47 research outputs found
STATEWIDE JUDICIAL EMERGENCY: Judicial Order by the Supreme Court of Georgia Declaring a Statewide Judicial Emergency
The Supreme Court of Georgia issued an Order declaring a Statewide Judicial Emergency to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 throughout the State of Georgia. The courts remained open to address essential functions, as defined within the Order. Additionally, all deadlines and other filing requirements were extended or tolled. Throughout the counties in Georgia, different courts released Orders outlining how they would follow the Judicial Emergency Order from the Supreme Court of Georgia. The Judicial Emergency Order had been extended four times as of August 1, 2020
AC propulsion system for an electric vehicle, phase 2
A second-generation prototype ac propulsion system for a passenger electric vehicle was designed, fabricated, tested, installed in a modified Mercury Lynx vehicle and track tested at the Contractor's site. The system consisted of a Phase 2, 18.7 kw rated ac induction traction motor, a 192-volt, battery powered, pulse-width-modulated, transistorized inverter packaged for under rear seat installation, a 2-axis, 2-speed, automatically-shifted mechanical transaxle and a microprocessor-based powertrain/vehicle controller. A diagnostics computer to assist tuning and fault finding was fabricated. Dc-to-mechanical-system efficiency varied from 78% to 82% as axle speed/torque ranged from 159 rpm/788 nm to 65 rpm/328 nm. Track test efficiency results suggest that the ac system will be equal or superior to dc systems when driving urban cycles. Additional short-term work is being performed under a third contract phase (AC-3) to raise transaxle efficiency to predicted levels, and to improve starting and shifting characteristics. However, the long-term challenge to the system's viability remains inverter cost. A final report on the Phase 2 system, describing Phase 3 modifications, will be issued at the conclusion of AC-3
STATEWIDE JUDICIAL EMERGENCY: Judicial Order by the Supreme Court of Georgia Declaring a Statewide Judicial Emergency
The Supreme Court of Georgia issued an Order declaring a Statewide Judicial Emergency to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 throughout the State of Georgia. The courts remained open to address essential functions, as defined within the Order. Additionally, all deadlines and other filing requirements were extended or tolled. Throughout the counties in Georgia, different courts released Orders outlining how they would follow the Judicial Emergency Order from the Supreme Court of Georgia. The Judicial Emergency Order had been extended four times as of August 1, 2020
Growth Trajectory in Children with Trisomy 21 with and without Atrioventricular Septal Defect
Displacment amplification and latching mechanism using V-shape actuators in design of electro-thermal MEMS switches
Feeding Dysfunction in Children with Single Ventricle Following Staged Palliation
OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence of feeding dysfunction in children with single ventricle defects and identify associated risk factors. STUDY DESIGN: Patients aged 2–6 years with single ventricle physiology presenting for routine cardiology follow-up at the Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin were prospectively identified. Parents of the patients completed 2 validated instruments for assessment of feeding dysfunction. Chart review was performed to retrospectively obtain demographic and diagnostic data. RESULTS: Instruments were completed for 56 patients; median age was 39 months. Overall, 28 (50%) patients had some form of feeding dysfunction. Compared with a normal reference population, patients with single ventricle had statistically-significant differences in dysfunctional food manipulation (p<0.001), mealtime aggression (p=0.002), choking/gagging/vomiting (p<0.001), resistance to eating (p<0.001) and parental aversion to mealtime (p<0.001). Weight and height for age z-scores were significantly lower in subjects with feeding dysfunction (−0.84 vs. −0.33; p<0.05 and −1.46 vs. −0.56; p=0.001 respectively). Multivariable analysis identified current gastrostomy tube use (p=0.02) and a single parent household (p=0.01) as risk factors for feeding dysfunction. CONCLUSION: Feeding dysfunction is common in children with single ventricle defects, occurring in 50% of our cohort. Feeding dysfunction is associated with worse growth measures. Current gastrostomy tube use and a single parent household were identified as independent risk factors for feeding dysfunction
