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1

Germain-McCarthy, Yvelyne. "The Decorative Ornamental Ironwork of New Orleans: Connections to Geometry and Haiti". Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 4, nr 7 (kwiecień 1999): 430–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mtms.4.7.0430.

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Think about new orleans. images of the wrought-iron balconies and doors of the French Quarter probably come to mind. Wrought iron was first brought to New Orleans from Spain in 1790. During the next twenty years, a number of free, mixed-race Haitians fled the Haitian slave revolts and entered the southern ports of Savannah, Charleston, and New Orleans. The Haitian refugees who came to Louisiana between 1791 and 1809 were better trained and better educated than were the inhabitants of the Louisiana territory, and “their influence insured that the state would have a Creole flair for years to come” (Hunt 1988, 58).
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Davis, Shelina, Alexander Billioux, Jennifer L. Avegno, Tiffany Netters, Gerrelda Davis i Karen DeSalvo. "Fifteen Years After Katrina: Paving the Way for Health Care Transformation". American Journal of Public Health 110, nr 10 (październik 2020): 1472–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2020.305843.

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Following the devastation of the Greater New Orleans, Louisiana, region by Hurricane Katrina, 25 nonprofit health care organizations in partnership with public and private stakeholders worked to build a community-based primary care and behavioral health network. The work was made possible in large part by a $100 million federal award, the Primary Care Access Stabilization Grant, which paved the way for innovative and sustained public health and health care transformation across the Greater New Orleans area and the state of Louisiana.
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Diaz, James H., Kari F. Brisolara, Daniel J. Harrington, Chih-yang Hu i Adrienne L. Katner. "The Environmental Health Impact of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans". American Journal of Public Health 110, nr 10 (październik 2020): 1480–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2020.305809.

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Hurricane Katrina caused unprecedented flood damage to New Orleans, Louisiana, and has been the costliest hurricane in US history. We analyzed the environmental and public health outcomes of Hurricane Katrina by using Internet searches to identify epidemiological, sociodemographic, and toxicological measurements provided by regulatory agencies. Atmospheric scientists have now warned that global warming will increase the proportion of stronger hurricanes (categories 4–5) by 25% to 30% compared with weaker hurricanes (categories 1–2). With the new $14.6 billion Hurricane Storm Damage Risk Reduction System providing a 100-year storm surge–defensive wall across the Southeast Louisiana coast, New Orleans will be ready for stronger storms in the future.
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Kunian, David. "The Louisiana State Museum Music Collection Oral Histories: Digitization, Preservation, and Use". Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals 13, nr 2 (czerwiec 2017): 115–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/155019061701300206.

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The Louisiana State Museum, a statewide network of National Historic Landmarks, architecturally significant structures, and half a million artifacts, has a robust collection of oral histories with New Orleans jazz originators, revival figures, and other New Orleans and Louisiana musicians. This collection of oral histories consists of more than 300 interviews in the following formats: reel-to-reel and cassette tapes, digital audiotape, videotape, CD and DVD, and assorted digital file formats, such as WAV, MP3, and MP4. This article examines the range of the Music Collection, explains its value, and makes the case for digitization and preservation. Finally, the article provides examples of use in on-site exhibitions as well as online dissemination through the New Orleans Jazz Museum.
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VanLandingham, Mark. "2007 MURDER RATES IN NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA". American Journal of Public Health 98, nr 5 (maj 2008): 776. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2008.133991.

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Huffstutler, E. W. "The McFarland Institute, Inc., New Orleans, Louisiana". Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy 9, nr 1-2 (wrzesień 1999): 59–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j080v09n01_07.

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Gant, Herbert. "Leave New Orleans and Discover ‘Real’ Louisiana". Psychiatric News 36, nr 4 (16.02.2001): 27–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/pn.36.4.0027.

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Andress, K. "(A32) Emergency Preparedness in Louisiana Nursing Programs – Response Roles, Impacts, and Competencies". Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 26, S1 (maj 2011): s9—s10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x11000458.

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IntroductionNurses are leaders and primary health responder/providers in natural, anthropic and technological disasters. Preparation and education for nursing emergency and disaster response should begin before nursing program graduation and before disaster events occur. In Louisiana, 17 federally-declared disaster declarations were experienced from 2000 – 2009, ranging from the Space Shuttle “Columbia” to Hurricane “Katrina”. This presentation overviews Louisiana nursing programs' disaster preparedness and operational planning as demonstrated to Louisiana's Schools of Nursing Aligned for Emergency Responsiveness (SAFER) Conference, New Orleans, 2010. Co-sponsored by Dillard University, Division of Nursing, New Orleans, and Northwestern State University, College of Nursing, Shreveport, the invitational conference brought expert nurse and physician preparedness speakers from federal, state and local venues to review disaster planning, experiences, needs, and nurse preparedness competencies with nurse faculty leadership.MethodsA multiple choice survey was developed, trialed and emailed to 42 Louisiana Nursing Programs. Programs surveyed included Associate degree, Bachelors and Graduate-level providers for Registered Nurses as well as Vocational Technical programs for the Licensed Practical Nurse. National Planning Scenario threat priorities; impacts of federally declared disasters on Louisiana nursing programs; nursing program roles in disaster; and awareness of nurse emergency preparedness competencies were queried.Results34 of 42 surveys were returned. 20 were complete. Nursing programs were located state-wide and found in 7 of 9 Louisiana regions. Surveyed programs offered a Bachelors degree (45%); Graduate degree (35%); Associate degree (35%) and vocational or Licensed Practical Nursing (35%).ConclusionsThe majority of Louisiana nursing programs and their health communities have been impacted by federally declared disasters. Coordinated efforts to improve nursing program preparedness education, roles and responsibility are warranted as vulnerability increases.
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Owings, Allen D. "Louisiana Select: Taking the Plants to the People". HortScience 33, nr 4 (lipiec 1998): 603f—604. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.33.4.603f.

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The LSU Agricultural Center and Louisiana Association of Nurserymen initiated an ornamental plant promotion and recommendation program in 1996. Called `Louisiana Select', this program is intended to actively promote outstanding ornamental plants to Louisiana's gardening consumers. Plants are promoted in the spring and fall of each year and have included `New Orleans Red' coleus, mayhaw, `Henry's Garnet' Virginia willow, `Homestead Purple' verbena, `Watchet' azalea, `Telstar' dianthus, bald cypress, `New Wonder' scaevola, “Fall is for Planting Native Trees”, and lantana (`New Gold', `Dallas Red', `Confetti', `Trailing Purple', and `Silver Mound'). Point of purchase signs and banners promoting the `Louisiana Select' program and individual plants are provided to retail garden centers. Significant sales increases ranging from 300% to 2500% have been reported for the selected plants, with annual bedding plants and perennial flowers enjoying the greater sales increases. Plants for promotion are selected by a committee of wholesale greenhouse producers, retailers, landscape contractors, and cooperative extension service personnel.
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Spielman, Andrew I., i Judit Forrai. "History of the Dental Assistant". Kaleidoscope history 14, nr 28 (2024): 394–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.17107/kh.2024.28.25.

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McIlraith, Sheila, Kilian Weinberger, G. Michael Youngblood, Karen Myers, Eric Eaton i Michael Wollowski. "A Recap of the AAAI and IAAI 2018 Conferences and the EAAI Symposium". AI Magazine 39, nr 4 (21.12.2018): 3–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/aimag.v39i4.2843.

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The 2018 AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, the 2018 Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence, and the 2018 Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence were held February 2–7, 2018 at the Hilton New Orleans Riverside, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. This report, based on the prefaces contained in the AAAI-18 proceedings and program, summarizes the events of the conference.
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Braun, Juliane. "Re-Visiting the Creole Myth: Race and Ethnicity on the New Orleans Stage". Quebec Studies 71, nr 1 (1.06.2021): 41–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/qs.2021.5.

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Scholars who have studied the contested meaning of “creole” in Louisiana have typically maintained that the “Creole myth,” that is the strategic redefinition of the term “creole” to refer to the white descendants of Louisiana’s original French and Spanish settlers, emerged during or shortly after the Civil War. Drawing on a newspaper article and two case studies related to the New Orleans theatre, this essay proposes a new periodization for the emergence of the “Creole myth” and a re-evaluation of the cultural and political work it was doing. I want to suggest that conceiving of the Creole myth as an antebellum phenomenon (rather than examining it in the context of the postbellum era) allows us to see that its creation was not just motivated by French Louisianian concerns about cultural integrity and ethnic survival but also by this population’s anxiety about race and the status and mobility of free people of color. As a rhetorical tool that gained traction in the 1830s, the strategic redefinition of “creole” to exclude all people of African descent operated in tandem with other attempts to curtail the rights of free people of color, preventing their social, economic, and political ascent during the antebellum period. Ceux qui ont étudié le sens contesté du terme « créole » en Louisiane ont typiquement maintenu que le « mythe créole », c’est-à-dire, la redéfinition stratégique du terme « créole » à ne comprendre que les descendants blancs des colons d’origine française ou espagnole est apparu pendant ou peu après la guerre de Sécession. S’appuyant sur un article de journal et sur deux études de cas du théâtre à la Nouvelle-Orléans, cet article propose une nouvelle périodisation de l’émergence du « mythe créole » ainsi qu’une réévaluation du travail politique et culturelle qu’il exerçait. Je veux suggérer qu’en concevant le mythe créole comme phénomène d’avant la guerre de Sécession (plutôt que de l’examiner dans le contexte de l’après-guerre), nous comprenons que sa création a été motivé non seulement par des préoccupations d’intégrité culturelle et de survie ethnique de la part des Franco-louisianais, mais aussi par leur anxiété raciale par rapport à la mobilité des gens de couleur libres. Comme outil rhétorique qui a gagné du terrain dans les années 1830, la redéfinition stratégique de « créole » afin d’exclure tous ceux d’ascendance africaine fonctionnait en combinaison avec d’autres tentatives à restreindre les droits des gens de couleur libres, empêchant leur ascension sociale, économique et politique pendant l’ère d’avant la guerre de Sécession.
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Kong, Hyejung Grace. "Mapping Charity Hospital in Antebellum New Orleans, Louisiana". Korean Journal of American History 45 (31.05.2017): 131–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.37732/kjah.2017.45.131.

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Airriess, Christopher A., i David L. Clawson. "Versailles: A Vietnamese Enclave in New Orleans, Louisiana". Journal of Cultural Geography 12, nr 1 (wrzesień 1991): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08873639109478416.

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DICARLO, RICHARD, MICHAEL LEVITZKY, ROBERT MARIER i CHARLES HILTON. "Louisiana State University School of Medicine—New Orleans". Academic Medicine 75, Supplement (wrzesień 2000): S135—S137. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200009001-00038.

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Murray, Paul T. "Jack Nelson: Fighting for Racial Justice in Louisiana". U.S. Catholic Historian 41, nr 4 (wrzesień 2023): 53–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cht.2023.a914864.

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Abstract: Jack Nelson was a white Catholic lawyer involved in the struggle for African American civil rights in New Orleans. Drawing upon his faith's teachings, he advocated for racial justice in the courtroom and his community. As an officer of Save Our Schools, he fought to keep public schools open, and as a candidate for the Orleans Parish school board, he opposed those resisting integration. He defended young civil rights activists in a landmark Supreme Court case, and he filed the lawsuit that forced Tulane University to admit its first Black students. He facilitated the integration of New Orleans' Catholic schools. His civil rights advocacy brought social ostracism, hurt his legal practice, and doomed his efforts to win political office. Despite these setbacks, Nelson remained faithful to the principles of his religion and his profession. His victories are not widely known today because his desire to remain a solo practitioner precluded his involvement in cases lawyers argued for major civil rights organizations.
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Ingersoll, Thomas N. "Slave Codes and Judicial Practice in New Orleans, 1718–1807". Law and History Review 13, nr 1 (1995): 23–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/743955.

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Slave law in early Louisiana is of great interest because it was shaped by three major European legal traditions under the rule of France (1699 to 1769), Spain (1769 to 1803), and the United States (after 1803). In this article, the types and origins of slave laws in early Louisiana and their application in the slave society of New Orleans is examined. Several different imperial, local, and mixed codes were ordained in the colony to govern relations between masters and slaves, and these laws reveal either the political strategies of imperial policymakers or the social tactics of slaveowners, but very little about actual slave treatment. The administration of justice in New Orleans was mostly determined by the planters: local needs and ideals prevailed when they conflicted with those represented by the crown's laws, and the courts rarely interfered with the authority of indivdual slaveowners over their chattels.
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Johnson, Jerah. "Jim Crow laws of the 1890s and the origins of New Orleans jazz: correction of an error". Popular Music 19, nr 2 (kwiecień 2000): 243–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143000000143.

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A seriously misleading error has crept into almost all the literature on the origins of New Orleans jazz. The error mistakenly attributes to the Jim Crow laws of the 1890s a significant role in the formation of the city's jazz tradition.Jazz historians have done a reasonably good job of depicting the two black communities that existed in new Orleans from the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 until the twentieth century. One community comprised a French-speaking Catholic group who lived mostly in downtown New Orleans, i.e. the area of the city down-river from Canal Street. Before the Civil War this group, commonly called Creoles, or Black Creoles, but more accurately called Franco-Africans, comprised free people of colour as well as slaves, and after the war consisted of their descendants who perpetuated the group's language, religion and musical tradition, which combined French, African and Caribbean elements.Members of the other black community were English-speaking Protestants who lived mostly in uptown new Orleans. That group, before the Civil War, was made up largely of slaves brought to New Orleans by Americans who flooded into Louisiana after the 1803 Purchase, though it also included some free people of colour. After the war, the descendants of these immigrants continued their language, religion and musical tradition, which came mostly from the rural South. There Anglo-Africans were generally less prosperous and less educated than the downtown Franco-African or Creole community.
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Youngblood, Michael, i Karen Myers. "Research Updates from the Deployed Applications of the 2018 Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference (IAAI-18)". AI Magazine 41, nr 1 (13.04.2020): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/aimag.v41i1.5191.

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This editorial introduces several of the deployed applications that were described at the 2018 Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence conference, held in New Orleans, Louisiana, in February 2018.
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Talarchek, Gary. "Indicators of Urban Forest Condition in New Orleans". Arboriculture & Urban Forestry 13, nr 9 (1.09.1987): 217–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.48044/jauf.1987.046.

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Urban trees constitute a valuable environmental resource in many cities. Designing a tree maintenance and management strategy depends upon an understanding of the environments of urban trees and stresses on tree health and condition. Using New Orleans, Louisiana as an example, environmental indicators of tree condition are identified using data from sample inventory of trees. Tree condition is related to the types of land covers in the zone of root growth under the tree canopy, the presence of wires in the tree canopy and associated land uses. The inventory also shows that the New Orleans urban forest is a mature forest, which suggests special care is needed in order to protect and replenish the resource, this information can be used to plan urban forestry management strategies in New Orleans.
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Pionke, JJ, i Ellen M. Aaronson. "122nd Annual Meeting, Medical Library Association, Inc., New Orleans, LA, May 3-6, 2022". Journal of the Medical Library Association 111, nr 1/2 (21.04.2023): E35—E61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2023.1707.

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The Medical Library Association (MLA) held its 122nd annual meeting May 3-6, 2022, in New Orleans, Louisiana. The meeting was entitled “MLA ’22: Reconnect. Renew. Reflect” and utilized a hybrid model with some events in person, and some virtually.
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Owings, Allen D. "Louisiana Select—Plant Promotion, Marketing, and Recommendation Efforts for the Nursery and Landscape Industry". HortScience 35, nr 4 (lipiec 2000): 566A—566. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.35.4.566a.

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The LSU Agricultural Center and Louisiana Nursery and Landscape Association initiated an ornamental plant promtion, marketing, and recommendation program in 1996. Called `Louisiana Select', this program is intended to actively promote outstanding ornamental plants to Louisiana's gardening consumers. In addition, it provides county agents and industry professionals information on plants that should be recommended. The selection committee consists of an extension horticulturist, two county agents, a landscape contractor, a wholesale greenhouse grower, a wholesale woody ornamental producer, and two representatives from retail garden centers. Plants are usually promoted in the spring and fall of each year. Plants previously named as Louisiana Select recipients include `New Orleans Red' (Red Ruffle) coleus, mayhaw, `Henry's Garnet' virginia sweetspire, `Homestead Purple' perennial verbena, `Telstar' dianthus, bald cypress, `New Gold' lantana, `Confetti' lantana, `Trailing Purple' lantana, `Dallas Red' lantana, `Silver Mound' lantana, `Lady in Red' salvia, `New Wonder' scaevola, `Goldsturm' rudbeckia, and `Foxy' fox-glove. A theme (“Fall is for Planting Native Trees”) has also been promoted. Point of purchase signs promoting the Louisiana Select program and individual plants are made available to garden centers. Significant sales increases ranging from 300% to 2500% have been reported for seelcted plants with annual bedding plants and perennial flowers enjoying the greater sales volume increases.
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Andress, K., i E. Downey. "(A146) Disaster Patient Tracking – Local, State and Federal Interoperability during a Multi-Hospital Evacuation Exercise". Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 26, S1 (maj 2011): s42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x11001476.

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IntroductionAssociated with hospital evacuation is the need to track multiple patient evacuees from point of origination to final hospital reception. Patient tracking, a component of the hospital emergency operations plan, is vital to patient care; family association, resource management, financial reimbursement, risk management, and repatriation. Tracking strategies and plans can include a variety of vendors, hardware, software, and coordination issues. Hospital evacuee tracking plans and platforms exist at multiple jurisdictional levels but may not be interoperable.MethodsThree patient tracking platforms representing a local, state and federal application were used during a multi-hospital evacuation exercise, initiated in New Orleans, Louisiana, May 2010. Simulated patients were flown and tracked to multiple patient reception centers in the southern United States, including the Federal Coordinating Center in Shreveport, Louisiana, and receiving National Disaster Medical System hospitals. This review summarizes tracking operations, patient data characteristics captured and interoperability at the Shreveport reception location.Results7 New Orleans hospitals entered 51 patients for evacuation into Louisiana's web-based, At-Risk-Registry (ARR) database including 8 patient identifiers each. ARR data was shared with federal and Louisiana Region 7 patient evacuee receivers for flight manifest construction and reception planning. 34 ARR evacuee patients were indicated for the Shreveport, Louisiana, reception site. 34 patients with 6 identifying characteristics were entered from ARR into EMTrack, the local patient tracking system. A C130 arrived with a TRAC2ES manifest of 20 simulated patients with 6 patient data characteristics. The local tracking system was reconfigured for the hardcopy manifest; simulated patients were received at the airport; transported and received at local hospitals.ConclusionsTracking system interoperability may be challenged by tracking technologies, jurisdictional requirements and degree of implementation at the local, state and federal level. Tracking should be standardized based on national recommendations with local systems remaining flexible for just-in-time requirements.
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Proaño, Alvaro, Eric Dumonteil i Claudia Herrera. "Chagas Disease Diagnostic Testing in Two Academic Hospitals in New Orleans, Louisiana: A Call to Action". Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 8, nr 5 (15.05.2023): 277. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8050277.

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Chagas disease, caused by the protozoa parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, is an anthropozoonosis that represents a major public health problem in the Americas, affecting 7 million people with at least 65 million at risk. We sought to assess the intensity of disease surveillance based on diagnostic test requests from hospitals in New Orleans, Louisiana. We extracted information from send-out labs at two major tertiary academic hospitals in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, from 1 January 2018 to 1 December 2020. We found that in these three years there were 27 patients for whom Chagas disease testing was ordered. Most of these patients were male (70%), with a median age of 40 years old, and their most common ethnical background was Hispanic (74%). These findings demonstrate undertesting of this neglected disease in our region. Given the low Chagas disease surveillance, we need to increase awareness, health promotion, and education among healthcare workers.
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Mayer, Vicki, Beth Willinger, Pamela Jenkins, Susan Tucker, Susanne Dietzel, Pamela Waldron Moore, Betsy Jones Hemenway, Crystal Kile, Violet Harrington Bryan i Julia Reineman. "Losing Ground but Finding the High Road: Teaching Women’s Studies in Post-Katrina New Orleans". NWSA Journal 20, nr 3 (wrzesień 2008): 185–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ff.2008.a256900.

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This essay combines the experiences and participation of women’s studies members from four campuses in New Orleans, Louisiana. It reflects both on the damage suffered by women in the academy and the strides that have been made in the post-Katrina environment.
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Skinner, Hubert, i Karlem Riess. "John Leonard Riddell: From Rensselaer to New Orleans (1827-1865)". Earth Sciences History 4, nr 1 (1.01.1985): 75–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.4.1.y136x81m6h4761h9.

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John L. Riddell, though primarily interested in chemistry, botany, and medicine, made considerable contributions to geology. From 1827-1829 he was a student at Rensselaer under Amos Eaton, the first American teacher of geology. Riddell's first scientific lecture, A new theory of the earth, was delivered at Rensselaer in August 1829. It dealt with geological formations and the fossil remains contained therein. From 1830-1832 Riddell presented public subscription lectures in New York, Ontario, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. Late in 1832 he became professor of chemistry and botany at the Ohio Reformed Medical College, where he began to study the geology of the state. Geology of Ohio, his first formal paper on geological subjects, appeared in 1833. Others papers soon followed. He worked with Samuel P. Hildreth on Survey of the geology of Ohio, which was completed in 1836. Soon afterwards, Riddell married and moved to New Orleans, becoming professor of chemistry at the New Orleans Medical College, now Tulane University. He remained in New Orleans until his death nearly thirty years later. In 1839 Riddell attempted to secure state authorization to conduct a geological survey of Louisiana. Also in 1839, he made two excursions to Texas, resulting in his Geology of the Trinity Country, Texas, published in 1839. Finally, in 1841, the Geological Committee of the State of Louisiana was formed, with Riddell as Chairman. There were five other members. Tragically, the result of their work was lost before being published, and no trace of the manuscript is known to exist today. In his later years, Riddell continued to do geological work, including studies of Mississippi River dynamics. He also continued his long teaching career in New Orleans.
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Cross, Robert W., David Safronetz, Elizabeth R. Fischer, Heinz Feldmann, Thomas G. Voss, Bradley Waffa, Ashley Freeman i in. "Old World Hantaviruses in Rodents in New Orleans, Louisiana". American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 90, nr 5 (7.05.2014): 897–901. http://dx.doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.13-0683.

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English, Robin, Joy Sturtevant, Richard DiCarlo i Steve Nelson. "Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans". Academic Medicine 95, nr 9S (wrzesień 2020): S196—S198. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/acm.0000000000003343.

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Sullivent, Ernest E., Christine A. West, Rebecca S. Noe, Karen E. Thomas, L. J. David Wallace i Rebecca T. Leeb. "Nonfatal injuries following Hurricane Katrina—New Orleans, Louisiana, 2005". Journal of Safety Research 37, nr 2 (styczeń 2006): 213–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsr.2006.03.001.

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Talbot, Kasey, i Jeff Dauzat. "Hurricane Isaac Post-Storm Response1". International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings 2014, nr 1 (1.05.2014): 2253–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.7901/2169-3358-2014.1.2253.

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ABSTRACT Hurricane Isaac made landfall on August 29, 2012 over Louisiana, lingering overhead for more than 60 hours. While most were concerned with surviving the 80+ mph winds and ensuing storm surge and floods, Coast Guard members statewide knew there would be no calm after the storm; instead it would be a grueling fight to restore the port to normalcy. The slow moving storm caused grounded deep draft vessels and barges, spilled oil, releases of hazardous materials (HAZMAT), and damage to various buildings and infrastructures. U.S. Coast Guard Sector New Orleans integrated local, states, and federal agencies into a Unified Command structure to coordinate limited resources post-storm. Within Sector New Orleans, the Incident Management Division (IMD) made it their primary mission to mitigate any substantial threats of oil discharges or HAZMAT releases and ensure proper cleanup. On September 2, 2012, IMD utilized the Incident Command System (ICS) to establish a Marine Environmental Response (MER) Incident Management Team (IMT) to achieve their post storm mission. The MER IMT consisted of 200 personnel, of which 60 were Coast Guard members, and included representatives from the National Strike Force, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ), Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator's Office (LOSCO), Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF), and three Oil Spill Removal Organizations (OSROs); together the team collected 4500 barrels of oily water and 1200 HAZMAT containers, deployed over 11,000 feet of containment boom, and federalized three pollution projects. The MER IMT was disestablished on September 28, 2012 leaving Sector New Orleans IMD to maintain complete management of the ongoing federalized projects, “Fantome”, “Map Drilling”, and “Gulf South”. The projects included oil discharges in adjacent waterways of two oil production/storage facilities, oil discharges from fixed facility barges, and oil discharges from a storage platform along the marsh shoreline. Sector New Orleans executed $9.5 million in Oil Spill Liability Trust Funds towards emergency response efforts and successfully restored safety to the public health, welfare, environment, and maritime community.
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Best, Alice, Joshuah S. Perkin, Amanda K. Pinion, Hailey Binkley i Kevin W. Conway. "First record of the Gangetic Swamp Eel, Ophichthys cuchia (Hamilton, 1822) (Teleostei: Synbranchidae), from Texas (USA) based on museum vouchered material, and confirmation of a second established non-native population in the USA". Check List 18, nr 3 (10.05.2022): 475–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/18.3.475.

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The native range of Ophichthys cuchia includes part of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Myanmar, and Nepal. Ophichthys cuchia has also been collected within six states in the USA (Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania) and an established invasive population exists in New Orleans (Louisiana). We provide the first record of O. cuchia from Texas and the second report of an established non-native population in the USA based on 26 museum vouchered specimens collected from a series of urban ponds within the Houston metro area (Fort Bend Co.).
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Vidal, Cécile. "Public Slavery, Racial Formation, and the Struggle over Honor in French New Orleans, 1718-1769". Anuario Colombiano de Historia Social y de la Cultura 43, nr 2 (1.07.2016): 155. http://dx.doi.org/10.15446/achsc.v43n2.59075.

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In New Orleans throughout the French Regime (1718-1769), ruling authorities did not only shape the slave system through the way they exercised their political and administrative prerogatives and functions, but were directly involved as slaveholders. Public slavery facilitated the emergence of New Orleans and Lower Louisiana society as a slave society, and was not necessarily incompatible with racial prejudice and discrimination. On the contrary, it fueled the construction of race. At the same time, it made visible the fact that honor did not only define the boundary between the free and the non-free and the identity of the white population.
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33

Herbert, Kyle, Ronald Fenton, Ben Flitter, Raymond Kessler i Meghan Maslanka. "Hurricane Ida Emergency Medicine Resident Disaster Response". Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 38, S1 (maj 2023): s189—s190. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x23004892.

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Introduction:This report describes the response, action plan, and after-action changes adopted by the Louisiana State University New Orleans (LSU-NO)–Emergency Medicine (EM) Residency Program in response to Hurricane Ida, which occurred in New Orleans, Louisiana in late August through early September 2021. Summarized are the redistribution of emergency department (ED) residents within the primary clinical site, University Medical Center New Orleans (UMCNO); the daily communication flow from chief residents and program leadership; and discussions pertaining to procedural revisions instituted following investigation of pre- and post-hurricane operations.Method:Small-group debrief sessions and after-action reports were conducted post-storm to discuss perceived deficiencies from a resident stand-point. Debriefing occurred between chief residents and individual classes through standardized residency forums. Additionally, an after-action committee, comprised of senior residents, academic faculty, and ancillary personnel, convened a separate counsel with hospital administration-level leadership to analyze retrospective limitations that occurred both during, and immediately following, Code Grey activation.Results:Following data collection and analysis from the various feedback channels, several changes were made to the residency’s Code Grey activation plan going into the 2022-2023 academic residency year. The information obtained was used to develop a more formalized Code Grey process, and to create more robust orientation and education materials for residents.Conclusion:Throughout the events of Hurricane Ida, the LSU-NO Emergency Medicine Department at University Medical Center New Orleans managed a substantial intensification in daily emergency medical activity, while contending with a near-immediate reduction in available resources. Consequently, our program has formalized a more durable residency response to future disasters, including real-time, evolving evacuation correspondence and modernized protocols for rapid re-distribution of resident-power. These procedures are now distributed and practiced throughout each residency year and reinforced on an ad hoc basis in advance of any major weather-related events predicted to impact the greater New Orleans metropolitan area.
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Harville, Emily W., Tri Tran, Xu Xiong i Pierre Buekens. "Population Changes, Racial/Ethnic Disparities, and Birth Outcomes in Louisiana After Hurricane Katrina". Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 4, S1 (wrzesień 2010): S39—S45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/dmp.2010.15.

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ABSTRACTObjective: To examine how the demographic and other population changes affected birth and obstetric outcomes in Louisiana, and the effect of the hurricane on racial disparities in these outcomes.Methods: Vital statistics data were used to compare the incidence of low birth weight (LBW) (<2500 g), preterm birth (PTB) (37 weeks' gestation), cesarean section, and inadequate prenatal care (as measured by the Kotelchuck index), in the 2 years after Katrina compared to the 2 years before, for the state as a whole, region 1 (the area around New Orleans), and Orleans Parish (New Orleans). Logistic models were used to adjust for covariates.Results: After adjustment, rates of LBW rose for the state, but preterm birth did not. In region 1 and Orleans Parish, rates of LBW and PTB remained constant or fell. These patterns were all strongest in African American women. Rates of cesarean section and inadequate prenatal care rose. Racial disparities in birth outcomes remained constant or were reduced.Conclusions: Although risk of LBW/PTB remained higher in African Americans, the storm does not appear to have exacerbated health disparities, nor did population shifts explain the changes in birth and obstetric outcomes.(Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2010;4:S39-S45)
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35

LeBlanc, Albert. "1992 Senior Researcher Award Acceptance Address". Journal of Research in Music Education 40, nr 3 (październik 1992): 180–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3345679.

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Albert LeBlanc is the recipient of the MENC's 1992 Senior Researcher Award. The following speech was presented on April 10, 1992 at the business meeting of the Society for Research in Music Education at the National Biennial In-Service Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana.
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36

Stafford, Tom, i Mohamed Tazkarji. "Whole Lotta COVID Goin' On". ACM SIGMIS Database: the DATABASE for Advances in Information Systems 52, nr 4 (28.12.2021): 7–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3508484.3508486.

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It's been a long year-and-a-half or since the initial outbreak arose down here in Louisiana, right after Mardi Gras 2020, February. New Orleans and its widely attended Mardi Gras looked to be the "spreader event" of our region, it seemed like.
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Uwakonye, Matthew, Gbolahan S. Osho, Onochie Jude Dieli i Michael Adams. "Economic and Social Impacts of Public Schools Management on the City of New Orleans and the State of Louisiana". Journal of Public Management Research 6, nr 2 (28.09.2020): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/jpmr.v6i2.17359.

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Poverty, illiteracy, and crimes are key factors that commonly lead to poor performance in public schools in many inner cities. Without an adequate solution to eradicate these issues, a city could propel towards a path to destruction. Over the past decade, the city of New Orleans, which is known for its exotic party atmosphere, has been crippled by its failing school system, as well as increasing crime and poverty rates. New Orleans has eagerly strived to improve its social stature, but there are several issues that affect the performance of the public school system. Several research studies have shown that strong education is the key to both economic growth and crime rate reduction. Within the city of New Orleans, it is often realized that the management of the public school system has a major impact on the student’s success rate. Statistics shown that within the recent years, tests scores have been continuously lower, crime has been higher than expected, and the teacher’s salary has been unsatisfactory. This prompts the question of whether there are significant associations between social economic factors and public school performance in inner city such as New Orleans. Hence, this current research will attempt to examine factors contributing to public school performance in New Orleans.
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38

Hodges, T. Mark. "When the Saints Go Marching In: MLA in New Orleans, 22-25 May 1988, New Orleans, Louisiana". Health Libraries Review 6, nr 1 (marzec 1989): 34–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2532.1989.6100341.x.

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Goldfine, Shayna, i Meredith Mclnturff. "Mass Vaccination for All: Increasing Inclusivity of Point of Dispensing Plans in New Orleans." Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 38, S1 (maj 2023): s209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x23005344.

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Introduction:In January 2021, the State of Louisiana approved COVID-19 vaccine distribution to elderly and immunocompromised persons. From annual hurricane planning assessments, the city of New Orleans recognized medical and transportation barriers would prevent some eligible residents from accessing vaccines at public point of dispensing (POD) sites. A new vaccine distribution system was needed for homebound individuals and their caregivers. By February, the city developed and implemented a homebound vaccination plan under the direction of New Orleans Emergency Medical Services (NOEMS) and the New Orleans Health Department. This presentation will review this vaccine distribution model and the opportunities and challenges identified in maintaining this model for future medical POD interventions.Method:The City of New Orleans, along with news outlets and service providers, instructed homebound residents and caregivers to self-identify their need for a homebound vaccine by calling 311 and adding their name to a centralized waitlist. NOEMS/NOHD staff would schedule appointments based on resident and provider availability and geography of their home residence. Two 2-person teams were deployed simultaneously to provide ten doses within a five-hour time frame to minimize waste. Each deployment team included one city employee with an EMS certification and one volunteer, along with a cooler, ancillary supplies, registration form, and educational sheet to complete the appointment.Results:350 homebound residents and caregivers were vaccinated with the COVID-19 vaccine from February 2021 to January 2022. Vaccine doses were rarely wasted due to the availability of a centralized city-wide vaccine request list.Conclusion:The COVID-19 pandemic exposed gaps in mass dispensing plans and procedures. This local plan, created in haste to meet community need, became a model practice for other Parishes within the State of Louisiana and nationwide. This distribution modality needs to be maintained and tested, in addition to traditional POD sites, to be utilized in future dispensing events.
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40

GIMMEL, MATTHEW L., i CHRISTOPHER E. CARLTON. "The identity of Languria femoralis Motschulsky (Coleoptera: Erotylidae: Languriinae)". Zootaxa 1821, nr 1 (11.07.2008): 67. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1821.1.7.

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In her monograph of North American Languriidae (= Erotylidae: Languriinae), Vaurie (1948) noted that Motschulsky (1860: 242) described the species Languria femoralis from New Orleans, Louisiana, but Vaurie did not examine the type. No additional information has been published on this species. The original description, reproduced here, states:
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41

Tallaksen, Amund R. "Junkies and Jim Crow: The Boggs Act of 1951 and the Racial Transformation of New Orleans’ Heroin Market". Journal of Urban History 45, nr 2 (20.09.2017): 230–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144217731339.

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This article details the origin and passage of the Boggs Act of 1951, as well as a similar drug law passed at the state level in Louisiana. Both laws featured strict mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes, which led to a demographic transformation of New Orleans’ heroin markets in the early 1950s: As New Orleans’ Italian-American Mafiosi retreated from the lower echelons of the heroin economy, entrepreneurial African Americans took their place. In turn, many black leaders came to support both stricter drug laws and increased police focus on crime in black neighborhoods. This demand was rooted in African Americans’ frustration with the New Orleans Police Department and its Jim Crow practice of ignoring intra-racial black crime. It also became important for black leaders to distance themselves from the “criminal element”—an otherwise potent political symbol for white segregationists.
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42

Kotok, Stephen, Brian Beabout, Steven L. Nelson i Luis E. Rivera. "A Demographic Paradox: How Public School Students in New Orleans Have Become More Racially Integrated and Isolated Since Hurricane Katrina". Education and Urban Society 50, nr 9 (19.06.2017): 818–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013124517714310.

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Following the tragedy of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans public schools underwent a variety of changes including a mass influx of charter schools as well as a demographic shift in the racial composition of the district. Using school-level data from the Louisiana Department of Education, this study examines the extent that New Orleans public schools are more or less racially integrated, racially segregated, and concentrated by poverty almost a decade after Katrina. The study utilizes exposure indices, inferential statistics, and geospatial analysis to examine how levels of school integration and segregation have changed over time. Our findings indicate that though a greater share of New Orleans schools are considered racially diverse than prior to Katrina, a greater share of minority students are now attending dually segregated schools, where over 90% of students are classified as minority and are receiving free/reduced lunch.
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43

Hall, Kaitlyn. "Loyola University New Orleans College of Law: A History". Journal of Curriculum Studies Research 4, nr 1 (18.02.2022): 76–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.46303/jcsr.2022.7.

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Maria Isabel Medina's chronicle of Loyola University New Orleans College of Law examines the prominent Jesuit institution across its hundred-year history, from its founding in 1914 through the first decade of the twenty-first century. With a mission to make the legal profession attainable to Catholics, and other working-class persons, Loyola's law school endured the hardships of two world wars, the Great Depression, the tumult of the civil rights era, and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to emerge as a leader in legal education in the state.Exploring the history of the college within a larger examination of the legal profession in New Orleans and throughout Louisiana, Medina provides details on Loyola's practical and egalitarian approach to education. As a result of the school's principled focus, Loyola was the first law school in the state to offer a law school clinic, develop a comprehensive program of legal-skills training, and to voluntarily integrate African Americans into the student body.The transformative milestones of Loyola University New Orleans College of Law parallel pivotal points in the history of the Crescent City, demonstrating how local culture and environment can contribute to the longevity of an academic institution and making Loyola University New Orleans College of Law a valuable contribution to the study of legal education.
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Whalen, D. Joel. "Selections From the ABC 2013 Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana". Business and Professional Communication Quarterly 77, nr 2 (20.05.2014): 217–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2329490614530466.

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Whalen, D. Joel. "Selections From the ABC 2013 Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana". Business and Professional Communication Quarterly 77, nr 3 (12.08.2014): 330–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2329490614530554.

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&NA;. "Le Meridien Hotel, New Orleans, Louisiana Friday, October 13, 1989". Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology 1, nr 2 (czerwiec 1989): 115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00008506-198906000-00006.

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Halling, C. L., i R. M. Seidemann. "A probable example of cranial dysraphism from New Orleans, Louisiana". International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 28, nr 4 (23.05.2018): 470–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/oa.2672.

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48

Brunet, Perrin. "Queer Constellations in the Big Easy: Making Space in New Orleans". Interdependent: Journal of Undergraduate Research in Global Studies 4 (2023): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.33682/uzdv-33xw.

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This article explores LGBTQ+ space-making practices and spaces in New Orleans, Louisiana. It analyzes spaces to understand why, how, and for whom they were made. I conducted interviews with LGBTQ+ New Orleanians and utilized queer geographical theory, to present LGBTQ+ spaces across New Orleans as "queer constellations" of time and space on the map of the city marking places of importance to individuals and/or the broader LGBTQ+ community. To differentiate between the various types of spaces found, I divided them into four categories: lost space, transient space, explicitly queer space, and non-explicitly queer space. Through an intersectional lens of gender, race, sexuality, and socioeconomic status, this article attempts to examine whether the diversity and globality of the city were reflected in its queer spaces.
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Rodriguez, John Eugene. "AWASH IN TRANS-IMPERIAL TRADE: SPANISH NEW ORLEANS AND NATCHEZ, 1783-1803". Illes i imperis, nr 24 (24.11.2022): 139–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.31009/illesimperis.2022.i24.07.

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Spanish Louisiana (1766-1803) was probably the most prolonged and open Spanish experimentin free trade. The colony’s riverine ports of New Orleans and Natchez were awash intrans-imperial trade from France, British colonies, and especially the new North Americanempire. This trade flowed through both ports in both directions, upriver and down, constantlyrecirculating - but through the U.S. economy, and not that of metropolitan Spain.Louisiana’s riverine planters and merchants simultaneously owned plantations, stores, andships, and enjoyed access to ready capital and multiple sources of produce, goods and slaves.By the 1790s, these men and sometimes women no longer needed to see themselves as Spanish,and moved closer in their political discourse to that of the people already labeled losAmericanos. Therefore, even before 1803, riverine Louisiana was already both trans-imperialand, in the broadest sense, American.
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Rapp, Kristi Isaac, Leonard Jack, Candice Wilson, Sandra Carr Hayes, Robert Post, Ellen McKnight i Floyd Malveaux. "Improving Asthma-Related Outcomes Among Children Participating in the Head-Off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana (HEAL), Phase II Study". Health Promotion Practice 19, nr 2 (22.11.2017): 233–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1524839917740126.

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Purpose. Pediatric asthma disproportionately affects low-income and minority children. The HEAL (Head-Off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana), Phase II Project was a collaborative effort with a primary focus to improve pediatric asthma management in New Orleans, Louisiana. The purpose of this article is to report clinical outcomes captured at baseline and 12-month follow-up. Method. HEAL (Head-off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana), Phase II was a pre–post intervention study that enrolled children ages 2 to 18 years of age with a diagnosis of asthma to receive asthma education within the clinic setting. Enrollees received an asthma education intervention, an environmental evaluation, and a 12-month follow-up session. Endpoints included symptom days, level of asthma control, asthma exacerbations, emergency room visits, hospitalizations, and missed school days. Results. The majority of participants were aged 5 years and older, male, Black, and persistent asthmatics. Emergency room visits decreased from 41% to 20% ( p < .001). Improvements in coughing (83% to 62%, p < .001), wheezing (50% to 26%, p < .001), and chest tightness (29% to 18%, p < .001) were also seen. Conclusion. The novel intervention was associated with improved asthma outcomes among pediatric patients receiving care at the clinical sites in the Greater New Orleans area.
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