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The Maine Lung Cancer Coalition: A Statewide, Multi-Sector Partnership to Improve Evidence-Based Lung Cancer Prevention & Screening
Leo B Waterston, Liz Scharnetzki, Susan Leeds, Jaclyn A. Janis, Lee Lucas, Deborah Deatrick, Rebecca Boulos, Neil Korsen, and Paul K.J. Han
MLCC has two primary goals:
1. Engage and educate about evidence based lung cancer prevention and screening practices
2. Develop, implement, and evaluate innovative programs to increase access to prevention, screening, and treatment services for all Mainers
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Process Evaluation of a Smoking Cessation Group for Adults with Serious Mental Illness
David M. Weiss and Thomas Styron
Tobacco cessation strategies are needed to improve health outcomes among individuals with serious mental illness
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Ideographic Modeling and Data Visualization of Sleep, Affect, and Psychotic Symptoms: A Case Example
D M. Weiss, E Aslinger, W L. Cook, K A. Johnson, K M. Elacqua, R I. Mesholam-Gately, and K A. Woodberry
Background:
1. Psychotic disorders are heterogeneous.
2. Current diagnostic categorizations are unable to capture individuals’ unique symptom experiences.
3. Newly-developed ideographic analyses and data visualization tools may be useful in assessing individuals’ symptom experiences and stimulating data informed care.
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Notch signaling regulates perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) function during diet-induced obesity
C Yang, A Harrington, L Ryzhova, and L Liaw
Objectives:
-To test the hypothesis that canonical Notch signaling influence vascular function by regulating PVAT-derived vascular relaxation factors.
-To determine how overexpression of Notch signaling or loss of the key Notch signaling component influence PVAT function.
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A Simulation-Based Outreach Program Improves Delivery Room Team Confidence in Neonatal Resuscitation at Rural Community Hospitals
Allison Zanno, Misty Melendi, Micheline Chipman, Jeffrey Holmes, Alexa Craig, Samantha Piro, Anna Gilbert, Sarah Gabrielson, Leah Mallory, Anya Culter, and Mary Ottolini
Objective- Our goal is to pilot the use of an onsite Neonatal Community Outreach Education Program to improve provider confidence with procedural skills and neonatal resuscitation in the delivery room.
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Development of Maine Ongoing Outreach Simulation Education (MOOSE), a Novel Telesimulation Program, to Improve Neonatal Resuscitation in a Rural Community Hospital
Allison Zanno, Misty Melendi, Micheline Chipman, Jeffrey Holmes, Alexa Craig, Samantha Piro, Anna Gilbert, Sarah Gabrielson, Leah Mallory, Anya Culter, and Mary Ottolini
Objective- To implement monthly neonatal resuscitation telesimulation team training sessions in a rural community hospital delivery room that is feasible, sustainable, and replicable at other sites.
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A Modified SIR Model Equivalent to a Generalized Logistic Model, with Standard Logistic Approximations
David E Clark, Jordan S Peck, and Gavin Welch
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Did racial representation change at our outpatient sports medicine clinic during the COVID-19 Pandemic?
William Douglas, William Dexter, Amy Haskins, and Christina Holt
Introduction/Objective
• COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC)
• Increased infection, hospitalization, and death rates1,2
• Black Americans unequal access to outpatient care vs. White Americans 3
• Inequity worsened during the COVID-19 Pandemic 4
• Maine population: 94.25% “White;” 1.42% “Black” 5
• July 2020 COVID cases: 66.8% “White;” 22% “Black” 6
• Did this disparity reflect in in our sports medicine clinic?
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