Publications by authors named "C J G Whittaker"

Tumor cell-intrinsic signaling pathways can drastically affect the tumor immune microenvironment, promoting tumor progression and resistance to immunotherapy by excluding immune-cell populations from the tumor. Several tumor cell-intrinsic pathways have been reported to modulate myeloid-cell and T-cell infiltration creating "cold" tumors. However, clinical evidence suggests that excluding cytotoxic T cells from the tumor core also mediates immune evasion.

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Background: Despite a wealth of data from high-income countries, there is limited information on the distinct epidemiological patterns observed in diverse, densely populated regions within Latin America. This retrospective analysis of COVID-19's four major waves in Bogotá, Colombia, evaluates 1.77 million cases in detail.

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Article Synopsis
  • Re-deployment of registered nursing staff during the Covid-19 pandemic was part of efforts to address workforce shortages in pediatric critical care, but little research exists on its effects.
  • The study aimed to examine the impact of this re-deployment on staffing levels in pediatric critical care settings through a survey of paediatric critical care nurses in the UK.
  • Results indicated that many nurses felt that re-deployment affected patient care safety, with themes emerging around quality of care, wellbeing, teamwork, training, support, and leadership, highlighting the need for strategies to improve nurse retention.
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The tsunamigenic potential of underwater volcanic eruptions is not well understood, even though eruption-generated tsunamis can be devastating. To address how erupted steam bursts from underwater volcanoes generate tsunamis, we present the experiments, using pressurized steam injected vertically into a water tank. Results over various eruption conditions identify three eruption regimes, namely, shallow-, intermediate-, and deep-water eruptions, according to the combined effects of water depths, source strengths, and source durations.

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The relative contributions of exposure vs. acquired immunity to the epidemiology of human schistosomiasis has been long debated. While there is considerable evidence that humans acquire partial immunity to infection, age- and sex-related contact patterns with water bodies contaminated with infectious cercarial schistosome larvae also contribute to typical epidemiological profiles of infection.

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