73 research outputs found

    Journaliste de père en fils à CJBR

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    Un demi-siècle d'information: que de nouvelles!

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    The public health response during and after the Lac-Mégantic train derailment tragedy: a case study

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    On July 6th 2013, a train derailment occurred in the small town of Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, Canada, causing a major human and environmental disaster. In this case study, we comprehensively describe and analyze actions taken by the Public Health Department of the Eastern Townships, in close collaboration with community-based organizations, during both the impact phase emergency response and the post-impact recovery operations that continued for months. Due to the complexity of the event, public health actions needed to be broadly diversified. Preventive measures targeted chemical, physical, biological, and psychosocial hazards in the short-, medium- and long-term. Our analyses yielded valuable lessons that will improve and inform our response to future events while serving as a basis for developing a conceptual framework for public health emergency preparedness

    Revue d'histoire du Bas-Saint-Laurent, vol. 12 (3-4)

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    Mot de l'éditeur -- Au micro de CJBR -- La grande histoire de CJBR -- Jules-A. Brillant et le poste CJBR -- Avec CJBR, un bon en avant pour le Bas St-Laurent -- CJBR, l'école -- L'annonceur: un éducateur populaire -- Sandy Burgess : le journaliste que j'ai connu -- "Ce pays qui est le mien" -- Un demi-siècle d'information: que de nouvelles! -- Journaliste de père en fils à CJBR -- Le théâtre à CJBR -- 50 ans de musique à CJBR, le château fort de la mélodie française -- Poésie, théâtre, jazz et originalité avec Michel Garneau -- Les "Chroniques du dimanche", l'âge d'or de la critique culturelle à CJBR -- "Si CJBR m'était conté..." -- L'évolution technologique, un élément-clef de l'histoire des 50 ans de radiodiffusion -- La publicité à CJBR, quarante ans de croissance -- Des pionnières à CJBR -- 1958-1972, des années enrichissantes -- De Trois-Pistoles à Rimouski -- Le sport et son enracinement dans le milieu régional -- "Debout c'est l'heure", c'est Jean Brisson qui sonne le réveil -- "Par une belle journée de tempête" -- Et on repart vers la centain

    PREVENtion of HeartMate II Pump Thrombosis Through Clinical Management: The PREVENT multi-center study

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    BACKGROUND: Recommended structured clinical practices including implant technique, anti-coagulation strategy, and pump speed management (PREVENT [PREVENtion of HeartMate II Pump Thrombosis Through Clinical Management] recommendations) were developed to address risk of early (<3 months) pump thrombosis (PT) risk with HeartMate II (HMII; St. Jude Medical, Inc. [Thoratec Corporation], Pleasanton, CA). We prospectively assessed the HMII PT rate in the current era when participating centers adhered to the PREVENT recommendations. METHODS: PREVENT was a prospective, multi-center, single-arm, non-randomized study of 300 patients implanted with HMII at 24 participating sites. Confirmed PT (any suspected PT confirmed visually and/or adjudicated by an independent assessor) was evaluated at 3 months (primary end-point) and at 6 months after implantation. RESULTS: The population included 83% men (age 57 years ± 13), 78% destination therapy, and 83% Interagency Registry for Mechanically Assisted Circulatory Support (INTERMACS) Profile 1-3. Primary end-point analysis showed a confirmed PT of 2.9% at 3 months and 4.8% at 6 months. Adherence to key recommendations included 78% to surgical recommendations, 95% to heparin bridging, and 79% to pump speeds ≥9,000 RPMs (92% >8,600 RPMs). Full adherence to implant techniques, heparin bridging, and pump speeds ≥9,000 RPMs resulted in a significantly lower risk of PT (1.9% vs 8.9%; p < 0.01) and lower composite risk of suspected thrombosis, hemolysis, and ischemic stroke (5.7% vs 17.7%; p < 0.01) at 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: Adoption of all components of a structured surgical implant technique and clinical management strategy (PREVENT recommendations) is associated with low rates of confirmed PT

    Recommended nomenclature for five mammalian carboxylesterase gene families: human, mouse, and rat genes and proteins

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    Mammalian carboxylesterase (CES or Ces) genes encode enzymes that participate in xenobiotic, drug, and lipid metabolism in the body and are members of at least five gene families. Tandem duplications have added more genes for some families, particularly for mouse and rat genomes, which has caused confusion in naming rodent Ces genes. This article describes a new nomenclature system for human, mouse, and rat carboxylesterase genes that identifies homolog gene families and allocates a unique name for each gene. The guidelines of human, mouse, and rat gene nomenclature committees were followed and “CES” (human) and “Ces” (mouse and rat) root symbols were used followed by the family number (e.g., human CES1). Where multiple genes were identified for a family or where a clash occurred with an existing gene name, a letter was added (e.g., human CES4A; mouse and rat Ces1a) that reflected gene relatedness among rodent species (e.g., mouse and rat Ces1a). Pseudogenes were named by adding “P” and a number to the human gene name (e.g., human CES1P1) or by using a new letter followed by ps for mouse and rat Ces pseudogenes (e.g., Ces2d-ps). Gene transcript isoforms were named by adding the GenBank accession ID to the gene symbol (e.g., human CES1_AB119995 or mouse Ces1e_BC019208). This nomenclature improves our understanding of human, mouse, and rat CES/Ces gene families and facilitates research into the structure, function, and evolution of these gene families. It also serves as a model for naming CES genes from other mammalian species

    Proceedings of the 13th International Newborn Brain Conference: Neuro-imaging studies

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    Stopper l’affaiblissement de l’éthique du 4e pouvoir

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    Le nouveau paysage de l’environnement médiatique exerce des pressions accrues sur l’éthique des agents du 4e pouvoir. L’éthique journalistique est mal­menée dans ce contexte et risque de perdre ses repères tant professionnels que traditionnels. La mutation qui touche l’univers médiatique est profonde. Nombre de mé­dias traditionnels vacillent. Chez les journalistes, le marché de l’emploi souffre de précarité, le travail à la pige prenant de plus en plus d’ampleur. À cette conjonc­ture s’ajoute un maigre niveau de confiance du public qui n’excède guère les 45 %, bon an, mal an. À la recherche d’un nouveau modèle d’affaires pour assurer leur survie, tous les médias se sont lancés dans la production multiplateforme, proposant à leurs publics des productions écrites, sonores, visuelles et en ligne. En fait, la culture des médias sociaux et des nouvelles télédiffusées en conti­nu a imprimé une nouvelle réalité, dans laquelle l’information circule à une vitesse excessive. Cette rapidité de production est cependant mère d’approxima­tions, de superficialité et de dérapages éthiques dans le traitement de l’information. La liste de ces dérapages s’allonge. L’auteur propose une série de mesures pour contrer le dysfonctionnement du 4e pouvoir et stopper le glissement éthique observé.The media environment’s new landscape is exerting growing pressure on the ethics of agents of the 4th power. As a result, journalistic ethics are being given a rough ride and risk losing both their professional and traditional guideposts. The changes affecting the media are profound, and many traditional media forms are faltering. The job market for journalists is precarious and freelance work is becoming increasingly widespread. Moreover, public confidence in the media has declined, barely exceeding 45 % year after year. In their efforts to find a new business model that will ensure their survival, all media have adopted a multiplatform approach that offers their audiences written, audio, visual and online productions. In fact, the culture of social media and 24/7 TV news has created a new reality where information is circulating at an overly rapid pace. Conse­quently, information is being handled in a superficial, less rigorous manner and ethical considerations are suffering to a considerable extent. The author proposes a series of measures to counter the dysfunctioning of the 4th power and halt the ethical decline currently observed
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