70 research outputs found

    What? Now a Respiratory Syncytial Virus Epidemic

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    What? Is Epstein–Barr Virus Infection Linked to Multiple Sclerosis?

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    Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry During Covid-19

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    Consultation/liaison psychiatrists care for people with co-existing medical and psychologic difficulties. The coronavirus pandemic is stressful for patients and their psychiatric caregivers. Patients have lost support systems and harbor fears about exposing family to the virus. COVID-19 sometimes exacerbates previous psychiatric conditions, while diminishing intimacy with physicians. Everyone is oversaturated with COVID-19-related news focusing on rising concerns about the illness and about jobs, school, and housing insecurities. The psychiatrist maintains a hospital presence despite fear of contracting the disease. Challenges include addressing staff morale, evidencing empathy despite telecommunication devices, and treating anxiety, depression, sleep phobias, post intubation flashbacks, COVID-19-induced cognitive disorders, and/or drug and alcohol addiction or withdrawal. They also provide support to patients who otherwise would die alone. The consultant must value small clinical successes, debrief beleaguered colleagues, offer support to hospital staff, and deliver psychotherapies to bolster patient comfort and autonomy. They prescribe pharmacotherapies that address psychiatric concerns without adversely affecting medical conditions. To decrease professional burnout from COVID-19-related issues, psychiatrists should attend to self-care and precautions designed to maintain the safety of their family

    Mucormycosis: COVID-19 and Corticosteroids

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    Are Antipyretic Medications Compatible with SARS-CoV-2 Vaccines?

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    What About Anosmia From COVID-19 ?

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    Treating Cytokine Storm In Patients With COVID-19

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    Do You Know the Pathophysiology of Cytokine Storm During COVID-19?

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    The roles of motivation and ability in controlling the consequences of stereotype suppression

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    Two experiments investigated the conditions under which previously suppressed stereotypes are applied in impression formation. In Experiment 1, the extent to which a previously suppressed racial stereotype influenced subsequent impressions depended on the race of the target who was subsequently encountered. Whereas impressions of race-unspecified targets were assimilated to the stereotype following its suppression, no such effects were observed when the target belonged to the racial group whose stereotype had been initially suppressed. These results demonstrate that when perceivers are motivated to avoid stereo-typing individuals, the influence of a stereotype that has been previously activated through suppression is minimized. Experiment 2 demonstrated that these processing goals effectively reduce the impact of suppression-activated stereotypes only when perceivers have sufficient capacity to enact the goals. These results suggest that both sufficient motivation and capacity are necessary to prevent heightened stereotyping following stereotype suppression
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