21 results on '"Sculley, J"'
Search Results
2. The Nine Chains of Care for Home Oxygen During Hospital-to-Home Transitions in Patients with COPD Exacerbations
- Author
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Sculley, J., primary, Cattamanchi, A., additional, Gamino, A.J., additional, Asche, C.V., additional, Au, D., additional, Collins, E.G., additional, Sullivan, J.L., additional, Erwin, K., additional, Feemster, L.C., additional, Stefan, M.S., additional, Lindenauer, P.K., additional, Basu, S., additional, Carson, S.S., additional, Johnson, T.P., additional, Vollmer, W.M., additional, and Krishnan, J.A., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. International migration of doctors, and its impact on availability of psychiatrists in low and middle income countries
- Author
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Jenkins, R, Kydd, R, Mullen, P, Thomson, K, Sculley, J, Kuper, S, Carroll, J, Gureje, O, Hatcher, S, Brownie, S, Carroll, C, Hollins, S, Wong, ML, Jenkins, R, Kydd, R, Mullen, P, Thomson, K, Sculley, J, Kuper, S, Carroll, J, Gureje, O, Hatcher, S, Brownie, S, Carroll, C, Hollins, S, and Wong, ML
- Abstract
Background:Migration of health professionals from low and middle income countries to rich countries is a large scale and long-standing phenomenon, which is detrimental to the health systems in the donor countries. We sought to explore the extent of psychiatric migration. Methods: In our study, we use the respective professional databases in each country to establish the numbers of psychiatrists currently registered in the UK, US, New Zealand, and Australia who originate from other countries. We also estimate the impact of this migration on the psychiatrist population ratios in the donor countries. Findings: We document large numbers of psychiatrists currently registered in the UK, US, New Zealand and Australia originating from India (4687 psychiatrists), Pakistan (1158), Bangladesh (149) , Nigeria (384) , Egypt (484), Sri Lanka (142), Philippines (1593). For some countries of origin, the numbers of psychiatrists currently registered within high-income countries' professional databases are very small (e.g., 5 psychiatrists of Tanzanian origin registered in the 4 high-income countries we studied), but this number is very significant compared to the 15 psychiatrists currently registered in Tanzania). Without such emigration, many countries would have more than double the number of psychiatrists per 100, 000 population (e.g. Bangladesh, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon); and some countries would have had five to eight times more psychiatrists per 100,000 (e.g. Philippines, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Liberia, Nigeria and Zambia). Conclusions: Large numbers of psychiatrists originating from key low and middle income countries are currently registered in the UK, US, New Zealand and Australia, with concomitant impact on the psychiatrist/ population ratio n the originating countries. We suggest that creative international policy approaches are needed to ensure the individual migration rights of health professionals do not compromise societal population rights to health
- Published
- 2010
4. Algal mats and insect emergence in rivers under Mediterranean climates: towards photogrammetric surveillance
- Author
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POWER, M., primary, LOWE, R., additional, FUREY, P., additional, WELTER, J., additional, LIMM, M., additional, FINLAY, J., additional, BODE, C., additional, CHANG, S., additional, GOODRICH, M., additional, and SCULLEY, J., additional
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- 2009
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5. Defense R&D
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Sculley, J. R.
- Published
- 1984
6. Mathematical Modeling for Evaluation of Field Water Supply Alternatives (Arid and Semi-Arid Regions).
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VMI RESEARCH LABS LEXINGTON VA, Morgan,J M , Jr, Sculley,J R, Ciccone,V J, Jamison,D K, Knapp,J W, VMI RESEARCH LABS LEXINGTON VA, Morgan,J M , Jr, Sculley,J R, Ciccone,V J, Jamison,D K, and Knapp,J W
- Abstract
A mathematical model has been developed which can be applied to evaluate the least-cost alternatives to meet the projected potable and non-potable water requirements of a US Army Corps-sized operation. It included the adaptation of the model to an existing solution technique, the Out-of-Kilter Algorithm (OKA), a search of the literature to obtain cost data for the various elements within the alternatives, a search of the literature for health and other related factors, a review of existing scenarios, a review of collateral issues pertinent to the production of water in an arid or semi-arid environment, and finally, proposed systems for the re-use of laundry and shower wastewaters. (Author)
- Published
- 1981
7. Modeling Methane Adsorption in Interpenetrating Porous Polymer Networks
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Martin, R. L., Shahrak, M. N., Swisher, J. A., Simon, C. M., Sculley, J. P., Zhou, H. C., Smit, B., and Haranczyk, M.
- Abstract
Porous polymer networks (PPNs) are a class of porous materials of particular interest in a variety of energy-related applications because of their stability, high surface areas, and gas uptake capacities. Computationally derived structures for five recently synthesized PPN frameworks, PPN-2, -3, -4, -5, and -6, were generated for various topologies, optimized using semiempirical electronic structure methods, and evaluated using classical grand-canonical Monte Carlo simulations. We show that a key factor in modeling the methane uptake performance of these materials is whether, and how, these material frameworks interpenetrate and demonstrate a computational approach for predicting the presence, degree, and nature of interpenetration in PPNs that enables the reproduction of experimental adsorption data. © 2013 American Chemical Society.
8. α,β-DIAMINO CARBINOLS FROM α,β-DIAMINOBUTYROPHENONES
- Author
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SCULLEY, J. D., primary and CROMWELL, NORMAN H., additional
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- 1951
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9. Personal computers on the frontiers of education
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Sculley, John
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COMPUTERS - Educational Applications ,EDUCATION - United States - Published
- 1989
10. Technology is reshaping both work and workers.
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Sculley, J.
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOLS - Abstract
Opinion. Asserts that the American education system must change from being based on the industrial economy so that workers can be properly trained to help America compete.
- Published
- 1989
11. Analyses of heat transfer at cooling lakes.
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Sculley, J
- Published
- 1971
12. Returning individual research results to participants: Values, preferences, and expectations.
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Kent DA, Villegas-Downs M, Rios MD, Freedman M, Krishnan JA, Menchaca MG, Patil CL, Sculley J, Tintle N, and Gerald LB
- Abstract
Background/objective: Disclosing individual research results to participants is not standard practice. The return of individual research results to participants may increase recruitment, retention, and engagement in research. This study's objective was to explore the preferences, expectations, and experiences of research participants receiving individual research results., Methods: A mixed-methods approach, consisting of semi-structured interviews and a health literacy assessment, was used with participants enrolled in a cohort study. The interviews were analyzed to produce an understanding of current experiences. Using descriptive analyses, responses were compared to identify alignments and divergences among participants., Results: Forty-three English-speaking and 16 Spanish-speaking participants enrolled. Ninety-eight percent of participants wanted to receive their individual research results. Seventy-five percent of participants reported they shared results with their healthcare providers. More participants aged 18-65 reported the need to follow up with their provider (70%) as compared to participants > 65 (20%). Two-thirds of participants reported a positive experience receiving their research results; however, 22% reported anxiety and worry. Most participants (69%) described the electronic medical record (EMR) as their preferred method for receiving their results. Yet only 50% of Spanish speakers preferred receiving research results through the EMR compared to 77% of English speakers. Participants with low health literacy preferred receiving study results in person or by phone., Conclusion: Research participants value receiving their individual research results, and this may increase recruitment and retention within the research enterprise. While more research is needed, the lessons learned from this study lay the groundwork for developing best practices and policies around the return of individual research results., Competing Interests: None., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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13. Clinical Practices Surrounding the Prescription of Home Oxygen in Patients With COPD and Desaturation.
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Zaeh SE, Case M, Au DH, DaSilva M, Deitemeyer K, DeLisa J, Feemster LC, Gerald LB, Krishnan JA, Sculley J, Woodruff A, and Eakin MN
- Abstract
Purpose: While home oxygen therapy increases survival in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who have severe resting hypoxemia, recent evidence suggests that there is no survival benefit of home oxygen for patients with COPD who have isolated exertional desaturation. We aimed to understand clinician practice patterns surrounding the prescription of home oxygen for patients with COPD., Methods: We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews via videoconference with 15 physicians and 3 nurse practitioners who provide care for patients with COPD. Clinicians were recruited through the American Lung Association Airways Clinical Research Centers. Interview guides were created with the assistance of patient investigators and included questions regarding clinician practices surrounding the prescription of oxygen for patients with COPD and the use of clinical guidelines. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and coded for themes., Results: Of the 18 clinician interviewees, one-third were women, with most participants (n=11) being < 50 years old. Results of the semi-structured interviews suggested research evidence, clinical experience, and patient preferences contributed to clinician decision-making. Most clinicians described a shared decision-making process for prescribing home oxygen for patients, including discussion of risks and benefits, and developing an understanding of patient values and preferences. Clinicians did not use a structured tool to conduct these conversations., Conclusions: Clinicians consider a number of patient and clinical factors when prescribing home oxygen therapy, often using a shared decision-making process. Tools to support shared decision-making about the use of home oxygen are needed., (JCOPDF © 2023.)
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- 2023
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14. Coordinated Health Care Interventions for Childhood Asthma Gaps in Outcomes (CHICAGO) plan.
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Krishnan JA, Margellos-Anast H, Kumar R, Africk JJ, Berbaum M, Bracken N, Chen YF, DeLisa J, Erwin K, Ignoffo S, Illendula SD, Kim H, Lohff C, MacTavish T, Martin MA, Mosnaim GS, Nguyen H, Norell S, Nyenhuis SM, Paik SM, Pittsenbarger Z, Press VG, Sculley J, Thompson TM, Zun L, Gerald LB, and McDermott M
- Abstract
Background: Evidence-based strategies to improve outcomes in minority children with uncontrolled asthma discharged from the emergency department (ED) are needed., Objectives: This multicenter pragmatic clinical trial was designed to compare an ED-only intervention (decision support tool), an ED-only intervention and home visits by community health workers for 6 months (ED-plus-home), and enhanced usual care (UC)., Methods: Children aged 5 to 11 years with uncontrolled asthma were enrolled. The change over 6 months in the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Asthma Impact Scale score in children and Satisfaction with Participation in Social Roles score in caregivers were the primary outcomes. The secondary outcomes included guideline-recommended ED discharge care and self-management., Results: Recruitment was significantly lower than expected (373 vs 640 expected). Of the 373 children (64% Black and 31% Latino children), only 63% completed the 6-month follow-up visit. In multivariable analyses that accounted for missing data, the adjusted odds ratios and 98% CIs for differences in Asthma Impact Scores or caregivers' Satisfaction with Participation in Social Roles scores were not significant. However, guideline-recommended ED discharge care was significantly improved in the intervention groups versus in the UC group, and self-management behaviors were significantly improved in the ED-plus-home group versus in the ED-only and UC groups., Conclusions: The ED-based interventions did not significantly improve the primary clinical outcomes, although the study was likely underpowered. Although guideline-recommended ED discharge care and self-management did improve, their effect on clinical outcomes needs further study., Competing Interests: In the past 12 months, J. Krishnan has received research funding from the National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NIH/NHLBI), the American Lung Association, and the Patient-Centered Outcomes Institute, as well as consulting fees from GlaxoSmithKline, the American Thoracic Society, and BData Inc. G. Mosnaim currently receives research grant support from GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis, Sanofi-Regneron, and Teva, and in the past 12 months she has received research grant support from Astra-Zeneca, Alk-Abelló and Genentech. In the past 12 months, L. Gerald has received research funding from the NIH/NHLBI, the American Lung Association, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Institute, and the Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center, as well as consulting fees from Up-to-Date. V. Press reports receiving funding from the National Institutes of Health (grant R01HL146644) and the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality (grant R01HS027804) as well as consultant fees from Vizient, Inc, and Humana. S. M. Nyenhuis receives funding from the National Institutes of Health, royalties from Wolters/Kluwer and Springer, and consultant fees from PRIME Education. The rest of the authors declare that they have no relevant conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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15. The Great Porn Experiment V2.0: Sexual Arousal Reduces the Salience of Familiar Women When Heterosexual Men Judge Their Attractiveness.
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Sculley J and Watkins CD
- Subjects
- Face, Female, Humans, Male, Men, Sexual Behavior, Heterosexuality, Sexual Arousal
- Abstract
Pornography has become widely accessible in recent years due to its integration with the Internet, generating social scientific and moralistic debate on potential "media effects," given correlations between consumption and various sexual traits and behaviors. One popular public debate (Wilson, 2012) claimed that exposure to Internet pornography has addictive qualities that could impact men's sexual relationships, underpinned by the "Coolidge effect," where males are sexually motivated by the presence of novel mates. As claims about Internet and sexual addictions are scientifically controversial, we provide a direct experimental test of his proposal. Adapting a paradigm used to examine "Coolidge-like" effects in men, we examined the extent to which exposure to images of pornographic actresses altered men's attractiveness ratings of (1) familiar faces/bodies on second viewing and (2) familiar versus novel women's faces/bodies. Independent of slideshow content (pornographic versus clothed versions of same actress), heterosexual men were less attracted to familiar bodies, and homosexual men were less attracted to familiar women (faces and bodies), suggesting that mere visual exposure to attractive women moderated men's preferences. However, consistent with one of our preregistered predictions, heterosexual but not homosexual men's preferences for familiar versus novel women were moderated by slideshow content such that familiar women were less salient on the attractiveness dimension compared to novel women when sexual arousal was greater (pornographic versus clothed slideshows). In sum, our findings demonstrate that visual exposure/sexual arousal moderates attractiveness perceptions, albeit that much greater nuance is required considering earlier claims., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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16. Porous materials with pre-designed single-molecule traps for CO₂ selective adsorption.
- Author
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Li JR, Yu J, Lu W, Sun LB, Sculley J, Balbuena PB, and Zhou HC
- Abstract
Despite tremendous efforts, precise control in the synthesis of porous materials with pre-designed pore properties for desired applications remains challenging. Newly emerged porous metal-organic materials, such as metal-organic polyhedra and metal-organic frameworks, are amenable to design and property tuning, enabling precise control of functionality by accurate design of structures at the molecular level. Here we propose and validate, both experimentally and computationally, a precisely designed cavity, termed a 'single-molecule trap', with the desired size and properties suitable for trapping target CO(2) molecules. Such a single-molecule trap can strengthen CO(2)-host interactions without evoking chemical bonding, thus showing potential for CO(2) capture. Molecular single-molecule traps in the form of metal-organic polyhedra are designed, synthesised and tested for selective adsorption of CO(2) over N(2) and CH(4), demonstrating the trapping effect. Building these pre-designed single-molecule traps into extended frameworks yields metal-organic frameworks with efficient mass transfer, whereas the CO(2) selective adsorption nature of single-molecule traps is preserved.
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- 2013
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17. Metal-organic frameworks for separations.
- Author
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Li JR, Sculley J, and Zhou HC
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Gases chemistry, Membranes, Artificial, Organic Chemicals chemistry, Surface Properties, Gases isolation & purification, Organic Chemicals isolation & purification, Organometallic Compounds chemistry
- Published
- 2012
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18. A novel MOF with mesoporous cages for kinetic trapping of hydrogen.
- Author
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Fang QR, Yuan DQ, Sculley J, Lu WG, and Zhou HC
- Abstract
A stable MOF, assigned PCN-105, with two types of mesoporous cages, has been prepared by using a new multidentate flexible ligand with amine functional groups, and PCN-105 exhibits a marked N(2), O(2), Ar and H(2) hysteretic behaviour., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2012)
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- 2012
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19. Sulfonate-grafted porous polymer networks for preferential CO2 adsorption at low pressure.
- Author
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Lu W, Yuan D, Sculley J, Zhao D, Krishna R, and Zhou HC
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Nitrogen chemistry, Porosity, Pressure, Surface Properties, Carbon Dioxide chemistry, Polymers chemistry, Sulfonic Acids chemistry
- Abstract
A porous polymer network (PPN) grafted with sulfonic acid (PPN-6-SO(3)H) and its lithium salt (PPN-6-SO(3)Li) exhibit significant increases in isosteric heats of CO(2) adsorption and CO(2)-uptake capacities. IAST calculations using single-component-isotherm data and a 15/85 CO(2)/N(2) ratio at 295 K and 1 bar revealed that the sulfonate-grafted PPN-6 networks show exceptionally high adsorption selectivity for CO(2) over N(2) (155 and 414 for PPN-6-SO(3)H and PPN-6-SO(3)Li, respectively). Since these PPNs also possess ultrahigh physicochemical stability, practical applications in postcombustion capture of CO(2) lie well within the realm of possibility.
- Published
- 2011
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20. Functional mesoporous metal-organic frameworks for the capture of heavy metal ions and size-selective catalysis.
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Fang QR, Yuan DQ, Sculley J, Li JR, Han ZB, and Zhou HC
- Abstract
By using Zn(4)O(CO(2))(6) as secondary building units (SBUs) and two extended ligands containing amino functional groups, TATAB and BTATB (TATAB = 4,4',4''-s-triazine-1,3,5-triyltri-p-aminobenzoate and BTATB = 4,4',4''-(benzene-1,3,5-triyltris(azanediyl))tribenzoate), two isostructural mesoporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with cavities up to 2.73 nm, designated as PCN-100 and PCN-101 (PCN represents porous coordination network), have been synthesized. N(2) sorption isotherms of both PCN-100 and -101 showed typical type IV behavior, indicating their mesoporous nature. The TATAB ligand that comprises PCN-100 was employed to capture heavy metal ions (Cd(II) and Hg(II)) by constructing complexes within the pores with a possible coordination mode similar to that found in aminopyridinato complexes. This reveals that mesoporous materials such as PCN-100 can be applied in the elimination of heavy metal ions from waste liquid. In addition, both PCNs-100 and -101 exhibit size-selective catalytic activity toward the Knoevenagel condensation reaction.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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21. International migration of doctors, and its impact on availability of psychiatrists in low and middle income countries.
- Author
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Jenkins R, Kydd R, Mullen P, Thomson K, Sculley J, Kuper S, Carroll J, Gureje O, Hatcher S, Brownie S, Carroll C, Hollins S, and Wong ML
- Subjects
- Australia, Bangladesh ethnology, Egypt ethnology, Humans, India ethnology, New Zealand, Nigeria ethnology, Pakistan ethnology, Sri Lanka ethnology, United Kingdom, United States, Workforce, Emigration and Immigration statistics & numerical data, Personnel Turnover statistics & numerical data, Professional Practice Location statistics & numerical data, Psychiatry
- Abstract
Background: Migration of health professionals from low and middle income countries to rich countries is a large scale and long-standing phenomenon, which is detrimental to the health systems in the donor countries. We sought to explore the extent of psychiatric migration., Methods: In our study, we use the respective professional databases in each country to establish the numbers of psychiatrists currently registered in the UK, US, New Zealand, and Australia who originate from other countries. We also estimate the impact of this migration on the psychiatrist population ratios in the donor countries., Findings: We document large numbers of psychiatrists currently registered in the UK, US, New Zealand and Australia originating from India (4687 psychiatrists), Pakistan (1158), Bangladesh (149), Nigeria (384), Egypt (484), Sri Lanka (142), Philippines (1593). For some countries of origin, the numbers of psychiatrists currently registered within high-income countries' professional databases are very small (e.g., 5 psychiatrists of Tanzanian origin registered in the 4 high-income countries we studied), but this number is very significant compared to the 15 psychiatrists currently registered in Tanzania). Without such emigration, many countries would have more than double the number of psychiatrists per 100,000 population (e.g. Bangladesh, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon); and some countries would have had five to eight times more psychiatrists per 100,000 (e.g. Philippines, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Liberia, Nigeria and Zambia)., Conclusions: Large numbers of psychiatrists originating from key low and middle income countries are currently registered in the UK, US, New Zealand and Australia, with concomitant impact on the psychiatrist/population ratio n the originating countries. We suggest that creative international policy approaches are needed to ensure the individual migration rights of health professionals do not compromise societal population rights to health, and that there are public and fair agreements between countries within an internationally agreed framework.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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