266 research outputs found
Document, Alfred Summers Estate, 1838 December 22
This handwritten document, dated December 22, 1838, is a legal document on behalf of the Alfred Summers estate in which his widow, Norier Summers, relinquished her right to her husband\u27s estate to her husband\u27s father, Levi Summers. A note written and signed by Abraham Lincoln is at the bottom of the document.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-manuscripts-original-manuscripts/1001/thumbnail.jp
Diccionario de la literatura cubana Tomo I, A - LL, (Instituto de literatura y lingüística de la Academia de Ciencias de Cuba), La Habana (Editorial Letras Cubanas) 1980 ,538 pp.
El artículo no presenta resumen
A Model for Testing New Seed Technologies
Extension specialists from several North Central states recently proposed a new approach to expedite and facilitate evaluation of new genetically modified organism (GMO) hybrids through multi-state testing. As an example of this approach, newly released GMO glyphosate tolerant (GT) corn hybrids were evaluated at multiple locations across five states in 1999 and nine states in 2001. This cooperative testing effort demonstrated that powerful sets of data across a range of production environments could be generated with a minimal amount of input and resource allocation for the individual states
Social Media and Unprofessional Pharmacist Conduct: A Cross-Sectional Survey of Boards of Pharmacy
Purpose: To determine how often boards of pharmacy (BOPs) receive complaints related to licensee’s online behavior, and what types
online behaviors may prompt an investigation of a licensee.
Methods: A survey (consisting of questions related to BOP’s management of complaints against licensee online behavior and 10 case
vignettes) was adapted from a previous survey of United States medical boards. Vignettes encompassed themes such as patient
confidentiality, derogatory language, alcohol use, false or misleading product claims, and others. Following institutional review board
approval, survey materials were distributed via email by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy to 63 domestic and
international boards of pharmacy. Completed surveys were analyzed using descriptive statistics. The proportion of respondents who
indicated that the vignette would “very likely” or “likely” result in an investigation was used to determine consensus. Proportions of
>75%, 50%-75% and <50% were classified as high, moderate and low consensus, respectively.
Results: Fourteen completed surveys (22.2%) were received. Sixty percent of respondents stated that their board has been involved in
managing a complaint regarding the online behavior of a licensee, and that disciplinary actions including revocation or suspension of
license, letter of reprimand, and monetary fines have been enacted. While 79% of responding BOPs have a policy regarding Internet
usage, 36% are unsure whether the policies are sufficient to cover online professionalism. One vignette, where a pharmacist made
misleading claims regarding a compounded product, achieved high consensus for likelihood to prompt an investigation. Moderate
consensus was achieved for a breach of patient confidentiality, inappropriate alcohol use, and misrepresentation of professional
credentials.
Conclusion: Boards of pharmacy are widely varied in what types of online behaviors may prompt an investigation. Additional
dialogue is needed among pharmacy leaders to determine best practices
Social Media and Unprofessional Pharmacist Conduct: A Cross-Sectional Survey of Boards of Pharmacy
Purpose: To determine how often boards of pharmacy (BOPs) receive complaints related to licensee's online behavior, and what types online behaviors may prompt an investigation of a licensee.
Methods: A survey (consisting of questions related to BOP's management of complaints against licensee online behavior and 10 case vignettes) was adapted from a previous survey of United States medical boards. Vignettes encompassed themes such as patient confidentiality, derogatory language, alcohol use, false or misleading product claims, and others. Following institutional review board approval, survey materials were distributed via email by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy to 63 domestic and international boards of pharmacy. Completed surveys were analyzed using descriptive statistics. The proportion of respondents who indicated that the vignette would "very likely" or "likely" result in an investigation was used to determine consensus. Proportions of >75%, 50%-75% and <50% were classified as high, moderate and low consensus, respectively.
Results: Fourteen completed surveys (22.2%) were received. Sixty percent of respondents stated that their board has been involved in managing a complaint regarding the online behavior of a licensee, and that disciplinary actions including revocation or suspension of license, letter of reprimand, and monetary fines have been enacted. While 79% of responding BOPs have a policy regarding Internet usage, 36% are unsure whether the policies are sufficient to cover online professionalism. One vignette, where a pharmacist made misleading claims regarding a compounded product, achieved high consensus for likelihood to prompt an investigation. Moderate consensus was achieved for a breach of patient confidentiality, inappropriate alcohol use, and misrepresentation of professional credentials.
Conclusion: Boards of pharmacy are widely varied in what types of online behaviors may prompt an investigation. Additional dialogue is needed among pharmacy leaders to determine best practices.
Type: Original Researc
The Chromospheric Telescope
We introduce the Chromospheric Telescope (ChroTel) at the Observatorio del
Teide in Izana on Tenerife as a new multi-wavelength imaging telescope for
full-disk synoptic observations of the solar chromosphere. We describe the
design of the instrument and summarize its performance during the first one and
a half years of operation. We present a method to derive line-of-sight velocity
maps of the full solar disk from filtergrams taken in and near the He I
infrared line at 10830 \AA.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Predicting seabed burial of cylinders by wave-induced scour : application to the sandy inner shelf off Florida and Massachusetts
Author Posting. © IEEE, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of IEEE for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering 32 (2007): 167-183, doi:10.1109/JOE.2007.890958.A simple parameterized model for wave-induced
burial of mine-like cylinders as a function of grain-size,
time-varying, wave orbital velocity and mine diameter was
implemented and assessed against results from inert instrumented
mines placed off the Indian Rocks Beach (IRB, FL), and off the
Martha’s Vineyard Coastal Observatory (MVCO, Edgartown,
MA). The steady flow scour parameters provided by Whitehouse
(1998) for self-settling cylinders worked well for predicting burial
by depth below the ambient seabed for Ο (0.5 m) diameter mines
in fine sand at both sites. By including or excluding scour pit
infilling, a range of percent burial by surface area was predicted
that was also consistent with observations. Rapid scour pit infilling
was often seen at MVCO but never at IRB, suggesting that the
environmental presence of fine sediment plays a key role in promoting
infilling. Overprediction of mine scour in coarse sand was
corrected by assuming a mine within a field of large ripples buries
only until it generates no more turbulence than that produced by
surrounding bedforms. The feasibility of using a regional wave
model to predict mine burial in both hindcast and real-time forecast
mode was tested using the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA, Washington, DC) WaveWatch 3 (WW3)
model. Hindcast waves were adequate for useful operational
forcing of mine burial predictions, but five-day wave forecasts
introduced large errors. This investigation was part of a larger
effort to develop simple yet reliable predictions of mine burial
suitable for addressing the operational needs of the U.S. Navy.This work was supported by the grants from the U.S. Office of
Naval Research Marine Geosciences Program. The work of A. C. Trembanis
was supported by the USGS/WHOI Postdoctoral Fellowship
Development and Assessment of a Diagnostic DNA Oligonucleotide Microarray for Detection and Typing of Meningitis-Associated Bacterial Species.
Meningitis is commonly caused by infection with a variety of bacterial or viral pathogens. Acute bacterial meningitis (ABM) can cause severe disease, which can progress rapidly to a critical life-threatening condition. Rapid diagnosis of ABM is critical, as this is most commonly associated with severe sequelae with associated high mortality and morbidity rates compared to viral meningitis, which is less severe and self-limiting. We have designed a microarray for detection and diagnosis of ABM. This has been validated using randomly amplified DNA targets (RADT), comparing buffers with or without formamide, in glass slide format or on the Alere ArrayTubeTM (Alere Technologies GmbH) microarray platform. Pathogen-specific signals were observed using purified bacterial nucleic acids and to a lesser extent using patient cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) samples, with some technical issues observed using RADT and glass slides. Repurposing the array onto the Alere ArrayTubeTM platform and using a targeted amplification system increased specific and reduced nonspecific hybridization signals using both pathogen nucleic and patient CSF DNA targets, better revealing pathogen-specific signals although sensitivity was still reduced in the latter. This diagnostic microarray is useful as a laboratory diagnostic tool for species and strain designation for ABM, rather than for primary diagnosis
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