| Title | Venue | Year | Impact | Source |
5001 | The synergy between food and agri-food suppliers and the restaurant sector in the World Heritage City of Córdoba (Spain) The tourist-catering subsector plays an important role in the consolidation and attraction of tourism products and services offered. This research aims to ascertain the importance of synergies, and proactive collaborative and co-operational relations between agri-food suppliers and the restaurants. This is a qualitative, exploratory and descriptive methodology, data source triangulation, information processing using NVIVO12 software. This study identifying that the city of Córdoba offers a variety of gastronomic products and services, and that the supply sector is semi-structured and still in need of improvements of quality, safety and having a wider commercial network. Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, suppliers have reinvented themselves and created new market opportunities to benefit from rapid growth in some sectors; furthermore, they are in a position to offer restaurants a competitive advantage in post-pandemic recovery. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5002 | Mitteilungen des ÖWAV | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5003 | Narrative sozioökonomischer Ungleichheit. Ein Überblick This volume features contributions on the discussion in the social sciences on inequality. It is based on the premise that inequality is not only a quantifiable material state but also a lived experience which must be understood. It accordingly centers on narrative; a concept which has garnered much attention among renowned economists seeking to unpack the reality-creating power of language. The volume comprises three parts. First, validity problems in narratives are discussed from the perspective of empirical data research. Second, contributions grapple conceptually with the legitimacy-creating capacity of narratives, which is, third, explored in empirical studies. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5004 | Attachment in the time of COVID-19: Insecure attachment orientations are associated with defiance of authorities' guidelines during the pandemic Previous research has linked people’s relational attachment orientations to emotional reactions and coping during crises, and to social trust and trust in societal institutions. The COVID-19 pandemic is a global crisis for which collective efforts, such as social distancing, are necessary to stop the spread of the virus. During previous pandemics, people high in trust have typically adhered to such efforts. In the present study, we investigated whether attachment orientations were related to people’s adherence to authorities’ guidelines to stop the spread of COVID-19. We also tested whether previous mediational findings—linking attachment-related avoidance to welfare state trust via social trust—would replicate. We used a web-based survey of 620 participants. Our findings showed that attachment-related anxiety was linked to low adherence to social distancing regulations. This finding was especially noteworthy because high attachment-anxious participants also experienced more negative emotions, yet negative emotions were generally linked to high adherence. Thus, people higher in attachment anxiety seem to have more difficulties in avoiding social situations despite heightened risk of catching and spreading the virus. In addition, attachment-related avoidance was negatively related to adherence and to welfare state trust, and its effects on welfare state trust were statistically mediated by low social trust. | J Soc Pers Relat | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5005 | Clinical characteristics and risk factors for mortality in patients with COVID-19: A retrospective nationwide study in Malaysia BACKGROUND: Age and multiple comorbidities have been reported to influence the case fatality rate of COVID-19 worldwide, so also in Malaysia; however, to date, no scientific study among the local population has been published to confirm this. This study aimed to determine the overall demographics and clinical characteristics of COVID-19 non-survivors in Malaysia, stratified by age (< 65 vs. ≥ 65 years old). The mortality was also compared between two half-year periods: March–August 2020 and September 2020–March 2021. METHOD: Daily reports containing demographics and medical history of COVID-19 non-survivors from March 2020 to March 2021 were obtained from the Malaysian Ministry of Health website. All information was extracted retrospectively and analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics with SPSS. RESULTS: Of 1192 COVID-19 non-survivors, the overall mean (SD) age was 64.8 (15.7) years, with 64.7% male. Death was seen mostly among 50- to 64-year-olds (33.1%) and 65- to 74-year-olds (24.8%). The presence of underlying hypertension (61.8%) and diabetes mellitus (48.2%) were the most common comorbid diseases encountered in the COVID-19 non-survivors. Underlying hypertension, stroke, heart disease and dyslipidaemia were significantly higher among COVID-19 non-survivors who were ≥ 65 years old compared to those < 65 (p < 0.05). Mortality was a lot higher in September 2020–March 2021 compared to March 2020–August 2020 (91.3% vs. 8.3%). CONCLUSION: Older age, male gender and the presence of multimorbidity (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, stroke and heart disease) are risk factors that contribute to mortality due to COVID-19 in Malaysia, especially among those ≥ 65 years old. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5006 | "Why wasn't I doing this before?": Changed school social work practice in response to the COVID-19 pandemic The American education system has been significantly disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, which led schools to shut down and convert to remote learning environments in spring 2020. However, long before these school closures, school social workers (SSWs) have faced significant practice dilemmas, as they have encountered obstacles to their engagement in best practices. While initial pandemic school closures presented SSWs with a range of uncertain situations, they also provided the possibility to respond to practice demands in different and dynamic ways. This article explores the pandemic's impact upon SSWs’ practice, and how SSWs responded in turn as they quickly adapted their practice during this widespread, ongoing crisis. Informed by crisis theory, previous analyses of SSW practice trends and dilemmas, and a review of traditional social work values and ethics, we conducted three focus groups in July 2020 with SSWs during the pandemic’s early months. From these interviews, we learned that participants’ work was disrupted by dramatic shifts in school and community settings, as well as changes in support needs within their respective school communities. Those disruptions gave way to substantial shifts in practice, which reflect a more prominent role for systemic practice and for traditional social work values in SSW decision-making. These findings offer implications for post-pandemic practice, and practice in other host settings. | Qual Soc Work | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5007 | Crisis leadership: Leading schools in a global pandemic The global Covid-19 outbreak has disrupted schooling worldwide. Remote and limited face-to-face school management during the pandemic brought to bear the numerous challenges facing schools and principals throughout the crisis, which, in turn, gave rise to changes in their leadership practices and roles. The professional literature needs conceptual and empirical frameworks concerning the challenges facing principals, their role perceptions, and their behaviors when coping with a health crisis such as the coronavirus pandemic. This paper draws on extant literature about school leadership during diverse crisis situations to advise principals facing the current pandemic. Eight guidelines for pandemic leadership are discussed, as well as practical and research implications. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5008 | Educational futures after COVID-19: Big tech and pandemic profiteering vs education for democracy To address the dramatic economic contraction brought on by the global pandemic, governments at all levels have taken on tremendous debt in order to provide economic stability and prevent a more dramatic collapse. It is likely that, as the initial phase of the pandemic passes, familiar neoliberal austerity claims about the necessity to trim education budgets will gain greater force and acceptance. However, I suggest that these neoliberal policies demand sacrifices of the wrong constituency: Given that Big Tech has amassed huge sums of money over the course of the pandemic, how is it morally justifiable that tech companies benefit from the pandemic while educational institutions shoulder the financial fallout of pandemic government spending? In this paper, I first outline how Big Tech profits from the education sector during the pandemic even as it undermines the democratic function of education in doing so. I then situate these more specific critiques within a broader consideration of the role technology plays in undermining a democratic society. In conclusion, I argue that a pandemic profiteering tax for Big Tech represents the best short-term solution to get ahead of the “austerity curve” and ensure that the COVID-19 crisis serves as an opportunity to deepen our commitments to promoting the democratic function education. Without such commitments, the pandemic will become the turning point at which Big Tech effectively coopts public education for its own ends, to the detriment of democracy. My underlying claim is that technology is in conflict with both democracy and education. This runs against the widespread notion that technology will help promote learning, and that technology helps inform and connect people and therefore helps promote democracy. In what follows I dispel such notions. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5009 | The Impact of COVID-19 on China's Capital Market and Major Industry Sectors This paper studies the impact of COVID-19 on China’s capital market and major industry sectors via an improved ICSS algorithm, a time series model with exogenous variables and nonparametric conditional probability estimation. Through the empirical analysis of the stock market, the bond market and different industry sectors, it is found that the pandemic has had no significant impact on the return of the stock and bond markets; however, it has increased market volatility. There are significant differences in the significance, direction and duration of the impact of the pandemic in different sectors. In addition, the impacts of COVID-19 have been gradual in some industries but rapid in others. Different industries show different sensitivities in their response to COVID-19. Based on the impact analysis, this paper proposes corresponding suggestions for investment strategies and macrocontrol decisions. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5010 | Maritime governance after COVID-19: how responses to market developments and environmental challenges lead towards degrowth This paper considers two current challenges in the governance of maritime transport, specifically container shipping. The first is the oligopolistic market structure of container shipping, the downsides of which became evident during the COVID-19 pandemic. The second challenge is climate change, both the need to reduce emissions to zero by 2050 and to adapt to effects that are already locked in. The paper reviews the academic and policy literature and unveils a link between these market and environmental challenges which result from a focus on efficiency without considering negative effects such as diseconomies of scale and induced traffic, leading to a continued rise in total industry carbon emissions. The review likewise identifies links in how policy-makers react to the two challenges. Regulators could remove anti-trust exemptions from carriers, and policy-makers are being pushed to provide strict decarbonisation targets with a coherent timeline for ending the use of fossil fuels. Recent thinking on ecological economics, degrowth and steady-state economics is introduced as the paradigm shift that could link these two policy evolutions. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5011 | Assessing the impact of sulfur cap on bunkering spot selection in the ARA region The introduction of IMO2020, the outbreak of COVID-19, and the oil price drop in 2020 had a significant impact on operators’ operating profits. Therefore, a competitive analysis of bunkering spots that suggests the optimal location for bunkering is of interest. This paper uses a combination of primary and secondary research, both from operators’ and suppliers’ side, to identify the key performance factors (KPFs) affecting the decision-making process of a bunkering port selection process. Answers were then combined by using a fuzzy TOPSIS analytical approach to quantify the competitive position of each port in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) region. Results suggest that availability of low sulfur bunkers, bunker quality, bunker price, reliability, punctuality, and safety of bunkering services, as well as usage and availability of barges are the key KPFs in order of importance. Sulfur cap has not changed the competitive environment in the region as the geographic advantage of the port of Rotterdam plays a crucial role in the comparison with the other ports, in contrast to expressed concerns in the industry. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5012 | A text mining approach for CSR communication: an explorative analysis of energy firms on Twitter in the post-pandemic era The rapid diffusion of the Covid-19 worldwide has accelerated the need for companies to address the sustainability issue at different levels, as nowadays the attention of stakeholders with respect to this theme has grown considerably. As a result, companies had to set up CSR communication strategies to build and strengthen their legitimacy and reputation. Among the communication channels to convey messages of firms’ CSR initiatives, social media are becoming increasingly important and, particularly, Twitter is the social media platform where more CSR-related content is generated. By adopting the theoretical lens of constitutive communication of organization, the aim of this paper is to investigate with a textual approach how the CSR communication in the energy sector has evolved in the post Covid-19 scenario. Specifically, our attention will be focus on: (1) the exploratory analysis based on the hashtags; (2) the identification of CSR communication topics and (3) the proposal of topics network in order to discover subgroups of topics. Findings of this research show that the CSR communication on Twitter has undergone changes compared to the pre Covid-19 era. Particularly, we identified 11 CSR related-topics which, as the proposed topic network demonstrates, are interconnected. On the one hand, our results corroborate previous research regarding some CSR-related issues; on the other hand, we identified some topics such as safety, people and work which have exploded in Twitter conversations in the post Covid-19 scenario. Finally, this study provides managerial implications for professionals dealing with CSR communication, digital communication and social media marketing activities. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5013 | Entrepreneurial Leadership, Supply Chain Innovation and Adaptability: A Cross-national Investigation This study investigates the effects of entrepreneurial leadership on supply chain innovation and supply chain adaptability. Based on theoretical foundations of the upper echelon theory and the dynamic capability theory, it also assesses the mediating role played by supply chain innovation in the relationship between entrepreneurial leadership and supply chain adaptability. Partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) was performed on survey data collected from 139 firms in Sudan, Japan, and China. The results reveal that entrepreneurial leadership had positive effects on supply chain innovation and supply chain adaptability despite varying business environments. The results also provided interesting findings regarding the moderating role of supply chain innovation as a mediator of the relationship between entrepreneurial leadership and supply chain adaptability. The findings of the study stress the importance of entrepreneurial leadership for firms’ adaptability across nations. Although the number of countries included in this study was limited, these countries exhibit different cultural and structural settings. These findings suggest the possibility of the generalizability of the results. The findings also imply that firms should place greater emphasis on improving their supply chain processes and upgrading relevant technologies in order to facilitate the development of adaptable supply chains. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5014 | The Effect of Financial Technology Investment Level on European Banks' Profitability This paper examines the dynamic relationship between fintech investments and financial performance, and it explores whether the bank size could influence the performance in the context of the digital transformation (digitization). The fully modified ordinary least squares (FMOLS) model is estimated for 23 European banks throughout the whole period ranging from 2010 to 2019 and for the two sub-periods spanning from 2010 to 2014 and from 2015 to 2019. The econometric results evince that fintech are positively and significantly related to the bank profitability, inferring that the greater the digital engagement of banks is, the higher the profitability is. Our findings provide evidence that the bank size is a moderator factor in affecting the relationship between digital investments and the profitability. Hence, larger banks benefit more from investments in the financial technology so as to improve their performance. Our study has substantial policy implications as we suggest that the increased investment in the fintech is a possible channel through which banks improve their performance, particularly when the bank size is considered large. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5015 | Life in the hole: practices and emotions in the cultural political economy of mitigation deterrence Negative emissions techniques (NETs) promise to capture greenhouse gases from the atmosphere and sequester them. Since decarbonisation efforts have been slow, and the climate crisis is intensifying, it is increasingly likely that removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere will be necessary to meet internationally-agreed targets. Yet there are fears that pursuing NETs might undermine other mitigation efforts, primarily the reduction (rather than removal) of greenhouse gas emissions. This paper discusses the risk of this phenomenon, named ‘mitigation deterrence’. Some of us have previously argued that a cultural political economy framework is needed for analysing NETs. Such a framework explains how promises of future NETs deployment, understood as defensive spatio-temporal fixes, are depoliticised and help defend an existing neoliberal political regime, and its inadequate climate policy. Thus they risk deterring necessary emissions reductions. Here we build on that framework, arguing that to understand such risks, we need to understand them as the result of historically situated, evolving, lived practices. We identify key contributing practices, focussing in particular but not exclusively on climate modelling, and discuss how they have been reproduced and co-evolved, here likened to having dug a hole for ourselves as a society. We argue that understanding and reducing deterrence risks requires phronetic knowledge practices, involving not just disembodied, dispassionate technoeconomic knowledge-making, but also strategic attention to political and normative issues, as well as emotional labour. Reflecting on life in the hole hurts. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5016 | Robert Boyer, Les capitalismes à l'épreuve de la pandémie, La Découverte, 2020 Robert Boyer, a leader in régulation theory, characterizes the crisis provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic in his latest book. His analysis centers on the political process in which different groups of entities with heterogeneous interests compete against each other and make compromises, and on the interaction of different processes affecting public health, the economy, finance, and freedom. In this book review, we carefully introduce the main argument in the book (which has been published in French) in English to help readers understand its message, and we consider several points to apply the theoretical conjecture proposed in the book to actual issues, especially in Japan. In particular, we investigate the following issues: the actual diversity of national economies from the perspective of the “trilemma,” the current situation of Japan as an embryo of the anthropogenetic development mode, and the issue of ecology to scrutinize the future of capitalism. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5017 | COMPACT PICOSECOND DIODE LASERS This article presents the electrical circuit, a description of the design, and results of measurements of the radiative watt–ampere and time characteristics of compact inexpensive emitters based on commercial laser diodes with wavelengths from 405 to 850 nm, which operate in the picosecond (70–180 ps) and nanosecond (0.69–1.2 ns) modes. The optical emitter includes a master crystal oscillator based on a microcontroller (frequencies of 76 Hz–20/80 MHz), a synchronization circuit, a low-voltage (9–12 V) subnanosecond electric pulse shaper that operates according to the method of double differentiation, a pump circuit with an adjustable direct current source, and a laser diode. The average light power at a frequency of 80 MHz varies in pico mode from 0.6 to 1.6 mW and in nano mode from 6 to 18 mW. The lasers are powered by a 220 V/12 V, 0.25 A serial power supply, with a power consumption of 3 W and a weight of 0.2 kg. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5018 | Nutritional improvement of cereal crops to combat hidden hunger during COVID-19 pandemic: Progress and prospects COVID-19 has posed a severe challenge on food security by limiting access to food for the marginally placed population. While access to food is a challenge, access to nutritional food is a greater challenge to the population. The present-day foods are not sufficient to meet the nutritional requirements of the human body. In a pandemic condition, providing nutritious food to the population is imperative to ensure the health and well-being of humankind. Exploiting the existing biodiversity of crop species and deploying classical and modern tools to improve the nutritional potential of these species holds the key to addressing the above challenge. Breeding has been a classical tool of crop improvement that relied predominantly on genetic diversity. Collecting and conserving diverse germplasms and characterizing their diversity using molecular markers is essential to preserve diversity and use them in genetic improvement programs. These markers are also valuable for association mapping analyses to identify the genetic determinants of traits-of-interest in crop species. Association mapping identifies the quantitative trait loci (QTL) underlying the trait-of-interest by exploring marker-trait associations, and these QTLs can further be exploited for the genetic improvement of cultivated species through genomics-assisted breeding. Conventional breeding and genomics approaches are also being applied to develop biofortified cereal crops to reduce nutritional deficiencies in consumers. In this context, chapter explains the prerequisites for association mapping, population structure, genetic diversity, different approaches of performing association mapping to dissect nutritional traits, use the information for genomics-assisted breeding for nutrient-rich cereal crops, and application of genomics strategies in crop biofortification. These approaches will ensure food and nutrition security for all amidst the current COVID-19 crisis. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5019 | Corrigendum to "Food sufficiency and the utilization of free food resources for working-age Americans with disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic" [Disabil Health J 14 (2021) 101153] | Disabil Health J | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5020 | Interest groups in US local politics: Introduction to the special issue Interest group scholarship has so far focused mainly on national politics and has had very little to say about interest groups in American cities, counties, school districts, and special districts. This special issue is a step toward remedying that: it is a collection of articles and essays that examine some of the interest groups that are commonly active in US local politics. The contributions herein discuss real estate developers, tenant organizations, teachers' unions, police unions, and local PACs—covering topics such as how they are organized, how they engage in local politics, some of the constraints on their influence, and the nuanced ways in which ideology and identities can sometimes shape what coalitions are possible in the local context. By bringing this work together in one place, in a journal devoted to research on interest groups, the hope is that this special issue will help to cement “interest groups in local politics” as the recognizable research focus it deserves to be. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5021 | Bilateral distal radius fractures with seven month pregnancy during the peak period of national lockdown due to COVID-19 pandemic in Nepal: A case report Introduction Even though distal radius fracture is a common orthopedic problem, bilateral distal radius fracture associated with pregnancy is a very rare injury pattern. A twenty-three years old female with seven-month pregnancy came to our hospital with a history of falling from 10 feet height and sustained a fracture on both sides of the wrist joint. On examination, there was a Grade IIIA open fracture on the right wrist, suspected closed fracture on the left wrist, and distended lower abdomen with estimated seven-month pregnancy. X-ray of bilateral wrist and forearm was performed along with ultrasonography of abdomen and pelvis. She was successfully managed through debridement, K wires fixation, and external fixator on the right forearm while fracture on the left side was treated with closed reduction and percutaneous K wires fixation. However, the fetus was evacuated as dead because of concomitant intrauterine fetal injury even though we successfully saved the limb and life during the lockdown period with an extremely worst situation. Conclusion This combination injury in the same individual during the peak period of COVID 19 National Lockdown not only is a challenging condition that needs multidisciplinary management but also requires life and limb saving judicial surgical intervention in one of the worst surrounding environments. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5022 | Locating the Quad: informality, institutional flexibility and future alignment in the Indo-Pacific Australia, India, Japan, and the US are coordinating security activities in the Indo-Pacific under the guise of the ‘Quad’, a highly informal intergovernmental organization that some observers describe as an embryonic military alliance. For others, it is a loose group amounting to little else. Cutting a path through this confusion, this article poses and answers a series of interlinking questions. First, is the Quad purposeful? What do its members expect to achieve through its existence? If it possesses an identifiable purpose—which we claim is a shared need to meet the long-term challenge posed by China—why is the Quad’s format highly informal? Does this informality reflect the growing cascade of informal IGOs in international politics? We argue that although informality is a geopolitical necessity, it also provides a workable format for four diverse members to coordinate security activities whilst maintaining equivocal positions vis-à-vis China. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5023 | Tumorpatienten und onkologisches Personal während der Pandemie: Onlinebefragungen und Interviews zu psychosozialen Belastungen The spread of the SARS-CoV‑2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus type 2), which has been prevalent since 2020, has had far-reaching consequences. There were also unforeseeable changes for cancer patients and oncology health care workers in Germany. The aim of the presented projects was to explore the effects of the pandemic on these people more closely. Online questionnaires and interviews that were released or carried out during the COVID (coronavirus disease) waves in 2020 and 2021 were used for this purpose. Almost 1000 patients and 900 professional helpers took part in the survey. In addition, 20 people were interviewed. It becomes clear that clinical care has adapted to the new requirements over time. Aspects such as visiting bans or the obligation to wear masks became normal. At the same time, the frustration and stress on the part of the oncology staff increased significantly from wave to wave. Subsequent projects showed that mental coping strategies and physical activity decreased among patients during the second wave. To counteract this, virtual projects including scientifically based knowledge transfer and movement were launched. The developments shown are alarming. They speak for the urgency of preventing helpers from leaving the healthcare system on the one hand, and providing them with more support and relief on the other. Patients must also receive further digital training and be protected from being left alone. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5024 | How to exploit Big Social Data in the Covid-19 pandemic: the case of the Italian tourism industry From March 2020, restrictive measures have been taken to limit the Covid-19 pandemic, thus impacting and hugely affecting the tourism industry. In this new scenario, tourism destination managers and stakeholders need to look ahead to the future, trying to wisely react to overcome this crisis. This paper aims at demonstrating how a Smart Tourism Destination can tackle the consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic using smart and digital technologies such as Big Data and Analytics. In particular, the monitoring of Italian public debates on social media allowed discovering knowledge from unstructured data that provide valuable insights for destination stakeholders and decision-makers. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5025 | Wie Technologie den Arbeitsplatz verändert | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5026 | IT-Assets hegen und pflegen: Daten-Fundament für die digitale Transformation | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5027 | COVID-19 und die Zukunft der Arbeit: Hybride Modelle sind auf dem Vormarsch | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5028 | Mehr Effizienz für hybride Arbeitsumgebungen | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5029 | Full-Stack Observability: Tiefere Einblicke für mehr Innovationskraft | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5030 | Upcoming Events in Pediatric Cardiology | Pediatr Cardiol | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5031 | Die Cloud-getriebene Transformation rückt in den Fokus | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5032 | Postdigital Warfare: A Plea for Dialogue | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5033 | Neues Arbeiten braucht eine neue Mentalität! Warum es wichtiger ist, sich an Ergebnissen zu orientieren, statt an einer Präsenzpflicht im Homeoffice festzuhalten | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5034 | Damit „Working from Home" nicht zum „Living at Work" wird | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5035 | Clouds dieser Erde, vereinigt euch! | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5036 | Nach dem Notfallmodus: Die Zukunft der Cloud-Nutzung | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5037 | IT-Trends und neue Herausforderungen: Cloud, Back-up und intelligentes Datenmanagement im Jahr 2021 | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5038 | The blood-brain barrier in health, neurological diseases and COVID-19 The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a protective interface between the central nervous system (CNS) and the circulating blood, and is critical in controlling the movement of ions, molecules and cells to maintain CNS homeostasis. The disruption of BBB is a key event responsible for the pathology in a number of neurological diseases and has also been shown to be involved in the severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections recently. In this review, we discuss the cellular and molecular components orchestrating BBB formation and function maintenance across species. How this barrier can be modulated for efficient drug delivery into the brain, and how BBB breakdown participates in neurological diseases are discussed. Finally, we highlight the recent work identifying the possible mechanisms by which SARS-CoV-2 invades CNS by crossing BBB in Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5039 | Application of a Kinetic Model for Studying the Spatial Spread of COVID-19 A one-dimensional model based on a kinetic-type equation is proposed for studying the dynamic distribution density of virus carriers in time and space while taking into account their distribution from a dedicated center. This model is new and fundamentally different from known models of the diffusion–reaction type. The analytical solution is built; for obtaining a series of calculations, numerical methods are also used. The model and real data from Italy, Russia, and Chile are compared. In addition to the rate of infection, the “rate of recovery” is considered. When the wave of recovery passes through a territory with the greater part of the commonwealth, a conclusion is made about the onset of global recovery, which corresponds to real data. The predictions are proved to have been accurate also for the second wave of the pandemic in Russia. The model is expected to be able also to describe adequately subsequent epidemics instead of only the development of COVID-19. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5040 | 132. Mental Health Interventions Practiced by School Nurses and Changes Due to COVID-19 | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5041 | 91. COVID-19 Impacts and Videoconference Healthcare Preferences in Relation to Depression and Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Female Young Adults Seeking Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5042 | 155. The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Number and Severity of New Diagnoses of Restrictive Eating Disorders During Prolonged Lockdown in Ontario, Canada | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5043 | 105. Perceived COVID-19-Related Stress & Other Impacts Among Lower Income Expectant Young Adult Fathers | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5044 | 7. Mental Health and Suicide Risk Disparities among Sexual and Gender Minority Adolescents during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from CDC's Nationally-Representative COVID Experiences Surveys | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5045 | 160. The Protective Effect of Close Follow-up During the Pandemic on Adolescents With an Eating Disorder | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5046 | 9. Adherence to Public Health Recommendations in TikTok Content During the Early Days of the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5047 | 45. Building Competency in Gender Inclusive Healthcare: An Innovative Virtual Curriculum | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5048 | 194. Patients with Somatic Symptoms and Related Disorders (SSRD) in a Tertiary Care Pediatric Hospital Center: The Need for a Structured Approach to Limit the COVID-19 Pandemics' Impacts on Medical Care | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5049 | 94. Impact of COVID-19 on Contraceptive Care Delivery: A Retrospective Cohort Study | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5050 | 146. Trajectories of College Student Mental Health and Wellbeing During the COVID-19 Pandemic | J Adolesc Health | 2022 | | CORD-19 |