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1

Barra, Séamus de. "Geriatracht arís... Rodeo sa West County." Comhar 50, no. 10 (1991): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25571603.

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Brada, Josef C., Zdenek Drabek, and M. Fabricio Perez. "The Effect of Home-country and Host-country Corruption on Foreign Direct Investment." Review of Development Economics 16, no. 4 (October 18, 2012): 640–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12009.

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Bandyopadhyay, Subhayu, Dustin Chambers, and Jonathan Munemo. "Foreign Aid, Illegal Immigration, and Host Country Welfare." Review of Development Economics 18, no. 2 (April 2, 2014): 372–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12090.

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4

Nakagawa, Mariko, and Shonosuke Sugasawa. "Linguistic distance and economic development: A cross‐country analysis." Review of Development Economics 26, no. 2 (December 29, 2021): 793–834. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12850.

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Chundakkadan, Radeef, and Subash Sasidharan. "Gender gap and access to finance: A cross‐country analysis." Review of Development Economics 26, no. 1 (October 14, 2021): 180–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12830.

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6

Beladi, Hamid, and Saibal Kar. "Skilled and Unskilled Immigrants and Entrepreneurship in a Developed Country." Review of Development Economics 19, no. 3 (July 15, 2015): 666–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12155.

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7

Cuberes, David, Sadia Priyanka, and Marc Teignier. "The determinants of entrepreneurship gender gaps: A cross-country analysis." Review of Development Economics 23, no. 1 (September 19, 2018): 72–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12537.

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Jalles, João Tovar, and Luiz Mello. "Cross‐country evidence on the determinants of inclusive growth episodes." Review of Development Economics 23, no. 4 (June 14, 2019): 1818–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12605.

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9

Mayer-Foulkes, David. "A Cross-country Causal Panorama of Human Development and Sustainability." Review of Development Economics 17, no. 2 (April 19, 2013): 235–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12029.

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Djajić, Slobodan. "Temporary Migration and the Flow of Savings to the Source Country." Review of Development Economics 18, no. 1 (January 21, 2014): 162–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12076.

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van der Marel, Erik. "Explaining Export Performance through Inputs: Evidence from Aggregated Cross-country Firm-level Data." Review of Development Economics 21, no. 3 (February 28, 2017): 731–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12309.

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12

Steinitz, G., and O. Piatibratova. "Radon signals at the Roded site, Southern Israel." Solid Earth 1, no. 1 (November 16, 2010): 99–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/se-1-99-2010.

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Abstract. Temporal variations of radon in the geological environment (upper crust) are frequent and recognized as unique in terms of the signals encountered and for the lack of substantial and generally applicable explanations. The phenomena observed at the Roded site, located in arid southern Israel, illustrate this situation. The monitoring of radon in the last 10 years or more has been carried out in massive meta-diorite of the Precambrian basement block of Roded. The measurement is conducted using an alpha detector at a resolution of 15-min, placed in a borehole at a depth of 9 m, within a PVC casing to that depth. Systematic temporal variation patterns, manifested as large relative signals are composed of sub-diurnal (SDR) radon, multi-day (MD) and annual (AR) signals. The overall variation is dominated by the intense SDR signals which occur in some days, and may vary from background levels (5 counts or less) to peak values (attaining >1000 counts) and back to background at an interval of 6 to 12 h. Intervals of up to several tens of days without significant SDR signals interchange with times of intense daily occurrences of such signals. Their occurrence indicates very fast variations of radiation from radon at the point of measurement. The peak times, within the diurnal 24-h cycle of SDR signals occur preferentially at an interval of 14–16 h (UT+2). Spectral analysis indicates: (a) A diurnal periodicity composed of a primary 24-h and a secondary 12-h periodicity, which are attributed to the solar tide constituents S1 and S2. Tidal constituents indicative for gravity tide (O1, M2) are lacking; (b) An annual periodicity. A compound relation among the diurnal and annual periodicity is indicated by: (a) Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) analysis shows an overall annual structure with a modulation of the S1 and S2 periodicities; (b) Moving-time-window Fourier spectral analysis showing that the amplitudes of S1 and S2 vary in an annual pattern, with relatively high values in summer. The phase of S1, S2 and S3 shows a systematic multi-year variation. It is suggested that the significant signatures of the periodic phenomena and their modulations reflect a direct link with the solar radiation tide.
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13

Steinitz, G., and O. Piatibratova. "Radon signals at the Roded site, southern Israel." Solid Earth Discussions 2, no. 1 (June 22, 2010): 161–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/sed-2-161-2010.

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Abstract. Temporal variations of radon in the geological environment (upper crust) are frequent and recognized as unique in terms of the signals encountered and for the lack of substantial and generally applicable explanations. The phenomena observed at the Roded site, located in arid southern Israel, emphasize this situation. Monitoring of radon during more than 10 years is carried out in massive meta-diorite of the Precambrian basement block of Roded. Measurement is conducted using an alpha detector at a resolution of 15-min, lowered in a borehole at a depth of 9 m, within a PVC casing to that depth. Systematic temporal variation patterns, manifesting large relative signals are composed of sub-daily (SDR) radon, multi-day (MD) and annual (AR) signals. The overall variation in dominated by the intense SDR signals which occur in some days, and may vary from background levels (5 counts or less) to peak values (attaining >1000 counts) and back to background in an interval of 6 to 12 h. Intervals of up to several tens of days without significant SDR signals interchange with times of intense daily occurrences of such signals. Their occurrence indicates very fast variations of radiation from radon at the point of measurement. The peak times, within the diurnal 24-h cycle of SDR signals occur preferentially in the interval of 14–16 h (UT+2). Spectral analysis indicates: (a) A diurnal periodicity composed of a primary 24-h and a secondary 12-h periodicity, which are attributed to the solar tide constituents S1 and S2. Tidal constituents indicative for gravity tide (O1, M2) are lacking; (b) An annual periodicity. A compound relation among the diurnal and annual periodicity is indicated by: (a) Wavelet (CWT) analysis showing an overall annual structure with a modulation of the S1 and S2 periodicities; (b) FFT analysis using consecutive 21.3-day long time intervals shows that the amplitudes of S1 and S2 vary in an annual pattern, with relatively high values in summer. The phase of S1 and S2 and S3 shows a systematic multi-year variation. Existing frames of reference of geophysical processes cannot explain the highly systematic phenomena. It is suggested that the significant signatures of the periodic phenomena and their modulations are reflecting a direct link with solar radiation tide.
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14

Aziz, M. Nusrate, Nick Horsewood, and Somnath Sen. "The First and Second Stage Pass-through of Exchange Rates: A Developing Country Perspective." Review of Development Economics 18, no. 3 (July 10, 2014): 595–609. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12105.

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15

Chun, Natalie, Rana Hasan, Muhammad Habibur Rahman, and Mehmet Ali Ulubaşoğlu. "The Role of Middle Class in Economic Development: What Do Cross-Country Data Show?" Review of Development Economics 21, no. 2 (May 29, 2016): 404–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12265.

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16

Kar, Saibal, and Hamid Beladi. "A Model of Smuggling and Trafficking of Illegal Immigrants with a Host Country Policy." Review of Development Economics 21, no. 3 (January 30, 2017): 698–712. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12307.

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17

Rankin, Neil, and Volker Schöer. "Export Destination, Product Quality and Wages in a Middle-Income Country. The Case of South Africa." Review of Development Economics 17, no. 1 (January 22, 2013): 64–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12015.

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18

McQuade, Timothy, Stephen Salant, and Jason Winfree. "Regulating an Experience Good Produced in the Formal Sector of a Developing Country when Consumers Cannot Identify Producers." Review of Development Economics 16, no. 4 (October 18, 2012): 512–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12001.

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19

Bhaumik, Sumon Kumar, and Ralitza Dimova. "Does Human Capital Endowment of Foreign Direct Investment Recipient Countries Really Matter? Evidence from Cross-country Firm Level Data." Review of Development Economics 17, no. 3 (July 17, 2013): 559–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12050.

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20

Blackburn, Christopher. "When Typhus Rode a Red Horse: Weaponizing Disease During the Polish-Bolshevik War." Przegląd Historyczno-Wojskowy 22, no. 2 (2021): 87–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.32089/wbh.phw.2021.2(276).0003.

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This work explores the role of the Red Army in the spread of typhus on Polish lands during the Polish-Bolshevik War, 1919–1920. As a result of the Bolshevik style of war, one of the results of the Soviet advance into Poland was the anti-typhus effort along the border and throughout the country. Polish efforts, supported by American humanitarian groups, had made great strides in eradicating typhus however, much of this was undone with the Bolshevik offensive of 1920. Through both active and passive means the Bolshevik advance drove typhus victims and refugees across the Polish lines, while at the same time Bolshevik forces destroyed or removed sanitation equipment and supplies across the frontier.
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21

Roden, David. "Subtractive-Catastrophic Xenophilia." Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture 16, no. 1-2 (December 28, 2019): 40–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.51151/identities.v16i1-2.371.

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Subtraction is a critical method whereby a cognitively inaccessible reality is thought in terms of its inaccessibility or “subtraction” from discourse. In this essay I begin by considering the role of subtraction in Alain Badiou’s work, where the method receives its most explicit contemporary articulation. I then generalize subtraction beyond Badiou’s ontology to explore a productive aporia in posthumanist theory. The implicit subtraction of posthumanist epistemology and ontology, I claim, confronts theorists of the posthuman with an inescapable tension between their philosophical language and its deployment within the historical situation I call the “posthumanist predicament.” This reveals an equivalence between ontological subtraction and an empty compulsion to become what one cannot yet think, or “xenophilia.” That is, between a philosophy of limits that forecloses the thought of the posthuman (qua defined structure or subject) through subtraction and an implicit desire to construct or “become” this subtracted, unpresented posthuman. Author(s): David Roden Title (English): Subtractive-Catastrophic Xenophilia Journal Reference: Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture, Vol. 16, No. 1-2 (Summer - Winter 2019) Publisher: Institute of Social Sciences and Humanities - Skopje Page Range: 40-46 Page Count: 7 Citation (English): David Roden, “Subtractive-Catastrophic Xenophilia,” Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture, Vol. 16, No. 1-2 (Summer - Winter 2019): 40-46.
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22

Jackson, Michael E., and Erik O. Ruehr. "Let the People Be Heard: San Diego County Bicycle Use and Attitude Survey." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 1636, no. 1 (January 1998): 8–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.3141/1636-02.

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What is the best way to promote bicycle transportation? Are people afraid to ride bicycles because motorists will run them over? Are there enough bicycle facilities available? Is promoting bicycle transportation a wise use of tax dollars? What percentage of the population currently rides bicycles? The San Diego Association of Governments allocates approximately $2 million annually on bicycling projects throughout San Diego County, California. Both the county of San Diego and the city of San Diego employ full-time bicycle coordinators. Periodically, questions and comments will arise regarding bicycling policies. “Why are they spending so much money on bicycle lanes? No one ever bicycles down this street.” “If they would build more bicycle paths, I would ride my bicycle to work instead of drive.” “How do they expect people to ride bicycles if they don’t maintain the pavement?” The San Diego County Bicycle Use and Attitude Survey was commissioned at the behest of the San Diego County Public Works Department to determine existing levels of bicycle usage and bicycling attitudes among San Diego County residents. A total of 3,800 interviews, conducted during February and March 1994 by telephone throughout the county, provided valuable insight into a large range of bicycling issues. The survey found that a majority (58 percent) of those residents polled reported that they were bicycle owners, and that a majority (68 percent) of those households in which bicycles were present reported that the adults bicycled. Respondents who bicycle chose bicycle paths, which are separated from motor vehicles, as their preferred bikeway facility. Almost three-fourths of the respondents (73 percent) stated that they did not bicycle at night. Only 15 percent of respondents who rode a bicycle at least once within the past year reported riding for transportation purposes. Over 99 percent of all respondents stated that they did not belong to a bicycling organization. A majority of respondents (over 70 percent) had not heard of various government programs that provided bicycle maps and bicycle information, and less than 10 percent of respondents have used these services. The majority of bicycling households (86 percent) reported being at least somewhat satisfied with the level of bikeway maintenance provided. Overall, survey respondents expressed support for government efforts to promote bicycle transportation.
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Lewis, Elyse O’C, and Don MacKenzie. "UberHOP in Seattle." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 2650, no. 1 (January 2017): 101–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3141/2650-12.

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UberHOP is a commute-focused interpretation of the Uber suite of transportation services, with the goal of reducing personal vehicle commute trips. The service first launched in Seattle, Washington, and Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in December 2015 and expanded to Manila, Philippines, in early 2016. UberHOP is similar to vanpooling with fixed pickup and drop-off locations in the primary commute direction during peak hours, but it leverages Uber’s ridesourcing platform to replace fixed departure schedules with riders matched in real time. This paper reports on an intercept survey (83% response rate) to understand who rode, how they traveled to the pickup location, why they rode, and what modes UberHOP was replacing for all 11 UberHOP routes in Seattle during the morning and evening commute periods. In addition, detailed trip and total rider count data were collected during the survey administration process. The results show that many UberHOP riders made UberHOP their primary form of commute mode. Unlike standard ridesourcing services, UberHOP riders predominantly replaced public transportation modes rather than personal vehicles. UberHOP services were canceled in Seattle in August 2016. However, with larger rider densities per trip, the UberHOP model can be profitable, and it is reasonable to expect that Uber or others will resurrect a similar service in the future.
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Morus, Iwan Rhys. "Out on the fringe: Wales and the history of science." British Journal for the History of Science 54, no. 1 (March 2021): 87–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007087420000655.

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Imagine a scene sometime in the 1750s in the depths of west Wales. This was wild country. Even a century later, George Borrow called it a ‘mountainous wilderness … a waste of russet-coloured hills, with here and there a black craggy summit’. Through this desolation rides the Reverend William Williams. As he rode, he read – and the book in his saddlebags on this occasion was William Derham's Astro-Theology, first published some twenty years earlier. Williams was a leading figure in the Methodist revolution that had been sweeping through Wales for the past two decades. Disenchanted with an Anglican Church that seemed increasingly disconnected – culturally and linguistically – from their everyday lives, and attracted by powerful and charismatic preachers like Williams himself, men and women across Wales turned to Methodism. They organized themselves into local groups worshipping in meeting houses rather than in their parish churches. Leaders like Williams usually had a number of such groups under their care, and spent much of their time on horseback, travelling between widely scattered communities to minister to their congregations. That Williams read in the saddle is well known. As shall become clear, he had certainly read Derham's book as well. It is not too much of an imaginative leap, therefore, to picture him reading about God's design of the cosmos as he rode through the Welsh hills – and it is a good image with which to begin a discussion about Wales, science and European peripheries.
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Watson, Kenneth, Fred A. Kruse, and Susanne Hummer‐Miller. "Thermal infrared exploration in the Carlin trend, northern Nevada." GEOPHYSICS 55, no. 1 (January 1990): 70–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.1442773.

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Experimental Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner (TIMS) aircraft data have been acquired for the Rodeo Creek NE 7 1/2 minute quadrangle, Eureka County, northern Nevada, covering the Carlin gold mine. A simple model has been developed to extract spectral emissivities for mapping surface lithology and alteration based on the physical properties of geologic materials. Emissivity‐ratio images were prepared that allow generalized lithologic discrimination, identification of areas with high silica content, and the first reported detection of the carbonate secondary reststrahlen feature. Together with thermal‐inertia images, they permit identification of areas of subtle lithologic variation not shown on conventional geologic maps. Emissivity‐ratio spectra extracted from the data compare favorably with modeled laboratory spectra and establish for the first time the link among theory, measured physical properties, and color‐composited TIMS images. Identification of previously unknown silicification in the Tertiary volcanic rocks and mapping of a silicified structure and possible extensions in alluvium indicate that TIMS data can be a valuable tool for detecting subtle alteration associated with mineralization, particularly in less accessible or less well‐known areas.
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Houston, Douglas, Marlon G. Boarnet, Gavin Ferguson, and Steven Spears. "Can compact rail transit corridors transform the automobile city? Planning for more sustainable travel in Los Angeles." Urban Studies 52, no. 5 (April 22, 2014): 938–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098014529344.

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Directing growth towards compact rail corridors has become a key strategy for redirecting auto-oriented regions towards denser, mixed-use communities that support sustainable travel. Few have examined how travel of near-rail residents varies within corridors or whether corridor land use–travel interactions diverge from regional averages. The Los Angeles region has made substantial investments in transit-oriented development, and our survey analysis indicates that although rail corridor residents drove less and rode public transit more than the county average, households in an older subway corridor with more near-transit development had about 11 fewer daily miles driven and higher transit ridership than households along a newer light rail line, a difference likely associated with development patterns and the composition and preferences of residents. Rail transit corridors are not created equally, and transit providers and community planners should consider the social and development context of corridors in efforts to improve transit access and maximise development.
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Conde, Gilberto. "On the evolutions of the Arab Spring." Regions and Cohesion 7, no. 2 (July 1, 2017): 96–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/reco.2017.070206.

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This article looks back at the 2011 Arab Spring where the movements that brought hope to the region and beyond seem to have gone astray. The military has taken over in Egypt, while Libya, Syria and Yemen have descended into civil strife with tremendous human costs. Bahrain has witnessed repression that has overwhelmed the opposition, and while Tunisia, the country where Arab Spring began, has avoided the violence characterizing the aforementioned states, change has remained rather limited. As for other countries that rode on the same wave of mobilizations, hopes for democratic transformation have been subdued in somewhat less violent contexts but with varying degrees of pressure from the state. This article examines what has happened to the Arab Spring countries, why and what is required to democratically transform the region.
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Davidson, Cathy N. "Critical Fictions." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 111, no. 5 (October 1996): 1063–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/s0030812900177004.

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Throughout the first decade of the nineteenth century, Ethan Allen Greenwood, a rather pedantic young diarist, each day recorded the weather and the title of the book he was reading. He sometimes observed that a particular work was “instructive” or “entertaining” and occasionally noted the library from which the volume was borrowed–the Adelphi Fraternity Library, the Social Friends Library, or the unnamed circulating library he joined in 1806. His meticulous account of his activities and expenses–whether he was living at home in Worcester County, Massachusetts, or at Dartmouth College or later in Boston or traveling around the countryside as an itinerant painter–provides posterity with an unusually comprehensive portrait of “Ethan Allen Greenwood, his life and times.” Looking over the record that he left, we can well imagine that we know this serious and sober, parsimonious and abstemious young man Franklinesquely working his way toward fame and fortune. But then we encounter a curious diary entry: “Rode out with the ladies. Returned and spent the evening agreeably. What I do not write here will not be forgotten.”
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Mayer, Henrique, Joe Garofalo, and Carlos Balerdi. "SUCCESSFUL APPROACHES PROVIDING SAFETY TRAINING FOR FARM AND LANDSCAPE EMPLOYEES IN SOUTHERN FLORIDA." HortScience 40, no. 3 (June 2005): 894a—894. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.40.3.894a.

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Safety training for farm, nursery and landscape workers has been provided in Miami-Dade County in English and Spanish for many years. Vegetable workers are available August–September; nursery, landscape and tropical fruit workers all year. Certificates of Completion and proof of training cards are provided. Traditionally, a half-day rodeo was offered—instructors delivered presentations several times as participants move from room to room. 4 to 6 agents and 2 to 4 volunteers are needed to teach such training, plus 8 to 10 classrooms. 100+ vegetable and nursery workers participate. A local school was used for many years, with training scheduled when school was out. A tractor driving competition was held after lunch, with trophies and cash prizes. As scheduling the school became difficult, training was offered at the CES office using one room and 2 agents (Spanish in am, English in pm). This is easier to arrange and can be offered any time of year. In total, 40–50 nursery workers attend. A third type of training developed as topics were requested by the industries; for example, chainsaw and climbing safety for tree crews. One agent and one volunteer are required; 50 or more participate, and class is in English. Safety is also taught as part of other seminars, required by law (pesticide applicator training, Worker Protection Standard), trade organizations (landscape, nursery, arborist) or county policy (hurricane pruning for public employees). Participation varies widely (15 to 100+), as does language. We have concluded that successful safety training depends on being willing and able to offer the type of training required by a given situation, which will change over time.
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NICHOLS, LAURA, and FERNANDO CÁZARES. "Homelessness and the Mobile Shelter System: Public Transportation as Shelter." Journal of Social Policy 40, no. 2 (August 25, 2010): 333–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047279410000644.

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AbstractThose without housing often use public space differently than those who are housed. This can cause dilemmas for and conflicts among public officials as guardians of public space and goods. In this paper, we look at one such utilisation of space from the perspective of those who board 24-hour public transportation routes and ride the bus all night for shelter. We describe the results of a preliminary survey, observations and informal conversations with unhoused riders on the bus over three nights in one county in the United States. We found that a substantial number of the unhoused riders we surveyed used the bus as their main form of night-time shelter throughout the year, and that some have ridden the bus for shelter for many years. Men were more likely to say that they used the bus to sleep, while women rode the bus for safety. While some unhoused riders also utilised shelters or did not know about other shelter options, many actively choose the bus over emergency shelters. The potential implications of the study for service providers, researchers and policy-makers are addressed.
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Van Belle, David. "“Festivalizing” Performance: Community and Aesthetics through the Lens of Three Festival Experiences." Canadian Theatre Review 138 (March 2009): 7–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/ctr.138.001.

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Although the history of Canadian theatre has been greatly shaped by the existence of the long-established Stratford and Shaw Festivals, a new creative energy is coming from a crop of alternatives to them. These newer festivals are an increasingly important part of the Canadian performance landscape, in part precipitated by a renaissance in performance-creation work by independent artists and performance collectives who eschew the “season and theatre building” model of performance. Instead, these creators favour fluid creation methodologies and presentation arrangements that are well suited to the fluidity of a new festival model of presentation. Over the past decade, a whole network of festivals has been set up across the country to embrace such work, anchored by now venerable festivals such as One Yellow Rabbit’s twenty-three-year-old High Performance Rodeo. Some of these festivals are high profile; Vancouver’s PuSh Festival and the National Arts Centre’s Magnetic North Festival have provided important national stages for new work. Others, like Calgary’s Mutton Busting Festival and Toronto’s RED Festival, happen on a smaller scale and in local settings. Although these smaller festivals tend to be more temporary in nature (both the festivals just mentioned are now defunct), they provide necessary opportunities for new and adventurous work to be developed and seen.
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Vittetoe, Kelly L., Jackson H. Allen, Purnima Unni, Katlyn G. McKay, Aaron M. Yengo-Kahn, Owais Ghani, Pradeep Mummidi, Amber L. Greeno, Christopher M. Bonfield, and Harold N. "Bo" Lovvorn. "Socioeconomic factors associated with helmet use in pediatric ATV and dirt bike trauma." Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open 7, no. 1 (March 2022): e000876. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tsaco-2021-000876.

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ObjectivesRecreational off-road vehicle crashes can produce severe injury and death among children, often from head trauma sustained while riding unhelmeted. Although required for competition, recreational riders commonly forego helmets. This study aimed to identify socioeconomic factors associated with unhelmeted injuries among children riding all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) and dirt bikes recreationally, thus informing injury prevention efforts.MethodsA retrospective review was completed of patients younger than 18 years who presented after recreational ATV or dirt bike crash to a single American College of Surgeons-verified level 1 pediatric trauma center (2010–2019). Demographic, injury, and outcome data were collected. US Census data regarding median and per capita income, poverty prevalence, and scholastic graduation rates were recorded for each patient’s home county. Relationships between helmet use at the time of injury, demographics, and socioeconomic variables were examined.ResultsThe cohort comprised 680 injured recreational ATV (n=510; 75%) and dirt bike (170; 25%) riders. Unhelmeted riders (n=450) were significantly older (median age 13 vs 11 years; p=0.008) and more often rode ATVs (n=399). Significantly greater percentages of females (77.9%; p<0.001) and passengers (89.5%; p<0.001) were unhelmeted at the time of injury. Residents of counties with lower median and per capita income, higher poverty prevalence, and lower high school and college graduation rates were significantly more likely to be unhelmeted at the time of their crash (p=0.003). In multivariable analysis, unhelmeted injuries were independently associated with ATV use (OR=6.757; p<0.0001), passenger status (OR=6.457; p<0.0001), and older age (OR=1.219; p<0.0001).ConclusionIn children, ATV use, passenger status, and older age associated independently with unhelmeted riding in recreational vehicle crash. Residence in a county with both lower median income and scholastic graduation rates associated with unhelmeted crashes, and lower median income significantly predicted unhelmeted crashes. This study revealed socioeconomic factors that identify communities with greatest need for injury prevention initiatives.Level of evidenceIII—retrospective comparative epidemiological study.
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33

Babik, N. P., Ye I. Fedorovych, and V. V. Fedorovych. "DURATION AND EFFECTIVENESS OF LIFETIME USE OF DAIRY COWS DEPENDENDING ON THEIR FATHER'S COUNTRY ORIGIN." Animal Breeding and Genetics 54 (November 29, 2017): 19–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.31073/abg.54.03.

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Productive longevity is a very important feature, which is determined by a combination of genotype factors in specific environments. It is known that in recent decades to improve of productive qualities of domestic dairy cattle, the Holstein breeders of different breeds are used. Such measures, although allowed to increase the milk productivity of cows significantly, however, led to reduction in the duration of their productive use. Therefore, the purpose of our research was to study the duration and effectiveness of lifetime use of dairy cows, depending on the country of origin of their father. The research was conducted on animals of Holstein (n = 2902), Ukrainian Black-and-White (n = 14876) and Ukrainian Red-and-White (n = 2176) breeding in various regions of Ukraine. It was established that the controllable number of Holstein cows came from 116 bulls from five different countries. Cows originated from the bulls of Hungarian selection had the longest life and lactation. Cows that came from Canadian bulls had the best life-long yields and life-long number of milk fat. Cows from French bulls were characterized by the worst indicators of productive longevity. Among the descendants of the German bulls, the daughters of the following bulls: Lord 661287, Trend 2761400782690, Bg. Rodeo 27642626161 and Ingo 27677179331, American selection – daughters of B. Astronomer 2160438 and Bob Hubby 2109267, Canadian – daughters of Rock 373840409 and H. R. Artist 6284191, Hungarian – daughters of V.Vilmos 3101733688 and E.Samba 3035115974 and French – daughters of Brico 5794006324 had the best indicators of the duration and efficiency of lifelong use. The studied population of cows of Ukrainian Black-and-White dairy breed came from 167 bulls from eight countries. The largest number of daughters was obtained from domestic bulls (34.6%) and German (29.5%) selection. However, cows of Russian selection had the highest rates of longevity, productive use, lactation, the number of lactations per life, life expectancy and lifetime of milk fat. Daughter Valentina 373840175, Matadora 373840109, Piclenda 373880102 and Tigris 373880127 were lactured more than 4 lactations and had lifelong yield of over 25,000 kg, among the descendants of Russian bulls. Of the descendants of the domestic selection the daughters of the Abrykos 5806 lactated in an average of 6.2 lactation, and their lifetime yields were 38,401 kg. By the number of lactations per life and life-long yields of the daughters of the German bulls, the leader was Presbyter 27621490100, the American – Bob Hubby 2109267 and T. D. Fiasco 1709950, the Canadian – B. Goldgate 6387868 and B. Regensy 394223, the Netherlands – G. Tristan 3021652032 and Baneliai 243931215, Hungarian – E. Samba 3035115974 and P. Selvichar 3023006464. The controlled population of cows of Ukrainian Red-and-White dairy breed came from 69 bulls from five countries. More than 50% of cows of this breed are derived from bulls of German selection. However, the longest duration of productive use and the greatest lifelong yields had daughters of bulls from Canada and Ukrainian selection. Among the descendants of the domestic bulls, according to the indicators of lifetime productivity, the daughters of Khlor 2052 differ markedly. They lacted in average 7.7 lactations, and lifetime longevity was 41,000 kg. Among the descendants of Canadian bulls, the best of their productive use and their lifelong yields had daughters of V. Texel 393522, V.N.Dan 5510544 and Inhibitor 402151, German – Roman 660886883 and Tumpi 112367468, and American – Addikshn 17143107. The influence of the father's country origin on the longevity, productive use, lactation and the number of lactations per life, depending on the breed and the indicator, was within the range of 1.4–17.1, on the indicators of lifetime productivity – within 1.5–9.7%, and the influence of the father on these indicators was, respectively, 9.9–19.9 and 11.4–29.3%.
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Loetterle, Francis E., Richard A. Beck, and Jim Carlson. "Public Perception of Pavement-Marking Brightness." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 1715, no. 1 (January 2000): 51–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.3141/1715-08.

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The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) conducted research to establish a threshold value of retroreflectivity for use in its pavement-marking management program. Members of the general public were invited to drive MnDOT automobiles on a driving course of state and county roads. An interviewer rode along with each study participant asking questions about the brightness (or luminance) of pavement markings within predetermined sections of roadway. The interview was conducted after dark with the car’s headlights at low beam. For each section of roadway, study participants were asked to grade the visibility of the pavement markings; the edge line and the centerline were evaluated individually. The average scores received from all study participants for a specific section were compared with retroreflectivity data taken by MnDOT’s mobile retroreflectometer. Analysis of the data revealed an apparent correlation between the readings taken by the retroreflectometer and the rating scores provided by the study participants. This analysis also suggested that the threshold value of acceptable retroreflectivity versus unacceptable retroreflectivity was between 80 and 120 mcd/m2/lx when using the Laserlux® retroreflectometer. In its continuing effort to improve “customer service,” MnDOT has committed to providing durable pavement markings that are visible year-round and is purchasing equipment and training personnel to implement this program. As a result of the market research project, MnDOT will use 120 mcd/m2/lx as the threshold between acceptable retroreflectivity and unacceptable retroreflectivity when developing the new pavement-marking management program. The establishment of a threshold retroreflectivity value also will allow cost-benefit and life-cycle analyses of different pavement-marking materials and help MnDOT to grade itself on how well it is meeting customer expectations.
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de Carvalho, José Murilo. "The Unfinished Republic." Americas 48, no. 2 (October 1991): 139–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1006821.

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The celebration of the centennial of the Brazilian Republic (1889-1989) was marked by a few events of academic or civic nature and no enthusiasm whatsoever. It has been observed that the bicentennial of the French Revolution aroused more interest in the people of Brazil. The reasons for this are not difficult to understand. Two seem to have particular relevance. First, is the recent memory of a military regime (1964-1985) in the minds of the people. The proclamation of the Republic on 15 November 1889 is generally held to be the making of the Brazilian military; it would be somewhat embarrassing to celebrate the actions of yesterday's enemies.The second reason relates to the disappointment felt among the populace with the New Republic—the name given to the civilian government inaugurated in 1985. The New Republic rode in on the crest of huge mass demonstrations, the most impressive ever to take place in the country. These people called for the end of military rule and the direct election of a civilian president. In 1985 a civilian president took over, although not chosen by direct election, and a constituent assembly drafted a new constitution. Freedom of the press was restored and the people lived in great hope that a new era had finally dawned for the nation. Four years later, in 1989, a new constitution was in effect, and the fundamental precepts of a democratic system—the executive, the legislature, and the judiciary branches of government; a free press; multiple political parties; and a politicized populace—were all in place.
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Abdigapbarova, Zh. "Gender Issues in the Kazakh Literature of the Early 20th Century." Iasaýı ýnıversıtetіnіń habarshysy 126, no. 4 (December 15, 2022): 64–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.47526/2022-4/2664-0686.06.

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Women’s rights and fate have always been a significant issue. In the article, the author reviews the gender issues in human history and analyzes the literary theoretical and historical aspects of the problem of women in Kazakh society of the early 20th century with the help of Kazakh intellectuals’ works which were written to solve the problems of women, and literary works and journalistic articles of that time. The Kazakh people valued the role of women, therefore, paid a lot of attention on the upbringing, behavior of a girl and planned her general life. There were times when a Kazakh woman rode a horse, fought the enemy and ruled the country wisely. But over time, the issue of women in Kazakh society has become more complicated. At the beginning of the 20th century, Alash intellectuals, who understood the importance of gender issues in Kazakh society, wrote special articles and works of art to influence people’s consciousness. It was disseminated to the public through the media. The first novel in Kazakh literature was dedicated to the issue of women. Women’s civil rights and their place in society began to find a positive solution in the early 20th century with the intervention of Alash activists. In the research article we analyzed M. Dulatuly’s «Bakytsyz Zhamal» (Poor Zhamal), Zh. Aimauytov’s «Akbilek» novels, also M. Auezov, M. Zhumabayev, N. Kulzhanova’s journalistic articles. In this article, the author examines the origins of the struggle for women’s equality in the early 20th century, and the specific actions of Kazakh intellectuals to protect women’s civil rights. The study is based on historical data and literary and journalistic works. The results of the hard struggle is proven by the works written in that period.
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De Lorenzo, D. S., and M. L. Hull. "Quantification of Structural Loading During Off-Road Cycling." Journal of Biomechanical Engineering 121, no. 4 (August 1, 1999): 399–405. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.2798337.

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To provide data for fatigue life prediction and testing of structural components in off-road bicycles, the objective of the research described herein was to quantify the loads input to an off-road bicycle as a result of surface-induced loads. A fully instrumented test bicycle was equipped with dynamometers at the pedals, handlebars, and hubs to measure all in-plane structural loads acting through points of contact between the bicycle and both the rider and the ground. A portable data acquisition system carried by the standing rider allowed, for the first time, this loading information to be collected during extended off-road testing. In all, seven experienced riders rode a downhill trail test section with the test bicycle in both front-suspension and full-suspension configurations. The load histories were used quantitatively to describe the load components through the computation of means, standard deviations, amplitude probability density functions, and power spectral density functions. For the standing position, the coefficients of variation for the load components normal to the ground were greater than 1.2 for handlebar forces and 0.3 and 0.5–0.6 for the pedal and hub forces, respectively. Thus, the relative contribution of the dynamic loading was much greater than the static loading at the handlebars but less so at the pedals and hubs. As indicated by the rainflow count, high amplitude loading was developed approaching 3 and 5 times the weight of the test subjects at the front and rear wheels, respectively. The power spectral densities showed that energy was concentrated in the band 0–50 Hz. Through stress computations and knowledge of material properties, the data can be used analytically to predict the fatigue life of important structural components such as those for steering. The data can also be used to develop a fatigue testing protocol for verifying analytical predictions of fatigue life.
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Lakhera, Pankaj. "Ambedkar's Nationalism." RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary 7, no. 8 (August 17, 2022): 79–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.31305/rrijm.2022.v07.i08.012.

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The idea of nationalism is a modern idea which has its roots in modern European Renaissance. However, in a country like India, it emerged and developed during the anti-colonial struggle which marks a new beginning of social and political awakening. Generally, we identify Indian nationalism with the ideas of great freedom fighters like Gandhi, Nehru, Subhash, Patel and lokmanya tilak. These great leaders emphasized upon a particular brand of Indian nationalism that looks at Indian civilization as the greatest Civilization on earth. It ignores the operation and suppression of Dalits and other down roden sections of Indian society which has been going on in India for centuries. The dominant Indian nationalism is the based upon the ideas of Brahmanism, manuvad and Aryan racial superiority. It bypasses the nationalist perspectives of Dravidians, communist and the subalterns. It was doctor BR Ambedkar who gave a new definition of Indian nationalism. His nationalism stands for the salvation of Dalits and backward sections of Indian society. The present paper will analyse Ambedkar’s ideas on Indian nationalism and will differentiate it from other brands of nationalism prevailing in India for the last two centuries. Abstract in Hindi Language: राष्ट्रवाद का विचार एक आधुनिक विचार है जिसकी जड़ें आधुनिक यूरोपीय पुनर्जागरण में हैं। हालाँकि, भारत जैसे देश में, यह उपनिवेश विरोधी संघर्ष के दौरान उभरा और विकसित हुआ जो सामाजिक और राजनीतिक जागरण की एक नई शुरुआत का प्रतीक है। आम तौर पर, हम भारतीय राष्ट्रवाद की पहचान गांधी, नेहरू, सुभाष, पटेल और लोकमान्य तिलक जैसे महान स्वतंत्रता सेनानियों के विचारों से करते हैं। इन महान नेताओं ने भारतीय राष्ट्रवाद के एक विशेष प्रकार पर जोर दिया जो भारतीय सभ्यता को पृथ्वी पर सबसे बड़ी सभ्यता के रूप में देखता है। यह दलितों और भारतीय समाज के अन्य दबे कुचले वर्गों के संचालन और दमन की उपेक्षा करता है जो सदियों से भारत में चल रहा है। प्रमुख भारतीय राष्ट्रवाद ब्राह्मणवाद, मनुवाद और आर्य नस्लीय श्रेष्ठता के विचारों पर आधारित है। यह द्रविड़ों, कम्युनिस्टों और निम्नवर्गों के राष्ट्रवादी दृष्टिकोणों को पारित करता है। डॉक्टर बीआर अंबेडकर ही थे जिन्होंने भारतीय राष्ट्रवाद की नई परिभाषा दी। उनका राष्ट्रवाद भारतीय समाज के दलितों और पिछड़े वर्गों के उद्धार के लिए खड़ा है। वर्तमान पेपर भारतीय राष्ट्रवाद पर अम्बेडकर के विचारों का विश्लेषण करेगा और इसे पिछली दो शताब्दियों से भारत में प्रचलित राष्ट्रवाद के अन्य प्रकारों से अलग करेगा। Keywords: राष्ट्रवाद, अस्पृश्यता, जाति, दलित, ब्राह्मणवाद, मनुवाद, आर्य, द्रविड़, कम्युनिस्ट समर्थक
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39

Nasrulloh, Ahmad, and Burhaan Shodiq. "Pengaruh latihan beban dengan metode super set kombinasi diet OCD terhadap berat badan, presentase lemak dan kekuatan otot." Jorpres (Jurnal Olahraga Prestasi) 16, no. 2 (July 29, 2020): 54–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.21831/jorpres.v16i2.31613.

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Tujuan penelitian ini adalah untuk mengetahui pengaruh latihan beban dengan metode Superset kombinasi diet OCD (Obsessive Corbuzier's Diet) terhadap berat badan, presentase lemak dan kekuatan otot. Populasi dalam penelitian ini adalah members RODEO Fitness Center di Yogyakarta. Teknik pengambilan sampel dengan metode purposive sampling. Sampel dalam penelitian ini adalah members laki-laki aktif yang berjumlah 11 orang berusia 18-30 tahun. Instrumen yang digunakan dalam penelitian adalah omron carada scan fat body monitor, leg and back dynamometer dan handgrip dynamometer. Analisis data menggunakan analisis uji t (paired sample t test) pada taraf signifikasi 5 % dengan aplikasi SPSS ver 16. Pada penelitian kali ini members di beri perlakuan latihan berupa frekuensi: 3-5 kali/minggu, intensitas: 70 % 1RM, jumlah set: 3 set, repetisi: 15-20 kali pengulangan, istirahat antar set selama 20-30 detik, latihan ini dilaksanakan selama 24 kali pertemuan. Sedangkan diet OCD yang diberikan dalam penelitian ini adalah diet yang diciptakan oleh Dedi Corbuzier, yaitu diet yang menggunakan sistem jendela makan. Berdasarkan hasil penelitian bahwa terjadi penurunan berat badan yang signifikan dengan rerata 77,76 menjadi 76,17 dengan taraf signifikansi 0,000 artinya nilai p 0,05. Persentase lemak tubuh menunjukkan hasil rerata 22,43 menjadi 21,05 dengan nilai signifikansi 0,008 yaitu p 0,05. Kekuatan otot tangan menunjukkan hasil peningkatan yang dignifikan dengan nilai rerata 41,87 menjadi 44,99 nilai signifikansi 0,000, artinya p 0,05. Kekuatan otot punggung meunjukkan hasil rerata 197 menjadi 208,72 dengan nilai signifikansi 0,001, artinya p 0,05. Kekuatan otot tungkai penunjukkan berubahan rerata 162,08 menjadi 183,5 dengan tarf 0,020, artinya p 0,05. Hasil uji t pada latihan beban dengan metode super set kombinasi diet OCD diperoleh nilai-nilai t hitung t tabel, dan nilai p 0,05. Maka dapat disimpulkan bahwa ada pengaruh yang signifikan latihan beban metode dengan Superset set kombinasi diet OCD terhadap penurunan berat badan, penurunan persentase lemak, dan peningkatan kekuatan otot tangan, punggung dan tungkai. The effect of weight training with superset method combination the OCD diet toward body weight, fat percentage and muscle strength AbstractThe purpose of this research is to observe the effect of weight training with Superset method combination OCD (Obsessive Corbuzier's Diet) toward body weight, fat percentage and muscle strength. The population in this study was RODEO Fitness Center members in Yogyakarta. The sampling technique used purposive sampling method. The sample in this study were 11 active male members aged 18-30 years. The instruments used in this study were omron carada scan fat body monitor, leg and back dynamometer and handgrip dynamometer. Data analysis using paired sample t test analysis at the significance level of 5% by SPSS ver 16. n this study the members were given exercise treatment in the form of frequency: 3-5 times / week, intensity: 70% 1RM, number of sets: 3 sets, reps: 15-20 repetitions, rest between sets for 20-30 seconds, exercise this was held for 24 meetings. While the OCD diet given in this study is a diet created by Dedi Corbuzier, a diet that uses a window eating system. Based on the results of the study that there was a significant weight loss with an average of 77.76 to 76.17 with a significance level of 0.000 means that the value of p 0.05. The percentage of body fat showed an average result of 22.43 to 21.05 with a significance value of 0.008 ie p 0.05. Hand muscle strength showed a significant increase in the mean value of 41.87 to 44.99, with a significance value of 0.000, meaning that p 0.05. The strength of the back muscles shows the average results of 197 to 208.72 with a significance value of 0.001, meaning that p 0.05. The muscle strength of the appointment limb changed the mean 162.08 to 183.5 with a tarf of 0.020, meaning p 0.05. T test results in weight training with the super set combination OCD diet method obtained values of t count t table, and the value of p 0.05. This means that it can be concluded that there is a significant effect of weight training with the Superset set combination of the OCD diet on weight loss, fat percentage reduction, and increased muscle strength of the hands, back and legs.
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Christodoulou, Ilias, Michael Koldobskiy, Won Jin Ho, Andrew Marple, Wesley J. Ravich, Ruyan Rahnama, and Challice L. Bonifant. "Engineered Interleukin-15 Autocrine Signaling Invigorates Anti-CD123 CAR-NK Cells." Blood 138, Supplement 1 (November 5, 2021): 2806. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2021-146609.

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Abstract Introduction : Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is an aggressive neoplastic disorder with poor outcomes in children and adults. NK cell adoptive transfer is an anti-cancer immunotherapy that has promise for AML treatment. We aimed to improve NK cell anti-tumor efficacy with expression of a Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) on the cell surface. Our CAR consists of an extracellular single-chain variable fragment targeting the AML-associated antigen CD123 (IL3Rα) and intracellular domains derived from 2B4 and TCRζ. We sought to improve the persistence and long-term functionality of our CAR-NKs by introducing transgenic interleukin-15 (IL15). Methods: CD3-depleted PBMCs were first activated with lethally irradiated feeder cells, then transduced with transiently produced replication incompetent γ-retrovirus (αCD123.2B4.ζ, αCD123.2B4.ζ-IRES-sIL15, sIL15-IRES-mOrange) on day 4 of culture. CAR expression was measured on day 8 using FACS. Secretion of IL15 was verified with ELISA. Cytotoxicity was measured using ffLuc expressing target cells and bioluminescence (BL) measurement. In serial stimulation assays, target cells were repleted daily to maintain a 1:1 effector:target ratio. Immunophenotype and cell counts were assessed by FACS. Transcriptomic analysis (RNAseq) was performed on RNA derived from NK cells purified on D10. Xenograft modeling was performed using NSG mice engrafted with MV-4-11.ffLuc or MOLM-13.ffLuc AML cell lines. Mice were treated with NK cells on D4 or D4-7-10. Untreated mice served as controls. Tumor growth was serially tracked in vivo using BL imaging. NK cell persistence and expansion were measured in peripheral blood. Results: The 2B4.ζ CAR was well expressed on the surface of transduced NK cells (median transduction efficiency 95%, range 85-97%, n=3). 2B4.ζ CAR-NK treatment prolonged survival of AML engrafted mice when compared to treatment with unmodified NKs (median survival: 63 vs 55 days; n=8 mice; p=0.014). Serial peripheral blood analysis revealed a steady decline in circulating NK cells, which were undetectable in all cohorts within 21 days. NK cells were then engineered for constitutive secretion of IL15, with and without CAR expression. 2B4.ζ/sIL15 CAR-NKs had the most potent 24h-cytotoxicity against CD123+ targets (Fig. 1). After a 10-day chronic stimulation with MV-4-11, 2B4.ζ/sIL15- and sIL15-NKs expanded (x1.2 and x5.9 respectively), while NK cells without sIL15 decreased in number. In this assay, only 2B4.ζ/sIL15 CAR-NKs exhibited sustained tumor killing. Transcriptomic analysis after 10 days of serial stimulation showed sample clustering dependent on IL15 secretion. Differential gene expression analysis (DESeq2) identified upregulation of genes associated with cell cycle progression, apoptosis regulation, chemokine signaling, and NK cell mediated cytotoxicity in NK cells secreting IL15 compared to those without. In multiparameter flow cytometric analysis, 2B4.ζ/sIL15 CAR-NKs had a higher percentage of NK cells populating clusters defined by higher surface expression of NK cell activating receptors (NKp30, NKG2D, LFA-1) compared to 2B4.ζ and unmodified NK cells. In our MV-4-11 xenograft model, NKs armed with secreted IL15 expanded in vivo and had improved persistence. A single dose (D4) of 2B4.ζ/sIL15 CAR-NKs demonstrated an initial antitumor response, equivalent to that seen following 3 doses (D4-7-10) of 2B4.ζ CAR-NKs. However, mice treated with IL15-secreting NKs had short survival (Fig. 2). Compared to control mice, peripheral blood analysis showed increasing systemic hIL15 and higher levels of hTNFα. In our more aggressive MOLM-13 xenograft model, both single dose 2B4.ζ/sIL15 CAR-NK and multiple dose 2B4.ζ CAR-NK treatment prolonged survival compared to treatment with unmodified NKs. (27 and 26 vs 20 days; n=5 mice; p&lt;0.01; Fig. 2). Conclusion: 2B4.ζ CAR-NKs have limited antitumor efficacy and short persistence in vivo. NK cells armored with secreted IL15 have enhanced anti-AML cytotoxicity and in vitro persistence. Introduction of IL15 secretion confers a distinctly activated phenotype that is maintained during chronic antigen stimulation. Constitutive local IL15 secretion improves in vivo NK cell persistence but may cause lethal toxicity when employed against AML. These results warrant further study and should impact the development of CAR-NK clinical products for patients with AML. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Ho: Rodeo Therapeutics/Amgen: Patents & Royalties; Exelixis: Consultancy; Sanofi: Research Funding. Bonifant: Kiadis Pharma: Research Funding; BMS: Research Funding; Merck, Sharpe, Dohme: Research Funding.
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Kirkpatrick, Helen Beryl, Jennifer Brasch, Jacky Chan, and Shaminderjot Singh Kang. "A Narrative Web-Based Study of Reasons To Go On Living after a Suicide Attempt: Positive Impacts of the Mental Health System." Journal of Mental Health and Addiction Nursing 1, no. 1 (February 15, 2017): e3-e9. http://dx.doi.org/10.22374/jmhan.v1i1.10.

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Background and Objective: Suicide attempts are 10-20X more common than completed suicide and an important risk factor for death by suicide, yet most people who attempt suicide do not die by suicide. The process of recovering after a suicide attempt has not been well studied. The Reasons to go on Living (RTGOL) Project, a narrative web-based study, focuses on experiences of people who have attempted suicide and made the decision to go on living, a process not well studied. Narrative research is ideally suited to understanding personal experiences critical to recovery following a suicide attempt, including the transition to a state of hopefulness. Voices from people with lived experience can help us plan and conceptualize this work. This paper reports on a secondary research question of the larger study: what stories do participants tell of the positive role/impact of the mental health system. Material and Methods: A website created for The RTGOL Project (www.thereasons.ca) enabled participants to anonymously submit a story about their suicide attempt and recovery, a process which enabled participation from a large and diverse group of participants. The only direction given was “if you have made a suicide attempt or seriously considered suicide and now want to go on living, we want to hear from you.” The unstructured narrative format allowed participants to describe their experiences in their own words, to include and emphasize what they considered important. Over 5 years, data analysis occurred in several phases over the course of the study, resulting in the identification of data that were inputted into an Excel file. This analysis used stories where participants described positive involvement with the mental health system (50 stories). Results: Several participants reflected on experiences many years previous, providing the privilege of learning how their life unfolded, what made a difference. Over a five-year period, 50 of 226 stories identified positive experiences with mental health care with sufficient details to allow analysis, and are the focus of this paper. There were a range of suicidal behaviours in these 50 stories, from suicidal ideation only to medically severe suicide attempts. Most described one or more suicide attempts. Three themes identified included: 1) trust and relationship with a health care professional, 2) the role of friends and family and friends, and 3) a wide range of services. Conclusion: Stories open a window into the experiences of the period after a suicide attempt. This study allowed for an understanding of how mental health professionals might help individuals who have attempted suicide write a different story, a life-affirming story. The stories that participants shared offer some understanding of “how” to provide support at a most-needed critical juncture for people as they interact with health care providers, including immediately after a suicide attempt. Results of this study reinforce that just one caring professional can make a tremendous difference to a person who has survived a suicide attempt. Key Words: web-based; suicide; suicide attempt; mental health system; narrative research Word Count: 478 Introduction My Third (or fourth) Suicide AttemptI laid in the back of the ambulance, the snow of too many doses of ativan dissolving on my tongue.They hadn't even cared enough about meto put someone in the back with me,and so, frustrated,I'd swallowed all the pills I had with me— not enough to do what I wanted it to right then,but more than enough to knock me out for a good 14 hours.I remember very little after that;benzodiazepines like ativan commonly cause pre- and post-amnesia, says Google helpfullyI wake up in a locked rooma woman manically drawing on the windows with crayonsthe colors of light through the glassdiffused into rainbows of joy scattered about the roomas if she were coloring on us all,all of the tattered remnants of humanity in a psych wardmade into a brittle mosaic, a quilt of many hues, a Technicolor dreamcoatand I thoughtI am so glad to be able to see this. (Story 187)The nurse opening that door will have a lasting impact on how this story unfolds and on this person’s life. Each year, almost one million people die from suicide, approximately one death every 40 seconds. Suicide attempts are much more frequent, with up to an estimated 20 attempts for every death by suicide.1 Suicide-related behaviours range from suicidal ideation and self-injury to death by suicide. We are unable to directly study those who die by suicide, but effective intervention after a suicide attempt could reduce the risk of subsequent death by suicide. Near-fatal suicide attempts have been used to explore the boundary with completed suicides. Findings indicated that violent suicide attempters and serious attempters (seriousness of the medical consequences to define near-fatal attempts) were more likely to make repeated, and higher lethality suicide attempts.2 In a case-control study, the medically severe suicide attempts group (78 participants), epidemiologically very similar to those who complete suicide, had significantly higher communication difficulties; the risk for death by suicide multiplied if accompanied by feelings of isolation and alienation.3 Most research in suicidology has been quantitative, focusing almost exclusively on identifying factors that may be predictive of suicidal behaviours, and on explanation rather than understanding.4 Qualitative research, focusing on the lived experiences of individuals who have attempted suicide, may provide a better understanding of how to respond in empathic and helpful ways to prevent future attempts and death by suicide.4,5 Fitzpatrick6 advocates for narrative research as a valuable qualitative method in suicide research, enabling people to construct and make sense of the experiences and their world, and imbue it with meaning. A review of qualitative studies examining the experiences of recovering from or living with suicidal ideation identified 5 interconnected themes: suffering, struggle, connection, turning points, and coping.7 Several additional qualitative studies about attempted suicide have been reported in the literature. Participants have included patients hospitalized for attempting suicide8, and/or suicidal ideation,9 out-patients following a suicide attempt and their caregivers,10 veterans with serious mental illness and at least one hospitalization for a suicide attempt or imminent suicide plan.11 Relationships were a consistent theme in these studies. Interpersonal relationships and an empathic environment were perceived as therapeutic and protective, enabling the expression of thoughts and self-understanding.8 Given the connection to relationship issues, the authors suggested it may be helpful to provide support for the relatives of patients who have attempted suicide. A sheltered, friendly environment and support systems, which included caring by family and friends, and treatment by mental health professionals, helped the suicidal healing process.10 Receiving empathic care led to positive changes and an increased level of insight; just one caring professional could make a tremendous difference.11 Kraft and colleagues9 concluded with the importance of hearing directly from those who are suicidal in order to help them, that only when we understand, “why suicide”, can we help with an alternative, “why life?” In a grounded theory study about help-seeking for self-injury, Long and colleagues12 identified that self-injury was not the problem for their participants, but a panacea, even if temporary, to painful life experiences. Participant narratives reflected a complex journey for those who self-injured: their wish when help-seeking was identified by the theme “to be treated like a person”. There has also been a focus on the role and potential impact of psychiatric/mental health nursing. Through interviews with experienced in-patient nurses, Carlen and Bengtsson13 identified the need to see suicidal patients as subjective human beings with unique experiences. This mirrors research with patients, which concluded that the interaction with personnel who are devoted, hope-mediating and committed may be crucial to a patient’s desire to continue living.14 Interviews with individuals who received mental health care for a suicidal crisis following a serious attempt led to the development of a theory for psychiatric nurses with the central variable, reconnecting the person with humanity across 3 phases: reflecting an image of humanity, guiding the individual back to humanity, and learning to live.15 Other research has identified important roles for nurses working with patients who have attempted suicide by enabling the expression of thoughts and developing self-understanding8, helping to see things differently and reconnecting with others,10 assisting the person in finding meaning from their experience to turn their lives around, and maintain/and develop positive connections with others.16 However, one literature review identified that negative attitudes toward self-harm were common among nurses, with more positive attitudes among mental health nurses than general nurses. The authors concluded that education, both reflective and interactive, could have a positive impact.17 This paper is one part of a larger web-based narrative study, the Reasons to go on Living Project (RTGOL), that seeks to understand the transition from making a suicide attempt to choosing life. When invited to tell their stories anonymously online, what information would people share about their suicide attempts? This paper reports on a secondary research question of the larger study: what stories do participants tell of the positive role/impact of the mental health system. The focus on the positive impact reflects an appreciative inquiry approach which can promote better practice.18 Methods Design and Sample A website created for The RTGOL Project (www.thereasons.ca) enabled participants to anonymously submit a story about their suicide attempt and recovery. Participants were required to read and agree with a consent form before being able to submit their story through a text box or by uploading a file. No demographic information was requested. Text submissions were embedded into an email and sent to an account created for the Project without collecting information about the IP address or other identifying information. The content of the website was reviewed by legal counsel before posting, and the study was approved by the local Research Ethics Board. Stories were collected for 5 years (July 2008-June 2013). The RTGOL Project enabled participation by a large, diverse audience, at their own convenience of time and location, providing they had computer access. The unstructured narrative format allowed participants to describe their experiences in their own words, to include and emphasize what they considered important. Of the 226 submissions to the website, 112 described involvement at some level with the mental health system, and 50 provided sufficient detail about positive experiences with mental health care to permit analysis. There were a range of suicidal behaviours in these 50 stories: 8 described suicidal ideation only; 9 met the criteria of medically severe suicide attempts3; 33 described one or more suicide attempts. For most participants, the last attempt had been some years in the past, even decades, prior to writing. Results Stories of positive experiences with mental health care described the idea of a door opening, a turning point, or helping the person to see their situation differently. Themes identified were: (1) relationship and trust with a Health Care Professional (HCP), (2) the role of family and friends (limited to in-hospital experiences), and (3) the opportunity to access a range of services. The many reflective submissions of experiences told many years after the suicide attempt(s) speaks to the lasting impact of the experience for that individual. Trust and Relationship with a Health Care Professional A trusting relationship with a health professional helped participants to see things in a different way, a more hopeful way and over time. “In that time of crisis, she never talked down to me, kept her promises, didn't panic, didn't give up, and she kept believing in me. I guess I essentially borrowed the hope that she had for me until I found hope for myself.” (Story# 35) My doctor has worked extensively with me. I now realize that this is what will keep me alive. To be able to feel in my heart that my doctor does care about me and truly wants to see me get better.” (Story 34). The writer in Story 150 was a nurse, an honours graduate. The 20 years following graduation included depression, hospitalizations and many suicide attempts. “One day after supper I took an entire bottle of prescription pills, then rode away on my bike. They found me late that night unconscious in a downtown park. My heart threatened to stop in the ICU.” Then later, “I finally found a person who was able to connect with me and help me climb out of the pit I was in. I asked her if anyone as sick as me could get better, and she said, “Yes”, she had seen it happen. Those were the words I had been waiting to hear! I quickly became very motivated to get better. I felt heard and like I had just found a big sister, a guide to help me figure out how to live in the world. This person was a nurse who worked as a trauma therapist.” At the time when the story was submitted, the writer was applying to a graduate program. Role of Family and Friends Several participants described being affected by their family’s response to their suicide attempt. Realizing the impact on their family and friends was, for some, a turning point. The writer in Story 20 told of experiences more than 30 years prior to the writing. She described her family of origin as “truly dysfunctional,” and she suffered from episodes of depression and hospitalization during her teen years. Following the birth of her second child, and many family difficulties, “It was at this point that I became suicidal.” She made a decision to kill herself by jumping off the balcony (6 stories). “At the very last second as I hung onto the railing of the balcony. I did not want to die but it was too late. I landed on the parking lot pavement.” She wrote that the pain was indescribable, due to many broken bones. “The physical pain can be unbearable. Then you get to see the pain and horror in the eyes of someone you love and who loves you. Many people suggested to my husband that he should leave me in the hospital, go on with life and forget about me. During the process of recovery in the hospital, my husband was with me every day…With the help of psychiatrists and a later hospitalization, I was actually diagnosed as bipolar…Since 1983, I have been taking lithium and have never had a recurrence of suicidal thoughts or for that matter any kind of depression.” The writer in Story 62 suffered childhood sexual abuse. When she came forward with it, she felt she was not heard. Self-harm on a regular basis was followed by “numerous overdoses trying to end my life.” Overdoses led to psychiatric hospitalizations that were unhelpful because she was unable to trust staff. “My way of thinking was that ending my life was the only answer. There had been numerous attempts, too many to count. My thoughts were that if I wasn’t alive I wouldn’t have to deal with my problems.” In her final attempt, she plunged over the side of a mountain, dropping 80 feet, resulting in several serious injuries. “I was so angry that I was still alive.” However, “During my hospitalization I began to realize that my family and friends were there by my side continuously, I began to realize that I wasn't only hurting myself. I was hurting all the important people in my life. It was then that I told myself I am going to do whatever it takes.” A turning point is not to say that the difficulties did not continue. The writer of Story 171 tells of a suicide attempt 7 years previous, and the ongoing anguish. She had been depressed for years and had thoughts of suicide on a daily basis. After a serious overdose, she woke up the next day in a hospital bed, her husband and 2 daughters at her bed. “Honestly, I was disappointed to wake up. But, then I saw how scared and hurt they were. Then I was sorry for what I had done to them. Since then I have thought of suicide but know that it is tragic for the family and is a hurt that can never be undone. Today I live with the thought that I am here for a reason and when it is God's time to take me then I will go. I do believe living is harder than dying. I do believe I was born for a purpose and when that is accomplished I will be released. …Until then I try to remind myself of how I am blessed and try to appreciate the wonders of the world and the people in it.” Range of Services The important role of mental health and recovery services was frequently mentioned, including dialectical behavioural therapy (DBT)/cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), recovery group, group therapy, Alcoholics Anonymous, accurate diagnosis, and medications. The writer in Story 30 was 83 years old when she submitted her story, reflecting on a life with both good and bad times. She first attempted suicide at age 10 or 12. A serious post-partum depression followed the birth of her second child, and over the years, she experienced periods of suicidal intent: “Consequently, a few years passed and I got to feeling suicidal again. I had pills in one pocket and a clipping for “The Recovery Group” in the other pocket. As I rode on the bus trying to make up my mind, I decided to go to the Recovery Group first. I could always take the pills later. I found the Recovery Group and yoga helpful; going to meetings sometimes twice a day until I got thinking more clearly and learned how to deal with my problems.” Several participants described the value of CBT or DBT in learning to challenge perceptions. “I have tools now to differentiate myself from the illness. I learned I'm not a bad person but bad things did happen to me and I survived.”(Story 3) “The fact is that we have thoughts that are helpful and thoughts that are destructive….. I knew it was up to me if I was to get better once and for all.” (Story 32): “In the hospital I was introduced to DBT. I saw a nurse (Tanya) every day and attended a group session twice a week, learning the techniques. I worked with the people who wanted to work with me this time. Tanya said the same thing my counselor did “there is no study that can prove whether or not suicide solves problems” and I felt as though I understood it then. If I am dead, then all the people that I kept pushing away and refusing their help would be devastated. If I killed myself with my own hand, my family would be so upset. DBT taught me how to ‘ride my emotional wave’. ……….. DBT has changed my life…….. My life is getting back in order now, thanks to DBT, and I have lots of reasons to go on living.”(Story 19) The writer of Story 67 described the importance of group therapy. “Group therapy was the most helpful for me. It gave me something besides myself to focus on. Empathy is such a powerful emotion and a pathway to love. And it was a huge relief to hear others felt the same and had developed tools of their own that I could try for myself! I think I needed to learn to communicate and recognize when I was piling everything up to build my despair. I don’t think I have found the best ways yet, but I am lifetimes away from that teenage girl.” (Story 67) The author of story 212 reflected on suicidal ideation beginning over 20 years earlier, at age 13. Her first attempt was at 28. “I thought everyone would be better off without me, especially my children, I felt like the worst mum ever, I felt like a burden to my family and I felt like I was a failure at life in general.” She had more suicide attempts, experienced the death of her father by suicide, and then finally found her doctor. “Now I’m on meds for a mood disorder and depression, my family watch me closely, and I see my doctor regularly. For the first time in 20 years, I love being a mum, a sister, a daughter, a friend, a cousin etc.” Discussion The 50 stories that describe positive experiences in the health care system constitute a larger group than most other similar studies, and most participants had made one or more suicide attempts. Several writers reflected back many years, telling stories of long ago, as with the 83-year old participant (Story 30) whose story provided the privilege of learning how the author’s life unfolded. In clinical practice, we often do not know – how did the story turn out? The stories that describe receiving health care speak to the impact of the experience, and the importance of the issues identified in the mental health system. We identified 3 themes, but it was often the combination that participants described in their stories that was powerful, as demonstrated in Story 20, the young new mother who had fallen from a balcony 30 years earlier. Voices from people with lived experience can help us plan and conceptualize our clinical work. Results are consistent with, and add to, the previous work on the importance of therapeutic relationships.8,10,11,14–16 It is from the stories in this study that we come to understand the powerful experience of seeing a family members’ reaction following a participant’s suicide attempt, and how that can be a potent turning point as identified by Lakeman and Fitzgerald.7 Ghio and colleagues8 and Lakeman16 identified the important role for staff/nurses in supporting families due to the connection to relationship issues. This research also calls for support for families to recognize the important role they have in helping the person understand how much they mean to them, and to promote the potential impact of a turning point. The importance of the range of services reflect Lakeman and Fitzgerald’s7 theme of coping, associating positive change by increasing the repertoire of coping strategies. These findings have implications for practice, research and education. Working with individuals who are suicidal can help them develop and tell a different story, help them move from a death-oriented to life-oriented position,15 from “why suicide” to “why life.”9 Hospitalization provides a person with the opportunity to reflect, to take time away from “the real world” to consider oneself, the suicide attempt, connections with family and friends and life goals, and to recover physically and emotionally. Hospitalization is also an opening to involve the family in the recovery process. The intensity of the immediate period following a suicide attempt provides a unique opportunity for nurses to support and coach families, to help both patients and family begin to see things differently and begin to create that different story. In this way, family and friends can be both a support to the person who has attempted suicide, and receive help in their own struggles with this experience. It is also important to recognize that this short period of opportunity is not specific to the nurses in psychiatric units, as the nurses caring for a person after a medically severe suicide attempt will frequently be the nurses in the ICU or Emergency departments. Education, both reflective and interactive, could have a positive impact.17 Helping staff develop the attitudes, skills and approach necessary to be helpful to a person post-suicide attempt is beginning to be reported in the literature.21 Further implications relate to nursing curriculum. Given the extent of suicidal ideation, suicide attempts and deaths by suicide, this merits an important focus. This could include specific scenarios, readings by people affected by suicide, both patients themselves and their families or survivors, and discussions with individuals who have made an attempt(s) and made a decision to go on living. All of this is, of course, not specific to nursing. All members of the interprofessional health care team can support the transition to recovery of a person after a suicide attempt using the strategies suggested in this paper, in addition to other evidence-based interventions and treatments. Findings from this study need to be considered in light of some specific limitations. First, the focus was on those who have made a decision to go on living, and we have only the information the participants included in their stories. No follow-up questions were possible. The nature of the research design meant that participants required access to a computer with Internet and the ability to communicate in English. This study does not provide a comprehensive view of in-patient care. However, it offers important inputs to enhance other aspects of care, such as assessing safety as a critical foundation to care. We consider these limitations were more than balanced by the richness of the many stories that a totally anonymous process allowed. Conclusion Stories open a window into the experiences of a person during the period after a suicide attempt. The RTGOL Project allowed for an understanding of how we might help suicidal individuals change the script, write a different story. The stories that participants shared give us some understanding of “how” to provide support at a most-needed critical juncture for people as they interact with health care providers immediately after a suicide attempt. While we cannot know the experiences of those who did not survive a suicide attempt, results of this study reinforce that just one caring professional can make a crucial difference to a person who has survived a suicide attempt. We end with where we began. Who will open the door? References 1. World Health Organization. Suicide prevention and special programmes. http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/suicide/suicideprevent/en/index.html Geneva: Author; 2013.2. Giner L, Jaussent I, Olie E, et al. Violent and serious suicide attempters: One step closer to suicide? J Clin Psychiatry 2014:73(3):3191–197.3. Levi-Belz Y, Gvion Y, Horesh N, et al. Mental pain, communication difficulties, and medically serious suicide attempts: A case-control study. Arch Suicide Res 2014:18:74–87.4. Hjelmeland H and Knizek BL. Why we need qualitative research in suicidology? Suicide Life Threat Behav 2010:40(1):74–80.5. Gunnell D. A population health perspective on suicide research and prevention: What we know, what we need to know, and policy priorities. Crisis 2015:36(3):155–60.6. Fitzpatrick S. Looking beyond the qualitative and quantitative divide: Narrative, ethics and representation in suicidology. Suicidol Online 2011:2:29–37.7. Lakeman R and FitzGerald M. How people live with or get over being suicidal: A review of qualitative studies. J Adv Nurs 2008:64(2):114–26.8. Ghio L, Zanelli E, Gotelli S, et al. Involving patients who attempt suicide in suicide prevention: A focus group study. J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs 2011:18:510–18.9. Kraft TL, Jobes DA, Lineberry TW., Conrad, A., & Kung, S. Brief report: Why suicide? Perceptions of suicidal inpatients and reflections of clinical researchers. Arch Suicide Res 2010:14(4):375-382.10. Sun F, Long A, Tsao L, et al. The healing process following a suicide attempt: Context and intervening conditions. Arch Psychiatr Nurs 2014:28:66–61.11. Montross Thomas L, Palinkas L, et al. Yearning to be heard: What veterans teach us about suicide risk and effective interventions. Crisis 2014:35(3):161–67.12. Long M, Manktelow R, and Tracey A. The healing journey: Help seeking for self-injury among a community population. Qual Health Res 2015:25(7):932–44.13. Carlen P and Bengtsson A. Suicidal patients as experienced by psychiatric nurses in inpatient care. Int J Ment Health Nurs 2007:16:257–65.14. Samuelsson M, Wiklander M, Asberg M, et al. Psychiatric care as seen by the attempted suicide patient. J Adv Nurs 2000:32(3):635–43.15. Cutcliffe JR, Stevenson C, Jackson S, et al. A modified grounded theory study of how psychiatric nurses work with suicidal people. Int J Nurs Studies 2006:43(7):791–802.16. Lakeman, R. What can qualitative research tell us about helping a person who is suicidal? Nurs Times 2010:106(33):23–26.17. Karman P, Kool N, Poslawsky I, et al. Nurses’ attitudes toward self-harm: a literature review. J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs 2015:22:65–75.18. Carter B. ‘One expertise among many’ – working appreciatively to make miracles instead of finding problems: Using appreciative inquiry as a way of reframing research. J Res Nurs 2006:11(1): 48–63.19. Lieblich A, Tuval-Mashiach R, Zilber T. Narrative research: Reading, analysis, and interpretation. Sage Publications; 1998.20. Braun V and Clarke V. Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual Res Psychol 2006:3(2):77–101.21. Kishi Y, Otsuka K, Akiyama K, et al. Effects of a training workshop on suicide prevention among emergency room nurses. Crisis 2014:35(5):357–61.
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Fernandes, Ana Margarida, Hiau Looi Kee, and Deborah Winkler. "Determinants of Global Value Chain Participation: Cross-Country Evidence." World Bank Economic Review, August 30, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhab017.

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Abstract The past decades have witnessed big changes in international trade with the rise of global value chains (GVCs). Some countries, such as China, Poland, and Vietnam rode the tide, while other countries, many in the Africa region, faltered. This paper studies the determinants of countries’ GVC participation, based on a panel database of more than 100 countries from 1990 to 2015. Results from a three-pronged empirical approach show that factor endowments, geography, political stability, liberal trade policies, foreign direct investment and domestic industrial capacity are very important in determining GVC participation. These factors matter more for GVC trade than traditional trade.
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43

Camino‐Mogro, Segundo, and Natalia Bermudez‐Barrezueta. "Productivity determinants in the construction sector in emerging country: New evidence from Ecuadorian firms." Review of Development Economics, March 16, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12771.

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44

Lohmann, Rebecca, and Lisa Hoffmann. "Material and nonmaterial impacts of the COVID‐19 pandemic: Evidence from a low‐income country." Review of Development Economics, June 19, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.13021.

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45

Güven, Gökhan, and Selim İnançlı. "Open‐access renewable resources and pollution: Trade and policy implications in a two‐country model." Review of Development Economics, May 15, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.13001.

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46

Baydag, R. Melis, and Stephan Klingebiel. "Partner country selection between development narratives and self‐interests: A new method for analysing complex donor approaches." Review of Development Economics, October 27, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.12954.

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47

W. W. Wornardt. "Diatom Biostratigraphy from Dolomites in Monterey Formation, Rodeo Canyon to Point Pedernales, Southwestern Santa Barbara County, California: ABSTRACT." AAPG Bulletin 70 (1986). http://dx.doi.org/10.1306/9488592b-1704-11d7-8645000102c1865d.

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48

Pritchett, Lant. "“Rely (only) on the rigorous evidence” is bad advice." Review of Development Economics, August 2, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.13037.

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AbstractA popular interpretation of “evidence‐based” decision‐making is “rely (only) on the rigorous evidence” (RORE) via “systematic” reviews that: use objective protocols to generating the potentially relevant papers from the literature; then filter those to retain only the small subset that provide impact estimates regarded as “rigorous”; and summarize only those estimates. I use two sets of cross‐country impact estimates—on wage gains for migrants and private school learning gains—to illustrate this seemingly attractive approach is both empirically and conceptually unsound. First, the cross‐country variation in the rigorous estimates of impact is very large, which implies the average(s) from a systematic review is of little predictive use. In both empirical examples the “systematic review of the rigorous estimates” approach leads to worse predictions of impact across countries than the naïve use of country‐specific ordinary least squares estimates. Second, I contrast a systematic review—RORE approach with an “understanding” approach—which seeks to encompass all of the available evidence into coherent understandings in forming judgments. In both examples the notion that the impact effects are constant across countries—“external validity”—is easily rejected. Insisting on privileged reliance on “rigorous” estimates in making context‐specific decisions is logically incoherent and deeply anti‐scientific.
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49

Peña Rey, Ferney Oswaldo, Javier Eduardo Becerra Becerra, Angie Cristina Culma Pirabán, and Faindry Julieth Rojas Farfán. "Influence of crushed stone aggregates from the rodeb distribution center in the mechanical properties of the concretes employed for the construction of the Tocancipá free trade zone." Ingeniería Solidaria 16, no. 2 (May 12, 2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.16925/2357-6014.2020.02.05.

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Introduction: This article is a product of the research “The influence of stone aggregates of the Rodeb distribution center on the mechanical properties of the concrete used for the construction of the free trade zone of Tocancipa”, developed at the University Santo Tomas and carried out during 2017. Methodology: The use of crushed stone aggregates without quality standards, those that guarantee the resistance of commercial concrete, is a problem in the country; with the understanding that the physical properties of stone aggregates affect the physical properties of fresh concrete and hardening strength. In this study, crushed stone aggregates of a “Rodeb” collection center in Tocancipa, used for the construction of its Free Trade Zone and of technically supported aggregate types in the capital city, will be physically characterized to measure the mechanical variation in concrete of 21 and 28 MPa. Results: It was found that the “Rodeb collection” aggregates comply with the physical parameters that achieve the expected design resistance and to a greater degree than the results obtained by the certified quality aggregates. Conclusion: This project seeks to raise awareness about the variability in the physical and mechanical properties of concrete, according to the characterization of the crushed stone aggregates used. Originality: It seeks to implement a mix design in the Rodeb collection for its aggregates. Limitations: To continue with the investigation, it is necessary to carry out additional tests of physical-chemical characterization to better understand how the texture and shape of aggregates can influence the mechanic properties of concrete. Additionally, it is important to disseminate the results in the Tocancipa community.
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50

Rochina Barrachina, María Engracia, and Jorge Antonio Rodríguez Moreno. "A possible mechanism for partial crowding‐out of R&D subsidies in developing countries." Review of Development Economics, August 3, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/rode.13038.

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AbstractWe analyze the effectiveness of R&D subsidies on firms' R&D efforts in a developing country like Ecuador. We use the National Survey of Innovation Activities. Methodologically, we employ a structural framework that considers simultaneity and selection issues. Our results indicate that subsidies have an extensive margin effect, as they encourage firms to carry out R&D activities, and an intensive margin effect, as they increase firms' total innovation effort. However, this is compatible with partial crowding‐out of private efforts by public funds. One possible mechanism to explain this result is that, in developing countries with less developed capital markets, firms with financial constraints may divert part of the subsidy to invest in fixed capital. We find some support for this hypothesis, as the most financially constrained firms both explain the crowding‐out effect and increase their fixed capital investment when receiving a subsidy. For other firms, we observe crowding‐in, and their fixed capital investment remains insensitive to the subsidy.
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