Institution
Université de Sherbrooke
Education•Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada•
About: Université de Sherbrooke is a education organization based out in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Receptor. The organization has 14922 authors who have published 28783 publications receiving 792511 citations. The organization is also known as: Universite de Sherbrooke & Sherbrooke University.
Topics: Population, Receptor, Health care, Angiotensin II, Poison control
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Domenico Regoli and colleagues describe how new selective agonists developed have been successfully used in vitro to characterize the responses of peripheral organs to neurokinins, and in vivo to elucidate possible physiological roles of the neurokinin system.
347 citations
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TL;DR: It is concluded that the presently available information still supports the notion that Bt Cry toxins act by forming pores, but most events leading to their formation, following binding of the activated toxins to their receptors, remain relatively poorly understood.
347 citations
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TL;DR: This systematic literature review was aimed to synthesize current knowledge of the barriers and facilitators influencing shared EHR implementation among its various users to demonstrate that each user group has a unique perspective of the implementation process that should be taken into account.
Abstract: Electronic health record (EHR) implementation is currently underway in Canada, as in many other countries. These ambitious projects involve many stakeholders with unique perceptions of the implementation process. EHR users have an important role to play as they must integrate the EHR system into their work environments and use it in their everyday activities. Users hold valuable, first-hand knowledge of what can limit or contribute to the success of EHR implementation projects. A comprehensive synthesis of EHR users' perceptions is key to successful future implementation. This systematic literature review was aimed to synthesize current knowledge of the barriers and facilitators influencing shared EHR implementation among its various users. Covering a period from 1999 to 2009, a literature search was conducted on nine electronic databases. Studies were included if they reported on users' perceived barriers and facilitators to shared EHR implementation, in healthcare settings comparable to Canada. Studies in all languages with an empirical study design were included. Quality and relevance of the studies were assessed. Four EHR user groups were targeted: physicians, other health care professionals, managers, and patients/public. Content analysis was performed independently by two authors using a validated extraction grid with pre-established categorization of barriers and facilitators for each group of EHR users. Of a total of 5,695 potentially relevant publications identified, 117 full text publications were obtained after screening titles and abstracts. After review of the full articles, 60 publications, corresponding to 52 studies, met the inclusion criteria. The most frequent adoption factors common to all user groups were design and technical concerns, ease of use, interoperability, privacy and security, costs, productivity, familiarity and ability with EHR, motivation to use EHR, patient and health professional interaction, and lack of time and workload. Each user group also identified factors specific to their professional and individual priorities. This systematic review presents innovative research on the barriers and facilitators to EHR implementation. While important similarities between user groups are highlighted, differences between them demonstrate that each user group also has a unique perspective of the implementation process that should be taken into account.
346 citations
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TL;DR: It is argued that some important foundational assumptions of trait-based ecology have not received sufficient empirical evaluation and, where possible, methods of improvement are suggested.
Abstract: The promise of “trait-based” plant ecology is one of generalized prediction across organizational and spatial scales, independent of taxonomy. This promise is a major reason for the increased popularity of this approach. Here, we argue that some important foundational assumptions of trait-based ecology have not received sufficient empirical evaluation. We identify three such assumptions and, where possible, suggest methods of improvement: (i) traits are functional to the degree that they determine individual fitness, (ii) intraspecific variation in functional traits can be largely ignored, and (iii) functional traits show general predictive relationships to measurable environmental gradients.
345 citations
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Rambam Health Care Campus1, French Institute of Health and Medical Research2, Aalborg University3, University of Florida4, University of Haifa5, Oslo University Hospital6, Karolinska Institutet7, Columbia University8, Université de Sherbrooke9, National Institute of Occupational Health10, Norwegian University of Science and Technology11, University of Oslo12, Heidelberg University13
TL;DR: The recommendations of interested researchers consensus meeting regarding the practice of CPM are summarized and report of its results are reported.
345 citations
Authors
Showing all 15051 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Masashi Yanagisawa | 130 | 524 | 83631 |
Joseph V. Bonventre | 126 | 596 | 61009 |
Jeffrey L. Benovic | 99 | 264 | 30041 |
Alessio Fasano | 96 | 478 | 34580 |
Graham Pawelec | 89 | 572 | 27373 |
Simon C. Robson | 88 | 552 | 29808 |
Paul B. Corkum | 88 | 576 | 37200 |
Mario Leclerc | 88 | 374 | 35961 |
Stephen M. Collins | 86 | 320 | 25646 |
Ed Harlow | 86 | 190 | 61008 |
William D. Fraser | 85 | 827 | 30155 |
Jean Cadet | 83 | 372 | 24000 |
Vincent Giguère | 82 | 227 | 27481 |
Robert Gurny | 81 | 396 | 28391 |
Jean-Michel Gaillard | 81 | 410 | 26780 |