Publications by authors named "Parrish G"

Article Synopsis
  • - VegDischarge v1 is a comprehensive dataset covering over 64,000 river segments in Africa, created using a combination of the VegET agro-hydrologic model and the mizuRoute routing model for the years 2001-2021.
  • - The dataset shows strong reliability in its modeling performance with statistical metrics indicating good fit at the continental level, and reveals Africa’s total average annual river discharge as approximately 3271.4 km³·year.
  • - This dataset is essential for researchers and stakeholders, providing insights into water availability and variations that support effective infrastructure planning, resource management, and climate resilience strategies.
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Wastewater surveillance offers a rapid evaluation of SARS-CoV-2 transmission in a community. We describe how a community group, the Yarmouth Wastewater Testing Team (YWTT), in Yarmouth, Maine, (population 8,990) utilized an asset-based community design framework to organize and manage a program to monitor SARS-CoV-2 RNA concentrations. From September 22, 2020 through June 8, 2021, the YWTT disseminated weekly reports of the wastewater results and reported COVID-19 cases within the Yarmouth postal code.

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Importance: In 2018, the combination of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase (UCH-L1) levels became the first US Food and Drug Administration-approved blood test to detect intracranial lesions after mild to moderate traumatic brain injury (MTBI). How this blood test compares with validated clinical decision rules remains unknown.

Objectives: To compare the performance of GFAP and UCH-L1 levels vs 3 validated clinical decision rules for detecting traumatic intracranial lesions on computed tomography (CT) in patients with MTBI and to evaluate combining biomarkers with clinical decision rules.

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Carboxyhemoglobin levels in blood reflect endogenous carbon monoxide production and are often measured during routine blood gas analysis. Endogenous carbon monoxide production has been reported to be increased during sepsis, but carboxyhemoglobin levels have not been thoroughly evaluated as a biomarker of sepsis. We sought to determine whether carboxyhemoglobin levels were elevated during sepsis in a high risk population of premature neonates.

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Background: Tracheal disruption secondary to blunt force occurs infrequently. Most individuals suffering such an injury die before arriving at a hospital. Diagnosis for those who do present alive is often delayed, as signs and symptoms typically do not match the severity of injury.

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Invasive mammalian predators such as rats are now widespread on islands, but hypotheses about their effects have rarely been tested. Circumstantial evidence from New Zealand indicates that, when introduced to islands, Pacific rats (Rattus exulans) have negative effects on endemic plants, invertebrates, birds, and reptiles, including the tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus). We tested the effects of Pacific rats on tuatara by comparing the demographic structure and body condition of tuatara populations on three islands before and after removal of rats and on a fourth island where rats remained.

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General surgeons are often consulted for assistance in the management of ingested foreign bodies. Deglutition of an endotracheal tube is an unusual complication of airway management. In these cases, the artificial airway is "lost" when it becomes lodged deep into the esophagus.

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Objective: To determine if knowledge of neonatal outcome influences obstetricians' retrospective interpretation of fetal heart rate monitor tracings and opinion on the appropriateness of obstetric care.

Study Design: Ten obstetric case histories that involved a critical judgment by the managing obstetrician were selected for this study. Each case contained a point in the patient's labor at which the physician made a judgment regarding route and timing of delivery.

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Increasingly, researchers use medical examiner reports to study the epidemiology of fatal injuries, often assuming that reports of all fatal injuries are included in medical examiner databases. This study evaluated that assumption by comparing the medical examiner database with the death certificates of persons who died of fatal injuries in Iowa during 1990-1991. The authors also examined the association between demographic variables and the presence of a medical examiner report.

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Emergency physicians frequently encounter patients with acute urinary retention. Although most common among the elderly, pediatric and young adult patients occasionally may present with this complaint. The differential diagnosis and emergency department work-up must be age specific.

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A 32-year-old male presented to the emergency department for evaluation of a 12-day history of altered mental status. Workup revealed the presence of an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) of the great vein of Galen, an exceedingly rare and often fatal type of cerebral vascular malformation. Concurrent aneurysmic dilatation of the vein, a frequent finding associated with this type of AVM, resulted in compression of the aqueduct of Sylvius and acute hydrocephalus.

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We measured cardiorespiratory endurance, muscular strength and endurance, anaerobic run time, coronary risk factors, and dietary habits in male fire fighters (n = 779, ages 18 to 64 years) and performed factor analysis to determine the interrelationships and underlying factor structure of the data set. Principal component analysis produced nine factors (eigenvalues greater than 1.0) accounting for 61% of the total variance.

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Sudden death in the emergency department occurs frequently. Intervention by ED support staff may have a significant impact on the survivor's grief response. This study was undertaken to assess sudden death survivors' perceptions and satisfaction with their ED experience, as well as to identify potential weaknesses in their management.

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One hundred twenty-six consecutive ACS Category I motor vehicle trauma patients transported by helicopter from 25 hospitals to a regional trauma center in rural Pennsylvania during a 14-month period were reviewed retrospectively. The overall mortality was 13%. Average round-trip distance was 79 miles.

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For most emergency physicians and pediatricians, the frustrations encountered when obtaining intravenous access in infants involved in traumatic or medical emergencies are well known. Although it is rare that parenteral access is absolutely unobtainable in a pediatric patient, minutes and sometimes hours are often lost as futile attempts are made to cannulate a collapsed vein of such a patient. Many alternatives to such a crisis situation, including the intratracheal, intracardiac, and sublingual routes of administration, have been proposed and efficaciously used.

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Presented is the case of a 30-year-old man who sustained bilateral posterior fracture-dislocations of the shoulder as an unusual complication of status epilepticus. Initial evaluation failed to reveal this unsuspected diagnosis. After improvement in the patient's mental status, his subjective complaints made the diagnosis evident.

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