25 results match your criteria: "The University of Michigan-Ann Arbor[Affiliation]"

During COVID-19, many colleges offered mental health services to their students through telehealth or through a combination of telehealth and in-person (hereby hybrid) services. This study examines the experiences and perceptions among students who received telehealth, hybrid, or in-person services. : Data was collected from the Healthy Minds Survey, a national survey of college students, during Fall 2020 and Spring/Winter 2021 ( = 13,976).

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Colorectal Neoplasia in CDH1 Pathogenic Variant Carriers: A Multicenter Analysis.

Am J Gastroenterol

November 2022

Section of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.

Introduction: Germline variants in CDH1 are associated with elevated risks of diffuse gastric cancer and lobular breast cancer. It is uncertain whether there is an increased risk of colorectal neoplasia.

Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of colonoscopy outcomes in patients with germline CDH1 pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants.

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Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is the most common chronic interstitial lung disease and is characterized by progressive scarring of the lung. Transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling plays an essential role in IPF and drives fibroblast to myofibroblast transition (FMT). Dedicator of cytokinesis 2 (DOCK2) is known to regulate diverse immune functions by activating Rac and has been recently implicated in pleural fibrosis.

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Background Inherited cardiomyopathies display variable penetrance and expression, and a component of phenotypic variation is genetically determined. To evaluate the genetic contribution to this variable expression, we compared protein coding variation in the genomes of those with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Methods and Results Nonsynonymous single-nucleotide variants (nsSNVs) were ascertained using whole genome sequencing from familial cases of HCM (n=56) or DCM (n=70) and correlated with echocardiographic information.

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Objectives: Phantom sound perception (tinnitus) may arise from altered brain activity within auditory cortex. Auditory cortex neurons in tinnitus animal models show increased spontaneous firing rates. This may be a core characteristic of tinnitus.

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Association analysis of GWAS hits and non-syndromic cleft lip with/without palate with cleft alveolar in Han population of western China.

Int J Clin Exp Pathol

October 2020

State Key Laboratory of Oral Diseases & National Clinical Research Center for Oral Diseases & Dept. of Cleft Lip and Palate Surgery, West China Hospital of Stomatology, Sichuan University Chengdu, China.

Cleft alveolar is often accompanied by non-syndromic cleft lip with/without palate (NSCL/P), which could seriously affect the growth and development of the maxilla. In this study, we assessed the associations between 47 susceptible SNPs from previous GWASs of NSCL/P and cleft alveolar in Western Han Chinese population. We recruited 228 trios of NSCL/P with cleft alveolar (156 males and 72 females).

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Simulated Interprofessional Education Discharge Planning Meeting to Improve Skills Necessary for Effective Interprofessional Practice.

Prof Case Manag

September 2018

Leslie M. Smith, DPT, PT, CCS, is Assistant Clinical Professor at the University of Michigan-Flint (UMF). She graduated from the UMF with a master's degree in physical therapy in 1995 and earned a transition DPT from Utica College in 2015. Leslie was named to the Interprofessional Leadership Fellowship at the University of Michigan in 2016 and completed in 2017. Megan Keiser, DNP, RN, CNRN, ACNS-BC, NP-C, is Assistant Professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Michigan-Flint. She received her BSN in 1986 and a master of science in medical-surgical nursing in 1990, both from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She received her doctorate of nursing practice in 2012 from Wayne State University. She was a member of the inaugural cohort for the International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning Simulation Fellowship. She has participated in many grant-funded research projects involving interprofessional practice in health care. Carman Turkelson, DNP, MSN, RN, CCRN, CHSE, is Assistant Professor of Nursing and Associate Director of the Nursing Simulation Center. Dr. Turkelson earned her doctor of nursing practice with a focus on interprofessional education using simulation from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in 2013. She received her master of science in nursing education (MSN-Ed) from Michigan State University in 2008. Dr. Turkelson was named to the Interprofessional Leadership Fellowship at the University of Michigan in 2017. Amy M. Yorke, PhD, PT, NCS, is Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan-Flint (UMF). Dr. Yorke received her master's degree in physical therapy in 1993 from UMF and earned her PhD in Interdisciplinary Health Sciences from Western Michigan University in 2013. Dr. Yorke was named as an Interprofessional Leadership Fellow at the University of Michigan in 2017. Benjamin Sachs, SPT, is a second-year doctorate of physical therapy student at the University of Michigan-Flint. Ben received his BS in health science from the University of Central Florida. He serves as a graduate research student assistant for Interprofessional Education. Karen Berg, DPT, PT, OCS, is Clinical Assistant Professor and Co-Associate Director of Clinical Education at the University of Michigan-Flint (UMF). Dr. Berg earned her BS in physical therapy from Wayne State University in 1989 and her Transitional DPT from Des Moines University in 2010. She is a board-certified orthopedic clinical specialist and an APTA advanced credentialed clinical instructor.

Purpose Of Study: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the use of a simulation-enhanced interprofessional education (Sim-IPE) discharge planning learning experience using simulated patients (SPs), to explore the ability for students to communicate with each other and to a patient/caregiver, and to use clinical thinking to make a safe and appropriate interprofessional discharge recommendation.

Primary Practice Setting(s): Educational institution; university simulation center.

Methodology And Sample: A Sim-IPE was performed with students from physical therapy (N = 46), nursing (N = 25), and social work (N = 11).

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Early Experience with the ACA: Coverage Gains, Pooling of Risk, and Medicaid Expansion.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2016

Linda J. Blumberg, Ph.D., is a senior fellow in the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute where she has conducted extensive work related to the Affordable Care Act (ACA). She received her Bachelor of Arts in economics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (Champaign, IL) and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI). John Holahan, Ph.D., is an Institute Fellow in the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute where he previously served as center director for more than 30 years. Much of his work centers on Medicaid and Medicare reform, coverage, costs, and the economic impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Dr. Holahan received his Bachelor of Art degree from the University of Notre Dame (Notre Dame, IN) and a Ph.D. from Georgetown University (Washington, DC).

We provide an overview of the characteristics of those who have gained insurance coverage due to the ACA as well as the characteristics of the remaining uninsured. We also describe the implications for the broader sharing of health care risks required under the law, and how they vary by individuals' health status. Finally, we assess the implications of state decisions to expand or not expand Medicaid eligibility under the law, how those decisions affect state finances, health care providers, residents, and how the effects may vary for those states using waivers to expand eligibility using strategies designed to be more broadly politically acceptable.

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Health Reform in a New Presidency: The Challenge of Finding Common Ground.

J Law Med Ethics

December 2016

Gail R. Wilensky, Ph.D., is an economist and senior fellow at Project HOPE. She currently serves as a trustee of the Combined Benefits Fund of the United Mine Workers of America and National Opinion Research Center and is on the Board of Regents of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) and the Geisinger Health System Foundation. She directed the Medicare and Medicaid programs from 1990-1992, served as a senior advisor to President George H.W. Bush, and was the first chair of MedPAC. Dr. Wilensky received a bachelor's degree in psychology and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI).

Finding "common ground" to fix some of the policy problems with the ACA was never expected to be easy. How challenging depends on the election outcome. With split government or even same party control of the Congress and White House but without a supermajority in the Senate, fixing identifiable problems requires remedies that might garner bipartisan cooperation.

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Cell-based cardiac therapy is a promising therapeutic strategy to restore heart function after myocardial infarction (MI). However, the cell type selection and ensuing effects remain controversial. Here, we intramyocardially injected Isl1+ cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) derived from EGFP/luciferase double-tagged mouse embryonic stem (dt-mES) cells with vehicle (fibrin gel) or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) into the infarcted area in nude mice to assess the contribution of CPCs to the recovery of cardiac function post-MI.

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Oxycodone is a commonly used analgesic with a large body of pharmacokinetic data from various immediate-release or controlled-release formulations, under different administration routes, and in diverse populations. Longer terminal half-lives from extravascular administration as compared to IV administration have been attributed to flip-flop pharmacokinetics with the rate constant of absorption slower than elimination. However, PK parameters from the extravascular studies showed faster absorption than elimination.

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To identify regulatory drivers of prostate cancer malignancy, we have assembled genome-wide regulatory networks (interactomes) for human and mouse prostate cancer from expression profiles of human tumors and of genetically engineered mouse models, respectively. Cross-species computational analysis of these interactomes has identified FOXM1 and CENPF as synergistic master regulators of prostate cancer malignancy. Experimental validation shows that FOXM1 and CENPF function synergistically to promote tumor growth by coordinated regulation of target gene expression and activation of key signaling pathways associated with prostate cancer malignancy.

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Microbially mediated bioremediation of polluted sites has been a subject of much research over the past 30 years, with many different compounds shown to be degraded under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Aerobic-mediated bioremediation commonly examines the use of methanotrophs, microorganisms that consume methane as their sole source of carbon and energy. Given the diverse environments in which methanotrophs have been found, the range of substrates they can degrade and the fact that they can be easily stimulated with the provision of methane and oxygen, these microorganisms in particular have been examined for aerobic degradation of chlorinated hydrocarbons.

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Ten questions for evolutionary studies of disease vulnerability.

Evol Appl

March 2011

Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology, Institute for Social Research, The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

Many evolutionary applications in medicine rely on well-established methods, such as population genetics, phylogenetic analysis, and observing pathogen evolution. Approaches to evolutionary questions about traits that leave bodies vulnerable to disease are less well developed. Strategies for formulating questions and hypotheses remain unsettled, and methods for testing evolutionary hypotheses are unfamiliar to many in medicine.

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We examine a spatially discrete reaction-diffusion model based on the interactions that create a periodic pattern in the Drosophila eye imaginal disc. This model is known to be capable of generating a regular hexagonal pattern of gene expression behind a moving front, as observed in the fly system. In order to better understand the novel "switch and template" mechanism behind this pattern formation, we present here a detailed study of the model's behavior in one dimension, using a combination of analytic methods and numerical searches of parameter space.

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Biocompatible anisotropic polymer particles with bipolar affinity towards human endothelial cells are a novel type of building blocks for microstructured bio-hybrid materials. Functional polarity due to two biologically distinct hemispheres has been achieved by synthesis of anisotropic particles via electro-hydrodynamic co-jetting of two different polymer solutions and subsequent selective surface modification.

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Aim: The medical specialty of physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R) has had a proven impact on persons with disability and on healthcare systems. Documents such as The White Book on Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine in Europe have been important in defining the scope of practice within various regions. However on some continents the practice has not been well defined.

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Standard methods for the analysis of survey data assume that the data arise from a simple random sample of the target population. In practice, analysts of survey data sets collected from nationally representative probability samples often pay little attention to important properties of the survey data. Standard statistical software procedures do not allow analysts to take these properties of survey data into account.

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The Photosystem II (PS II) manganese stabilizing protein (MSP) possesses characteristics, including thermostability, ascribed to the natively unfolded class of proteins (Lydakis-Simantiris et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38: 404-414). A site-directed mutant of MSP, C28A, C51A, which lacks the -S-S- bridge, also binds to PS II at wild-type levels and reconstitutes oxygen evolution activity [Betts et al.

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Dimetalation of pyrazines. a one-pot synthesis of multisubstituted pyrazine C-nucleosides.

J Org Chem

July 2001

Department of Medicinal Chemistry, College of Pharmacy, and Department of Chemistry, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.

As a part of our efforts to pursue direct, convergent, and concise methodologies for the synthesis of pyrazine C-nucleosides, we have successfully established a sequential dilithiation-addition method, which allows one to introduce two different functional groups to a pyrazine ring in a one-pot fashion. 2,6-Dichloropyrazine was dilithiated at -100 degrees C and then allowed to react with an electrophile, such as bromine, iodine, or disulfides, followed by a reaction with a protected ribonolactone to afford C-nucleosides. After reduction and deprotection, tetrasubstituted pyrazine C-nucleosides, including 2,6-dichloro-3-iodo-5-(beta-D-ribofuranosyl)pyrazine and 2-bromo-3,5-dichloro-6-(beta-D-ribofuranosyl)pyrazine, were obtained.

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Cells in a -wild population of a species belonging to the diatom germs Mastogloia may form frustules of 2 strikingly different morphologic types during their vegetative life cycle. Total conversion from coarsely structured morphologic form to a more finely structured form takes place during a single division; hence no inter gradations between the 2 forms are evident. Intact frustules with 1 valve of each type leave no reasonable doubt of the ability to make the change.

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