Publications by authors named "E Shaver"

Parental incarceration touches the lives of millions of school-aged children and youth. School psychologists are positioned to support students who have experienced the incarceration of a loved one and to consult with school team members to boost students' long-term outcomes. This scoping review aimed to assess the scope and extent of parental incarceration's presence in the peer-reviewed and practitioner-oriented literature of school psychology, as well as to compare school psychology to the related disciplines of school counseling and special education.

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Audience: The targeted audience for this simulation is Emergency Medicine (EM) residents. Medical students, advanced practice providers, and staff physicians could all also find educational merit in this scenario.

Background: Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the United States according to the CDC.

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Non-native species are expanding globally and can alter ecosystem functions, including food web dynamics, community structure and carbon storage. Seagrass are foundation species that contribute a variety of ecosystem services in near-shore coastal ecosystems, including a significant sink of carbon. In the Caribbean, the rapidly expanding non-native Halophila stipulacea has unknown impacts on carbon storage.

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Background: This study investigated whether there are pharmacogenomic markers predictive of chemotherapy induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) as a result of taxane-based chemotherapy.

Methods: Patients were enrolled from August 2020 to November 2020 in a prospective, case-control trial evaluating pharmacogenetic predictors of CIPN. All women were treated with at least 3 cycles of taxane-based chemotherapy for histologically confirmed gynecologic malignancies.

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Recent warm temperatures driven by climate change have caused mass coral bleaching and mortality across the world, prompting managers, policymakers, and conservation practitioners to embrace restoration as a strategy to sustain coral reefs. Despite a proliferation of new coral reef restoration efforts globally and increasing scientific recognition and research on interventions aimed at supporting reef resilience to climate impacts, few restoration programs are currently incorporating climate change and resilience in project design. As climate change will continue to degrade coral reefs for decades to come, guidance is needed to support managers and restoration practitioners to conduct restoration that promotes resilience through enhanced coral reef recovery, resistance, and adaptation.

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