1,617 research outputs found
Early Feeding After a Total Abdominal Hysterectomy
Background: Oral fluids and food are traditionally introduced slowly after total abdominal hysterectomy (TAH). This descriptive study examined the effect and tolerance of early oral intake following this surgery. Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted on 164 patients who had been on a clinical pathway following TAH. Comparisons in initiation of fluids and foods, and gastrointestinal effects were made between the early fed group (n=82) and the traditionally fed group (n=82). Results: Both groups had the similar gastrointestinal symptoms postoperatively, but the early fed group had an earlier bowel movement. The early fed group had a statistically significant shorter length of stay. Similar usage of anti-nausea medication and pain medication usage was noted between the two groups, except for a lower usage of Tylenol #3 (acetaminophen with codeine) in the early fed group. Conclusions: This study found that early feeding could be tolerated well in TAH patients, with statistically significant improvements in usage of some pain medication and length of stay were noted in the early fed group
A Frontier Model for Landscape Ecology: The Tapir in Honduras
We borrow a frontier specification from the econometrics literature to make inferences about the tolerance of the tapir to human settlements. We estimate the width of an invisible band surrounding human settlements which would act as a frontier or exclusion zone to the tapir to be around 290 meters.Tapir, Frontier models, landscape ecology, conservation
Cross-Gender Supervision in Prison and the Constitutional Right of Prisoners to Remain Free from Rape
A variety of state, federal, and international laws theoretically prohibit sexual abuse of prisoners by the guards hired by the state to oversee them. Nevertheless, sexual abuse of female prisoners by male prison guards is a rampant phenomenon that the law has thus far failed to remedy. Cross-gender supervision policies exacerbate the problem by placing women in situations in which they have no escape from their attackers. These policies, which are as dangerous for some prisoners as they are humiliating to all prisoners, have generally withstood scrutiny in courts.
This note attempts to reframe the arguments challenging crossgender supervision policies and proposes a more narrowly tailored constitutional claim against them. Clearly establishing the causal link between cross-gender supervision policies and custodial sexual abuse could convince courts to enjoin prisons from hiring male guards to oversee female prisoners in contact positions. Such a result would hopefully both stem the tide of sexual abuse in prisons while simultaneously improving conditions of confinement for female prisoners by restricting prisons from adopting these degrading policies
Editorial: Feminism, women’s movements and women in movement
Introduction to Special Issue that engages with the increasingly important, separate yet interrelated themes of feminism, women’s movements and women in movement in the context of global neoliberalism
Low-Temperatures Vortex Dynamics in Twinned Superconductors
We discuss the low-temperature dynamics of magnetic flux lines in samples
with a family of parallel twin planes. A current applied along the twin planes
drives flux motion in the direction transverse to the planes and acts like an
electric field applied to {\it one-dimensional} carriers in disordered
semiconductors. As in flux arrays with columnar pins, there is a regime where
the dynamics is dominated by superkink excitations that correspond to Mott
variable range hopping (VRH) of carriers. In one dimension, however, rare
events, such as large regions void of twin planes, can impede VRH and dominate
transport in samples that are sufficiently long in the direction of flux
motion. In short samples rare regions can be responsible for mesoscopic
effects.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures email: [email protected]
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