1,329 results on '"Wilkinson, E"'
Search Results
2. Mapping the migrant diagnostic radiographers in the UK: A national survey
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Omiyi, D., Snaith, B., Iweka, E., and Wilkinson, E.
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- 2024
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3. What do the revised UK standards of proficiency mean for diagnostic radiography training? A regional radiographer focus group study
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Wilkinson, E., Gill, A., and Hardy, M.
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- 2024
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4. Radiographers' perceptions of first year diagnostic radiography students’ performance following implementation of a simulation-based education model
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Wilkinson, E. and Cadogan, E.
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- 2023
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5. Survey of clinical placements within pre-registration diagnostic radiography programmes in the UK and Ireland
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Wilkinson, E.
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- 2023
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6. A single-centre experience of implementing a rapid CXR reporting and CT access pathway for suspected lung cancer: Initial outcomes
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Hunter, R., Wilkinson, E., and Snaith, B.
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- 2022
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7. Did school characteristics affect the uptake of meningococcal quadrivalent vaccine in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom?
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Fletcher, R., Wilkinson, E., Cleary, P., Blagden, S., and Farmer, S.
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- 2019
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8. The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph: On-Orbit Instrument Performance
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Osterman, S., Green, J., Froning, C., Béland, S., Burgh, E., France, K., Penton, S., Delker, T., Ebbets, D., Sahnow, D., Bacinski, J., Kimble, R., Andrews, J., Wilkinson, E., McPhate, J., Siegmund, O., Ake, T., Aloisi, A., Biagetti, C., Diaz, R., Dixon, W., Friedman, S., Ghavamian, P., Goudfrooij, P., Hartig, G., Keyes, C., Lennon, D., Massa, D., Niemi, S., Oliveira, C., Osten, R., Proffitt, C., Smith, T., and Soderblom, D.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) was installed in the Hubble Space Telescope in May, 2009 as part of Servicing Mission 4 to provide high sensitivity, medium and low resolution spectroscopy at far- and near-ultraviolet wavelengths (FUV, NUV). COS is the most sensitive FUV/NUV spectrograph flown to date, spanning the wavelength range from 900{\AA} to 3200{\AA} with peak effective area approaching 3000 cm^2. This paper describes instrument design, the results of the Servicing Mission Orbital Verification (SMOV), and the ongoing performance monitoring program., Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Astrophysics and Space Science
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- 2010
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9. Putting children first? : tax and transfer policy and support for children in South Africa
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Wilkinson, E. K., Noble, M., and Evans, M.
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361 ,Poverty ,Evaluation of social policies,programmes and practice ,Families,children and childcare ,child poverty ,microsimulation ,South Africa - Abstract
This thesis considers the extent to which tax and transfer policies in South Africa support children between 2000 and 2008. The analyses are carried out using a four-dimensional analytical framework which separates the dimensions of welfare ideology, policy aims, policy instruments and welfare outcomes. This approach is adopted in recognition of the fact that the extent to which tax and transfer policies support children is seen to vary according to the dimension of analysis. The analysis of welfare ideology, policy aims and policy instruments is undertaken by considering key legislative texts, including the Bill of Rights in the South African Constitution, budget speeches and policy documents. Welfare outcomes are analysed at the individual and household level using microsimulation modelling. A microsimulation model for South Africa, SAMOD, is developed specifically for these analyses. The findings of this thesis add conceptual and empirical understanding to the impact of tax and transfer policies on children. Children are found to be supported by policy to some extent, and have been prioritised in reforms to social assistance. However, recent reforms to tax policy have not benefited children and the analyses indicate that child poverty rates in South Africa could be lower than they are at present had the government pursued alternative policy reforms. The construction of the microsimulation model SAMOD is a valuable tool to facilitate future policy evaluation in South Africa. Further development of SAMOD is recommended to continue to progress and enhance debates on policy reforms. In addition, this thesis highlights some key areas for future research including developing further understanding of the patterns of inter and intra-household income allocation and the impact that this may have on poverty measures for different groups.
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- 2010
10. The FUSE survey of OVI absorption in and near the Galaxy
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Wakker, B. P., Savage, B. D., Sembach, K. R., Richter, P., Meade, M., Jenkins, E. B., Shull, J. M., Ake, T. B., Blair, W. P., Friedman, S. D., Green, J. C., Green, R. F., Kruk, J. W., Moos, H. W., Murphy, E. M., Oegerle, W. R., Sahnow, D. J., Sonneborn, G., Wilkinson, E., and York, D. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present FUSE observations of OVI absorption in a sample of 100 extragalactic targets and 2 distant halo stars. We describe the details of the calibration, alignment in velocity, continuum fitting, and manner in which contaminants were removed (Galactic H2, absorption intrinsic to the background target and intergalactic Ly-beta lines). We searched for OVI absorption in the velocity range -1200 to 1200 km/s. With a few exceptions, we only find OVI between -400 and 400 km/s; the exceptions may be intergalactic OVI. We discuss the separation of the observed OVI absorption into components associated with the Galactic halo and components at high-velocity, which are probably located in the neighborhood of the Galaxy. We describe the measurements of equivalent width and column density, and we analyze the different contributions to the errors. We conclude that low-velocity Galactic OVI absorption occurs along all sightlines - the few non-detections only occur in noisy spectra. We further show that high-velocity OVI is very common, having equivalent width >65 mAA in 50% of the sightlines and >30 mAA in 70% of the high-quality sightlines. The high-velocity OVI absorption has velocities relative to the LSR of +/-(100--330) km/s; there is no correlation between velocity and absorption strength. We present 50 km/s wide OVI channel maps. These show evidence for the imprint of Galactic rotation. They also highlight two known HI high-velocity clouds (complex~C and the Magellanic Stream). The channel maps further show that OVI at velocities <-200 km/s occurs along all sightlines in the region l=20-150, b<-30, while OVI at velocities >200 km/s occurs along all sightlines in the region l=180-300, b>20 (abbreviated)., Comment: 85 pages, 127 figures, 13 color figures, 3 tables, AASTeX preprint format. All figures are in PNG format due to space concerns. Bound copies of manuscript and two accompanying articles are available upon request. submitted to ApJS
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- 2002
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11. Abundances of Deuterium, Oxygen, and Nitrogen in the Local Interstellar Medium: Overview of First Results from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer Mission
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Moos, H. W., Sembach, K. R., Vidal-Madjar, A., York, D. G., Friedman, S. D., Hebrard, G., Kruk, J. W., Lehner, N., Lemoine, M., Sonneborn, G., Wood, B. E., Ake, T. B., Andre, M., Blair, W. P., Chayer, P., Gry, C., Dupree, A. K., Ferlet, R., Feldman, P. D., Green, J. C., Howk, J. C., Hutchings, J. B., Jenkins, E. B., Linsky, J. L., Murphy, E. M., Oegerle, W. R., Oliveira, C., Roth, K., Sahnow, D. J., Savage, B. D., Shull, J. M., Tripp, T. M., Weiler, E. J., Welsh, B. Y., Wilkinson, E., and Woodgate, B. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations obtained with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) have been used to determine the column densities of D I, O I, and N I along seven sight lines that probe the local interstellar medium (LISM) at distances from 37 pc to 179 pc. Five of the sight lines are within the Local Bubble and two penetrate the surrounding H I wall. Reliable values of N(H I) were determined for five of the sight lines from HST data, IUE data, and published EUVE measurements. The weighted mean of D I/H I for these five sight lines is (1.52 +/- 0.08) x10-5 (1 sigma uncertainty in the mean). It is likely that the D I/H I ratio in the Local Bubble has a single value. The D I/O I ratio for the five sight lines within the Local Bubble is (3.76 +/- 0.20) x10-2. It is likely that the O I column densities can serve as a proxy for H I in the Local Bubble. The weighted mean for O I/H I for the seven FUSE sight lines is (3.03 +/-0.21) x10-4, comparable to the weighted mean (3.43 +/- 0.15) x10-4 reported for 13 sight lines probing larger distances and higher column densities (Meyer et al. 1998, Meyer 2001). The FUSE weighted mean of N I/H I for the five sight lines is half that reported by Meyer et al. (1997) for seven sight lines with larger distances and higher column densities. This result combined with the variability of O I/N I (six sight lines) indicates that at the low column densities found in the LISM, nitrogen ionization balance is important. Thus, unlike O I, N I cannot be used as a proxy for H I or as a metallicity indicator in the LISM. Subject Headings: cosmology: observations- ISM: abundances- ISM: evolution - Galaxy:abundances-Ultraviolet:ISM, Comment: 36 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables
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- 2001
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12. The Discovery of Argon in Comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp)
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Stern, S. A., Slater, D. C., Festou, M. C., Parker, J. Wm., A'Hearn, G. R. Gladstone. M. F., and Wilkinson, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
On 30.14 March 1997 we observed the EUV spectrum of the bright comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) at the time of its perihelion, using our EUVS sounding rocket telescope/spectrometer. The spectra reveal the presence H Ly beta, O+, and, most notably, Argon. Modelling of the retrieved Ar production rates indicates that comet Hale-Bopp is enriched in Ar relative to cosmogonic expectations. This in turn indicates that Hale-Bopp's deep interior has never been exposed to the 35-40 K temperatures necessary to deplete the comet's primordial argon supply., Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. ApJ, 545, in press (2000)
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- 2000
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13. On-Orbit Performance of the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) Satellite
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Sahnow, D. J., Moos, H. W., Ake, T., Andersen, J., Andersson, B-G, Andre, M., Artis, D., Berman, A., Blair, W., Brownsberger, K., Calvani, H., Chayer, P., Conard, S., Feldman, P., Friedman, S., Fullerton, A., Gaines, G., Gawne, W., Green, J., Gummin, M., Jennings, T., Joyce, J. B., Kaiser, M. E., Kruk, J., Lindler, D., Massa, D., Murphy, E., Oegerle, W., Ohl, R., Roberts, B., Romelfanger, M., Roth, K., Sankrit, R., Sembach, K., Shelton, R., Siegmund, O., Silva, C., Sonneborn, G., Vaclavik, S., Weaver, H., and Wilkinson, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Launch of the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) has been followed by an extensive period of calibration and characterization as part of the preparation for normal satellite operations. Major tasks carried out during this period include initial coalignment, focusing and characterization of the four instrument channels, and a preliminary measurement of the resolution and throughput performance of the instrument. We describe the results from this test program, and present preliminary estimates of the on-orbit performance of the FUSE satellite based on a combination of this data and prelaunch laboratory measurements., Comment: 8 pages, including 3 figures. This paper will appear in the FUSE special issue of ApJ Letters
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- 2000
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14. FUSE Observations of Interstellar Gas Towards the LMC Star Sk -67 05
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Friedman, S. D., Howk, J. C., Andersson, B-G, Sembach, K. R., Ake, T. B., Roth, K., Sahnow, D. J., Savage, B. D., York, D. G., Sonneborn, G., Vidal-Madjar, A., and Wilkinson, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on measurements of interstellar O VI, H2, P II, Si II, Ar I, and Fe II absorption along the line of sight to Sk -67 05, a B0 Ia star in a diffuse H II region in the western edge of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We find log N(O VI) = 14.40 +/- 0.04 in the Milky Way (MW) component and, using the C IV column density from previous IUE observations, N(C IV) / N(O VI) = 1.00 +/- 0.16, a value similar to other halo measurements made with FUSE. In the LMC component, log N(O VI) = 13.89 +/- 0.05, and N(C IV) / N(O VI) < 0.4 (3 sigma), since only an upper limit on N(C IV) is available. Along this sightline the LMC is rich in molecular hydrogen, log N(H2) = 19.50 +/- 0.08; in the MW log N(H2) = 14.95 +/- 0.08. A two-component fit for the excitation temperature of the molecular gas in the LMC gives T_01 = 59 +/- 5 K for J=0,1 and T_ex = 800 +/- 330 K for J=3,4,5. For the MW, T_01 = 99 (+30/-20) K; no excitation temperature could be determined for the higher rotational states. The MW and LMC gas-phase [Fe/P] abundances are ~0.6 and ~0.7 dex lower, respectively, than solar system abundances. These values are similar to [Fe/Zn] measurements for the MW and LMC towards SN 1987A., Comment: 8 pages, including 2 tables and 4 figures. To appear in FUSE special issue of Ap.J. Letters
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- 2000
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15. Renewing Felsenstein's phylogenetic bootstrap in the era of big data
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Lemoine, F., Domelevo Entfellner, J.-B., Wilkinson, E., Correia, D., Dávila Felipe, M., De Oliveira, T., and Gascuel, O.
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Phylogeny -- Models ,Big data -- Usage ,Bootstrapping (Statistics) -- Usage ,Statistical models -- Usage ,HIV ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Felsenstein's application of the bootstrap method to evolutionary trees is one of the most cited scientific papers of all time. The bootstrap method, which is based on resampling and replications, is used extensively to assess the robustness of phylogenetic inferences. However, increasing numbers of sequences are now available for a wide variety of species, and phylogenies based on hundreds or thousands of taxa are becoming routine. With phylogenies of this size Felsenstein's bootstrap tends to yield very low supports, especially on deep branches. Here we propose a new version of the phylogenetic bootstrap in which the presence of inferred branches in replications is measured using a gradual 'transfer' distance rather than the binary presence or absence index used in Felsenstein's original version. The resulting supports are higher and do not induce falsely supported branches. The application of our method to large mammal, HIV and simulated datasets reveals their phylogenetic signals, whereas Felsenstein's bootstrap fails to do so.A new version of the phylogenetic bootstrap method enables assessment of the robustness of phylogenies that are based on large datasets of hundreds or thousands of taxa., Author(s): F. Lemoine [sup.1] [sup.2] , J.-B. Domelevo Entfellner [sup.3] [sup.4] , E. Wilkinson [sup.5] , D. Correia [sup.1] , M. Dávila Felipe [sup.1] , T. De Oliveira [sup.5] [sup.6] [...]
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- 2018
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16. Multiomics analysis of adaptation to repeated DNA damage in prostate cancer cells
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Challis, D., primary, Lippis, T., additional, Wilson, R., additional, Wilkinson, E., additional, Dickinson, J., additional, Black, A., additional, Azimi, I., additional, Holloway, A., additional, Taberlay, P., additional, and Brettingham-Moore, K., additional
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- 2023
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17. 291 Dysregulation of N-methyladenine DNA methylation as a new epigenetic mechanism in skin tumorigenesis
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Cui, Y., primary, Wilkinson, E., additional, Peterson, J., additional, and He, Y., additional
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- 2023
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18. Role of Cholecystostomy Drain in Severe Acute Cholecystitis in Critically Ill Patients
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Mohamed B, Chauhan MN, Nahboo SZ, Wilkinson E, and Canelo R
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Complementary and alternative medicine ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacology (medical) - Abstract
Aims: To investigate the outcome of Cholecystostomy drains in the management of Acute Cholecystitis at Cumberland Infirmary. To develop a Cholecystostomy Pathway for patient selection, management and post procedure management. Method: A retrospective study of all patients with Cholecystostomy drains over the last 3 years at Cumberland Infirmary. 58 Inpatients at Cumberland Infirmary and West Cumberland Hospital who had cholecystostomy drains inserted for Acute Cholecystitis from January 2019 to January 2022 were included in the study. The patient list was collected from the Information Department at Cumberland Infirmary, with the Cholecystostomy code J 24.1 used in the search. Results: CRP ranged from 10-450 (mean 200) pre-insertion and on 5th post-procedure day, 37(63.79%) patients had a CRP of less than 50. Similar trends have been observed with the WBC counts. Follow-up investigations post drain insertion varied between CT abdomen, ultrasound abdomen and tubogram. The overall morality in the study group was 8(13.79%). Non of the mortalities were Cholecystostomy related. Reported over all complications were 2 (3.44%) which were sub-phrenic abscess and Cholo-Cutaneous fistula. Conclusion: We conclude that Insertion of a Cholecystostomy drain is a useful and safe procedure for the management of Severe Cholecystitis, especially in critically ill patients, with good early and late outcomes, and a low mortality rate. It can be used as a temporary management option with plan for Interval Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy, or can be the Definitive Management, especially in those patients with High Operative Risk
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- 2023
19. Medical record review of acute childhood wheeze presentations, air pollution and deprivation
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Wilkinson, E, primary and Mcnamara, P, additional
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- 2022
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20. Standardization of molecular monitoring of CML : results and recommendations from the European treatment and outcome study
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White HE, Salmon M, Albano F, Andersen CSA, Balabanov S, Balatzenko G, Barbany G, Cayuela JM, Cerveira N, Cochaux P, Colomer D, Coriu D, Diamond J, Dietz C, Dulucq S, Engvall M, Franke GN, Gineikiene-Valentine E, Gniot M, Gómez-Casares MT, Gottardi E, Hayden C, Hayette S, Hedblom A, Ilea A, Izzo B, Jiménez-Velasco A, Jurcek T, Kairisto V, Langabeer SE, Lion T, Meggyesi N, Mešanović S, Mihok L, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner G, Moeckel S, Naumann N, Nibourel O, Oppliger Leibundgut E, Panayiotidis P, Podgornik H, Pott C, Rapado I, Rose SJ, Schäfer V, Touloumenidou T, Veigaard C, Venniker-Punt B, Venturi C, Vigneri P, Vorkinn I, Wilkinson E, Zadro R, Zawada M, Zizkova H, Müller MC, Saussele S, Ernst T, Machova Polakova K, Hochhaus A, Cross NCPa 62, Andreas Hochhaus 52, Nicholas C P Cross, White, He, Salmon, M, Albano, F, Andersen, Csa, Balabanov, S, Balatzenko, G, Barbany, G, Cayuela, Jm, Cerveira, N, Cochaux, P, Colomer, D, Coriu, D, Diamond, J, Dietz, C, Dulucq, S, Engvall, M, Franke, Gn, Gineikiene-Valentine, E, Gniot, M, Gómez-Casares, Mt, Gottardi, E, Hayden, C, Hayette, S, Hedblom, A, Ilea, A, Izzo, B, Jiménez-Velasco, A, Jurcek, T, Kairisto, V, Langabeer, Se, Lion, T, Meggyesi, N, Mešanović, S, Mihok, L, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, Moeckel, S, Naumann, N, Nibourel, O, Oppliger Leibundgut, E, Panayiotidis, P, Podgornik, H, Pott, C, Rapado, I, Rose, Sj, Schäfer, V, Touloumenidou, T, Veigaard, C, Venniker-Punt, B, Venturi, C, Vigneri, P, Vorkinn, I, Wilkinson, E, Zadro, R, Zawada, M, Zizkova, H, Müller, Mc, Saussele, S, Ernst, T, Machova Polakova, K, Hochhaus, A, Cross NCPa, 62, Andreas Hochhaus, 52, and Nicholas C, P Cross
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Cancer Research ,Cancer och onkologi ,Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic ,Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl ,610 Medicine & health ,Hematology ,Reference Standards ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,Cancer and Oncology ,Humans ,Hematologi - Abstract
Standardized monitoring of BCR::ABL1 mRNA levels is essential for the management of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients. From 2016 to 2021 the European Treatment and Outcome Study for CML (EUTOS) explored the use of secondary, lyophilized cell-based BCR::ABL1 reference panels traceable to the World Health Organization primary reference material to standardize and validate local laboratory tests. Panels were used to assign and validate conversion factors (CFs) to the International Scale and assess the ability of laboratories to assess deep molecular response (DMR). The study also explored aspects of internal quality control. The percentage of EUTOS reference laboratories (n = 50) with CFs validated as optimal or satisfactory increased from 67.5% to 97.6% and 36.4% to 91.7% for ABL1 and GUSB, respectively, during the study period and 98% of laboratories were able to detect MR4.5 in most samples. Laboratories with unvalidated CFs had a higher coefficient of variation for BCR::ABL1IS and some laboratories had a limit of blank greater than zero which could affect the accurate reporting of DMR. Our study indicates that secondary reference panels can be used effectively to obtain and validate CFs in a manner equivalent to sample exchange and can also be used to monitor additional aspects of quality assurance.
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- 2022
21. Definitions and Explanatory Notes
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Scully, R. E., Bonfiglio, T. A., Kurman, R. J., Silverberg, S. G., Wilkinson, E. J., Scully, R. E., Bonfiglio, T. A., Kurman, R. J., Silverberg, S. G., and Wilkinson, E. J.
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- 1994
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22. Histological Classification of Tumours of the Female Genital Tract
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Scully, R. E., Bonfiglio, T. A., Kurman, R. J., Silverberg, S. G., Wilkinson, E. J., Scully, R. E., Bonfiglio, T. A., Kurman, R. J., Silverberg, S. G., and Wilkinson, E. J.
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- 1994
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23. ‘Real rape’ and the coverage of sexual violence in Dutch newspapers, 1880 to 1930
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Clare Wilkinson, E., primary
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- 2022
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24. Selection analysis identifies unusual clustered mutational changes in Omicron lineage BA.1 that likely impact Spike function
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Martin, DP, Lytras, S, Lucaci, AG, Maier, W, Grüning, B, Shank, SD, Weaver, S, MacLean, OA, Orton, RJ, Lemey, P, Boni, MF, Tegally, H, Harkins, G, Scheepers, C, Bhiman, JN, Everatt, J, Amoako, DG, San, JE, Giandhari, J, Sigal, A, NGS-SA, Williamson, C, Hsiao, N-Y, Von Gottberg, A, De Klerk, A, Shafer, RW, Robertson, DL, Wilkinson, RJ, Sewell, BT, Lessells, R, Nekrutenko, A, Greaney, AJ, Starr, TN, Bloom, JD, Murrell, B, Wilkinson, E, Gupta, RK, De Oliveira, T, Kosakovsky Pond, SL, and Wellcome Trust
- Abstract
Among the 30 non-synonymous nucleotide substitutions in the Omicron S-gene are 13 that have only rarely been seen in other SARS-CoV-2 sequences. These mutations cluster within three functionally important regions of the S-gene at sites that will likely impact (i) interactions between subunits of the Spike trimer and the predisposition of subunits to shift from down to up configurations, (ii) interactions of Spike with ACE2 receptors, and (iii) the priming of Spike for membrane fusion. We show here that, based on both the rarity of these 13 mutations in intrapatient sequencing reads and patterns of selection at the codon sites where the mutations occur in SARS-CoV-2 and related sarbecoviruses, prior to the emergence of Omicron the mutations would have been predicted to decrease the fitness of any genomes within which they occurred. We further propose that the mutations in each of the three clusters therefore cooperatively interact to both mitigate their individual fitness costs, and adaptively alter the function of Spike. Given the evident epidemic growth advantages of Omicron over all previously known SARS-CoV-2 lineages, it is crucial to determine both how such complex and highly adaptive mutation constellations were assembled within the Omicron S-gene, and why, despite unprecedented global genomic surveillance efforts, the early stages of this assembly process went completely undetected.
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- 2022
25. Encountering Berlant part 1: Concepts otherwise
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Anderson, B, Aitken, S, Bacevic, J, Callard, F, Chung, KDM, Coleman, KSS, Hayden Jr, RFF, Healy, S, Irwin, RLL, Jellis, T, Jukes, J, Khan, S, Marotta, S, Seitz, DKK, Snepvangers, K, Staples, A, Turner, C, Tse, J, Watson, M, Wilkinson, E, Anderson, B, Aitken, S, Bacevic, J, Callard, F, Chung, KDM, Coleman, KSS, Hayden Jr, RFF, Healy, S, Irwin, RLL, Jellis, T, Jukes, J, Khan, S, Marotta, S, Seitz, DKK, Snepvangers, K, Staples, A, Turner, C, Tse, J, Watson, M, and Wilkinson, E
- Abstract
In Part 1 of ‘Encountering Berlant’, we encounter the promise and provocation of Lauren Berlant's work. In 1000-word contributions, geographers and others stay with what Berlant's thought offers contemporary human geography. They amplify an encounter with their work, demonstrating how a concept, idea, or style disrupts something, opens up a new possibility, or simply invites thinking otherwise. The encounters range across the incredible body of work Berlant left us with, from the ‘national sentimentality’ trilogy through to recent work on negativity. Varying in form and tone, the encounters exemplify and enact the inexhaustible plenitude of Berlant's thought: fantasy, the case, love, impasse, feel tanks, slow death, ellipses, gesture, attrition, intimate public, ambivalence, style. Part 2 of ‘Encountering Berlant’ focuses on Berlant's most influential concept: ‘cruel optimism’. Across these heterogeneous encounters, Berlant's enduring concern with the tensions and possibilities of relationality and how to enact better forms of common life shine through. These enduring concerns and Berlant's commitment to the incoherence and overdetermination of phenomena are summarised in the Introduction, which also explores how Berlant's work has been engaged with in geography. The result is a repository of what an encounter with Berlant's thought makes possible.
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- 2022
26. The evolving SARS-CoV-2 epidemic in Africa: Insights from rapidly expanding genomic surveillance
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Tegally, H, San, JE, Cotten, M, Moir, M, Tegomoh, B, Mboowa, G, Martin, DP, Baxter, C, Lambisia, AW, Diallo, A, Amoako, DG, Diagne, MM, Sisay, A, Zekri, A-RN, Gueye, AS, Sangare, AK, Ouedraogo, A-S, Sow, A, Musa, AO, Sesay, AK, Abias, AG, Elzagheid, A, Lagare, A, Kemi, A-S, Abar, AE, Johnson, AA, Fowotade, A, Oluwapelumi, AO, Amuri, AA, Juru, A, Kandeil, A, Mostafa, A, Rebai, A, Sayed, A, Kazeem, A, Balde, A, Christoffels, A, Trotter, AJ, Campbell, A, Keita, AK, Kone, A, Bouzid, A, Souissi, A, Agweyu, A, Naguib, A, Gutierrez, A, Nkeshimana, A, Page, AJ, Yadouleton, A, Vinze, A, Happi, AN, Chouikha, A, Iranzadeh, A, Maharaj, A, Batchi-Bouyou, AL, Ismail, A, Sylverken, AA, Goba, A, Femi, A, Sijuwola, AE, Marycelin, B, Salako, BL, Oderinde, BS, Bolajoko, B, Diarra, B, Herring, BL, Tsofa, B, Lekana-Douki, B, Mvula, B, Njanpop-Lafourcade, B-M, Marondera, BT, Khaireh, BA, Kouriba, B, Adu, B, Pool, B, McInnis, B, Brook, C, Williamson, C, Nduwimana, C, Anscombe, C, Pratt, CB, Scheepers, C, Akoua-Koffi, CG, Agoti, CN, Mapanguy, CM, Loucoubar, C, Onwuamah, CK, Ihekweazu, C, Malaka, CN, Peyrefitte, C, Grace, C, Omoruyi, CE, Rafai, CD, Morang'a, CM, Erameh, C, Lule, DB, Bridges, DJ, Mukadi-Bamuleka, D, Park, D, Rasmussen, DA, Baker, D, Nokes, DJ, Ssemwanga, D, Tshiabuila, D, Amuzu, DSY, Goedhals, D, Grant, DS, Omuoyo, DO, Maruapula, D, Wanjohi, DW, Foster-Nyarko, E, Lusamaki, EK, Simulundu, E, Ong'era, EM, Ngabana, EN, Abworo, EO, Otieno, E, Shumba, E, Barasa, E, Ahmed, EB, Ahmed, EA, Lokilo, E, Mukantwari, E, Philomena, E, Belarbi, E, Simon-Loriere, E, Anoh, EA, Manuel, E, Leendertz, F, Taweh, FM, Wasfi, F, Abdelmoula, F, Takawira, FT, Derrar, F, Ajogbasile, F, Treurnicht, F, Onikepe, F, Ntoumi, F, Muyembe, FM, Ragomzingba, FEZ, Dratibi, FA, Iyanu, F-A, Mbunsu, GK, Thilliez, G, Kay, GL, Akpede, GO, van Zyl, GU, Awandare, GA, Kpeli, GS, Schubert, G, Maphalala, GP, Ranaivoson, HC, Omunakwe, HE, Onywera, H, Abe, H, Karray, H, Nansumba, H, Triki, H, Kadjo, HAA, Elgahzaly, H, Gumbo, H, Mathieu, H, Kavunga-Membo, H, Smeti, I, Olawoye, IB, Adetifa, IMO, Odia, I, Ben Boubaker, IB, Mohammad, IA, Ssewanyana, I, Wurie, I, Konstantinus, IS, Halatoko, JWA, Ayei, J, Sonoo, J, Makangara, J-CC, Tamfum, J-JM, Heraud, J-M, Shaffer, JG, Giandhari, J, Musyoki, J, Nkurunziza, J, Uwanibe, JN, Bhiman, JN, Yasuda, J, Morais, J, Kiconco, J, Sandi, JD, Huddleston, J, Odoom, JK, Morobe, JM, Gyapong, JO, Kayiwa, JT, Okolie, JC, Xavier, JS, Gyamfi, J, Wamala, JF, Bonney, JHK, Nyandwi, J, Everatt, J, Nakaseegu, J, Ngoi, JM, Namulondo, J, Oguzie, JU, Andeko, JC, Lutwama, JJ, Mogga, JJH, O'Grady, J, Siddle, KJ, Victoir, K, Adeyemi, KT, Tumedi, KA, Carvalho, KS, Mohammed, KS, Dellagi, K, Musonda, KG, Duedu, KO, Fki-Berrajah, L, Singh, L, Kepler, LM, Biscornet, L, Martins, LDO, Chabuka, L, Olubayo, L, Ojok, LD, Deng, LL, Ochola-Oyier, L, Tyers, L, Mine, M, Ramuth, M, Mastouri, M, ElHefnawi, M, Mbanne, M, Matsheka, M, Kebabonye, M, Diop, M, Momoh, M, Lima Mendonca, MDL, Venter, M, Paye, MF, Faye, M, Nyaga, MM, Mareka, M, Damaris, M-M, Mburu, MW, Mpina, MG, Owusu, M, Wiley, MR, Tatfeng, MY, Ayekaba, MO, Abouelhoda, M, Beloufa, MA, Seadawy, MG, Khalifa, MK, Matobo, MM, Kane, M, Salou, M, Mbulawa, MB, Mwenda, M, Allam, M, Phan, MVT, Abid, N, Rujeni, N, Abuzaid, N, Ismael, N, Elguindy, N, Top, NM, Dia, N, Mabunda, N, Hsiao, N-Y, Silochi, NB, Francisco, NM, Saasa, N, Bbosa, N, Murunga, N, Gumede, N, Wolter, N, Sitharam, N, Ndodo, N, Ajayi, NA, Tordo, N, Mbhele, N, Razanajatovo, NH, Iguosadolo, N, Mba, N, Kingsley, OC, Sylvanus, O, Femi, O, Adewumi, OM, Testimony, O, Ogunsanya, OA, Fakayode, O, Ogah, OE, Oludayo, O-E, Faye, O, Smith-Lawrence, P, Ondoa, P, Combe, P, Nabisubi, P, Semanda, P, Oluniyi, PE, Arnaldo, P, Quashie, PK, Okokhere, PO, Bejon, P, Dussart, P, Bester, PA, Mbala, PK, Kaleebu, P, Abechi, P, El-Shesheny, R, Joseph, R, Aziz, RK, Essomba, RG, Ayivor-Djanie, R, Njouom, R, Phillips, RO, Gorman, R, Kingsley, RA, Neto Rodrigues, RMDESA, Audu, RA, Carr, RAA, Gargouri, S, Masmoudi, S, Bootsma, S, Sankhe, S, Mohamed, SI, Femi, S, Mhalla, S, Hosch, S, Kassim, SK, Metha, S, Trabelsi, S, Agwa, SH, Mwangi, SW, Doumbia, S, Makiala-Mandanda, S, Aryeetey, S, Ahmed, SS, Ahmed, SM, Elhamoumi, S, Moyo, S, Lutucuta, S, Gaseitsiwe, S, Jalloh, S, Andriamandimby, SF, Oguntope, S, Grayo, S, Lekana-Douki, S, Prosolek, S, Ouangraoua, S, van Wyk, S, Schaffner, SF, Kanyerezi, S, Ahuka-Mundeke, S, Rudder, S, Pillay, S, Nabadda, S, Behillil, S, Budiaki, SL, van der Werf, S, Mashe, T, Mohale, T, Le-Viet, T, Velavan, TP, Schindler, T, Maponga, TG, Bedford, T, Anyaneji, UJ, Chinedu, U, Ramphal, U, George, UE, Enouf, V, Nene, V, Gorova, V, Roshdy, WH, Karim, WA, Ampofo, WK, Preiser, W, Choga, WT, Ahmed, YA, Ramphal, Y, Bediako, Y, Naidoo, Y, Butera, Y, de Laurent, ZR, Ouma, AEO, von Gottberg, A, Githinji, G, Moeti, M, Tomori, O, Sabeti, PC, Sall, AA, Oyola, SO, Tebeje, YK, Tessema, SK, de Oliveira, T, Happi, C, Lessells, R, Nkengasong, J, Wilkinson, E, Tegally, H, San, JE, Cotten, M, Moir, M, Tegomoh, B, Mboowa, G, Martin, DP, Baxter, C, Lambisia, AW, Diallo, A, Amoako, DG, Diagne, MM, Sisay, A, Zekri, A-RN, Gueye, AS, Sangare, AK, Ouedraogo, A-S, Sow, A, Musa, AO, Sesay, AK, Abias, AG, Elzagheid, A, Lagare, A, Kemi, A-S, Abar, AE, Johnson, AA, Fowotade, A, Oluwapelumi, AO, Amuri, AA, Juru, A, Kandeil, A, Mostafa, A, Rebai, A, Sayed, A, Kazeem, A, Balde, A, Christoffels, A, Trotter, AJ, Campbell, A, Keita, AK, Kone, A, Bouzid, A, Souissi, A, Agweyu, A, Naguib, A, Gutierrez, A, Nkeshimana, A, Page, AJ, Yadouleton, A, Vinze, A, Happi, AN, Chouikha, A, Iranzadeh, A, Maharaj, A, Batchi-Bouyou, AL, Ismail, A, Sylverken, AA, Goba, A, Femi, A, Sijuwola, AE, Marycelin, B, Salako, BL, Oderinde, BS, Bolajoko, B, Diarra, B, Herring, BL, Tsofa, B, Lekana-Douki, B, Mvula, B, Njanpop-Lafourcade, B-M, Marondera, BT, Khaireh, BA, Kouriba, B, Adu, B, Pool, B, McInnis, B, Brook, C, Williamson, C, Nduwimana, C, Anscombe, C, Pratt, CB, Scheepers, C, Akoua-Koffi, CG, Agoti, CN, Mapanguy, CM, Loucoubar, C, Onwuamah, CK, Ihekweazu, C, Malaka, CN, Peyrefitte, C, Grace, C, Omoruyi, CE, Rafai, CD, Morang'a, CM, Erameh, C, Lule, DB, Bridges, DJ, Mukadi-Bamuleka, D, Park, D, Rasmussen, DA, Baker, D, Nokes, DJ, Ssemwanga, D, Tshiabuila, D, Amuzu, DSY, Goedhals, D, Grant, DS, Omuoyo, DO, Maruapula, D, Wanjohi, DW, Foster-Nyarko, E, Lusamaki, EK, Simulundu, E, Ong'era, EM, Ngabana, EN, Abworo, EO, Otieno, E, Shumba, E, Barasa, E, Ahmed, EB, Ahmed, EA, Lokilo, E, Mukantwari, E, Philomena, E, Belarbi, E, Simon-Loriere, E, Anoh, EA, Manuel, E, Leendertz, F, Taweh, FM, Wasfi, F, Abdelmoula, F, Takawira, FT, Derrar, F, Ajogbasile, F, Treurnicht, F, Onikepe, F, Ntoumi, F, Muyembe, FM, Ragomzingba, FEZ, Dratibi, FA, Iyanu, F-A, Mbunsu, GK, Thilliez, G, Kay, GL, Akpede, GO, van Zyl, GU, Awandare, GA, Kpeli, GS, Schubert, G, Maphalala, GP, Ranaivoson, HC, Omunakwe, HE, Onywera, H, Abe, H, Karray, H, Nansumba, H, Triki, H, Kadjo, HAA, Elgahzaly, H, Gumbo, H, Mathieu, H, Kavunga-Membo, H, Smeti, I, Olawoye, IB, Adetifa, IMO, Odia, I, Ben Boubaker, IB, Mohammad, IA, Ssewanyana, I, Wurie, I, Konstantinus, IS, Halatoko, JWA, Ayei, J, Sonoo, J, Makangara, J-CC, Tamfum, J-JM, Heraud, J-M, Shaffer, JG, Giandhari, J, Musyoki, J, Nkurunziza, J, Uwanibe, JN, Bhiman, JN, Yasuda, J, Morais, J, Kiconco, J, Sandi, JD, Huddleston, J, Odoom, JK, Morobe, JM, Gyapong, JO, Kayiwa, JT, Okolie, JC, Xavier, JS, Gyamfi, J, Wamala, JF, Bonney, JHK, Nyandwi, J, Everatt, J, Nakaseegu, J, Ngoi, JM, Namulondo, J, Oguzie, JU, Andeko, JC, Lutwama, JJ, Mogga, JJH, O'Grady, J, Siddle, KJ, Victoir, K, Adeyemi, KT, Tumedi, KA, Carvalho, KS, Mohammed, KS, Dellagi, K, Musonda, KG, Duedu, KO, Fki-Berrajah, L, Singh, L, Kepler, LM, Biscornet, L, Martins, LDO, Chabuka, L, Olubayo, L, Ojok, LD, Deng, LL, Ochola-Oyier, L, Tyers, L, Mine, M, Ramuth, M, Mastouri, M, ElHefnawi, M, Mbanne, M, Matsheka, M, Kebabonye, M, Diop, M, Momoh, M, Lima Mendonca, MDL, Venter, M, Paye, MF, Faye, M, Nyaga, MM, Mareka, M, Damaris, M-M, Mburu, MW, Mpina, MG, Owusu, M, Wiley, MR, Tatfeng, MY, Ayekaba, MO, Abouelhoda, M, Beloufa, MA, Seadawy, MG, Khalifa, MK, Matobo, MM, Kane, M, Salou, M, Mbulawa, MB, Mwenda, M, Allam, M, Phan, MVT, Abid, N, Rujeni, N, Abuzaid, N, Ismael, N, Elguindy, N, Top, NM, Dia, N, Mabunda, N, Hsiao, N-Y, Silochi, NB, Francisco, NM, Saasa, N, Bbosa, N, Murunga, N, Gumede, N, Wolter, N, Sitharam, N, Ndodo, N, Ajayi, NA, Tordo, N, Mbhele, N, Razanajatovo, NH, Iguosadolo, N, Mba, N, Kingsley, OC, Sylvanus, O, Femi, O, Adewumi, OM, Testimony, O, Ogunsanya, OA, Fakayode, O, Ogah, OE, Oludayo, O-E, Faye, O, Smith-Lawrence, P, Ondoa, P, Combe, P, Nabisubi, P, Semanda, P, Oluniyi, PE, Arnaldo, P, Quashie, PK, Okokhere, PO, Bejon, P, Dussart, P, Bester, PA, Mbala, PK, Kaleebu, P, Abechi, P, El-Shesheny, R, Joseph, R, Aziz, RK, Essomba, RG, Ayivor-Djanie, R, Njouom, R, Phillips, RO, Gorman, R, Kingsley, RA, Neto Rodrigues, RMDESA, Audu, RA, Carr, RAA, Gargouri, S, Masmoudi, S, Bootsma, S, Sankhe, S, Mohamed, SI, Femi, S, Mhalla, S, Hosch, S, Kassim, SK, Metha, S, Trabelsi, S, Agwa, SH, Mwangi, SW, Doumbia, S, Makiala-Mandanda, S, Aryeetey, S, Ahmed, SS, Ahmed, SM, Elhamoumi, S, Moyo, S, Lutucuta, S, Gaseitsiwe, S, Jalloh, S, Andriamandimby, SF, Oguntope, S, Grayo, S, Lekana-Douki, S, Prosolek, S, Ouangraoua, S, van Wyk, S, Schaffner, SF, Kanyerezi, S, Ahuka-Mundeke, S, Rudder, S, Pillay, S, Nabadda, S, Behillil, S, Budiaki, SL, van der Werf, S, Mashe, T, Mohale, T, Le-Viet, T, Velavan, TP, Schindler, T, Maponga, TG, Bedford, T, Anyaneji, UJ, Chinedu, U, Ramphal, U, George, UE, Enouf, V, Nene, V, Gorova, V, Roshdy, WH, Karim, WA, Ampofo, WK, Preiser, W, Choga, WT, Ahmed, YA, Ramphal, Y, Bediako, Y, Naidoo, Y, Butera, Y, de Laurent, ZR, Ouma, AEO, von Gottberg, A, Githinji, G, Moeti, M, Tomori, O, Sabeti, PC, Sall, AA, Oyola, SO, Tebeje, YK, Tessema, SK, de Oliveira, T, Happi, C, Lessells, R, Nkengasong, J, and Wilkinson, E
- Abstract
Investment in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) sequencing in Africa over the past year has led to a major increase in the number of sequences that have been generated and used to track the pandemic on the continent, a number that now exceeds 100,000 genomes. Our results show an increase in the number of African countries that are able to sequence domestically and highlight that local sequencing enables faster turnaround times and more-regular routine surveillance. Despite limitations of low testing proportions, findings from this genomic surveillance study underscore the heterogeneous nature of the pandemic and illuminate the distinct dispersal dynamics of variants of concern-particularly Alpha, Beta, Delta, and Omicron-on the continent. Sustained investment for diagnostics and genomic surveillance in Africa is needed as the virus continues to evolve while the continent faces many emerging and reemerging infectious disease threats. These investments are crucial for pandemic preparedness and response and will serve the health of the continent well into the 21st century.
- Published
- 2022
27. Predicting occult stress urinary incontinence: prolapse-reduced cough stress test vs. intraoperative credé maneuver
- Author
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Wilkinson, E., primary, Weber-LeBrun, E., additional, and Heft, J., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. 10 proactive questions every board member should be asking
- Author
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White, A, Essani, T, and Wilkinson, E
- Abstract
Boards only see what they’re presented with and can easily become passive recipients of agendas created by powerful CEOs and senior executives. And corporate failure raises questions as to what the board knew and what more it could have done. Board members can play a transformational role in a company by asking questions that create a space for deep reflection and strategic change — not just responding to what the executive presents and then stepping in to deal with a crisis when things become difficult. The authors present 10 questions for board members to ask that can enable change at the level of individual board members and the board as a whole.
- Published
- 2022
29. The pathophysiology of otosclerosis: Review of current research
- Author
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Rudic, M., Keogh, I., Wagner, R., Wilkinson, E., Kiros, N., Ferrary, E., Sterkers, O., Bozorg Grayeli, A., Zarkovic, K., and Zarkovic, N.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Accuracy of Hospital Diagnostic and Operative Procedure Coding
- Author
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Wilkinson, E. J., Harvey, I., Rienhoff, O., editor, Lindberg, D. A. B., editor, Adlassnig, Klaus-Peter, editor, Grabner, Georg, editor, Bengtsson, Stellan, editor, and Hansen, Rolf, editor
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR-ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR
- Author
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White, H, Deprez, L, Corbisier, P, Hall, V, Lin, F, Mazoua, S, Trapmann, S, Aggerholm, A, Andrikovics, H, Akiki, S, Barbany, G, Boeckx, N, Bench, A, Catherwood, M, Cayuela, J-M, Chudleigh, S, Clench, T, Colomer, D, Daraio, F, Dulucq, S, Farrugia, J, Fletcher, L, Foroni, L, Ganderton, R, Gerrard, G, Gineikiene, E, Hayette, S, El Housni, H, Izzo, B, Jansson, M, Johnels, P, Jurcek, T, Kairisto, V, Kizilors, A, Kim, D-W, Lange, T, Lion, T, Polakova, K M, Martinelli, G, McCarron, S, Merle, P A, Milner, B, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, Nagar, M, Nickless, G, Nomdedéu, J, Nymoen, D A, Leibundgut, E O, Ozbek, U, Pajic, T, Pfeifer, H, Preudhomme, C, Raudsepp, K, Romeo, G, Sacha, T, Talmaci, R, Touloumenidou, T, Van der Velden, V HJ, Waits, P, Wang, L, Wilkinson, E, Wilson, G, Wren, D, Zadro, R, Ziermann, J, Zoi, K, Müller, M C, Hochhaus, A, Schimmel, H, Cross, N CP, and Emons, H
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Evolving Treatment Patterns and Outcomes of Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration Over a Decade
- Author
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Schwartz, Roy, primary, Warwick, Alasdair, additional, Olvera-Barrios, Abraham, additional, Pikoula, Maria, additional, Lee, Aaron Y., additional, Denaxas, Spiros, additional, Taylor, Paul, additional, Egan, Catherine, additional, Chakravarthy, Usha, additional, Lip, Peck Lin, additional, Tufail, Adnan, additional, Akerele, T., additional, Antcliff, R., additional, Bailey, C., additional, Brand, C., additional, Chakravarthy, U., additional, Davis, A., additional, Dhingra, N., additional, Downey, L., additional, Eleftheriadis, H., additional, George, S., additional, Ghanchi, F., additional, Jones, C., additional, Khan, R., additional, Kumar, V., additional, Lip, P., additional, Lobo, A., additional, Lotery, A., additional, Mahmood, S., additional, Menon, G., additional, Mukherjee, R., additional, Natha, S., additional, Palmer, H., additional, Patra, S., additional, Patwardhan, A., additional, Paul, B., additional, Talks, J., additional, and Wilkinson, E., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. SARS-CoV-2 shifting transmission dynamics and hidden reservoirs potentially limit efficacy of public health interventions in Italy
- Author
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Giovanetti, M., Cella, E., Benedetti, F., Rife Magalis, B., Fonseca, V., Fabris, S., Campisi, G., Ciccozzi, A., Angeletti, S., Borsetti, A., Tambone, V., Sagnelli, C., Pascarella, S., Riva, A., Ceccarelli, G., Marcello, A., Azarian, T., Wilkinson, E., de Oliveira, T., Alcantara, L. C. J., Cauda, Roberto, Caruso, A., Dean, N. E., Browne, C., Lourenco, J., Salemi, M., Zella, D., Ciccozzi, M., Cauda R. (ORCID:0000-0002-1498-4229), Giovanetti, M., Cella, E., Benedetti, F., Rife Magalis, B., Fonseca, V., Fabris, S., Campisi, G., Ciccozzi, A., Angeletti, S., Borsetti, A., Tambone, V., Sagnelli, C., Pascarella, S., Riva, A., Ceccarelli, G., Marcello, A., Azarian, T., Wilkinson, E., de Oliveira, T., Alcantara, L. C. J., Cauda, Roberto, Caruso, A., Dean, N. E., Browne, C., Lourenco, J., Salemi, M., Zella, D., Ciccozzi, M., and Cauda R. (ORCID:0000-0002-1498-4229)
- Abstract
We investigated SARS-CoV-2 transmission dynamics in Italy, one of the countries hit hardest by the pandemic, using phylodynamic analysis of viral genetic and epidemiological data. We observed the co-circulation of multiple SARS-CoV-2 lineages over time, which were linked to multiple importations and characterized by large transmission clusters concomitant with a high number of infections. Subsequent implementation of a three-phase nationwide lockdown strategy greatly reduced infection numbers and hospitalizations. Yet we present evidence of sustained viral spread among sporadic clusters acting as “hidden reservoirs” during summer 2020. Mathematical modelling shows that increased mobility among residents eventually catalyzed the coalescence of such clusters, thus driving up the number of infections and initiating a new epidemic wave. Our results suggest that the efficacy of public health interventions is, ultimately, limited by the size and structure of epidemic reservoirs, which may warrant prioritization during vaccine deployment.
- Published
- 2021
34. The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph: on-orbit instrument performance
- Author
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Osterman, S., Green, J., Froning, C., Béland, S., Burgh, E., France, K., Penton, S., Delker, T., Ebbets, D., Sahnow, D., Bacinski, J., Kimble, R., Andrews, J., Wilkinson, E., McPhate, J., Siegmund, O., Ake, T., Aloisi, A., Biagetti, C., Diaz, R., Dixon, W., Friedman, S., Ghavamian, P., Goudfrooij, P., Hartig, G., Keyes, C., Lennon, D., Massa, D., Niemi, S., Oliveira, C., Osten, R., Proffitt, C., Smith, T., and Soderblom, D.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Independent Effects of Fuel Aromatic Content and Mid-Range Volatility on Tailpipe Emissions from Current Technology European Vehicle Fleets
- Author
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McDonald, C. R., Morgan, T. D. B., Graupner, O., and Wilkinson, E.
- Published
- 1996
36. Variation in resource size distribution around colonies changes ant–parasitoid interactions
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Wilkinson, E. B. and Feener, Jr., D. H.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Netmums: a phase II randomized controlled trial of a guided Internet behavioural activation treatment for postpartum depression
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OʼMahen, H. A., Richards, D. A., Woodford, J., Wilkinson, E., McGinley, J., Taylor, R. S., and Warren, F. C.
- Published
- 2014
38. 337 Barriers to Laparoscopic Surgical Training for Abdominal Conditions in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICS): A Systematic Review
- Author
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Wilkinson, E, primary, Aruparayil, N, additional, Gnanaraj, J, additional, and Jayne, D, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Understanding the neuroprotective effect of tranexamic acid: an exploratory analysis of the CRASH-3 randomised trial
- Author
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Brenner, A., Belli, A., Chaudhri, R., Coats, T., Frimley, L., Jamaluddin, S. F., Jooma, R., Mansukhani, R., Sandercock, P., Shakur-Still, H., Shokunbi, T., Roberts, I., Aeron-Thomas, A., Chaudary, M. A., Jamaluddin, S. F. B., Javaid, K., Kayani, A., Leech, C., Mahmood, K., Noor, J. M., Mejia-Mantilla, J., Moss, P., Pott, J., Vallecilla, L., Hartzenberg, H. B., Joshipura, M., Perel, P., Clarke, M. J., Ohaegbulam, S. C., Rodgers, A., Brady, T., Dewan, Y., Edwards, P., Komolafe, E. O., Arribas, M., Austin, E., Balogun, E., Barneston, L., Barrow, C., Beaumont, D., Benyahia, M., Brooks, I., Cargill, M., Carrington, L., Cook, L., Cornu-Hewitt, B., Geer, A., Gilbert, D., Gilliam, C., Gil-Onandia, J., Hetherington, D., Howe, C., Hughes, C., I'Anson, D., Jackson, R., Joshi, M., Kansagra, S., Kawahara, T., Ker, K., Kostrov, S., Mahmood, A., Miah, H., Ndungu, B., Needham, K., Okusi, C., Outtandy, A., Pardinaz-Solis, R., Pearson, D., Pepple, T., Pisani, C., Prieto-Merino, D., Prowse, D., Quashi, N., Quinn, A., Ramos, M., Reid, M., Roukas, C., Scrapa, G., Squires, C., Tanner, J., Thayne, A., Vidaurre, L., Woods, E., Fawole, B., Adetayo, O., Okunade, O., Gogichaishvili, T., de los Angeles Munoz-Sanchez, M., Olldashi, F., Krishnan, S., Djientcheu, V., Castellanos, J. L., Rasulo, F., Hama, Q., Mulla, Y., Florian, I. S., Tobar, J., Khamis, H., Deasy, C., Wellsh, B., Williams-Johnson, J., Chandra, S., Mutiso, V., Butt, R., Nasir, M. H., Ahmad, S., Aslam, F., Ishaque, K., Usmani, F., Rizvi, S., Ali, F., Sajjad, O., Zunair, A., Rehman, L., Rizvi, R., Javeed, F., Ahmed, S., Abbas, A., Afzal, A., Mikdad, A., Bashir, A., Chaudary, A., Salahuddin, T., Ahemed, B., Aziz, A., Ashraf, N., Hussain, S., Ahmad, U., Asif, M., Adil, M., Rauf, A., Khan, R., Ahmad, B., Afzal, U., Raza, H., Ain, Q., Yaqoob, S., Waseem, Q., Nishat, M., Semvel, S., Iqbal, J., Majeed, S., Zulfiqar, S., Iqbal, M., Majeed, N., Ahmed, M., Akhtar, N., Malik, M., Shehzad, Y., Yousaf, M., Wahid, A., Samad, A., Shah, S., Ali, M., Zeb, J., Khan, A. S., Irfan, A., Sharif, S., Memon, R., Bloom, B., Harris, T., Skene, I., Bellhouse, G., Boulton, O., Ward, G., Jarvis, C., Swann, C., Ratnam, S., Carrera, R., Yakoub, K., Davies, D., Fellows, E., Jarman, H., Rounding, S., Johnson, E., Loughran, C., Lecky, F., Clayton, K., Michael, A., Coumbarides, A., Kendall, J., Faulkner, B., Worner, R., Gendall, E., Hopkins, P., Riozzi, P., Cotton, H., Astin-Chamberlain, R., Wilson, M., Bodnar, J., Williams, R., Rigoni, A., Sattout, A., Fletcher, J., Edge, C., Maryanji, N., Boyle, A., Hardwick, S., Nichols, E., Hayhurst, C., Coffey, F., Gough, C., Miller, P., Ryan, L., Darwent, M., Espinosa, A., Beer, S., Norton, J., Maguire, H., Finney, K., Kehoe, A., Squire, R., Jeffery, A., Vorwerk, C., Foord, D., Wilkinson, E., Kuhrt, A., Ramlakhan, S., Reid, S., Curran, A., Mcmullan, S., Hassan, T., Nuttall, S., Haig, S., Al-Nahhas, S., Bulters, D., Zolnourian, A., Ribbons, T., Mew, I., de Weymarn, T., Hughes, V., Mcvicar, J., Mckiernan, C., Keating, L., Reschreiter, H., Wright, J., Chan, L., Kataria, H., Ireland, A., Body, R., Corfield, A., Francis, S., Townend, W., Gagg, J., Wilson, S., Cottingham, R., Tucker, S., Sutherland, F., Mitchell, L., Parker, L., Afolabi, O., Hunter, F., Jadav, M., Adeboye, K., Grocutt, M., May, G., Watson, D., Wootten, A., Robertshaw, S., Dorrian, S., Perry, R., Choi, H., Mcgroarty, C., Shone, P., Maritz, D., Jamaluddin, S., Noor, J., Rosli, N., Xian, L. L. S., De Jun, Y., Mohamed, F., Song, C. H., Hawari, A., Chin, L. Y., Hussein, H. M., Lotfi, M., Hamid, H., Udin, N., Lian, P., Choo, S., Wong, K., Gani, F., Jusoh, M., Rajakumar, D., Yang, C. B., Dzulkiflee, N. S. B., W. C., Ky, Azman, M. A. B. M., Osman, A. B., Ahmad, A. H., Ismail, R., Lai, S. Q., Mohidin, M. A. B., Deraman, N. B., Selamat, S. B., Abidin, I., Halim, N., Bakar, Z., Ismail, Z. M., Hisham, B., Kamal, R., Effendy, Z., Ismail, M., Azleen, N., Seng, L. Y., Baharuddin, K. A., Kandasamy, R., Kamalludin, A., Asmee, S., Fadzil, M., Basitz, A., Abdullah, N., Ingorokva, G., Ingorokva, S., Agdgomelashvili, I., Mumladze, K., Maisuradze, I., Kugusheva, I., Shalamberidze, B., Tomadze, G., Fernandez-Ortega, J., Seara-Valero, R., Ibanez-Botella, G., Garcia-Martinez, V., Martul, M. G., Ramos, S. F., Preciado, G. L., Garcia-Alfaro, C., Munoz-Sanchez, A., Bellido-Alba, R., Corcobado, C., Bueno, A., Ambros, A., Jimenez, J. T., Ramirez, J. R., Martin, J., Rodriguez, L. I., Fontanals, J., Jimenez-Moragas, J. M., Berbegal, J. P., Oluwole, O., Mahmud, R., Ukwu, N., Bankole, F., Oseni, A., Adebayo, B., Malomo, A., Tiamiyu, L., Adekanmbi, A., Thanni, L., Olubodun, A., Ojeblenu, F., Uwaezuoke, M., Komolafe, E., Owagbemi, O., Ishola, F., Durodola, A., Udoffa, U., James, A., Tella, A., Dongo, A., Ekpemiro, U., Anyanwu, S., Aigoro, N., Mezue, W., Shilong, D., Azeez, A., Babalola, O., Ibrahim, M., Obande, J., Franco, A. C., Salazar, E. V., Londono, S. B., Cardona, V. M., Morales, C., Naranjo, S., Agudelo, J., Carvajal, S., Fajardo-Gaviria, Y., Roka, Y., Ghising, U., Roka, N., Shrestha, M., Devkota, U., Vaidya, B., Nepal, P., Thapa, A., Kc, B., Shrestha, A., Jha, R., Shrestha, P., Hodaj, I., Spaho, E., Selaj, A., Bendo, N., Shoko, T., Endo, H., Senda, A., Hagihara, Y., Fuse, T., Masunaga, N., Otomo, Y., Egashira, R., Ohnuki, T., Almazmi, A., Saha, S., Suvarov, A., Aung, T. L., Tun, K. M., Khaing, T. T., Maw, T., Ndome, O., Moumi, M., Mbida, A., Fondop, J., Sebastien, M., Azim, A., Adil, J., Amiry, Z., Loria-Castellanos, J., Rubio, N. G., Leon, P. O., Estrada, F., de Oca-Garcia, E. M., Sanchez, H., Soria, A., Bonucci, P., Franchi, F., Girardini, A., Hameed, H., Basim, M., Stock, S., Hourt, E., Ilunga, A., Mulenga, J., Ples, H., Danil, A., Gorgan, M., Florian, I., Vlahovic, D., French, J., East, J., Kurniawan, A., and Kiboi, J.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Tranexamic acid ,Traumatic brain injury ,Epidemiology ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Placebo ,CRASH-3 trial ,Neuroprotection ,Intracranial haemorrhage ,law.invention ,Emergence care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Randomised controlled trial ,business.industry ,Multiple Trauma ,Research ,lcsh:Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,lcsh:RC86-88.9 ,Protective Factors ,medicine.disease ,Polytrauma ,Antifibrinolytic Agents ,3. Good health ,Neuroprotective Agents ,Relative risk ,Brain Injuries ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background The CRASH-3 trial hypothesised that timely tranexamic acid (TXA) treatment might reduce deaths from intracranial bleeding after traumatic brain injury (TBI). To explore the mechanism of action of TXA in TBI, we examined the timing of its effect on death. Methods The CRASH-3 trial randomised 9202 patients within 3 h of injury with a GCS score ≤ 12 or intracranial bleeding on CT scan and no significant extracranial bleeding to receive TXA or placebo. We conducted an exploratory analysis of the effects of TXA on all-cause mortality within 24 h of injury and within 28 days, excluding patients with a GCS score of 3 or bilateral unreactive pupils, stratified by severity and country income. We pool data from the CRASH-2 and CRASH-3 trials in a one-step fixed effects individual patient data meta-analysis. Results There were 7637 patients for analysis after excluding patients with a GCS score of 3 or bilateral unreactive pupils. Of 1112 deaths, 23.3% were within 24 h of injury (early deaths). The risk of early death was reduced with TXA (112 (2.9%) TXA group vs 147 (3.9%) placebo group; risk ratio [RR] RR 0.74, 95% CI 0.58–0.94). There was no evidence of heterogeneity by severity (p = 0.64) or country income (p = 0.68). The risk of death beyond 24 h of injury was similar in the TXA and placebo groups (432 (11.5%) TXA group vs 421 (11.7%) placebo group; RR 0.98, 95% CI 0.69–1.12). The risk of death at 28 days was 14.0% in the TXA group versus 15.1% in the placebo group (544 vs 568 events; RR 0.93, 95% CI 0.83–1.03). When the CRASH-2 and CRASH-3 trial data were pooled, TXA reduced early death (RR 0.78, 95% CI 0.70–0.87) and death within 28 days (RR 0.88, 95% CI 0.82–0.94). Conclusions Tranexamic acid reduces early deaths in non-moribund TBI patients regardless of TBI severity or country income. The effect of tranexamic acid in patients with isolated TBI is similar to that in polytrauma. Treatment is safe and even severely injured patients appear to benefit when treated soon after injury. Trial registration ISRCTN15088122, registered on 19 July 2011; NCT01402882, registered on 26 July 2011.
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- 2020
40. The ‘triple dividend’ of early warning systems. Evidence from Tanzania’s coastal areas
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Apergi, M., Wilkinson, E., and Calderone, M.
- Abstract
Early warning systems (EWSs) have been effective in reducing loss of life and injury associated with extreme weather events, but it is less clear what influence they have on other household decisions. Some research has identified increased productivity in rainfed farming from using weather and climate information, but much less is known about fishing communities, where livelihoods also depend heavily on the weather. This paper begins to fill this gap by examining the range of socio-economic benefits associated with improvements in EWSs in coastal areas of Tanzania, including for fishing communities and the marine sector. It uses the Triple Dividend of Resilience (TDR) framework, developed by ODI, the World Bank and the London School of Economics, to capture the direct, indirect and co-benefits of investments in disaster risk reduction.
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- 2020
41. SARS-CoV-2 prolonged infection during advanced HIV disease evolves extensive immune escape
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Cele, S., Karim, F., Lustig, G., San, J., Hermanus, T., Tegally, H., Snyman, J., Moyo-Gwete, T., Wilkinson, E., Bernstein, M., Khan, K., Hwa, S., Tilles, S., Singh, L., Giandhari, J., Mthabela, N., Mazibuko, M., Ganga, Y., Gosnell, B., Karim, S., Hanekom, W., Voorhis, W., Ndung'u, T., Team, C., Lessells, R., Moore, P., Moosa, M., de Oliveira, T., and Sigal, A.
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Delta variant ,SARS-CoV-2 ,viruses ,Brief Report ,immune escape ,HIV ,neutralization ,variants of concern ,Microbiology ,Beta variant ,advanced HIV disease ,Virology ,evolution ,Parasitology - Abstract
Characterizing SARS-CoV-2 evolution in specific geographies may help predict properties of the variants that come from these regions. We mapped neutralization of a SARS-CoV-2 strain that evolved over 6 months from ancestral virus in a person with advanced HIV disease in South Africa; this person was infected prior to emergence of the Beta and Delta variants. We longitudinally tracked the evolved virus and tested it against self-plasma and convalescent plasma from ancestral, Beta, and Delta infections. Early virus was similar to ancestral, but it evolved a multitude of mutations found in Omicron and other variants. It showed substantial but incomplete Pfizer BNT162b2 escape, weak neutralization by self-plasma, and despite pre-dating Delta, it also showed extensive escape of Delta infection-elicited neutralization. This example is consistent with the notion that SARS-CoV-2 evolving in individual immune-compromised hosts, including those with advanced HIV disease, may gain immune escape of vaccines and enhanced escape of Delta immunity, and this has implications for vaccine breakthrough and reinfections., Graphical abstract, Cele et al. examine a SARS-CoV-2 infection persisting over 6 months, starting as ancestral virus but evolving various mutations found in Omicron and other variants. The evolved virus substantially but incompletely escaped BNT162b2-elicited immunity as well as neutralization by self-plasma and showed extensive escape from neutralization elicited by Delta infections.
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- 2022
42. United Kingdom Diabetic Retinopathy Electronic Medical Record (UK DR EMR) Users Group: report 4, real-world data on the impact of deprivation on the presentation of diabetic eye disease at hospital services
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Denniston, A. K., Lee, A. Y., Lee, C. S., Crabb, D. P., Bailey, C., Lip, P-L., Taylor, P., Pikoula, M., Cook, E., Akerele, T., Antcliff, R., Brand, C., Chakravarthy, U., Chavan, R., Dhingra, N., Downey, L., Eleftheriadis, H., Ghanchi, F., Khan, R., Kumar, V., Lobo, A., Lotery, A., Menon, G., Mukherjee, R., Palmer, H., Patra, S., Paul, B., Sim, D. A., Talks, J. S., Wilkinson, E., Tufail, A., and Egan, C. A.
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Male ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,genetic structures ,diabetes ,Incidence ,Visual Acuity ,Disease Management ,Clinical Science ,Middle Aged ,eye diseases ,Hospitals ,United Kingdom ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,RE ,Female ,electronic medical record ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Aim: To assess the impact of deprivation on diabetic retinopathy presentation and related treatment interventions, as observed within the UK hospital eye service. Methods: This is a multicentre, national diabetic retinopathy database study with anonymised data extraction across 22 centres from an electronic medical record system. The following were the inclusion criteria: all patients with diabetes and a recorded, structured diabetic retinopathy grade. The minimum data set included, for baseline, age and Index of Multiple Deprivation, based on residential postcode; and for all time points, visual acuity, ETDRS grading of retinopathy and maculopathy, and interventions (laser, intravitreal therapies and surgery). The main outcome measures were (1) visual acuity and binocular visual state, and (2) presence of sight-threatening complications and need for early treatment. Results: 79 775 patients met the inclusion criteria. Deprivation was associated with later presentation in patients with diabetic eye disease: the OR of being sight-impaired at entry into the hospital eye service (defined as 6/18 to better than 3/60 in the better seeing eye) was 1.29 (95% CI 1.20 to 1.39) for the most deprived decile vs 0.77 (95% CI 0.70 to 0.86) for the least deprived decile; the OR for being severely sight-impaired (3/60 or worse in the better seeing eye) was 1.17 (95% CI 0.90 to 1.55) for the most deprived decile vs 0.88 (95% CI 0.61 to 1.27) for the least deprived decile (reference=fifth decile in all cases). There is also variation in sight-threatening complications at presentation and treatment undertaken: the least deprived deciles had lower chance of having a tractional retinal detachment (OR=0.48 and 0.58 for deciles 9 and 10, 95% CI 0.24 to 0.90 and 0.29 to 1.09, respectively); in terms of accessing treatment, the rate of having a vitrectomy was lowest in the most deprived cohort (OR=0.34, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.58). Conclusions: This large real-world study suggests that first presentation at a hospital eye clinic with visual loss or sight-threatening diabetic eye disease is associated with deprivation. These initial hospital visits represent the first opportunities to receive treatment and to formally engage with support services. Such patients are more likely to be sight-impaired or severely sight-impaired at presentation, and may need additional resources to engage with the hospital eye services over complex treatment schedules.
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- 2018
43. Exploring Patient and Staff Experiences of Video Consultations During COVID-19 in an English Outpatient Care Setting: Secondary Data Analysis of Routinely Collected Feedback Data
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Bradwell, HL, primary, Baines, RL, additional, Edwards, KJ, additional, Stevens, SG, additional, Atkinson, K, additional, Wilkinson, E, additional, Chatterjee, A, additional, and Jones, RB, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph: on-orbit instrument performance
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Osterman, S., primary, Green, J., additional, Froning, C., additional, Béland, S., additional, Burgh, E., additional, France, K., additional, Penton, S., additional, Delker, T., additional, Ebbets, D., additional, Sahnow, D., additional, Bacinski, J., additional, Kimble, R., additional, Andrews, J., additional, Wilkinson, E., additional, McPhate, J., additional, Siegmund, O., additional, Ake, T., additional, Aloisi, A., additional, Biagetti, C., additional, Diaz, R., additional, Dixon, W., additional, Friedman, S., additional, Ghavamian, P., additional, Goudfrooij, P., additional, Hartig, G., additional, Keyes, C., additional, Lennon, D., additional, Massa, D., additional, Niemi, S., additional, Oliveira, C., additional, Osten, R., additional, Proffitt, C., additional, Smith, T., additional, and Soderblom, D., additional
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- 2011
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45. Concordance facilitates access in diabetes care—service provider perspectives of service improvement and cultural competency
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Wilkinson, E. and Randhawa, G.
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- 2012
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46. Experimental Jetlag Disrupts Circadian Clock Genes But Improves Performance in Racehorses After Light-Dependent Rapid Resetting of Neuroendocrine Systems and the Rest–Activity Cycle
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Tortonese, D. J., Preedy, D. F., Hesketh, S. A., Webb, H. N., Wilkinson, E. S., Allen, W. R., Fuller, C. J., Townsend, J., and Short, R. V.
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- 2011
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47. A Microdosimetry Application for Microbeam Radiation Therapy Dose Delivery using TOPAS
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Tassano-Smith, E. L., primary, Wilkinson, E. L., additional, Duffy, J. A., additional, and Spiga, J., additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. 34 Geriatricians in Intermediate Care Settings: A Modern Approach to Geriatric Medicine
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Enwere, P, primary, Mahmood, R, additional, Aranda-Martinez, A, additional, Manzoor, A, additional, Wilkinson, E, additional, Soliman, K, additional, Yeong, K, additional, Lawn, L, additional, and Lisk, R, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Stochastic models for certain solid classification and solid fluid separation processes
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Wilkinson, E. T.
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660 ,Chemical engineering - Published
- 1985
50. Induction of phenolic synthesis in plants
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Wilkinson, E. M.
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572.2 - Published
- 1978
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