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Biorisk Management Features of a Temporary COVID-19 Hospital [PDF]
Yale University designed and constructed a temporary field hospital for 100 COVID-19 symptomatic patients. Conservative biocontainment decisions were made in design and operational practices. Objectives of the field hospital included the safe flow of patients, staff, equipment and supplies, and obtaining approval by the Connecticut Department of Public
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Concepts to Bolster Biorisk Management
Health Security, 2022The rapid increase in the power of the life sciences has not been accompanied by a proportionate increase in the sophistication of biorisk management. Through conversations with thought leaders in biosafety and biosecurity, we have identified 19 concepts that are critical for biorisk management to continue to ensure the responsible and safe conduct of ...
Robert August, Dettmann +3 more
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The Nonproliferation Review, 2006
The misuse of biological research is increasingly becoming a prominent policy concern. One regulatory measure that has gained considerable support over the last few years in response to this is voluntary self-governance by the scientific community, and in particular codes of conduct.
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The misuse of biological research is increasingly becoming a prominent policy concern. One regulatory measure that has gained considerable support over the last few years in response to this is voluntary self-governance by the scientific community, and in particular codes of conduct.
openaire +2 more sources
Health Security, 2016
Rapid development and advancement of bioresearch at a university's laboratories can have both positive and negative implications for public health and the environment. Many research activities in which biological materials have been created, modified, stored, and manipulated require safety procedures to keep the negative effects on humans and the ...
Aroem, Naroeni +6 more
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Rapid development and advancement of bioresearch at a university's laboratories can have both positive and negative implications for public health and the environment. Many research activities in which biological materials have been created, modified, stored, and manipulated require safety procedures to keep the negative effects on humans and the ...
Aroem, Naroeni +6 more
openaire +2 more sources
Developing a Biorisk Management Program To Support Biorisk Management Culture
2016The past few decades have seen a consistent evolution of approaches to safety and security risk management across a diversity of industries. In their review of this evolution, a U.S. National Academies of Sciences panel reviewing safety culture in academic chemistry laboratories (1) summarized, from safety science literature, three “epochs” that arose ...
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[Biorisk Management for Clinical Diagnostic Laboratories].
Rinsho byori. The Japanese journal of clinical pathology, 2019The mission of the clinical diagnostic laboratory is to continuously provide high-quality diagnostic services. For this purpose, quality management, continuous technical improvement, work place safety assurance, and biosecurity are their objectives. Biorisks arise from handling clinical samples categorized at the highest risk level due to their unknown
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A Call for a National Agency for Biorisk Management
Health Security, 2022Ryan, Ritterson +5 more
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Integrative oncology: Addressing the global challenges of cancer prevention and treatment
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Jun J Mao,, Msce +2 more
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