44 results on '"Victoria Sutton"'
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2. Immunogenicity of chimeric haemagglutinin-based, universal influenza virus vaccine candidates: interim results of a randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 1 clinical trial
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Peter Palese, Anna-Karin E. Palm, Patrick C. Wilson, Marie Van der Wielen, Rahnuma Wahid, Michelle Dickey, Jeffrey T. Guptill, Rong Hai, Chris Gast, Haley L. Dugan, David I. Bernstein, Alicia Solórzano, Abdollah Naficy, Christopher T. Stamper, Monica M. McNeal, Raffael Nachbagauer, Min Gao, Emmanuel B. Walter, Linda Yu-Ling Lan, Randy A. Albrecht, Dustin G. Shaw, Florian Krammer, Micah E. Tepora, Jodi Feser, Heather Wenzel, Megan E Ermler, Jenna J. Guthmiller, D. Freeman, Bruce L Innis, Adolfo García-Sastre, Carine Claeys, Kristen N Buschle, Weina Sun, Teddy John Wohlbold, Carole Henry, Victoria Sutton, Francesco Berlanda-Scorza, and Yao-Qing Chen
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,and promotion of well-being ,Immunologic ,Medicine ,Vaccines ,Immunogenicity ,Vaccination ,Healthy Volunteers ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,Hemagglutinins ,3.4 Vaccines ,Medical Microbiology ,Influenza Vaccines ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Public Health and Health Services ,Female ,Infection ,Human ,Biotechnology ,Adult ,030106 microbiology ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Sciences ,Vaccines, Attenuated ,Microbiology ,Antigenic drift ,Virus ,Article ,Vaccine Related ,03 medical and health sciences ,Adjuvants, Immunologic ,Clinical Research ,Biodefense ,Influenza, Human ,Humans ,AS03 ,Adjuvants ,Adverse effect ,Reactogenicity ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Inactivated ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,Virology ,Influenza ,030104 developmental biology ,Attenuated ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,Vaccines, Inactivated ,Inactivated vaccine ,Immunization ,business - Abstract
Summary Background Influenza viruses cause substantial annual morbidity and mortality globally. Current vaccines protect against influenza only when well matched to the circulating strains. However, antigenic drift can cause considerable mismatches between vaccine and circulating strains, substantially reducing vaccine effectiveness. Moreover, current seasonal vaccines are ineffective against pandemic influenza, and production of a vaccine matched to a newly emerging virus strain takes months. Therefore, there is an unmet medical need for a broadly protective influenza virus vaccine. We aimed to test the ability of chimeric H1 haemagglutinin-based universal influenza virus vaccine candidates to induce broadly cross-reactive antibodies targeting the stalk domain of group 1 haemagglutinin-expressing influenza viruses. Methods We did a randomised, observer-blinded, phase 1 study in healthy adults in two centres in the USA. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three prime–boost, chimeric haemagglutinin-based vaccine regimens or one of two placebo groups. The vaccine regimens included a chimeric H8/1, intranasal, live-attenuated vaccine on day 1 followed by a non-adjuvanted, chimeric H5/1, intramuscular, inactivated vaccine on day 85; the same regimen but with the inactivated vaccine being adjuvanted with AS03; and an AS03-adjuvanted, chimeric H8/1, intramuscular, inactivated vaccine followed by an AS03-adjuvanted, chimeric H5/1, intramuscular, inactivated vaccine. In this planned interim analysis, the primary endpoints of reactogenicity and safety were assessed by blinded study group. We also assessed anti-H1 haemagglutinin stalk, anti-H2, anti-H9, and anti-H18 IgG antibody titres and plasmablast and memory B-cell responses in peripheral blood. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov , number NCT03300050 . Findings Between Oct 10, 2017, and Nov 27, 2017, 65 participants were enrolled and randomly assigned. The adjuvanted inactivated vaccine, but not the live-attenuated vaccine, induced a substantial serum IgG antibody response after the prime immunisation, with a seven times increase in anti-H1 stalk antibody titres on day 29. After boost immunisation, all vaccine regimens induced detectable anti-H1 stalk antibody (2·2–5·6 times induction over baseline), cross-reactive serum IgG antibody, and peripheral blood plasmablast responses. An unsolicited adverse event was reported for 29 (48%) of 61 participants. Solicited local adverse events were reported in 12 (48%) of 25 participants following prime vaccination with intramuscular study product or placebo, in 12 (33%) of 36 after prime immunisation with intranasal study product or placebo, and in 18 (32%) of 56 following booster doses of study product or placebo. Solicited systemic adverse events were reported in 14 (56%) of 25 after prime immunisation with intramuscular study product or placebo, in 22 (61%) of 36 after immunisation with intranasal study product or placebo, and in 21 (38%) of 56 after booster doses of study product or placebo. Disaggregated safety data were not available at the time of this interim analysis. Interpretation The tested chimeric haemagglutinin-based, universal influenza virus vaccine regimens elicited cross-reactive serum IgG antibodies that targeted the conserved haemagglutinin stalk domain. This is the first proof-of-principle study to show that high anti-stalk titres can be induced by a rationally designed vaccine in humans and opens up avenues for further development of universal influenza virus vaccines. On the basis of the blinded study group, the vaccine regimens were tolerable and no safety concerns were observed. Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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- 2020
3. Introduction to Volume XIII
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Victoria Sutton
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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4. Introduction to Volume XII
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Paul Whitfield Horn and Victoria Sutton
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Materials science ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,business.industry ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Published
- 2021
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5. Perceptions of Online Learning and COVID-19 Countermeasures Among Law Students in a One-year Followup Study
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Victoria Sutton
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Class (computer programming) ,Government ,Online learning ,Public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Burnout ,Preference ,Face-to-face ,Law ,Perception ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,medicine ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This is a one-year follow-up study to a May 2020 study, conducted May 2021 about perceptions of law students about the transition to online learning as well as government required pandemic public health measures and their effect on returning to face to face classes. The trend in preference for online courses is increasing by 17%, despite the fear that burnout or frustration from the COVID-19 transition to online learning for law schools would create a general dislike for online courses. There are still a significant number of students who have difficulty with online learning of as many as 25%. About 72% of the respondents feel safe returning to class with no pandemic precautions, but accommodations should be considered early in the planning stages for the semester for those 15% who still do not feel safe enough to return to the classroom. In general, the survey dispelled a wide concern that online courses would sour students to online teaching, rather the online experience resulted in a significant increase in interest in online learning in law schools.
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- 2021
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6. Unintended Consequences of Water Policy and Law
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Victoria Sutton
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Water resources ,Statute ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Unintended consequences ,Natural resource economics ,Wetland ,Business ,Water cycle ,Surface water ,Groundwater ,Simple (philosophy) - Abstract
The water cycle including its oceans, surface water, wetlands, water vapor, clouds and groundwater has resulted in a patchwork of statutes and regulations that fail to address true protection of water resources. This is not a simple "fix" and requires Congressional positivism rather than decades of relying on the judicial branch to resolve statutes that are ultimately not designed for true water protection. The unintended consequences of this choice of policy resolution has had profound negative effects on water resources and it is increasingly urgent to address this complex problem and avert a water resources disaster.
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- 2021
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7. Introduction to Volume XI
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Victoria Sutton
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Physics ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Thermodynamics ,General Medicine - Published
- 2020
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8. Law Student Attitudes about their Experience in the COVID-19 Transition to Online Learning
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Victoria Sutton
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,E-learning (theory) ,Online learning ,Transition (fiction) ,Face-to-face ,Perception ,Online course ,Law ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,The Internet ,business ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Law students from Texas Tech University were surveyed about their attitudes concerning online learning due to the COVID-19 transition, at the end of the spring semester 2020. Questions concerned obstacles to learning, experiences and perceptions. Among the most frequently cited obstacles for students were that students had to move (49%) from their physical location, they were impacted financially (60%) and they lacked reliable internet (40%). The impact of the disease itself was relatively small with only 10% reporting they were affected by someone having COVID-19. Concerns that the lack of time to design courses for online learning, may have soured students to the online experience were evident from the responses that 36% of students indicated they were less likely to take online classes in the future. Perhaps more surprisingly, 17% reported they were more likely to take online classes in the future. There was a difference between students who self-selected online courses in the spring semester compared with those experiencing the compulsory transition to all online classes. When students were asked whether they got as much from online learning as face to face courses, 55% of those self-selecting for online courses agreed; whereas 25% all law students disagreed with that statement. More than half of those who self-selected for online courses (55%) reported that their spring semester online course experience helped in the COVID-19 transition.
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- 2020
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9. United Nations Security Council Resolution 2270
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Victoria Sutton
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National security ,business.industry ,Political science ,Resolution (electron density) ,Security council ,Public administration ,business - Published
- 2017
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10. 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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11. Introduction to Volume X
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Victoria Sutton
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Materials science ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Analytical chemistry - Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
12. Effects of fluoxetine on functional outcomes after acute stroke (FOCUS) : a pragmatic, double-blind, randomised, controlled trial
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Martin Dennis, Gillian Mead, John Forbes, Catriona Graham, Maree Hackett, Graeme J Hankey, Allan House, Stephanie Lewis, Erik Lundström, Peter Sandercock, Karen Innes, Carol Williams, Jonathan Drever, Aileen Mcgrath, Ann Deary, Ruth Fraser, Rosemary Anderson, Pauli Walker, David Perry, Connor Mcgill, David Buchanan, Yvonne Chun, Lynn Dinsmore, Emma Maschauer, Amanda Barugh, Shadia Mikhail, Gordon Blair, Ingrid Hoeritzauer, Maggie Scott, Greig Fraser, Katherine Lawrence, Alison Shaw, Judith Williamson, David Burgess, Malcolm Macleod, Dan Morales, Frank Sullivan, Marian Brady, Ray French, Frederike Van Wijck, Caroline Watkins, Fiona Proudfoot, Joanna Skwarski, Diane Mcgowan, Rachael Murphy, Seona Burgess, William Rutherford, Katrina Mccormick, Ruaridh Buchan, Allan Macraild, Ruth Paulton, Adnan Fazal, Pat Taylor, Ruwan Parakramawansha, Neil Hunter, Jack Perry, John Bamford, Dean Waugh, Emelda Veraque, Caroline Bedford, Mary Kambafwile, Luis Idrovo, Linetty Makawa, Paula Smalley, Marc Randall, Tharani Thirugnana-Chandran, Ahamad Hassan, Richard Vowden, Joanne Jackson, Ajay Bhalla, Anthony Rudd, Chi Kai Tam, Jonathan Birns, Charlotte Gibbs, Leonie Lee Carbon, Elizabeth Cattermole, Katherine Marks, Angela Cape, Lisa Hurley, Sagal Kullane, Nigel Smyth, Charlotte Eglinton, Jennifer Wilson, Elio Giallombardo, Angela Frith, Paul Reidy, Matthew Pitt, Lucy Sykes, Deborah Dellafera, Victoria Croome, Lauriane Kerwood, Mirea Hancevic, Christina Narh, Carley Merritt, John Duffy, Duncan Cooke, Juliet Willson, Ali Ali, Aaizza Naqvi, Christine Kamara, Helen Bowler, Simon Bell, Tracy Jackson, Kirsty Harkness, Kathy Stocks, Suzanna Duty, Clare Doyle, Geoffrey Dunn, Keith Endean, Fiona Claydon, Emma Richards, Jo Howe, Ralf Lindert, Arshad Majid, Katy Dakin, Ahmad Maatouk, Luke Barron, Madana Meegada, Pratap Rana, Anand Nair, Christine Brighouse-Johnson, Jill Greig, Myint Kyu, Sanjeev Prasad, Matthew Robinson, Irfan Alam, Belinda Mclean, Lindsay Greenhalgh, Zenab Ahmed, Christine Roffe, Susan Brammer, Carole Beardmore, Kay Finney, Adrian Barry, Paul Hollinshead, Jeanette Grocott, Holly Maguire, Indira Natarajan, Jayan Chembala, Ranjan Sanyal, Sue Lijko, Nenette Abano, Alda Remegoso, Phillip Ferdinand, Stephanie Stevens, Resti Varquez, Chelsea Causley, Adrian Butler, Philip Whitmore, Caroline Stephen, Racquel Carpio, Joanne Hiden, Girish Muddegowda, Hayley Denic, Jane Sword, Ross Curwen, Martin James, Paul Mudd, Fiona Hall, Julie Cageao, Samantha Keenan, Caroline Roughan, Hayley Kingwell, Anthony Hemsley, Christoph Lohan, Sue Davenport, Angela Bowring, Tamika Chapter, Max Hough, David Strain, Karin Gupwell, Keniesha Miller, Anita Goff, Ellie Cusack, Shirley Todd, Rebecca Partridge, Georgiana Jennings, Kevin Thorpe, Jacquelyn Stephenson, Kelly Littlewood, Mark Barber, Fiona Brodie, Steven Marshall, Derek Esson, Irene Coburn, Caroline Mcinnes, Fiona Ross, Emma Bowie, Heather Barcroft, Victoria Withers, Laura Miller, Paul Willcoxson, Michelle Donninson, Richard Evans, Di Daniel, John Coyle, Michael Keeling, Peter Wanklyn, Mark Elliott, John Wightman, Elizabeth Iveson, Natasha Dyer, Anne-Marie Porteous, Monica Haritakis, Mandy Ward, Lucy Doughty, Lisa Carr, Mark O Neill, Cosmas Anazodo, Paul Wood, Poppy Cottrell, Cheryl Donne, Romina Rodriguez, Ruhail Mir, Jax Westmoreland, Judith Bell, Christopher Emms, Lorraine Wright, Pearl Clark Brown, Elizabeth Bamford, Andrew Stanners, Mike Carpenter, Prabal Datta, Richard Davey, Ann Needle, Marjorie Jane Eastwood, Fathima Zeena Razik, Imran Ghouri, Gavin Bateman, Judy Archer, Venkatesh Balasubramanian, Richard Bowers, Julie Ball, Louise Benton, Linda Jackson, Julie Ellam, Kate Norton, Paul Guyler, Terry Dowling, Sharon Tysoe, Paula Harman, Ashish Kundu, Ololade Omodunbi, Thayalini Loganathan, Stuart Chandler, Shanas Noor, Anwer Siddiqui, Amber Siddiqui, Swapna Kunhunny, Devesh Sinha, Martin Sheppard, Sindhu Rashmi, Elena France, Rajalakshmi Orath Prabakaran, Laura Wilson, Amiirah Ropun, Shyam Kelavkar, Kheng Xiong Ng, Lucy Kamuriwo, Sweni Shah, David Mangion, Camen Constantin, Luigi De Michele Hock, Anne Hardwick, Jayne Borley, Skarlet Markova, Kimberley Netherton, Tara Lawrence, Jo Fletcher, Rebecca Spencer, Helen Palmer, Claire Cullen, Dolores Hamill, Ramesh Durairaj, Zoe Mellor, Tanya Fluskey, Diane Wood, Alison Keeling, Victoria Hankin, Jennifer Peters, Daniela Shackcloth, Thant Hlaing, Rebecca Tangney, Jordan Ewing, Melanie Harrison, Sarah Stevenson, Victoria Sutton, Mohamed Soliman, Julia Hindle, Elizabeth Watson, Claire Hewitt, Susie Butler, Ibrahim Wahishi, Sarwat Arif, Amy Fields, Jagdish Sharma, Rose Brown, Caroline Taylor, Sarah Bell, Simon Leach, Chris Patterson, Sophia Khan, Helen Wilson, Joanne Price, Hawraman Ramadan, Stuart Maguire, Ruth Bellfield, Michaela Hooley, Umair Hamid, Waqar Gaba, Robina Ghulam, Leslie Masters, Outi Quinn, Lakshmanan Sekaran, Margaret Tate, Niaz Mohammed, Kiranjit Bharaj, Frances Justin, Rajan Pattni, Lanka Alwis, Sakthivel Sethuraman, Rianne Robinson, Lianne Eldridge, Susan Mintias, Meena Chauhan, Chi-Kai Tam, Jeremias Palmones, Clare Holmes, Lucy Belle Guthrie, Mairead Osborn, Lindsay Ball, Sarah Caine, Amy Steele, Peter Murphy, Nikki Devitt, Jayne Leonard, Ronak Patel, Ian Penwarden, Emily Dodd, Amy Holloway, Pauline Baker, Samantha Clarke, Sandra Williams, Lindsey Dow, Roland Wynn-Williams, James Kennedy, Rachel Teal, Ursula Schulz, Gary Ford, Philip Mathieson, Ian Reckless, Ana Deveciana, Paige Mccann, Gillian Cluckie, Geoffrey Howell, Jonathan Ayer, Barry Moynihan, Rita Ghatala, Brian Clarke, Geoffrey Cloud, Bhavini Patel, Usman Khan, Nia Al-Samarrai, Sarah Trippier, Neha Chopra, Temi Adedoyin, Fran Watson, Val Jones, Liqun Zhang, Lillian Choy, Rebecca Williams, Natasha Clarke, Adrian Blight, Kate Kennedy, Alice Dainty, Johann Selvarajah, Dheeraj Kalladka, Bharath Cheripelli, Wilma Smith, Fiona Moreton, Angela Welch, Xuya Huang, Elizabeth Douglas, Audrey Lush, Nicola Day, Salwa El Tawil, Karen Montgomery, Helen Hamilton, Doreen Ritchie, Sankaranarayanan Ramachandra, Kirsty Mcleish, Kamy Thavanesan, Sathyabama Loganathan, Josh Roberts, Chantel Cox, Sarah Orr, Alison Hogan, Divya Tiwari, Gail Hann, Barbara Longland, Owen David, Jo Bell, Catherine Ovington, Emily Rogers, Rachel Bower, Marketa Keltos, David Cohen, Joseph Devine, Lankantha Alwis, Lucy Southworth, Laura Burgess, Matilda Lang, Bhavna Badiani, Fenglin Guo, Anne Oshodi, Emmanuelle Owoyele, Norah Epie, Anette David, Mushiya Mpelembue, Rajaram Bathula, Mudhar Abdul-Saheb, Angela Chamberlain, Varthi Sudkeo, Khalid Rashed, Barbara Williams-Yesson, Joanne Board, Sarah De Bruijn, Clare Buckley, Sarah Board, Joanna Allison, Elizabeth Keeling, Tracey Duckett, Dave Donaldson, Carinna Vickers, Claire Barron, Linda Balian, Jodhi Wilson, Adam Edwards, Timothy England, Amanda Hedstrom, Elizabeth Bedford, Margaret Harper, Elina Melikyan, Wendy Abbott, Kashmira Subramanian, Marie Goldsworthy, Meena Srinivasan, Angela Yeomans, Denise Donaldson, Frances Hurford, Riquella Chapman, Sana Shahzad, Nicki Motherwell, Louise Tonks, Rachel Young, Usman Ghani, Indranil Mukherjee, Dipankar Dutta, Mudhar Obaid, Pauline Brown, Fiona Davis, Deborah Ward, Jennifer Turfrey, Bethan Cartwright, Bilal Topia, Judith Spurway, Kayleigh Collins, Rehana Bakawala, Chloe Hughes, Susan Oconnell, Linda Hill, Kausik Chatterjee, Tim Webster, Syed Haider, Pamela Rushworth, Fiona Macleod, Arumugam Nallasivan, Charlotte Perkins, Edel Burns, Sandra Leason, Tom Carter, Samantha Seagrave, Eman Sami, Lisa Armstrong, Syed Naseem Naqvi, Muhammad Hassan, Sharron Parkinson, Samantha Mawer, Gillian Darnbrook, Carl Booth, Brigid Hairsine, Matthew Smith, Sue Williamson, Fiona Farquhar, Bernard Esisi, Tim Cassidy, Gavin Mankin, Beverley Mcclelland, Maria Bokhari, David Sproates, Elliot Epstein, Steve Hurdowar, Ruth Blackburn, Nazran Sukhdeep, Saika Razak, Khalid Osman, Amina Hashmi, Natasha Upton, Frances Harrington, Gillian Courtauld, Christine Schofield, Linda Lucas, Katja Adie, Kirsty Bond, Abhijit Mate, Jo Skewes, Ali James, Carolyn Brodie, Matthew Johnson, Linda Allsop, Emma Driver, Karina Harris, Mark Drake, Sam Ellis, Bev Maund, Emma Thomas, Kimberley Moore, Matthew Burn, Adam Hamilton, Shageetha Mahalingam, Amulya Misra, Farrah Reid, Adrienne Benford, Derek Hilton, Lorraine Hazell, Keziah Ofori, Anne Louise Thomas, Moncy Mathew, Sonia Dayal, Iona Burn, Kenneth Fotherby, Karla Jennings-Preece, Angela Willberry, Debbie Morgan, Donna Butler, Gurminder Sahota, Kelly Kauldhar, Nasar Ahmad, Angela Stevens, Saugata Das, David Bruce, Yogish Pai, Khin Nyo, Lynsey Stephenson, Richard Nendick, Gill Rogers, Mahesh Dhakal, Sofia Dima, Ellen Brown, Susan Clayton, Penny Gamble, Muhammad Naeem, Rachel Hayman, Rachel Burnip, Philip Earnshaw, David Hargroves, Barbara Ransom, Hannah Rudenko, Ibrahim Balogun, Kirsty Griffiths, Kim Mears, Tom Webb, Linda Cowie, Tessa Hammond, Audrey Thomson, Daniela Ceccarelli, Navraj Chattha, Eva Beranova, Anna Verrion, Andrew Gillian, Natasha Schumacher, Anna Bahk, Susannah Walker, Vera Cvoro, Nicola Chapman, Susan Pound, Rebecca Cain, Sean Mcauley, Mandy Couser, Maria Simpson, Athan Tachtatzis, Khalil Ullah, Don Sims, Rachael Jones, Jonathan Smith, Rebecca Tongue, Mark Willmot, Claire Sutton, Edward Littleton, Jattinder Khaira, Susan Maiden, James Cunningham, Carole Green, Yin-May Chin, Michelle Bates, Katherine Ahlquist, Ingrid Kane, Joanna Breeds, Tenesa Sargent, Laura Latter, Alexandra Pitt Ford, Nicola Gainsborough, Tom Levett, Philip Thompson, Emma Barbon, Angela Dunne, Simon Hervey, Suzanne Ragab, Tracy Sandell, Christine Dickson, Judith Dube, Sharon Power, Nick Evans, Beverley Wadams, Savina Elitova, Beth Aubrey, Tatiana Garcia, James Mcilmoyle, Carol Jeffs, Christina Dickinson, Anis Ahmed, Sanjeev Kumar, Julie Frudd, Charlotte Armer, Andrew Potter, Stacey Donaldson, Joanne Howard, Kirsty Jones, Saikat Dhar, David Collas, Saul Sundayi, Lynn Denham, Deepali Oza, Elaine Walker, Mohit Bhandari, Sissy Ispoglou, Rachel Evans, Kamel Sharobeem, Elaine Walton, Steven Shanu, Anne Hayes, Jennifer Howard-Brown, Steven Billingham, Nic Weir, Vanessa Pressly, Emma Wood, Gabriella Howard, Holly Burton, Pam Crawford, Shuna Egerton, Sue Evans, Jasmine Hakkak, Janet Andrews, Rebecca Lampard, Christopher Allen, Ashleigh Walters, Rasha Said, James Richard Marigold, Sau-Mon Tsang, Robyn Creeden, Chloe Cox, Simon Smith, Imogen Gartrell, Fiona Smith, Colin Jenkins, Joanna Pryor, Andrew Hedges, Fiona Price, Linda Moseley, Lily Mercer, Claire Hughes, Abul Azim, Julie White, Milena Krasinska-Chavez, Shaun Chaplin, James Curtis, Deepwant Singh, Javed Imam, Anne Nicolson, Sajid Alam, Simon Whitworth, Lisa Wood, Elizabeth Warburton, Siobhan Kelly, Joanne Mcgee, Hugh Markus, Denish Chandrasena, Derek Hayden, Juliana Sesay, Helen Hayhoe, Mark Bolton, Jane Macdonald, Jenny Mitchell, Charlotte Farron, Elaine Amis, Diana Day, Ainsley Culbert, Ailene Espanol, Niamh Hannon, Dominic Handley, Sarah Finlay, Sarah Crisp, Lynne Whitehead, Jobbin Francis, Janice Oconnell, Emily Osborne, Rod Beard, Ramesh Krishnamurthy, Langanani Mokoena, Naweed Sattar, Min Myint, Michelle Edwards, Andrew Smith, Paul Corrigan, Anthony Byrne, Joanne Blackburn, Caroline Mcghee, Amanda Smart, Fiona Donaldson, Claire Copeland, Jill Wilson, Rhona Scott, Paul Fitzsimmons, Paula Lopez, Mark Wilkinson, Aravindakshan Manoj, Penelope Cox, Leona Trainor, Glyn Fletcher, Lisa Denny, Karen Kavanagh, Hannah Allsop, Hedley Emsley, Sulaiman Sultan, Alison Mcloughlin, Benjamin Walmsley, Louise Hough, Shakeel Ahmed, Donna Doyle, Bindu Gregary, Sonia Raj, Kirubananthan Nagaratnam, Neelima Mannava, Nyla Haque, Norma Shields, Kate Preston, Geraldine Mason, Kirsty Short, Gemma Lumsdale, Giulia Uitenbosch, Ugnius Sukys, Stacey Valentine, David Jarrett, Kerry Dodsworth, Mary Wands, Nisa Khan, Jane Tandy, Catrin Watkinson, Wendy Golding, Rebecca Butler, Max Williams, Yasmin Davies, Keith Yip, Claire James, Anne Suttling, Aditya Maney, Giles Edward Gamble, Adam Hague, Bethan Charles, Sujata Blane, Beatriz Duran, Caroline Lambert, Katherine Stagg, Robert Whiting, Jane E Homan, Sarah Brown, Malik Hussain, Miriam Harvey, Libby Graham, Leanne Foote, Catherine Lane, Liz (Joan) Kemp, Joy Rowe, Helen Durman, Jayne Foot, Lucy Brotherton, Nicholas Hunt, Corinne Pawley, Alison Whitcher, Patrick Sutton, Susan Mcdonald, Denys Pak, Alison Wiltshire, Jennifer Jagger, Anthony K Metcalf, Gail Louise Healey, Joyce Balami, Clare Marie Self, Melissa Crofts, Annie Chakrabarti, Chit Hmu, Garth Ravenhill, Charmaine Grimmer, Thandar Soe, Jocelyn Keshet-Price, Margaret Langley, Ian Potter, Pui-Lin Tam, Mary Joan Macleod, Patricia Cooper, Michael Christie, Janice Irvine, Faye Annison, David Christie, Celia Meneses, Amber Johnson, Anu Joyson, Sandra Nelson, Vicky Taylor, John Reid, Rebecca Clarke, Jacqueline Furnace, Heather Gow, Youssif Abousleiman, Tania Beadling, Sally Collins, Stuart Jones, Jessica Purcell, Samantha Bloom, Shelly Goshawk, Marcial Landicho, Sivatharshini Sangaralingham, Yasmin Begum, Sherree Mutton, Elangovan Munuswamy Vaiyapuri, Jane Allen, Jemma Lowe, Martin Hughes, Ivan Wiggam, Sarah Cuddy, Suzanne Tauro, Brian Wells, Azlisham Mohd Nor, Nicola Persad, Maggie Kalita, Stuart Weatherby, Claire Brown, Adrian Pace, Daniel Lashley, Mike Marner, Marie Weinling, Natasha Wilmshurst, Darren Waugh, Anna Mucha, Alex Shah, John Baker, Jacqueline Westcott, Richard Cowan, Evangelos Vasileiadis, Samira Mumani, Anthea Parry, Cathy Mason, Melinda Holden, Katerina Petrides, Tomoko Nishiyama, Hina Mehta, Manju Krishnan, Dacey Lynne, Lisa Thomas, Connor Lynda, Catherine Hughes, Clare Clements, Rhys Williams, Tal Anjum, Storton Sharon, Susan Tucker, Paul Jones, Deanne Colwill, Helen Thompson Jones, Dinesh Chadha, Mark Fairweather, Deborah Walstow, Rosanna Fong, Stuart Johnston, Christine Almadenboyle, Sarah Ross, Shona Carson, Priya Nair, Emily Tenbruck, Mairi Stirling, Aparna Pusalkar, Hannah Beadle, Kelly Chan, Puneet Dangri, Asaipillai Asokanathan, Anita Rana, Sunita Gohil, Mark Massyn, Prabhu Aruldoss, Angela Cook, Karen Crabtree, Sura Dabbagh, Toby Black, Caroline Clarke, Denise Mead, Ruth Fennelly, Alpha Anthony, Linda Nardone, Victoria Dimartino, Michele Tribbeck, David Broughton, Dinesh Tryambake, Lynn Dixon, Agnieszka Skotnicka, Jane Thompson, Sarah Whitehouse, Andrew Sigsworth, Jason Wong, Arunkumar Annamalai, Julie Pagan, Brendan Affley, Caroline Sunderland, Lynda Goldenberg, Atif Khan, Peter Wilkinson, Raad Nari, Lucy Abbott, Emma Young, Amritpal Shakhon, Sally Lock, Jack Stewart, Rita Pereira, Margaret Dsouza, Sally Dunn, Anne-Marie Mckenna, Nina Cron, Michelle Kidd, Grace Hull, Kerry Bunworth, Graham Drummond, Karim Mahawish, Nicola Hayes, Lynne Connell, Jennifer Simpson, Helen Penney, Shuja Punekar, Joanne Nevinson, William Wareing, Jacqueline Ward, Richard Greenwood, Duncan Austin, Azra Banaras, Carolin Hogan, Thomas Corbett, Nnebuife Oji, Emma Elliott, Maria Brezitski, Nathalie Passeron, Laura Howaniec, Caroline Watchurst, Krishna Patel, Renuka Erande, Rahi Shah, Nabarun Sengupta, Maria Metiu, Celia Gonzalez, Sarah Funnell, Jordi Margalef, Gillian Peters, Indra Chadbourn, Ramachandran Sivakumar, Rajesh Saksena, Jane Ketley-O'donel, Richard Needle, Elaine Chinery, Alison Wright, Sue Cook, Joseph Ngeh, Harald Proeschel, Paige Cook, Pauline Ashcroft, Simon Sharpe, Stephanie Jones, Damian Jenkinson, Deborah Kelly, Holly Bray, Gunaratnam Gunathilagan, Sally Jones, Sorrell Tilbey, Saidu Abubakar, Joseph Vassallo, Dee Leonard, Lucy Orrell, Aziz Hasan, Asif Khan, Sulmaaz Qamar, Susan Graham, Emma Hewitt, Jennifer Awolesi, Muhammad Haque, Alissa Kent, Elizabeth Bradshaw, Martin Cooper, Inez Wynter, Anoja Rajapakse, Joumana Janbieh, Abu M Nasar, Lynne Wade, Linda Otter, Steve Haigh, Jamie-Rae Burgoyne, Rebecca Boulton, Andrew Boulton, Rayessa Rayessa, Emma Clarkson, Horne Rhian, Amy Fleming, Kim Mitchelson, Vicki Lowthorpe, Ahmed Abdul-Hamid, Phil Jones, Claire Duggan, Abigail Hynes, Emma Nurse, Syed Abid Raza, Sarah Jones, Udaya Pallikona, Bleddyn Edwards, Geraint Morgan, Kirsty Dennett, Helen Tench, Ronda Loosley, Toby Trugeon-Smith, Rhian Jones, Richard Williams, Donna Robson, Sunanda Mavinamane, Sanjeevi Meenakshisundaram, Lalitha Ranga, Sharon Dealing, Andrew Hill, Margaret Hargreaves, Tom Smith, Julie Bate, Linda Harrison, Ramanathan Kirthivasan, Emma Cannon, Joanne Topliffe, Rebecca Keskeys, Sarah Williams, Fiona Mcneela, Frances Cairns, Thomas James, Amanda Lyle, Sheela Shah, George Zachariah, Lauren Fergey, Susan Smolen, Lucy Cooper, Elizabeth Bohannan, Siddiq Omer, Sageet Amlani, Nadia Hunter, Melissa Hawkes-Blackburn, Giosue Gulli, Alice Peacocke, Justine Amero, Maria Burova, Ottilia Speirs, Steph Levy, Lynda Francis, Susan Holland, Sean Brotheridge, Helen Lyon, Christine Hare, Samantha Jackson, Lorraine Stephenson, Samer Al Hussayni, James Featherstone, Agness Bwalya, Arun Singh, M N Goorah, Jamie Walford, Angela Bell, Christine Kelly, Darren Rusk, Deborah Sutton, Farzana Patel, Stephen Duberley, Kathryn Hayes, Lorraine Hunt, Ahmed El Nour, Sacha Honour, Chloe Box, Simon Dyer, Lynne Brown, Kerry Elliott, Emma Temlett, John Paterson, Rosie Furness, Shelli Young, Enoch Orugun, Chris Brewer, Sarah Thornthwaite, Hannah Crowther, Rachel Glover, Moe Sein, Kashif Haque, Elspeth Gibson, Sam Wong, Karen Rotchell, Karen Burton, Lisa Brookes, Linda Bailey, Chris Lindley, Abbi Murray, Karen Waltho, Maureen Holland, Pradeep Kumar, Purnima Harlekar, Laura Booth, Charlotte Culmsee, Jade Drew, Mohammad Khan, Nicola Mackenzie, Carmel Thomas, Jane Ritchie, James Barker, Michael Haley, Donna Cotterill, Lynne Lane, Christine Little, Dawn Simmons, Glenn Saunders, Harvey Dymond, Sarah Kidd, Rachel Warinton, Yara Neves-Silva, Branimir Nevajda, Michael Villaruel, Udayaraj Umasankar, Seema Patel, Anna Man, Natasha Christmas, Ravi Rangasamy, Richard Ladner, Georgina Butt, Wilson Alvares, Narasimha Gadi, Michael Power, Belinda Wroath, Kevin Dynan, David Wilson, Sarah Crothers, Catherine Leonard, Samantha Hagan, Geraldine Douris, Djamil Vahidassr, Alastair Thompson, Brian Gallen, Shirley Mckenna, Collette Edwards, Clare Mcgoldrick, Murdi Bhattad, Khalil Kawafi, Deborah Morse, Patricia Jacob, Lisa Turner, Narayanamoorti Saravanan, Linda Johnson, Sadie Humphrey, Robert Namushi, Ramesh Patel, Jemma Mclaughlin, Paul Omahony, Esther Osikominu, Chukwuka Orefo, Chisha Mcdonald, Esther Makanju, Tabindah Khan, Grace Appiatse, Helena Stone, Martia Augustin, Alicia Wardale, Maqsud Salehin, Duncan Bailey, Luciano Garcia-Alen, Latheef Kalathil, Sarah Tinsley, Taya Jones, Kelly Amor, Andrew Ritchings, Emma Margerum, Jane Horton, Richard Miller, Nireekshana Gautam, Julie Meir, Amaryl Jones, Janet Putteril, Mirella Lepore, Rachel Gallifent, Laura-Louise Arundell, Catherine Mcredmond, Alicia Goulding, Vivek Nadarajan, Julia Laurence, Su Fung Lo, Sabina Melander, Paul Nicholas, Elizabeth Woodford, Gillian Mckenzie, Vietland Le, Jacolene Crause, Robert Luder, Maneesh Bhargava, Girish Bhome, Venetia V Johnson, Dara Chesser, Hayley Bridger, Elodie Murali, Jon Scott, Susan Morrison, Amy Burns, Julie Graham, Madeline Duffy, Khalid Ali, Emma Pitcher, Jane Gaylard, Julie Newman, Sunil Punnoose, Sarah Besley, Kirtan Purohit, Amy Rees, Mark Davy, Osman Chohan, Muhammad Fozan Khan, Rachel Walker, Vicky Murray, Charlotte Bent, Susan Oakley, Cassilda Peixoto, Suzanne Jones, Gaybrielle Livingstone, Fiona Butler, Sally Bradfield, Laura Gordon, Jenneke Schmit, Anika Wijewardane, Tineke Edmunds, Rebecca Wills, Catherine Medcalf, Lucia Argandona, Larissa Cuenoud, Hanna Hassan, Esther Erumere, Aidan Ocallaghan, Patrick Gompertz, Ozlem Redjep, Grace Auld, Anna Song, Tillana Tarkas, Hashim Kabash, Rumbi Hungwe, University of St Andrews. Sir James Mackenzie Institute for Early Diagnosis, University of St Andrews. Population and Behavioural Science Division, and University of St Andrews. School of Medicine
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RM ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Neurologi ,NDAS ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Placebo ,Minimisation (clinical trials) ,Article ,B700 ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,Modified Rankin Scale ,law ,Fluoxetine ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,R2C ,Acute stroke ,business.industry ,~DC~ ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Stroke ,RC Internal medicine ,BDC ,business ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,RC ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Results of small trials indicate that fluoxetine might improve functional outcomes after stroke. The FOCUS trial aimed to provide a precise estimate of these effects.Methods: FOCUS was a pragmatic, multicentre, parallel group, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial done at 103 hospitals in the UK. Patients were eligible if they were aged 18 years or older, had a clinical stroke diagnosis, were enrolled and randomly assigned between 2 days and 15 days after onset, and had focal neurological deficits. Patients were randomly allocated fluoxetine 20 mg or matching placebo orally once daily for 6 months via a web-based system by use of a minimisation algorithm. The primary outcome was functional status, measured with the modified Rankin Scale (mRS), at 6 months. Patients, carers, health-care staff, and the trial team were masked to treatment allocation. Functional status was assessed at 6 months and 12 months after randomisation. Patients were analysed according to their treatment allocation. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN83290762.Findings: Between Sept 10, 2012, and March 31, 2017, 3127 patients were recruited. 1564 patients were allocated fluoxetine and 1563 allocated placebo. mRS data at 6 months were available for 1553 (99·3%) patients in each treatment group. The distribution across mRS categories at 6 months was similar in the fluoxetine and placebo groups (common odds ratio adjusted for minimisation variables 0·951 [95% CI 0·839–1·079]; p=0·439). Patients allocated fluoxetine were less likely than those allocated placebo to develop new depression by 6 months (210 [13·43%] patients vs 269 [17·21%]; difference 3·78% [95% CI 1·26–6·30]; p=0·0033), but they had more bone fractures (45 [2·88%] vs 23 [1·47%]; difference 1·41% [95% CI 0·38–2·43]; p=0·0070). There were no significant differences in any other event at 6 or 12 months.Interpretation: Fluoxetine 20 mg given daily for 6 months after acute stroke does not seem to improve functional outcomes. Although the treatment reduced the occurrence of depression, it increased the frequency of bone fractures. These results do not support the routine use of fluoxetine either for the prevention of post-stroke depression or to promote recovery of function.Funding: UK Stroke Association and NIHR Health Technology Assessment Programme.
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13. Visual Legal Scholarship
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Victoria Sutton
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Scholarship ,Promotion (rank) ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Media studies ,Legal scholarship ,media_common - Abstract
When viewed across disciplines, the traditional scholarship is not limited to published articles or books, but can also be music concerts, solo performances, design competitions and acting performances. Each discipline has its own categories of scholarship deemed worthy of the academy for the field, and for consideration in tenure and promotion decisions. Is it time that legal scholarship be extended to the media of the new millennia, and look to other fields for setting visual scholarship standards?
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- 2019
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14. Introduction to Volume IX
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Victoria Sutton
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Materials science ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,business.industry ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Published
- 2018
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15. Emerging Biotechnologies and the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention
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Victoria Sutton
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standing agenda item ,business.industry ,law and science ,Dual-use technology ,Biological Weapons Convention ,emerging biotechnologies ,1972 Biological Weapons Convention ,Biotechnology ,Convention ,Political science ,convention ,dual use technology ,business ,biotechnology revolution ,biotechnology - Abstract
In light of the quandaries presented by domestic law, has the Biological Weapons Convention of 1972 (“BWC”) also been so outpaced by the technologies that it is no longer effective and meaningful in international law? Part II will examine the continuum of official actions that have attempted to keep pace with the growing biotechnologies that may present threats to global biosecurity through interpreting the BWC. Part III looks at how these definitions may not be sufficient. Finally, Part IV looks at other mechanisms that may provide a better way of controlling biological weapons than redefining the technologies through the current processes.
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- 2015
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16. Antiplatelet therapy with aspirin, clopidogrel, and dipyridamole versus clopidogrel alone or aspirin and dipyridamole in patients with acute cerebral ischaemia (TARDIS): a randomised, open-label, phase 3 superiority trial
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Ruth Graham, Charlotte Eglinton, Swapna Kunhunny, J Banns, Alison K Wright, Sunil Munshi, C Khuoge, Beverley McClelland, A Benford, Jean Buxton, Maia Beridze, K Deighton, Neha Chopra, Nichola Motherwell, Emily C. O'Brien, Sonia S. Anand, Anand Dixit, Una Poultney, N Beridze, Jessica Beavan, K Dizayee, Thompson G. Robinson, Deborah Howcroft, Alison Sarah rachel Mcloughlin, A Kenton, Derek Esson, A Tittle, L Matter, Kerstin Knops, C Hubbuck, Kath Chapman, R Rangasamay, Ranjan Sanyal, Sarah Lewis, Alpha Anthony, Sarah Board, Janice Irvine, Anna Verrion, Katherine Whittamore, N Khizanishvili, L O'Shea, Lisa Shaw, K Ayes, Tracey Dobson, N Akiashvili, Gill Rogers, Jenny Peters, Alda Remegoso, S S Hansen, James A. White, T Attygalle, Rosalind Brown, Irene Martin, Manesh R. Patel, D O'Kane, Stuart J. Pocock, Khalid Rashed, G Spurling, Sharon Tysoe, Frances Harrington, Margo Henry, Rowilson Jarapa, Julia Hindle, K A Kay, Carinna Vickers, S Duty, Angela Bowring, David Eveson, Saul Sundayi, Mary Kambafwile, Rashmi Kumar, Jack Roffe, Marilyn James, Natalie Temple, R Oliver, Christine Kelly, M Niemierko, J Chembala, S Jones, M Dent, K Chatterjee, S Atkinson, J Tomlinson, S Norman, E Cattermole, P Daboo, Nicola Gilzeane, Anne Hardwick, Pietro Cariga, C Rankin, David A. Wood, Lelia Duley, John Bamford, L Holford, J Good, C Ambulo, S Gomm, Girish Muddegowda, Fiona Wright, M Alao, L Sztriha, Maite D. Rodriguez, Christine Dickson, S Merotra, Helen Bearne, Ann Needle, Emma Mckenzie, Olga Balazikova, Emily Osborne, A Lankester, Rod S Taylor, Pauline Fitzell, Bernard Esisi, E Young, Richard Donnelly, Anu Joyson, Debbie Morgan, Fran Watson, Caroline Mcinnes, C Padilla-Harris, Stephanie McCann, T Ajao, Suzanne Lucas, Inez Wynter, Barbara Longland, Don Sims, Gavin Bateman, Anthony Hemsley, Vera Cvoro, Fiona Kennedy, Peter Langhorne, Adrian Butler, P Jacob, Barry Moynihan, Amit K. Mistri, W Sunman, Hannah Beadle, Polly Scutt, M Garside, Glyn Fletcher, Deborah Walstow, L Ryan, Michelle Fawcett, D Wilkinson, E Gibson, O Orugun, Malcolm R. Macleod, Philip M.W. Bath, Elio Giallombardo, T Kherkheulidze, Lourda Kerin, Clare Doyle, Brigid Hairsine, N Kakabadze, B Wadams, Enas Lawrence, Dinesh Chadha, I Memon, Cheryl L. Perkins, Victoria Sutton, C.B. Patel, A Ravindrane, K Javaid, Mahmud Sajid, T Tsanava, Y Duodu, Timothy J. England, Geoffrey A. Rose, Sheila Nyabadza, Louisa M. Christensen, M Bajoriene, F Faola, J Kok, C Vernon, Aravindakshan Manoj, E Horsley, T Gordon, Linda Cowie, S Hurdowar, D Sandler, Temi Adedoyin, Mandy Couser, C Jenkins, C Pringle, Paula Lopez, Vicky Taylor, James Cunningham, Gillian Courtauld, S Maheswaran, H Rehman, Christine Roffe, M Sein, Carla Richardson, John B. Davis, Nenette Abano, Racquel Carpio, Sheila Mashate, P Christian, Lynn Dixon, Dulka Manawadu, Jeanette Grocott, Peter Owusu-Agyei, P Farren, F K Chan, Komal Ali, Annemarei Ranta, Judith Clarke, Dean Waugh, Stan Heptinstall, M Reader, Nikola Sprigg, John F. Corrigan, Caroline Roughan, F Brodie, Paula Harman, P Webster, Kenneth Smith, Julie Reddan, Angela Willberry, Peter Howard, Kay Finney, S Buddha, C Hewitt, M Zaidi, Tracy Marsden, Heather Gow, Robert A. Dineen, Kimberley Netherton, Kashif Musarrat, Emma Barbon, V Riddell, G Storey, Ahamad Hassan, O Adegbaju, S Wong, Bethan Charles, Bindu Gregary, Rhys Williams, M G Metiu, Nilofer Dayal, C Lawlor, Kirsten E Anderson, R Icart Palau, N Khanom, C Stevenson, Prabel Datta, Betty Mokoena, Kelly Chan, Amanda Hedstrom, Sonia Raj, Y Gruenbeck, D Dellafera, Georgina Butt, A Peacocke, James Okwera, L Mokoena, Holly Maguire, Mohana Maddula, C Bailey, Ian Shread, LáShauntá M. Glover, Elizabeth Keeling, Mari Smith, Jane Powell, A Tevdoradze, Christopher Price, Hannah Rudenko, K Gill, Laura Howaniec, P Lingwood, Katherine Marks, Ivan Iniesta, F Barrett, Barbara Madigan, Emery N. Brown, Katie Flaherty, Gail Hann, Mark Barber, Kelley Storey, Aparna Pusalkar, Jason P. Appleton, Joanne Hiden, R Jolly, Hedley C. A. Emsley, J Chambers, Christina Kruuse, Mairead Osborn, P Lai, Tracy Fuller, David G. Bruce, Robert Namushi, Martin Cooper, Peter Murphy, Naomi Jeyaraj, Hayley Kingwell, A Nair, Robert S.M. Davies, Katrina McCormick, Rachel L. Lakey, Sharon Dealing, F Leslie, Peter Wilkinson, Amitava Banerjee, Penelope Cox, Janice E. O’Connell, N Sikondari, Sandra Leason, Lisa J Woodhouse, Judith Bell, Puneet Dangri, Donna Butler, Judith Dube, Rachel Gascoyne, Amberly Brigden, Debs Kelly, Renuka Erande, Kirsty Harkness, Sarah Trippier, Kirsten Harvey, Georgina Ayres, R Rowland-Axe, E Campbell, Sue Lyjko, Sylvia Szabo, David Mangion, Suzanne Ragab, C Hilaire, Alan A Montgomery, Dawn Tomlin, John Paterson, K Muhidden, Grace Auld, C Keaveney, Hannah Crowther, Lisa Hyatt, Louise E. Jackson, K Castro, Khaled Elfandi, H Russell, S Tennant, Ozlem Redjep, Tim Cassidy, Linda Y Johnson, Amulya Misra, E Khoromana, Catherine Ovington, Stuart Maguire, S Khan, Zoe Mellor, Michael Funnell, Hugh S. Markus, Emma Richards, I Toidze, Colin Smith, R Sivakumar, Janet Wilson, Amina Ahmed, A Mohd Nor, A Barkat, Line Bentsen, K Whysall, Carol L Clarke, N Sengupta, Meena Srinivasan, Balakrishna Kumar, Mgg Soliman, A Thomson, Adrian Barry, Abul Azim, Ed Gamble, H Eccleson, Kelly Marie Shaw, Christine Schofield, Linetty Makawa, Carole Hays, David Hargroves, Jordi Margalef, S Butler, H Webb, Carol Denniss, Samantha Stafford, Faye Shelton, D Forrest, Amanda Buck, Tarn Nozedar, Indira Natarajan, Jane Perez, Susanna R. Stevens, Denise Button, Mary Johnes, Samantha Keenan, Olivia C. Geraghty, Eva Beranova, Emma Jinks, S Hassan, Caroline McGhee, Nicola Persad, Gunaratnam Gunathilagan, Clare Buckley, Jennifer Mitchell, Mike Clarke, Mathew Burn, B Bhaskaran, D Hayward, Lucy Belle Guthrie, S Meenakshisundaram, Anushka Warusevitane, O Speirs, J O'Callaghan, Sudipto Ghosh, Peter Wilding, Helen Cochrane, Susan Clayton, Mandy Doherty, Fiona Price, L Montague, Valerie Hogg, S Arif, Beth Hazel, Margaret Ball, S Johnson-Holland, S Booth, N Rands, Dionne Hove, Teresa Thompson, C Krarup Hansen, Lisa Manning, Andrew Smith, Jo Howe, Jill Greig, Kailash Krishnan, Caroline Watchurst, L Finlay, Sandra Nelson, Toby Black, S Tilby, Zin Naing, D Morse, David Broughton, K Preece, M Platton, M Siddiqui, Angela Dodd, Catrin Blank, Maria Bokhari, Jacqueline Furnace, F Hammonds, Helen Guy, A Lehman, J Hunt, S Windebank, Becky Jupp, K Fotherby, Ruth Bellfield, P Wanklyn, D Hilton, Amy Steele, S Mahmood, N Lobjanidze, Sarah Finlay, L Hunt, M Krasinska-Chavez, Gemma Grimwood, H H Jensen, J. Duignan, Jane Gaylard, Asaipillai Asokanathan, Joanna O'Reilly, J Kessell, Diane Havard, T Fluskey, L Lee-Carbon, Graham Venables, Margi Godfrey, L Boxall, C Douglass, Emelda Veraque, Elaine Amis, M Chowdhury, Rekha Keshvara, Adrian Blight, G Thomas, Marc Randall, S Stoddart, Paul Guyler, Rita Ghatala, Janet T Scott, Kathy J. Jenkins, Sarah Ross, John Aeron-Thomas, C Allcock, J Goodsell, Ifan Jones, D Kakabadze, T T Thomsen, V Petrovic, I. Watson, C Athulathmudali, Hanne Christensen, Susan Crawford, Christine Kamara, James McIlmoyle, Stephen Woodward, Christine McAlpine, Emma Temlett, Gwendoline Wilkes, Benjamin Hyams, L Mills, S Brixey, Raj Shekhar, P Findlay, Markus, Hugh [0000-0002-9794-5996], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Georgia ,Ticlopidine ,Denmark ,Hemorrhage ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Risk Assessment ,Brain Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ischemia ,Recurrence ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Prospective Studies ,cardiovascular diseases ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aspirin ,business.industry ,Dipyridamole ,General Medicine ,Guideline ,Middle Aged ,Clopidogrel ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Treatment Outcome ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,Research Design ,Acute Disease ,Platelet aggregation inhibitor ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,New Zealand ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background Intensive antiplatelet therapy with three agents might be more effective than guideline treatment for preventing recurrent events in patients with acute cerebral ischaemia. We aimed to compare the safety and efficacy of intensive antiplatelet therapy (combined aspirin, clopidogrel, and dipyridamole) with that of guideline-based antiplatelet therapy. Methods We did an international, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial in adult participants with ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA) within 48 h of onset. Participants were assigned in a 1:1 ratio using computer randomisation to receive loading doses and then 30 days of intensive antiplatelet therapy (combined aspirin 75 mg, clopidogrel 75 mg, and dipyridamole 200 mg twice daily) or guideline-based therapy (comprising either clopidogrel alone or combined aspirin and dipyridamole). Randomisation was stratified by country and index event, and minimised with prognostic baseline factors, medication use, time to randomisation, stroke-related factors, and thrombolysis. The ordinal primary outcome was the combined incidence and severity of any recurrent stroke (ischaemic or haemorrhagic; assessed using the modified Rankin Scale) or TIA within 90 days, as assessed by central telephone follow-up with masking to treatment assignment, and analysed by intention to treat. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN47823388. Findings 3096 participants (1556 in the intensive antiplatelet therapy group, 1540 in the guideline antiplatelet therapy group) were recruited from 106 hospitals in four countries between April 7, 2009, and March 18, 2016. The trial was stopped early on the recommendation of the data monitoring committee. The incidence and severity of recurrent stroke or TIA did not differ between intensive and guideline therapy (93 [6%] participants vs 105 [7%]; adjusted common odds ratio [cOR] 0·90, 95% CI 0·67–1·20, p=0·47). By contrast, intensive antiplatelet therapy was associated with more, and more severe, bleeding (adjusted cOR 2·54, 95% CI 2·05–3·16, p Interpretation Among patients with recent cerebral ischaemia, intensive antiplatelet therapy did not reduce the incidence and severity of recurrent stroke or TIA, but did significantly increase the risk of major bleeding. Triple antiplatelet therapy should not be used in routine clinical practice. Funding National Institutes of Health Research Health Technology Assessment Programme, British Heart Foundation.
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- 2017
17. Bioengineering and biocrime
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Victoria Sutton
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Engineering ,business.industry ,business - Published
- 2017
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18. Asynchronous, E-Learning in Legal Education: A Comparative Study
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Victoria Sutton
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Empirical research ,Computer science ,Asynchronous communication ,Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,E-learning (theory) ,Traditional classroom ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Mathematics education ,Legal education ,State of affairs ,Plan (drawing) ,media_common - Abstract
The recent survey from Wolters Kluwer showed that only 14% of respondents were aggressively planning for online legal education, while 19% did not plan to ever offer online education, with the rest of the responses falling into the proceeding-with-caution category. The authors attribute two major factors to this state of affairs — first, the limited number of hours allowed for online courses by ABA; and second, the technological difficulties and the reluctance of professors to learn the technology necessary to offer online courses. In addition, what the report calls a “greater barrier over time” was the general “wide-scale perception that online education is worth less than on-campus education.”The question of whether online, or e-learning, education is “worth less” than the traditional classroom experience has not been empirically tested, but remains a kind of folk wisdom among legal educators. There does not appear to be any data or empirical research on this question, probably because of the small number of asynchronous law e-learning courses and opportunities to study them. Perhaps the right question is not whether online legal education is better or worse; but simply how specific parts of the course compare to traditional law course experiences. This goal of this article is to help fill the empirical gap and provide an overview of how one law school’s first completely asynchronous doctrinal course compares to “traditional” law courses.
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- 2016
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19. Introduction to Volume VIII
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Victoria Sutton
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Materials science ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,business.industry ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Published
- 2017
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20. Introduction to Volume V
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Victoria Sutton
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Agricultural science ,Biodefense ,Engineering ,Biosafety ,National security ,business.industry ,Biosecurity ,Engineering ethics ,business ,Volume (compression) - Published
- 2014
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21. Understanding technologies of terror
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D. Allan Bromley and Victoria Sutton
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Biodefense ,National security ,Sociology and Political Science ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,Education ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Foreign policy ,Political science ,Terrorism ,Business and International Management ,business ,Soviet union ,Law and economics - Abstract
The variety of weapons of mass destruction are intended to create the maximum possible fear, death, destruction, and general terror in the target region or nation, particularly with new and creative ways of using them. An understanding of how these weapons work, the ways they may be used, and the scope of their destruction can contribute to effectively combating their effects. This article examines these weapons—nuclear, electromagnetic pulse, radiological, chemical and biological technologies—as well as policy approaches to defending against them. The development of national programs directed toward the understanding, potential use, and response to weapons of mass destruction by the United States, Japan and the Soviet Union are reviewed and compared, as are the international agreements that have thus far addressed the possible use of such weapons. q 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 2005
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22. A Multidisciplinary Approach to an Ethic of Biodefense and Bioterrorism
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Victoria Sutton
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Warfare ,Poison control ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Ethics, Research ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,International relations ,Social Responsibility ,Research ethics ,Biodefense ,Health Care Rationing ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Politics ,Uncertainty ,Civil Defense ,06 humanities and the arts ,General Medicine ,Bioethics ,Bioterrorism ,United States Government Agencies ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Human Experimentation ,Law ,Engineering ethics ,Public Health ,060301 applied ethics ,business ,Discipline ,Social responsibility - Abstract
The normative approach to defining an ethic of a field, which focuses on one disciplinary field, requires modification in the consideration of a biodefense ethic to include not one discipline, but many. The consideration of an ethic in biodefense must capture issues in a multidisciplinary scope, including the ethical studies in the disciplines of medicine, sciences, technology, law, international relations, public health, environment, and war, each having their unique framework of ethical constructs.An ethic of bioterrorism and biodefense raises issues which can be examined utilizing multidisciplinary ethical considerations. The disciplines of medicine, sciences, technology, law, international relations, public health, environment, and war each have a framework of ethical principles which are essential in the scope of ethics which are incident to bioterrorism and biodefense; the absence of any one of which would create a void in our understanding of the complexity of this subject.
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- 2005
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23. Introduction to Volume VII
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Victoria Sutton
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Materials science ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,business.industry ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Published
- 2016
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24. A President's Energy Policy: An Ethical Duty But a Popularity Disaster
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Victoria Sutton
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,National security ,Presidential system ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fell ,Public administration ,Popularity ,Energy policy ,National economy ,Ethical obligation ,Political science ,Political economy ,business ,Duty ,media_common - Abstract
This study finds that the opposite results were found in response to the announcement of a national energy policy. Instead of Presidential approval ratings going up in the subsequent year, they consistently fell during the following year, with one explicable exception. Instead, it was found that gas prices consistently increase after an energy policy is announced, which is probably the true factor explaining the drop in Presidential approval ratings. This is due to the finding that 52% of a president’s approval rating can be attributed to gas prices. Future national energy policies might consider taking actions that would have an immediate effect on dropping gas prices if they would like to have their energy policies seen favorably. Despite this predictive findings for Presidential approval ratings, the development of a National Energy Policy should be considered not only an ethical obligation but a legal one. A national energy policy has become increasingly critical to our national economy and our national security, a constitutional responsibility of the President.
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- 2014
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25. Coordination of science and technology in the first Bush administration
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D. Bromley and Victoria Sutton
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Measure (data warehouse) ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,Public relations ,Education ,Business and International Management ,Peer pressure ,business ,Empowerment ,Administration (government) ,Autonomy ,media_common - Abstract
This case study examines the functioning of the Federal Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering and Technology (FCCSET) during the 1989–1993 Bush administration and the transition to the subsequent Clinton administration. In addition to the traditional elements discussed in the literature as essential to effective cooperation in complex, multi-participant initiatives, several new elements have been identified. We have found that among the traditional elements the expectation of increased resources and the satisfaction of legal requirements were of greatest importance. Among the new elements are the maintenance of institutional autonomy, peer pressure, empowerment of individual participants, a common analytic measure of success and strong centralized leadership for the overall process.
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- 2001
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26. Emergencies, disasters, conflicts, and human rights
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Victoria Sutton
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Economic growth ,Actuarial science ,Human rights ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,media_common - Published
- 2013
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27. Asking the right questions: body scanners, is salus populi supreme lex the answer?
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Victoria, Sutton
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Travel ,Privacy ,Humans ,Terrorism ,Whole Body Imaging ,Security Measures ,United States - Published
- 2013
28. Fiji: climate change, tradition and Vanua
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Victoria Sutton
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Environmental law ,Human rights ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Climate change ,Environmental ethics ,Law and development ,media_common - Published
- 2013
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29. Patient- and Trial-Specific Barriers to Participation in Cardiovascular Randomized Clinical Trials
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Seth S. Martin, Patricia A. Adams, Victoria Sutton, Fang Shu Ou, G. Michael Felker, L. Kristin Newby, and Tracy Y. Wang
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Charlson index ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,Randomized controlled trial ,Interquartile range ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Poisson regression ,Aged ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Female sex ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Relative risk ,Patient Participation Rates ,symbols ,Female ,Patient Participation ,business ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Objectives The purpose of this study was to quantitatively examine the association of patient- and trial-specific factors with participation in cardiovascular randomized clinical trials. Background Randomized clinical trials are central to evidenced-based medicine, but low patient participation rates and potentially modifiable barriers are not well understood. Methods At a large U.S. academic health system, we examined screening logs from December 1, 2005, to February 28, 2011, from 15 cardiovascular randomized clinical trials. We identified 655 patients who were screened and potentially eligible for participation in at least 1 trial. We used multivariable Poisson regression to quantify the risk of not participating in a trial associated with patient- and trial-specific factors. Results The median age was 63 years (interquartile range: 54 to 72), 35% were women, and the median Charlson Index was 2 (interquartile range: 1 to 5). Forty-two percent of patients did not participate in a trial. In multivariable regression (C-Index 0.85), trial-specific factors strongly associated with not participating included intensive trial-related testing (relative risk [RR]: 1.89; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.63 to 2.20) and anticipated trial participation >6 months (RR: 4.10; 95% CI: 2.30 to 7.29). Patient-specific factors associated with not participating included older age (RR: 1.23; 95% CI: 1.11 to 1.36, per 10-year increase if age ≥65 years), out-of-state residence (RR: 1.26; 95% CI: 1.04 to 1.54), and female sex (RR: 1.17; 95% CI: 1.01 to 1.35). Race was not associated with participation. Conclusions While patient-specific factors were associated with not participating in cardiovascular trials, longer trial duration and intensive trial-related testing were most strongly associated with risk for patients not participating. Innovative trial designs fostering convenience may most enhance trial participation.
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- 2013
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30. PATIENT AND TRIAL FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH NONPARTICIPATION IN RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED CARDIOVASCULAR TRIALS
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Victoria Sutton, Patricia A. Adams, Seth S. Martin, G. Michael Felker, Tracy Y. Wang, Fang Shu Ou, and L. Kristin Newby
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,business ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2012
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31. Introduction: Volume 3 of the Journal of Biosecurity, Biosafety & Biodefense Law
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Victoria Sutton
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Biodefense ,biodefense ,Jurisdiction ,business.industry ,pandemic ,Biosecurity ,biosafety ,biocriminology ,Biosafety ,jurisdiction ,Law ,Medicine ,business ,biosecurity - Abstract
An introduction to Volume 3 of the Journal for Biosecurity, Biosafety and Biodefense Law which raises new and important legal issues within the field of biosecurity, biosafety, and biodefense law, both from a practical as well as a theoretical perspective. Articles cover topics including: proposed regulatory changes to the biosafety and biosecurity regulations; jurisdiction during an international biosecurity incident; biocriminology; biosafety and biosecurity concerns at the border; unregulated areas of science and medicine which may present an increased risk for biosecurity threats; national and international responses to recent disease outbreaks; and pandemic preparedness.
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- 2012
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32. Introduction: Volume 2 of the Journal of Biosecurity, Biosafety & Biodefense Law
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Victoria Sutton
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Biodefense ,Biosafety ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Law ,Political science ,Biosecurity - Published
- 2012
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33. A Survey of Priorities and Impediments for a Biosecurity Code of Conduct as a Confidence Building Measure for the Biological Weapons and Toxins Convention
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Victoria Sutton
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Code of conduct ,Biodefense ,National security ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biosecurity ,Public relations ,World community ,Convention ,Law and science ,Biosafety ,Political science ,Biological warfare ,Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention ,business ,media_common - Abstract
The Biological and Toxins Weapons Convention (BTWC), signed in 1972, is the express sense of 162 nations that as a world community, we agree to the end of the use of biological weapons by state parties. However, the increasing numbers of biological, pharmaceutical and public health facilities, coupled with the biotechnology revolution in the latter part of the 20th century, made the development of preventative code of conduct a priority. Biosafety and biosecurity codes of conduct became a topic for consideration by the BTWC in 2005. To develop this new focus, the BTWC conference held a series of expert meetings culminating with the 2011 Review Conference. Codes of conduct encourage a community approach to formulate acceptable, effective, and reasonably related principles in order to achieve its goals. In order to achieve a collective definition of the priorities or impediments for a biosecurity code of conduct among the representatives of the States Parties, a survey was designed. The survey instrument was designed to be answered during one of the days of the regular intersessional Meetings of Experts of the BTWC on August 27, 2009. This article provides a review and assessment of results of this survey.
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- 2012
34. Whistleblower and Liability Protections for Scientific Laboratory Employees
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Victoria Sutton and Jarod S. Gonzalez
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Warrant ,National security ,business.industry ,Labour law ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Liability ,Context (language use) ,employment law ,Whistleblower Protection Act ,whistleblower protection ,OSHA ,Work (electrical) ,State (polity) ,Law ,Political science ,laboratory regulations ,business ,whistleblower ,media_common - Abstract
The American whistleblower protection scheme as applied to whistleblowers in the laboratory context is a complex patchwork of federal, state, and local laws. Substantial differences in whistleblower protection for laboratory employee whistleblowers depend on a number of factors, including whether the laboratory employee whistleblowers work for public or private institutions and the location of the whistleblower. This document provides a basic summary of the American whistleblower protection scheme applicable to workers employed in laboratories in the United States, with a focus on biological laboratories, and those working with select agents, which are highly infectious agents that warrant special regulations for public safety and national security reasons.
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- 2012
35. Introduction: The Launch of the Journal of Biosecurity, Biosafety & Biodefense Law
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Victoria Sutton
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Engineering ,Biosafety ,Biodefense ,business.industry ,Biosecurity ,Engineering ethics ,business ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2011
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36. Survey Finds Biodefense Researcher Anxiety– Over Inadvertently Violating Regulations
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Victoria Sutton
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Biodefense ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,National security ,business.industry ,Public health ,Data Collection ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,High anxiety ,Biohazard Release ,General Medicine ,Select agent ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Public relations ,Anxiety ,Containment of Biohazards ,In Brief ,Research Personnel ,Statute ,Statutory law ,medicine ,Government Regulation ,Business ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
A nationwide survey of biodefense researchers assesses the effectiveness of the select agent regulations, 42 CFR Sec. 73, which governs the handling, storage and security of listed biological agents and toxins, in achieving their statutory goals of protecting public health and national security. Conducted in 2007 and 2008 among funded biodefense researchers, 509 PIs and Co-PIs were surveyed, with 198 responses (39%).Regulatory components are assessed and an "anxiety factor" is measured indicating high anxiety about inadvertently violating these regulations, leading to negative career impacts, potentially thwarting achieving the goals of the statute.
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- 2009
37. Smarter regulations: commentary on 'Responsible conduct by life scientists in an age of terrorism'
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Victoria Sutton
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Health (social science) ,Biomedical Research ,Biosecurity ,Biological Warfare Agents ,Select agent ,Select Agent Program ,Security Measures ,Convention ,Biosafety ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Political science ,Biodefense ,Codes of Ethics ,Humans ,Bioethical Issues ,Life Scientists ,Social Responsibility ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public relations ,Bioterrorism ,United States ,Law and science ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Terrorism ,Government Regulation ,Safety ,business - Abstract
In the United States a rapidly increasing regulatory burden for life scientists has led to questions of whether the increased burden resulting from the Select Agent Program has had adverse effects on scientific advances. Attention has focussed on the regulatory "fit" of the Program and ways in which its design could be improved. An international framework convention to address common concerns about biosecurity and biosafety is a logical next step.
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- 2009
38. Small groups for supporting GPs' professional development in mental health disease--an evaluation
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Kay, Wilhelm, Glenda, Peel, Victoria, Sutton, Adam, Finch, and Anne, Sved-Williams
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Male ,Models, Educational ,Interprofessional Relations ,Mental Disorders ,Australia ,Humans ,Education, Medical, Continuing ,Female ,Focus Groups ,Family Practice ,Group Processes - Abstract
Small groups provide opportunities for education, information sharing, development of clinical skills and peer support. They have been promoted in general practice in Australia, especially for mental health disease, and often by divisions of general practice.Minutes from a series of small groups supervised by psychiatrists were analysed to observe the content and themes over 5 years. Additionally, focus groups of general practitioner participants were asked to comment on what they found most valuable.Forty-two GPs attended small groups (mean size 2-3) over 3 years, about half for 10-49 sessions. The most discussed diseases were depression (most frequently at 157 times), psychosis (137), personality disorders (79), drug and alcohol abuse (73), anxiety disorders (68) and suicide (42). Discussion of doctor-patient interpersonal and doctor self care issues increased from under 2% of all statements in 1995 to nearly 10% in 2000. Participating GPs found the small groups empowering, confidence increasing, and useful for addressing psychological and interpersonal issues at work.Participating GPs found small groups useful and provided helpful recommendations based on their experiences.
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- 2005
39. Environment and Public Health in a Time of Plague
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Victoria Sutton
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Public health law ,Environmental Protection Agency ,Environmental pollution ,Disaster Planning ,Federal Government ,Public administration ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,01 natural sciences ,Statutory law ,Biodefense ,medicine ,Humans ,0101 mathematics ,United States Environmental Protection Agency ,Public health ,010102 general mathematics ,06 humanities and the arts ,General Medicine ,Bioterrorism ,United States ,Environmental law ,Government Regulation ,Property law ,060301 applied ethics ,Federalism ,Business ,Law ,Environmental Health ,State Government - Abstract
1. INTRODUCTION The environment and public health goals hold a common value of healthy populations. The threat of bioterrorism requires a partnership of both, building upon the long history of the link between public health and the environment. This existing relationship is key to an effective system of biodefense for the nation, because the use of biological weapons through every environmental pathway poses a potential threat. Contaminations of water, growing crops, grazing cattle, air through inhalation, dermal absorption, or consumption of food or water in the human environment are potential delivery methods. For these risks of bioterrorism in the environment, there is an existing federal regulatory and statutory framework upon which the relationship between the environment and public health can be strengthened and shaped. We took a narrower approach to public health priorities in the environment in 1962 with the publication of Silent Spring,1 which shifted the direct public health effects regulation to a broader environmental protection policy, which took a more comprehensive, holistic approach to human health. This Article examines two important features of change in the post-9-11 relationship between public health, public health law, and environmental law. The first is an immediate change in the expansion of environmental laws to address biodefense activities of surveillance and response through either executive action or congressional amendment.2 The second and most pervasive change is the indication of a shift in federalism in public health law, in a way analogous to the development of federal environmental law in the last half of the twentieth century. This Article begins with an examination of the indications of a shift in federalism in public health, and then turns to the changing role of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") and the application of existing environmental laws to new problems and controversies in bioterrorism. II. THE SHIFT IN FEDERALISM AS A COURSE TOWARD AN EFFECTIVE BIODEFENSE Because modern federal environmental law has a well-established existing regulatory structure, shaped by more than three decades of experience, this framework can present major contributions to a national homeland defense built around federal environmental law expanding on the original effort to protect public health. A. SHIFTING FEDERALISM AND ENVIRONMENTAL LAW The role today of the federal government in environmental protection is the product of the shift from state power over property law and water law,3 to federal power because of the substantial effect on interstate commerce from environmental pollution control and remediation, which has preempted these areas for state control. An example of this shift in federalism can be observed in the area of regulation of water pollution. The first action by Congress involving the effects of dumping trash and materials into rivers was through the regulation of "navigable waters" in the U.S. Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899(4) and the Refuse Act of 1899.5 The primary purpose was to protect the rivers for navigation and to avoid impeding navigation traffic with trash or lumber and wood floating in the rivers obstructing shipping.6 The Water Pollution Control Act of 1948(7) was the first comprehensive act to address the growing concern for water pollution but did little more than underscore states' responsibilities for water. This Act was replaced by the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1956(8) which were intended to "extend and strengthen" the 1948 Act, and emphasized the continuing responsibilities of the state in controlling water pollution.9 The House Report from the Committee on Public Works stated that: The bill as reported reemphasizes the policy of the Congress to recognize, preserve, and protect the primary rights and responsibilities of the States in controlling water pollution . . . . Regulatory authority at the Federal level should be limited to interstate pollution problems and used on a standby basis only for serious situations and which are not resolved through State and interstate collaboration. …
- Published
- 2004
40. Law and Science Drive Technology in the War Against Bioterrorism
- Author
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Victoria Sutton
- Subjects
Biodefense ,Engineering ,Technology ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,Public policy ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,Bioterrorism ,Education ,Spanish Civil War ,Order (exchange) ,Statutory law ,Law ,Business and International Management ,business - Abstract
The US approach to defense against bioterrorism is necessarily constrained by existing legal frameworks. Biodefense research also responds to the development of new laws designed to address bioterrorism threats, but for the most part, technology is not driving the development of new law. While the biotechnology revolution has resulted in a wide range of biodefense applications, these can be used only within existing constitutional restraints and statutory frameworks. These rules, including safety precautions, privacy concerns, and compensatory systems, will continue to shape technologies to fit within those constraints. Several examples demonstrate that technology cannot be used in ways that threaten the legal foundations of our society. Thus technology is now being challenged to come up with more rule-sensitive approaches. In other areas, such as research priorities, progress toward an effective biodefense would be better served by prioritizing research according to scientifically based organizing principles. In order to reach the next level of effectiveness in biodefense, we must understand the complex interrelations of biotechnology and law.
- Published
- 2004
41. Biodefense: who's in charge?
- Author
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Victoria, Sutton
- Subjects
Leadership ,Interinstitutional Relations ,Models, Organizational ,Communicable Disease Control ,Government Regulation ,Civil Defense ,Humans ,Disaster Planning ,Cooperative Behavior ,Bioterrorism ,United States ,United States Government Agencies - Published
- 2003
42. Federal Regulatory, State Statutory, and Tort-Based Problems in Research Involving Informed Consent with Alzheimer Disease and Dementia Patients
- Author
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Victoria Sutton
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Regulatory state ,Decision Making ,Federal Government ,psychology ,Informed consent ,Statutory law ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Clinical Trials ,Psychiatry ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Informed Consent ,business.industry ,Public health ,Tort ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Research Design ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Alzheimer's disease ,business ,Gerontology ,State Government - Abstract
This article discusses the heightened implications surrounding Alzheimer disease patients and conflicts of interest that arise when physicians seek to conduct research with minimal or no benefit to the patient.
- Published
- 2003
43. Harnessing Wind Is Not (by Nature) Environmentally Friendly
- Author
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Victoria Sutton and Nicole Tomich
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Constitutional Taking Doctrine - Did Lucas Really Make a Difference?
- Author
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Victoria Sutton
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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