\ BIP! Finder for COVID-19 - Impact-based ranking

BIP! Finder for COVID-19

This version of BIP! Finder aims to ease the exploration of COVID-19-related literature by enabling ranking articles based on various impact metrics.

Last Update: 18 - 01 - 2023 (628506 entries)

Provided impact measures:
Popularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.
Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.
Reader Attention: The current number of Mendeley readers.
Social Media Attention: The number of recent tweets related to this article.
*More details on these impact measures can be found here.
Score interpretations:
Exceptional score (in top 0.01%).
Substantial score (in top 1%).
Average score (in bottom 99%).
Score not available.
Main data sources:
CORD-19 dataset(1) (list of papers)
LitCovid hub(2) (list of papers)
PMC & PubMed (citations)
Mendeley (number of readers)
COVID-19-TweetIDs(3) (tweets)

Use:  Impact  Relevance & Impact
TitleVenueYearImpactSource
505129. Use of Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder among US Adolescents and Young Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5052135. Internet Addiction Among Adolescents in South East Nigeria During COVID-19 Pandemic-Implications for Adolescent Care in the Post Pandemic Era  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5053191. Impact of COVID-19 Risk Mitigation Interventions on Drug Overdose in the Emergency Department Among Adolescents and Young Adults in St. Petersburg, Florida  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
505432. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Adolescent Alcohol Use  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5055182. The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Adolescent Social Media Use, Substance Use and Depressive Symptoms: A Scoping Review  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
505611. Changes in Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Relationship Status during COVID-19: Data from a 30 Country Sexual and Reproductive Health Study  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5057142. Content and Linguistic Analysis of COVID-19 Tweets on One University's Twitter Page  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5058144. Associations Among COVID-19 Related Exposures, Impact or Distress and Self-Rated Health Among Adolescents and Young Adults  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
505958. Comparing Changes in Family Dynamics and Mental Health by Sexual Orientation Among Youth in California During the Initial COVID-19 Restrictions  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
506022. Vaccines for Teens: Attitudes Across the Pandemic on Routine and COVID-19 Vaccines  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5061167. BMI Changes in an Adolescent Population During the COVID-19 Pandemic Lock-Down  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5062116. Conducting an Online Survey of Youth Experiencing Homelessness During the COVID-19 Pandemic Employing Youth Participatory Action Research: Lessons Learned  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5063147. Youth Perceptions on the Long-Term Impacts of COVID-19  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5064153. AYA Subspecialty Patient and Parent Views on COVID-19 Vaccination  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5065183. Adolescents' and Young Adults' Social Media References to COVID-19, Alcohol Use and Mental Health  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5066154. Attitudes of Parents and Teens Regarding Mitigation Strategies at Three Time Points during the COVID-19 Pandemic  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5067139. "We are Going on a Wasteland, we do not Know Where we are Going ..." The Vision of the Future Post-Pandemic COVID-19: A Qualitative Study From the Point of View of Young People in Switzerland  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5068New public dental service clinical director  

Br Dent J2022       CORD-19
5069Overseas Registration Exam to restart  

Br Dent J2022       CORD-19
5070193. Foregone Healthcare Among US Adolescents and Children During the COVID-19 Pandemic- COVID Experiences Surveys, Wave 2, March-May, 2021  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5071149. Turning the Hospital Inside Out: Expanding Access to COVID-19 Vaccinations for Underserved Adolescents Using Mobile Outreach  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
507287. Telehealth and Access to Care for Young Adults Experiencing Homelessness During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5073117. COVID-19 Youth Impact Survey: The effects of COVID-19 on Youth Experiencing Homelessness  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5074134. The Effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Video Gaming Behavior, Depressive Symptoms, Sleep Quality and Physical Activity of Excessive Video Gamers  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
507583. Physician Perspectives on Confidentiality During Telemedicine Sessions with Adolescent Patients During the COVID-19 Pandemic  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5076129. The Feasibility and Acceptability of Behavioral Activation in an Adolescent Clinical Setting  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5077189. Association Between Cannabis Use and Covid-19 Exposure, Impact and Distress Among Adolescent Patients  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
507886. Predictors of Adolescent Telemedicine Visit No-Shows During the COVID-19 Pandemic  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
50798. "It Was Suffocating": A Qualitative Study of Mental Health Outcomes Among Adolescents and Young Adults Engaged in Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5080140. "I Think that They Are the Great Forgotten Ones in this Whole Pandemic and They're the Ones Who Will Pay the Heaviest Price" The Experience of Adolescents in the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Research From the Perspective of Parents in Switzerland  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5081192. COVID-19 Exposure and Care-Seeking Behaviors Among Vulnerable Urban Adolescents and Young Adults-Baltimore, Maryland USA  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
508223. A Pilot Intervention to Reduce Adolescent Sexual and Mental Health Disparities by Increasing Access to Telemedicine and Mobile Care (AccessKCTeen)  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5083148. Exploring the Impact of College Students' COVID-19- and Capitol Insurrection-Related Horizontal and Vertical Collectivism/Individualism on Emotional Reaction to Those Events  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5084145. Coping with the COVID-19 Pandemic Overtime Among Depressed Adolescents  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
508510. Screen Time and Moderate-to-Vigorous Intensity Physical Activity Among Adolescents During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings From the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study  

J Adolesc Health2022       CORD-19
5086L'impact du confinement COVID-19 sur le métabolisme cérébral  

Introduction Cette étude française vise à évaluer l’impact du confinement national de 55jours sur le métabolisme cérébral de patients atteints de troubles neurologiques. Méthodes Une analyse TEP à l’échelle du voxel et sur cerveau entier a été conduite pour corréler le métabolisme 18F-FDG au nombre de journées passées en confinement après le 17 mars 2020 (chez 95 patients ; âge moyen : 54,3 ans±15,7 ; 59 hommes), par rapport à la même période en 2019 avant l’épidémie de SARS-CoV-2 (chez 212 patients ; âge moyen : 59,5 ans±15,8 ; 114 hommes), et aux 55 premiers jours du déconfinement (chez 188 patients ; âge moyen : 57,5 ans±16,5 ; 93 hommes). Résultats La durée du confinement était négativement corrélée au métabolisme du cortex sensori-moteur avec un effet prédominant sur le réseau pyramidal de l’hémisphère majeur et chez les patients les plus jeunes, incluant également l’amygdale gauche, avec une réversibilité seulement partielle après 55jours de déconfinement. Un faible recouvrement était retrouvé avec le profil d’hypométabolisme décrit dans le COVID long (<9 %). Conclusion La restriction des activités physiques, avec son déconditionnement associé, et l’isolement social pourraient entraîner des perturbations fonctionnelles des réseaux cérébraux sensorimoteurs et émotionnels. Ce profil métabolique semble distinct de celui rapporté dans le COVID long. D’autres études longitudinales sont nécessaires, avec un suivi plus long, pour évaluer les conséquences cliniques et, en particulier, l’impact sur la santé cognitive et mentale, et pour étendre ces résultats aux sujets sains dans ce contexte de confinement.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5087Les profils scintigraphiques de la perfusion pulmonaire des patients post-COVID-19  

La maladie à coronavirus (COVID19) est une maladie infectieuse due au virus SARS-CoV-2. L’incidence des complications thromboemboliques dans l’infection COVID-19 est bien connue, même chez les patients recevant une anticoagulation prophylactique. La scintigraphie pulmonaire est un examen fonctionnel permettant d’étudier les processus physiologiques de la perfusion et d’éliminer une embolie. Matériels et méthodes Nous avons analysé rétrospectivement la scintigraphie pulmonaire de perfusion de 60 patients post-COVID-19, cette exploration consiste à l’injection intraveineuse de macro-agrégats d’albumine marqués au technétium (MAA-99mTc). Notre étude porte sur la présence ou non de défects de perfusion évocateurs de processus embolique ainsi que leurs différents aspects au niveau des deux champs pulmonaires. Résultats En plus de l’étude épidémiologique, des signes cliniques et paracliniques, nos résultats scintigraphiques sont exprimés en probabilité (de faible à forte) à défaut de couplage de la scintigraphie perfusion/ventilation et en confrontation avec les images scanographiques. Conclusion La scintigraphie pulmonaire de perfusion reste un examen incontournable dans le diagnostic de l’embolie, surtout si l’angioscanner est négatif. En cette pandémie, elle occupe une place importante dans le suivi post-COVID.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5088pediatric dental neglect: a pathway for information sharing  

Br Dent J2022       CORD-19
5089The 2nd World Logic Prizes Contest, 7th UNILOG, Crete 2022  

We discuss the evolution of the World Logic Prizes Contest. In a first section, we describe how this contest developed, on the on hand by the creation of the Universal Logic Prize starting in 2005 at the 1st World Congress and School on Universal Logic in Montreux, Switzerland, on the other hand by the creation of the Newton da Costa Logic Prize in Brazil in 2014. These two projects joined in 2018 by the organization of the 1st World Logic Prizes Contest at the 6th World Congress and School on Universal Logic in Vichy, France. In a second section, we talk about the organization of the 2nd World Logic Prizes Contest to take place in April 2022 at the 6th World Congress and School on Universal Logic in Crete, Greece. We explain that there will be 15 contestants from 15 different countries with a good geographic distribution. In a third section, we discuss how this project can develop in the future with the creation of more logic prizes, the creation of similar prizes in other fields and the organization of a World Scientific Prizes Contest.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5090Restaurant hygiene attributes and consumers' fear of COVID-19: Does psychological distress matter?  

Restaurant unhygienic affairs have concerned consumers and policy makers alike since the onset of COVID-19 pandemic. The current study incorporates restaurant hygiene attributes—consumers-use spaces, personal hygiene of staff, workplace hygiene— and their association with consumers’ fear of COVID-19 (CFC). Moreover, how CFC educes consumers’ psychological distress (CSD) and the consequent behavioral reactions—preventive behavior (PB) and revisit intention (RI)— has been examined. Furthermore, perceived vulnerability (PV) employed as a moderator between hygiene attributes and CFC. Data collected from 407 respondents via Chinese online platform was analyzed in SPSS 25.0 and AMOS 24.0. Results showed significant association between hygiene attributes and CFC. Similarly, CFC significantly engenders CSD, which consequently effects PB. Contrarily to our hypothesis, CSD positively developed RI. Lastly, PV moderated the relationships between antecedents and CFC. Findings add to the literature of health management, consumer psychology, and service management with practical relevance, followed by limitations and potential future avenues.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5091Correlating the Effect of Covid-19 Lockdown with Mobility Impacts: A Time Series Study Using Noise Sensors Data  

The Covid-19 crisis forced governments around the world to rapidly enact several restrictions to face the associated health emergency. The Portuguese government was no exception and, following the example of other countries, established various limitations to flat the contagions curve. This led to inevitable repercussions on mobility and environmental indicators including noise. This research aims to assess the impact of the lockdown due to Covid-19 disease on the noise levels recorded in the city of Porto, Portugal. Data from four noise sensors located in strategic spots of the city were used to calibrate and validate Time Series Models, allowing to impute the missing values in the datasets and rebuild them. The trend and the cyclic information were extracted from the reconstructed datasets using decomposition techniques. Finally, a Spearman correlation analysis between noise levels values and traffic volumes (extracted from five inductive loop detectors, located nearby the noise sensors) was performed. Results show that the noise levels series present a daily seasonal pattern and the trends values decreased from 6.7 to 7.5 dBA during the first lockdown period (March-May 2020). Moreover, the noise levels tend to gradually rise after the removal of restrictions. Finally, there is a monotonic relationship between noise levels and traffic volumes values, as confirmed by the positive moderate-to-high correlation coefficients found, and the sharp drop of the former during March-May 2020 can be attributed to the strong reduction of road traffic flows in the city.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5092Sociodemographic Factors Affecting Outdoor Exercise Trips During the COVID-19 Lockdown  

We employ a state-of-the-art modelling framework to determine the significant factors affecting rates of outdoor exercise trips during Scotland’s COVID-19 lockdown, using data from public surveys conducted by Transport Scotland. The random parameters ordered probit modelling approach is used for its ability to account for the potential effect of unobserved heterogeneity stemming from explanatory variables. The framework is extended further to also allow for detection of heterogeneity among the means of random parameters. We show that various sociodemographic factors (relating mainly to household social grade, employment status and disability) significantly influenced the frequency at which outdoor exercise trips were made during lockdown. Specifically, those who are self-employed, those from a social DE household (the household’s main income earner is employed in a manual occupation or is unemployed) and those with a health problem or disability, were shown to be significantly more likely to complete no outdoor exercise during lockdown, and therefore, these groups are at greater risk of the associated mental and physical illnesses. Model results are linked to issues surrounding transport equity, as personal vehicle ownership was found to significantly affect the rate of outdoor exercise trips made by disabled individuals. Policy implications are discussed with regards to mitigating the effects of the pandemic on the future health state of groups exhibiting low exercise levels.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5093Anxiety, fear and stress feelings of road users during daily walking in COVID-19 pandemic: Sicilian cities  

The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly influenced people’s lifestyles including their travel choices. The pandemic resulted in placing restrictions in travelling throughout Italy due to the obligatory need for social distancing and changes in public transport services. City residents changed their mobility patterns and started using their private vehicles more often instead of public transport, while choosing to walk or cycle for short distance trips. Governments and local authorities encouraged citizens to use sustainable travel modes, particularly walking, during the pandemic period. However, the high number of infections and deaths, especially in Italy, has strongly influenced the propensity of walking due to the emotional aspects of travelling. This paper presents a statistical analysis based on data gathered through a questionnaire in urban areas of Sicily focusing on travel by walking for either leisure or work. The evaluation of negative emotions that people who habitually walk for short distances in the study areas is the main focus of the present work.The data indicated a variation between three emotions: anxiety, stress, and fear. These emotions had a potential to influence people’s daily life and, as a result, their travel habits.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5094Restart: A Route Planner to Encourage the Use of Public Transport Services in a Pandemic Context  

Public transport services play an important role in the mobility of the population in urban centers, allowing a decrease in the number of private vehicles in circulation and contributing to a more sustainable mobility. However, the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic had a serious impact on the mobility habits of the population, with a substantial reduction in the number of public transport passengers due to the fear of contagion, which raises questions about the future sustainability of cities. Thus, it is essential to restore the confidence of travelers to feel safe and comfortable using public transport services. Taking advantage of the widespread use of mobile technologies, this article intends to propose a route planning system for public transport that meets the needs of passengers in terms of safety and comfort. After a systematic review of the existing literature and a series of focus group sessions, a prototype of the system was developed, and subsequently evaluated by potential users through usability tests. The results obtained are a good indicator of the system’s functionality and ease of use. This assessment allowed us to corroborate the potential that the proposed route planning system has in promoting the use of public transport services as a means of mobility.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5095Dynamic and static analysis of Airport capacity  

The objective of this paper is to compare two methods of airport capacity analysis: Static Analysis and Dynamic Analysis. For this purpose, the two methods have been evaluated in two different scenarios, the first one related to normal operations and the other to an exceptional event. In the context of the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic, they can be considered as coinciding with a Pre-Covid and a Covid scenario. Currently, the calculation of airport capacity is mostly linked to static analysis, a solid historical method, based on empirical formulas dictated by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). The dynamic analysis is a state-of-the-art method that uses software packages to simulate a great variety of non-ordinary situations by incorporating a wide range of information related to the specific case study such as airport layout, entry/exit routes, etc. Nevertheless, since it does not currently have specific guidelines, is still little used. The following study evaluates the two methods, highlighting their strengths and weaknesses.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5096Impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in the demand for urban transportation in Budapest  

Social distancing guidelines established amid the COVID-19 pandemic have decreased the number of trips in urban transportation networks; furthermore, travelers have shifted away from high occupancy modes due to the fear of contagion. This scenario has led to reduced public transportation ridership and increased shares of private cars, cycling and walking in urban areas. In the international literature, predictive models for this scenario of changed travel behavior and imminent needs for operations and planning adjustments, however, are still scarce or limited in scope. Holt-Winter’s multiplicative method was used to extrapolate pre-pandemic datasets as a means to evaluate the impacts of the pandemic in transportation activities in Budapest. Data from March 2020 indicate that stay-at-home orders have resulted in intra-city and commuter traffic reductions of about 35%, while public transportation ticket sales decreased by 90%. Bicycle traffic, on the other hand, increased by about 13% in the same period. These observations suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic has driven significant changes in trip generation and mode choice in Budapest. This study proposes the adjustment of a pre-existing four-step transportation model of Budapest based on the introduction of contextual explanatory variables and on the recalibration of model parameters in order to reflect pandemic-related trends in trip generation and trip distribution. The recalibration and validation of the model were based on data from the first wave of the pandemic in Hungary. Validation results, although limited, suggest that the traditional four-step models are able to capture the impacts on transportation of the atypical scenario of a pandemic with relatively simple adjustments and few data requirements.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5097How to support the economic recovery of aviation after COVID-19?  

The still ongoing COVID-19 pandemic lead to the most significant decrease in global air transport passenger traffic in aviation history. This decrease has been caused by a combination of demand and supply shocks. Main reasons for these shocks were the global travel restrictions, border closures, the rules and regulations for physical distancing as well as income losses of both private companies and private households even though financial support has been provided by many governments. As a consequence, airlines worldwide had to cut down the number of operated routes and flights significantly. Since February 2020, both the number of global passengers and passenger flight kilometers decreased by 80 per cent and more). These developments have caused large financial losses both for airlines and airports worldwide, critically threatening the existence of a large number of these companies. This paper investigates whether and how the economic recovery of the aviation sector should be supported by governments. Our main results indicate that government loans or government secured loans are enabling a well-balanced trade-off between governmental influence, public debt and distortion of competition if the lending criteria are transparent and nondiscriminatory. However, in the course of time, over-indebtedness will become a critical issue for most companies. At this point, non-refundable state grants offer a relatively simple but costly solution since these subsidies will directly increase public debt.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5098The spread of informal governance practices in G-summitry  

This article examines the spread of informal practices from the G7 to the G20, analysing the implications of the G20’s adoption of six practices that have marked the G7 as a quintessential informal governance group. Drawing on archival documents, elite interviews, and embedded participant observation, the argument is made that the practices that are strengths of the G7 are liabilities for the G20. Key practices that have been central to the G7’s success do not entail success in G20. Furthermore, the practices that transpose well into the G20 context are those that have less to do with the way the members relate to one another within the club and more to do with how its members are positioned within the international system overall. These findings add complexity to the proposition that informal governance institutions like the G20 can serve as effective means to channel rising states’ status concerns.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5099Corporate policies and outcomes during the COVID-19 crisis: Does managerial ability matter?  

The devastating impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have forced firms to formulate strategies that can help them effectively cope with the crisis. In this study, we investigate whether and how managerial ability affects the corporate policies and outcomes during the COVID-19 crisis. Specifically, we investigate how managerial ability affects the policies of firms related to investment, financing, cash holdings, and dividend payouts. We also explore whether firm performance is influenced by managerial ability. Using quarterly data of Chinese firms during 2020, results show that firms with higher ability managers reduce their investments, financing, and cash holdings, yet increase their dividend payouts during the COVID-19 crisis. Findings also indicate that firms having more capable managers tend to outperform those having less capable managers. Results of our additional analyses reveal that general ability carries more value than special ability and that managerial ability has varying effects on state-owned and non-state-owned firms. These results contribute to the literature by highlighting managerial ability as a critical determinant of firm performance and policies at times of uncertainty.

N/A2022       CORD-19
5100Food Crisis as a Tool for Social Change: Lessons from New York City's COVID-19 Response  

The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted food availability and affordability and changed the daily food practices of New Yorkers in three critical ways: (1) closing restaurants and public institutions, including schools, reduced food access and changed shopping patterns, food expenditures, and diets; (2) economic disruption exacerbated food insecurity and increased the need for food assistance; and (3) altered food practices affected diets. Vulnerable populations were disproportionately affected by these disruptions to the food system. The city's response included emergency measures to stave off food insecurity and hunger, yet the crisis also prompted a refocusing of food governance to address other social equity issues in the food system: fears of engaging with food programs by immigrant communities; disparities in access to online grocers; worker rights and worker ownership; and new priorities for the use of public space. The paper presents policy responses to the pandemic that illustrate how the crisis has opened opportunities for initiating changes that can lead to a more just food system.

N/A2022       CORD-19

(1) COVID-19 Open Research Dataset (CORD-19). 2020. Version 2022-06-02. Retrieved from https://ai2-semanticscholar-cord-19.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/historical_releases.html. Accessed 2022-06-05. doi:10.5281/zenodo.3715506
(2) Chen Q, Allot A, & Lu Z. (2020) Keep up with the latest coronavirus research, Nature 579:193 and Chen Q, Allot A, Lu Z. LitCovid: an open database of COVID-19 literature. Nucleic Acids Research. 2020. (version 2023-01-10)
(3) Currently tweets of June 23rd to June 29th 2022 have been considered.

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