Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Newcastle Unitarian Tract Society »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Newcastle Unitarian Tract Society"

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Easterbrook, Bethany, John-Paul Capolicchio et Luis H. Braga. « Antibiotic prophylaxis for prevention of urinary tract infections in prenatal hydronephrosis : An updated systematic review ». Canadian Urological Association Journal 11, no 1-2S (16 février 2017) : 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.4384.

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Introduction: While continuous antibiotic prophylaxis (CAP) is currently recommended to prevent urinary tract infections (UTIs) in infants with prenatal hydronephrosis (HN), this recommendation is not evidence-based. The objective of this study was to systematically determine whether CAP reduces UTIs in the HN population.Methods: Applicable trials were identified through an electronic search of MEDLINE (1946‒2015), EMBASE (1980‒2016), CINAHL (1982‒2016), and CENTRAL (1993‒2016) and through a hand search of American Urological Association (AUA) (2012‒2015) and European Society for Pediatric Urology (ESPU) (2012‒2015) abstracts, as well as reference lists of included trials. The search strategy was not limited by language or year of publication. Eligible studies compared CAP to no CAP in patients with antenatal HN, <2 years of age, and reported development of UTI and HN grades. Two independent reviewers performed title and abstract screening, full-text review, and quality appraisal.Results: Of 1518 citations screened, 11 were included, contributing 3909 patients for final analysis. Of these, four (36%) were considered high-quality when assessed by the Newcastle Ottawa Scale. Meta-analysis of the non-randomized trials (n=10) provided similar pooled UTI rates, regardless of CAP use: 9.9% (95% confidence interval [CI] 8.4‒11.4%) for CAP and 7.5% (95% CI 6.4‒8.6%)for no CAP.Conclusions: This systematic review and meta-analysis suggests there may be value in providing CAP to infants with high-grade HN; however, due to the very low-quality data from non-randomized studies, important clinical variables, such as circumcision status, were unable to be assessed.
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Zeng, Liping, Hua Cai, Aling Qiu, Dongfu Zhang, Lingying Lin, Xirong Lian et Manli Chen. « Risk factors for rehospitalization within 90 days in patients with total joint replacement : A meta-analysis ». Medicine 102, no 45 (10 novembre 2023) : e35743. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000035743.

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Background: The risk factors influencing the readmission within 90 days following total joint replacement (TJR) are complex and heterogeneous, and few systematic reviews to date have focused on this issue. Methods: Web of Science, Embase, PubMed, and Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure databases were searched from the inception dates to December 2022. Relevant, published studies were identified using the following keywords: risk factors, rehospitalization, total hip replacement, total knee replacement, total shoulder replacement, and total joint replacement. All relevant data were collected from the studies that meet the inclusion criteria. The methodological quality of the studies was assessed using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale (NOS). Results: Of 68,336 patients who underwent TJR, 1,269,415 (5.4%) were readmitted within 90 days. High American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) class (OR, 1.502; 95%CI:1.405–1.605; P < .001), heart failure (OR,1.494; 95%CI: 1.235–1.754; P < .001), diabetes (OR, 1.246; 95%CI:1.128–1.377; P < .001), liver disease (OR, 1.339; 95%CI:1.237–1.450; P < .001), drinking (OR, 1.114; 95%CI:1.041–1.192; P = .002), depression (OR, 1.294; 95%CI:1.223–1.396; P < .001), urinary tract infection (OR, 5.879; 95%CI: 5.119–6.753; P < .001), and deep vein thrombosis (OR, 10.007; 95%CI: 8.787–11.396; P < .001) showed statistically positive correlation with increased 90-day readmissions after TJR, but high blood pressure, smoking, and pneumonia had no significant association with readmission risk. Conclusion: The findings of this review and meta-analysis will aid clinicians as they seek to understand the risk factors for 90-day readmission following TJR. Clinicians should consider the identified key risk factors associated with unplanned readmissions and develop strategies to risk-stratify patients and provide dedicated interventions to reduce the rates of readmission and enhance the recovery process.
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Livres sur le sujet "Newcastle Unitarian Tract Society"

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Rivers, Isabel. Religious Societies for Distributing Books. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198269960.003.0003.

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This chapter traces the beginning and development of tract publication and distribution from the later seventeenth through to the early nineteenth centuries, with accounts in chronological order of the aims, methods, membership, and publications of six societies: the Welsh Trust, an early example of nonconformists and conformists cooperating; the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, a Church of England society, the largest and most long-lasting of those analysed; the interdenominational and evangelical Society for Promoting Religious Knowledge among the Poor; John Wesley’s Society for Distributing Religious Tracts among the Poor; the Unitarian Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge; and the Religious Tract Society.
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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Newcastle Unitarian Tract Society"

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Long, Kathryn Teresa. « ‘‘Where is the evidence of your revival of religion?” Critiques of the Revival’s Social Impact ». Dans The Revival of 1857-58, 110–26. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195112931.003.0007.

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Abstract As Suggested In The introduction to chapter 5, the most important sustained critique of the newly “spiritualized” public theology associated with the 1857-58 Revival came from two groups of disaffected New Englanders: non evangelical abolitionists and evangelical antislavery radicals.1 Abolitionists had long condemned as unchristian the timid attitude of many northern Protestants toward slavery, and the prohibition of prayers concerning slavery from the union meetings under the “no controversy” policy did nothing to change their opinion. The radical evangelicals were less willing to reject the revival outright, but they opposed its abdication of moral responsibility. In particular, they viewed the retrenchment of the American Tract Society after bitter debates throughout the spring of 18 58 as proof that revival piety did little to transform “worldly prudence.” The arguments of each group of critics, articulated most effectively by Unitarian Theodore Parker and Congregationalist George B. Cheever, reflected the moral absolutism of the New England tradition and a continuing allegiance to the goal of community moral reform.
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Milton, Frederick S. « The Children’s Press ». Dans The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, Volume 2, 655–80. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424882.003.0045.

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In the first quarter of the nineteenth century, just a handful of children’s press titles were circulating, with the didactic and evangelical output of the Sunday Schools and Religious Tract Society dominating. From 1866 to 1914, more than 500 children’s periodicals came into circulation, featuring well over 80 newspaper ‘children’s columns’, as publishers sought to produce reading that increasingly reflected the common pursuits of the widest range of juveniles. This piece undertakes a chronological account of the periodical growth in children’s literature over the course of the century, including the development of the boy’s papers from the 1850s onwards, and moves by publishers to broaden appeal by producing unisex publications such as Cassell’s Little Folks. The second half of the nineteenth century saw development of ‘house’ periodicals of campaigning movements, such as the RSPCA’s Band of Mercy. From the mid-century, newspapers began featuring children’s columns written for children, with purpose of educating young readers, organising charitable work and acting as a forum for carrying epitaphs for child readers. Such themes are examined through the lens of the most successful children’s column, the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle’s Dicky Bird Society, which began in 1876.
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« for the Propagation of the Gospel and local associations for promoting dis-ciplined spirituality. Methodist co-option of the form built a bridge to evangelicalism. In Britain the Baptist (1792), London (1795), and Church (1799) Missionary Societies, the Religious Tract Society (1799) and, supremely, the British and Foreign Bible Society (1804) offered Americans well-publicized examples for how rapidly, how effectively and with what reach lay-influenced societies could mobilize to address specific religious and social needs. A few small-scale voluntary societies had been formed in America before the turn of the nineteenth century, but it was only after about 1810 that voluntary societies – as self-created vehicles for preaching the Christian message, distributing Christian literature and bringing scattered Christian exertions together – fuelled the dramatic spread of evangelical religion in America. Many of the new societies were formed within denominations and a few were organized outside the boundaries of evangelicalism, like the American Unitarian Association of 1825. But the most important ones were organized by interdenominational teams of evangelicals for evangelical pur-poses. Charles Foster’s helpful (but admittedly incomplete) compilation of 159 American societies from this era finds 24 founded between 1801 and 1812, and another 32 between 1813 and 1816, with an astounding 15 in 1814 alone. After a short pause caused by the Bank Panic of 1819, the pace of for-mation picked up once again through the 1820s. The best funded and most ». Dans The Rise of the Laity in Evangelical Protestantism, 158–59. Routledge, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203166505-76.

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