9 results on '"Emily France"'
Search Results
2. Daughter Dalloway : A Brilliant Spin-off of the Virginia Woolf Classic
- Author
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Emily France and Emily France
- Subjects
- Romance fiction, Historical fiction, Novels, Fiction, History, Mrs. Dalloway (Woolf, Virginia), Mothers and daughters--Fiction, Missing persons--Fiction
- Abstract
Perfect for fans of Marie Benedict and Renée Rosen, Daughter Dalloway is both an homage to the Virginia Woolf classic and a brilliant spin-off—the empowering, rebellious coming-of-age story of Mrs. Dalloway's only child, Elizabeth.London, 1952: Forty-six-year-old Elizabeth Dalloway feels she has failed at most everything in life, especially living up to her mother, the elegant Mrs. Dalloway, an ideal socialite and model of perfection until she disappeared in the summer of 1923—and hasn't been heard from since.When Elizabeth is handed a medal with a mysterious inscription from her mother to a soldier named Septimus Warren Smith, she's certain it contains a clue from the past. As she sets out, determined to deliver the medal to its rightful owner, Elizabeth begins to piece together memories of that fateful summer.London, 1923: At seventeen, Elizabeth carouses with the Prince of Wales and sons of American iron barons and decides to join the Bright Young People—a group of bohemians whose antics often land in the tabloids. She is a girl who rebels against the staid social rules of the time, a girl determined to do it all differently than her mother. A girl who doesn't yet feel like a failure.That summer, Octavia Smith braves the journey from the countryside to London, determined to track down her older brother Septimus who returned from the war but never came home. She falls in with a group of clever city boys who have learned to survive on the streets. When one starts to steal her heart, she must discover whether he is a friend or foe—and whether she can make it in the city on her own.Elizabeth and Octavia are destined to cross paths, and when they do, the truths they unearth will shatter their understanding of the people they love most.
- Published
- 2023
3. Zen and Gone
- Author
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Emily France and Emily France
- Subjects
- Wilderness areas--Fiction, Dating (Social customs)--Fiction, Mothers and daughters--Fiction, Sisters--Fiction, Dysfunctional families--Fiction, Missing children--Fiction, Marijuana--Fiction, Zen Buddhism--Fiction
- Abstract
With another aching deep dive into human spirituality, Emily France mines her home state of Colorado in a novel of a teen girl's harrowing search for her missing younger sister—and her own search for self. Born and raised in Boulder, Colorado, Essence McKree feels older than any seventeen-year-old she knows. Ever since weed was legalized, her mother has been working in a pot shop, high more often than not. Lately it's been up to Essa to care for her nine-year-old sister, Puck. When Essa meets Oliver—a brainy indoor type who's in town for the summer—she is cautious at first, distrustful of the tourist crowd and suspicious of Oliver's mysterious past in Chicago. But Puck is charmed and pushes Essa toward him. Soon Essa finds herself showing Oliver the Boulder she has forgotten: the mountain parties, the long hikes... and at Oliver's urging, the exploration of Buddhism at the local zendo. When Oliver agrees to accompany Essa on a three-day survival game in the Rocky Mountains, she feels a lightness she hasn't known in a long time. Then she discovers that Puck has stowed away and followed them into the wilderness. After spending a night stuck in a mountain storm, Essa wakes to find Puck missing. Now Essa must rely on her newfound spiritual strength if she is to save her sister's life, and ultimately her own.
- Published
- 2018
4. Developing time-effective ways of introducing person-centred planning into mainstream schools
- Author
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Emily France and Sam Houlson
- Published
- 2015
5. Using digital assessment technology to detect neuropsychological problems in primary care settings
- Author
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David J. Libon, Emily Frances Matusz, Stephanie Cosentino, Catherine C. Price, Rod Swenson, Meagan Vermeulen, Terrie Beth Ginsberg, Adaora Obiageli Okoli-Umeweni, Leonard Powell, Robert Nagele, Sean Tobyne, Joyce Rios Gomes-Osman, and Alvaro Pascual-Leone
- Subjects
clock drawing ,executive control ,episodic memory ,mild cognitive impairment ,Alzheimer’s disease ,Mini-Cog ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
IntroductionScreening for neurocognitive impairment and psychological distress in ambulatory primary and specialty care medical settings is an increasing necessity. The Core Cognitive Evaluation™ (CCE) is administered/scored using an iPad, requires approximately 8 min, assesses 3- word free recall and clock drawing to command and copy, asks questions about lifestyle and health, and queries for psychological distress. This information is linked with patients’ self- reported concerns about memory and their cardiovascular risks.MethodsA total of 199 ambulatory patients were screened with the CCE as part of their routine medical care. The CCE provides several summary indices, and scores on 44 individual digital clock variables across command and copy tests conditions.ResultsSubjective memory concerns were endorsed by 41% of participants. Approximately 31% of participants reported psychological distress involving loneliness, anxiety, or depression. Patients with self-reported memory concerns scored lower on a combined delay 3- word/ clock drawing index (p < 0.016), the total summary clock drawing command/ copy score (p < 0.050), and clock drawing to command Drawing Efficiency (p < 0.036) and Simple and Complex Motor (p < 0.029) indices. Patients treated for diabetes and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) scored lower on selected CCE outcome measures (p < 0.035). Factor analyses suggest that approximately 10 underlying variables can explain digital clock drawing performance.DiscussionThe CCE is a powerful neurocognitive assessment tool that is sensitive to patient’s subjective concerns about possible decline in memory, mood symptoms, possible cognitive impairment, and cardiovascular risk. iPad administration ensures total reliability for test administration and scoring. The CCE is easily deployable in outpatient ambulatory primary care settings.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Signs of You
- Author
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Emily France and Emily France
- Subjects
- Self-help groups--Fiction, Grief--Fiction, Relics--Fiction, Supernatural--Fiction, Future life--Fiction, Love--Fiction, JUVENILE FICTION / Love & Romance, JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Death & Dying
- Abstract
Ever since Riley Strout lost her mother two years ago, her survival has depended on her other family: the quirky kids she met in a grief support group at school. Jay, Kate, and Noah are the only people who understand her pain; each lost a loved one. When Riley sees her dead mother shopping in a grocery store, she fears post-traumatic stress—until Jay and Kate report similar visions. Noah, having seen nothing, withdraws. Soon he disappears, and Riley fears the worst. But the frantic search for him unexpectedly draws Riley and the other two into a mystery surrounding a centuries-old relic and the clues it might offer about the afterlife. By reaching for the ones who are gone, Riley uncovers hidden truths about those she hasn't yet lost.
- Published
- 2016
7. The relative influence of surgical disease and co-morbidities on patient responses to a generic health-related quality-of-life instrument
- Author
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Emily France and Vic Velanovich
- Subjects
Health related quality of life ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Health Status ,General Medicine ,Disease ,Comorbidity ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Mann–Whitney U test ,Physical therapy ,Quality of Life ,Medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Co morbidity ,Female ,Postoperative Period ,business ,Surgical interventions - Abstract
Generic health-related quality-of-life (QoL) instruments are increasingly used to assess the outcomes of surgical interventions. However, it is unclear to what extent the patient's associated comorbidities have on the responsiveness of these instruments to measure changes caused by the operation. The purpose of this study was to assess the relative influence of comorbidities to surgical disease in how patients answered the items of the most frequently used generic instrument, the SF-36. Sixty-nine preoperative patients completed the SF-36, which contains 36 items covering eight domains and a health transition question. For each of the 36 items, patients were asked to rate the influence of their surgical disease and their comorbidities on how they answered the items from 1 to 10. The surgical disease, comorbidities, and medications were recorded. Data was analyzed using the Mann-Whitney U test and linear regression analysis. Of the 36 items of the SF-36, patients reported that their surgical disease influences nine items greater than their comorbidities (P < 0.05). Using linear regression analysis, the number of comorbidities did not effect the influence of the surgical disease in any item; however, this number had a direct relationship (P < 0.05) with the influence of comorbidities on how the patient answered the item. However, the magnitude of the influence was low. There was an inverse (negative slope, P < 0.05) relationship between the number of comorbidities and the score of six of eight domains. Although the surgical disease has more of an influence on how patients answered the items of the SF-36, as the number of comorbidities increased, these seem to have more influence. Therefore, the SF-36 would be a good choice for assessing QoL in most surgical disease. However, as the overall magnitude of this influence was low, this may be a cause of the lack of responsiveness of generic QoL instruments in measuring the effect of operations on QoL. Importantly, as the number of comorbidities increased, the scores of the SF-36 decreased, implying that the effect of the surgical disease would be greater in patients with fewer comorbidities.
- Published
- 2009
8. 4141 Molecular Signatures of Cocaine Toxicity in Postmortem Human Brain and Neurons
- Author
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Emily Frances Mendez, Laura Stertz, Gabriel Fries, Ruifeng Hu, Thomas Meyer, Zhongming Zhao, and Consuelo Walss-Bass
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: The goal of this project is to identify new therapeutic targets and biomarkers to treat or prevent cocaine toxicity by investigating proteomic, transcriptomic and epigenetic signatures of cocaine exposure in human subjects. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Cocaine is a highly addictive neurotoxic substance, and it is estimated that 1.9 million Americans are current users of cocaine. To study the molecular effects of cocaine, we generated preliminary proteomics and next-generation RNA sequencing (RNAseq) data from human postmortem dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (Broadmann area 9 or BA9) of 12 cocaine-exposed subjects and 17 controls. Future directions for this project include RNAseq and DNA methylation analysis of neuronal nuclei sorted from human postmortem BA9 and a human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neuron (hiPSN) model of cocaine exposure from the same postmortem subjects from whom we have brain samples. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We found alterations in neuronal synaptic protein levels and gene expression, including the serotonin transporter SLC6A4, and synaptic proteins SNAP25, SYN2, SYNGR3. Pathway analysis of our results revealed alterations in specific pathways involved with neuronal function including voltage-gated calcium channels, and GABA receptor signaling. In the future, we expect to see an enhancement in neuron-specific gene expression signatures in our sorted neuronal nuclei and our hiPSN model of cocaine exposure. The hiPSN model will help elucidate which effects are due to acute versus chronic exposure of cocaine. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: Neuronal signatures found with this analysis can help us understand mechanisms of cognitive decline in long-term cocaine users as well as the acute effects on the brain of cocaine taken in overdose. With this work and future proposed studies, we can discover novel clinical biomarkers for cocaine neurotoxicity in patients with cocaine use disorder and determine readouts for future therapeutic development on cocaine addiction and overdose.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Neuronal dark matter: The emerging role of microRNAs in neurodegeneration
- Author
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Emily Frances Goodall, Paul Roy Heath, Oliver eBandmann, Janine eKirby, and Pamela Jean Shaw
- Subjects
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,microRNA ,Parkinson’s disease ,neurodegeneration ,Alzheimer’s disease ,Huntington’s disease ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, abundant RNA molecules that constitute part of the cell’s non-coding RNA dark matter. In recent years, the discovery of miRNAs has revolutionised the traditional view of gene expression and our understanding of miRNA biogenesis and function has expanded. Altered expression of miRNAs is increasingly recognised as a feature of many disease states, including neurodegeneration. Here, we review the emerging role for miRNA dysfunction in Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Huntington’s disease pathogenesis. We emphasise the complex nature of gene regulatory networks and the need for systematic studies, with larger sample cohorts than have so far been reported, to reveal the most important miRNA regulators in disease. Finally, miRNA diversity and their potential to target multiple pathways, offers novel clinical applications for miRNAs as biomarkers and therapeutic agents in neurodegenerative diseases.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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