1,050 research outputs found
Development of a Child Localization System on RFID and Sensor Networks in an Undergraduate Capstone Senior Design Project
BMQ
BMQ: Boston Medical Quarterly was published from 1950-1966 by the Boston University School of Medicine and the Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals. Pages 49-52, v17n2, provided courtesy of Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center
Effects of surgery on the mental status of older persons. A meta-analytic review
The data bases of 18 empirical studies were combined into one comprehensive data set and subjected to meta-analysis. The following trends were observed: (1) surgery has a significantly decompensating impact on the mental status of older persons, and the average effect size observed is modest (r = .37); (2) for all mental status measures included in the review (cognition, delirium and affect), effect size appears to be significantly moderated by patient age; (3) patient sex may be predictive of the kind of mental impairment that is most likely to occur within an older surgery population, with women manifesting a greater affinity for delirious and men for cognitive decompensation; (4) most existing research within this domain of study is either purely descriptive or anecdotal: of 46 studies reviewed, only 18, or 39.1% of the total published output, were of sufficient methodologic rigor to allow for scientifically valid effect-size computations. The implications of these findings for future research are discussed
Religious practices among Islamic immigrants: Moroccan and Turkish men in Belgium
This study examines the religious participation of Islamic immigrants in Belgium using data from the Migration
History and Social Mobility Survey collected in 1994–1996 from 2,200 men who had immigrated from Turkey and
Morocco. Religious participation is measured as mosque attendance, fasting during Ramadan, and sacrificing a
sheep at the Festival of Sacrifice. Results show that the religious participation of Islamic immigrants depends on
both premigration and postmigration characteristics. Religious participation is higher among immigrants who:
(1) attended a Koranic school in their country of origin, (2) were socialized in a religious region of their home
country, (3) received little schooling, (4) currently live in an area of Belgium with a greater number of mosques,
and (5) associate with a high number of co-ethnics. These results suggest that the religious participation of Islamic
immigrants in Belgium is an outcome of characteristics unique to immigrants as well as processes common among
the general population.
- …
