5,340 research outputs found

    Description of author Lisa Price\u27s hiking trip through the Hundred Mile Wilderne

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    Description of author Lisa Price\u27s hiking trip through the Hundred Mile Wilderness, the final section of the Appalachian Trail in Maine. Price, who has hiked the Appalachian Trail for four years, one section at a time, meets up with fellow hikers Noel and Caroline at Shaw\u27s Boarding House in Monson, and the three reach the summit of Mount Katahdin together

    Conversatorio con Lisa Garforth=Conversation with Lisa Garforth

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    Julia Ramírez-Blanco conversa con Lisa Garforth, autora del libro Green Utopias y especialista en utopías medioambientales. Con ella, hablamos acerca de las posibles maneras de definir las ecotopías, y cómo estas se manifiestan tanto en la literatura como en distintas formas de práctica social.Julia Ramírez-Blanco interviews Lisa Garforth, author of the book Green Utopias and specialist in environmental utopias. With her, we talk about the possible ways of defining ecotopias, and how they manifest themselves both in literature and in different forms of social practice.http://re-visiones.net/audio/Entrevista-Lisa-Garfoth.mp

    APPLYING LISA CONCEPTS ON SOUTHERN FARMS

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    Agribusiness,

    An interview with Alfredo Falcone and Lisa Salvatore: RECOURSE and trifluridine/tipiracil in metastatic colorectal cancer

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    Professor Alfredo Falcone and Dr Lisa Salvatore speak to Roshaine Gunawardana, Managing Commissioning Editor: Professor Alfredo Falcone is the Director of the Department of Oncology and the Specialization School at the University Hospital of Pisa, Italy. He trained in Pisa and Genoa, Italy, and has held major positions in Italian oncology since 2000. He currently has more than 300 publications, including papers in peer-reviewed international and national journals, book chapters, and more than 600 abstracts of presentations to international and national conferences. The majority of his papers regard clinical and translational research, with a particular focus on metastatic colorectal cancer. Dr Lisa Salvatore is a medical oncologist in the Department of Translational Research and New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery at the University of Pisa. She has been an author on about 40 publications in major peer-reviewed publications and has made numerous presentations in national and international conferences. Her main interest is focused on clinical and translational research in metastatic colorectal cancer

    RHM Author Interview: Dr. Lisa Melonçon, RHM Editor, Interviews Dr. Abby Dubisar and Sara Davis on Their Persuasion Brief, "Communicating Elective Sterilization: A Feminist Perspective"

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    RHM Author Interview: Dr. Lisa Meloncon, RHM Editor, interviews Dr. Abby Dubisar and Sara Davis on Their Persuasion Brief, “Communicating Elective Sterilization: A Feminist Perspective.

    Preservation assessment of the collections at the Oregon State Library, Salem, Oregon: October 6, 7 & 8, 2009

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    Report -- Appendix A. Documentation Images -- Appendix B. Resources -- Appendix C. Recommended Books, Collection Policy Resources, Organizations for Reference & Vendors for Supplies -- Appendix D. Cost Estimates.prepared by Lisa Duncan, Art Conservator, LLC.Title from PDF title page (viewed on February 8, 2023).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    Egyptology

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    M.F.A.by Lisa HubermanA play

    After the goldrush : Joe Felber, Sasha Grbich, Lisa Harms

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    Catalogue of an exhibition held at SASA Gallery, Adelaide, 5 May-5 June 2009.Artist: Lisa Harms. Editor: Mary Knights. Includes bibliographical references

    Current practice and new systems for in-house pressure garment production

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    Pressure garments are widely used in the treatment and prevention of hypertrophic burn scars. These pressure garments can be made by commercial suppliers or in-house by specialist staff. This paper will present the results of a 2012 survey of NHS burn units examining current pressure garment practice and construction techniques. The results of this survey will be compared with the results of the last survey conducted in 1997 to establish what has changed in the last 15 years, what has influenced these changes and also what barriers there are to changes in practice when new information comes to light. Previous research showed that following standard practice of 1997 would exert a wide range of pressures on patients’ limbs. The pressures exerted are determined by the fabric selected and the circumference of the limb to which the pressure garment was fitted [1]. The 2012 survey has shown a consolidation of the source and number of fabrics used for in-house pressure garment manufacture but little change in the design processes used. These findings have led to the development of 2 computer based pressure garment construction and evaluation systems, which are being developed in partnership with hospital staff responsible for making pressure garments in-house. The first allows medical staff to monitor the mean pressures exerted to patient’s limbs when pressure garments are designed and constructed following their standard protocol. This will enable them to catalogue the mean pressures they are exerting on their patients allowing them to build their understanding of which pressures work better on specific patients and scar sites. The second system enables users to design pressure garments capable of exerting specific mean pressures to the patient’s scarred limb, it is anticipated that this would be used once a body of data has been built up using the first, pressure calculating/cataloguing, system. Both of these systems have been developed based on research published in Burns [2] and following testing of the fabrics currently used by hospitals for pressure garment construction. Both systems are very simple, cheap and quick to use and will enable users to not only develop a greater understanding of pressure garment treatment but also be able to apply the most effective pressures for particular scars and scar locations. It is anticipated that use of these systems will enable the collection of valuable future research data.[1] Dr Lisa Macintyre, Dr Margot Baird. Pressure garments for use in the treatment of hypertrophic scars – an evaluation of current construction techniques in NHS hospitals. BURNS 31/1 (2005) 11-14[2] Macintyre L. Designing pressure garments capable of exerting specific pressures on limbs. Burns 33/5 (2007) 579-86.<br/
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