2 results match your criteria: "University of Mary- land School of Medicine.[Affiliation]"

Adaptation of labor and delivery to COVID-19.

Am J Disaster Med

August 2020

Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine; Division Chief of Obstetric Anesthesiology, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland; Chief Safety Officer, Anesthesiology, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland.

As the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) escalates globally, and no end in sight, we describe an approach for adapting swiftly to the increasing number of COVID-19 parturients admitted into labor and delivery unit. The adaptability includes physical layout, triaging, quick testing, isolating confirmed parturients, access to designated intensive care units, facilitating emergent cesarean deliveries, and educating health care personnel. It is vital that other healthy parturi-ents and healthcare providers must be protected from COVID-19.

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Recent research has suggested that people with schizophrenia (PSZ) have sensory deficits, especially in the magnocellular pathway, and this has led to the proposal that dysfunctional sensory processing may underlie higher-order cognitive deficits. Here we test the hypothesis that the antisaccade deficit in PSZ reflects dysfunctional magnocellular processing rather than impaired cognitive processing, as indexed by working memory capacity. This is a plausible hypothesis because oculomotor regions have direct magnocellular inputs, and the stimuli used in most antisaccade tasks strongly activate the magnocellular visual pathway.

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