriptions ,Opioid ,Child, Preschool ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Drug Overdose ,business ,Medicaid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background The CDC Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain recommends considering prescribing naloxone when factors that increase risk for overdose are present (e.g., history of overdose or substance use disorder, opioid dosages ≥50 morphine milligram equivalents per day [high-dose], and concurrent use of benzodiazepines). In light of the high numbers of drug overdose deaths involving opioids, 36% of which in 2017 involved prescription opioids, improving access to naloxone is a public health priority. CDC examined trends and characteristics of naloxone dispensing from retail pharmacies at the national and county levels in the United States. Methods CDC analyzed 2012-2018 retail pharmacy data from IQVIA, a health care, data science, and technology company, to assess U.S. naloxone dispensing by U.S. Census region, urban/rural status, prescriber specialty, and recipient characteristics, including age group, sex, out-of-pocket costs, and method of payment. Factors associated with naloxone dispensing at the county level also were examined. Results The number of naloxone prescriptions dispensed from retail pharmacies increased substantially from 2012 to 2018, including a 106% increase from 2017 to 2018 alone. Nationally, in 2018, one naloxone prescription was dispensed for every 69 high-dose opioid prescriptions. Substantial regional variation in naloxone dispensing was found, including a twenty-fivefold variation across counties, with lowest rates in the most rural counties. A wide variation was also noted by prescriber specialty. Compared with naloxone prescriptions paid for with Medicaid and commercial insurance, a larger percentage of prescriptions paid for with Medicare required out-of-pocket costs. Conclusion Despite substantial increases in naloxone dispensing, the rate of naloxone prescriptions dispensed per high-dose opioid prescription remains low, and overall naloxone dispensing varies substantially across the country. Naloxone distribution is an important component of the public health response to the opioid overdose epidemic. Health care providers can prescribe or dispense naloxone when overdose risk factors are present and counsel patients on how to use it. Efforts to improve naloxone access and distribution work most effectively with efforts to improve opioid prescribing, implement other harm-reduction strategies, promote linkage to medications for opioid use disorder treatment, and enhance public health and public safety partnerships.
- Published
- 2019
57. Learning from a failure in threat assessment: 11 questions and not enough answers
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Mary Evans, Andrew J. Thompson, William Woodward, and Sarah Goodrum
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Hierarchy ,Service (systems architecture) ,Schools ,business.industry ,Mindset ,Violence ,Public relations ,Multidisciplinary team ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Humans ,Students ,Psychology ,business ,Law ,Threat assessment ,Qualitative Research ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Threat assessment theory and practice have evolved significantly since Columbine. The US Secret Service's guidelines for threat assessment include 11 questions that school officials should ask to identify, investigate, and manage students of concern. Yet, no research examines how school officials implement these questions. This qualitative case study examines the way that school officials used the 11 questions with a student of concern, who underwent a threat assessment and 3 months later shot and killed a classmate and himself on school grounds. The data include deposition testimony from 12 school and district officials and more than 8,000 pages of records in the case. For each of the 11 questions, the findings reveal what the threat assessment team knew and might have learned; the findings also demonstrate the importance of multiple sources of information, a multidisciplinary team, and an investigative mindset. The questions may prove difficult to answer in "loosely coupled" systems, like schools, where information is unintentionally lost due to the organization's structural hierarchy, specialization of tasks, and heavy workloads. The findings provide critical lessons learned for threat assessment, information gathering, and violence prevention in schools.
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- 2019
58. NIH Nutrition Health Disparities Framework: A Model to Advance Health Equity
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Tanya Agurs-Collins, Jennifer Alvidrez, Mary Evans, Charlotte Pratt, Jill Reedy, and Alison Brown
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
59. Killing Thinking
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Mary Evans and Mary Evans
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- 2005
60. Demographic, clinical, and epidemiologic characteristics of persons under investigation for Coronavirus Disease 2019—United States, January 17–February 29, 2020
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Laura Conklin, Samuel B. Graitcer, Alexandra M. Oster, Matthew R. Mauldin, Mary Evans, Marc Fischer, Chris Edens, Aron J. Hall, Sara E. Oliver, Joana Y Lively, Andrew T Boyd, Elisabeth M Hesse, Jessica L. Waller, Allan W. Taylor, Robert P. McClung, Eric P. Griggs, Christopher A. Elkins, Cheryl Isenhour, Runa H Gokhale, Sapna Bamrah Morris, Mark R. Stenger, Alicia M. Fry, Kristina L Bajema, Nia Williams, Tonny Bogere, Laura A. Cooley, Yingtao Zhou, Stephen Lindstrom, Songli Xu, Aaron T. Curns, Maureen H. Diaz, Tara C. Anderson, Kevin R. Clarke, Olivia L McGovern, Christopher M. Jones, and Naeemah Logan
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RNA viruses ,Male ,Viral Diseases ,Coronaviruses ,Epidemiology ,Geographical Locations ,Cohort Studies ,Medical Conditions ,Pandemic ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Public and Occupational Health ,Medical Personnel ,Child ,Pathology and laboratory medicine ,Virus Testing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Travel ,Multidisciplinary ,Transmission (medicine) ,Medical microbiology ,Middle Aged ,Professions ,Infectious Diseases ,Preparedness ,COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Testing ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Viruses ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Medicine ,Female ,Public Health ,SARS CoV 2 ,Pathogens ,Travel-Related Illness ,Cohort study ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,China ,Asia ,SARS coronavirus ,Adolescent ,Science ,Microbiology ,Young Adult ,Diagnostic Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Biology and life sciences ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Public health ,Organisms ,Viral pathogens ,COVID-19 ,Covid 19 ,United States ,Microbial pathogens ,Family medicine ,People and Places ,North America ,Population Groupings ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,business - Abstract
Background The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), evolved rapidly in the United States. This report describes the demographic, clinical, and epidemiologic characteristics of 544 U.S. persons under investigation (PUI) for COVID-19 with complete SARS-CoV-2 testing in the beginning stages of the pandemic from January 17 through February 29, 2020. Methods In this surveillance cohort, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provided consultation to public health and healthcare professionals to identify PUI for SARS-CoV-2 testing by quantitative real-time reverse-transcription PCR. Demographic, clinical, and epidemiologic characteristics of PUI were reported by public health and healthcare professionals during consultation with on-call CDC clinicians and subsequent submission of a CDC PUI Report Form. Characteristics of laboratory-negative and laboratory-positive persons were summarized as proportions for the period of January 17−February 29, and characteristics of all PUI were compared before and after February 12 using prevalence ratios. Results A total of 36 PUI tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 and were classified as confirmed cases. Confirmed cases and PUI testing negative for SARS-CoV-2 had similar demographic, clinical, and epidemiologic characteristics. Consistent with changes in PUI evaluation criteria, 88% (13/15) of confirmed cases detected before February 12, 2020, reported travel from China. After February 12, 57% (12/21) of confirmed cases reported no known travel- or contact-related exposures. Conclusions These findings can inform preparedness for future pandemics, including capacity for rapid expansion of novel diagnostic tests to accommodate broad surveillance strategies to assess community transmission, including potential contributions from asymptomatic and presymptomatic infections.
- Published
- 2021
61. The Medicalization of Criminal behavior among Mental Patients
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Melick, Mary Evans, Steadman, Henry J., and Cocozza, Joseph J.
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- 1979
62. Life Change and Illness: Illness Behavior of Males in the Recovery Period of a Natural Disaster
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Melick, Mary Evans
- Published
- 1978
63. Policing interpersonal violence
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Janet Mary Evans and Mark Rhys Kebbell
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Criminology ,Psychology ,Interpersonal violence - Published
- 2020
64. Fifteen minutes of shame: the growing notoriety of grand corruption.
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Webster, Mary Evans
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Bribery -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Political corruption -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation - Published
- 2008
65. Effects of mesenchymal stromal cell-conditioned media on measures of lung structure and function: a systematic review and meta-analysis of preclinical studies
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Delanie Moses, Rija Naqvi, Sarah Zoretic, Evan Dittmar, Alvaro Moreira, Mary Evans, Chimobi Emukah, Kristen Hall, John Martinez, Axel Moreira, and Shamimunisa B. Mustafa
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Review ,Disease ,Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Lung disease ,lcsh:Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Right ventricular hypertrophy ,Internal medicine ,Pulmonary fibrosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:QD415-436 ,Lung ,Conditioned media ,Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,Asthma ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Animal ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Cell Biology ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension ,respiratory tract diseases ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bronchopulmonary dysplasia ,Culture Media, Conditioned ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Molecular Medicine ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business - Abstract
Background Lung disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. A breach in the lung alveolar-epithelial barrier and impairment in lung function are hallmarks of acute and chronic pulmonary illness. This review is part two of our previous work. In part 1, we demonstrated that CdM is as effective as MSCs in modulating inflammation. Herein, we investigated the effects of mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC)-conditioned media (CdM) on (i) lung architecture/function in animal models mimicking human lung disease, and (ii) performed a head-to-head comparison of CdM to MSCs. Methods Adhering to the animal Systematic Review Centre for Laboratory animal Experimentation protocol, we conducted a search of English articles in five medical databases. Two independent investigators collected information regarding lung: alveolarization, vasculogenesis, permeability, histologic injury, compliance, and measures of right ventricular hypertrophy and right pulmonary pressure. Meta-analysis was performed to generate random effect size using standardized mean difference with 95% confidence interval. Results A total of 29 studies met inclusion. Lung diseases included bronchopulmonary dysplasia, asthma, pulmonary hypertension, acute respiratory distress syndrome, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and pulmonary fibrosis. CdM improved all measures of lung structure and function. Moreover, no statistical difference was observed in any of the lung measures between MSCs and CdM. Conclusions In this meta-analysis of animal models recapitulating human lung disease, CdM improved lung structure and function and had an effect size comparable to MSCs.
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- 2020
66. Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children: A systematic review
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Shailesh Advani, Karthik Rajasekaran, Aina Tarriela, Sarah Zoretic, Rija Naqvi, John P. Martinez, Axel Moreira, Matthew Petershack, Kevin Chorath, Sunil K. Ahuja, Finn Burmeister-Morton, Sebastian Acosta, Alvaro Moreira, Mubbasheer Ahmed, Fiona Burmeister, Mary Evans, and Ansel Hoang
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Severe acute respiratory syndrome 2 ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominal pain ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MIS-C ,Pediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children ,medicine ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Children ,PIMS ,Mechanical ventilation ,Pediatric ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Ejection fraction ,Coronavirus disease 2019 ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,010102 general mathematics ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Hyperinflammatory shock ,Intensive care unit ,Diarrhea ,Vomiting ,Observational study ,medicine.symptom ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business - Abstract
Background Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), also known as pediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome, is a new dangerous childhood disease that is temporally associated with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We aimed to describe the typical presentation and outcomes of children diagnosed with this hyperinflammatory condition. Methods We conducted a systematic review to communicate the clinical signs and symptoms, laboratory findings, imaging results, and outcomes of individuals with MIS-C. We searched four medical databases to encompass studies characterizing MIS-C from January 1st, 2020 to July 25th, 2020. Two independent authors screened articles, extracted data, and assessed risk of bias. This review was registered with PROSPERO CRD42020191515. Findings Our search yielded 39 observational studies (n = 662 patients). While 71·0% of children (n = 470) were admitted to the intensive care unit, only 11 deaths (1·7%) were reported. Average length of hospital stay was 7·9 ± 0·6 days. Fever (100%, n = 662), abdominal pain or diarrhea (73·7%, n = 488), and vomiting (68·3%, n = 452) were the most common clinical presentation. Serum inflammatory, coagulative, and cardiac markers were considerably abnormal. Mechanical ventilation and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation were necessary in 22·2% (n = 147) and 4·4% (n = 29) of patients, respectively. An abnormal echocardiograph was observed in 314 of 581 individuals (54·0%) with depressed ejection fraction (45·1%, n = 262 of 581) comprising the most common aberrancy. Interpretation Multisystem inflammatory syndrome is a new pediatric disease associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) that is dangerous and potentially lethal. With prompt recognition and medical attention, most children will survive but the long-term outcomes from this condition are presently unknown. Funding Parker B. Francis and pilot grant from 2R25-HL126140. Funding agencies had no involvement in the study
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- 2020
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67. Trends in Indicators of Injection Drug Use, Indian Health Service, 2010-2014 : A Study of Health Care Encounter Data
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Danae Bixler, Andria Apostolou, Kate Buchacz, Marissa Person, Thomas Weiser, Kim Elmore, Michele K. Bohm, Philip J. Peters, Richard Haverkate, Jessica Leston, Brigg Reilley, Andrew Mitsch, Michelle Van Handel, Eyasu H. Teshale, Jeffrey McCollum, Mary Evans, Dana L. Haberling, Sarah M. Hatcher, and Paul J. Weidle
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,medicine.disease_cause ,Injection drug use ,Virus ,Health services ,Young Adult ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Hiv transmission ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Research ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Opioid use disorder ,Hepatitis C ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Alaskan Natives ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,United States ,Family medicine ,United States Indian Health Service ,Indians, North American ,Female ,business ,Forecasting - Abstract
Objectives Hepatitis C virus (HCV) and HIV transmission in the United States may increase as a result of increasing rates of opioid use disorder (OUD) and associated injection drug use (IDU). Epidemiologic trends among American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) persons are not well known. Methods We analyzed 2010-2014 Indian Health Service data on health care encounters to assess regional and temporal trends in IDU indicators among adults aged ≥18 years. IDU indicators included acute or chronic HCV infection (only among adults aged 18-35 years), arm cellulitis and abscess, OUD, and opioid-related overdose. We calculated rates per 10 000 AI/AN adults for each IDU indicator overall and stratified by sex, age group, and region and evaluated rate ratios and trends by using Poisson regression analysis. Results Rates of HCV infection among adults aged 18-35 increased 9.4% per year, and rates of OUD among all adults increased 13.3% per year from 2010 to 2014. The rate of HCV infection among young women was approximately 1.3 times that among young men. Rates of opioid-related overdose among adults aged Conclusions Rates of HCV infection and OUD increased significantly in the AI/AN population. Strengthened public health efforts could ensure that AI/AN communities can address increasing needs for culturally appropriate interventions, including comprehensive syringe services programs, medication-assisted treatment, and opioid-related overdose prevention and can meet the growing need for treatment of HCV infection.
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- 2020
68. COVID-19 in 7780 pediatric patients: A systematic review
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Finn Burmeister-Morton, Rija Naqvi, Matthew Petershack, Axel Moreira, Alvaro Moreira, Kevin Chorath, Mary Evans, Fiona Burmeister, and Ansel Hoang
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lcsh:R5-920 ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,010102 general mathematics ,MEDLINE ,Disease ,General Medicine ,Laboratory results ,01 natural sciences ,Asymptomatic ,Article ,Procalcitonin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Increased risk ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,medicine.symptom ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business - Abstract
Background Studies summarizing the clinical picture of COVID-19 in children are lacking. This review characterizes clinical symptoms, laboratory, and imaging findings, as well as therapies provided to confirmed pediatric cases of COVID-19. Methods Adhering to PRISMA guidelines, we searched four medical databases (PubMed, LitCovid, Scopus, WHO COVID-19 database) between December 1, 2019 to May 14, 2020 using the keywords “novel coronavirus”, “COVID-19” or “SARS-CoV-2”. We included published or in press peer-reviewed cross-sectional, case series, and case reports providing clinical signs, imaging findings, and/or laboratory results of pediatric patients who were positive for COVID-19. Risk of bias was appraised through the quality assessment tool published by the National Institutes of Health. PROSPERO registration # CRD42020182261. Findings We identified 131 studies across 26 countries comprising 7780 pediatric patients. Although fever (59·1%) and cough (55·9%) were the most frequent symptoms 19·3% of children were asymptomatic. Patchy lesions (21·0%) and ground-glass opacities (32·9%) depicted lung radiograph and computed tomography findings, respectively. Immunocompromised children or those with respiratory/cardiac disease comprised the largest subset of COVID-19 children with underlying medical conditions (152 of 233 individuals). Coinfections were observed in 5.6% of children and abnormal laboratory markers included serum D-dimer, procalcitonin, creatine kinase, and interleukin-6. Seven deaths were reported (0·09%) and 11 children (0·14%) met inclusion for multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children. Interpretation This review provides evidence that children diagnosed with COVID-19 have an overall excellent prognosis. Future longitudinal studies are needed to confirm our findings and better understand which patients are at increased risk for developing severe inflammation and multiorgan failure. Funding Parker B. Francis and pilot grant from 2R25-HL126140. Funding agencies had no involvement in the study.
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- 2020
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69. Concurrent Naloxone Dispensing Among Individuals with High-Risk Opioid Prescriptions, USA, 2015-2019
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Christopher M. Jones, Mary Evans, Gery P. Guy, Kathleen R. Ragan, Andrea E. Strahan, Jan L. Losby, and Tamara M. Haegerich
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Naloxone ,Narcotic Antagonists ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Drug Prescriptions ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Prescriptions ,Opioid ,Emergency medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Medical prescription ,Drug Overdose ,business ,Concise Research Report ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2020
70. Simone de Beauvoir
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Published
- 2020
71. Within-Trial Cost-Effectiveness of a Structured Lifestyle Intervention in Adults With Overweight/Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes: Results From the Action for Health in Diabetes (Look AHEAD) Study
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Cora E. Lewis, Helen P. Hazuda, Steven E. Kahn, John M. Jakicic, Anne Peters, Mary Evans, Ping Zhang, Maria G. Montez, Gareth R. Dutton, Haiying Chen, Karen M. Atkinson, David M. Nathan, William C. Knowler, Rena R. Wing, Mace Coday, Jeanne M. Clark, Holly R. Wyatt, Julia Rushing, Tina Killean, Thomas A. Wadden, Bruce Redmon, Karen C. Johnson, Van S. Hubbard, Susan Z. Yanovski, George A. Bray, Mary T. Korytkowski, Robert W. Jeffery, John P. Foreyt, Peter J. Huckfeldt, James O. Hill, Helmut Steinburg, Henry Pownall, Caitlin Egan, Sharon D. Jackson, Jennifer Patricio, Nisa M. Maruthur, Edward S. Horton, Edward W. Gregg, Xavier Pi-Sunyer, Sara Michaels, Frank L. Greenway, and Mark A. Espeland
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Research design ,Adult ,Cost effectiveness ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Psychological intervention ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Type 2 diabetes ,Overweight ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Obesity ,Epidemiology/Health Services Research ,Life Style ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Health Utilities Index ,Demography - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To assess the cost-effectiveness (CE) of an intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) compared with standard diabetes support and education (DSE) in adults with overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes, as implemented in the Action for Health in Diabetes study. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Data were from 4,827 participants during their first 9 years of study participation from 2001 to 2012. Information on Health Utilities Index Mark 2 (HUI-2) and HUI-3, Short-Form 6D (SF-6D), and Feeling Thermometer (FT), cost of delivering the interventions, and health expenditures was collected during the study. CE was measured by incremental CE ratios (ICERs) in costs per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). Future costs and QALYs were discounted at 3% annually. Costs were in 2012 U.S. dollars. RESULTS Over the 9 years studied, the mean cumulative intervention costs and mean cumulative health care expenditures were $11,275 and $64,453 per person for ILI and $887 and $68,174 for DSE. Thus, ILI cost $6,666 more per person than DSE. Additional QALYs gained by ILI were not statistically significant measured by the HUIs and were 0.07 and 0.15, respectively, measured by SF-6D and FT. The ICERs ranged from no health benefit with a higher cost based on HUIs to $96,458/QALY and $43,169/QALY, respectively, based on SF-6D and FT. CONCLUSIONS Whether ILI was cost-effective over the 9-year period is unclear because different health utility measures led to different conclusions.
- Published
- 2020
72. Update: Interim Guidance for Health Care Professionals Evaluating and Caring for Patients with Suspected E-cigarette, or Vaping, Product Use-Associated Lung Injury and for Reducing the Risk for Rehospitalization and Death Following Hospital Discharge - United States, December 2019
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Kayla N. Anderson, Lori A. Pollack, Jennifer L. Wiltz, Eleanor S. Click, Alyson B. Goodman, Sascha R. Ellington, Vikram Krishnasamy, Dale A. Rose, Melissa L. Danielson, Evelyn Twentyman, Christina A. Mikosz, Matthew Lozier, Brian A. King, Mary Evans, Christopher M. Jones, Peter A. Briss, Emily Kiernan, Susan Adkins Hocevar, Lung Injury Response Clinical Task Force, and David N. Weissman
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Patient discharge ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Vaping ,MEDLINE ,General Medicine ,Lung Injury ,Lung injury ,Patient Readmission ,Patient Discharge ,United States ,Health Information Management ,Interim ,Emergency medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Hospital discharge ,Humans ,Product (category theory) ,Full Report ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,business - Published
- 2020
73. Characteristics of Patients Experiencing Rehospitalization or Death After Hospital Discharge in a Nationwide Outbreak of E-cigarette, or Vaping, Product Use-Associated Lung Injury - United States, 2019
- Author
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Sharyn E. Parks, Mary Evans, Christina A. Mikosz, Evelyn Twentyman, Zheng Li, Janet J. Hamilton, Megan J. Wallace, Christopher M. Jones, Amy Board, Vikram Krishnasamy, Sukhshant Atti, Mary Pomeroy, Caroline Schrodt, Stephen Soroka, Chelsea Austin, Alissa C. Cyrus, Denise Hughes, Jean Ko, Bailey Wallace, Sierra J Graves, Alyson B. Goodman, Adebola Adebayo, Donald Hayes, Sascha R. Ellington, Peter A. Briss, Lung Injury Response Epidemiology, Jennifer L. Wiltz, Suzanne Newton, Gyan Chandra, Phillip P. Salvatore, Matthew Lozier, Brian A. King, Ruth Lynfield, Geroncio C Fajardo, Melissa L. Danielson, Katherine Roguski, Dustin W Currie, Rashid Njai, Kelsey C. Coy, Mia Israel, Kimberly Thomas, Surveillance Task Force, Sonal Goyal, Kayla N. Anderson, Lori A. Pollack, and Dale A. Rose
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Poison control ,Comorbidity ,Lung injury ,Suicide prevention ,Patient Readmission ,Occupational safety and health ,Disease Outbreaks ,Young Adult ,Age Distribution ,Health Information Management ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Full Report ,Young adult ,business.industry ,Vaping ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,Lung Injury ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Patient Discharge ,United States ,Emergency medicine ,Chronic Disease ,Female ,business - Published
- 2020
74. Chapter 3: Making the ‘Modern’ Woman
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Subjects
History ,Aesthetics ,Personal consumption expenditures price index ,Modernity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Self ,Self-consciousness ,Consumption (sociology) ,media_common - Abstract
The twentieth century is generally associated with terms about the ‘modern’ and this chapter concerns the way in which periodicals explicitly aimed at women (across class lines) encouraged women to be ‘modern’. To be a ‘modern’ woman, this chapter suggests, is to be a woman who is intensely aware of her appearance and the picture which she presents to the world. Modern ‘self consciousness’ involves a high degree of consumption and the industries of personal consumption became a central part of the twentieth century economies of peace time. Women were central to these new forms of production; hence the encouragement of ‘making’ the self.
- Published
- 2020
75. Chapter 5: Judging Women
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Subjects
Emancipation ,Aesthetics ,sense organs ,Meaning (existential) ,Sociology ,skin and connective tissue diseases - Abstract
The final chapter returns to the issues identified in the Introduction: that the study of the changing meaning of the ‘respectability’ of women suggests that ‘progress’ and ‘emancipation’ as applied to the history of women are dubious and mistaken terms. Ideas about what women ‘should be’ have changed, but although some of the changes might have a dramatic presence (for example in terms of dress) underlying assumptions, most importantly that of the responsibility of ‘respectable’ women for care, have not.
- Published
- 2020
76. Making Respectable Women
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Published
- 2020
77. Chapter 4: The Right Body
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Subjects
Emancipation ,Aesthetics ,Abandonment (legal) ,Self ,Narrative ,Human sexuality ,Sociology ,Consumption (sociology) ,Social status ,Theme (narrative) - Abstract
Just as ‘modern’ women were encouraged to pay attention to their appearance, a central aspect of that concern was the need for women to maintain ‘youthfulness’ and avoid the signs of ageing. The body, in all its aspects, became the location for work and for expenditure; not to care for the body and the self was associated with the lack of ‘respectability’ and, implicitly, the possible abandonment of forms of social status. Again, what is sometimes seen in the changing appearance of women is a narrative of emancipation; indeed advertising copy often invoked ideas about the ‘freedom’ of women in order to encourage consumption. The theme is one in which the construction of the’ respectable’ is not static but woven from a number of social sources.
- Published
- 2020
78. Chapter 1: The Context
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Subjects
Individualism ,Emancipation ,Austerity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Subject (philosophy) ,Context (language use) ,Class (philosophy) ,Sociology ,Autonomy ,Epistemology ,media_common - Abstract
The initial chapter sets out some of the more important issues about the relationship of conceptual definitions and gender. It is suggested here that gender often plays too little part in structural accounts of the social world, despite the considerable work that exists on the subject. Further, it is often assumed that the ‘emancipation’ of women can be taken for granted as a social achievement: again, despite the evidence which demonstrates lasting forms of prejudice and discrimination against women. Finally, the chapter notes the longstanding search for definitions of ‘respectable’ women; the very fact of the history of that search suggestive of the ways in which the concept is one that is always changing.
- Published
- 2020
79. One-year postpartum anthropometric outcomes in mothers and children in the LIFE-Moms lifestyle intervention clinical trials
- Author
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Suzanne Phelan, S. Sonia Arteaga, Elizabeth Thom, Rebecca G. Clifton, Samuel Klein, Jami L. Josefson, Susan Z. Yanovski, Kaumudi Joshipura, Alison G. Cahill, Linda Van Horn, Mary Evans, Kimberly A Couch, William C. Knowler, Corby K. Martin, Leanne M. Redman, Kimberly L. Drews, Debra Haire-Joshu, Paul W. Franks, Alan M. Peaceman, Dympna Gallagher, Rena R. Wing, Xavier Pi-Sunyer, and Neurosurgery
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,infant weight ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Health Promotion ,Overweight ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Pregnancy ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Risk factor ,Child ,education ,Life Style ,education.field_of_study ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Anthropometry ,prenatal intervention ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Body Weight ,Postpartum Period ,Postpartum weight retention ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Gestational Weight Gain ,3. Good health ,Pregnancy Complications ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Weight gain ,Postpartum period - Abstract
Background/objectives Excess gestational weight gain (GWG) is a risk factor for maternal postpartum weight retention and excessive neonatal adiposity, especially in women with overweight or obesity. Whether lifestyle interventions to reduce excess GWG also reduce 12-month maternal postpartum weight retention and infant weight-for-length z score is unknown. Randomized controlled trials from the LIFE-Moms consortium investigated lifestyle interventions that began in pregnancy and tested whether there was benefit through 12 months on maternal postpartum weight retention (i.e., the difference in weight from early pregnancy to 12 months) and infant-weight-for-length z scores. Subjects/methods In LIFE-Moms, women (N = 1150; 14.1 weeks gestation at enrollment) with overweight or obesity were randomized within each of seven trials to lifestyle intervention or standard care. Individual participant data were combined and analyzed using generalized linear mixed models with trial entered as a random effect. The 12-month assessment was completed by 83% (959/1150) of women and 84% (961/1150) of infants. Results Compared with standard care, lifestyle intervention reduced postpartum weight retention (2.2 ± 7.0 vs. 0.7 ± 6.2 kg, respectively; difference of −1.6 kg (95% CI −2.5, −0.7; p = 0.0003); the intervention effect was mediated by reduction in excess GWG, which explained 22% of the effect on postpartum weight retention. Lifestyle intervention also significantly increased the odds (OR = 1.68 (95% CI, 1.26, 2.24)) and percentage of mothers (48.2% vs. 36.2%) at or below baseline weight at 12 months postpartum (yes/no) compared with standard care. There was no statistically significant treatment group effect on infant anthropometric outcomes at 12 months. Conclusions Compared with standard care, lifestyle interventions initiated in pregnancy and focused on healthy eating, increased physical activity, and other behavioral strategies resulted in significantly less weight retention but similar infant anthropometric outcomes at 12 months postpartum in a large, diverse US population of women with overweight and obesity.
- Published
- 2020
80. Chapter 2: Victorian Values
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Subjects
History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,British Empire ,Economic history ,Empire ,Racism ,Order (virtue) ,media_common ,Emigration ,Term (time) - Abstract
In order to demonstrate the ways in which the term ‘respectable’ has been used about and by women this chapter uses material from the various societies which, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, organised the emigration of women to what was then the British Empire. The definition being used to choose these women for assisted passages was that they should be ‘respectable’. A definition which was accepted by the women themselves, although further defined by some in terms of the definition of being a ‘lady’. What this chapter also considers is the way in which, as the twentieth century progressed, potential candidates for emigration were expected to have some form of qualification. The definition of being ‘respectable’ was not disappearing but was acquiring new forms.
- Published
- 2020
81. Dark Nights and Moral Diversity: Re-thinking Morality in Nordic Noir
- Author
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Mary Evans
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Environmental ethics ,Sociology ,Morality ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common - Published
- 2020
82. Traumatic Brain Injury-Related Emergency Department Visits Among American Indian and Alaska Native Persons—National Patient Information Reporting System, 2005–2014
- Author
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Jill Daugherty, Alexis B. Peterson, Kelly Sarmiento, Jordan L Kennedy, Holly Billie, Mary Evans, and Dana L. Haberling
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Psychological intervention ,Poison control ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,American Indian or Alaska Native ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Rehabilitation ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Alaskan Natives ,humanities ,United States ,Family medicine ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) population has a disproportionately high rate of traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). However, there is little known about incidence and common mechanisms of injury among AI/AN persons who seek care in an Indian Health Service (IHS) or tribally managed facility. METHODS: Using the IHS National Patient Information Reporting System, we assessed the incidence of TBI-related emergency department visits among AI/AN children and adults seen in IHS or tribally managed facilities over a 10-year period (2005–2014). RESULTS: There were 44 918 TBI-related emergency department visits during the study period. Males and persons aged 18 to 34 years and 75 years and older had the highest rates of TBI-related emergency department visits. Unintentional falls and assaults contributed to the highest number and proportion of TBI-related emergency department visits. The number and age-adjusted rate of emergency department visits for TBI were highest among persons living in the Southwest and Northern Plains when compared with other IHS regions. CONCLUSION: Thousands of AI/AN children and adults are seen each year in emergency departments for TBI and the numbers increased over the 10-year period examined. Evidence-based interventions to prevent TBI-related emergency department visits, such as programs to reduce the risk for older adult falls and assault, are warranted.
- Published
- 2020
83. Luminescence dating, sediment analysis, and flood dynamics on the Sabie River, South Africa
- Author
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Jasper Knight and Mary Evans
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Sediment Analysis ,Flood myth ,Thermoluminescence dating ,Sediment ,Fluvial ,Context (language use) ,Physical geography ,01 natural sciences ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Floods on sediment-rich semiarid rivers often lead to significant geomorphic change, but luminescence dating of sediments deposited by past flood events has hitherto been unable to meaningfully inform on past flood dynamics. This is important because luminescence dating has commonly been applied to flood sediments, but the calculated sediment ages are in almost all cases older than the ages of known floods responsible for sediment deposition. Correctly interpreting these older ages in the context of flood dynamics is therefore a key problem. This study addresses this problem by discussing relationships between luminescence dating, sediments, and reach-scale geomorphology along the semiarid Sabie River, northeastern South Africa. Twelve luminescence ages were obtained from near-surface sediments (
- Published
- 2018
84. Lifestyle Interventions Limit Gestational Weight Gain in Women with Overweight or Obesity: LIFE‐Moms Prospective Meta‐Analysis
- Author
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Susan Z. Yanovski, Samuel Klein, Linda Van Horn, Rena R. Wing, Alan M. Peaceman, Dympna Gallagher, Alison G. Cahill, William C. Knowler, Corby K. Martin, Kimberly L. Drews, Mary Evans, Suzanne Phelan, Elizabeth Thom, Rebecca G. Clifton, Xavier Pi-Sunyer, Leanne M. Redman, Paul W. Franks, Kimberly A Couch, Debra Haire-Joshu, and Kaumudi Joshipura
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Birth weight ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Overweight ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Pregnancy ,education.field_of_study ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Gestational diabetes ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Weight gain - Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of varied lifestyle intervention programs designed to ameliorate excess gestational weight gain (GWG) in pregnant women with overweight or obesity compared with standard care, including effects on pregnancy outcomes. Methods: Seven clinical centers conducted separate randomized clinical trials to test different lifestyle intervention strategies to modify GWG in diverse populations. Eligibility criteria, specific outcome measures, and assessment procedures were standardized across trials. The results of the separate trials were combined using an individual-participant data meta-analysis. Results: For the 1,150 women randomized, the percent with excess GWG per week was significantly lower in the intervention group compared with the standard care group (61.8% vs. 75.0%; odds ratio [95% CI]: 0.52 [0.40 to 0.67]). Total GWG from enrollment to 36 weeks' gestation was also lower in the intervention group (8.1 ± 5.2 vs. 9.7 ± 5.4 kg; mean difference: −1.59 kg [95% CI:−2.18 to −0.99 kg]). The results from the individual trials were similar. The intervention and standard care groups did not differ in preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, cesarean delivery, or birth weight. Conclusions: Behavioral lifestyle interventions focusing primarily on diet and physical activity among women with overweight and obesity resulted in a significantly lower proportion of women with excess GWG. This modest beneficial effect was consistent across diverse intervention modalities in a large, racially and socioeconomically diverse US population of pregnant women. (Less)
- Published
- 2018
85. Accumulating Data to Optimally Predict Obesity Treatment (ADOPT) Core Measures: Behavioral Domain
- Author
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Mary Evans, Aaron D. Laposky, John M. Jakicic, Catherine M. Loria, Susan B. Roberts, Leslie A. Lytle, and Holly L. Nicastro
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Weight control ,Adult obesity ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Domain (software engineering) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Core (game theory) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Weight loss ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Psychosocial ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Background The ability to identify and measure behaviors that are related to weight loss and the prevention of weight regain is crucial to understanding the variability in response to obesity treatment and the development of tailored treatments. Objectives The overarching goal of the Accumulating Data to Optimally Predict obesity Treatment (ADOPT) Core Measures Project is to provide obesity researchers with guidance on a set of constructs and measures that are related to weight control and that span and integrate obesity-related behavioral, biological, environmental, and psychosocial domains. This article describes how the behavioral domain subgroup identified the initial list of high-priority constructs and measures to be included, and it describes practical considerations for assessing the following four behavioral areas: eating, activity, sleep, and self-monitoring of weight. Challenges and considerations for advancing the science related to weight loss and maintenance behaviors are also discussed. Significance Assessing a set of core behavioral measures in combination with those from other ADOPT domains is critical to improve our understanding of individual variability in response to adult obesity treatment. The selection of behavioral measures is based on the current science, although there continues to be much work needed in this field.
- Published
- 2018
86. Etty Hillesum: Gender, the Modern and the Literature of the Holocaust
- Author
-
Mary Evans
- Subjects
Psychoanalysis ,The Holocaust ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,media_common - Published
- 2018
87. The book of grasses; an illustrated guide to the common grasses, and the most common of the rushes and sedges,
- Author
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Francis, Mary Evans, Cornell University Library, and Francis, Mary Evans
- Subjects
Cyperaceae ,Grasses ,Juncaceae ,United States - Published
- 1912
88. The book of grasses : an illustrated guide to the common grasses, and the most common of the rushes and sedges / by Mary Evans Francis ; illustrated by H.H. Knight, Arthur G. Eldredge and Sarah Francis Dorrance.
- Author
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Francis, Mary Evans, 1876-1941, Gerstein - University of Toronto (archive.org), and Francis, Mary Evans, 1876-1941
- Subjects
Cyperaceae ,Grasses ,Juncaceae ,United States - Published
- 1912
89. The construction and habitation of one of the earliest homesteads at Komati Gorge Village 1, Bokoni, South Africa
- Author
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Mary Evans, Maria H. Schoeman, and Ruby-Anne Birin
- Subjects
Archeology ,Geography ,Terrace (agriculture) ,law ,Human settlement ,Pottery ,Radiocarbon dating ,Moisture retention ,Archaeology ,law.invention - Abstract
Bokoni is a unique archaeological region in South Africa, with settlements ranging from scattered homesteads to large towns. Research into the development of this region has been constrained by the limited number of directly dated sites. Radiocarbon dating has not yet been successful in the region because no charcoal-hosting middens were found, and organic preservation is generally poor due to soil type and related moisture retention. As an interim measure, oral histories were used in combination with architectural and spatial changes to define four occupation phases in Bokoni. However, this approach is not applicable to Phase I sites because these predate oral traditions, which narrates Bokoni history from the 17th century onwards. Consequently, until this research, the age of the start of terrace construction was unknown. Here, we present optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages of pottery and sediment samples from two homesteads (KG80 and KG81) in the site Komati Gorge Village 1, which based on settlement configuration, is believed to form part of Phase I. The dates constrain the timing of the initial construction and use of homestead KG80 from 1489CE ± 54 to 1577CE ± 30, and reuse of KG80 by the builders of KG81 from 1682CE ± 20 to 1765CE ± 20. KG81 itself was occupied and reused from 1738CE ± 19 to 1912CE ± 7.
- Published
- 2021
90. Erratum to: Measurement of the J/ψ pair production cross-section in pp collisions at s = 13 $$ \sqrt{s}=13 $$ TeV
- Author
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William Barter, Jaap Velthuis, Christopher Jones, Kevin Dungs, Timothy Head, F. J. P. Soler, Joel Closier, S. Ali, Marco Clemencic, Ana Barbara Rodrigues, M. P. Williams, C. Matteuzzi, Paolo Durante, M. De Serio, P. De Simone, Guido Andreassi, E. Ben-Haim, Maxime Schubiger, Agnieszka Oblakowska-Mucha, Lucia Grillo, S. Farry, Tjeerd Ketel, Carmelo D'Ambrosio, George Coombs, Leonid Kravchuk, Ignacio Bediaga, M. Kreps, Biagio Saitta, Sabin Stoica, Gianluigi Casse, Samuel Coquereau, S. Ely, Alessandro Pistone, Emanuele Santovetti, Gaia Lanfranchi, Rosen Matev, William Sutcliffe, Louis Henry, Tomasz Fiutowski, Jonathan Harrison, P. Collins, Slavomira Stefkova, T. Kirn, V.G. Shevchenko, L. Castillo Garcia, Roland Bernet, Claire Prouve, Neville Harnew, Mark Hatch, Sebastian Neubert, Sneha Malde, D. Decamp, M. Tobin, Vitaly Vorobyev, Andrea Valassi, Pierre Henrard, Matteo Rama, Vincenzo Vagnoni, J. Jalocha, Stephanie Hansmann-Menzemer, Kenneth Wyllie, Mariana Rihl, Robert Ekelhof, Suzanne Klaver, Jakub Moron, F. Ferreira Rodrigues, M. Calvo Gomez, C. M. Costa Sobral, Marco Santimaria, R. Vazquez Gomez, Alexander Semennikov, Oleg Stenyakin, Mika Vesterinen, R. Calabrese, A. Di Canto, Marco Adinolfi, A. Fernandez Prieto, Benedetto Gianluca Siddi, Michael McCann, Emanuele Michielin, Alberto Lusiani, J. A. Rodriguez Lopez, Yuezhe Yao, Miriam Heß, L. Del Buono, Oleg Maev, Carla Göbel, Thomas Nikodem, C. Bozzi, Julien Cogan, D. Campora Perez, Tengiz Kvaratskheliya, Antonios Papanestis, U. Marconi, G. Martellotti, Alison Tully, Violaine Bellee, Clarissa Baesso, David Chamont, Andrew Crocombe, Veronika Chobanova, Erica Polycarpo, John William Ronayne, P. Owen, Mariusz Witek, Emiliano Furfaro, Marco Corvo, Adlène Hicheur, B. Souza De Paula, R. Cenci, Giovanni Punzi, Mohamad Kozeiha, Lucio Anderlini, M. van Veghel, l. Soares Lavra, Anna Lupato, J. Wimberley, H. Hopchev, Vladimir Volkov, M. Andreotti, Nikolay Bondar, Manuel Schiller, P. Vazquez Regueiro, Arno Heister, Niko Neufeld, Alexey Zhelezov, A. Romero Vidal, Andrey Tayduganov, R. Mountain, G. Collazuol, Yanxi Zhang, Lennaert Bel, Cameron Thomas Dean, Sergey Barsuk, S. Benson, Stephane T'Jampens, D. Martinez Santos, G. Alkhazov, S. A. Wotton, Sebastien Valat, Krzysztof Swientek, Brian Meadows, Jean Wicht, T. Lesiak, Agnieszka Dziurda, Giulio Gazzoni, S. Karodia, Guido Haefeli, Markus Frank, Simon Stemmle, S. Playfer, Pietro Marino, Malgorzata Pikies, Christophe Haen, G. Wormser, Janine Müller, S. Gianì, F. Archilli, Mikhail Hushchyn, Heinrich Schindler, Jacques Lefrançois, Xavier Vilasis-Cardona, Marek Sirendi, Alexey Vorobyev, Mike J. Wilkinson, G. Manca, Marek Szczekowski, Gloria Corti, Michael Kolpin, Florin Maciuc, Evelina Gersabeck, François Fleuret, M. van Beuzekom, Konrad Klimaszewski, Stefano Perazzini, D. A. Milanes, J. Dalseno, Francesco Polci, K. Carvalho Akiba, J. E. Andrews, Georgios Chatzikonstantinidis, T. Skwarnicki, Giacomo Graziani, Max Neuner, Alexander Mazurov, K. Petridis, Timon Schmelzer, Ronan Wallace, Vlad-Mihai Placinta, Maulik R. Patel, Marta Calvi, Mark Richard James Williams, Mikhail Zavertyaev, Conor Fitzpatrick, Blake Leverington, Antonino Sergi, T. Boettcher, Eleonora Luppi, S. Blusk, M. Veltri, Marco Gersabeck, B. Sanmartin Sedes, Roberta Cardinale, A. Gallas Torreira, Xiaofeng Zhu, C. Remon Alepuz, Florian Lemaitre, Dean Charles Forshaw, Ph. Charpentier, Alessandro Camboni, W. Qian, M. Cruz Torres, L. Sun, Andrey Ustyuzhanin, Sajan Easo, Bernardo Adeva, B. R. Gruberg Cazon, Fedor Baryshnikov, Daniel Charles Craik, Mirco Dorigo, Andreas Weiden, R. Graciani Diaz, C. Parkes, Cristina Lazzeroni, Fabio Ferrari, Mick Mulder, Fergus Wilson, Donal Hill, Wojciech Kucewicz, James Mwangi Kariuki, R. McNulty, Francesco Dettori, Olivier Göran Girard, S. C. Haines, L. A. Granado Cardoso, M. N. Minard, Karlis Dreimanis, Brice Maurin, Matthew Charles, George Lafferty, Pascal Perret, S. Amerio, N. Farley, Michael Joseph Morello, Giampiero Mancinelli, Pierre Billoir, Vladimir Gligorov, M. Gandelman, Patrick Robbe, P. Alvarez Cartelle, Stefanie Reichert, I. V. Gorelov, John Back, Christopher Burr, Maurizio Martinelli, Eduardo Rodrigues, T. Ruf, S. Cadeddu, Mauro Morandin, K. De Bruyn, Xiao-Rui Lyu, Hannah Mary Evans, Massimiliano Fiorini, Nicola Skidmore, Themistocles Bowcock, Daniel Patrick O'Hanlon, Stephen Ogilvy, Federico Stagni, E. G. Thomas, Stanislav Poslavskii, David Gerick, Egor Khairullin, F. Blanc, Niels Tuning, Oliver Lupton, Francesca Dordei, Christoph Frei, Rainer Schwemmer, Florian Kruse, O. Grünberg, F. Da Cunha Marinho, Davide Pinci, Serhii Koliiev, Mirko Deckenhoff, R. Silva Coutinho, Nathan Jurik, Guy Wilkinson, Ph. Ghez, J. M. De Miranda, Gregory Ciezarek, P. Rodriguez Perez, Jose Lopes, L. Beaucourt, Z. Mathe, Matteo Palutan, Andrea Mogini, Violetta Cogoni, Zhenwei Yang, Roland Waldi, Thierry Gys, Alessandro Cardini, Dominik Stefan Mitzel, Preema Rennee Pais, V. Rives Molina, R. Le Gac, Dominik Müller, C. Potterat, D. Tonelli, Dianne Ferguson, Philip John Garsed, Michael Schmelling, Xiaoxue Han, B. Khanji, Ia. Bezshyiko, Alexandra Paige Rollings, C. Santamarina Rios, M. Pappagallo, Lluis Garrido, E. Grauges, Wojciech Wislicki, Xuhao Yuan, Davide Fazzini, Chitsanu Khurewathanakul, Abhijit Mathad, Albert Bursche, Alessandro Bertolin, Wolfgang Funk, J. Buytaert, Kevin Maguire, Alexey Badalov, Tobias Tekampe, Eluned Smith, Kurt Rinnert, S. Gambetta, Alexey Dzyuba, Nikolay Nikitin, D. Martins Tostes, Mateusz Baszczyk, J. D. Price, R. Dzhelyadin, Andrei Tsaregorodtsev, S. Richards, Rose Koopman, L. Cassina, Emma Buchanan, Artur Ukleja, Alex Pearce, T. Britton, E. Bowen, Bartolomiej Rachwal, S. Ricciardi, Frank Meier, Denis Derkach, David Gascon, Katharina Müller, Alessio Borgheresi, Nicolas Déléage, C. Satriano, Eddy Jans, J. R. Smith, M. De Cian, Alla Nogay, J. M. Otalora Goicochea, J. Blouw, Julian Wishahi, Valery Pugatch, Illya Shapoval, Daniel Johnson, Christian Voß, Simone Bifani, Daniel Martin Saunders, Giovanni Carboni, Mark Smith, Harry Cliff, Timothy Gershon, Claudio Gotti, J. J. Saborido Silva, Robert Appleby, Timofei Maltsev, Giovanni Valenti, R. Lefèvre, Robert Currie, L. M. Garcia Martin, R. A. Fini, W. Bonivento, Giovanni Veneziano, Feng Jiang, Matthieu Marinangeli, A. Puig Navarro, Manuel Mussini, Philippe d'Argent, Ana Trisovic, V. Salustino Guimaraes, C. Gaspar, Jan Maratas, Paras Naik, Alexander Malinin, Marcela Vitti, Daniel Vieira, A. B. Morris, Federica Lionetto, Anatoliy Dovbnya, Tatiana Likhomanenko, Roger Forty, Marcello Rotondo, J. J. Walsh, Christoph Hombach, P. M. Manning, Iurii Raniuk, Hans Dijkstra, Elnur Sadykhov, Sergii Kandybei, Lars Eklund, Jonas Rademacker, Vanessa Müller, J. L. Fu, E. Lemos Cid, Marina Artuso, Evgeny Gushchin, Thomas Blake, Emilie Maurice, Charlotte Wallace, Martino Borsato, B. Pietrzyk, Vladimir Romanovskiy, Gabriele Simi, Patrick Koppenburg, Marco Cattaneo, Maxim Borisyak, Ziad Ajaltouni, Colin Barschel, Biplab Dey, Dmytro Melnychuk, R. Oldeman, M. Vieites Diaz, Marek Idzik, Hella Leonie Snoek, William Parker, L. De Paula, Thomas Hadavizadeh, Andrew McNab, Nigel Watson, Lorenzo Sestini, Lei Zhang, Marcin Kucharczyk, Andrea Bizzeti, Katharina Kreplin, S. Schael, G. A. Cowan, Naylya Sagidova, A. Rogozhnikov, Jing Wang, T. Bird, Y. H. Zheng, Silvia Borghi, Heather Mckenzie Wark, Pavel Krokovny, C. Marin Benito, Tatsuya Nakada, Stephen M. Stahl, Giulio Dujany, Laura Gavardi, A. Vollhardt, Bogdan Popovici, Alex Birnkraut, Christian Linn, A. Dosil Suárez, Marcel Merk, E. van Herwijnen, Pavol Stefko, M. Ebert, Adam Davis, Zhirui Xu, Daniel Lacarrere, Timothy Evans, Stig Topp-Joergensen, Yang Li, Alessio Piucci, Miroslaw Firlej, S. Tolk, Axel Kevin Kuonen, C. J. G. Onderwater, Maxime Vernet, Matthew Scott Rudolph, Matthieu Kecke, Alena Kosmyntseva, Alexandru Grecu, Giulia Tellarini, A. Oyanguren, J. V. Viana Barbosa, J. He, Yu. Guz, Svende Braun, J. van Tilburg, Margarete Schellenberg, T. D. Nguyen, C. Färber, I. Babuschkin, Panagiotis Tsopelas, Adam Dendek, Piotr Morawski, A. Schopper, Alexey Novoselov, Xuesong Liu, A. Bitadze, Marouen Baalouch, M. Shapkin, Paolo Gandini, Benoit Viaud, Yuehong Xie, Frederic Machefert, Stephane Tourneur, Victor Egorychev, Andrew Cook, S. Cunliffe, Minh Tâm Tran, Federico Alessio, Vasily Kudryavtsev, Ulrich Eitschberger, Yasmine Amhis, C. Nguyen-Mau, Gabriela Johanna Pomery, Elena Dall'Occo, Paolo Carniti, Barbara Storaci, David Websdale, Marco Meissner, M. Ferro-Luzzi, Franz Muheim, A. Comerma-Montells, Morgan Martin, Aravindhan Venkateswaran, Wojciech Krzemien, X. Cid Vidal, Sheldon Stone, Alessandra Pastore, Andrea Contu, J. García Pardiñas, M. Ramos Pernas, Alessandro Petrolini, Alexander Berezhnoy, J. van Leerdam, Thomas Latham, Konstantin Gizdov, Kenneth Wraight, Jean François Marchand, Wouter Hulsbergen, Wander Baldini, Victor Renaudin, C. Patrignani, V. Tisserand, Stefania Vecchi, R. Fay, Christian Joram, Andrea Merli, Ilya Komarov, Mark Whitehead, Alexey A. Petrov, O. Schneider, Semen Eidelman, Matthias Karacson, Timothy Williams, K. Trabelsi, M. Pepe Altarelli, Marianna Fontana, Luca Pescatore, A. Gomes, A. A. Alves, Federico Betti, Moritz Demmer, Kristian Alexander Zarebski, J. Beddow, Michael Alexander, J. Arnau Romeu, A. Pritchard, Frederic Teubert, Maximilien Chefdeville, J. de Vries, Domenico Galli, Sandra Amato, Michael Sokoloff, Andreas Jaeger, Karol Hennessy, Ramon Niet, K. Belous, Varvara Batozskaya, Lev Shekhtman, Darya Savrina, I. A. Monroy, Jolanta Brodzicka, Konstantin Schubert, Benjamin Couturier, Flavio Fontanelli, Adalberto Sciubba, Marie Helene Schune, Teng Li, Tuomas Poikela, Barbara Sciascia, Simon Akar, Antonio Falabella, C. Sanchez Mayordomo, Marco Fiore, Iain Longstaff, Federico Redi, Klaus Fohl, E. Picatoste Olloqui, Luciano Pappalardo, B. Schmidt, R. Santacesaria, E. Cogneras, Yang Gao, A. Lai, Marcin Chrzaszcz, S. Monteil, David Ward, Andrea Mauri, Murdo Traill, Laurent Dufour, Nicola Neri, Maximilian Schlupp, Alessandro Mordà, C. Vázquez Sierra, Z. Xing, P. Spradlin, Elie Aslanides, F. Martinez Vidal, Shu-Faye Cheung, Gianni Penso, Richard Jacobsson, A. Carbone, Krzysztof Kurek, L. M. Massacrier, P. Ruiz Valls, Nicoletta Belloli, A. Bay, Francis Toriello, Christos Hadjivasiliou, Marco Petruzzo, Alessia Satta, Renato Quagliani, Francesco Bossu, J. Garra Tico, B. Hamilton, J. Serrano, Victor Coco, Haiyun Luo, O. Yushchenko, B. Spaan, S. Baker, Matthew Kenzie, Vladislav Balagura, Stefano Gallorini, Marian Stahl, Igor Bordyuzhin, U. Straumann, Baasansuren Batsukh, Liupan An, V. Bocci, A. Massafferri, Elena Graverini, Christoph Langenbruch, Roel Aaij, Olivier Deschamps, Alexander D. Popov, G. Bencivenni, Nicola Serra, Vincenzo Battista, Balazs Voneki, P. Campana, Paul Seyfert, David Loh, Andrey Golutvin, G. Raven, Alexander Bondar, V. Franco Lima, A. Otto, Scott Stevenson, A. C. dos Reis, Lavinia-Helena Giubega, Matthew James Tilley, Jessica Prisciandaro, Markward Britsch, Marco Tresch, Stefan Roiser, R. Nandakumar, S. T. Harnew, Dmitry Golubkov, O. Steinkamp, Laurence Carson, Johannes Albrecht, Peter Clarke, S. Filippov, Malcolm John, F. Bedeschi, Matthew Needham, Giovanni Cavallero, E. Tournefier, Luca Tomassetti, Srikanth Sridharan, Stefano Zucchelli, J. Marks, Irina Nasteva, U. Uwer, Roger Barlow, Beat Jost, Holger Stevens, Hang Yin, Tara Shears, L. Silva de Oliveira, Anton Poluektov, Anita Nandi, Harald Viemann, Alexander Leflat, G. D. Patel, Alessio Sarti, Yury Shcheglov, Sebastian Bachmann, Dmitry Popov, G. Passaleva, V. Obraztsov, M. Lucio Martinez, Stephan Eisenhardt, Peter Griffith, S. De Capua, Ivan Polyakov, Simon Nieswand, Valery Zhukov, S. Simone, Mihai Straticiuc, Christopher Betancourt, Sevda Esen, Ulrik Egede, Olga Morgunova, Olivier Leroy, Ivan Belyaev, A. Artamonov, R. Lindner, M. Boubdir, Iwan Thomas Smith, Valerie Gibson, Anastasiia Kozachuk, Vasileios Syropoulos, Matthew Kelsey, L. Cojocariu, Claudia Vacca, A. Pellegrino, Sai-Juan Chen, Fedor Ratnikov, E. Price, Philip Ilten, Murilo Rangel, Lorenzo Capriotti, G. Auriemma, S. Stracka, A. Jawahery, Jie Yu, M. Plo Casasus, Donatella Lucchesi, J. Molina Rodriguez, Pieter David, A. Palano, Tomasz Szumlak, Marc-Olivier Bettler, Thibaud Humair, and David Hutchcroft
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Science & Technology ,02 Physical Sciences ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Root (chord) ,01 natural sciences ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Physics, Particles & Fields ,Nuclear physics ,Cross section (physics) ,Pair production ,0103 physical sciences ,Physical Sciences ,lcsh:QC770-798 ,lcsh:Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,010306 general physics ,01 Mathematical Sciences - Published
- 2017
91. Behavioral and Psychological Phenotyping of Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior: Implications for Weight Management
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Mary Evans, Leonard H. Epstein, Christine M. Hunter, Susan Z. Yanovski, John M. Jakicic, and Angela D. Bryan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Response to intervention ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Psychological intervention ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030229 sport sciences ,Sedentary behavior ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Weight management ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Risk factor ,Psychology ,Psychosocial ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objective Risk for obesity is determined by a complex mix of genetics and lifetime exposures at multiple levels, from the metabolic milieu to psychosocial and environmental influences. These phenotypic differences underlie the variability in risk for obesity and response to weight management interventions, including differences in physical activity and sedentary behavior. Methods As part of a broader effort focused on behavioral and psychological phenotyping in obesity research, the National Institutes of Health convened a multidisciplinary workshop to explore the state of the science in behavioral and psychological phenotyping in humans to explain individual differences in physical activity, both as a risk factor for obesity development and in response to activity-enhancing interventions. Results Understanding the behavioral and psychological phenotypes that contribute to differences in physical activity and sedentary behavior could allow for improved treatment matching and inform new targets for tailored, innovative, and effective weight management interventions. Conclusions This summary provides the rationale for identifying psychological and behavioral phenotypes relevant to physical activity and identifies opportunities for future research to better understand, define, measure, and validate putative phenotypic factors and characterize emerging phenotypes that are empirically associated with initiation of physical activity, response to intervention, and sustained changes in physical activity.
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- 2017
92. Crime, Laws, and Legalization: Perceptions of Colorado Marijuana Dispensary Owners and Managers
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Kyle C. Ward, Brian Iannacchione, Andrew J. Thompson, and Mary Evans
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Marijuana legalization ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Public administration ,Dispensary ,State (polity) ,Political science ,Law ,Perception ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Federalism ,0509 other social sciences ,Recreation ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Legalization ,media_common - Abstract
The legalization of recreational marijuana in Colorado has complicated the relationships between local, state, and federal governments. Such challenges have trickled down to proprietors, managers, and employees within the new billion-dollar industry. Dispensary owners and managers often must navigate the implementation of new laws and policies in how they operate their business. The current study surveyed marijuana dispensaries across Colorado to explore owners’ and managers’ perceptions of operating their business while considering federal banking laws and concerns with state laws conflicting with federal laws, particularly in context of the 2016 presidential election.
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- 2017
93. Observation of ηc(2S)→pp¯ and search for X(3872)→pp¯ decays
- Author
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Marcello Rotondo, Christopher Burr, C. Sanchez Mayordomo, Minh Tâm Tran, Federico Alessio, Katharina Kreplin, Pavol Stefko, S. Tolk, Axel Kevin Kuonen, Eduardo Rodrigues, Lorenzo Capriotti, G. Auriemma, A. Vallier, Stephane Tourneur, N. Hussain, Ulrich Eitschberger, Violetta Cogoni, E. Grauges, S. Stracka, Andrea Contu, Roberta Cardinale, S. Hall, Roland Waldi, Robert Appleby, Timofei Maltsev, W. Bonivento, Giovanni Veneziano, Ch. Elsasser, Luca Pescatore, Wander Baldini, Victor Renaudin, P. Alvarez Cartelle, A. Pritchard, Sandra Amato, K. Belous, Jolanta Brodzicka, Alex Birnkraut, A. Schopper, Mick Mulder, Egor Khairullin, S. C. Haines, Domenico Galli, Darya Savrina, I. A. Monroy, Laurent Dufour, Nicola Neri, M. Tobin, A. Di Canto, Xuesong Liu, M. Ramos Pernas, Alessandro Petrolini, F. Blanc, Niels Tuning, Chitsanu Khurewathanakul, Sergii Kandybei, Cheryl Pappenheimer, Y. H. Zheng, Jakub Moron, Mark Hatch, Sebastian Neubert, C. M. Costa Sobral, R. Silva Coutinho, Katharina Müller, Nicolas Déléage, Ronan Wallace, Yang Gao, M. Vieites Diaz, Lucio Anderlini, Michael Kolpin, R. Mountain, G. Collazuol, Pietro Marino, G. Wormser, J. Dalseno, F. Martinez Vidal, Tjeerd Ketel, Vitaly Vorobyev, J. Garra Tico, F. Ferreira Rodrigues, Carla Göbel, A. A. Alves, David Gascon, P. Vazquez Regueiro, B. Liu, C. J. G. Onderwater, Maxime Vernet, Giulia Tellarini, J. Molina Rodriguez, Oleg Maev, S. A. Wotton, Silvia Borghi, Pavel Krokovny, Alexandru Grecu, Xiao-Rui Lyu, Hannah Mary Evans, William Barter, Jaap Velthuis, M. N. Minard, Elie Aslanides, Dianne Ferguson, Giovanni Punzi, Mohamad Kozeiha, Heinrich Schindler, Jacques Lefrançois, Xavier Vilasis-Cardona, Marek Sirendi, Thomas Nikodem, C. Bozzi, Svende Braun, Nikolay Bondar, Michael Sokoloff, Andreas Jaeger, Marie Helene Schune, S. Wright, Maximilian Schlupp, Alessandro Mordà, B. Hamilton, U. Straumann, Elena Graverini, Olivier Deschamps, Konstantin Schubert, J. J. Walsh, A. Jawahery, Jie Yu, Daniel Johnson, Markus Frank, Karlis Dreimanis, M. Gandelman, Jonas Rademacker, Tobias Tekampe, Stephen M. Stahl, A. Merli, Georgios Chatzikonstantinidis, Ana Barbara Rodrigues, M. P. Williams, S. Gianì, Marco Cattaneo, Daniel Patrick O'Hanlon, Stephen Ogilvy, Federico Stagni, Kevin Maguire, Antonio Falabella, J. D. Price, Alexey Dzyuba, B. Schmidt, A. Lai, R. Nandakumar, C. Remon Alepuz, F. Betti, Dean Charles Forshaw, Jean François Marchand, L. Del Buono, Lev Shekhtman, Agnieszka Dziurda, Giulio Gazzoni, Sebastien Valat, Eluned Smith, Max Neuner, E. Ben-Haim, Maxime Schubiger, K. Trabelsi, Luciano Pappalardo, P. Spradlin, Andrea Mauri, Stefano Perazzini, Maulik R. Patel, Dmitry Golubkov, Samuel Coquereau, Mikhail Zavertyaev, Blake Leverington, O. Steinkamp, Jose Lopes, Christoph Hombach, O. De Aguiar Francisco, L. Sun, Andrey Ustyuzhanin, A. Dosil Suárez, Sajan Easo, Guido Andreassi, David Ward, Murdo Traill, Agnieszka Oblakowska-Mucha, Bernardo Adeva, S. Filippov, Ignacio Bediaga, Timothy Gershon, Niko Neufeld, G. Manca, Marek Szczekowski, Florin Maciuc, Evelina Gersabeck, Marta Calvi, A. Carbone, Mark Richard James Williams, L. Beaucourt, Donatella Lucchesi, Nicola Skidmore, Claudio Gotti, Thomas Blake, Christoph Frei, Rainer Schwemmer, Lorenzo Sestini, L. Cassina, E. Tournefier, Biplab Dey, Marek Idzik, P. Ruiz Valls, Thomas Hadavizadeh, T. Skwarnicki, Christian Linn, Mauro Morandin, Pieter David, Srikanth Sridharan, J. Marks, Victor Coco, Irina Nasteva, J. McCarthy, M. Kreps, Simon Nieswand, Valery Zhukov, Themistocles Bowcock, Matthew Charles, Mika Vesterinen, M. De Cian, U. Uwer, Mihai Straticiuc, Yang Li, Miroslaw Firlej, Piotr Morawski, Alexey Novoselov, Stephanie Hansmann-Menzemer, Kenneth Wyllie, M. van Beuzekom, Elena Dall'Occo, Paolo Carniti, Stefano Gallorini, A. Puig Navarro, D. Campora Perez, A. Massafferri, D. Fazzini, Sevda Esen, Ulrik Egede, A. B. Morris, E. G. Thomas, David Gerick, R. F. Koopman, A. Palano, Tomasz Szumlak, Stephane T'Jampens, Giacomo Graziani, Giovanni Carboni, Zhenwei Yang, Alexander Berezhnoy, Christopher Jones, Mirco Dorigo, Andreas Weiden, Evgeny Gushchin, A. Romero Vidal, Marina Artuso, Nicoletta Belloli, Renato Quagliani, Francesco Bossu, J. Serrano, J. A. de Vries, Kevin Dungs, Timothy Head, Marco Clemencic, D. Tonelli, C. Potterat, C. Marin Benito, Julien Cogan, Roger Forty, Marc-Olivier Bettler, J. P. Lees, Dmytro Melnychuk, R. Oldeman, C. Nguyen-Mau, R. Calabrese, Simon Stemmle, Alessandro Pistone, Simon Akar, D. Decamp, Vincenzo Vagnoni, F. J. P. Soler, Marco Santimaria, Mariana Rihl, B. Souza De Paula, X. Cid Vidal, U. Marconi, G. Martellotti, Robert Ekelhof, Joel Closier, Roger Barlow, Conor Fitzpatrick, Antonino Sergi, T. Boettcher, Gabriele Simi, S. Ali, Lluis Garrido, Suzanne Klaver, B. Langhans, C. Satriano, R. Lefèvre, Florian Kruse, O. Grünberg, M. Veltri, P. Campana, C. Matteuzzi, Paolo Durante, S. Playfer, Robert Currie, C. Santamarina Rios, O. Schneider, B. R. Gruberg Cazon, Thibaud Humair, David Hutchcroft, M. Cruz Torres, Davide Pinci, Alexey Zhelezov, E. Bowen, George Lafferty, Kurt Rinnert, S. Gambetta, Krzysztof Swientek, Varvara Batozskaya, James Mwangi Kariuki, Klaus Fohl, David Loh, Andrey Golutvin, Adam Davis, Lucia Grillo, Albert Bursche, Z. Mathe, Federica Lionetto, Pierre Billoir, S. Ely, Matthias Karacson, Olivier Göran Girard, Julian Wishahi, Olivier Leroy, Frank Meier, C. Thomas, W. Kanso, A. Bay, Carmelo D'Ambrosio, Francesco Polci, Brian Meadows, Jean Wicht, R. Vazquez Gomez, Eddy Jans, Alison Tully, Massimiliano Fiorini, D. Souza, D. Lambert, J. Jalocha, Giulio Dujany, Gaia Lanfranchi, William Sutcliffe, G. A. Cowan, Andrew Cook, A. Shires, Roland Bernet, E. Picatoste Olloqui, Sneha Malde, Pierre Henrard, J. R. Smith, Valery Pugatch, S. Schael, Christian Voß, Karol Hennessy, Ramon Niet, Simone Bifani, J. L. Fu, R. Dzhelyadin, Andrei Tsaregorodtsev, J. E. Andrews, Alessia Satta, R. McNulty, Laurence Carson, Nathan Jurik, Guy Wilkinson, T. Lesiak, Timon Schmelzer, J. Buytaert, Alexey Badalov, Beat Jost, S. Karodia, Guido Haefeli, Leonid Kravchuk, J. Panman, Biagio Saitta, Sabin Stoica, S. Richards, R. Cenci, J. A. Rodriguez Lopez, Konstantin Gizdov, Frederic Machefert, Sheldon Stone, Ph. Ghez, R. Santacesaria, E. Cogneras, Z. Xing, Nigel Watson, Ivan Belyaev, Anatoliy Dovbnya, Kenneth Wraight, Tatiana Likhomanenko, Hang Yin, Illya Shapoval, J. van Leerdam, G. Raven, Emanuele Santovetti, Alexander Bondar, A. Zhokhov, Yanxi Zhang, Florian Lemaitre, Rosen Matev, Yu. Guz, M. Plo Casasus, Louis Henry, L. Cojocariu, Vincenzo Battista, D. Voong, Claudia Vacca, A. Pellegrino, F. Palombo, Tomasz Fiutowski, M. Grabalosa Gándara, Federico Redi, P. Owen, C. Vázquez Sierra, Mariusz Witek, P. Collins, Vladimir Romanovskiy, Slavomira Stefkova, P. M. Manning, Hans Dijkstra, A. Artamonov, V. Bocci, Ch. Cauet, Maximilien Chefdeville, Patrick Koppenburg, Lei Zhang, Matthieu Kecke, F. Archilli, Maxim Borisyak, V. Salustino Guimaraes, R. Lindner, Christoph Langenbruch, Marcin Kucharczyk, K. Carvalho Akiba, Naylya Sagidova, A. Rogozhnikov, Jing Wang, M. Boubdir, T. Bird, P. De Simone, Christos Hadjivasiliou, G. Bencivenni, Elnur Sadykhov, R. Le Gac, V. Franco Lima, Patrick Robbe, Wouter Hulsbergen, Alessandro Cardini, Alexey Vorobyev, Gloria Corti, J. M. De Miranda, Marco Meissner, Tara Shears, Artur Ukleja, S. Benson, Sai-Juan Chen, J. van Tilburg, E. Price, Iurii Raniuk, A. D. Nguyen, L. Silva de Oliveira, B. Sanmartin Sedes, Eleonora Luppi, Adalberto Sciubba, T. Kirn, V.G. Shevchenko, M. Pepe Altarelli, Anton Poluektov, Jonathan Harrison, Dominik Stefan Mitzel, Preema Rennee Pais, Marco Gersabeck, S. Ricciardi, Marco Adinolfi, Haiyun Luo, Jessica Prisciandaro, Philip Ilten, Murilo Rangel, Anita Nandi, Alexander Leflat, Iwan Thomas Smith, C. Färber, Panagiotis Tsopelas, R. Graciani Diaz, Alex Pearce, T. Britton, I. V. Gorelov, Dominik Müller, Tuomas Poikela, Valerie Gibson, Franz Muheim, V. Fernandez Albor, Anastasiia Kozachuk, A. Comerma-Montells, Morgan Martin, Benedetto Gianluca Siddi, Michael McCann, Nicola Serra, Iain Longstaff, O. Yushchenko, Stefania Vecchi, R. Fay, Stefan Roiser, B. Spaan, A. Otto, Lavinia-Helena Giubega, S. T. Harnew, Barbara Sciascia, J. Benton, L. M. Massacrier, G. D. Patel, Christian Joram, Scott Stevenson, Gianni Penso, J. Arnau Romeu, Frederic Teubert, Claire Prouve, Neville Harnew, Shu-Faye Cheung, Matthew Scott Rudolph, E. Lemos Cid, Bartolomiej Rachwal, J. García Pardiñas, Richard Jacobsson, Emanuele Michielin, Moritz Demmer, Kristian Alexander Zarebski, J. Beddow, Michael Alexander, Denis Derkach, Alessio Sarti, Johannes Albrecht, Emiliano Furfaro, Manuel Mussini, Alexander Malinin, Miriam Heß, J. He, Vasileios Syropoulos, C. Gaspar, Malcolm John, M. van Veghel, J. A. Hernando Morata, Marco Corvo, Adlène Hicheur, A. Borgheresi, H. L. Snoek, Matthew Kelsey, Benjamin Couturier, Flavio Fontanelli, Emma Buchanan, Igor Babuschkin, F. Bedeschi, Francis Toriello, Yury Shcheglov, Marco Petruzzo, Roel Aaij, Alexander D. Popov, Cameron Thomas Dean, M. Ferro-Luzzi, Sebastian Bachmann, Violaine Bellee, Clarissa Baesso, Stig Topp-Joergensen, Alessio Piucci, Anna Lupato, J. Wimberley, Benoit Viaud, Alexander Mazurov, Yuehong Xie, Dmitry Popov, G. Passaleva, Vladimir Volkov, V. Obraztsov, Yasmine Amhis, Alberto Lusiani, Gabriela Johanna Pomery, Matthew Kenzie, K. Petridis, D. Martinez Santos, Alexey A. Petrov, M. Lucio Martinez, Stephan Eisenhardt, Marian Stahl, Peter Griffith, I. R. Kenyon, Christophe Haen, Janine Müller, Ilya Komarov, Heather Mckenzie Wark, Laura Gavardi, Ivan Polyakov, M. Zangoli, Stefanie Reichert, A. Vollhardt, A. Bitadze, Marcin Chrzaszcz, Fergus Wilson, Marouen Baalouch, T. Ruf, S. Monteil, Michael Joseph Morello, E. van Herwijnen, Mark Whitehead, Krzysztof Kurek, Semen Eidelman, Manuel Schiller, Oliver Lupton, M. Shapkin, Arno Heister, Victor Egorychev, Philip John Garsed, Giampiero Mancinelli, S. Cunliffe, Paul Seyfert, Vladimir Gligorov, D. Martins Tostes, Tengiz Kvaratskheliya, Antonios Papanestis, Daniel Vieira, A. Gallas Torreira, Wojciech Wislicki, Xuhao Yuan, Mike J. Wilkinson, Konrad Klimaszewski, V. Rives Molina, L. De Paula, Baasansuren Batsukh, Timothy Williams, Liupan An, Marianna Fontana, A. Gomes, Balazs Voneki, L. A. Granado Cardoso, Markward Britsch, Marco Tresch, Peter Clarke, Marco Fiore, Matthew Needham, Giovanni Cavallero, Luca Tomassetti, Andrey Tayduganov, Stefano Zucchelli, Malgorzata Pikies, S. Blusk, Ph. Charpentier, W. Qian, Donal Hill, Gregory Ciezarek, J. Blouw, Giovanni Valenti, Andrea Bizzeti, K. De Bruyn, Michael Schmelling, Xiaoxue Han, B. Khanji, Abhijit Mathad, Francesco Dettori, Pascal Perret, S. Amerio, N. Farley, Serhii Koliiev, Mirko Deckenhoff, M. Pappagallo, Daniel Martin Saunders, Mark Smith, William Parker, Zhirui Xu, Daniel Lacarrere, Timothy Evans, Paolo Gandini, Vasily Kudryavtsev, Thomas Latham, C. Patrignani, V. Tisserand, S. Farry, Gianluigi Casse, Alexander Semennikov, Oleg Stenyakin, M. Andreotti, O. Aquines Gutierrez, Sergey Barsuk, François Fleuret, A. Oyanguren, L. Castillo Garcia, Alessandro Bertolin, J. M. Otalora Goicochea, Charlotte Wallace, Martino Borsato, B. Pietrzyk, Tatsuya Nakada, Marcel Merk, David Websdale, Aravindhan Venkateswaran, Matteo Rama, Andrew Crocombe, Veronika Chobanova, Erica Polycarpo, John William Ronayne, D. A. Milanes, J. J. Saborido Silva, Thierry Gys, P. Rodriguez Perez, Lars Eklund, Vanessa Müller, Ziad Ajaltouni, Colin Barschel, Andrew McNab, Bogdan Popovici, Margarete Schellenberg, Barbara Storaci, Wojciech Krzemien, Maurizio Martinelli, S. Cadeddu, Francesca Dordei, Matteo Palutan, S. De Capua, Nikolay Nikitin, Philippe d'Argent, Ana Trisovic, Jan Maratas, A. C. dos Reis, Paras Naik, M. Winn, Lennaert Bel, G. Alkhazov, Mikhail Hushchyn, M. Calvo Gomez, Daniel Charles Craik, C. Parkes, Cristina Lazzeroni, Fabio Ferrari, Wojciech Kucewicz, Brice Maurin, John Back, and Harry Cliff
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,0103 physical sciences ,Analytical chemistry ,Intermediate state ,Atomic physics ,010306 general physics ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,X(3872) - Abstract
The first observation of the decay ηc(2S)→pp¯ is reported using proton-proton collision data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0fb−1 recorded by the LHCb experiment at centre-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV. The ηc(2S) resonance is produced in the decay B+→[cc¯]K+. The product of branching fractions normalised to that for the J/ψ intermediate state, Rηc(2S), is measured to be Rηc(2S)≡B(B+→ηc(2S)K+)×B(ηc(2S)→pp¯)B(B+→J/ψK+)×B(J/ψ→pp¯)= (1.58±0.33±0.09)×10−2, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic. No signals for the decays B+→X(3872)(→pp¯)K+ and B+→ψ(3770)(→pp¯)K+ are seen, and the 95\% confidence level upper limits on their relative branching ratios are % found to be RX(3872)
- Published
- 2017
94. Student Perceptions of a Required Information Literacy Course on Their Success in Research & Writing Intensive Criminal Justice Courses
- Author
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Brian Iannacchione, Mary Evans, and Lyda McCartin
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Student perceptions ,Medical education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Information literacy ,05 social sciences ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,050801 communication & media studies ,Library and Information Sciences ,Literacy ,Education ,Course (navigation) ,Presentation ,0508 media and communications ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETY ,Research writing ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,Psychology ,Curriculum ,media_common ,Criminal justice - Abstract
Scholars in Criminal Justice have argued that students should have a stand-alone course that focuses on fostering library literacy skills for Criminal Justice students in order to improve their writing, research, and presentation skills. In 2011, a required information literacy course was implemented in one Criminal Justice program to meet this need. Building on the existing literature, the current study is the first to explore student perceptions of a required information literacy course. The results offer valuable information on how to strengthen the course moving forward and can provide useful suggestions to other Criminal Justice programs thinking about instituting a library literacy course in their curriculum.
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- 2017
95. The sediment stratigraphy of a flood event: An example from the Sabie River, South Africa
- Author
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Jasper Knight and Mary Evans
- Subjects
Hydrology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Flood myth ,Floodplain ,Fluvial ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Geologic record ,01 natural sciences ,Stratigraphy ,Aggradation ,Period (geology) ,Sedimentary rock ,Physical geography ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The geomorphic effects of river floods in various climatic settings worldwide have been extensively described, but there is little information on sedimentary processes during and immediately following flood peaks. Here we reconstruct sedimentary processes and patterns of the 2012 flood on the Sabie River in Kruger National Park, South Africa, from the preserved geomorphic and sedimentary signature of this event. Based on a combination of geomorphic and sedimentary evidence, the maximal and waning flow stages of the flood event are identified, shown by cut and fill and fining up sequences within aggradational bars, and organic horizons, which may be buried, that correspond to the period of flood peak recession. The presence of organic horizons suggests a strongly seasonal flow regime typical of semi-arid South African rivers. It also provides an exemplar of a flood event stratigraphy that is usually poorly preserved in the geologic record.
- Published
- 2017
96. An Examination of the Relationship Between Height and Delinquency
- Author
-
Mary Evans, Amy L. Anderson, and Pete Simi
- Subjects
Aggression ,fungi ,Social change ,medicine ,Juvenile delinquency ,food and beverages ,medicine.symptom ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Affect (psychology) ,Psychology ,Law ,Applied Psychology ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Purpose Height has been shown to influence social development, which can affect life outcomes such as involvement in delinquent behaviors. Previous studies have linked height to aggression but have not examined other delinquent behaviors. The current study examines multiple ways that height can affect violence, property offending, and alcohol use.
- Published
- 2017
97. Accuracy of Self-Reported Weight Among Adolescent and Young Adults Following Bariatric Surgery
- Author
-
Todd M. Jenkins, Tawny W. Boyce, Thomas H. Inge, C. Ralph Buncher, Mary Evans, Anita P. Courcoulas, and Meg H. Zeller
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Treatment outcome ,Bariatric Surgery ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Self reported weight ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Weight loss ,Weight Loss ,Humans ,Medicine ,Mass index ,Postoperative Period ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,Self report ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Mean age ,United States ,Obesity, Morbid ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Adolescent Health Services ,Female ,Median body ,Self Report ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
This study evaluates accuracy of self-reported weight in adolescent bariatric surgery patients. During follow-up visits, participants self-reported weight and had weight measured. The differences between self-reported and measured weights were analyzed from 60 participants. Participants were 70% (n = 42) female, 72% (n = 43) white, mean age of 20.8 years and a median body mass index of 36.6 kg/m2. At an average of 3.5 years following surgery, females underestimated weight (0.5 kg, range: −18.7 to 5.6 kg), while males overestimated (1.1 kg, range: −7.8 to 15.2 kg). Most (80%, n = 48) reported within 5 kg of measured weight. The majority of adolescents who previously underwent bariatric surgery reported reasonably accurate weights, but direction of misreporting varied by gender. Self-reported weights could be utilized when measured values are unavailable without markedly biasing the interpretation of outcomes.
- Published
- 2016
98. Becoming Beauvoir: a life
- Author
-
Mary Evans
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,History ,Work (electrical) ,Art history ,Cover (algebra) - Abstract
The inside cover notes for this new account of the work of Simone de Beauvoir include the remark from Kate Kirkpatrick that ‘(Beauvoir) wondered if she had sold herself short’. I am not quite sure ...
- Published
- 2019
99. Feminist theory
- Author
-
Mary Evans
- Published
- 2019
100. Five-Year Outcomes of Gastric Bypass in Adolescents as Compared with Adults
- Author
-
Mary L. Brandt, Michael A. Helmrath, Todd M. Jenkins, Anita P. Courcoulas, Carroll M. Harmon, Thomas H. Inge, Stavra A. Xanthakos, John Dixon, Changchun Xie, Marc P. Michalsky, Mary Evans, and Mike K. Chen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Gastric bypass ,MEDLINE ,Gastric Bypass ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Body Mass Index ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Weight loss ,Diabetes mellitus ,Weight Loss ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Poisson Distribution ,Young adult ,Vitamin D ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,business.industry ,Remission Induction ,Age Factors ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Surgery ,Obesity, Morbid ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Ferritins ,Hypertension ,Linear Models ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Cohort study - Abstract
Bariatric surgery results in weight loss and health improvements in adults and adolescents. However, whether outcomes differ according to the age of the patient at the time of surgery is unclear.We evaluated the health effects of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass in a cohort of adolescents (161 patients enrolled from 2006 through 2012) and a cohort of adults (396 patients enrolled from 2006 through 2009). The two cohorts were participants in two related but independent studies. Linear mixed and Poisson mixed models were used to compare outcomes with regard to weight and coexisting conditions between the cohorts 5 years after surgery. The rates of death and subsequent abdominal operations and selected micronutrient levels (up to 2 years after surgery) were also compared between the cohorts.There was no significant difference in percent weight change between adolescents (-26%; 95% confidence interval [CI], -29 to -23) and adults (-29%; 95% CI, -31 to -27) 5 years after surgery (P = 0.08). After surgery, adolescents were significantly more likely than adults to have remission of type 2 diabetes (86% vs. 53%; risk ratio, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.03 to 1.57) and of hypertension (68% vs. 41%; risk ratio, 1.51; 95% CI, 1.21 to 1.88). Three adolescents (1.9%) and seven adults (1.8%) died in the 5 years after surgery. The rate of abdominal reoperations was significantly higher among adolescents than among adults (19 vs. 10 reoperations per 500 person-years, P = 0.003). More adolescents than adults had low ferritin levels (72 of 132 patients [48%] vs. 54 of 179 patients [29%], P = 0.004).Adolescents and adults who underwent gastric bypass had marked weight loss that was similar in magnitude 5 years after surgery. Adolescents had remission of diabetes and hypertension more often than adults. (Funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00474318.).
- Published
- 2019
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