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Showing 17 of 7 results for Annual Reports as Topic

13.  Infection risk

Annual Report. November 4, 2022. Accessed May 14, 2024. https://www.aaos.org/aaos-home/newsroom/press-releases/2022-ajrr-annual-report-announcement/. 13. Parvizi J, Gehrke T & Chen AF. Proceedings of the International Consensus on Periprosthetic Joint Infection Bone Joint J 11, 2013;95-b: 1450-1452 doi:10.1302/0301-620x.95b11.33135. 14. Parvizi J, Zmistowski B, Berbari
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →

2 New Developments in LGBT Development: What’s New and What’s (Still) True

topic in LGBT mental health is the practice of conversion or reparative therapy. These individual therapies and group counseling programs, often clergy- or religious layperson-based, purport to convert gay, lesbian, and bisexual people to heterosexuality. The clinical and research literature could not be clearer that these attempts are both
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →

18.  The female knee: Intraoperative considerations for the arthroplasty surgeon

topic, especially in the era of “patella-friendly” implants. These contemporary femoral implants have deepened and lengthened intercondylar notches, laterally oriented trochlear grooves, and included a high lateral flange to decrease symptomatic anterior knee pain (AKP) and extensor mechanism problems.79 A meta-analysis by Teel et al. of 20 RCTs
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →

12 Quality and Equality: An Interdisciplinary Graduate Program to Develop Agents of Change in LGBT Health

reports and accompanying progressive legislation resonated with what many of the program faculty already knew: more providers, researchers, and policy professionals were needed who could develop and implement culturally competent, evidence-based best practices in order to create LGBT-affirmative health systems and promote LGBT health equity. Moreover, increased access
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →

7 Caught at the Intersections: Microaggressions toward Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer People of Color

report myriad offenses committed as a result of their racial identities, sexual orientation identities, or both, leading to an array of emotional reactions and mental health consequences, both immediately after experiencing microaggressions and in terms of their cumulative impact. In spite of this, many participants retrospectively attributed positive mental health
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →

10 Challenges in Moving toward the Resolution, Reduction, and Elimination of Health Disparities for LGBT Populations

report discrimination during healthcare service delivery. Following from this recognition, there have been calls for infusing into undergraduate medical education sufficient LGBT-related curriculum content, including by the American Medical Association (AMA), IOM, and the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC; Grubb et al., 2013). For example, toward a major
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →

5 LGBT Psychology and Ethnic Minority Perspectives: Intersectionality

reported they “gave up family and church” to come out, Hector felt a deep enduring “connection” to both his family and church. He felt the group was “not a safe space” for him to talk about these enduring connections or related concerns. Though he never discussed his sexual orientation with
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →
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