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1.
Pharmaceutical Technology Europe ; 32(9):9-10,12-13, 2020.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20245639

ABSTRACT

Among the challenges of a pandemic is the need to scale up to billions of doses, at a larger scale than typically needed for vaccines, from raw materials all the way through to the materials for the containers for fill/finish. Having adequate raw materials, building and staffing the facilities, and tech transfer are all keys to success. [...]we can plug into existing infrastructure, including services (gas, water, waste, etc.) as well as analytics and quality labs." Emergent BioSolutions says that its flexible CDMO capacity deployment model can respond quickly to demand fluctuations. The company's facilities in France, Switzerland, and the US are working on the project;at CordenPharma Colorado, unique high-pressure chromatography systems usually used for manufacturing peptides have been reallocated for purifying lipids.

2.
Contemporary Pediatrics ; 38(2):10, 2021.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2326585

ABSTRACT

Medical Director, International Patient Services Program, Co-Director, Pediatric Travel Medicine Clinic, Director, International Adoptee Clinic, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois contributing editors Bernard A. Cohen, MD Section Editor for Dermcase, Professor of Pediatrics and Dermatology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland Jon Matthew Farber, MD Section Editor for Journal Club, pediatrician, ALL Pediatrics, Woodbridge, Virginia Carlton K.K. Lee, PharmD.MPH, FASHP.FPPAG Section Editor for The Clinical Pharmacologist's Notebook, Pediatric Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Department of Pharmacy, and Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland MinaL.Alfieri.MD, MS nstructor of Pediatrics, Feinberg Schoo of Medicine, Northwestern University Attending Physician, Academic General Pediatrics, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois AminJ. MSCE Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences;Pediatric Infectious Diseases Attending, Director, Antimicrobial Stewardship Program, Associate Fellowship Program Director, Children's National Hospital, Washington, DC Michael S. Jellinek, MD Professor of Psychiatry and of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts Candice Jones, MD Board-certified general pediatrician in group practice in Orlando, Florida, former National Health Service Corps Scholar, AAP member, spokesperson and author Andrew J. Schuman, MD Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, New Hampshire Steven M. Selbst, MD Professor of Pediatrics, Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Attending Physician, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Nemours/Alfred I duPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, Delaware As 2021 gets underway and an increasing number of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines are administered, I believe that 2021 will be much more of a "normal" year, especially with the hope of COVID-19 vaccine availability for children by fall 2021. Issues discussed include illnesses more prevalent in children of color, such as asthma, sickle cell disease, and COVID-19;the difference in pain managementfor White children versus children of color;and how bias impacts mental health issues in children of color.

3.
Sustainability ; 15(7):5831, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2298834

ABSTRACT

As a riveting example of social housing in Brazil, the Minha Casa Minha Vida program was set in 2009 to diminish the 6-million-home housing deficit by offering affordable dwellings for low-income families. However, recurrent thermal discomfort complaints occur among dwellers, especially in the Baltimore Residential sample in Uberlândia City. To avoid negative effects of energy poverty, such as family budget constraints from the purchase of electric appliances and extra costs from power consumption, a simulation based on system dynamics modeling shows a natural ventilation strategy with a mixed combination of sustainable and energy-efficient materials (tilting window with up to 100% opening, green tempered glass, and expanded polystyrene wall) to observe the internal room temperature variation over time. With a 50% window opening ratio combined with a 3 mm regular glass window and a 12.5 cm rectangular 8-hole brick wall, this scenario presents the highest internal room temperature value held during the entire period. From the worst to the best-case scenario, a substantial reduction in the peak temperature was observed from window size variation, demonstrating that natural ventilation and constructive elements of low complexity and wide availability in the market contribute to the thermal comfort of residential rooms.

4.
Journal of Clinical and Translational Science ; 7(s1):70, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2293932

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Social distancing practices during COVID-19 may impact experience of stress, substance use and violence exposure. This study aims to describe the effect of the COVID-19 stay-at-home orders on stress, substance use, and teen dating violence (TDV) among young women living in Baltimore City. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Study participants were recruited from an observational study examining TDV before the COVID-19 pandemic, through snowball sampling, pediatric and adolescent primary care clinics, the pediatric emergency department, and a registry for patients interested in participating in COVID-19 research. Participants were between the ages of 16 and 22, identified as female, and lived in Baltimore, Maryland. They were asked to complete a baseline survey. March 16, 2020 (Maryland governor's stay-at-home order) through June 2022 defined the COVID-19 pandemic period. The survey assessed stress experiences, including isolation, finances, job loss, transportation, school stress, substance use, experiences of violence and adherence to COVID-19 safety measures. We conducted descriptive and bivariate analyses. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Participants (n=105) had a mean age of 19.4 years (SD 1.73). Preliminary analyses demonstrate that stress associated with isolation, finances, transportation, and school increased during the pandemic compared to pre-pandemic. In addition, the majority of participants who used marijuana, e-cigarettes, and alcohol used about the same amount or more of each substance during the pandemic. For the next steps, we will examine experiences of TDV for young women during the pandemic and examine whether experiences of TDV differ for young women who reported a greater adherence to COVID-19 safety measures compared to participants who adhered less. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Assessing the impact of COVID-19 safety measures on stress, substance use, and TDV is critical to informing and designing future public health interventions. In addition, the information obtained from this study may be used to address the unique challenges faced by disenfranchised populations while curbing the spread of infectious diseases.

5.
Portal : Libraries and the Academy ; 22(1):7-25, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2207410

ABSTRACT

As the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) spread, a team from the Sheridan Libraries and Museums at Johns Hopkins University (JHU) provided technical support to the JHU Global COVID-19 Dashboard. This paper reflects on the lessons learned from working on a highly publicized, heavily trafficked resource and explores the role of academic libraries in supporting research in the public interest. The authors argue that engagement with projects of this nature not only leverages the existing strengths and expertise of libraries but also positions them to contribute to cutting-edge opportunities in academic institutions.

6.
American Educational History Journal ; 49(1/2):143-160, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2034210

ABSTRACT

[...]the polio nightmare was over when, in 1953, Dr. Jonas Salk announced the invention of the first polio vaccine. In October 1937, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Wagner-Steagall Act creating the United States Housing Authority, established to administer federal funding in the form of loans and grants to local jurisdictions for low-income housing. In February of 1939, Baltimore obtained a loan of 26,390,000 dollars to demolish slums and build five public housing projects-in addition to two other projects-on vacant land. The final vacant land project took two more years of political wrangling: no white neighborhoods would condone a public housing project for African Americans being built.

7.
The Journal of Southern History ; 88(3):605-609, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1929206

ABSTRACT

In cooperation and consultation with the Southern Poverty Law Center, the SHA is building a database of historical experts who can speak to issues relevant to both organizations, including the history of disenfranchisement, hate crimes, and civil rights violations against all legally protected classes in the United States. SHA 2023 CALL FOR PAPERS Over the last few years, we have witnessed the flourishing of a deep conservatism in the South, from the embrace of former U.S. president Donald J. Trump's politics of resentment, to rampant voter suppression, to negative responses to COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine recommendations, to efforts to limit what can be taught in public schools about racism, to the undermining of abortion rights and gay rights. The SHA Program Committee invites proposals that will help us understand the landscape of employment, the rural/urban divide, the state of cultural conservatism, the rise of conservative political movements, and the development of political strategies deployed by conservatives in the region. What have been the relationships between conservatism and environmental transformation (including clearance of forest land to make room for plantation agriculture, the dredging of swamps to facilitate settlement, and environmental disasters such as oil spills)?

8.
American Journal of Public Health ; 112(7):953-955, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1904694

ABSTRACT

[...]from her vantage points as a medical student, a resident, an emergency room doctor, a public health professional, and a political commentator, Wen provides a capsule history of several major public health events of the last few decades, including the continuing burden of HIV, the opioid epidemic, food insecurity, the Affordable Care Act, the rising toll of gun violence, the COVID-19 pandemic, the climate emergency, and more. [...]Wen describes her interactions with a glittering cast of mentors and role models as well as her efforts to pay this support forward by advising, assisting, and advancing the careers of her colleagues and students and the life success of her patients. Wen devotes limited space to a very public phase of her career, her brief stint as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA).7 Hoping to provide a new direction for PPFA, she reports she had taken the job with the goal of repositioning the organization from being a leading advocate for abortion and reproductive rights into becoming a women's health organization that speaks for the health care needs of all women.

9.
Cityscape ; 24(1):27-51, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1849310

ABSTRACT

This paper presents a qualitative evaluation of how Opportunity Zones (OZs) have attracted capital and economic development to highly distressed neighborhoods in West Baltimore. Based on 76 interviews with community and government officials, program managers, developers, businesses, and fund managers, we assess the strengths and weaknesses of OZs in West Baltimore and Baltimore City. We find that OZs are stimulating new investment conversations and building local economic development capacity. However, we also find OZs fail at oversight and community engagement, do not spur new development, and are a missed opportunity to incentivize actors and institutions critical to revitalizing distressed neighborhoods. To spur development in distressed neighborhoods, OZs require reporting standards, the removal of non-distressed census tracts, dollars for education and infrastructure, the incorporation of Community Development Financial Institutions, and incentives for non-capital gains holding investors.

10.
The Coastal Business Journal ; 18(1):39-58, 2021.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1848998

ABSTRACT

The Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, area was selected to serve as one-time hosts for two tournaments in 2017: the ACC Women's Basketball Tournament and the Puerto Rico Tip-Off Men's College Basketball Tournament, when circumstances required those events to relocate on very short notice. Following the success of these two one-time events, the region sought to become a permanent host of an annual men's college basketball tournament to be played in November or December. This manuscript examines the development process of this tournament and illustrates how tournament organizers addressed the most common elements found in such events.

11.
Journal of Clinical and Translational Science ; 6(s1):1-2, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1795946

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES/GOALS: This study seeks to determine the relationship between fear of COVID-19 infection and care-seeking behaviors including provider visit and telemedicine utilization among vulnerable adolescent and young adults in Baltimore, Maryland METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Participants enrolled in the COVID-19 Youth study were 13-25 years old and recruited from four existing sexual health studies based in Baltimore, MD which focused on 1) PID, 2) HIV, 3) emerging sexually transmitted infections, and 4) a dyadic STI prevention, respectively. Participants agreed to be re-contacted for future studies and completed a telephone survey developed to inquire about the impacts of COVID-19 on care seeking behaviors. Bivariate analyses tested for correlations between fear of COVID-19 infection, demographic variables, and care-seeking behaviors. Multivariable logistic regression modeled associations between fear of COVID-19 infection and care-seeking behaviors. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Adjusted multivariable logistic regression revealed a statistically significant association between fear of COVID-19 infection and having a provider visit;AYA who feared COVID-19 were at greater than two times increased odds of a provider visit compared to AYA who did not fear COVID-19 infection (OR: 2.37, 95%CI: 1.02, 6.15). Among those with a provider visit, fear of COVID-19 infection was associated with two-fold increased odds of having a telemedicine visit vs. an in-person visit (OR: 2.23, 95%CI: 1.09, 4.51), however this was not statistically significant in the adjusted model. There were however significant associations detected in the adjusted model for HIV status, insurance type and telemedicine utilization respectively. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: This study demonstrates the ongoing need for health services during the recent pandemic and overall willingness of AYA to utilize telemedicine. Given the sexual health disparities faced by AYA, who bear more than half of the 50 million STI cases in the US, optimizing services for AYA is essential and consistent with new laws expanding telehealth use.

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