| Title | Venue | Year | Impact | Source |
4551 | 342 National cohort analysis of maternal, perinatal and neonatal outcomes of pregnancies which were positive for sars-COV-2 infection | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4552 | 38 Pregnant with COVID-19 and acute renal insufficiency attended in a hospital in the Amazon region: Case report | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4553 | 153 The experience of the largest greek maternity hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4554 | 60 COVID Collaboration-NHS elective caesarean sections in a private maternity hospital setting-The portland hospital experience | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4555 | 286 COVID-19 Pandemic as a barrier to cervical cancer screening in brazil | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4556 | 145 Severe maternal morbidity and mortality associated with COVID-19 In russian far east | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4557 | 405 The lockdown effect on gynaecological cancer surgeries during the COVID-19 Pandemic | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4558 | 418 Anxiety among polish pregnant women during the COVID-19 pandemic-preliminary results of a cross-sectional study | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4559 | 231 Enhanced postnatal anxiety, traumatic stress symptoms and lower well-being after giving birth alone due to The COVID-19 Pandemic | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4560 | 225 An acute decline in utilization of the obstetric and gynaecology emergency service during The COVID-19 Pandemic in MALTA | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4561 | 404 Remote monitoring of pregnancies complicated by gestational diabetes mellitus during the covid-19 pandemic using stork. A pilot study | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4562 | 273 Overview of the clinical management and outcome of sars-cov-2 pregnant women and their infants in the university clinic frankfurt, Germany | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4563 | 125 Pregnancy and COVID-19. A case report of preterm delivery at 29weeks of a critical ill icu patient. Review of relevant bibliography | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4564 | 369. Lifestyle habits among pregnant women in denmark during the first covid-19 lockdown compared with a historical period-a hospital-based cross-sectional study | Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Bi | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4565 | Play-Hysteresis in the Joint Dynamics of Employment and Investment The slow recovery of many developed economies to the recent financial crisis, and the largest fall in aggregate demand since WWII caused by the COVID-19 Pandemic with its foreseeable negative and persistent effects on the aggregate supply, has generated renewed interest in the subject of hysteresis. The presence of significant hysteresis effects has important theoretical and policy implications. First, there is no unique and predetermined long-run equilibrium level of aggregate employment, as the equilibrium is permanently changed by temporary shocks. Second, as the economic system is not self-adjusting, substantial, timely, and sustained expansionary monetary and fiscal policy should be applied to mitigate the impact of shocks, including the temporary ones. Although it is not possible to quantify hysteresis effects in real time, we can use historical data to shed some light on the possible long-term economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. For that purpose, we use the linear play-hysteresis model in the context of two equation system to analyses the join hysterical dynamics of aggregate employment and investment. We implement the model empirically by means of a new algorithm for the simultaneous equations system applied to Portuguese data that separates the effects of large and small changes in aggregate demand on aggregate employment and investment using an endogenous determined switching parameter as reference. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4566 | Sustainability and Financial Crime Sustainable development promises a wave of new approaches to environmental and social issues due to its perceived holistic nature. New ways of producing and consuming are purported to pave the way for smooth and consensual governance and the reduction of conflicts. The diversion of finance towards sustainable development may also impact on financial crime, at least in the views of optimists who focus on the connections between the two. It is felt that there is no really sustainable finance (the alignment of financial operations with sustainable development) without developing strong and efficient means to fight financial crime. This paper examines such optimistic views, providing, first, an account of institutional strategies relating to sustainable finance, and second, an analysis of some forms of financial crime. Focusing particularly but not exclusively on the UK, a final hypothesis is then formulated around the scenario we are likely to face in the near future if the financial sphere is coopted into the arena of sustainable development. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4567 | Revisiting the safe haven role of Gold across time and frequencies during the COVID-19 pandemic This research empirically evaluates the potential diversification benefits of Gold during the COVID-19 pandemic period, when including it in equity-based asset allocation strategies. This study proposes minimum VaR portfolios, with monthly rebalance and different wavelet scales (short-run, mid-run and long-run), doing both an in-sample and out-of-sample analysis. We find much more unstable weights as the frequency of the decomposition becomes lower, and strong evidence of the outperformance of the mid-run decompositions over the rest of active management strategies and the passive management of buy and hold the variety of single equity indices. Thus, we may shed some light on the role of Gold as a safe haven when properly filtering aggregated data. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4568 | Retour d'expérience sur la réorganisation du Service de médecine du Travail CHU Tlemcen en réponse à l'épidémie COVID-19 We present an organizational plan and feedback, from occupational medicine to CHU Tlemcen to deal with the COVID-19 epidemic. We outline a structural reorganization of our service, an adaptability of our team and an almost daily reassessment of this organization associated with information, training and training of the staff of this structure. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4569 | Effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Infra-Inguinal Vein Bypass Graft Surveillance DUS Scans: Single Unit Experience | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4570 | Impact of COVID-19 on Patients Undergoing Scheduled Carotid Interventions | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4571 | Venous Thrombo-Embolism in an Outpatient Vascular Ultrasound Laboratory All-Comers Cohort with Recent COVID-19 Infection | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4572 | Clinical profile of patients attending the emergency department in different phases of COVID-19 pandemic | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4573 | Home Surgical Skills Training on Simulators for Vascular Surgery Trainees During the COVID-19 Pandemic on an Online Basis | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4574 | Microcirculatory Predictors of Thrombosis in Patients After COVID-19 | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4575 | Mortality and Bleeding Complications of COVID-19 Critically Ill Patients with Venous Thrombo-Embolism | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4576 | COVID-19 Pandemic Impact on Dialysis Access Procedures for End Stage Renal Disease Patients | EJVES Vasc Forum | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4577 | Value and prognostic impact of a deep learning segmentation model of COVID-19 lung lesions on low-dose chest CT Objectives 1) To develop a deep learning (DL) pipeline allowing quantification of COVID-19 pulmonary lesions on low-dose computed tomography (LDCT). 2) To assess the prognostic value of DL-driven lesion quantification. Methods This monocentric retrospective study included training and test datasets taken from 144 and 30 patients, respectively. The reference was the manual segmentation of 3 labels: normal lung, ground-glass opacity(GGO) and consolidation(Cons). Model performance was evaluated with technical metrics, disease volume and extent. Intra- and interobserver agreement were recorded. The prognostic value of DL-driven disease extent was assessed in 1621 distinct patients using C-statistics. The end point was a combined outcome defined as death, hospitalization>10 days, intensive care unit hospitalization or oxygen therapy. Results The Dice coefficients for lesion (GGO+Cons) segmentations were 0.75±0.08, exceeding the values for human interobserver (0.70±0.08; 0.70±0.10) and intraobserver measures (0.72±0.09). DL-driven lesion quantification had a stronger correlation with the reference than inter- or intraobserver measures. After stepwise selection and adjustment for clinical characteristics, quantification significantly increased the prognostic accuracy of the model (0.82 vs. 0.90; p<0.0001). Conclusions A DL-driven model can provide reproducible and accurate segmentation of COVID-19 lesions on LDCT. Automatic lesion quantification has independent prognostic value for the identification of high-risk patients. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4578 | Photoelectrochemical oxidation assisted air purifiers; perspective as potential tools to control indoor SARS-CoV-2 Exposure Coronavirus diseases 2019 (COVID-19), a viral infection pandemic, arises due to easy human-to-human transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). The SARS-CoV-2 causes severe respiratory disorders and other life-threatening diseases (during/post-infection) such as black mold disease, diabetes, cardiovascular, and neurological disorders/diseases. COVID-19 infection emerged challenging to control as SARS-CoV-2 transmits through respiratory droplets (> 10 µm size range), aerosols (< 5 µm), airborne, and particulate matter (PM1.0 PM2.5 and PM10.0). SARS-CoV-2 is more infective in indoor premises due to aerodynamics where droplets, aerosols, and PM1.0/2.5/10.0 float for a longer time and distance leading to a higher probability of it entering upper and lower respiratory tracts. To avoid human-to-human transmission, it is essential to trap and destroy SARS-CoV-2 from the air and provide virus-free air that will significantly reduce indoor viral exposure concerns. In this process, an efficient nano-enable photoelectrochemical oxidation (PECO, a destructive approach to neutralize bio-organism) assisted air purification is undoubtedly a good technological choice. This technical perspective explores the role of PECO-assisted Air-Purifiers (i.e., Molekule as a focus example for proof-of-concept) to trap and destroy indoor microorganisms (bacteria and viruses including Coronaviruses), molds, and allergens, and other indoor air pollutants, such as volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and PM1.0/2.5/10.0. It is observed through various standard and non-standard tests that stimuli-responsive nanomaterials coated filter technology traps and destroys microbial particles. Due to technological advancements according to premises requirements and high-performance desired outcomes, Molekule air purifiers, Air Pro Air -Rx, Air Mini, and Air Mini+, have received Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance as a Class II medical device for the destruction of bacteria and viruses. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4579 | Data Analysis of COVID-19 Hospital Records Using Contextual Patient Classification System Humanity today is suffering from one of the most dangerous pandemics in history, the Coronavirus Disease of 2019 (COVID-19). Although today there is immense advancement in the medical field with the latest technology, the COVID-19 pandemic has affected us severely. The virus is spreading rapidly, resulting in an escalation in the number of patients admitted. We propose a contextual patient classification system for better analysis of the data from the discharge summary available from the research hospital. The classification was done using the Knuth–Morris–Pratt algorithm. We have also analyzed the data of COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 patients. During the analysis, studies on the medicines, medical services and tests, pulse count, body temperature, and the overall effect of age and gender was done. The death versus survival ratio for the COVID-19 positive patients has also been studied. The classification accuracy of the contextual patient classification system achieved was 97.4%. The combination of data analysis and contextual patient classification will be helpful to all the sectors to be better prepared for any future waves of the COVID-19 pandemic. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4580 | Are 'carrots' better than 'sticks'? New EU conditionality and social investment policies in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy and Spain This article asks whether the novel EU approach to member states’ economic adjustment strategies constitutes a ‘social investment turn’ by the Italian and Spanish welfare states. The analytical framework combines insights from different strands of the literature on policy change, in particular those devoted to policy legacies and to policy-making ‘conditionings’ (constraints and facilitators). The study assesses the extent of social investment, as advocated by EU country-specific recommendations, of the set of measures introduced to fight the socio-economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and of programmatic documents issued by the Italian and Spanish executives, such as the State Budget Laws for 2021 and National Recovery and Resilience Plans. In order to evaluate the impact of new conditionality on policy outputs, the article then turns to consider the economic, social and policy legacies of the previous economic crisis and what would have been the prospects for a social investment turn in the absence of Next Generation EU funding. Conclusions show that, at least at the level of intentions, ‘carrots’ seem to be working better than ‘sticks’ on the quest for more intense social investment in Italy and Spain. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1057/s41295-022-00281-w. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4581 | Chaos and complexity: entrepreneurial planning during pandemic Entrepreneurs are argued to have higher foresight, ability to handle complex situations, and superior planning. This qualitative study attempted to validate these assertions in the pandemic context of COVID19. The pandemic created a complex and chaotic business environment. The information was available to businesspersons of the region before a quarter. Did they show adequate foresight to assimilate information and respond to the crisis? How complex was the situation for planning? What entrepreneurial characteristics were demonstrated? A qualitative study design sought and analyzed business owner’s responses to these questions. Though the findings are not generalizable, it indicated inadequate but reactive response. Secondly, the challenge of reduced cash flow prompted cost cutting as an operational response. The plan of winning trust in transactions was also an operational response. A few perceived pandemic as an opportunity for product innovation. Business owners demonstrated empathy toward their employees. Interestingly, most business owners indicated fluidity and inadequate information as a barrier for planning. Information acquisition, seeking help from network, responding to imminent events, wait and watch, were predominant operational responses, whereas innovation and shifting of sectors were strategic responses considered by few entrepreneurs. The perception of superior entrepreneurial abilities in anticipating events, planning, strategizing, and handling complexity was less evidenced in this study. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4582 | Evolving Conceptions of Work-Family Boundaries: In Defense of The Family as Stakeholder In the management and organization studies literature, a key question to explore and explain is that of the family as an organizational stakeholder, particularly when working-from-home became the “new normal”. Departing from meta-analytic studies on the work-family relation and connecting with scholarly conversation on work-family boundary dynamics, we identify three main narratives. In the separation narrative, work and family belong to different realms, and including the family in the domain of organizational responsibility is seen as pointless. The interdependence narrative stresses that organizations and families are overlapping domains in which it is important to acknowledge that the policies and practices of the former might have an impact on family life, and vice-versa. The embeddedness narrative, brought to the fore by the COVID-19 pandemic, sees employment and family as progressively convergent and hybrid work domains. The evolution of employment relations towards increased hybridity of the work situation being embedded in the familial/household context increasingly calls for consideration of the family/household as an integral rather than a peripheral stakeholder. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4583 | Kontakt-Tracing-Apps Zur Bekämpfung der Coronapandemie wurden erstmals mobile Applikationen zur Kontakterfassung und -nachverfolgung, also dem systematischen Erfassen aller Personen mit zeitlicher und räumlicher Nähe zu einer infizierten Person, eingesetzt. In Deutschland haben hierzu vor allem die Corona-Warn-App und die Luca-App Verbreitung gefunden. Dieser Artikel diskutiert die beiden Apps vor allem im Hinblick auf Datenschutz, Sicherheit sowie deren Effektivität zur Bekämpfung der Pandemie. Im Gegensatz zu der Vielzahl an populärwissenschaftlichen Artikeln liegt der Fokus in diesem Artikel auf den technischen Aspekten der Kontakt-Tracing-Apps. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4584 | Exploring the journey of Responsible Business Model Innovation in Asian companies: A review and future research agenda Responsible Business Model Innovation is increasingly becoming a relevant challenge in academic research and business practice, mainly in the Asian context. Changes in business models are widely acknowledged as a key strategy for achieving long-term innovation. However, little is known about the design journey of Responsible Business Model Innovation. By applying the knowledge-based view and stakeholder theory, this paper introduces the founding pillars of Responsible Business Model Innovation, namely: Corporate Social Responsiveness, Inclusiveness, and Reflective Knowledge Exchange. Based on the analysis of extended bodies of literature published between 2011 and 2021 on business model innovation, sustainability innovation, stakeholder theory and responsible innovation, the article explores the state of the art of business ethics and dynamic capabilities in Asian organizations. Findings show that recent research in the field of sustainability and ethical values are improving the impact on business models, thus encouraging the advent of Responsible Business Model Innovation. This article contributes to the emerging field of responsible innovation and offers novel theoretical and practical implications for academy and practitioners, including a first attempt to develop a road map to be followed to achieve of sustainable and ethical values for business and society at large. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4585 | Cocreating transformative value propositions with customers experiencing vulnerability during humanitarian crises To understand the cocreation and impact of transformative value propositions (TVPs), which are designed to address vulnerabilities that customers experience because of humanitarian crises, this study applies a typology of service innovation archetypes as a domain theory to examine different ways to cocreate TVPs. The authors identify different types of customers who experience vulnerability, using a social determinants of health (SDOH) framework. Exemplary TVPs reveal how service organizations can alleviate customer vulnerabilities, in the short and long terms, and highlight a distinction between TVPs that require incremental changes to existing resource deployment versus those that require novel capabilities. This article contributes to transformative service research by establishing a value-centric model that relates the cocreation of TVPs to customers experiencing vulnerability. In turn, researchers and managers can identify the output-based, process-based, experiential, and systemic changes needed to cocreate TVPs. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4586 | Evidence from the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag model on the asymmetric influence of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic on energy markets The COVID-19 pandemic remained a global risk factor and integrated into various means in the functioning of companies, economies and financial markets. Therefore, this paper investigates how COVID-19 influences the energy market in the main financial markets (China, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United States), using time series from February 28, 2020, to November 3, 2020. The goal of this research is to investigate the asymmetric impact of COVID-19 from leading financial markets on energy commodities. In this regard, the non-linear auto-regressive distributed lag (NARDL) framework is employed to capture the long-run asymmetric reactions. The econometric design allows to explore the long-term asymmetric reactions of dependent variables through positive and negative partial sum decompositions of changes in the explanatory variables. The quantitative results show a significant long-run asymmetric interdependence between the number of new SARS-CoV-2 incidence and mortality and the daily percent change in close price of future contracts pertaining to Brent oil, crude oil WTI, carbon emissions, gasoline RBOB, heating oil, Chukyo kerosene, and natural gas. Furthermore, no asymmetry is found in the case of ethanol and fuel oil futures. The novelty of this article is the study of the impact of COVID-19 on the energy sector during the first two waves of COVID-19 by applying the NARDL model that allows to capture long-term asymmetric reactions. Certainly, further research on this topic is necessary due to the permanent shifts in the pandemic, as well as the availability of longer data periods on COVID-19. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4587 | Test Technology Newsletter | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4588 | Radical departure or opportunity not taken? The Johnson government's Constitution, Democracy and Rights Commission In its 2019 manifesto, Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party pledged a Constitution, Democracy and Rights Commission, to consider far-reaching constitutional change. This appeared to signal a radical departure from UK precedent in approaching constitutional reform. In this paper, we examine the Johnson government’s initial proposals and subsequent actions, placing them in comparative context and contrasting them with UK precedent. We show that the government’s explicit pledge to appoint a single Commission to develop the reforms along with its emphasis on restoring public trust in politics through the constitutional reform process, reflected several internationally recognized principles and models for constitutional reform. In practice, however, the government abandoned these potentially radical procedural ambitions, and instead appointed several issue-specific elite-led reviews. We argue that the government’s procedural approach has so far closely followed recent UK precedent, and that the Commission turned out to be an opportunity not taken rather than the radical departure that initially seemed possible. | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4589 | Einfluss krankheitsmodifizierender MS-Therapien auf die Immunantwort | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4590 | Clozapin aus Sicht des Projekts "Arzneimittelsicherheit in der Psychiatrie" | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4591 | Kommunikation in der COVID-19-Pandemie: der Turmbau zu Babel 2022 | N/A | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4592 | Nutritional comparison of surge one and surge two COVID-19 patients in an adult intensive care unit | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4593 | COVID-19 management in a UK Tertiary Centre with High Consequence Infectious Diseases Centre: Nutritional status, intervention and outcome | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4594 | Virtual pump trouble shooting for home parenteral and enteral nutrition patients | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4595 | Applying learning from 1st to the 3rd wave of the COVID-19 pandemic: nutritional provision in critical care | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4596 | Going Digital in a Pandemic! Transforming Dietetic Services by the use of digital platforms to deliver safe and sustainable care during COVID-19 and beyond | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4597 | Dietetic-led nutrition interventions provided to patients recovering from critical illness from COVID-19 in a large London teaching Hospital from March 2020 to April 2021 | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4598 | The provision of parenteral nutrition for patients with COVID-19 on the intensive care unit: experience at a district general hospital | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4599 | A Quality Improvement Project to optimise nutrition in COVID-19 patients receiving CPAP therapy in a ward based setting | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |
4600 | Nutrition Support in the Intensive Care Unit during the COVID-19 pandemic | Clin Nutr ESPEN | 2022 | | CORD-19 |