Hunt

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Terms modified by Hunt

  • hunt syndrome

  • Selected Abstracts


    Complementary and alternative medicine practitioner consultations among those who have or have had cancer in a Norwegian total population (Nord-Trøndelag Health Study): prevalence, socio-demographics and health perceptions

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE, Issue 3 2010
    A. STEINSBEKK phd, research fellow
    STEINSBEKK A., ADAMS J., SIBBRITT D. & JOHNSEN R. (2010) European Journal of Cancer Care19, 346,351 Complementary and alternative medicine practitioner consultations among those who have or have had cancer in a Norwegian total population (Nord-Trøndelag Health Study): prevalence, socio-demographics and health perceptions The aim of the study was to identify the use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) practitioners among current and previous cancer patients in a total population. A secondary analysis of data from the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (otherwise known as the HUNT 2 Study) , a total population survey conducted in central Norway , was undertaken. Analysis focused upon the response of 1406 individuals who reported to have or have had cancer and who answered a question on visits to CAM practitioners. The study identified 16.1% of respondents had visited a CAM practitioner in the prior 12 months compared with 12.8% in the total population, and the likelihood of consulting a CAM practitioner was significantly increased among those who had a university degree, who reported a lower perceived global health and who had experienced a health complaint during the last 12 months. Complementary and alternative medicine practitioner consultations among individuals with a previous or current malignant disease were highest for those with poor self-reported health status and with a recent health complaint. From the socio-demographic variables studied only the reporting of a university degree was significantly associated with higher CAM practitioner use. [source]


    Hormone replacement therapy and headache prevalence in postmenopausal women.

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 1 2007
    The Head-HUNT study
    Conflicting evidence exists whether hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is a risk factor for headache. The aim of the study was to examine the prevalence of headache and migraine amongst postmenopausal women using HRT. In the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study 1995,97 (HUNT 2), 18 323 (62%) out of 29 679 women aged 40 years or more responded to headache questions (Head-HUNT). Amongst the 6007 postmenopausal women, 5507 (92%) responded to questions regarding use of HRT (2375 used or had used it) and questions related to headache (2407 had complaints). There was a significant association between headache and present use of HRT, both with local [odds ratio (OR) = 1.4, 95% confidence intervals (CI) 1.1,1.7] and systemic (OR = 1.6, 95% CI 1.4,1.9) application. This was found for non-migrainous headache (OR = 1.3, 95% CI 1.1,1.5) and migraine (OR = 1.6, 95% CI 1.4,1.9). Both migraine and non-migrainous headache were more probably amongst users of postmenopausal HRT than amongst those who had never used HRT. Whether HRT caused headache or was used partly because of headache cannot be determined in this cross-sectional study. [source]


    COMT genotypes and use of antipsychotic medication: linking population-based prescription database to the HUNT study,

    PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY AND DRUG SAFETY, Issue 4 2008
    Dr Knut Hagen
    Abstract Purpose The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the impact of codon 158 polymorphism at the catechol- O -methyltransferase (COMT) gene on prescription of antipsychotic medication in a general population. Methods The sample comprised 2623 non-diabetic individuals who participated in the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT) in the period 1995,97 and who were alive 1 January 2004. The subjects were followed up with respect to prescription of antipsychotic medication based on data obtained from the Norwegian prescription database. Results Among the group of 76 individuals who had been prescribed antipsychotic medication the distribution did not differ between genotypes and alleles when compared to a control group. For 47 individuals with at least three prescriptions a correlation between median total defined daily doses (DDDs) and genotype groups was found (Spearman's rho, ,0.40, p,=,0.01), being highest for the Met/Met genotype (250), intermediate for the Met/Val genotype (126) and lowest for the Val/Val genotype (47) (p,=,0.03). Conclusion In this population-based cohort of 2623 adults, the Val158Met polymorphism at the COMT gene had no major impact on number of individuals who had been prescribed antipsychotic medication. However, linkage to the prescription database may in an indirect way indicate an association between the COMT Val158Met polymorphism and treatment response or dose requirements of antipsychotic medication. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    THE PATH OF THE DEVIL: EARLY MODERN WITCH HUNTS.

    JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF RELIGION, Issue 1 2008
    By Gary Jensen
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Ruptured symptomatic internal carotid artery dorsal wall aneurysm with rapid configurational change.

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 10 2010
    Clinical experience, management outcome: an original article
    Background:, Aneurysms located at non-branching sites, protruding from the dorsal wall of the supraclinoid internal carotid artery (ICA) with rapid configurational changes, were retrospectively reviewed in effort to identify and characterize these high-risk aneurysms. Methods:, A total of 447 patients with 491 intracranial aneurysms were treated from March 2005 to August 2008, and of these, eight patients had ICA dorsal wall aneurysms. Four of them suffered subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), and all had aneurysms undergoing rapid configuration changes during the treatment course. Digital subtraction cerebral angiography (DSA) performed soon after the SAH events. Data analyzed were patient age, sex, Hunt and Kosnik grade, time interval from first DSA to second DSA, aneurysm treatment, and modified Rankin scale score after treatment for 3 months. Success or failure of therapeutic management was examined among the patients. Results:, Digital subtraction cerebral angiography showed only lesions with small bulges in the dorsal walls of the ICAs. However, the patients underwent DSA again for re-bleeding or for post-treatment follow-up, confirming the SAH source. ICA dorsal wall aneurysms with rapid growth and configurational changes were found on subsequent DSA studies. Conclusions:, Among the four patients, ICA dorsal wall aneurysms underwent rapid growth with configurational change from a blister type to a saccular type despite different management. ICA trapping including the lesion segment can be considered as the first treatment option if the balloon occlusion test (BOT) is successful. If a BOT is not tolerated by the patient, extracranial,intracranial bypass revascularization surgery with endovascular ICA occlusion is another treatment option. [source]


    Migraine and delayed ischaemic neurological deficit after subarachnoid haemorrhage in women: a case,control study

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 12 2007
    J. P. Dreier
    The aim of the present case,control study was to investigate the role of migraine as a potential risk factor for a delayed ischaemic neurological deficit (DIND) after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). A telephone interview was performed in patients or their relatives to determine the prevalence of migraine. Thirty-six women aged <60 years had SAH with Hunt & Hess grade I,III and DIND (group A). This group was compared with an age-matched group of 36 female SAH patients, Hunt & Hess grade I,III without DIND (group B). The two populations were also characterized regarding hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus and alcohol use. A significant difference was only found for the prevalence of migraine with 47% in group A and 25% in group B (P < 0.05; odds ratio: 2.68, confidence interval: 0.99,7.29). Migraineurs revealed similar prevalences of risk factors independently of the presence of DINDs. This retrospective study suggests that women with migraine have a higher risk to develop a DIND than women without migraine. [source]


    Semianalytical Solutions for Stream Depletion in Partially Penetrating Streams

    GROUND WATER, Issue 1 2004
    Xunhong Chen
    In the analysis of streamflow depletion, the Hunt (1999) solution has an important advantage because it considers a partially penetrating stream. By extending the Hunt drawdown solution, this paper presents semianalytical solutions for gaining streams that evaluate the induced stream infiltration and base flow reduction separately. Simulation results show that for a given ,h (the initial hydraulic head difference between stream and aquifer beneath the channel), the base flow reduction is in direct proportion to the product of streambed leakage (,) and the distance between pumping well and stream (L), and the induced stream infiltration is in inverse proportion to ,L. ,h has a significant effect on the ratio of stream infiltration to base flow reduction. The results from the semianalytical solutions agree well with those from MODFLOW simulations. The semianalytical solutions are useful in the verification of numerical simulations and in the analysis of stream-aquifer interactions where water quantity or quality is concerned. [source]


    A Stream Depletion Field Experiment

    GROUND WATER, Issue 2 2001
    Bruce Hunt
    A field experiment was carried out to measure drawdowns in observation wells and stream depletion flows that occurred when water was abstracted from a well beside a stream. The field data is analyzed herein to determine the aquifer transmissivity, T, the aquifer storage coefficient, S, and a streambed leakage parameter, ,, by comparing measurements with a solution obtained by Hunt (1999). The analysis uses early time drawdowns with a match-point method to determine T and S, and stream depletion measurements at later times are used to determine ,. The final results are reasonably consistent for measurements taken in four observation wells. The advantages and disadvantages of this approach are discussed, and two alternative ways of estimating , are also discussed. [source]


    Commentary on Hunt, P., Gatenby, S. and Rayner, M. (1995) The format for the National Food Guide: performance and preference studies.

    JOURNAL OF HUMAN NUTRITION & DIETETICS, Issue 3 2007
    Dietetics; , Journal of Human Nutrition
    [source]


    What Determines Buyer-Seller Relationship Quality?

    JOURNAL OF SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, Issue 2 2002
    An Investigation from the Buyer's Perspective
    SUMMARY In today's environment, businesses are increasingly dependent on the relationships they have with their suppliers and are demanding that they adhere to high standards. It is increasingly important that buyers have strong relationships with their suppliers to stay ahead of competition. The establishment, development, and maintenance of relationships between exchange partners is crucial to achieving success (Morgan and Hunt 1994). The goal of this research is to further investigate the nature of buyer-seller relationships from the buyer's perspective and to address the question , what determines the quality of buyer-seller relationships? Many factors may contribute to the quality of a buyer-seller relationship. Quality may depend on the nature of the organizations involved, the individuals in the organizations, and the nature of the situation. This study considers two main sets of variables, interpersonal and aspects of the relationship. Interpersonal variables describe the characteristics of individual company representatives, while aspects of the relationship variables describe the situations buyers and sellers face. A unique aspect of this study is that it considers the role both of individuals and of the organizations they represent. [source]


    A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo

    MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY, Issue 1 2001
    Janice Boddy
    . Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo. Nancy Rose Hunt. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1999. xii+475 pp. [source]


    California's supreme court first reasserts an arbitrator power,

    ALTERNATIVES TO THE HIGH COST OF LITIGATION, Issue 8 2008
    Jillian Lee Hunt
    Two significant opinions on mediation confidentiality from opposite coasts emerged this summer. Alternatives' editor Russ Bleemer, and Timothy Klimpl, of New York, analyze the result in the closely watched California Supreme Court Simmons v. Ghaderi case, which provides strong support for the state's mediation protection statutes. Confidentiality is on shakier ground in the hands of New York's top court, with details provided about the Court's affirmance of a subpoena for a mediator's testimony and records. Jillian Lee Hunt, of New York, looks at another California Supreme Court case on the limits of arbitrator power, and there is a report on a United Kingdom survey revealing an insufficient use of employment mediation. [source]


    Outcome of aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage in patients on maintenance haemodialysis

    NEPHROLOGY, Issue 1-2 2000
    Gakusen Nishihara
    SUMMARY: To investigate the outcome of aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) in patients on maintenance haemodialysis (HD), eight patients on maintenance HD and 245 patients not on HD who suffered from SAH, all of whom were surgically treated at our institution between 1993 and 1997, were reviewed. The clinical features and 3-month outcome of SAH were analysed in the eight HD patients (three males, five females) and compared with those in the 245 non-HD patients (77 males, 168 females). Although there were no significant differences in the patient's age, gender and pre-operative grading of SAH with the Hunt and Hess grading scale, the mortality rate in HD patients was significantly higher than that in non-HD patients (50% [4/8] vs 13% [32/245]; P < 0.01). It was concluded that the outcome of aneurysmal SAH in HD patients was extremely poor. The explanation for the worse prognosis in HD patients seems not to lie in systemic heparization but in a vulnerability to SAH, because SAH in all HD patients occurred after anticoagulant activity from the previous dialysis had already disappeared. [source]


    Looking for Bias in All the Wrong Places: A Search for Truth or a Witch Hunt in Student Ratings of Instruction?

    NEW DIRECTIONS FOR INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 109 2001
    Michael Theall
    Through a half-century of research on student ratings, the constant quest has been to prove or disprove the existence of biasing factors. What have we learned, and what has happened as a result? This chapter examines some of these supposed biases and presents some guidelines for improving practice. [source]


    Metabolites from cerebrospinal fluid in aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage correlate with vasospasm and clinical outcome: a pattern-recognition 1H NMR study

    NMR IN BIOMEDICINE, Issue 1 2005
    Victoria G. Dunne
    Abstract Following subarachnoid haemorrhage the most significant complication is sustained cerebral vascular contraction (vasospasm), which may result in terminal brain damage from cerebral infarction. Despite this, the biochemical cause of vasospasm remains poorly understood. In this study, the global high-concentration metabolite composition of CSF has been correlated with patient outcome after subarachnoid haemorrhage using multivariate statistics and 1H NMR spectroscopy. In total, 16 patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH) were compared with 16 control patients who required a procedure where CSF was obtained but did not have aSAH. Multivariate statistics readily distinguished the aSAH group from the heterogeneous control group, even when only those controls with blood contamination in the CSF were used. Using principal components analysis and orthogonal signal correction, vasospasm was correlated to the concentrations of lactate, glucose and glutamine. These pattern recognition models of the NMR data also predicted Glasgow Coma Score (54% within ±,1 of the actual score on a scale of 1,15 for the whole patient group), Hunt and Hess SAH severity score (88% within ±,1 of the actual score on a scale of 1,5 for the aSAH group) and cognitive outcome scores (78% within ±,3 of the actual score on a 100% scale for the whole patient group). Thus, the approach allowed the prediction of outcome as well as confirming the presence of aSAH. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    A brief history of the Human Biology Association: 1974,2004

    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2005
    Michael A. Little
    Originally incorporated as the Human Biology Council in 1974, the Human Biology Association, as it has been known since 1994, has matured in the intervening 30 years to become a society that represents broadly the interests of human biologists in the U.S. and throughout the world. The purpose of this paper is to trace the development of the Association from its foundation to the present in the context of changes in the organization of the Association and in its By-Laws, officers, committees, and membership; the history of the two journals that served as the Association's official organs (Human Biology and American Journal of Human Biology); and how the annual meetings have evolved from a modest one-day plenary session to meetings that last more than two days and include a variety of scientific contributions. Highlights of the national meetings include the Raymond Pearl Memorial Lecture, the Franz Boas Distinguished Achievement Award, and the Edward E. Hunt, Jr. Student Prize. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 17:141,154, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Flow over a hill covered with a plant canopy

    THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, Issue 596 2004
    J. J. Finnigan
    Abstract We develop an analytical model for atmospheric boundary-layer flow over a hill that is covered with a vegetation canopy. The slope of the hill is assumed to be small enough that the flow above the canopy can be treated within the linear framework of Hunt. Perturbations to the flow within the canopy are driven by the pressure gradient associated with the flow over the hill. In the upper canopy this pressure gradient is balanced by downwards turbulent transport of momentum and the canopy drag. The flow there can be calculated from linearized dynamics, which show that the maximum streamwise winds are where the perturbation pressure is at a minimum, i.e. near the crest of the hill. Deep within the canopy the pressure gradient associated with the flow over the hill is balanced by the canopy drag, here the nonlinear canopy drag. This nonlinear balance shows how the streamwise winds are largest where the perturbation pressure gradient is largest, i.e. on the upwind slope of the hill. In the lee of the hill this nonlinear solution shows how the pressure gradient decelerates the wind deep within the canopy, leading to separation with a region of reversed flow when the canopy is sufficiently deep. Coupling between the out-of-phase flows within and above the canopy means that the maximum velocity is further upwind of the hill crest than in flow over a rough hill, while the extra turbulent mixing caused by the canopy significantly reduces the magnitude of the velocity speed-up over the hill. Finally, we find that there is no formal limit process where the solutions with a canopy yield the well-known solutions for flow over a rough hill. This finding calls into question the very use of a roughness length in accelerating or decelerating turbulent boundary layers. Copyright © 2004 Royal Meteorological Society [source]


    Illegitimate Killers: The Symbolic Ecology and Cultural Politics of Coyote-Hunting Tournaments in Addison County, Vermont

    ANTHROPOLOGY & HUMANISM, Issue 2 2009
    Marc A. BoglioliArticle first published online: 6 NOV 200
    SUMMARY Although I have conducted ethnographic research on hunting in central Vermont since 1996, one important issue has remained conspicuously absent from my field notes: organized hunting protest. That all changed one cold February day in 2005 as protesters from a home-grown animal rights group stood along a country road in Whiting, Vermont, to voice their opposition to the first annual Howlin' Hills Coyote Hunt. This coyote-hunting tournament was characterized by a broad assortment of local residents,including hunters,as a morally corrupt departure from traditional hunting ethics and from that day forward Addison County has been caught up in a social drama that may forever change the face of hunting in Vermont. As deep philosophical differences were revealed between not only hunters and antihunters, but between hunters themselves, a small window opened for a more general moral critique of hunting. Drawing on testimony from hunters, animal rights activists, Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife personnel, and my own experiences at coyote tournaments, I explain the perspectives of the various actors in this drama as they struggle to define the meaning and ethical place of hunting in the 21st century. [Keywords: human,animal relations, symbolic ecology, hunting, rural America, coyotes] [source]


    HISTORY ILLUMINATED: WILLIAM HOLMAN HUNT'S LONDON BRIDGE

    ART HISTORY, Issue 5 2006
    NANCY ROSE MARSHALL
    Grappling with the complex problem of how to represent history through the experience of ordinary people, William Holman Hunt's London Bridge of 1864 combined a modern urban crowd scene, a careful choice of depicted location, and an unusual deployment of light effects to create a painting about Victorian perceptions of time itself. By portraying a night-time scene lit by the gas illuminations on the bridge in honour of the wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales, Hunt drew on the traditional aesthetic of the sublime to create a spectacle of an historic event , a royal marriage , that inspired both wonder and fear. Juxtaposing the flame-lit city with the moonlit Thames at the charged site of London Bridge allowed the artist to set in play the common Victorian framework one might term the ,moralizing sublime'. This pervasive mode of thought involved reading the mighty strivings of man and the modern industrial city as puny, transitory glimmers in comparison with the infinite onward rush of time; paradoxically, it also permitted the wilful overlooking of any negative yet ephemeral consequences of modernity. These ideas were underscored by the original exhibition of London Bridge with another work by Hunt in which light plays a key role in producing meaning: The Afterglow in Egypt. [source]


    Tsunamis and geophysical warnings

    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, Issue 5 2010
    Julian Hunt
    Meeting report Julian Hunt, Grant Kopec and Karen Aplin report on new techniques and practical approaches before, during and after devastating events such as tsunamis. [source]


    Consumers on a Mission to Force a Change in Public Policy: A Qualitative Study of the Ongoing Canadian Seafood Boycott1

    BUSINESS AND SOCIETY REVIEW, Issue 4 2009
    KARIN BRAUNSBERGER
    ABSTRACT Netnography (i.e., the online equivalent of ethnography) was used to analyze consumer boycott pledges submitted to an online boycott petition that was designed to recruit consumer participation in the contentious Canadian Seafood Boycott. The purpose was to investigate what motivates consumers to pledge boycott participation as well as to provide a preliminary understanding of boycott pledgees' psychographic makeup. The findings show that petition signatories are generally very angry about the Canadian Seal Hunt, pledge to boycott for a variety of objectives (instrumental, expressive, and punitive), abhor cruelty against animals, do not believe that it is acceptable to kill an animal for its fur, and worry about the environment in general. Many are very religious and quite a number believe that traditions that embrace animal cruelty need to be abolished. The findings further indicate that concern for animal welfare/rights has been moved into the mainstream. [source]


    The neuro-cardio-endocrine response to acute subarachnoid haemorrhage

    CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 5 2002
    Eric A. Espiner
    Summary objective Whereas cardiac hormones increase after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), and may contribute to sodium wastage and hyponatraemia, there is controversy concerning the relative roles of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) vs. brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and the factors initiating their secretion. Noting previous work linking stress hormone responses with cardiac injury after SAH, we have studied responses in stress hormones, markers of cardiac injury and the temporal changes in ANP and BNP and related them to changes in sodium status post ictus and during recovery from acute SAH. design, patients, measurements Eighteen patients with verified SAH of variable severity were studied in a single unit for a 14-day period post ictus under controlled conditions of sodium and fluid intake. All received a standardized protocol of daily dexamethasone and nimodipine throughout the study. Severity was graded using criteria of Hess and Hunt at admission. Stress hormones (AVP, catecholamines and admission plasma cortisol), markers of cardiac injury (ECG and daily plasma troponin T) and cardiac hormones (ANP and BNP) were measured daily and related to severity, plasma sodium and renin,aldosterone activity. Hormone levels (ANP, BNP and endothelin) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were also measured in nine patients. results Intense neurohormonal activation (AVP, cortisol and catecholamines) at admission was associated with increased levels of both plasma ANP and BNP whereas levels in CSF were unaffected. In individual patients plasma levels of ANP and BNP were strongly correlated (P < 0·001). Cardiac events (abnormal ECG and/or elevated troponin) occurred in six of seven patients graded severe but neither stress hormones nor cardiac peptides differed significantly in patients with mild (n = 11) vs. severe (n = 7) SAH. During the course of a progressive fall in plasma sodium concentration (P = 0·001), there was a delayed activation of renin,aldosterone which was inversely correlated with declining levels of plasma ANP/BNP (P < 0·002). conclusions Excessive secretion of both ANP and BNP occurs in all patients after acute subarachnoid haemorrhage and is unrelated to severity, stress hormone activation or markers of cardiac injury. Inhibition of renin,aldosterone by cardiac hormones may impair renal sodium conservation and contribute to developing hyponatraemia. In the absence of evidence for activation of natriuretic peptides within the brain, the prompt and consistent increase in both ANP and BNP strongly supports the view that the heart is the source of increased natriuretic peptide secretion after acute subarachnoid haemorrhage. [source]


    Program Proficiency in Training Graduate Students for Clinical Faculty Careers: Does Program Size Matter?

    CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY: SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, Issue 2 2002
    Stephen C. Ilardi
    Hunt suggests that our published analysis of program proficiency in training graduate students for clinical psychology faculty careers is "worse than useless," inasmuch as it utilizes as its principal measure the total number (rather than the percentage) of each program's graduates which have attained training faculty status, an approach that, according to Hunt, "systematically underrates small programs." In reply, we note that (a) our analysis was not intended as an overall rating of program strength, but rather as an indication of program achievement in a narrowly specified domain, (b) the utilized total number metric has considerable specific informative utility, and (c) additional analyses based upon Hunt's preferred percentage metric do not support the claim that our previously published report systematically underrated small programs. Because it may be of interest to prospective students (and others), a rank-ordered listing of programs which have placed at least 5% of recent Ph.D. recipients in clinical faculty positions is provided. [source]


    Work-related amputations in Washington state, 1997,2005

    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, Issue 7 2010
    Naomi J. Anderson MPH
    Abstract Background Work-related amputations are infrequent but devastating injuries. Attempts to more accurately estimate the burden of amputations and industries at risk have led the Washington State occupational surveillance program to explore new methods for case identification in Washington State workers' compensation data. Methods Two methods were utilized for case identification of work-related amputations. The first method used the ANSI Z16 nature code for amputation. An alternative method utilized medical, hospital, and claim administration coding of medical bills and bill payment systems. After identifying suspected amputation claims, a sample of the medical records associated with different case identification methods were reviewed to verify that an amputation likely occurred. Results From 1997 to 2005, 2,528 amputations were identified using the ANSI Z16 code for amputation (Nature,=,100) and an additional 3,912 amputations were identified using the alternative method. There was an increasing trend of amputation injuries over the time period using the ANSI amputation definition; however, the trend in amputation injuries captured by the alternative method was decreasing. This may indicate a bias in estimating a trend due to misclassification of amputation injuries. The sectors with the highest amputation claims rates were Manufacturing; Construction; Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting; Accommodation and Food Services; and Wholesale and Retail Trade. Conclusions Current methods to identify work-related amputations in the workers' compensation data system underestimate the burden of amputations in Washington State. By utilizing alternative case identification methods, we estimate that there were about 150% more amputations in Washington State over the time period. Am. J. Ind. Med. 53:693,705, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Use of Premontane Moist Forest and Shade Coffee Agroecosystems by Army Ants in Western Panama

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2000
    Dina L. Roberts
    Behavioral and distributional studies of these two species have been confined largely to humid lowland forest. We conducted intensive systematic area searches at elevations between 1200 and 1800 m in western Panama to assess the distribution of both species in intact premontane moist forest, shade coffee plantations, and sun coffee plantations. Both species were repeatedly observed in forest, shade coffee plantations close to forest, and shade coffee plantations distant from forest. Neither species was observed in sun coffee plantations. We believe that retention of certain forest-like characteristics in the traditional shade coffee farm contributes to the persistence of these forest organisms in modified landscapes. Large canopy trees not only provide shade that buffers temperature extremes but also supply the ground layer with regular inputs of leaf litter and coarse woody debris from fallen trunks. Both E. burchelli and L. praedator hunt in leaf litter, and E. burchelli uses coarse woody debris as nesting sites ( bivouacs). There were significantly fewer potential bivouacs available in sun coffee plantations than in forest and shade coffee habitats. Also, litter depth was less in sun coffee than in forest and shade coffee. Our results provide the first evidence that shade coffee plantations can provide additional habitat for E. burchelli and L. praedator, top predators of the leaf litter arthropod community. E. burchelli and L. praedator act as critical links between swarm-attendant bird species and leaf-litter arthropods, providing an easily exploited food resource that would otherwise be unavailable for many birds. Continued conversion of shade coffee plantations to sun coffee plantations could have negative effects on army ants and associated biodiversity. Resumen: Las hormigas arrierras Neotropicales, Eciton burchelli y Labidus praedator ( Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Ecitoninae) son especies que requieren de extensas áreas de hábitat para cazar. Los estudios conductuales y de la distribución de estas especies se han realizado principalmente en bosques húmedos en tierras bajas. Desarrollamos búsquedas sistemáticas intensivas en elevaciones entre 1200 y 1800 msnm en Panama occidental para determinar la distribución de ambas especies en bosque húmedo premontano intacto, en plantaciones de café con y sin sombra. Las dos especies fueron observadas recurrentemente en bosque y en plantaciones de café de sombra cercanos y lejanos al bosque. Consideramos que la retención de ciertas características del bosque en las plantaciones de café de sombra contribuye a la persistencia de estos organismos de bosque en ambientes modificados. Los árboles no solo proporcionan sombra que amortigua la temperatura, sino que proporcionan hojarasca y restos leñosos de troncos caídos. Tanto E. burchelli como L. praedator cazan en la hojarasca, E. burchelli utiliza restos leñosos para anidar (vivaques). Encontramos significativamente menos vivaques en plantaciones de café sin sombra al compararlos con bosque y plantaciones de café con sombra. Asimismo, la profundidad de la capa de hojarasca fue menor en plantaciones de café sin sombra en comparación con bosque y plantaciones de café con sombra. Nuestros resultados proporcionan la primera evidencia de que las plantaciones con sombra proporcionan hábitat adicional para E. burchelli y L. praedator, depredadores de la comunidad de artrópodos en la hojarasca. E. burchelli y L. praedator actúan como eslabones críticos entre especies de aves que se alimentan de hormigas y los artrópodos de la hojarasca, proporcionando un recurso alimenticio fácilmente explotado que de otra manera no estaría disponible para muchas aves. La continua transformación de plantaciones de café con sombra a plantaciones sin sombra pudiera tener efectos negativos sobre las hormigas arrieras y la biodiversidad asociada. [source]


    Monoclonal antibody proteomics: Discovery and prevalidation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease biomarkers in a single step

    ELECTROPHORESIS, Issue 23 2007
    Eszter Csanky
    Abstract We define mAb proteomics as the global generation of disease specific antibodies that permit mass screening of biomarkers. An integrated, high-throughput, disease-specific mAb-based biomarker discovery platform has been developed. The approach readily provided new biomarker leads with the focus on large-scale discovery and production of mAb-based, disease-specific clinical assay candidates. The outcome of the biomarker discovery process was a highly specific and sensitive assay, applicable for testing of clinical validation paradigms, like response to treatment or correlation with other clinical parameters. In contrast to MS-based or systems biology-based strategies, our process produced prevalidated clinical assays as the outcome of the discovery process. By re-engineering the biomarker discovery paradigm, the encouraging results presented in this paper clearly demonstrate the efficiency of the mAb proteomics approach, and set the grounds for the next steps of studies, namely, the hunt for candidate biomarkers that respond to drug treatment. [source]


    Nurses on the Move: A Global Overview

    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 3p2 2007
    Mireille Kingma
    Objective. To look at nurse migration flows in the light of national nursing workforce imbalances, examine factors that encourage or inhibit nurse mobility, and explore the potential benefits of circular migration. Principal Findings. The number of international migrants has doubled since 1970 and nurses are increasingly part of the migratory stream. Critical nursing shortages in industrialized countries are generating a demand that is fueling energetic international recruitment campaigns. Structural adjustments in the developing countries have created severe workforce imbalances and shortfalls often coexist with large numbers of unemployed health professionals. A nurse's motivation to migrate is multifactorial, not limited to financial incentives, and barriers exist that discourage or slow the migration process. The migration flows vary in direction and magnitude over time, responding to socioeconomic factors present in source and destination countries. The dearth of data on which to develop international health human resource policy remains. There is growing recognition, however, that migration will continue and that temporary migration will be a focus of attention in the years to come. Conclusions. Today's search for labor is a highly organized global hunt for talent that includes nurses. International migration is a symptom of the larger systemic problems that make nurses leave their jobs. Nurse mobility becomes a major issue only in a context of migrant exploitation or nursing shortage. Injecting migrant nurses into dysfunctional health systems,ones that are not capable of attracting and retaining staff domestically,will not solve the nursing shortage. [source]


    ,Pig-Sticking Princes': Royal Hunting, Moral Outrage, and the Republican Opposition to Animal Abuse in Nineteenth-and Early Twentieth-Century Britain

    HISTORY, Issue 293 2004
    Antony Taylor
    This article locates monarchy in the debates arising out of the anti-animal abuse campaigns of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Through a close examination of urban republican criticisms of monarchy, it seeks to question the role of royalty as the custodian of shared national values concerning animal welfare. It demonstrates that hostility to monarchy based on its role in encouraging and patronizing hunting belongs to a long tradition. Much hostility to royalty crystallized around the royal patronage of fox-hunting and of pheasant-shooting. The nineteenth-century precedents for recent concerns about the visible presence of royal figures on the hunting-field articulated many of the component elements of a republican position. For many urban radicals the connection of reigning monarchs with the hunt demonstrated the dysfunctional nature of royal existence, the limitations of royalty's attainments, and the perceived need by monarchs to satisfy the baser, more carnal urges arising from a life devoted to indolence and pleasure. This article shows that hunting, as a marker of a robust masculinity and of the opulence of royalty, brought the reform community into collision with supporters of the monarchy, and provided an example of royal ritual that failed to work in the interests of the throne. The article concludes by revealing the connections between the land debate, criticisms of the royal house, and animal welfare politics in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. [source]


    Internet job hunting: A field study of applicant experiences with on-line recruiting

    HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, Issue 2 2002
    Daniel C. Feldman
    This field study examines the experiences of managers and professionals searching for jobs via the Internet. Results suggest that facility with Internet navigation is significantly associated with the amount of general job searching, particularly for those who want to explore job options initially in private without fear of retribution from supervisors. The data also suggest that managers and professionals are more likely to use the Internet for job hunting when the geographical scope of the job hunt is wide, when a major salary increase is desired, and when both small and large firms are being considered as potential employers. Use of the Internet is perceived as a somewhat less effective job search strategy than personal networking, but far superior to searching for jobs through newspaper ads and "cold calling." Major issues found to impede the effectiveness of on-line recruiting are the degree and speed of follow-up on-line applications, lack of specific and relevant job descriptions on a company's Web site, concerns about the security of personal information, and difficulty in customizing, formatting, and downloading resumes to companies' specifications. The article concludes with recommendations for improving the effectiveness of on-line recruiting. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    Predatory Care: The Imperial Hunt in Mughal and British India

    JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL SOCIOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
    Anand S. Pandian
    Taking the hunt as both metaphor of rule and political practice, this paper compares the predatory exercises of two imperial formations in India: the late British Raj and the sixteenth-century Mughal empire. The British pursuit of man-eaters confronted feline terror with sovereign might, securing the bodies and hearts of resistant subjects through spectacles of responsible force. The Mughal hunt, on the other hand, took unruly nobles and chieftains as the objects of its fearful care, winning their obedient submission through the exercise of a predatory sovereignty. Both instances of ,predatory care' shed light on the troubling intimacy of biopolitical cultivation and sovereign violence. [source]