Publications by authors named "Carolyn Rosenthal"

Article Synopsis
  • Staphylococcus aureus agglutinates in human plasma, aiding its ability to cause disease, but the exact mechanisms involved are not fully understood.
  • Researchers developed new methods to study this agglutination and found that the ArlRS two-component system is crucial for this process when exposed to human plasma or fibrinogen.
  • They discovered that while the ebh gene (related to the Giant Staphylococcal Surface Protein) is up-regulated in arlRS mutants, it negatively impacts agglutination, and manipulating this gene can influence the pathogenesis of S. aureus in models of infection.
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This paper utilizes Helena Znaniecka Lopata's concept of life frameworks as a lens through which to understand the experience of widowhood amongst elderly Chinese immigrant women living in Toronto, Canada. While Lopata defined life frameworks as including social supports, social relations and social roles, for these widows, personal resources (framed in Chinese cultural context) were also important aspects of life frameworks. In-depth interviews with 20 widows contacted through a Chinese community center were conducted in Mandarin and Cantonese and then transcribed and interpreted through team-based qualitative analyses.

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The study purpose was to contribute to a more complete understanding of the experience and meaning of family inheritance. The aim of this article is to describe and discuss the meaning of communication in inheritance experiences among Canadian families. A constructivist/interpretive methodological approach guided this research.

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While concern has been expressed for some time about the impact of rising female employment on informal help to older adults, few studies have directly compared employed and not-employed women and only rarely has research utilized national, population-based samples. This article examines whether paid employment reduces the provision and/or the intensity of specific types of help offered by women to older parents and parents-in-law. Data were drawn from the 1996 General Social Survey of Canada and consist of a sub-sample of women aged 40 to 64 who had at least one parent or parent-in-law alive.

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