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Women's Colleges (women + college)
Selected AbstractsCirculating soluble cytochrome c in liver disease as a marker of apoptosisJOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2003Z. Ben-Ari Abstract. Ben-Ari Z, Schmilovotz-Weiss H, Belinki A, Pappo O, Sulkes J, Neuman MG, Kaganovsky E, Kfir B, Tur-Kaspa R, Klein T (Beilinson and Golda Campuses, Rabin Medical Center, Petah Tiqva and Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel, and In Vitro Toxicology Laboratory, Sunnybrook Women's College, Toronto, Canada) Circulating soluble cytochrome c in liver disease as a marker of apoptosis. J Intern Med 2003; 254: 168,175. Objectives. To measure levels of soluble cytochrome c, a clinical marker of apoptosis in patients with liver disease; determine whether soluble cytochrome c is derived from the liver; and correlate soluble cytochrome c level with histology and disease activity. Design. Laboratory research study with comparison group. Setting. Liver Institute, at the Rabin Medical Center, Israel, and In Vitro Toxicology Laboratory, Canada. Subjects. A total of 108 patients with liver disease and 30 healthy controls. Interventions. Paired hepatic and portal vein samples were taken via the transjugular vein in patients after liver biopsy and transjugular intrahepatic portacaval shunt, and bile from patients with external biliary drainage. Soluble cytochrome c was measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in peripheral blood. Apoptotic cells in liver tissue were identified by morphological criteria and quantitated with the dUTP nick-end-labelling (TUNEL) assay. Main outcome measures. Soluble cytochrome c level by type of liver disease by clinical and histological findings. Results. Soluble cytochrome c concentration (mean 187.1 ± 219.5 ng mL,1) was significantly higher in patients with liver disease than in controls (39.8 ± 35.1 ng mL,1; P = 0.0001), with highest levels in the primary sclerosing cholangitis group (mean 1041.0 ± 2844.8 ng mL,1; P = 0.001). Cytochrome c levels were correlated with serum bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, creatinine levels, necroinflammatory score and apoptotic index, but not with serum alanine aminotransferase and synthetic liver function tests. In the 16 paired samples, soluble cytochrome c level was higher in the hepatic (mean 267.9 ± 297.0 ng mL,1) than the portal vein (mean 169.2 ± 143.3 ng mL,1), and it was highly detectable in bile (mean 2288.0 ±4596.0 ng mL,1) (P = 0.001). Untreated patients with chronic viral hepatitis (B and C) had significantly higher levels (mean 282.8 ±304.3 ng mL,1) than treated patients (77.9 ± 35.8 ng mL,1; P = 0.001). Conclusions. Soluble cytochrome c levels are increased in different types of liver disease. Soluble cytochrome c is probably derived from the liver and secreted into the bile. Levels correlate with the apoptotic index and are affected by antiviral treatment. Soluble cytochrome c may serve as a serum marker of apoptosis. [source] Students Writing Race at Southern Public Women's Colleges, 1884,1945HISTORY OF EDUCATION QUARTERLY, Issue 2 2010David Gold First page of article [source] Public Health Nursing Pioneer: Jane Elizabeth Hitchcock 1863,1939PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING, Issue 3 2003FAAN, Joellen W. Hawkins RNC, Ph.D. Abstract Jane Elizabeth Hitchcock was one of many distinguished nursing leaders of the 19th and early 20th centuries who attended a women's college before enrolling in a nurse training school. Like many of her contemporaries with equally impeccable family credentials, Hitchcock was something of an enigma to her family for choosing nursing over teaching, the most common acceptable career for women of her social class. Hitchcock's endowment of character, according to contemporary Lavinia Dock, exemplified the best of her Puritan roots. Her contributions to the evolution of public health nursing and the integration of public health nursing content into curriculums of training schools rivaled the achievements in higher education of her famous father, grandfather, and brother but garnered no comparable recognition. Her life presents an interesting case for analysis of an independent woman, a characteristic shared by many pioneers in the early years of public health nursing: 1893 to 1920. [source] Tough questions facing women's collegesNEW DIRECTIONS FOR HIGHER EDUCATION, Issue 151 2010Sara Kratzok The transition of women's colleges into coeducational institutions presents fundamental issues and sensitive dynamics. [source] An Extension of the Traditional Theory of Customer Discrimination: Customers Versus CustomersAMERICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY, Issue 2 2003Stephanie O. Crofton This study provides an extension on the traditional theory of customer discrimination. The traditional theory looks at customer discrimination via a case in which customers discriminate against a certain type of employee. This paper considers a case of customer discrimination in which customers discriminate against another group of customers. This paper argues that if women choose to attend an all-women college, they are engaging in this previously unexamined form of customer discrimination. Economic theory predicts that firms catering to customers who discriminate will charge higher prices. Thus, this study tests for the existence of customer discrimination by estimating a tuition equation at women's colleges and coeducational schools using ordinary least squares and a dummy-interaction technique. This study finds that, all else held constant, women's colleges do charge higher tuition rates. [source] |