1,103 results match your criteria: "Niagara University; 42 West Tupper Street.[Affiliation]"

Ethnopharmacological Relevance: Plant essential oils (PEOs) extracted from aromatic compounds of the plant contain complex mixtures of volatile and lipophilic bioactive compounds. In ancient Egypt, Arabia, Greece, and China, PEOs were traditional used in aromatherapy for various health disorders, including pain and inflammation.

Aim Of The Study: In this review, we provide an overview of the anti-inflammatory effects of PEOs and the underlying mechanisms associated with anti-inflammatory effects using in vitro and in vivo models.

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Pursuant to the COVID-19 pandemic, an executive order issued by the New York State (NYS) governor allowed pharmacists to act as laboratory directors for a limited-service laboratory (LSL) to order and perform Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment (CLIA)-waived COVID-19 point-of-care testing (POCT). To (i) assess the status of NYS community pharmacists with POCT in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, (ii) assess the readiness and willingness of community pharmacists to incorporate COVID-19 POCT into their workflow during a pandemic, and (iii) assess community pharmacists' perception of the barrier to initiating COVID-19 POCT. This is a prospective cross-sectional study conducted from February 4 to February 21, 2021.

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Adverse Childhood Experiences and COVID-19 Stress on Changes in Mental Health among Young Adults.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

October 2022

Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1, Canada.

The COVID-19 pandemic has been linked to poor mental health outcomes and may be particularly damaging for young adults who may be more affected by governmental pandemic responses such as mandatory school and work closures, online schooling, and social isolation. Exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) has also been shown to have a significant impact on mental health among young adults. This prospective study examined whether young adults with higher ACE profiles were more vulnerable to COVID-19 stressors.

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Introduction: People with non-severe haemophilia appear to be under-treated in many countries, and this may lead to joint damage and worsen quality of life.

Aim: To review literature for clotting factor replacement prophylaxis in people with non-severe haemophilia A and B (HA/HB) in relation to long-term outcomes to support clinical decision-making.

Methods: A targeted literature search was performed to identify studies published between 2000 and 2021 that included prophylaxis in people with non-severe HA/HB and long-term outcomes, including annualized bleeding rates, joint health and quality of life.

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Cost-effectiveness of remdesivir plus usual care versus usual care alone for hospitalized patients with COVID-19: an economic evaluation as part of the Canadian Treatments for COVID-19 (CATCO) randomized clinical trial.

CMAJ Open

October 2022

Department of Critical Care Medicine (Lau, Sligl), Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta and Alberta Health Services, Edmonton, Alta.; Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine (Fowler), University of Toronto; Department of Critical Care Medicine (Pinto), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ont.; Division of Respiratory Medicine (Tremblay, Lim, Weatherald), Department of Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alta.; Division of Infectious Diseases (Borgia), William Osler Health System, Brampton, Ont.; Division of Infectious Diseases (Borgia), Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.; Division of Critical Care Medicine (Carrier), Departments of Anesthesiology and Medicine, Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal; Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology (Cheng), Department of Medicine, McGill University Health Centre, Montréal, Que.; Section of Infectious Diseases (Conly, Somayaji), Department of Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary and Alberta Health Services, Calgary, Alta.; Division of Infectious Diseases and Chronic Viral Illness Service (Costiniuk), Department of Medicine, McGill University Health Centre, Montréal, Que.; Department of Medicine and Laboratory Medicine (Daley), Memorial University, St. John's, NL; Division of Critical Care (Duan, Tsang), Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.; Department of Medicine (Duan, Tsang), Niagara Health, St. Catharines, Ont.; Department of Critical Care (Duan), St. Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton, Ont.; Internal Medicine Service (Durand), Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal; Division of Pediatric Critical Care (Fontela), Department of Pediatrics, McGill University, Montréal, Que.; Division of Infectious Disease (Farjou), Department of Medicine, Niagara Health, St. Catharines, Ont.; Department of Medicine (Fralick, Semret), Sinai Health, University of Toronto; Division of Critical Care Medicine (Geagea), Department of Medicine, North York General Hospital, Toronto, Ont.; Division of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (Grant), Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; Section of Infectious Diseases (Keynan), Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man.; Departments of Surgery and Critical Care Medicine (Khwaja), McGill University, Montréal, Que.; Dalla Lana School of Public Health (N. Lee), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.; Clinical Practice Assessment Unit (T. Lee), Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montréal, Que.; Division of Infectious Diseases (O'Neil), Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta.; Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases (Papenburg), Department of Pediatrics, Montreal Children's Hospital; Division of Microbiology (Papenburg), Department of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, McGill University Health Centre, Montréal, Que.; Division of Infectious Diseases (Silverman), Department of Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, Ont.; Division of Infectious Diseases (Tan), St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ont.; J.D. MacLean Centre for Tropical Diseases (Yansouni), Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medical Microbiology, McGill University Health Centre, McGill University, Montréal, Que.; Department of Internal Medicine (Zarychanski), Sections of Hematology and Medical Oncology, and Critical Care, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man.; Division of Infectious Diseases (Murthy), Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC.

Background: The role of remdesivir in the treatment of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 remains ill-defined. We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis alongside the Canadian Treatments for COVID-19 (CATCO) open-label, randomized clinical trial evaluating remdesivir.

Methods: Patients with COVID-19 in Canadian hospitals from Aug.

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Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with dysregulation of inflammation and cortisol. The objectives of this study were to use principal component analysis to explore the inflammatory biomarker data to create inflammation composite variables; to examine the relationship between these composite measures of inflammation with ACEs and cortisol; and to assess whether these relationships were moderated by sex. The analysis included 232 young adults from the Niagara Longitudinal Heart Study (NLHS).

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Rewards and recognition for Canadian distributed medical education preceptors: a qualitative analysis.

MedEdPublish (2016)

June 2022

Distributed Learning and Rural Initiatives, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, T2N 4Z6, Canada.

: Recognition of Distributed Medical Education (DME) preceptors by medical schools ensures that important community-based training opportunities remain available to learners. Yet the literature seldom explores what rewards are meaningful to this population of teachers. The goal of our national project was to provide guidance to medical schools about the financial remuneration and non-financial rewards that are most valued by DME preceptors.

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Currencies of recognition: What rewards and recognition do Canadian distributed medical education preceptors value?

MedEdPublish (2016)

March 2022

Niagara Regional Campus, Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine, McMaster University, St. Catharines, Ontario, L2S 3A1, Canada.

: Medical schools spend considerable time, effort, and money on recognition initiatives for rural and distributed medical education (DME) faculty. Previous literature has focused on intrinsic motivation to teach and there is little in the literature to guide institutional recognition efforts or to predict which items or types of recognition will be most appreciated. To better understand how rural and DME faculty in Canada value different forms of recognition, we asked faculty members from all Canadian medical schools to complete a bilingual, national online survey evaluating their perceptions of currently offered rewards and recognition.

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First Report of Mesocriconema xenoplax from Apricots (Prunus armeniaca) in Ontario, Canada.

Plant Dis

September 2022

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Eastern Cereal and Oilseed Research Centre, 960 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, ON, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0C6.

Plant-parasitic nematodes have been causing more economic losses and related damages to fruit crops in the Province of Ontario than previous estimates. We have been conducting surveys since 2019 for the presence of plant-parasitic nematodes in different orchards in the Niagara region. Collected soil samples were extracted for nematodes following Jenkins (1964).

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Ester-linked p-hydroxybenzoate occurs naturally in poplar lignin as pendent groups that can be released by mild alkaline hydrolysis. These 'clip-off' phenolics can be separated from biomass and upgraded into diverse high-value bioproducts. We introduced a bacterial chorismate pyruvate lyase gene into transgenic poplar trees with the aim of producing more p-hydroxybenzoate from chorismate, itself a metabolic precursor to lignin.

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Empowering Patients and Families to Create, Inform and Endorse a New Patient and Family Declaration of Values.

Healthc Q

July 2022

The director of Quality, Safety, Risk, IPAC, Patient Partnership and Relations at Niagara Health in the Niagara Region, ON.

In 2019, Niagara Health embarked on a partnership journey to develop the Patient and Family Declaration of Values (PFDoV). The initiative leveraged all five International Association for Public Participation domains of engagement, integrating patient partners (PPs) in all facets of co-design methodology including planning, data collection, analysis and document formation. A qualitative data analysis in grounded theory yielded seven themes forming the PFDoV, fully endorsed by the executive team and board of directors.

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Chimp Haven is a sanctuary for chimpanzees being retired from biomedical research and from facilities that can no longer care for them. Chimpanzees often live in smaller groups in captive settings; however, Chimp Haven integrates them into larger, more species-typical groups. Social integrations, the process of introducing unfamiliar chimpanzees to one another, are often complex in terms of logistics and can be stressful due to the territorial nature of the animals, reduced space in captivity, and the fact that these situations are engineered by humans.

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Background: Literature on volumetric resolution and recurrence over time between surgical evacuation alone (SEA) and standalone middle meningeal artery embolization (MMAE) in comparable chronic subdural hematoma (cSDH) patients is limited.

Methods: A retrospective database analysis of cSDH patients managed with either SEA or MMAE was conducted. Propensity-score matching was performed for axial and coronal lengths, maximum diameter, and midline shift.

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Routine Ultrasonography Guidance for Femoral Vascular Access for Cardiac Procedures: The UNIVERSAL Randomized Clinical Trial.

JAMA Cardiol

November 2022

Departamento de enfermedades cardiovasculares, Clínica Alemana De Santiago, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile.

Importance: A significant limitation of femoral artery access for cardiac interventions is the increased risk of vascular complications and bleeding compared with radial access. Strategies to make femoral access safer are needed.

Objective: To determine whether routinely using ultrasonography guidance for femoral arterial access for coronary angiography/intervention reduces bleeding or vascular complications.

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Development of a qualitative data analysis codebook informed by the i-PARIHS framework.

Implement Sci Commun

September 2022

Department of Veterans Affairs, Behavioral Health Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI), 2200 Ft Roots Dr, North Little Rock, AR, 72114, USA.

Background: The Integrated-Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (i-PARIHS) framework and its predecessor, PARIHS, have been widely utilized in implementation studies. Although i-PARIHS developers have focused on creating tools to guide facilitators in its application in practice, tools are also needed for evaluation and research. Codebooks with clear and meaningful code labels and definitions are an important component of qualitative data analysis and have been developed for other widely used frameworks.

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Online Exercise Programming Among Older Adults: A Scoping Review.

J Aging Phys Act

April 2023

Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON,Canada.

Online exercise programming may promote physical activity while at home, but little is known about its use among older adults. Using the Arksey and O'Malley framework, we describe the nature and extent of the research pertaining to the use of online exercise programming among adults 65 years of age and older. We ran two separate searches (January 2005-September 2020 and October 2020-October 2021), yielding 17 articles that met our inclusion criteria.

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Although previous research has documented the mental and physical health impacts that COVID-19 had on frontline health workers in the United States, little is known about how the pandemic affected their families. This study sought to explore the impact COVID-19 had on the individual functioning of frontline health care workers in the USA and the perceived impact it had on their family members during the initial nine months of the pandemic. More specifically, this study sought to explore if and how family roles, routines, rules, and social-emotional well-being changed as a result of COVID-19.

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Rationale: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted non-COVID critical care trials globally as intensive care units (ICUs) prioritized patient care and COVID-specific research. The international randomized controlled trial CYCLE (Critical Care Cycling to Improve Lower Extremity Strength) was forced to halt recruitment at all sites in March 2020, creating immediate challenges. We applied the CONSERVE (CONSORT and SPIRIT Extension for RCTs Revised in Extenuating Circumstance) statement as a framework to report the impact of the pandemic on CYCLE and describe our mitigation approaches.

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Atomic excited states and the related energy levels.

J Mol Model

August 2022

Department of Chemistry, Niagara University, Lewiston, NY, USA.

This article is about generalization and extension of the Bohr atomic model as well as the Rydberg formula to make them applicable to all atomic/ionic excited states and their energy levels. Bohr and Rydberg's original works were deemed only for hydrogen and the hydrogen-like ions but in time many mistakenly have come to the conclusion that those original forms of the theory are applicable to all species. This article clarifies the subject and helps with the misunderstandings.

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Complex haploinsufficiency refers to the genetic interaction that occurs in strains with heterozygous mutations at two different loci (a double heterozygous deletion mutant). Double heterozygous deletion mutants can be used to identify gene partners that act within the same pathway or to determine expression-dependent genetic interactions that result in phenotypic changes outside of what would be expected based on the phenotypes of the single heterozygous deletion mutants. The approach outlined here uses a lithium acetate transformation method on a parental "query" strain to introduce a transcription factor deletion DNA construct that is derived from the Homann et al.

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Aims: The aim of the present study was to determine the effects of the tip structure of the catheters used for hemodialysis on blood recirculation at varying blood flow rates and diameters of the mock blood vessel in a well-defined in vitro experimental system, focusing on reverse connection mode.

Methods: A mock circulatory circuit was created with silicon tubing (15 or 20 mm), a circulatory pump, connected through the catheter to dialysis circuit and dialyzer attached to dialysis machine. The tip of the inserted catheter was fixed to the center of the silicone tube, and 3 L of pig blood was poured into the blood side of the dialyzer and the recirculation rates were measured at blood flow rates of 100, 150, and 200 mL/min.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A survey of 42,767 Canadian high school students revealed high support for mask mandates: 81.9% favored masks in public spaces, and 67.8% supported school mask requirements.
  • * Key factors influencing support included health concerns, discussions about prevention, and understanding mask effectiveness, indicating that enhancing knowledge about masks may boost support among adolescents.
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Objectives: Our objective was to evaluate the trend and to assess the impact of maternal region of residence in Western New York (WNY), on severe neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS).

Study Design: Term infants' born at gestational age greater than or equal to 37 weeks with severe NOWS, defined as withdrawal resulting in the receipt of pharmacologic therapy from WNY admitted to our neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) from January 1, 2008 to December 31, 2016, were included. Severe NOWS admissions to our NICU from the following five regions were controlled with birth and insurance data: (1) Urban North, (2) Erie Coastal, (3) Niagara Frontier, (4) Southern Tier, and (5) Urban South.

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Study Objective: We assessed whether the timing and order of patients over emergency shifts are associated with receiving diagnostic imaging in the emergency department and characterized whether changes in imaging are associated with changes in patients returning to the ED.

Methods: In this retrospective study, we used multivariate and instrumental variable regressions to examine how the timing and order of patients are associated with the use of diagnostic imaging. Outcomes include whether a patient receives a radiograph, a computed tomography (CT) scan, an ultrasound, and 7-day bouncebacks to the ED.

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The impact of indigenous Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces japonicus on typicality of crystal grape (Niagara) wine.

Food Res Int

September 2022

Province Key Laboratory of Fermentation Engineering and Biopharmacy, School of Liquor and Food Engineering, Key Laboratory of Plant Resource Conservation and Germplasm Innovation in Mountainous Region (Ministry of Education), Guizhou University, Guiyang 550025, China. Electronic address:

Schizosaccharomyces japonicus have been found as dominant yeast species coexisting with Saccharomyces cerevisiae during late stages of spontaneous fermentation of local grapes in Guizhou, China. Therefore, this study further investigated the impacts of the two indigenous yeast species on typicality of crystal grape (Niagara) wine. Five indigenous and one commercial S.

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