Books on the topic 'Preservative efficacy'

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1

DeGroot, Rodney C. Efficacy of alternative preservatives used in dip treatments for wood boxes. Madison, WI: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, 1986.

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2

Kelly, Anthony William. The efficacy of boron-based preservatives in temperate and tropical timber species. Portsmouth: Portsmouth Polytechnic, School of Biological Sciences, 1988.

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3

Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority. The efficacy of Illinois' sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE) pilot program: A report to the Illinois General Assembly. Chicago: Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, 2003.

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4

Efficacy of a borax-copper preservative in exposed applications. Madison, WI: United States Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, 2009.

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5

T, Lebow Stan, and Forest Products Laboratory (U.S.), eds. Efficacy of a borax-copper preservative in exposed applications. Madison, WI: United States Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, 2009.

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6

T, Lebow Stan, and Forest Products Laboratory (U.S.), eds. Efficacy of a borax-copper preservative in exposed applications. Madison, WI: United States Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, 2009.

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7

T, Lebow Stan, and Forest Products Laboratory (U.S.), eds. Efficacy of a borax-copper preservative in exposed applications. Madison, WI: United States Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, 2009.

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8

1953-, Schultz Tor P., and American Chemical Society. Cellulose and Renewable Materials Division., eds. Development of commercial wood preservatives: Efficacy, environmental, and health issues. Washington, DC: American Chemical Society, 2008.

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9

Preservation efficacy of pine wood tars. Nordic Council of Ministers, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.6027/tn2008-579.

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10

Hinchman, John Brayton. The efficacy of a control period approach in historic preservation. 2001.

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11

Miller, Christine Marie. Memorial hall: The efficacy of geographic information system software in conservation and maintenance. 2001.

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12

Jung, Dong-sun. Application, interaction, and enhancement of the efficacy of nisin in foods and beverages. 1992.

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13

Rushton, Cynda Hylton. Conceptualizing Moral Resilience. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190619268.003.0007.

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Moral resilience, the ability of an individual to preserve or restore integrity in response to moral adversity, draws on targeted scholarship of the broader concept of resilience in other contexts. This chapter builds on definitions in the literature and qualitative analysis of clinicians’ definitions of moral resilience in order to outline the key attributes of moral resilience. The foundation of moral resilience is personal and relational integrity. The attributes of self-regulation and self-awareness, such as mindfulness, buoyancy, moral efficacy, and self-stewardship, support the preservation or restoration of integrity. These attributes are defined and illustrated with quotes from clinicians. Taken together, these attributes constitute a conceptual basis for moral resilience.
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14

Tonn, Joerg-Christian, and Douglas Kondziolka. Tumours of the cranial nerves. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199651870.003.0010.

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‘Tumours of the cranial nerves’ describes diagnosis and management for the most common tumours such as vestibular (acoustic) schwannomas as well as for rare entities such as optic nerve sheath meningioma and esthesioneuroblastoma. It reviews the current data concerning epidemiology and the grading systems according to the World Health Organization classification of central nervous system tumours and describes refined magnetic resonance imaging techniques for differential diagnosis. Special emphasis is placed on the discussion of specific therapeutic modalities such as microsurgery, radiotherapy, as well as stereotactic radiosurgery, either alone or in combination. The focus of the differential therapeutic considerations is to provide personalized approaches in order to attain maximal efficacy with preservation of neurological function.
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15

Robert H, Smit, Robinson Tyler B, and Whittaker Janet M. 8 Obtaining Preliminary Relief. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198753483.003.0009.

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This chapter examines the rules, laws, and practices in New York relating to preliminary measures in support of arbitrations that are international in character. Preliminary relief, also referred to as interim relief or preliminary measures, broadly refers to the interim prescriptive measures a court or arbitral tribunal may take to ensure that the arbitration will provide an effective forum for the resolution of the parties’ dispute. Preliminary relief may contemplate, inter alia, protection of assets or property that is the subject of the dispute, preservation or production of evidence relevant to resolving the dispute, or vindication of the jurisdiction of the arbitral tribunal to decide the dispute. It thus serves to protect the efficacy of the arbitral process by equipping parties in arbitration with tools for preventing another party’s frustration of the process. Both arbitrators and national courts can issue preliminary relief in aid of arbitration.
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16

Hoskin, Peter. Penis. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199696567.003.0012.

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Chapter 8d discusses carcinoma of the penis, which is typically a squamous carcinoma arising on the penile shaft or glands in an uncircumcised patient. Management may be by primary surgery, either total amputation or partial amputation with reconstruction, or primary radiotherapy. Primary radiotherapy is indicated for those patients with T1 and T2 tumours <4 cm in diameter, particularly in those unfit for surgery, those with locally advanced disease and fixed inguinal lymph nodes, and for patients in whom surgical treatment may require total amputation and where they choose to have organ preservation by radiotherapy as an alternative. No randomized trial comparison is available to give accurate figures for the relative efficacy of either treatment. Brachytherapy is an alternative means of delivering high-dose radiotherapy to the penis and may be considered where there is local expertise for this instead of external beam treatment.
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17

Breitbart, William, Wendy G. Lichtenthal, Allison J. Applebaum, and Melissa Masterson. Individual Meaning-Centered Psychotherapy for Advanced Cancer Patients. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199837229.003.0003.

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Among the advanced cancer population, existential concerns are major issues that promote significant distress. For patients who are facing death, meaning and the preservation of meaning are not only clinically and existentially important but also central concepts to a therapeutic intervention. Based on Viktor Frankl’s logotherapy and the principles of existential psychology and philosophy, “meaning-centered psychotherapy” was developed to help patients with advanced cancer sustain or enhance a sense of meaning, peace, and purpose in their lives. This chapter provides an overview of work developing and testing individual meaning-centered psychotherapy (IMCP). It provides an overview of the session content in the IMCP intervention. It also presents findings from clinical trials, which support the efficacy of IMCP as an intervention to increase a sense of meaning, spiritual well-being, and hope while decreasing end-of-life despair. Furthermore, it presents difficult scenarios that may arise when delivering IMCP for clinicians interested in this work.
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18

Yamin, Rebecca, and Donna J. Seifert. The Archaeology of Prostitution and Clandestine Pursuits. University Press of Florida, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813056456.001.0001.

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The archaeological study of prostitution in nineteenth-century American contexts grew out of the discovery of brothels in the 1990s during large urban projects done in compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act. This book provides an overview of many of those projects as well as detailed discussions of a brothel found at Five Points in New York City and several parlor houses found in Washington, D.C. The large artifact assemblages recovered in combination with detailed primary and secondary historical research have produced a complex picture of commercial sex, which the book discusses in both nineteenth-century and twenty-first century perspectives. Agency theory is used to link the practice of prostitution with other forms of clandestine behavior that have come to light through archaeology. Issues of gender, class, and race run through the archaeological study of clandestine behavior, which includes acts of resistance in public—from drinking on the job to piracy—and acts in private—from hiding caches of artifacts in vulnerable places to scratching inscrutable designs on ceramic pots. The book ends with questions that touch on the age-old conundrum of passing judgment. Should prostitution be decriminalized? Should the efficacy of spiritual practices be questioned? The value of anomalous artifacts and their interpretation is stressed as crucial to recognizing brothels and evidence of clandestine pursuits.
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