Publications by authors named "A E J Duyn"

In this article, we report the results of a national survey of students in COAMFTE-accredited family therapy programs who self-identify as coming from lower- or working-class backgrounds. Results of the study reveal opportunity and tension relative to family, friends, and community because of social mobility associated with graduate education. Participants describe family therapy education as middle-class centered, pointing to lack of attention to social class, marginalization, classism, and unacknowledged class barriers as salient experiences in their graduate programs.

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Objective: To gain an insight into perinatal mortality and morbidity in full-term infants without congenital abnormalities admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).

Design: Retrospective analysis.

Method: In this study, all full-term infants, who were born in the period 1997-2003 without congenital disorders and admitted to the NICU at the Wilhelmina Children's Hospital in Utrecht, the Netherlands were included.

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Background: Early detection and quantification of brain damage in neonatal asphyxia is important. In adults, S100 protein in blood is associated with damage to the central nervous system.

Objective: To determine whether S100 protein can be detected in arterial and venous cord blood of healthy newborns and to relate S100 protein concentrations in cord blood to mode of delivery.

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Background: Only a small proportion of cervical cancer recurrences is detected during routine follow-up. We investigated which percentage of recurrences is detected during follow-up, which diagnostic tools are helpful to detect recurrent disease and which factors are of prognostic significance once recurrent disease has been established in patients treated for cervical cancer stage IB-IVA.

Methods: Characteristics of the primary tumor, characteristics of recurrent disease and follow-up were collected retrospectively from clinical records of 277 patients who achieved a complete remission of at least 3 months after primary treatment for cervical cancer in 1992, 1993 and 1994 in three university hospitals in the Netherlands.

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Background: Only a small proportion of cervical cancer recurrences is detected during routine follow-up. We investigated which percentage of recurrences is detected during follow-up, which diagnostic tools are helpful to detect recurrent disease and which factors are of prognostic significance once recurrent disease has been established in patients treated for cervical cancer stage IB-IVA.

Methods: Characteristics of the primary tumor, characteristics of recurrent disease and follow-up were collected retrospectively from clinical records of 277 patients who achieved a complete remission of at least 3 months after primary treatment for cervical cancer in 1992, 1993 and 1994 in three university hospitals in the Netherlands.

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