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Manuel Jiménez

Researcher at Universidad Internacional de La Rioja

Publications -  21
Citations -  595

Manuel Jiménez is an academic researcher from Universidad Internacional de La Rioja. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pandemic & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 18 publications receiving 371 citations. Previous affiliations of Manuel Jiménez include University of Málaga.

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Effects of victory and defeat on testosterone and cortisol response to competition: evidence for same response patterns in men and women.

TL;DR: Evidence from sport competition that is consistent with the biosocial model of status and dominance shows that testosterone levels rise and drop following victory and defeat in badminton players of both sexes, although at lower circulating levels in women.
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The Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26): reliability and validity in Spanish female samples.

TL;DR: Results from Principal and Simultaneous Component Analyses showed a unidimensional structure of the EAT-26 item scores and reliability analyses supported the internal consistency of the scale.
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Dynamics of population immunity due to the herd effect in the COVID-19 pandemic

TL;DR: This review presents the basis of herd immunology, the dynamics of infection transmission that induces specific immunity, and how the application of immunoepidemiology and herd Immunology could be used to control the actual COVID-19 pandemic, along with a discussion of its effectiveness, limitations, and applications.
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Saliva in the Diagnosis of COVID-19: A Review and New Research Directions.

TL;DR: Saliva offered sensitivity and specificity for SARS-CoV-2 detection comparable to that of the current standard of nasopharyngeal and throat swabs, however, the utility of saliva in diagnosing COVID-19 infection remains understudied.
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The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Social, Health, and Economy

TL;DR: The aim was to assess the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on population health, where the possible interventions at the health level are discussed, the impact in economic and social areas, and the government and health systems interventions in the pandemic, and finally, possible economic models for the recovery of the crisis are proposed.