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Weapons Detection at Two Urban Hospitals
Pediatric Emergency Care, 2003To determine the type of weapons confiscated from an urban pediatric hospital and its affiliated general hospital.This was a prospective evaluation of weapons confiscated from individuals entering 2 affiliated urban hospitals: a general hospital with over 85,000 emergency department visits and a freestanding children's hospital with over 45,000 ...
Harold K, Simon +2 more
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Hospitable urban spaces and diversity
Hospitality & Society, 2013Abstract The production and consumption of food plays a highly visible and vital role in the public life of cities and in the creation of hospitable public spaces. Food acts as a vehicle for facilitating sustenance and sociability to urban spaces.
Mand, Harpreet (Neena), Cilliers, Steani
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Gangrenous Cholecystitis in an Urban VA Hospital
Journal of Surgical Research, 1994Gangrenous cholecystitis is an advanced form of acute cholecystitis associated with increased morbidity and mortality. We sought to determine the incidence of gangrenous cholecystitis in an urban VA hospital patient population and identify any distinguishing characteristics that may aid in its preoperative diagnosis.
A K, Wilson +4 more
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Home touring as hospitable urbanism
Journal of Urbanism: International Research on Placemaking and Urban Sustainability, 2015AbstractThis paper twins theories of urbanism and feminist hospitality in exploring the practice of historic home touring as demonstrative of hospitable urbanism, an ethical opening of self and neighborhood to strangers. In Phoenix, Arizona, the quintessential “ahistorical” sprawling metropolis, historic home touring is particularly evocative.
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Teenage pregnancy in an urban hospital setting
Journal of Community Health, 1986Recent research suggests that adverse consequences of teenage pregnancy are largely a function of social background factors and adequacy of prenatal care. This study examines the situation of young mothers with new babies in a low income, urban environment.
J K, Davis +4 more
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Urbanization as Measured by Hospitalization
American Sociological Review, 1940E VER SINCE Charles J. Galpin began his work in Wisconsin on the structure of the rural community,' social ecologists have been attempting to find additional indices by which social interaction between a center and its outlying territory can be measured.
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Birth-Control Education in an Urban Hospital
Psychiatric Services, 1969(44) antipsychotic medications when a patient becomes pregnant, so that some patients who are adjusting at home on a maintenance dosage suffer a relapse and must be hospitalized again. Most mental hospitals have a high proportion of impulsive, impressionable, and often frankly prorniscuous youngsters-a very high risk group for out-ofwedlock pregnancies.
A M, Mesnikoff, S, Matorin
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Hospitality Marketing Strategies in Urban Events
The global expansion of tourism has provided several benefits for local economies, since it is not only responsible for creating jobs in several areas but also plays a crucial role in the development of new infrastructures, which is reflected in an increase in the value and relevance of regions, namely by specializing in organizing events and creating ...Liberato, Dália +4 more
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Introduction: Clinical Ethics Beyond the Urban Hospital
HEC Forum, 2015Bioethics, and subsequently clinical ethics, developed primarily out of concerns that arose in the context of urban academic acute-care medicine. The ‘‘life and death’’ conversations in the field’s early years predominantly culminated around questions about proper use of sophisticated life-sustaining technologies, technology that, at the time, could ...
Erica K, Salter, Joseph T, Norris
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