331 research outputs found
Assisting Rural MAT Patients Through Peer Social Support
Throughout the COVID19 Pandemic, there has been a spike in opioid relapse and opioid overdose related death. This problem, though multifactorial, can be attributed to lack of social outlets for MAT patients. Now that different social support groups are reopening, there is a greater emphasis placed on groups for patients suffering with alcoholism rather than those suffering from opioid addiction. This project hopes to plant the seeds for group therapy for MAT patients, giving them a social outlet with the hopeful outcome assisting patients with forming non-user networks.https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/fmclerk/1985/thumbnail.jp
Writing for the Social Sciences
The attached syllabus was used in the course, ENGL 21002 - R: Writing for the Social Sciences. It serves as a schedule and guide to the course, covering reading assignments, deadlines, course policies, and other essential information
Gamow-Teller Strength in the Region of Sn
New calculations are presented for Gamow-Teller beta decay of nuclei near
Sn. Essentially all of the Sn Gamow-Teller decay strength is
predicted to go to a single state at an excitation energy of 1.8 MeV in
In. The first calculations are presented for the decays of neighboring
odd-even and odd-odd nuclei which show, in contrast to Sn, surprisingly
complex and broad Gamow-Teller strength distributions. The results are compared
to existing experimental data and the resulting hindrance factors are
discussed.Comment: 12 pages (latex) and 2 figures available on reques
Discovery of palladium, antimony, tellurium, iodine, and xenon isotopes
Currently, thirty-eight palladium, thirty-eight antimony, thirty-nine
tellurium, thirty-eight iodine, and forty xenon isotopes have been observed and
the discovery of these isotopes is discussed here. For each isotope a brief
synopsis of the first refereed publication, including the production and
identification method, is presented.Comment: to be published in At. Data Nucl. Data Table
Histology of 24 organs from Asian elephant calves (Elephas maximus)
Background Elephants are the largest and heaviest living terrestrial animals, but information on their histology is still lacking. This study provides a unique insight into the elephant’s organs and also provides a comparison between juvenile Asian elephants and adult Asian elephants or other species. Here we report on the histological structure of 24 organs, including the skin, brain (cerebrum, cerebellar hemisphere, vermis, thalamus, midbrain), spinal cord, sciatic nerve, striated skeletal muscle, cardiac muscle, bone (flat bone and long bone), cartilage (hyaline cartilage and fibrocartilage), heart (right atrium, right ventricle), blood vessels (aorta, pulmonary artery and caudal vena cava), trunk, trachea, lung, tongue, esophagus, stomach, small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, ileum), large intestine (cecum, colon, rectum), liver and pancreas, kidney, ovary, uterus (body and horn) and spleen of two juvenile Asian elephants. Methods Tissue sections were stained with Harris’s hematoxylin and eosin Y. Results While almost all structures were similar to those of other species or adult elephants, some structures were different from other mammalian species, such as: plexiform bone was found in flat bone only; a thin trachealismuscle was observed in the trachea; and no serous or mucinous glands were found in the submucosa of the trachea. Discussion Histological information from various organs can serve as an important foundation of basal data for future microanatomical studies, and help in the diagnosis and pathogenesis in sick elephants or those with an unknown cause of death
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