332 research outputs found
“One if by land, and two if by sea,” but what is the signal for rejection?
Published online: 18 August 2023P. Toby Coates and Germaine Won
Cancer post kidney transplant: the question of risk
Abstract not availableGeorgina L. Irish, P. Toby Coates and Philip A. Clayto
Isolated sphenoid fungal sinusitis in a renal transplant recipient presenting with bilateral abducens nerve palsy
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comJordan Y. Z. Li, Tuck Y Yong, Eewin Khoo, Graeme R Russ, David I Grove, P. Toby H Coates, Stephen P McDonal
P.22: A financial audit of total pancreatectomy and islet-auto transplantation with remote isolation compared with traditional medical management and the expected complications of hereditary pancreatitis: a South Australian perspective
Abstract - P.22Alice Rickard, Colleen Etherton, Tiah Doody, Anita Yu, Sadia Jahan, Nicholas O, Kane, Alex Silverwood, Chris Drogemuller, Denghao Wu, Mikhail Boiarski, Kay Tom, Loudovaris Tom, Coates Toby, Couper Richard, Sanjeev Khurana, Chen Joh
Are Police the Enemy?
The argument about whether the police are unfairly targeting for harassment innocent citizens because they are identifiable as blacks or Hispanics or simply going about their difficult jobs in a reasonably efficient way cannot be settled by listening to the testimony of the police themselves. An obvious way to resolve the contradictory perceptions is to get objective data on police behavior. To my knowledge, only the study of police behavior conducted by Professor Albert Reiss in the 1960s for the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice meets scientific standards of objectivity.The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com.http://www.springerlink.com/content/fh15v1vf14xcttky/?p=b2c69c1ee94d44daa8727c2d8df19a0a&pi=1
LGBTI variations in crime reporting: how sexual identity influences decisions to call the cops
Research shows that people vary in their willingness to report crime to police depending on the type of crime experienced, their gender, age, and their race or ethnicity. Whether or not lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) and heterosexual people vary in their willingness to report crime to the police is not well understood in the extant literature. In this article, I examine variations in LGBTI respondents' attitudes, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control on their intentions to report crimes to the police. Drawing on a survey of LGBTI individuals sampled from a Gay Pride community event and online LGBTI community forums (N = 329), I use quantitative statistical methods to examine whether LGBTI people's beliefs in police homophobia are also directly associated with the behavioral intention to report crime. Overall, the results indicate that LGBTI and heterosexual people differ significantly in their intention to report crime to the police, and that a belief in police homophobia strongly influences LGBTI people's intention to underreport crime to the police
Nephrotoxicity and calcineurin inhibitors
© 2008 IngentaDate written: January 2005Final submission: October 2006Coates, P Toby
Disseminated microsporidiosis with Encephalitozoon species in a renal transplant recipient
To our knowledge, 5 cases of disseminated microsporidiosis with Encephalitozoon species have been reported worldwide in transplant recipients. George et al. present the first such case in Australia, to be reported and treated with good clinical recovery.Bibin George, Toby Coates, Stephen McDonald, Graeme Russ, Sajiv Cherian, James Nolan and John Breale
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