3,912,057 research outputs found

    Az ACS prehospitalis ellátása

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    Az ACS prehospitalis ellátásaBSc/BAápolás és betegellátás – mentőtisztmagyarlevelezőV

    Gender Distribution and Geography of Highly Cited Papers in ACS Catalysis

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    Following the editorial series presented in ACS Catalysis in 2020, I investigated the gender distribution in highly cited ACS Catalysis papers. As a main result, I found that from the 155 highly cited papers that showed up in my analysis, only 15 papers have female corresponding author(s) (9.7%), and only 5 of these 15 papers have solely female corresponding author(s) (3.2%). I also analyzed geographical distribution and found that two new categories "Small Countries", including for example Cyprus, Greece, Iceland, and Ireland, and "Developing Countries", including Mexico, South Africa, Thailand, and Vietnam, provide significant contributions to ACS Catalysis, larger than Canada or UK, based on the defined metrics

    fused AHS-ACS-2019 data - fst format

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    Fusion of 5 select donor variables from AHS 2019 to ACS 2019, fst format</p

    fused NHTS-ACS-2017 data - csv format

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    Fusion of 5 select donor variables from NHTS 2017 to ACS 2017, , gzipped csv format</p

    fused AHS-ACS-2019 data - csv format

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    Fusion of 5 select donor variables from AHS 2019 to ACS 2019, gzipped csv format</p

    fused RECS-ACS-2015 data - fst format

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    Fusion of 12 select donor variables from RECS 2015 to ACS 2015, fst format</p

    fused RECS-ACS-2015 data - csv format

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    Fusion of 12 select donor variables from RECS 2015 to ACS 2015, gzipped csv format</p

    fused NHTS-ACS-2017 data - fst format

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    Fusion of 5 select donor variables from NHTS 2017 to ACS 2017, fst format</p

    Indications for an early invasive strategy in NSTE-ACS patients

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    An early invasive strategy in patients who have acute coronary syndrome without ST-elevation (NSTE-ACS) can improve clinical outcome in high-risk subgroups. According to the current guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), the majority of NSTE-ACS patients are classified as "high-risk". We propose to prioritise patients with a global registry of acute coronary events (GRACE) risk score &gt;140 over patients with isolated troponin rise or electrocardiographic changes and a GRACE risk score</p
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