| Title | Venue | Year | Impact | Source |
5151 | Rituximab: COVID-19 infection: 2 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5152 | Non-serious case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5153 | Coronavirus-vaccine-stemirna-therapeutics/tongji-university: Constrictive pericarditis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5154 | Tozinameran: Dermatomyositis complicated by interstitial lung disease: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5155 | Methylprednisolone: Lack of efficacy: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5156 | Tozinameran: Autoimmune hepatitis: 3 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5157 | Bamlanivimab: Diffuse C4d staining of peritubular capillaries following off-label use: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5158 | Convalescent-anti-sars-cov-2-plasma/remdesivir: Lack of efficacy during treatment of COVID-19 and off label use: 2 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5159 | Dexamethasone: Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis suppression, psychosis and long COVID-19 symptoms: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5160 | COVID-19 Vaccination Effect on Stock Market and Death Rate in India The COVID-19 epidemic has brought attention to the vulnerability of new illnesses, and immunization remains a viable option for resuming normal life. This paper examines the influence of COVID-19 vaccination on the death rate and the performance of stock market in India. For this study, COVID-19 vaccination and death rate data is gathered from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) portal, and the data for the stock index is taken from the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), India. In order to achieve a precise representation of feature significance and distribution, EDA (Exploratory Data Analysis) is utilized in this study. The impact of COVID-19 immunization on the mortality rate and stock market index is investigated using both statistical analysis and Machine Learning Regression-based models. The models are remarkably accurate in reproducing actual result. The empirical study suggests that vaccination has a strong positive impact on the stock market and reducing the death rate. Furthermore, the policies recommended by government and monetary authorities coupled with COVID-19 vaccine supported the stock market recovery in pandemic. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5161 | Covid-19-vaccine-pfizer-biontech: Lack of efficacy: 5 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5162 | Multiple drugs: Lack of efficacy and off label use: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5163 | AZD-1222: Sensory Guillain-Barre syndrome: 2 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5164 | Ad26.COV2-S: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis and unmasking of inherited thrombophilia: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5165 | Multiple drugs: Lack of efficacy, off label use and exposure during pregnancy: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5166 | Remdesivir: Rebound effect in the form of SARS-CoV-2 infection following off label use: 2 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5167 | Coronavirus-vaccine: Myocarditis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5168 | Corticosteroids/immunosuppressants/steroids: COVID-19 and lack of efficacy following off label use: 7 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5169 | Ad26.COV2-S/COVID-19-Vaccine-Pfizer-BioNTec/elasomeran: Transverse myelitis, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy and optic neuritis: 3 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5170 | Multiple drugs: Severe diarrhoea, off label use and treatment failure: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5171 | PIN41 The Public Health Implications of Google Trends and News Coverage for COVID-19 in the Early Epidemic Stage: A Multinational Study in Eight Countries | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5172 | PIN55 Strategies, Ministers of Health and New Regulations: Did We Win or Were We Won By the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazil? | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5173 | PNS36 VALUE Based Procurement: A Tool to Make Better Purchasing Decisions after COVID-19 | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5174 | PMU58 Americans' Health Priorities during the COVID-19 Pandemic | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5175 | PIN83 The COVID-19 Research Database: Building One of the Largest PRO Bono Real-World DATA Repositories | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5176 | PDB28 Innovative Application of a Mobile APP for Gestational Diabetes Health Education in the Era of the COVID-19 Pandemic and BIG DATA | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5177 | PNS67 Gaining Trust in the Use of Virtual Meetings for Health Technology Assessment during the COVID-19 Pandemic | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5178 | PMH26 Early Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Antipsychotic Medication Use Among Patients with Schizophrenia | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5179 | PRS21 Quantifying the years of life lost due to COVID-19 in Colombia: preliminary estimates | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5180 | PCN238 COVID-19 Impact on Breast and Prostate Cancer Screening, Diagnosis and Surgery: A Real-World Study from the Brazilian and Colombian Public Healthcare System Perspectives | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5181 | PND48 Real World Data and COVID-19: Healthcare Impact in Emergency Care, Stroke Emergency Care and Stroke-Related Deaths in Chile | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5182 | PRS17 Economic Impact of COVID-19 Lockdown on Households in Nigeria | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5183 | PNS81 Is Telehealth in Primary Care Cost-Effective? a Systematic Review | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5184 | PNS25 Changing in Healthcare Service Demand during the COVID-19 Pandemic in 2020: A Study Case of a Subsidized Healthcare Company in the Caribbean Region of Colombia | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5185 | PMH19 Evaluation of Symptoms of Depression Among People with Substance Use during COVID-19 Lockdown in India: A CROSS-Sectional Study | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5186 | PCN120 Clinical and Economic Consequences of Delayed Care Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic- Focus on Mammograms and Breast Cancer | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5187 | PIN44 COVID-19 Knowledge and Mental Health IMPACT Assessment in Haiti | Value Health | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
5188 | Special issue on green finance and the post-COVID-19 world | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5189 | Branche | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5190 | What we have learned from the past and how we should look forward From the vantage point of more than 50 years’ work in the raw material field, as well as working in the private sector, in the German federal ministry of economics, at a geological survey, and engaged in teaching and supervising research at a university, I draw a number of conclusions about the following aspects of the fields: development of long-term prices, the long-term supply situation, especially the expectation of an imminent peaking of supply, the frequent and mistaken prediction of shortfalls in supply, our understanding of reserves and resources, and the cyclic nature of success in exploration. I am solely dealing with geological aspects, not taking into account political inferences and supply disruptions. This is followed by an attempt to look into the future of raw materials demand within the framework of the accelerating green energy transition. These conclusions are: Conclusion 1: When two amplifying effects overlap, long-term price trends can be broken. Conclusion 2: All growth rates flatten eventually. Never extrapolate high growth rates too far! However, growth rates are learning curves that move in waves and can steepen again. In general, the higher the production the lower the growth rates, even in exceptional cases. Conclusion 3: It is unclear, whether we have already reached the stage when growth rates of the major metals have flattened, but sooner or later it will come. Conclusion 4: Sooner or later we shall see demand peaking for primary metals of all commodities (in contrast to peak supply) because the share of secondary metals will grow and the consumption per capita reaches saturation levels. Conclusion 5: The reserve/ production ratio (R/P-ratio) is only a snapshot of a dynamically evolving reserve/resources system. The learning effects during exploration so far are in step with ever-increasing consumption. Serious limits to reserves are nowhere to be seen. Conclusion 6: Rapid changes in production rates may be accompanied by significant decreases in R/P-ratios and it would appear justified to suspect that advances in exploration cannot always keep pace with consumption. However, as long as the R/P-ratios do not fall below 50 for stratabound deposits and 25 for other deposits and exploration activities continue apace as normal there is no reason to worry about future supply bottlenecks. Conclusion 7: The R/P-ratios are useless as indicators for lifetime; however, they are helpful as early warning indicators for looming problems of supply and for indicating the need for boosting exploration. Conclusion 8: Exploration discoveries show episodic behaviour. Therefore it is difficult to extrapolate into the future. So far all pessimistic forecasts have been proven wrong by ingenious advances to detect new ore bodies to replace mined-out reserves. Conclusion 9: Supply shortages have been forecast frequently in the past. They never actually happened. The self-regulating feedback control cycle of mineral supply safeguards adequate supply over time. There is no reason to assume that this system of self-correcting forecasts will not work in the future. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5191 | Dead-reckoning elucidates fine-scale habitat use by European badgers Meles meles BACKGROUND: Recent developments in both hardware and software of animal-borne data loggers now enable large amounts of data to be collected on both animal movement and behaviour. In particular, the combined use of tri-axial accelerometers, tri-axial magnetometers and GPS loggers enables animal tracks to be elucidated using a procedure of ‘dead-reckoning’. Although this approach was first suggested 30 years ago by Wilson et al. (1991), surprisingly few measurements have been made in free-ranging terrestrial animals. The current study examines movements, interactions with habitat features, and home-ranges calculated from just GPS data and also from dead-reckoned data in a model terrestrial mammal, the European badger (Meles meles). METHODS: Research was undertaken in farmland in Northern Ireland. Two badgers (one male, one female) were live-trapped and fitted with a GPS logger, a tri-axial accelerometer, and a tri-axial magnetometer. Thereafter, the badgers’ movement paths over 2 weeks were elucidated using just GPS data and GPS-enabled dead-reckoned data, respectively. RESULTS: Badgers travelled further using data from dead-reckoned calculations than using the data from only GPS data. Whilst once-hourly GPS data could only be represented by straight-line movements between sequential points, the sub-second resolution dead-reckoned tracks were more tortuous. Although there were no differences in Minimum Convex Polygon determinations between GPS- and dead-reckoned data, Kernel Utilisation Distribution determinations of home-range size were larger using the former method. This was because dead-reckoned data more accurately described the particular parts of landscape constituting most-visited core areas, effectively narrowing the calculation of habitat use. Finally, the dead-reckoned data showed badgers spent more time near to field margins and hedges than simple GPS data would suggest. CONCLUSION: Significant differences emerge when analyses of habitat use and movements are compared between calculations made using just GPS data or GPS-enabled dead-reckoned data. In particular, use of dead-reckoned data showed that animals moved 2.2 times farther, had better-defined use of the habitat (revealing clear core areas), and made more use of certain habitats (field margins, hedges). Use of dead-reckoning to provide detailed accounts of animal movement and highlight the minutiae of interactions with the environment should be considered an important technique in the ecologist’s toolkit. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5192 | An evaluation into the causes of perpetual disruptive passenger behavior There is a rising trend in the number of disruptive airline passenger reports filed to the International Air Transport Association’s Incident Data eXchange and National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Aviation Safety Reporting System over the past 20 years. Passenger behavioral safety is vital for the comfort, well-being, and safety of other passengers, crew, and an airline’s smooth operations. Safety culture has been shown to impact the implementation and efficiency of safety management systems. This paper has evaluated the relationship between disruptive passenger occurrences and the intentions of a safety management system, through the lens of safety culture. An analysis of disruptive passenger reports from National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Aviation Safety Reporting System gave evidence of the consequential actions taken against disruptive passengers There was a tendency for disruptive passengers to either not be dealt consequences, or be subject to consequences that are not in full alignment with the concept of a robust safety culture. This perpetuated a sense that company support was lacking for frontline staff. It also potentially created an awareness amongst passengers that disruptive behaviors on aircraft were not statistically an arrestable offence. This reduces the efficiency of threat of punishment as a deterrent. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5193 | Pam Nilan: Young People and the Far Right: Singapore: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021, 145 pages | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5194 | Oh Omikron! | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5195 | Psoriatiker sind anfälliger für Atemwegsinfektionen | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5196 | Dank an die Gutachterinnen und Gutachter | Z Erziehwiss | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5197 | The influence of COVID-19 pandemic on biomedical waste management, the impact beyond infection Excessive population outbursts and associated xenobiotic interventions contribute overproduction of waste materials across the world. Among these waste materials biomedical wastes (BMW) make a significant contribution. The huge accumulation of BMW is not only meant for successive environmental pollution but increases health hazards by cross-contamination and reoccurrence of different fatal infections. The management of BMW gaining continuous attention to the scientific communities for their intriguing potentiality towards public health concerns. Although, world health organization (WHO) and other public health and environmental societies formulate different guidelines for the disposal machinery of BMW but the proper implementation of those rules in public sectors in developing countries is very difficult. In this situation, the sudden prevalence of pandemic like, COVID-19 further worsen such conditions. Huge disposition of medical wastes during COVID-19 detection, treatment, and precautionary measures not only increases the risk of reoccurrence of infection but puts us also in front of a huge challenge of efficient management of these BMW. In this respect, the present review focus on an overview of BMW, existing BMW management, probable consequences of COVID-19 pandemic on the waste management system, and future perspectives. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5198 | Expanding the field: using digital to diversify learning in outdoor science This is an empirical study of teacher experiences with school learners (7–18 years) engaging in cross-curricular environmental science during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study focuses on #FieldworkLive, a programme of live-streamed outdoor science lessons produced by the Field Studies Council and Encounter Edu during the UK lockdown (April – May 2020). The experiences of approximately 377,000 teachers and students from 32 countries were captured using an online survey and direct staff consultation. This delivery method allowed us to reach untapped audiences and to provide learners with a virtual fieldwork experience during the constraints of lockdown. Teachers were highly positive about the technology-enhanced learning which provided them with novel perspectives and approaches for the classroom. We propose a model for the affordances provided by this delivery approach based on the Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge framework. The Field Studies Council has developed a flexible package of multimedia resources for secondary schools as a route to enriching outdoor experience and learning despite the constraints imposed by the pandemic. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s43031-022-00047-0. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5199 | Evaluation of Turkey's contribution to SCI-E indexed publications on COVID-19 BACKGROUND: In December of 2019, a new disease which is caused by SARS-CoV-2, as an epidemic disease out of Wuhan, China, began to circulate. On March 11, 2020, the Republic of Turkey Ministry of Health had announced the first case from Turkey. The aim of this study is to analyze the scientific publications in the field of COVID-19 included in Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE) from Turkey and to establish a theoretical background for future studies in the health literature with obtained valuable information about the publications. We searched all papers published in the field of COVID-19 by using the terms of “COVID-19,” “2019-n-CoV,” “SARS-CoV-2,” “Coronavirus disease 19,” and “2019 novel coronavirus” as scientific nomenclatures of COVID-19 in the topic search section of the software. RESULTS: Overall, 47,368 papers, indexed by SCI-E, were found related to COVID-19 between January 1, 2020, and December 13, 2020. Of these, 931 were from Turkey. In terms of specialities, the most contribution was from the Medicine General Internal followed by Dermatology. Most of the publications were article. English was the most preferred language in papers. Dermatological Theraphy published the most paper. CONCLUSIONS: Applying this kind of analysis on an intermittent basis gives a general perspective for contribution of a countries to scientific publications and useful for the further studies. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
5200 | Hydroxychloroquine non-availability during COVID-19 pandemic and its relation to anxiety level and disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis and lupus patients: a cross-sectional study BACKGROUND: During COVID-19 disease era, there is an accelerated demand for hydroxychloroquine since it was suggested by some centers as potential therapy for COVID-19 which has led to diminished supplies for patients with rheumatic disease and which carried unexpected risk for disease flare particularly in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis. The purpose of the work is to detect the effect of HCQ shortage in patients with RA and SLE on anxiety and disease activity. RESULTS: A total of 320 patients were divided into two groups: group 1—216RA patients with mean age 45.5 ± 9.59 years, disease duration 43.4 ± 25.6 months with female predominance (62.5%). Group 2—104 SLE patients with mean33.4 ± 7.9 age years, disease duration 52.1 ± 34.6 months with female predominance (85.6%). HCQ shortage occurred in 174 RA patients (80.5%) and 76 lupus patients (73.1%). Despite HCQ shortage, there were no significant change in disease activity of RA (using CDAI) and SLE (using SELENA) p = 0.063 and 0.064 respectively before and after HCQ shortage. Anxiety level was higher in patients who were exposed to HCQ shortage in both groups (SLE p 0.0058 and RA p 0.0044) when we compared them to those without HCQ shortage. CONCLUSION: In most patients with RA and SLE, the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a HCQ scarcity, with no effect on disease activity. Anxiety was found to be associated with HCQ shortage in both diseases. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |