| Title | Venue | Year | Impact | Source |
3401 | The Challenges of Inflation in Europe and the US Inflationary pressures and uncertainties related to the severity and duration of the coronavirus pandemic have been growing steadily in the last year. Different approaches to supporting labour force participation in Europe and the United States have led to different inflationary outcomes. In addition, the Russian war against Ukraine, which began on 24 February, has provided a definitive answer to questions about whether rising inflation is just temporary. The sharp increase in already volatile food and energy prices is presenting monetary policymakers with new challenges. The authors in this Forum consider how to respond to rising inflation, discuss why inflation is so hard to predict and examine whether long-term inflation expectations have de-anchored. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3402 | Inflation Developments in the Euro Area Since the Onset of the Pandemic There is hope that the Russian war on Ukraine could expedite the energy transition in Europe leading to a new and more environmentally sustainable steady state. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3403 | European Inflation in an American Mirror In these highly uncertain times, flexibility has value. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3404 | Determinants of Inflation Expectations in the Euro Area Euro area inflation has been rising strongly in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, giving rise to concerns that there could be second-round effects, with higher inflation leading to higher inflation expectations, which in turn lead to higher inflation. This could result in more persistent rises in inflation. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3405 | Top tips for incorporating research | Br Dent J | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3406 | British Undergraduate Dental Research Conference 2022 | Br Dent J | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3407 | Would Renationalisation and Co-financing of the Common Agricultural Policy Be Justified? During the past decades several attempts have been made to reform the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). The article analyses the possible new directions of CAP implementation and financing of the CAP. It discusses whether renationalisation and co-financing of the CAP would be a beneficial approach to make the policy more efficient and to help restructuring not just the CAP expenditure but the whole EU budget. The author analyses the changes in light of the new regulatory frameworks to be implemented from 2023. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3408 | On Returning Inflation to Target To gauge the breadth of current inflation and prospects for inflation returning to target, we consider disaggregated measures of CPI infl ation to evaluate trends and then consider diff erent scenarios for the realisation for wages and prices. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3409 | Decolonizing the Home at Home in the Pandemic: Articulating Women's Experience Feminism bears the promise of liberation of and equality for women. Reading and teaching feminist texts, within the academia and in activist spaces, has provided the opportunity to explore what it means to become and be a woman. This article explores the experience of teaching a course on women’s writing at the undergraduate level during the COVID-19 pandemic. Normally, a course on feminist writings is an occasion for self-reflection, thereby providing an opportunity to establish a dialogue between the domestic and the public. Such dialogues took place in secure institutional spaces such as classrooms or conference halls, without the intrusion of the domestic. However, as the teacher–student interaction shifted to an online mode during the pandemic, all the participants in this dialogue, including the instructor and the students, found themselves in domestic spaces, with family members listening. The article chronicles the anxieties of a woman instructor, as she teaches feminist texts from home to learners who are sitting behind computer screen in their homes and the possible impact of feminist ideas on the domestic spaces of all participants. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3410 | Innovative Care for Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Use of Bedside Intestinal Ultrasound to Optimize Management BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 has reduced access to endoscopy and imaging. Safe alternatives, available at the bedside, are needed for accurate, non-invasive strategies to evaluate disease activity. The aim of this study is to establish the impact of clinic-based bedside intestinal ultrasound (IUS) on decision making, reduction in reliance on endoscopy and short-term healthcare utilization. METHODS: We conducted a prospective observational evaluation during the COVID-19 pandemic, of the impact of a regional comprehensive care pathway to manage IBD patients consecutively recruited with acute symptoms, or suspected new diagnosis of IBD. Clinic-based access to sigmoidoscopy and bedside intestinal ultrasound were evaluated, used to direct clinical care and avoid hospitalization or hospital-based endoscopy. RESULTS: A total of 72 patients were seen between March 15 and June 30, 2020. Of these, 57% (41/72) were female, 64% had Crohn’s disease (46/72) with 14% (10/72) presenting with symptoms requiring investigation, of which 5 new cases of IBD were identified (50%). Immediate access to ultrasound and sigmoidoscopy led to meaningful changes in management in 80.5% (58/72) of patients. Active inflammation was detected by IUS alone (72.5%, 29/40) or in combination with in-clinic sigmoidoscopy (78%, 18/23) or sigmoidoscopy alone (78% 7/9). Six patients were referred to colorectal surgery for urgent surgical intervention including two patients admitted directly. CONCLUSION: Implementation of IUS as part of a clinical care pathway during the COVID-19 pandemic is a useful strategy to enhance care delivery and improve clinical decisions, while sparing other important acute care resources. | J Can Assoc Gastroenterol | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3411 | Communicating With Breast Imaging Patients During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Impact on Patient Care and Physician Wellness OBJECTIVE: Assess the impact of COVID-19 on patient-breast radiologist interactions and evaluate the relationship between safety measure–constrained communication and physician wellbeing. METHODS: A 41-question survey on the perceived effect of COVID-19 on patient care was distributed from June 2020 to September 2020 to members of the Society of Breast Imaging and the National Consortium of Breast Centers. Non-radiologists and international members were excluded. Anxiety and psychological distress scores were calculated. A multivariable logistic model was used to identify demographic and mental health factors associated with responses. RESULTS: Five hundred twenty-five surveys met inclusion criteria (23% response rate). Diminished ability to fulfill patients’ emotional needs was reported by 46% (221/479), a response associated with younger age (OR, 0.8 per decade; P < 0.01), higher anxiety (OR, 2.3; P < 0.01), and higher psychological distress (OR, 2.2; P = 0.04). Personal protective equipment made patient communication more difficult for 88% (422/478), a response associated with younger age (OR, 0.8 per decade; P = 0.008), female gender (OR, 1.9; P < 0.01), and greater anxiety (OR, 2.6; P = 0.001). The inability to provide the same level of care as prior to COVID-19 was reported by 37% (177/481) and was associated with greater anxiety (OR, 3.4; P < 0.001) and psychological distress (OR, 1.7; P = 0.03). CONCLUSION: The majority of breast radiologists reported that COVID-19 has had a negative impact on patient care. This perception was more likely among younger radiologists and those with higher levels of anxiety and psychological distress. | J Breast Imaging | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3412 | Guest Editors' Introduction-Visionary Praxis: Paule Marshall's, Ntozake Shange's and Toni Morrison's Foresight concerning Sick Violence and Violent Sickness This introduction provides an overview of the special issue that focuses on the interconnections of Black women’s literary studies with the crises of COVID-19 and ongoing anti-Black violence. More specifically, it considers how the work of three renowned writers, Paule Marshall, Ntozake Shange, and Toni Morrison—which collectively spans over fifty years—offers models for how to reimagine our current circumstances and create more just futures in our national and global communities. The essay identifies and expounds on the overarching question of the special issue: how does the work of Marshall, Shange, and Morrison speak to contemporary affairs and concerns? By engaging this question, this collection of essays offers new insights about these women’s writing in particular and expands the corpus of scholarship on Black women’s writing in general. In the aftermath of the passing of these writers, a collective reappraisal of their oeuvres is a timely and fitting tribute, as each of their bodies of work reveals that they long have engaged concerns about Black people’s encounters with systemic barriers that have laid the foundation for the current twinned crises of anti-Black violence and the disproportionate impact of COVID-19. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3413 | Getting to the Root of US Healthcare Injustices through Morrison's Root Workers Although a number of scholars have tackled the figure of the Black folk-healer in Toni Morrison’s novels, the character deserves greater attention in the present moment for the insights she provides into two contemporary catastrophes: the coronavirus pandemic and the structural racism that precipitates rampant violence against brown-skinned people in the United States. Beginning with M’Dear, the elderly woman who is brought in to treat Cholly’s Aunt Jimmy in The Bluest Eye (1970), I survey descriptions of several root workers, hoodoo practitioners, and midwives in Morrison’s fiction, including Ajax’s mother in Sula (1973) and Milkman’s aunt Pilate in Song of Solomon (1977). Morrison’s portraits of these women and their communities capture the endurance of African folk customs, the undervalued knowledge of aged members of society, and a sense of Black women’s strength beyond that of the physical, laboring, or hypersexual body. The fictional experiences of Morrison’s healers also alert readers to the very real injustices that have historically impeded the successes of African Americans—and continue to hamper them, as has been exposed during the COVID-19 crisis and public outrages over police brutality. These injustices include inequities in lifelong earning potential, education, housing, and access to healthcare. Paying closer attention to the Nobel Laureate’s root-working women makes her novels more than simply “transformative” and “empowering” for individual readers; analyzing these figures allows one to unearth important critiques of medical bias and other forms of discrimination against marginalized members of society—disparities that must be dismantled in the push for social change. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3414 | Predictors of Nursing Home Covid-19 Cases: a Community Vulnerability Approach It is well known that the Covid-19 pandemic has placed considerable burden on nursing homes, including from resident, facility, and community perspectives, among others. This study examined facility and community factors that were related to incident Covid-19 cases in nursing home facilities. N=12,473 US nursing homes were included in this study. Data from June 2020 - January 2021 from several publicly available sources were combined to create a dataset that included facility name, size, ownership, mortality rate, Covid case rate, personal protective equipment (PPE) and staff shortages, % white residents, and % Medicaid residents. Community factors included core-based statistical area (CBSA) Covid case rates, urban/rural, CBSA death rates, and the CDC’s Social Vulnerability Index (SVI). Zero-inflated Poisson regression models were used to determine predictors of 8-month Covid case counts, normalized by facility size. Results indicated that higher staff shortages, poorer facility rating, for-profit ownership, proportionally more Medicaid and non-white residents were all significantly associated with higher Covid case rates over 8 months (all P < 0.0001). Significant community level predictors of higher cases included urban setting and higher SVI. PPE shortages was not associated with higher case counts. Of all the factors included, SVI was the strongest predictor of Covid case counts. This large US study assists in determining critical facility and community factors that predict increasing Covid burden in nursing homes. Particularly, SVI is an important factor in determining facility and public health policy, and targeting resources in large scale health crises such as the Covid-19 pandemic. | Innov Aging | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
3415 | When Black Lives Really Do Matter: Subverting Medical Racism through African-Diasporic Healing Rituals in Toni Morrison's Fiction Toni Morrison spent much of her career detailing the unpredictability of African American existence within a racist society, with a special focus on patriarchal violence and medical apartheid against women’s bodies. Yet Morrison also limns out alternative modes of healing within a Black metacultural framework that moves between Nigeria, Brazil, and Egypt. As we move forward from the COVID-19 crisis, research has suggested that training more African American doctors, nurses, and physician assistants might curtail medical racism. Morrison’s fiction looks to a more basic level in which love of the bodies of African American people is at the center of healing. This article therefore discusses medical racism and applies Morrison’s lessons to the COVID-19 moment that her writing trenchantly foreshadows. It focuses on three healers who elide the medical establishment to embody a metacultural ethics of healing: Baby Suggs (in Beloved [1987]), Consolata Sosa (in Paradise [1997]), and Ethel Fordham (in Home [2012]). Morrison fuses an African-diasporic framework with embodied new knowledge that allows individuals to gain insight and agency in a white-dominant medical world that still refuses to endorse the idea that Black people’s bodies and psyches really do matter. An examination of these healers’ practices therefore sheds light on the COVID-19 moment by suggesting ways that African American people can stay “woke” and have agency when encountering and navigating traditional health care systems, which even today view the bodies of African Americans as fodder for medical experiments, immune to disease, and not in need of ethical and humane medical care. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3416 | Technology and Social Isolation, Loneliness and Health Inequities Among Older Adults Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, older adults have been advised to stay-at-home to reduce the risk of infection. Social distancing and quarantine measures increase their vulnerability to adverse health outcomes like depression and cardiovascular disease. Technology is an effective tool to promote social connectedness among older adults affected by the pandemic; however, its role in reducing loneliness and health inequities is not well understood. The goal of this project was to construct a model for how technologies may be deployed to mitigate the impact of a pandemic on social isolation, loneliness, and health inequities for older adults. PubMed, SCOPUS, and PsychINFO were searched for the following keywords: “social isolation,” “loneliness,” “social support,” “resilience,” “technology,” “pandemic,” and “health inequities.” Articles selected for full analysis attempted to understand or observe how technology alleviates social isolation and/or loneliness among older adults. Research evidence indicates that using technology reduces loneliness directly and indirectly (by reducing social isolation) and can strengthen social support, which in turn promotes resilience among older adults. Video-based technologies encourage care-seeking behaviors in this population. There is insufficient evidence to determine technology’s relationship to health inequities experienced by older adults. The model we have proposed should help advance research on the relationship between technology and health inequities among older adults that may be aggravated by pandemic-like situations. We hypothesize that technology interventions for social support and functional competence should be sequenced in order to have the best effects on reducing health disparities. | Innov Aging | 2021 | | CORD-19 |
3417 | Zooming-in for climate action-hyperlocal greenhouse gas data for mitigation action? While the international community has made progress in adopting goals and agreements in the field of climate change mitigation, efforts to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are significantly lacking behind global ambitions for acceptable climate change. In this perspective, we discuss whether a window of opportunity for more effective climate action is emerging due to the convergence of new scientific and technological opportunities to provide high-resolution information on GHG emissions and emerging polycentric governance forms. We hypothesize that scientific and technological developments in the geophysical sciences and geoinformatics could provide the information policy makers need to put in place effective policies on climate change mitigation and to have measures to verify the effectiveness of their mitigation policies. To contribute to a better understanding of these developments and the requirements for effective climate action, new forms of inter- and transdisciplinary research become urgently necessary. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3418 | Author Correction: Advancing COVID-19 diagnosis with privacy-preserving collaboration in artificial intelligence In the version of this article initially published, the first name of Chuansheng Zheng was misspelled as Chuangsheng. The error has been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the article. © The Author(s) 2022. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3419 | First person-Christy Tulen and Ying Wang First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Disease Models & Mechanisms, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Christy Tulen and Ying Wang are co-first authors on ‘ Dysregulated mitochondrial metabolism upon cigarette smoke exposure in various human bronchial epithelial cell models’, published in DMM. Christy is a PhD student in the lab of Prof. Frederik-Jan van Schooten at Maastricht University Medical Center+, Maastricht, The Netherlands, investigating the mechanistic involvement of smoking-associated aldehyde-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease lung pathology. Ying is a PhD student in the lab of Prof. Pieter S. Hiemstra at Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands, investigating the interaction between respiratory viruses (SARS-CoV-2 and rhinovirus) and human lung epithelial cells. | Dis Model Mech | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3420 | Interplay of All Drive Types | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3421 | China's Complex Leadership in G20 and Global Governance: From Hangzhou 2016 to Kunming 2021 How and why have China’s G20 and thus global leadership changed since China hosted its first G20 summit at Hangzhou in September 2016? Since then the G20 has shaped global governance on an expanding array of subjects beyond its finance-economic core. China has consistently surpassed the other major powers in its economic growth, but also in its vulnerabilities at home. Its institutional leadership in long-established multilateral organizations has grown. The most systematic detailed account of China’s leadership in G20 governance from 1999 to 2015 argued that China was always a leader in G20 governance but never led alone, always doing so with another, different G20 member, as the subject changed. New findings arise by using an expanded model of China’s leadership, matching Xi Jinping’s priorities at G20 summits with the summit’s collective conclusions, commitments, compliance, and institutional development of global governance and examining the critical cases of climate change, biodiversity, infrastructure, and digitalization. This shows that China’s G20 leadership has become more complex and cautious since 2016, even as G20 performance has generally grown. In 2022 as China institutionally leads global governance on biodiversity and thus climate change, by hosting the United Nations biodiversity summit in Kunming in April and May, it can create cooperative leadership in the G20 from all the world’s great biodiversity powers of Russia and Brazil from the BRICS, Canada and the US from the G7, and Indonesia as G20 host. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3422 | Silver Lining | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3423 | SARS-COV-2-vaccine-inactivated-Sinovac-Biotech: Coronary thrombus: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3424 | Covid-19-vaccine: Lymphohistiocytic myocarditis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3425 | Natalizumab: Coronavirus disease-2019 infection: 6 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3426 | Covid-19-vaccine: Acute myocarditis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3427 | AZD-1222: ANCA-associated vasculitis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3428 | Elasomeran: Flare of pemphigus vulgaris: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3429 | Rituximab: COVID-19: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3430 | Tozinameran: Evans syndrome and systemic lupus erythematosus: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3431 | Sars-cov-2-vaccine-inactivated-sinovac-biotech: Endothelial corneal allograft rejection: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3432 | Bemiparin sodium: Thrombocytopenia: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3433 | Multiple drugs: Anaphylactic reaction, progression of prolonged QT interval and lack of efficacy: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3434 | Tozinameran: Right ventricular outflow tract ventricular tachycardia: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3435 | AZD-1222: Vaccine induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3436 | Tozinameran: Graves' disease: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3437 | Covid-19-vaccine-pfizer-biontech: Multisystem inflammatory syndrome: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3438 | Anakinra/steroids: Cytomegalovirus viremia: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3439 | Elasomeran: Myocarditis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3440 | beta-adrenergic-receptor-antagonists/dexmedetomidine: Recurrent asystole and syncope: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3441 | Anticoagulants/eculizumab/elasomeran: Various toxicities and lack of efficacy: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3442 | Other adverse reaction research | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3443 | Metoclopramide/morphine/ondansetron: QTc prolongation: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3444 | Tozinameran: Acute idiopathic maculopathy: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3445 | Elasomeran: Atrial fibrillation: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3446 | Tozinameran: Guttate psoriasis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3447 | Tozinameran: Acute haemolytic crisis with haemoglobinuria: 2 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3448 | No evidence of adverse neurological outcomes from COVID-19 vaccines | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3449 | AZD-1222: Rhabdomyolysis: case report | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
3450 | Apixaban/dabigatran etexilate/enoxaparin sodium: Various toxicities: 8 case reports | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |