Association Meetings (association + meeting)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Nervecenter: "Decade of the Brain" Bears Fruit at American Neurological Association Meeting

ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 6 2010
Kurt Samson
First page of article [source]


Review article: investigational agents for chronic hepatitis C

ALIMENTARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 7 2009
A. J. V. THOMPSON
Summary Background, The need for effective treatment for chronic hepatitis C infection has driven the development of novel antiviral agents that target specific steps in the viral replication cycle. Aim, To evaluate the current literature concerning investigational agents for chronic hepatitis C virus infection. Methods, Resources used included PubMed, conference proceedings from the American and European Liver Associations' meetings 2005,2008 and the National Institute of Health's clinical trials website (http://www.clinicaltrials.gov). The focus was restricted to investigational agents that have progressed beyond preclinical development. Results, Over 50 investigational agents for chronic hepatitis C infection are currently in clinical development. Specifically targeted anti-viral therapy for HCV (STAT-C) shows great promise with NS3/4a protease inhibitors now entering phase 3 programmes. New interferon-, and ribavirin formulations aim to optimize anti-viral efficacy yet limit toxicity. Other candidates include novel immunomodulators and therapeutic vaccines. Conclusions, A new era of therapy for chronic hepatitis C beckons, promising increased cure rates with shortened duration of therapy. However, the era will not be without challenges including viral resistance, drug toxicity and the need to optimize combination therapy in the face of a rapidly evolving therapeutic arsenal. [source]


Attachments, Grievances, Resources, and Efficacy: The Determinants of Tenant Association Participation Among Public Housing Tenants

JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, Issue 1 2005
Brian P. Conway
Using logistic regression models we estimate the net effects of four sets of factors on the likelihood that a tenant has attended tenant association meetings: neighborhood attachments, grievances, resources and constraints, and feelings of efficacy. Results show that net of other factors, participation is greater among attached tenants who have resided in public housing longer and who have social ties to other people. Grievances also increase participation, but they do so indirectly by increasing people's tendency to be more involved in their communities. With the exception of education's positive effect, resources and constraints are not important determinants of participation. Education and efficacy act like enablers increasing people's ability to be involved in their communities. The implications of the findings for research and community organizing are explored by examining how three mechanisms account for the findings. [source]


"But the winds will turn against you": An analysis of wealth forms and the discursive space of development in northeast Brazil

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST, Issue 1 2009
AARON ANSELL
ABSTRACT In this article, I explain the unfolding of a participatory development project in northeast Brazil by exploring how local genres of public speech articulate with categories of wealth. Although development resources cannot be easily categorized into local classes of wealth, they nonetheless evoke some of the anxieties cultivators feel when dealing with wealth forms susceptible to the evil eye. Beliefs surrounding the evil eye shape cultivators' relations to material objects, and they also define the contours of safe and acceptable speech within the village development association. As a result, during association meetings, the villagers speak in ways that frustrate development agents seeking to generate "open" and "transparent" managerial discourse felicitous to project success,at least, external notions of project success. Appreciating the link between wealth and speech forms sheds light on both the local implementation challenges that participants in such projects face and the reason development agents frequently blame ostensive project failures on beneficiary backwardness. [wealth, Brazil, development, evil eye, peasant society] [source]