8,470 research outputs found

    NACCS 33rd Annual Conference

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    Linking Local and Global Struggles for Social Justice: Transnational Chicana and Chicano StudiseJune 28-July 2006Hotel Fénix and Hotel Moraleshttps://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs_programs/1023/thumbnail.jp

    NACCS 32nd Annual Conference

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    Visión: Articulating, Imagining, and Contextualizing Chicana/o SpacesApril 13-17Hyatt Regencyhttps://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs_programs/1022/thumbnail.jp

    IMPACT, Fall 2013

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    https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/impact/1002/thumbnail.jp

    University of San Diego Volleyball Media Guide 2005

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    32 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 21.5 x 28 cmhttps://digital.sandiego.edu/amg-volleyball/1021/thumbnail.jp

    CD4 Count At Presentation For HIV Care In The United States And Canada: Are Those Over 50 Years More Likely To Have A Delayed Presentation?

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    We assessed CD4 count at initial presentation for HIV care among [greater than or equal to]50-year-olds from 1997-2007 in 13 US and Canadian clinical cohorts and compared to <50-year-olds. 44,491 HIV-infected individuals in the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD) were included in our study. Trends in mean CD4 count (measured as cells/mm3) and 95% confidence intervals ([,]) were determined using linear regression stratified by age category and adjusted for gender, race/ethnicity, HIV transmission risk and cohort. From 1997-2007, the proportion of individuals presenting for HIV care who were [greater than or equal to]50-years-old increased from 17% to 27% (p-value < 0.01). The median CD4 count among [greater than or equal to]50 year-olds was consistently lower than younger adults. The interaction of age group and calendar year was significant (p-value <0.01) with both age groups experiencing modest annual improvements over time (< 50-year-olds: 5 [4 , 6] cells/mm3; [greater than or equal to]50-year-olds: 7 [5 , 9] cells/mm3), after adjusting for sex, race/ethnicity, HIV transmission risk group and cohort; however, increases in the two groups were similar after 2000. A greater proportion of older individuals had an AIDS-defining diagnosis at, or within three months prior to, first presentation for HIV care compared to younger individuals (13% vs. 10%, respectively). Due to the increasing proportion, consistently lower CD4 counts, and more advanced HIV disease in adults [greater than or equal to]50-year-old at first presentation for HIV care, renewed HIV testing efforts are needed. &nbsp

    Commencement Program 2005

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    Undergraduate Commencement exercises of Whitworth College in May 2005.https://digitalcommons.whitworth.edu/commencement-programs/1098/thumbnail.jp
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