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1.
Public Health Nurs ; 11(3): 181-7, 1994 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8898558

ABSTRACT

Program planners collaborated with communities to achieve the goal of increasing the number of public health-educated nurse-midwives, and thus improve women's access to health services. By developing an innovative master's degree in public health nurse-midwifery education program. Boston University School of Public Health revitalized a model first developed at Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health. The dearth of nurse-midwifery education programs in the Northeast, coupled with the critical deficit of obstetric providers, had contributed to an alarmingly is an exciting alternative for meeting the health care needs of mothers and children and achieving the year 2000 objectives for the nation. Such a program, coupled with a foundation in public health education, synthesizes the best in nursing, nurse-midwifery, and public health Graduate nurse-midwives will have an enhanced understanding of the health care delivery system, the causal factors that contribute to disease, and the environmental, legal, and management dimensions surrounding the delivery of care.


Subject(s)
Nurse Midwives/education , Public Health Nursing/education , Boston , Curriculum , Delivery of Health Care , Education, Nursing, Graduate/methods , Health Services Needs and Demand , Schools, Public Health
2.
Arzneimittelforschung ; 28(8a): 1435-41, 1978.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-582534

ABSTRACT

A number of aryl substituted amidinoureas have been prepared and examined for their gastrointestinal spasmolytic, antimotility, antidiarrheal and antisecretory effects. In general, antisecretory and antimotility effects have been found to be associated with each other in these compounds. The structure-activity relationships found show that substitution of the aromatic ring in positions other than 2 and 6 correlates poorly with potency, and potency of such compounds is low. In contrast to this, 2,6-disubstitution confers high potency. The potency of 2,6-disubstituted compounds declines sharply with increasing weight of substitution of the amidinourea chain, with the important exception of the N-alkoxyamidinoureas. Increasing the molecular weight of an N-alkoxy substituent has a much less profound effect than the corresponding increase has in an N-alkyl substituent. High potency in an amidinourea may well be related to low basicity (or a high pKa value for its conjugate salt) but there is insufficient data to support this hypothesis fully. The actual tautomeric structure of an amidinourea probably affects its potency and this is discussed briefly.


Subject(s)
Amidines/pharmacology , Antidiarrheals , Gastric Juice/metabolism , Gastrointestinal Motility/drug effects , Amidines/toxicity , Animals , Charcoal/metabolism , Chemical Phenomena , Chemistry , Depression, Chemical , Isomerism , Lethal Dose 50 , Male , Mice , Molecular Conformation , Rats , Stomach/drug effects , Structure-Activity Relationship
3.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 5(2): 122-31, 1977.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15804

ABSTRACT

Fenclorac (alpha,m-dichloro-p-cyclohexylphenylacetic acid, diethylammonium salt), a new nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent, was rapidly and quantitatively absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract of rat, dog, monkey, and man following oral administration of a solution of 14C-labeled compound. Radiochromatography and mass spectrometry indicated that fenclorac was the principal component in plasma during both the absorption and elimination phases in all species. Small quantities of m-chloro-p-cyclohexylphenylglycolic acid metabolite were also present. Fenclorac and metabolite were confined primarily to the plasma phase of whole blood and were extensively bound to serum albumin. The plasma elimination half-time was species-dependent and varied from 1.6 hr in the rat to 6.5 hr in the dog. The principal tissues of distribution were liver, kidney, and small intestine. There was no significant accumulation or retention of drug or metabolites in any tissue compartment. Fenclorac was completely biotransformed prior to elimination in urine and bile. The major route of elimination was renal in man and monkey, and biliary in the dog. Enterohepatic recirculation of fenclorac metabolites was shown to occur in the rat. The major urinary metabolites were hydroxycyclohexyl analogs of fenclorac and m-chloro-p-cyclohexylphenylglycolic acid. There was no difference in metabolism and biological disposition of fenclorac in normal rats and rats with adjuvant-induced polyarthritis.


Subject(s)
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/metabolism , Phenylacetates/metabolism , Administration, Oral , Animals , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/blood , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/urine , Bile/metabolism , Biotransformation , Blood Proteins/metabolism , Chromatography, Gas , Dogs , Female , Haplorhini , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Injections, Intravenous , Intestinal Absorption , Kinetics , Macaca mulatta , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Male , Mass Spectrometry , Phenylacetates/blood , Phenylacetates/urine , Protein Binding , Rats , Serum Albumin/metabolism , Time Factors
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