Academic literature on the topic 'New Haven Hospital (Conn.)'

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Journal articles on the topic "New Haven Hospital (Conn.)"

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Solomon, N. A. "What are representative survival rates for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest? Insights from the New Haven (Conn) experience." Archives of Internal Medicine 153, no. 10 (May 24, 1993): 1218–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archinte.153.10.1218.

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Kealey, Edward J. "Nicholas Orme and Margaret Webster. The English Hospital, 1070-1570. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. 1995. Pp. xii, 308. $45.00. ISBN 0-300-06058-0." Albion 28, no. 3 (1996): 471–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4052184.

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Scannell, J. Gordon. "Book Review The English Hospital, 1070–1570 By Nicholas Orme and Margaret Webster. 308 pp., illustrated. new Haven, Conn., Yale University Press, 1995. $45. 0-300-06058-0." New England Journal of Medicine 334, no. 2 (January 11, 1996): 127–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/nejm199601113340219.

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&NA;. "Yale-New Haven Hospital." American Journal of Nursing 96 (January 1996): 56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000446-199601001-00030.

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&NA;. "Yale New Haven Hospital." AJN, American Journal of Nursing 91, no. 4 (April 1991): 141–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000446-199104000-00044.

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Mercado, Rachel C. "Yale-New Haven Hospital Remediation Plan." Journal of Clinical Engineering 24, no. 4 (July 1999): 262–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004669-199907000-00014.

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Argyropoulos, Erica K. "Hitchcock's Music. By Jack Sullivan. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2006." Journal of the Society for American Music 3, no. 3 (August 2009): 379–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1752196309990198.

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Student. "TALE OF THREE CITIES." Pediatrics 84, no. 5 (November 1, 1989): A42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.84.5.a42.

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Hospitalization accounts for a large proportion of the expenditures for child health care, and differences in the rate of hospitalization may produce important variations in the cost of that care. We studied the rates of hospitalization in Boston, Rochester (N.Y.), and New Haven (Conn.) in 1982. We assigned the risk of hospitalization in Rochester a score of 1.00. Boston children were hospitalized at more than twice the rate of Rochester children for most medical diagnostic categories (relative risk, 2.65; 95 percent confidence interval, 2.53 to 2.78), and the rate for the New Haven group was intermediate (relative risk, 1.80;95 percent confidence interval, 1.68 to 1.93).
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Pericolo, Lorenzo. "Michael Fried. After Caravaggio. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2016. 234 pp." Critical Inquiry 44, no. 3 (March 2018): 609–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/696907.

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&NA;. "Yale New Haven Hospital Installs Automated IV Filler." Journal of Clinical Engineering 30, no. 2 (April 2005): 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004669-200504000-00021.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "New Haven Hospital (Conn.)"

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Morisse-Corsetti, Daniel R. "At the doorstep of the model city : New Haven, urban renewal and the Oak Street Project /." Abstract and full text available, 2009. http://149.152.10.1/record=b3079683~S16.

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Thesis (M.A.) -- Central Connecticut State University, 2009.
Thesis advisor: Leah Glaser. "... in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 90-93). Also available via the World Wide Web.
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Ryder, Hilary Furste. "Alcohol and injury: an analysis of at risk drinkers presenting to the Yale-New Haven Hospital emergency room." Yale University, 2004. http://ymtdl.med.yale.edu/theses/available/etd-08202004-172347/.

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Compared with the population at-large, the Emergency Department (ED) population sees a high percentage of people with alcohol use and abuse problems. Therefore, the ED is well suited for the implementation of alcohol screening and interventions. It is important to be able to identify at risk drinkers who come to the ED for treatment for injury or other medical problems so that interventions may occur. Project ED Health conducted intensive interviews with harmful and hazardous drinkers presenting to the ED for treatment of injury or medical problem. The data was entered into a database and analyzed to find differences between injured and non-injured at risk drinkers. We found that 2/3 of at risk drinkers presented without injury. Compared to participants without injuries, injured individuals were significantly younger and more likely to be male. Injured and non-injured individuals had similar drinking patterns and health behaviors. Individuals at risk for alcohol-associated problems are similar in terms of drinking patterns and consequences and health status. Any screening tactic that is less than comprehensive, (i.e. that targets only injured individuals), will miss a significant number of at risk drinkers.
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Maxym, Maya. "Hypnosis for Relief of Pain and Anxiety in Children Receiving Intravenous Lines in the Pediatric Emergency Department." Yale University, 2008. http://ymtdl.med.yale.edu/theses/available/etd-08212007-115631/.

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Intravenous line placement is one of the most common procedures performed on children presenting to the Emergency Department. Anxiety about needles is widespread, and many children experience high levels of fear and/or pain with their IV line placements. Hypnosis is a behavioral intervention that shows significant promise for alleviating procedure-related pain and anxiety in children. Twenty-five developmentally normal, English-speaking children between the ages of five and fifteen who required IV line placement in the Pediatric Emergency Department at Yale-New Haven Childrens Hospital were randomized to receive either the standard of care or standard of care plus a brief hypnotic intervention. The groups were similar with regard to baseline demographic and socioeconomic status, previous experience with medical care, and presence or absence of chronic medical conditions. Childrens pre-procedural anxiety ratings on a 10cm visual analog scale (VAS) and expected procedural pain ratings by 10-point oucher and 10cm VAS were not significantly different between the groups. Children randomized to the hypnosis group reported less anxiety during the procedure (mean 5.0 vs 3.1, median 7.2 vs 2.2, p = 0.28) than children randomized to the standard of care group. Cases also had a decrease in anxiety from expected to actual of 1.6 on a 10cm scale, while those randomized to the control group had an increase from expected to actual anxiety of 1.1 (p=0.01). A smaller trend towards decreased pain in the hypnosis group was also present. As measured by VAS, cases had lower mean pain scores (3.4 vs 4.3) than controls. In a comparison of anticipated and actual pain scores between groups, the hypnosis group had a mean decrease of 0.8 on a 10cm VAS , while the control group had a mean increase of 0.5 (p=0.14). Recruitment of subjects is ongoing, but preliminary results suggest that hypnosis is effective for alleviating needle-related anxiety in children undergoing IV line placement and may be helpful for alleviating the pain of IV line placement as well.
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Sroat, Helene. "The humanism of brutalist architecture : the Yale Art & Architecture Building and postwar constructions of aesthetic experience in American universities and architecture /." 2003. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3077077.

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Son, Lois Jihae. "Exploring the lives of African Americans living with mental illness a project based upon an investigation at ALSO Cornerstone, New Haven, Connecticut /." 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10090/10141.

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Books on the topic "New Haven Hospital (Conn.)"

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Sledge, Betsy. Enjoying New Haven. 7th ed. New Haven, Conn: East Rock Press, 1985.

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Caplan, Colin M. New Haven. Charleston, SC: Arcadia, 2006.

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Fraprie, Frank. New Britain General Hospital: Reflections of our past. Lyme, Conn: Bellemore Books, 2000.

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Kutz, Christopher. Democracy in New Haven: A history of the Board of Aldermen, 1638-1988. New Haven: The Board, 1988.

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McConnell, Virginia A. Arsenic under the elms: Murder in Victorian New Haven. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 1999.

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Caplan, Colin M. A guide to historic New Haven, Connecticut. Charleston, SC: History Press, 2007.

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Caplan, Colin M. A guide to historic New Haven, Connecticut. Charleston, SC: History Press, 2007.

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Caplan, Colin M. A guide to historic New Haven, Connecticut. Charleston, SC: History Press, 2007.

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1941-, D'Agostino Janet, and New Haven Colony Historical Society., eds. Elms, arms, & ivy: New Haven in the twentieth century. Montgomery, Ala: Community Communications, 2000.

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Riccio, Anthony V. The Italian American experience in New Haven. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "New Haven Hospital (Conn.)"

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"YALE UNIVERSITY, NEW HAVEN, CONN. MANUSCRIPT DIVISION." In La revolución más allá del Bravo, 227–72. El Colegio de México, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv3dnqq7.16.

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"To Olivia L. Langdon 27 December 1869 • New Haven, Conn. (MS: CU-MARK)." In 1869, 439–41. University of California Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520906082-186.

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"John Hoskyns, Sidney’ s Arcadia and the rhetoric of English prose (c.1599)." In English Renaissance Literary Criticism, edited by Brian Vickers, 398–427. Oxford University PressOxford, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198186793.003.0019.

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Abstract John Hoskyns (1566-1638), lawyer and writer, was educated at Winchester, and New College Oxford, becoming a fellow in 1586 and taking his MA in 1592. He became MP for Hereford (1614), serjeant-at-law (1623), and a judge. In his Brief Lives John Aubrey records many anecdotes of ‘ his great wit’ , which sometimes got Hoskyns into trouble. A friend of Camden, Donne, and Selden, he was said to have helped revise the style both of Ralegh’ s History of the World and Ben Jonson’ s poems. Text. Preserved in manuscript, British Library Harleian MS 4604. Modern editions: by Hoyt H. Hudson, Directions for Speech and Style (Princeton, 1935), most of whose suggested emendations I have accepted, and by Louise Brown Osborn, The Life, Letters and Writings of John Hoskyns IS66-1638(New Haven, 1937; Hamden, Conn., 1973).
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Bliss, Michael. "Regius Professor at Yale." In Harvey Cushing, 483–516. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195169898.003.0015.

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Abstract Income was not a problem for the Cushings, because the family investments gradually recovered. Economically, it was not a bad time to have left the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, which was strapped for funds for the rest of the 1930s, creating endless, demoralizing problems for Harvey’s successor, Elliott Cutler, who did not have a happy tenure. While Yale, too, had to implement minor austerity measures, life for the Cushings in New Haven and wherever they summered was materially comfortable and intellectually rich.
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Edward Wright, J. "Later Developments In Jewish, Christian, And Islamic Images." In The Early History of Heaven, 203–14. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195130096.003.0008.

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Abstract The preceding review of the texts and traditions that describe the heavenly realm ends with sources that can in some way be dated to at least the second century ce. Obviously, heavenly speculation did not end at this point. Jewish, Christian, and Islamic authors continued to develop images of the heavenly realm. The following is a very brief overview of these speculations in order to show how some of the themes discussed in previous chapters developed in subsequent Jewish, Christian, and Islamic communities. This topic has been the focus of several successful books. A most helpful sketch of the images of heaven from ancient to modern times can be found in Colleen McDannell and Bernhard Lang, Heaven: A History (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1988). The analyses by McDannell and Lang are somewhat superficial since their survey covers several millennia. Nonetheless, their book fills an important role as a synthesis of the literary and artistic images of heaven in western thought. More recently Jeffrey Burton Russell’s A History of Heaven: The Singing Silence (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1997) provides an insightful study of the topic focusing on Christian materials.
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Vaughan, E. Darracott, R. Ernest Sosa, Aaron P. Perlmutter, and David A. Schulsinger. "Acute and chronic interstitial cryotherapy of the adrenal." In Biology and management, 603–7. Oxford University PressOxford, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198508229.003.0062.

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Abstract Unilateral adrenalectomy is indicated for patients with large adrenal lesions or functional tumors. Various open surgical approaches have been utilized. Laparoscopic adrenalectomy has now become an important surgical technique for the management of adrenal lesions (Takeda et al. 1994), including patients with primary aldosteronism (Conn’ s syndrome) or Cushing’ s adenoma, Cushing’ s disease, pheochromocytoma, and nonfunctioning tumors greater than 6 cm in size. Laparoscopy can be performed by transabdominal or retroperitoneal access. The advantage of laparoscopic adrenalectomy is the reduced postoperative discomfort, morbidity, and shorter hospital stay.
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Messac, Luke. "Out of the Shadows." In Your Money or Your Life, 65—C4F1. Oxford University PressNew York, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197676639.003.0005.

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Abstract This chapter chronicles the rise in media coverage and political attention to medical debt in the early 2000s. Articles by The Wall Street Journal in 2003, focused in large part on the aggressive debt collection practices of Yale University’s teaching hospital in New Haven, Connecticut, drew the attention of Congressman James Greenwood. He chaired congressional hearings in which he sought to shame hospitals into being less punitive about debt collection. He highlighted some strange particularities of health care debt, such as the practice by some hospitals of pursuing people for the debts of their spouses. For a time, this spotlight led some hospitals to stop pursuing low-income patients so aggressively. The power of shame was on display, if only for a moment. At the same time, however, lobbyists and legislators were pushing for a new kind of health insurance plan, the high-deductible health insurance plan, which would leave many more Americans at risk of falling into medical debt.
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Gillies, Alan C., and John Howard. "Information as Change Agent or Barrier in Health Care Reform?" In Healthcare Information Technology Innovation and Sustainability, 1–17. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2797-0.ch001.

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Health care systems across the world are in a state of flux. If the experience of the early 1990s can be used as a model, the recent global economic downturn will lead to very significant pressures to reduce spending and achieve better value. Systems have provided a range of approaches to modeling and evaluating these more complex organizations, from simple process models to complex adaptive systems. This paper considers the pros and cons of such approaches and proposes a new modeling approach that combines the best elements of other techniques. This paper also describes a case study, where the approach has been deployed by the authors. The case study comes from health care services in Ontario, Canada, who are shifting from the traditionally hospital-based system to one that recognizes a greater role for community and primary care services.
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Matthews, Bryan, and Margaret Rice-Oxley. "What is multiple sclerosis?" In Multiple Sclerosis, 1–10. Oxford University PressOxford, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198508984.003.0001.

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Abstract Although there had been earlier partial descriptions, multiple sclerosis was first identified as a distinctive disease in 1868 by the great French neurologist Charcot, working at the Salpetriere hospital in Paris. It is strange that a disease that now seems to be so well defined should have remained unrecognized for so long, but methods of examining someone with organic disease of the nervous system were only then being developed. Charcot’s great contribution to medicine was in linking the careful observation of symptoms and signs of disease in life with the pathological findings in the nervous system after death. He called this new disease ‘sclerose en plaques’ a phrase that in his original lecture he feared would sound barbarous to his audience. The ‘sclerose’ or sclerosis of his title means hardening and refers to the scarring that is the end result of the damage caused to the nervous system by multiple sclerosis. The word ‘sclerosis’ was used very freely in the early days of neurology and persists in the con, fusing title used in the United States to describe a quite different and much more serious disease of the nervous system, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
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S., Veluchamy, Rajeesh Kumar N.V., Srinivasan P., Nandhakumar A., and K. G. Parthiban. "Detection of COVID-19 Pandemic Face Mask Using ConvNet in Busy Environments." In Advanced Technologies for Science and Engineering, 50–66. BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBLISHERS, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/9789815196269124030006.

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The number of people using face masks has increased on public transportation, retail outlets, and at the workplace. All municipal entrances, workplaces, malls, schools, and hospital gates must have temperature and mask checks in order for people to enter. The paper's goal is to find someone who isn't wearing a face mask in order to control COVID-19. ConvNets may be used to recognize and classify images. The model depends on ConvNot to assess whether or not someone is wearing a mask. It is possible to identify an image's face by utilizing a face identification algorithm. These faces are then processed using Conv Net face mask detection. If the model is able to extract patterns and characteristics from photographs, it will be categorized as either “Mask” or “No Mask”. With an accuracy rate of 99.85 percent, Mobile Net V2 is the most accurate in regard to training data. MobilenetV2 correctly identifies the mask in “Mask” or “No Mask” video transmissions.
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Conference papers on the topic "New Haven Hospital (Conn.)"

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Pullen, Stacey Leigh Lillian. "Risk Factors Associated with Premature Birth at a District Hospital in Bisho, Eastern Cape." In 3rd International Nutrition and Dietetics Scientific Conference. KENYA NUTRITIONISTS AND DIETICIANS INSTITUTE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.57039/jnd-conf-abt-2023-m.i.y.c.n.h.p-33.

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Introduction and background: At least 23 000 new-born babies in South Africa die annually, 45% due to preterm-related complications or the lack of proper healthcare. Prematurity is the leading cause of death in children under five years old with at least 2.5 million preterm infants dying globally each year. What is more, is that greater disparity in mortality is being seen between rich and poor countries. Knowledge of the contributing and causative factors of prematurity within a community can help address modifiable risk factors and create vigilance and awareness around the non-modifiable risk factors leading to preterm birth. Aims and objectives: The aim of the study was to identify which risk factors are associated with prematurity at Bisho Hospital, a district hospital in central Eastern Cape, South Africa. The objectives of the study were to identify which risk factors between the full-term and preterm group were more prevalent and therefore associated with prematurity. Methodology: A descriptive quantitative correlation study design was used, where premature as well as full-term infants were included in the study. Data was collected by means of a questionnaire. All accessible medical notes of both the mother and infant were used as well. The questionnaire was used to establish which risk factors were most prevalent during the pregnancies of women in each group and whether these risk factors were significant contributors to prematurity. Results: A sample of 130 mothers, 50 from the preterm group and 80 from the full-term group were included in the study. Of the 51 questions and various risk factors investigated, only four risk factors showed to have statistical significance in its association with prematurity. These were: a positive HIV status (p=0.022), a poor maternal nutritional status (p=0.031), mothers living far distances from their local clinic (0.041-0.024) and mothers having previously delivered a pre-term baby (p=0.009). In addition to this, mothers who smoked during pregnancy and who had a previous TB diagnosis, was associated with delivering smaller birth weight babies of 580g and 537g less, respectively. Conclusion: The results of this study enlightened the study population on the causes of prematurity, specific to its catchment area. Modifiable risk factors have since been addressed at facility level, with more mothers with a poor nutritional status being referred for nutritional support. Non-modifiable risk factors are in the process of being addressed through the involvement of primary health care facilities to ensure timeous referrals of those at-risk patients as identified within the study. This study has also inspired the continued research on the management of premature infants at District Hospitals, with hopes to improve and optimise management and reduce pre-term related deaths and disability. Key Words: Preterm birth; poor maternal nutritional status; district hospital; Eastern Cape; South Africa
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