493,528 research outputs found
Physician-prescribed Asthma Treatment Regimen does not differ Between Smoking and Non-smoking Patients With Asthma in Seoul and Gyunggi province of Korea
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors thank Lauren Weisenfluh and Melissa Stauffer, PhD, in collaboration with SCRIBCO, for medical writing assistance. Funding for this research was provided by Merck & Co., Inc. The authors also wish to thank Eric Maiese and Sharlette Everett for their contributions to the design and implementation of the study and the analytic plan. The authors would also like to thank the study investigators who contributed to patient enrollment and data collection: Drs. Young Il Hwang (Hallym University Sacred Heart Hospital), Young Min Ye (Ajou University Medical Center), Joo Hee Kim (Ajou University Medical Center), Heung Woo Park (Seoul National University Hospital), Tae Wan Kim (Seoul National University Hospital), Jae Jeong Shim (Korea University Guro Hospital), Gyu Young Hur (Korea University Guro Hospital), Soo Taek Uh (SoonChunHyang University Hospital), Sang Ha Kim (Wonju Christian Hospital), Myoung Kyu Lee (Wonju Christian Hospital), Soo Keol Lee (Dong-A Medical Center), Jin Hong Chung (Yeungnam University Medical Center), Kyu Jin Kim (Yeungnam University Medical Center), Young Koo Jee (Dankook University Hospital), Kyung Mook Kim (Dankook University Hospital), Young Il Koh (Chonnam National University Hospital), Cheol Woo Kim (Inha university Hospital), You Sook Cho (Seoul Asan Medical Center), Tae Bum Kim (Seoul Asan Medical Center), Jae Myung Lee (Myeong Internal Medicine), Young Mok Lee (Good Friends Internal Medicine), Bong Chun Lee (Namsan Hospital), So Yoen Park (A&A Clinic).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Impact assessment in a non-government organisation
<p>Supplemental_figure for A Simple Scoring System Using the Red Blood Cell Distribution Width, Delta Neutrophil Index, and Platelet Count to Predict Mortality in Patients With Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock by Yong Chan Kim, Je Eun Song, Eun Jin Kim, Heun Choi, Woo Yong Jeong, In Young Jung, Su Jin Jeong, Nam Su Ku, Jun Yong Choi, Young Goo Song, and June Myung Kim in Journal of Intensive Care Medicine</p
jin soo kim Interview
Artist Bio: jin soo kim was born in 1950 in Seoul, during the Korean War. In 1974, after receiving her B.S. from Seoul National University, kim left Korea. Upon arriving in Los Angeles, the severity of the culture shock was such that after eight months, she moved to a remote rural town Macomb Illinois, forty miles east of the Mississippi River. She began studying art in Western Illinois University while working at a hospital as a registered nurse.
In 1983, kim went on to receive an MFA at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Since then, her work has been the subject of numerous one-person shows and she has participated in various exhibitions. kim has been teaching at The School of The Art Institute of Chicago since 1990. Living in Evanston, Illinois, she has been making art
College of Business News
Jin-Woo Kim Opines on Bank of America’s Marketing Strateg
Memories from the 13th World Congress of Music Therapy
Includes memories from: Gro Trondalen, Alan Turry, Joseph Moreno, Rajam Shanker, Jin-Hyung Lee, SuJeong Kim, Ng Wang Feng, Melanie Kwan, Kana Okazaki-Sakaue, Nancy Jackson, Ayako Konishi, Jana J. Skrien Koppula, Roberta Kagin, Joreal Chen, HaeSun Kim
tracks
tracks January 12-February 8, 1999 Jaffe-Friede & Strauss Galleries, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College
jin soo kim artist-in-residencehttps://via.library.depaul.edu/oral_his_gallery/1086/thumbnail.jp
Changes in trade intensity between Korea and her major trading countries in the manufacturing sector
Social and Ecological Issues in the Works of Some Contemporary Sculptors
Ecology in social or human terms owes its stability to man's activities on the earth planet. In the mainstream of modern art, different visual artists have produced notable works that explore either social or ecological concerns, most of which revolve around issues of climate change. This paper analyses some sculptures and installations created by Quayola Alastair Noble, Jin Soo Kim, El Anatsui, Ekenechukwu Anikpe, Amarachi Okafor and Johnpaul Ezeugwu, which in different ways refer directly or indirectly to global warming. It discusses how their works provoke relevant questions or proffer solutions to problems associated with social and ecological stratification. The paper concludes that the artists have employed their art as a tool for mass orientation on the implications of undermining the natural rhythm of the earth. Keywords: Climate Change, Quayola Alastair Noble, Jin Soo Kim, El Anatsui, Ekenechukwu Anikpe, Amarachi Okafor, Johnpaul Ezeugw
Which Explains Stock Return Co-movement better, Corporate Governance or Corporate Transparency? Evidence from R2 (in English)
A hypothesis is examined in support of Jin and Myers (2006) using cross-country individual stock’s R2 (i.e., individual stock’s R2 are calculated from the market-model regression using each country’s market return and U.S. market returns). Consistent with Jin and Myers, R2 has consistently negative relationships with corporate-transparency variables in various regression equations after controlling for macroeconomic variables and skewness. Furthermore, R2 is more affected by corporate-transparency variables, especially the private-information-acquisition characteristic of corporate transparency. The effect of the protection of property right on R2 disappears when all the other variables are included.corporate governance; corporate transparency; private information acquisition; protection of property rights and firm-specific risks
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