20 results on '"Jennifer Hurley"'
Search Results
2. The Potential of Procedural Justice in Mediation: A Study into Mediators Understandings
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Kathy Douglas and Jennifer Hurley
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Law
3. Supply chain disruptions due to the SARS‐CoV‐2 pandemic lead to an unusual preanalytical error in measuring hemoglobin concentration in a large medical center
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Samuel M. Law, Rochelle Hardy, Danna Anderson, Lona Small, Jennifer Hurley, Leon Beggs, Yanka Campbell, MiKaela Olsen, Tina Mancini‐Flegel, Al Valentine, Michael J. Borowitz, and Ivo M. B. Francischetti
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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4. Demographic and clinical correlates of acute and convalescent SARS-CoV-2 infection among patients of a U.S. emergency department
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Richard Wang, Yu Hsiang Hsieh, Danna Anderson, Eshan U. Patel, Ethan Klock, Jennifer Hurley, Richard E. Rothman, Oliver Laeyendecker, Morgan Keruly, Mehdi Youbi, Gabor D. Kelen, Yolanda Eby, Isabel V. Lake, Charles S. Kirby, Owen R Baker, Jernelle Miller, Thomas S. Kickler, Ross Knaub, William Clarke, Reinaldo E Fernandez, Haley A Schmidt, Thomas C. Quinn, Momina Khan, Sarah Reineck, Erin P. Ricketts, Aaron A.R. Tobian, and Gaby Dashler
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibody ,Disease ,White People ,Article ,Hospital records ,COVID-19 Serological Testing ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Hypoxia ,Aged ,Surveillance ,biology ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Emergency department ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 infection ,COVID-19 ,Demographic correlates ,Convalescence ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Hispanic or Latino ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Black or African American ,COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Testing ,Acute Disease ,Emergency Medicine ,biology.protein ,Hispanic ethnicity ,Female ,Antibody ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,Clinical correlates - Abstract
Background Emergency Departments (EDs) have served as critical surveillance sites for infectious diseases. We sought to determine the prevalence and temporal trends of acute (by PCR) and convalescent (by antibody [Ab]) SARS-CoV-2 infection during the earliest phase of the pandemic among patients in an urban ED in Baltimore City. Methods We tested remnant blood samples from 3255 unique ED patients, collected between March 16th and May 31st 2020 for SARS-CoV-2 Ab. PCR for acute SARS-CoV-2 infection from nasopharyngeal swabs was obtained on any patients based on clinical suspicion. Hospital records were abstracted and factors associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection were assessed. Results Of 3255 ED patients, 8.2% (95%CI: 7.3%, 9.2%) individuals had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection; 155 PCR+, 78 Ab+, and 35 who were both PCR+ and Ab+. Prevalence of disease increased throughout the study period, ranging from 3.2% (95%CI: 1.8%, 5.2%) PCR+ and 0.6% (95%CI: 0.1%, 1.8%) Ab+ in March, to 6.2% (95%CI: 5.1%, 7.4%) PCR+ and 4.2% (95%CI: 3.3%, 5.3%) Ab+ in May. The highest SARS-CoV-2 prevalence was found in Hispanic individuals who made up 8.4% (95%CI: 7.4%, 9.4%) of individuals screened, but 35% (95%CI: 29%, 41%) of infections (PCR and/or Ab+). Demographic and clinical factors independently associated with acute infection included Hispanic ethnicity, loss of smell or taste, subjective fever, cough, muscle ache and fever. Factors independently associated with convalescent infection were Hispanic ethnicity and low oxygen saturation. Conclusions The burden of COVID-19 in Baltimore City increased dramatically over the 11-week study period and was disproportionately higher among Hispanic individuals. ED-based surveillance methods are important for identifying both acute and convalescent SARS-CoV-2 infections and provides important information regarding demographic and clinical correlates of disease in the local community.
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- 2021
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5. Neurology podcast utilization during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Richard S. Isaacson, Adeline L. Goss, James E. Siegler, Patrick E. Boreskie, Megan B. Richie, Zachary N. London, Robert Rook, Jennifer Hurley, Bonnie Rossow, Fawaz Al-Mufti, Amanda Chamberlain, Teresa M. Chan, Roy E. Strowd, Alexandra Miller, Romergryko G. Geocadin, and Igor Rybinnik
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Medical education ,medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Neurology ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,education ,Dermatology ,Subspecialty ,Continuing medical education ,Pandemic ,Retrospective analysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Podcasting ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Family medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Covid-19 ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: As medical education shifted to a virtual environment during the early coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, we evaluated how neurology podcasting may have been utilized during this period, and which features of podcasts have been more highly sought by a medical audience. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of neurology-themed blogs and/or podcasts between April 2019 and May 2020. Programs were eligible if they reported mean monthly downloads > 2000, were affiliated with an academic society, or offered continuing medical education credit. Thirty-day download counts were compared between study months, with adjustment for multiple testing. Exploratory analyses were performed to determine which podcast features were associated with higher downloads. RESULTS: Of the 12 neurology podcasts surveyed, 8 completed the survey and 5 met inclusion criteria. The median monthly download count was 2865 (IQR 869-7497), with significant variability between programs (p
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- 2021
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6. High Burden of Undiagnosed Hepatitis B and Liver Disease in an Urban Emergency Department - Baltimore, 2020
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Richard Wang, Richard E. Rothman, Amir M. Mohareb, Oliver Laeyendecker, Gavin A. Cloherty, Thomas C. Quinn, Yu-Hsiang Hsieh, Mark Anderson, Sunil S. Solomon, Reinaldo E. Fernandez, Gaby Dashler, Radhika Mehta, Michael Stec, Thomas Kickler, Gabor D. Kelen, Shruti H. Mehta, Evan J. Beck, Sharada Saraf, Owen R. Baker, Isabel V. Lake, Erin P. Ricketts, Danna Anderson, and Jennifer Hurley
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
7. The Evolution of the Open Textbook Initiative
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Anne Lennox, Jennifer Hurley, and Frank Ponte
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Political science ,Library science ,Open educational practices ,Library and Information Sciences ,Open educational resources - Abstract
In 2018, RMIT University Library was awarded $5,000 fellowship from Libraries of the Australasian Network (LATN) to investigate opportunities in open educational resources (OER). The reasons behind...
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- 2021
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8. Role of the circadian clock on microglial-driven neuroinflammation
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Jonathan Dordick, Jennifer Hurley, and Muthukumarasamy Iswarya
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- 2022
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9. A fuzzy complex in the negative arm regulates circadian clock robustness
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Jennifer Hurley, Meaghan Jankowski, Daniel Griffith, Divya Shastry, Jacqueline Pelham, Garrett Ginell, Joshua Thomas, Pankaj Karande, and Alex Holehouse
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Organismal physiology is widely regulated by the circadian clock, a molecular circuit composed of a Transcription-Translation Feedback Loop 1,2. Protein components of the molecular clock are enriched in intrinsically disordered regions, inherently flexible regions that interact with other proteins via short linear binding motifs (SLiMs) 3–5. SLiM-driven interactions contribute to circadian timing and the circadian regulation of the cell. However, the mechanism that allows the formation of dynamic clock complexes remains unclear as structural analysis of these protein-protein interactions has been limited due to inherent protein disorder. Here, we apply a synthetic peptide microarray approach to demonstrate that the core clock forms a fuzzy complex to support circadian robustness 6,7. We found positively charged islands on the clock protein FREQUENCY (FRQ) drove a multi-valent interaction between FRQ and its partner FRQ-interacting RNA Helicase (FRH) that enabled clock robustness rather than the previously-reported feedback 8. We found these positively charged islands were a conserved molecular feature throughout clocks in fungi, insects, and mammals, and may enable the formation of fuzzy complexes. This study constitutes the first mechanistic reason for the uniquely-broad conservation of intrinsic disorder in circadian negative-arm proteins and will aid in the development of the molecular model of clock protein interactions. Furthermore, we anticipate the application of synthetic peptide microarrays to study disordered clock proteins and will be useful in characterizing sites of interaction for clock-specific drug discovery 9.
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- 2022
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10. A Tale of 3 Pandemics: Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2, Hepatitis C Virus, and Human Immunodeficiency Virus in an Urban Emergency Department in Baltimore, Maryland
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Yu-Hsiang, Hsieh, Richard E, Rothman, Sunil S, Solomon, Mark, Anderson, Michael, Stec, Oliver, Laeyendecker, Isabel V, Lake, Reinaldo E, Fernandez, Gaby, Dashler, Radhika, Mehta, Thomas, Kickler, Gabor D, Kelen, Shruti H, Mehta, Gavin A, Cloherty, Thomas C, Quinn, and Jennifer, Hurley
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Infectious Diseases ,Oncology - Abstract
Background We sought to determine the prevalence and sociodemographic and clinical correlates of acute and convalescent severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), hepatitis C virus (HCV), and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections among emergency department (ED) patients in Baltimore. Methods Remnant blood samples from 7450 unique patients were collected over 4 months in 2020 for SARS-CoV-2 antibody (Ab), HCV Ab, and HIV-1/2 antigen and Ab. Among them, 5012 patients were tested by polymerase chain reaction for SARS-CoV-2 based on clinical suspicion. Sociodemographics, ED clinical presentations, and outcomes associated with coinfections were assessed. Results Overall, 729 (9.8%) patients had SARS-CoV-2 (acute or convalescent), 934 (12.5%) HCV, 372 (5.0%) HIV infection, and 211 patients (2.8%) had evidence of any coinfection (HCV/HIV, 1.5%; SARS-CoV-2/HCV, 0.7%; SARS-CoV-2/HIV, 0.3%; SARS-CoV-2/HCV/HIV, 0.3%). The prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 (acute or convalescent) was significantly higher in those with HCV or HIV vs those without (13.6% vs 9.1%, P Conclusions The burden of SARS-CoV-2, HCV, and HIV co-pandemics and their associations with specific sociodemographic disparities, clinical presentations, and outcomes suggest that urban EDs should consider implementing integrated screening and linkage-to-care programs for these 3 infections.
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- 2022
11. The impact of facility ownership on nurses’ and care workers’ perceptions of missed care in Australian residential aged care
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Terri Gibson, Julie Henderson, Jennifer Hurley, Rob Bonner, Luisa Toffoli, Trish Currie, Ian Blackman, Eileen Willis, Kay Price, Henderson, Julie, Blackman, Ian, Willis, Eileen, Gibson, Terri, Price, Kay, Toffoli, Luisa, Bonner, Rob, Hurley, Jennifer, and Currie, Trish
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medicine.medical_specialty ,030504 nursing ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Australia ,missed care ,03 medical and health sciences ,residential aged care ,Care workers ,facility ownership ,Perception ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,survey ,Aged care ,0305 other medical science ,business ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common - Abstract
The Australian government has reduced restrictions on ownership of residential aged care facilities (RACF) as part of aged care reform enabling the growth of private-for-profit ownership. This study explores the impact of private-for-profit ownership through comparison of perceptions of the volume of missed care in government, private-not-profit and for-profit RACF in Australia. Data were collected through development and administration of a MISSCARE survey to3,206 nurses and personal care workers (PCW) working in RACF and hospitals providing aged care services. Employees working within government owned facilities reported levels of missed care that are significantly lower than privately owned facilities on six activities: moving patients who cannot walk; assisting residents’ toileting within 5 min of request; assisting resident mouth care; assessing skin integrity; answering call bells within 5 min and wound care. Staffing levels were identified as the most common reason for missed care across all settings. Of the 27 factors identified as causing missed care, government employees reported significantly lower scores for 16 items. Further research is needed on the impact of facility ownership upon capacity of nurses and personal care workers to deliver care. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
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- 2018
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12. ANA Investigates: Pioneering Unbiased Diagnostics
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Jennifer Hurley, Megan B. Richie, Michael R. Wilson, Samuel J. Pleasure, and Adeline L. Goss
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Neurology ,Central Nervous System Diseases ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Humans ,Medicine ,Library science ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Communicable Diseases ,Autoimmune Diseases - Published
- 2020
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13. Effects of antiplatelet therapy on stroke risk by brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases: subgroup analyses of the RESTART randomised, open-label trial
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Rustam Al-Shahi Salman, David P Minks, Dipayan Mitra, Mark A Rodrigues, Priya Bhatnagar, Johann C du Plessis, Yogish Joshi, Martin S Dennis, Gordon D Murray, David E Newby, Peter A G Sandercock, Nikola Sprigg, Jacqueline Stephen, Cathie L M Sudlow, David J Werring, William N Whiteley, Joanna M Wardlaw, Philip M White, Colin Baigent, Daniel Lasserson, Frank Sullivan, Johanna Carrie, Javier Rojas, Shannon Amoils, John Bamford, Jane Armitage, Gabriel Rinkel, Gordon Lowe, Jonathan Emberson, Karen Innes, Lynn Dinsmore, Jonathan Drever, Carol Williams, David Perry, Connor McGill, David Buchanan, Allan Walker, Aidan Hutchison, Christopher Matthews, Ruth Fraser, Aileen McGrath, Ann Deary, Rosemary Anderson, Pauli Walker, Christian Hansen, Richard Parker, Aryelly Rodriguez, Malcolm Macleod, Thomas Gattringer, Jeb Palmer, Eleni Sakka, Jennifer Adil-Smith, David Minks, Johannes du Plessis, Christine Lerpiniere, Richard O'Brien, Seona Burgess, Gillian Mead, Ruth Paulton, Fergus Doubal, Katrina McCormick, Neil Hunter, Pat Taylor, Ruwan Parakramawansha, Jack Perry, Gordon Blair, Allan MacRaild, Adrian Parry-Jones, Mary Johnes, Stephanie Lee, Kelly Marie Shaw, Ilse Burger, Martin Punter, Andrea Ingham, Jane Perez, Zin Naing, Jordi Morell, Tracy Marsden, Andrea Hall, Sally Marshall, Louise Harrison, Rowilson Jarapa, Edith Wood, Victoria O'Loughlin, David Cohen, Silvie Davies, Kelechi Njoku, Mushiya Mpelembue, Laura Burgess, Radim Licenik, Mmua Ngwako, Nabeela Nisar, Rangah Niranchanan, Tatjana Roganova, Rajaram Bathula, Joseph Devine, Anette David, Anne Oshodi, Fenglin Guo, Emmanuelle Owoyele, Varthi Sukdeo, Robert Ballantine, Mudhar Abbdul-saheb, Angela Chamberlain, Aberami Chandrakumar, Philip Poku, Kirsty Harkness, Catrin Blank, Emma Richards, Ali Ali, Faith Kibutu, Olesia Balitska, Kathryn Birchall, Pauline Bayliss, Clare Doyle, Kathy Stocks, Arshad Majis, Jo Howe, Christine Kamara, Luke Barron, Ahmad Maatouk, Ralf Lindert, Katy Dakin, Jessica Redgrave, Biju Bhaskaran, Isam Salih, Debs Kelly, Susan Szabo, Dawn Tomlin, Helen Bearne, Jean Buxton, Pauline Fitzell, Georgina Ayres, Afaq Saulat, Kathleen Horan, Joanne Garfield-Smith, Harbens Bhakri, Paul Guyler, Devesh Sinha, Thayalini Loganathan, Amber Siddiqui, Anwer Siddiqui, Lucy Coward, Swapna Kunhunny, Sharon Tysoe, Rajalakshmi Orath Prabakaran, Shyam Kelavkar, Sindhu Rashmi, David Ngo, Kheng Xiong Ng, Nisha Menon, Sweni Shah, Mark Barber, Derek Esson, Fiona Brodie, Talat Anjum, Mushtaq Wani, Manju Krishnan, Leanne Quinn, Jayne Spencer, Terry Jones, Helen Thompson-Jones, Lynne Dacey, Srikanth Chenna, Sharon Storton, Sarah Thomas, Teresa Beaty, Shelley Treadwell, Caroline Davies, Susan Tucker, Lynda Connor, Peter Slade, Glyn Gainard, Girish Muddegowda, Ranjan Sanyal, Alda Remegoso, Nenette Abano, Chelsea Causley, Racquel Carpio, Stephanie Stevens, Adrian Butler, Resti Varquez, Hayley Denic, Francis Alipio, Andrew Moores, Adrian Barry, Holly Maguire, Jeanette Grocott, Kay Finney, Sue Lyjko, Christine Roffe, Joanne Hiden, Phillip Ferdinand, Vera Cvoro, Khalil Ullah, Nicola Chapman, Mandy Couser, Susan Pound, Sean Mcauley, Senthil Raghunathan, Faye Shelton, Amanda Hedstrom, Margi Godfrey, Diane Havard, Amanda Buck, Kailash Krishnan, Nicola Gilzeane, Jack Roffe, Judith Clarke, Katherine Whittamore, Saima Sheikh, Rekha Keshvara, Carla Jordan, Benjamin Jackson, Gwendoline Wilkes, Jason Appleton, Zhe Law, Oliver Matias, Evangelos Vasileiadis, Cathy Mason, Anthea Parry, Geraldine Landers, Melinda Holden, Basaam Aweid, Khalid Rashed, Linda Balian, Carinna Vickers, Elizabeth Keeling, Sarah Board, Joanna Allison, Clare Buckley, Barbara Williams-Yesson, Joanne Board, Tressy Pitt-Kerby, Alfonso Tanate, Diane Wood, Manohar Kini, Dinesh Chadha, Deborah Walstow, Rosanna Fong, Robert Luder, Tolu Adesina, Jill Gallagher, Hayley Bridger, Elodie Murali, Maneesh Bhargava, Chloe van Someren, Frances Harrington, Abhijit Mate, Ali James, Gillian Courtauld, Christine Schofield, Katja Adie, Linda Lucas, Kirsty Bond, Bev Maund, Sam Ellis, Paul Mudd, Martin James, Samantha Keenan, Angela Bowring, Julie Cageao, Hayley Kingwell, Caroline Roughan, Anthony Hemsley, Jane Sword, David Strain, Keniesha Miller, Anita Goff, Karin Gupwell, Kevin Thorpe, Hedley Emsley, Shuja Punekar, Alison McLoughlin, Sulaiman Sultan, Bindu Gregory, Sonia Raj, Donna Doyle, Keith Muir, Wilma Smith, Angela Welch, Fiona Moreton, Bharath Kumar Cheripelli, Salwa El Tawil, Dheeraj Kalladka, Xuya Huang, Nicola Day, Sankaranarayanan Ramachandran, Caroline Crosbie, Jennifer Elliot, Tony Rudd, Katherine Marks, Ajay Bhalla, Jonathan Birns, Sagal Kullane, Nic Weir, Christopher Allen, Vanessa Pressly, Pam Crawford, Emma Battersby-Wood, Alex Blades, Shuna Egerton, Ashleigh Walters, Sue Evans, James Richard Marigold, Fiona Smith, Gabriella Howard, Imogen Gartrell, Simon Smith, Robyn Creeden, Chloe Cox, Cherish Boxall, Jonathan Hewitt, Claire Nott, Procter Sarah, Jessica Whiteman, Steve Buckle, Rebecca Wallace, Rina Mardania, Jane Gray, Claire Triscott, Anand Nair, Jill Greig, Pratap Rana, Matthew Robinson, Mohammad Irfan Alam, David Werring, Duncan Wilson, Caroline Watchurst, Maria Brezitski, Luci Crook, Ifan Jones, Azra Banaras, Krishna Patel, Renuka Erande, Caroline Hogan, Isabel Hostettler, Amy Ashton, Shez Feerick, Nina Francia, Nnebuife Oji, Emma Elliott, Talal Al-Mayhani, Martin Dennis, Cathie Sudlow, William Whiteley, Dipankar Dutta, Pauline Brown, Deborah Ward, Fiona Davis, Jennifer Turfrey, Chloe Hughes, Kayleigh Collins, Rehana Bakawala, Susan O'Connell, Jon Glass, David Broughton, Dinesh Tryambake, Lynn Dixon, Kath Chapman, Andrew Young, Adrian Bergin, Andrew Sigsworth, Aravind Manoj, Glyn Fletcher, Paula Lopez, Penelope Cox, Mark Wilkinson, Paul Fitzsimmons, Nikhil Sharma, James Choulerton, Denise Button, Lindsey Dow, Lukuman Gbadamoshi, Joanne Avis, Barbara Madigan, Stephanie McCann, Louise Shaw, Deborah Howcroft, Suzanne Lucas, Andrew Stone, Gillian Cluckie, Caroline Lovelock, Brian Clarke, Neha Chopra, Natasha Clarke, Bhavini Patel, Kate Kennedy, Rebecca Williams, Adrian Blight, Joanna O'Reilly, Chukwuka Orefo, Nilofer Dayal, Rita Ghatala, Temi Adedoyin, Fran Watson, Sarah Trippier, Lillian Choy, Barry Moynihan, Usman Khan, Val Jones, Naomi Jeyaraj, Lourda Kerin, Kamy Thavanesan, Divya Tiwari, Chantel Cox, Anja Ljubez, Laura Tucker, Arshi Iqbal, Caroline Bagnall, Marketa Keltos, Josh Roberts, Becky Jupp, Catherine Ovington, Emily Rogers, Owen David, Jo Bell, Barbara Longland, Gail Hann, Martin Cooper, Mohammad Nasar, Anoja Rajapakse, Inez Wynter, Ijaz Anwar, Helen Skinner, Tarn Nozedar, Damian McArdle, Balakrishna Kumar, Susan Crawford, Arunkumar Annamalai, Alex Ramshaw, Clare Holmes, Sarah Caine, Mairead Osborn, Emily Dodd, Peter Murphy, Nicola Devitt, Pauline Baker, Amy Steele, Lucy Belle Guthrie, Samantha Clarke, Ahamad Hassan, Dean Waugh, Emelda Veraque, Linetty Makawa, Mary Kambafwile, Marc Randall, Vasileios Papavasileiou, Claire Cullen, Jenny Peters, Hlaing Thant, Tanya Ingram, Mellor Zoe, Ramesh Durairaj, Melanie Harrison, Sarah Stevenson, Daniela Shackcloth, Jordan Ewing, Victoria Sutton, Mark McCarron, Jacqueline McKee, Mandy Doherty, Ferghal McVerry, Caroline Blair, Mary MacLeod, Janice Irvine, Heather Gow, Jacqueline Furnace, Anu Joyson, Baljit Jagpal, Sarah Ross, Katrina Klaasen, Sandra Nelson, Rebecca Clarke, Nichola Crouch, Beverly MacLennan, Vicky Taylor, Daniel Epstein, Avani Shukla, Vinodh Krishnamurthy, Paul Nicholas, Sammie Qureshi, Adam Webber, Justin Penge, Hawraman Ramadan, Stuart Maguire, Chris Patterson, Ruth Bellfield, Brigid Hairsine, Kelvin Stewart, Michaela Hooley, Outi Quinn, Bella Richard, Sally Moseley, Mandy Edwards, Heidi Lawson, Michelle Tayler, Yogish Pai, Mahesh Dhakal, Bernard Esisi, Sofia Dima, Gemma Marie Smith, Mark Garside, Muhammad Naeem, Vidya Baliga, Gill Rogers, Ellen Brown, David Bruce, Rachel Hayman, Susan Clayton, Ed Gamble, Rebecca Grue, Bethan Charles, Adam Hague, Sujata Blane, Caroline Lambert, Afnan Chaudhry, Thomas Harrison, Kari Saastamoinen, Dionne Hove, Laura Howaniec, Gemma Grimwood, Ozlem Redjep, Fiona Humphries, Lucia Argandona, Larissa Cuenoud, Esther Erumere, Sageet Amlani, Grace Auld, Afraim Salek-Haddadi, Ursula Schulz, James Kennedy, Gary Ford, Philip Mathieson, Ian Reckless, Rachel Teal, Giulia Lenti, George Harston, Eoin O'Brien, Joanne Mcgee, Jennifer Mitchell, Elaine Amis, Dominic Handley, Siobhan Kelly, George Zachariah, Jobbin Francis, Sarah Crisp, Juliana Sesay, Sarah Finlay, Helen Hayhoe, Niamh Hannon, Tom Hughes, Bethan Morse, Henry De Berker, Emma Tallantyre, Ahmed Osman, Susan White, Stefan Schwarz, Benjamin Jelley, Rajendra Yadava, Khalid Azhar, Julie Reddan, Mirriam Sangombe, Samantha Stafford, Ken Fotherby, Debbie Morgan, Farrukh Baig, Karla Jennings-Preece, Donna Butler, Nasar Ahmad, Angela Willberry, Angela Stevens, Baljinder Rai, Prasad Siddegowda, Peter Howard, Lisa Hyatt, Tracey Dobson, David Jarrett, Suheil Ponnambath, Jane Tandy, Yasmin Harrington-Davies, Rebecca Butler, Claire James, Stacey Valentine, Anne Suttling, Peter Langhorne, Gillian Kerr, Fiona Wright, Ruth Graham, Christine McAlpine, Mohammad Shahzad Iqbal, Louise Humphreys, Kath Pasco, Olga Balazikova, Ashraf Nasim, Cassilda Peixoto, Louise Gallagher, Shahrzad Shahmehri, Sandip Ghosh, Elizabeth Barrie, Danielle Gilmour, Margo Henry, Tom Webb, Linda Cowie, Hannah Rudenko, Shanni McDonald, Natasha Schumacher, Susannah Walker, Tracey Cosier, Anna Verrion, Eva Beranova, Audrey Thomson, Marius Venter, Arindam Kar, Sheila Mashate, Kirsten Harvey, Léjeune Gardener, Vinh Nguyen, Omid Halse, Olivia Geraghty, Beth Hazel, Peter Wilding, Victoria Tilley, Tim Cassidy, Beverley McClelland, Maria Bokhari, Timothy England, Mohana Maddula, Richard Donnelly, Paul Findlay, Ashish Macaden, Ian Shread, Charlotte Barr, Azlisham Mohd Nor, Claire Brown, Nicola Persad, Charlotte Eglinton, Marie Weinling, Benjamin Hyams, Alex Shah, John Baker, Anthony Byrne, Caroline McGhee, Amanda Smart, Claire Copeland, Michael Carpenter, Marion Walker, Richard Davey, Ann Needle, Razik Fathima, Gavin Bateman, Prabal Datta, Andrew Stanners, Linda Jackson, Julie Ball, Michelle Davis, Natalie Atkinson, Michelle Fawcett, Teresa Thompson, Helen Guy, Valerie Hogg, Carole Hays, Stephen Woodward, Mohammad Haque, Eluzai Hakim, Stuart Symonds, Mehran Maanoosi, Jane Herman, Toby Black, Skelton Miriam, Caroline Clarke, Alpha Anthony, Michele Tribbeck, Julie Cronin, Denise Mead, Ruth Fennelly, James McIlmoyle, Christina Dickinson, Carol Jeffs, Sajjad Anwar, Joanne Howard, Kirsty Jones, Saikat Dhar, Caroline Clay, Muhammad Siddiq, Simone Ivatts, Yolanda Baird, Moore Sally, Isobel Amey, Sophie Newton, Lisa Clayton-Evans, Indra Chadbourn, Rayessa Rayessa, Charde Naylor, Alicia Rodgers, Lisa Wilson, Sarah Wilson, Emma Clarkson, Ruth Davies, Paula Owings, Graeme Sangster, Valerie Gott, Victoria Little, Pauline Weir, Suja Cherian, Deepa Jose, Helen Moroney, Susan Downham, Angela Dodd, Venetia Vettimootal Johnson, Laura Codd, Naomi Robinson, Ashraf Ahmed, Mo Albazzaz, Sharon Johnson, Carol Denniss, Mishell Cunningham, Tajammal Zahoor, Timothy Webster, Sandra Leason, Syed Haider, Kausic Chatterjee, Arumugam Nallasivan, Charlotte Perkins, Samantha Seagrave, Colin Jenkins, Fiona Price, Claire Hughes, Lily Mercer, Malik Hussain, Sarah Brown, Miriam Harvey, Jane Homan, Mohammad Khan, Robert Whiting, Leanne Foote, Nicholas Hunt, Helen Durman, Lucy Brotherton, Jayne Foot, Corinne Pawley, Eliza Foster, Alison Whitcher, Kneale Metcalf, Jenny Jagger, Susan McDonald, Kelly Waterfield, Patrick Sutton, Naval Shinh, Ajmal Anversha, Garth Ravenhill, Richard Greenwood, Janak Saada, Alison Wiltshire, Rebekah Perfitt, Sreeman Andole, Naveen Gadapa, Karen Dunne, Magdalini Krommyda, Evelyne Burssens, Sam King, Catherine Plewa, Nigel Smyth, Jenny Wilson, Elio Giallombardo, Lucy Sykes, Pradeep Kumar, James Barker, Isabel Huggett, Linda Dunn, Charlotte Culmsee, Philip Thomas, Min Myint, Helen Brew, Nikhil Majmudar, Janice OConnell, George Bunea, Charlotte Fox, Diane Gulliver, Andrew Smith, Betty Mokoena, Naweed Sattar, Ramesh Krishnamurthy, Emily Osborne, David Wilson, Belinda Wroath, Kevin Dynan, Michael Power, Susan Thompson, Victoria Adell, Enoch Orugun, Una Poultney, Rachel Glover, Hannah Crowther, Sarah Thornthwaite, Ivan Wiggam, Aine Wallace, Enda Kerr, Ailsa Fulton, Annemarie Hunter, Suzanne Tauro, Sarah Cuddy, David Mangion, Anne Hardwick, Skarlet Markova, Tara Lawrence, Carmen Constantin, Jo Fletcher, Isobel Thomas, Kerry Pettitt, Lakshmanan Sekaran, Margaret Tate, Kiranjit Bharaj, Rohan Simon, Frances Justin, Sakthivel Sethuraman, Duke Phiri, Niaz Mohammed, Meena Chauhan, Khaled Elfandi, Uzma Khan, David Eveson, Amit Mistri, Lisa Manning, Shagufta Khan, Champa Patel, Mohammed Moqsith, Saira Sattar, Man Yee Lam, Kashif Musarrat, Claire Stephens, Latheef Kalathil, Richard Miller, Maqsud Salehin, Nikki Gautam, Duncan Bailey, Kelly Amor, Julie Meir, Anne Nicolson, Javed Imam, Lisa Wood, Julie White, Mahmud Sajid, George Ghaly, Margaret Ball, Rachel Gascoyne, Harald Proeschel, Simon Sharpe, Sarah Horton, Emily Beaves, Stephanie Jones, Brigitte Yip, Murdina Bell, Linda MacLiver, Brian MacInnes, Don Sims, Jennifer Hurley, Mark Willmot, Claire Sutton, Edward Littleton, Susan Maiden, Rachael Jones, James Cunningham, Carole Green, Michelle Bates, Raj Shekhar, Ellie Gilham, Iman Ahmed, Rachel Crown, Tracy Fuller, Neetish Goorah, Angela Bell, Christine Kelly, Arun Singh, Jamie Walford, Benjamin Tomlinson, Farzana Patel, Stephen Duberley, Ingrid Kane, Chakravarthi Rajkumar, Jane Gaylard, Joanna Breeds, Nicola Gainsborough, Alexandra Pitt-Ford, Emma Barbon, Laura Latter, Philip Thompson, Simon Hervey, Shrivakumar Krishnamoorthy, Joseph Vassallo, Deborah Walter, Helen Cochrane, Meena Srinivasan, Robert Campbell, Denise Donaldson, Nichola Motherwell, Frances Hurford, Indranil Mukherjee, Antony Kenton, Sheila Nyabadza, Irene Martin, Benjamin Hunt, Hardi Hassan, Sarah O'Toole, Bander Dallol, Janet Putterill, Ratneshwari Jha, Rachel Gallifent, Puneet Kakar, Aparna Pusalkar, kelly Chan, Puneet Dangri, Hannah Beadle, Angela Cook, Karen Crabtree, Santhosh Subramonian, Peter Owusu-Agyei, Natalie Temple, Nicola Butterworth-Cowin, Suzanne Ragab, Kerstin Knops, Emma Jinks, Christine Dickson, Laura Gleave, Judith Dube, Jacqui Leggett, Tatiana Garcia, Sissy Ispoglou, Rachel Evans, Sandeep Ankolekar, Anne Hayes, Hlaing Ni, Bithi Rahman, Josette Milligan, Carol Graham, Josin Jose, Breffni Keegan, Jim Kelly, Richard Dewar, James White, Kelly Thomas, Rajkumar, C, University of St Andrews. School of Medicine, University of St Andrews. Sir James Mackenzie Institute for Early Diagnosis, University of St Andrews. Population and Behavioural Science Division, University of St Andrews. Pure Mathematics, University of St Andrews. School of Psychology and Neuroscience, and University of St Andrews. School of Biology
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Male ,MICROBLEEDS ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,AMYLOID ANGIOPATHY ,Brain Ischemia ,law.invention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Secondary Prevention ,ACUTE ISCHEMIC-STROKE ,Aged, 80 and over ,Aspirin ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Hazard ratio ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Superficial siderosis ,Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases ,Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,medicine.drug ,CT ,medicine.medical_specialty ,ANTITHROMBOTIC THERAPY ,Clinical Neurology ,Neuroimaging ,Subgroup analysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,DAS ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,SIGNS ,ASPIRIN ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,SUPERFICIAL SIDEROSIS ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Findings from the RESTART trial suggest that starting antiplatelet therapy might reduce the risk of recurrent symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage compared with avoiding antiplatelet therapy. Brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases (such as cerebral microbleeds) are associated with greater risks of recurrent intracerebral haemorrhage. We did subgroup analyses of the RESTART trial to explore whether these brain imaging features modify the effects of antiplatelet therapy.Methods: RESTART was a prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint, parallel-group trial at 122 hospitals in the UK that assessed whether starting antiplatelet therapy might reduce the risk of recurrent symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage compared with avoiding antiplatelet therapy. For this prespecified subgroup analysis, consultant neuroradiologists masked to treatment allocation reviewed brain CT or MRI scans performed before randomisation to confirm participant eligibility and rate features of the intracerebral haemorrhage and surrounding brain. We followed participants for primary (recurrent symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage) and secondary (ischaemic stroke) outcomes for up to 5 years (reported elsewhere). For this report, we analysed eligible participants with intracerebral haemorrhage according to their treatment allocation in primary subgroup analyses of cerebral microbleeds on MRI and in exploratory subgroup analyses of other features on CT or MRI. The trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN71907627.Findings: Between May 22, 2013, and May 31, 2018, 537 participants were enrolled, of whom 525 (98%) had intracerebral haemorrhage: 507 (97%) were diagnosed on CT (252 assigned to start antiplatelet therapy and 255 assigned to avoid antiplatelet therapy, of whom one withdrew and was not analysed) and 254 (48%) underwent the required brain MRI protocol (122 in the start antiplatelet therapy group and 132 in the avoid antiplatelet therapy group). There were no clinically or statistically significant hazards of antiplatelet therapy on recurrent intracerebral haemorrhage in primary subgroup analyses of cerebral microbleed presence (2 or more) versus absence (0 or 1) (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0·30 [95% CI 0·08–1·13] vs 0·77 [0·13–4·61]; pinteraction=0·41), cerebral microbleed number 0–1 versus 2–4 versus 5 or more (HR 0·77 [0·13–4·62] vs 0·32 [0·03–3·66] vs 0·33 [0·07–1·60]; pinteraction=0·75), or cerebral microbleed strictly lobar versus other location (HR 0·52 [0·004–6·79] vs 0·37 [0·09–1·28]; pinteraction=0·85). There was no evidence of heterogeneity in the effects of antiplatelet therapy in any exploratory subgroup analyses (all pinteraction>0·05).Interpretation: Our findings exclude all but a very modest harmful effect of antiplatelet therapy on recurrent intracerebral haemorrhage in the presence of cerebral microbleeds. Further randomised trials are needed to replicate these findings and investigate them with greater precision.Funding: British Heart Foundation.
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- 2019
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14. Invented Edens: Techno-Cities of the Twentieth Century by Robert H. Kargon and Arthur P. Molella
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Jennifer Hurley
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Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Development - Published
- 2010
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15. Unravelling the Web: Supply Chains and Workers' Lives in the Garment Industry
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Jennifer Hurley
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Engineering ,Commerce ,business.industry ,Supply chain ,business - Published
- 2008
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16. The Changing Face of the Global Garment Industry
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Jennifer Hurley and Doug Miller
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Face (sociological concept) ,Operations management ,Top-down and bottom-up design ,business ,Construction engineering - Published
- 2008
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17. Action Research: Tracing the Threads of Labour in the Global Garment Industry
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Jane Wills and Jennifer Hurley
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Labour economics ,Business ,Tracing ,Action research ,Capitalism ,Industrial organization - Published
- 2008
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18. Measuring Educational Workload: A Pilot Study of Paper-based and PDA Tools
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Karen Leslie, Robert Hilliard, Lorelei Lingard, Lawrence Spero, Jonathan Hellmann, Jennifer Hurley, Jonathan Pirie, Marcellina Mian, Rayfel Schneider, Susan Tallett, Ann L Jefferies, and Jay Rosenfield
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Faculty, Medical ,Medical Faculty ,Workload measurement ,Pilot Projects ,Workload ,Pediatrics ,Education ,Interviews as Topic ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Humans ,Handheld Computers ,Face validity ,Medical education ,Pilot implementation ,Education, Medical ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Paper based ,Medical Education ,Computers, Handheld ,Resource allocation ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Teaching is an important professional role for most faculty members in academic health sciences centres. Careful delineation of educational workload is needed to foster and reward teaching efforts, and to facilitate equitable allocation of resources. AIMS: To promote recognition in teaching and facilitate equitable resource allocation, we developed, piloted, and qualitatively assessed a tool for delineating the educational workload of pediatric faculty in an academic health sciences centre. METHODS: A prototype educational workload measurement tool was developed. Between 2002 and 2004, three successive phases of pilot implementation were conducted to (1) assess the face validity of the tool, (2) assess its feasibility, and (3) develop and assess the feasibility of a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) version. Participants were interviewed regarding strengths, weaknesses, and barriers to completion. Data were analyzed for recurrent themes. RESULTS: Faculty found that the tool was usable and represented a broad range of educational activities. The PDA format was easier to use and better received. Technical support would be imperative for long-term implementation. The greatest barriers to implementation were skepticism about the purpose of the tool and concerns that it would promote quantity over quality of teaching. CONCLUSION: We developed a usable tool to capture data on the diverse educational workload of pediatric faculty. PDA technology can be used to facilitate collection of workload data. Faculty skepticism is an important barrier that should be addressed in future work.
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- 2008
19. National Aged Care Staffing and Skills Mix Project Report 2016. Meeting residents' care needs: A study of the requirement for nursing and personal care staff
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Eileen Willis, Kay Price, Robert Bonner, Julie Henderson, Terri Gibson, Jennifer Hurley, Dr Ian Blackman, Luisa Toffoli, and Trish Currie
20. The Potential of Procedural Justice in Mediation: A Study into Mediators Understandings
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Kathy Douglas and Jennifer Hurley
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business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:Law ,Procedural justice ,Therapeutic jurisprudence ,Public relations ,Tribunal ,Law ,Mediation ,Justice (ethics) ,Neutrality ,Empowerment ,Psychology ,business ,media_common ,Qualitative research ,lcsh:K - Abstract
Therapeutic jurisprudence, mediation and procedural justice are closely linked non-adversarial perspectives of law. Therapeutic jurisprudence aims to use the law to enhance individuals' wellbeing. Mediation provides benefits through its focus on the empowerment of parties. Procedural justice explains why disputants who experience validation and respect in a decision-making process are more likely to accept the outcome of a process even if they do not agree with the result. As a key platform of therapeutic jurisprudence, the benefits of procedural justice are accepted in the United States. However the Australian legal system is yet to recognise the potential of procedural justice to assist courts to provide court users with an improved experience of the justice system. Procedural justice can occur in mediation but many mediators do not understand the potential of this kind of experience for parties. In a qualitative study exploring the practices of mediators conducted at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal data analysis showed that mediators did not have a strong grasp of the concept of procedural justice. They lacked an understanding of the issues involved with procedural justice but did demonstrate intuitive insights about the needs of parties to be heard and validated in the decision-making process.
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