Publications by authors named "J S Pudlo"

This study illuminates how congregations adapted to an unfolding crisis in real-time and reveals areas of organizational learning and vulnerability. The driving question of this study asks "how has congregational disaster readiness changed during COVID-19?" From this, three measurable corollary questions emerge. First, how has experience during the pandemic changed risk assessment and planning? Second, how has disaster networking changed due to pandemic experiences? Third, did pandemic experience lead to a change in collaboration activities and actions? A natural experiment research design is used to answer these questions.

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Objective: Studies on the effect of statins on platelets in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) yielded inconsistent results. We sought to investigate whether high-dose statin therapy reduces plasma concentrations of soluble P-selectin (sP-selectin), a well-established platelet activation marker and if such changes can affect fibrin clot properties, which are unfavorably altered in CAD patients.

Methods: We studied 130 consecutive patients with advanced CAD who did not achieve the target LDL cholesterol on statins.

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Introduction: Prothrombotic coagulopathy in COVID-19 has led to a strong recommendation for thromboprophylaxis in all hospitalized patients, although there are large differences in the dosage regimens among hospitals and their outcomes remain uncertain. Objectives: We aimed to determine the incidence of thrombotic events and bleeding in patients with COVID-19 using the approved local thromboprophylaxis protocol. Patients and methods: We adapted a self-developed pharmacological thromboprophylaxis protocol based on clinical and laboratory risk assessment of thrombosis in 350 consecutive patients (median age, 67 years) with confirmed COVID-19, treated in designated wards at a single center in Kraków, Poland from October 10, 2020, to April 30, 2021.

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Community-based organizations, such as nonprofit organizations (NPOs) and churches, play an important role in helping individuals and communities bounce back after a disaster. The nature of disasters requires organizations across sectors to partner together to provide recovery services; however, collaboration is difficult even in times of stability and requires trust and communication to be built through prior collaborative relationships. These prior relationships rarely exist between the majority of the nonprofit sector, churches, and existing emergency management structures.

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