Publications by authors named "Frick W"

Unlabelled: Bacterial pathogens remain poorly characterized in bats, especially in North America. We describe novel (and in some cases panmictic) hemoplasmas (10.1% positivity) and bartonellae (25.

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Temporal activity patterns of animals can indicate how individuals respond to changing conditions. Gregarious roosting bats provide an opportunity to compare activity patterns among individuals living in the same location to investigate how reproductive status or sex may influence activity budgets. We examined how the activity patterns of the nectarivorous bat vary depending on reproductive conditions, sex, and environmental conditions.

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The world's rich diversity of bats supports healthy ecosystems and important ecosystem services. Maintaining healthy biological systems requires prompt identification of threats to biodiversity and immediate action to protect species, which for wide-ranging bat species that span geopolitical boundaries warrants international coordination. Anthropogenic forces drive the threats to bats throughout North America and the world.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study found that only 18.3% of adults with heart failure in the U.S. received palliative care within five years of diagnosis, despite its benefits.
  • Shorter wait times for palliative care were linked to more recent diagnoses, advanced heart failure, and certain medical interventions.
  • The research highlights underutilization of palliative care and suggests that factors like race and geography may affect access, indicating a need for further exploration of barriers to service utilization.
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Background: Coronary in-stent restenosis (ISR) is a major clinical challenge of contemporary percutaneous revascularization and portends adverse cardiovascular outcomes.

Objectives: We aimed to evaluate gender, race, and ethnicity related outcomes in acute coronary syndromes (ACS) with ISR.

Methods: Primary hospitalizations for ACS and ISR in the National Inpatient Sample database from 2016 to 2019 were included.

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Atrial fibrillation (AF) is common, but there are limited data to guide selection of rate control medications (RCM). Reasons for selection are multivariable, and the impact on outcomes is unknown. We investigated prescribing patterns of RCM among patients with AF.

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  • Wind energy is increasing globally to cut greenhouse gas emissions, but it negatively affects bat populations due to turbine-related fatalities and habitat loss.
  • Measures such as placing turbines away from sensitive areas and limiting operations during peak bat activity are essential to minimize these impacts.
  • There is a lack of legal protections for bats against wind energy development in many countries, highlighting the need for governments and financial institutions to enforce environmental standards to balance energy production with wildlife conservation.
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Emerging mycoses are an increasing concern in wildlife and human health. Given the historical rarity of fungal pathogens in warm-bodied vertebrates, there is a need to better understand how to manage mycoses and facilitate recovery in affected host populations. We explore challenges to host survival and mechanisms of host recovery in three bat species (Myotis lucifugus, Perimyotis subflavus, and M.

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  • Many people worldwide want to find ways to stop future pandemics from happening.
  • While there has been a lot of focus on preparing for and responding to pandemics, preventing diseases from spreading from animals to humans isn't talked about much.
  • The text suggests we should pay more attention to how environmental changes can cause these spills and offers ideas on how to make policies that help prevent them.
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Bacterial pathogens remain poorly characterized in bats, especially in North America. We describe novel (and in some cases panmictic) hemoplasmas (10.5% positivity) and bartonellae (25.

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Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic led to a global increase in healthcare-associated infections (HAI) among intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Whether this increase is directly attributable to COVID-19 or whether the pandemic indirectly (via staff shortages or breaches in infection prevention measures) led to this increase, remains unclear. The objectives of this study were to assess HAI incidence and to identify independent risk factors for HAI in COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 ICU patients.

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Inherent complexities in the composition of microbiomes can often preclude investigations of microbe-associated diseases. Instead of single organisms being associated with disease, community characteristics may be more relevant. Longitudinal microbiome studies of the same individual bats as pathogens arrive and infect a population are the ideal experiment but remain logistically challenging; therefore, investigations like our approach that are able to correlate invasive pathogens to alterations within a microbiome may be the next best alternative.

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This spotlight article gives two clinical case examples for the implementation of a suggested safe and feasible strategy to implant leadless pacemakers instead of changing the generators of transvenous pacemakers with depleted batteries in elderly patients.

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Background: For forty years, there has been growing uncertainty about whether Hill's horseshoe bat () still persists in Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda. Only known from one small area within the National Park, is listed as Critically Endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), based on its extremely small geographic range and presumed low number of mature individuals. Here, we present and describe bat species occurrence data contributed to the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) that we collected as part of a long-term collaborative project to rediscover this lost species.

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Social computing software and online tools are gaining credence in teaching and learning spaces, including higher education contexts. However, the adoption of social computing software does not automatically translate into effective teaching and learning if students' views and needs are not considered along with course learning outcomes. Thus, this study was conducted to explore students' perspectives and preferences for social computing software and online tools in a university elective course.

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Disease results from interactions among the host, pathogen, and environment. Inoculation trials can quantify interactions among these players and explain aspects of disease ecology to inform management in variable and dynamic natural environments. White-nose Syndrome, a disease caused by the fungal pathogen, Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd), has caused severe population declines of several bat species in North America.

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Many of the world's most pressing issues, such as the emergence of zoonotic diseases, can only be addressed through interdisciplinary research. However, the findings of interdisciplinary research are susceptible to miscommunication among both professional and non-professional audiences due to differences in training, language, experience, and understanding. Such miscommunication contributes to the misunderstanding of key concepts or processes and hinders the development of effective research agendas and public policy.

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Energy conservation has long been a focal point in hibernation research. A long-standing assumption is that ambient temperature (Ta) largely defines the rate of energy expenditure because of well-known relationships between Ta, metabolic rate and frequency of arousal from torpor. Body condition and humidity also affect energy expenditure but are usually considered secondary factors.

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Assessing the scope and severity of threats is necessary for evaluating impacts on populations to inform conservation planning. Quantitative threat assessment often requires monitoring programs that provide reliable data over relevant spatial and temporal scales, yet such programs can be difficult to justify until there is an apparent stressor. Leveraging efforts of wildlife management agencies to record winter counts of hibernating bats, we collated data for 5 species from over 200 sites across 27 U.

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Collaborative monitoring over broad scales and levels of ecological organization can inform conservation efforts necessary to address the contemporary biodiversity crisis. An important challenge to collaborative monitoring is motivating local engagement with enough buy-in from stakeholders while providing adequate top-down direction for scientific rigor, quality control, and coordination. Collaborative monitoring must reconcile this inherent tension between top-down control and bottom-up engagement.

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Article Synopsis
  • The COVID-19 pandemic reveals significant public health and economic issues stemming from viruses spilling over from wildlife, particularly focusing on the impact of SARS-CoV-2.
  • There's a growing concern about the potential for humans to infect wildlife, especially free-ranging bats, which might become new reservoirs for the virus, complicating public health efforts.
  • A review indicates that over 40 species of North American bats could be vulnerable to SARS-CoV-2, emphasizing the need for a unified approach to human and wildlife health during this pandemic.
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