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Pamela Donohue

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  114
Citations -  5341

Pamela Donohue is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Intensive care. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 109 publications receiving 4487 citations. Previous affiliations of Pamela Donohue include Yonsei University & University of Alabama at Birmingham.

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Burnout and Resilience Among Nurses Practicing in High-Intensity Settings.

TL;DR: These findings provide the basis for an experimental intervention in phase 2, which is designed to help participants cultivate strategies and practices for renewal, including mindfulness practices and personal resilience plans.
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Pediatric diffusion tensor imaging: normal database and observation of the white matter maturation in early childhood.

TL;DR: The establishment of a database of DTI images in children can be used as a normal standard of reference for diagnosis of pediatric neurological abnormalities, and visual observations that maturation of the white matter and the normality of its architecture can be assessed with DTI in young children are confirmed.
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The Limit of Viability -- Neonatal Outcome of Infants Born at 22 to 25 Weeks' Gestation

TL;DR: The mortality and neonatal morbidity of preterm infants born at these gestational ages are evaluated to provide better information and counseling for parents of infants about to be delivered after 22 to 25 weeks' gestation and survival improved with increasing gestational age.
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White and gray matter development in human fetal, newborn and pediatric brains.

TL;DR: Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging images of postmortem fetal brain samples and in vivo neonates and children are acquired to provide reference standards for diagnostic radiology of premature newborns and will be a valuable resource for human brain developmental study.
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Multi-contrast human neonatal brain atlas: application to normal neonate development analysis.

TL;DR: The development of neonatal brain atlases with detailed anatomic information derived from DTI and co-registered anatomical MRI and a diffeomorphic transformation is reported, which was able to normalize Neonatal brain images to the atlas space and three-dimensionally parcellate images into 122 regions.