1,476 research outputs found
Optic Nerve Size in Blind and Normal Mice
Measurements of eyes and optic nerves of blind and normal mice were taken at ages ranging from 1-60 days. The mice used were from a Bagg albino strain in which a dominant mutation for blindness had occurred. The size of the optic nerve appears to be dependent upon the development of the eye. Optic nerves from blind eyes are smaller than those from normal eyes, and optic nerves from blind eyes without a lens and with a folded retina are smaller than those from eyes with a lens, even though the lens is vacuolated and the cornea is thickened
Proposal for a low cost close air support aircraft for the year 2000: The Raptor
The Raptor is a proposed low cost Close Air Support (CAS) aircraft for the U.S. Military. The Raptor incorporates a 'cranked arrow' wing planform, and uses canards instead of a traditional horizontal tail. The Raptor is designed to be capable of responsive delivery of effective ordnance in close proximity to friendly ground forces during the day, night, and 'under the weather' conditions. Details are presented of the Raptor's mission, configuration, performance, stability and control, ground support, manufacturing, and overall cost to permit engineering evaluation of the proposed design. A description of the design process and analysis methods used is also provided
Impact of the COVIDâ19 pandemic on CreutzfeldtâJakob disease surveillance and patient care in the United Kingdom
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: CreutzfeldtâJakob disease (CJD) is lethal and transmissible. We assessed the impact of the COVIDâ19 pandemic on UK CJD surveillance. We hypothesized that (i) disruptions prolonged diagnostic latency; (ii) autopsy rates declined; and (iii) COVIDâ19 infection negatively affected diagnosis, care, and survival. METHODS: We retrospectively investigated the first year of the pandemic, using the preceding year as a comparator, quantifying numbers of individuals assessed by the UK National CJD Research & Surveillance Unit for suspected CJD, time to diagnosis, disease duration, and autopsy rates. We evaluated the impact of COVIDâ19 status on diagnosis, care, and survival in CJD. RESULTS: A total of 148 individuals were diagnosed with CJD in the pandemic (from a total of 166 individuals assessed) compared to 141 in the comparator (from 145 assessed). No differences were identified in disease duration or time to diagnosis. Autopsy rates were unchanged. Twenty individuals had COVIDâ19; 60% were symptomatic, and 10% had severe disease. Disruptions in diagnosis and care were frequently identified. Forty percent of COVIDâ19âpositive individuals died; however, COVIDâ19 status did not significantly alter survival duration in CJD. CONCLUSIONS: The COVIDâ19 pandemic has not impacted UK CJD case ascertainment or survival, but diagnostic evaluation and clinical care of individuals have been affected
Nurses Alumni Association Bulletin, Fall 1994
1994-1995 Meeting Dates Calendar
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1994-1995 Meeting Dates Calendar
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Department of Nursing 1993-1994
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Cadet Nurse Corps
Medical Anecdotes of Faith
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Are autistic children more vulnerable online? Relating autism to online safety, child wellbeing and parental risk management
Abstract
Many autistic children are active online users. Research suggests that they are subject to distress and poor wellbeing following online safety threats. However, it is unclear if autistic children are more likely to experience online safety risks compared with non-autistic children. We conducted a parental online safety survey. Two groups of parents (autistic children, n=63; non-autistic children, n= 41) completed questionnaires about their child's online safety behaviours, wellbeing, and their own parental self-efficacy (PSE). Our results highlight that autistic children experience significantly more online safety risks than non-autistic children and poorer wellbeing than autistic children who did not experience online safety risks. Parents of autistic children reported carrying out significantly less risk management and reported poorer PSE than parents of non-autistic children. Having an autistic child and parental online safety knowledge were significant predictors of PSE. These results will help inform the co-design of interventions to protect autistic children online
Nurses Alumni Association Bulletin, Fall 1995
1995-1996 Meeting Dates Calendar
1996 Annual Luncheon-Meeting Notice
Officers and Committee Chairs
Bulletin Publication Committee
1995-1996 Meeting Dates Calendar
The President\u27s Message
Financial Report
What\u27s New
Fiftieth Anniversary
Resume of Minutes of Alumni Association Meetings
Scholarship Funds at Work
CAHS Alumni Board/Diploma School
Alumni Office News
Jefferson Health System
Oldest Veteran Dies
1OOth Anniversary
Pearl Harbor Remembered
Memories
Janet Hindson Retires
Happy Birthday
Scholarship Fund donors for 1994
Committee Reports
By-Laws
Development
Bulletin
Relief Fund
Satellite
Social
Scholarship
In Memoriam, Names of Deceased Graduates
Class News
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Jefferson Alumni Identification Card
The Diploma School of Nursing Alumni Association-Mabel C. Prevost
Letter of Appreciation
Tribute To a Mother
An End Must Come
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For Senior Citizens to Chuckle Over
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To Order: A Chronological History and Alumni Directory From TJU Bookstore
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Norms Governing Urban African American Adolescents' Sexual and Substance-Using Behavior
Using a probability-based neighborhood sample of urban African American youth and a sample of their close friends (N = 202), we conducted a one-year longitudinal study to examine key questions regarding sexual and drug using norms. The results provide validation of social norms governing sexual behavior, condom use, and substance use among friendship groups. These norms had strong to moderate homogeneity; and both normative strength and homogeneity were relatively stable over a one-year period independent of changes in group membership. The data further suggest that sex and substance using norms may operate as a normative set. Similar to studies of adults, we identified three distinct ânorm-basedâ social strata in our sample. Together, our findings suggest that the norms investigated are valid targets for health promotion efforts, and such efforts may benefit from tailoring programs to the normative sets that make up the different social strata in a given adolescent community.Keywords: Friendships, Norm stability, HIV risk behavior, African American, Norm validity, Adolescent
Factors influencing referral to and uptake and attendance of pulmonary rehabilitation for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a qualitative evidence synthesis of the experiences of service users, their families, and healthcare providers (Protocol)
This is a protocol for a Cochrane Review (Qualitative). The object
ives are as follows:
âą
To identify factors that influence referral to pulmonary rehab
ilitation for COPD from the perspective of service users, thei
r
family/carers, and healthcare providers.
âą
To identify factors that influence uptake of pulmonary rehabil
itation for COPD (i.e. at least one attendance of an assessment
or
first programme session) from the perspective of service users
, their family/carers, and healthcare providers.
âą
To identify factors that influence attendance at pulmonary reha
bilitation programmes for COPD from the perspective of servi
ce
users, their family/carers, and healthcare providers.
âą
To develop an inductive explanatory framework for how these f
actors may interact to contribute to better or poorer uptake or
completion of pulmonary rehabilitation in order to guide acti
ons of healthcare decision-makers to improve opportunities fo
r people
with COPD to benefit from pulmonary rehabilitation
The genome of a songbird
The zebra finch is an important model organism in several fields with unique relevance to human neuroscience. Like other songbirds, the zebra finch communicates through learned vocalizations, an ability otherwise documented only in humans and a few other animals and lacking in the chickenthe only bird with a sequenced genome until now. Here we present a structural, functional and comparative analysis of the genome sequence of the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata), which is a songbird belonging to the large avian order Passeriformes. We find that the overall structures of the genomes are similar in zebra finch and chicken, but they differ in many intrachromosomal rearrangements, lineage-specific gene family expansions, the number of long-terminal-repeat- based retrotransposons, and mechanisms of sex chromosome dosage compensation. We show that song behaviour engages gene regulatory networks in the zebra finch brain, altering the expression of long non-coding RNAs, microRNAs, transcription factors and their targets. We also show evidence for rapid molecular evolution in the songbird lineage of genes that are regulated during song experience. These results indicate an active involvement of the genome in neural processes underlying vocal communication and identify potential genetic substrates for the evolution and regulation of this behaviour. © 2010 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved
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