37 research outputs found

    Fitting In: The Automation of the Archives at Northwestern University

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    By now the archival community has begun in earnest, though not always cheerfully, to participate in that special sector of the information revolution which involves the MARC (Machine Readable Cataloging) formats created by the Library of Congress. Most especially, many archivists are beginning to make use, or planning to begin to make use, of the recently published USMARC Archival and Manuscripts Control format, generally known as the MARC-AMC format, or simply AMC

    Nurses Alumni Association Bulletin, Fall 1991

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    Annual Meeting Calendar Annual Luncheon - Meeting Notice Meeting Notice Dates Officers and Committee Chairmen President\u27s Message Treasurer\u27s Report Proposed Budget- 1991 News About Our Graduates History of the School of Nursing The Future of Nursing School Health - 20 Years Ago - Today Happy Birthday Resume of Minutes of Alumni Association Meetings Alumni Office News Committee Reports By-Laws Bulletin Nominating Relief Fund Satellite Scholarship Social Finance Nursing Education at Jefferson - A Century of Excellence The Decade Fund Fiftieth Anniversary In Memoriam, Names of Deceased Graduates Luncheon Photos My Dear Son Weather Lore Class News Scholarship Application Non-Graduate Scholarship Fund Application Relief Fund Application Centennial Tile Order Form Membership Application Pins, Transcripts, Class Address Lists, Change of Address Form Ma

    Treatment of sporotrichosis with itraconazole

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    To describe the clinical presentation and outcomes of treatment with itraconazole in patients with sporotrichosis. A culture for Sporothrix schenckii or compatible histopathology was required for inclusion in the study. Patients with both cutaneous and systemic sporotrichosis were treated. Patients received from 100 to 600 mg of itraconazole daily for 3 to 18 months. Patients were classified as responders or nonresponders. Responders were further classified as remaining on treatment, relapsed, or free of disease. Nonresponders included patients who failed to respond or progressed during treatment with itraconazole. Twenty-seven patients (mean age: 53 years) were treated with 30 courses of itraconazole. Diabetes mellitus and alcoholism were present in eight and seven patients, respectively. Sites of involvement included lymphocutaneous alone in 9 patients, articular/osseous in 15 (multifocal in 3), and lung in 3. Prior therapy was unsuccessful in 11 patients. Among the 30 courses, there were 25 responders and 5 nonresponders. All 5 nonresponders received at least 200 mg daily of itraconazole for durations that ranged from 6 to 18 months. Of the 25 responders, 7 relapsed 1 to 7 months after treatment durations of 6 to 18 months. Of the 7 who relapsed, 2 are responding to a second course. One responder was lost to follow-up after 10 months of treatment with itraconazole. Of the remaining 17 responders, 3 remain on treatment, and 14 are free of disease over follow-up durations of 6 to 42 months (mean: 17.6 months). Itraconazole was well tolerated with few side effects noted. These results document the efficacy of itraconazole in the treatment of cutaneous and systemic sporotrichosis.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/31069/1/0000746.pd

    Independent and combined effects of improved water, sanitation, and hygiene, and improved complementary feeding, on child stunting and anaemia in rural Zimbabwe: a cluster-randomised trial.

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    BACKGROUND: Child stunting reduces survival and impairs neurodevelopment. We tested the independent and combined effects of improved water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), and improved infant and young child feeding (IYCF) on stunting and anaemia in in Zimbabwe. METHODS: We did a cluster-randomised, community-based, 2 × 2 factorial trial in two rural districts in Zimbabwe. Clusters were defined as the catchment area of between one and four village health workers employed by the Zimbabwe Ministry of Health and Child Care. Women were eligible for inclusion if they permanently lived in clusters and were confirmed pregnant. Clusters were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) to standard of care (52 clusters), IYCF (20 g of a small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplement per day from age 6 to 18 months plus complementary feeding counselling; 53 clusters), WASH (construction of a ventilated improved pit latrine, provision of two handwashing stations, liquid soap, chlorine, and play space plus hygiene counselling; 53 clusters), or IYCF plus WASH (53 clusters). A constrained randomisation technique was used to achieve balance across the groups for 14 variables related to geography, demography, water access, and community-level sanitation coverage. Masking of participants and fieldworkers was not possible. The primary outcomes were infant length-for-age Z score and haemoglobin concentrations at 18 months of age among children born to mothers who were HIV negative during pregnancy. These outcomes were analysed in the intention-to-treat population. We estimated the effects of the interventions by comparing the two IYCF groups with the two non-IYCF groups and the two WASH groups with the two non-WASH groups, except for outcomes that had an important statistical interaction between the interventions. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01824940. FINDINGS: Between Nov 22, 2012, and March 27, 2015, 5280 pregnant women were enrolled from 211 clusters. 3686 children born to HIV-negative mothers were assessed at age 18 months (884 in the standard of care group from 52 clusters, 893 in the IYCF group from 53 clusters, 918 in the WASH group from 53 clusters, and 991 in the IYCF plus WASH group from 51 clusters). In the IYCF intervention groups, the mean length-for-age Z score was 0·16 (95% CI 0·08-0·23) higher and the mean haemoglobin concentration was 2·03 g/L (1·28-2·79) higher than those in the non-IYCF intervention groups. The IYCF intervention reduced the number of stunted children from 620 (35%) of 1792 to 514 (27%) of 1879, and the number of children with anaemia from 245 (13·9%) of 1759 to 193 (10·5%) of 1845. The WASH intervention had no effect on either primary outcome. Neither intervention reduced the prevalence of diarrhoea at 12 or 18 months. No trial-related serious adverse events, and only three trial-related adverse events, were reported. INTERPRETATION: Household-level elementary WASH interventions implemented in rural areas in low-income countries are unlikely to reduce stunting or anaemia and might not reduce diarrhoea. Implementation of these WASH interventions in combination with IYCF interventions is unlikely to reduce stunting or anaemia more than implementation of IYCF alone. FUNDING: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Department for International Development, Wellcome Trust, Swiss Development Cooperation, UNICEF, and US National Institutes of Health.The SHINE trial is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (OPP1021542 and OPP113707); UK Department for International Development; Wellcome Trust, UK (093768/Z/10/Z, 108065/Z/15/Z and 203905/Z/16/Z); Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation; US National Institutes of Health (2R01HD060338-06); and UNICEF (PCA-2017-0002)

    The Cost of Converting to MARC AMC: Some Early Observations

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    published or submitted for publicatio

    RLIN, AMC, and Retrospective Conversion

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