Authors Whose Citations to Others Have Been Mined in BITRA As of 30 December 2015
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Provider and Pharmacy Directory 2021
MMOH.21.999.01.9.005 Provider and Pharmacy Directory 2021 UnitedHealthcare Connected® for MyCare Ohio (Medicare-Medicaid Plan) Geauga, Lake, Lorain, and Medina counties For more information, please contact Member Services at: Toll-free 1-877-542-9236, TTY 711 8 a.m. - 8 p.m., local time, Monday - Friday (voicemail available 24 hours a day/7 days a week) www.UHCCommunityPlan.com www.myuhc.com/CommunityPlan H2531_001_000_PD_2021_NM 7/6/2021 MMOH.21.999.01.9.005 MMOH.21.999.01.9.005 Page 1 UnitedHealthcare Connected® for MyCare Ohio (Medicare-Medicaid Plan) 2021 PROVIDER AND PHARMACY DIRECTORY Introduction This Provider and Pharmacy Directory includes information about the provider and pharmacy types in UnitedHealthcare Connected® for MyCare Ohio (Medicare-Medicaid Plan) and listings of all the plan's providers and pharmacies as of the date of this Directory. The listings contain provider and pharmacy address and contact information as well as other details such as days and hours of operations, specialties, and skills. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook. Table of Contents A. Disclaimers ........................................................................................................................................ 3 B. Providers B1. Key Terms ................................................................................................................................. 4 B2. Primary Care Provider ............................................................................................................. -
University Staff
822 UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA www.ualberta.ca University Staff Continuing Academic Staff University Staff Aaron, Stephen L, BSc MD (Alberta), LMCC, FRCP(C), Professor of Medicine (1989, 2003). Abbott, Marilyn, BEd MEd PhD (Alberta), Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology (2002, University Staff University In Memoriam: 2009). Aoki, Ted, BCom (British Columbia) BEd MEd (Alberta) PhD (Oregon), Professor Emeritus of Abdi, Ali A, BA MA (Concordia), PhD (McGill), Professor of Educational Policy Studies (2000, 2006). Secondary Education (1978, 1985). Abele, Jonathan T, BSc (Alberta), MD (Western Ontario), Assistant Professor of Radiology and Allen, Willard F, BSc (Western Ontario) MA PhD (Toronto), Professor Emeritus of Chemistry (1948, Diagnostic Imaging (2006, 2008). 1985). Abel, Wendy, Team Lead, Supply Operations, Buying Services, of Supply Management Services Berg, Roy Torgny, BSc (Alberta), MS PhD (Minnesota), Professor Emeritus of Animal Science (1950, (2002, 2002). 1988). Abourizk, Simon M, BS MS (Georgia Institute of Technology), PhD (Purdue), Professor of Civil and Buck, Robert J, BA (Alberta), MA (Kentucky), PhD (Cincinnati), Professor Emeritus of Classics (1960, Environmental Engineering (1990, 1996). 1992). Abram, Timothy, CRM (Alberta), Internal Auditor of Internal Audit Services (2011, 2011). Dranchuk, Peter Michael, MSc (Alberta), Professor Emeritus of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Abu-Laban, Yasmeen M, BA (Alberta), MA PhD (Carleton), Professor and Associate Chair (Research Engineering (1952, 1988). and Awards) of Political Science (1998, 2008). Dryden, William F, BSc (Glasgow), PhD (Strathclyde), Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology (1976, Achaibar-Morrison, Kumarie, BA (Alberta), Associate Director of International Student Services in 2008). the University of Alberta International (1995, 2008). Gall, Gerald L, O.C., BA (Queen’s), LLB (Windsor), Professor of Law (1974, 1985). -
BIRS 2004/2005 Scientific Report Foreword
Banff International Research Station for Mathematical Innovation and Discovery BIRS 2004/2005 Scientific Report Foreword Inaugurated in 2003, the Banff International Research Station (BIRS) has developed, through a unique scientific partnership between the US and Canada, into a tremendous resource for the world's international scientific community. In three short years 2003/05, the station has hosted over 6000 researchers from 1100 institutions in 60 countries who participated in over 160 different programs spanning almost every aspect of pure, applied, computational and industrial mathematics, statistics, computer science, but also physics, biology, and engineering. The extraordinary response to the opportunities at BIRS has led to extremely high quality competitions with over 450 proposed activities competing for the 170 available weeks in the period 2003-06. The proposals cover huge areas of the basic and engineering sciences as well as economics, finance, psychology and scientific writing. Over 600 scientists from all over the world wrote compelling testimonials on the impact of BIRS on their research (See Book of testimonials on http://www.birs.ca/images/birs/publications/BIRS_testimonials_8-Mar-2005.pdf ). BIRS in 2004 and 2005 was the home of a dazzling array of scientific activities. Besides the tremendously successful 5-day workshops and “Research-in-Teams" programs, BIRS hosted NSF's Focussed Research Groups, Canada's Collaborative Research Teams, Department Chairs meetings and other leadership retreats, gatherings for Women in Mathematics, summer schools in emerging areas, students modeling camps, training sessions for Math Olympiads teams, industrial fora, "ateliers" in scientific writing, as well Bridges conferences for Maths, Music and Arts. BIRS proved to be a unique interdisciplinary forum spanning the whole spectrum of sciences: from multimedia to developmental psychology. -
Escherichia Coli Response to Uranyl Exposure at Low Ph and Associated Protein Regulations
Escherichia coli Response to Uranyl Exposure at Low pH and Associated Protein Regulations Arbia Khemiri1,2,3, Marie Carrie`re4, Nicolas Bremond1,2,3, Mohamed Amine Ben Mlouka5, Laurent Coquet5, Isabelle Llorens6,7, Virginie Chapon1,2,3, Thierry Jouenne5, Pascal Cosette5*, Catherine Berthomieu1,2,3* 1 CEA, DSV, IBEB, Commissariat a` l’Energie Atomique, Laboratoire des Interactions Prote´ine-Me´tal, Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France, 2 CNRS, UMR Biologie Ve´ge´tale et Microbiologie Environnementales 7265, Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France, 3 Universite´ d’Aix-Marseille, Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France, 4 UMR E3 CEA-Universite´ Joseph Fourier, Service de Chimie Inorganique et Biologique, Laboratoire Le´sions des Acides Nucle´iques (LAN), Grenoble, France, 5 UMR 6270 CNRS, Plateforme Prote´omique PISSARO, IRIB -Universite´ de Rouen, Mont Saint Aignan, France, 6 ESRF-CRG-FAME beamline, Polygone Scientifique Louis Ne´el, Grenoble, France, 7 Commissariat a` l’Energie Atomique CEA, DSM, INAC, Laboratoire Nanostructure et Rayonnement Synchrotron, Grenoble, France Abstract Better understanding of uranyl toxicity in bacteria is necessary to optimize strains for bioremediation purposes or for using bacteria as biodetectors for bioavailable uranyl. In this study, after different steps of optimization, Escherichia colicells were exposed to uranyl at low pH to minimize uranyl precipitation and to increase its bioavailability. Bacteria were adapted to mid acidic pH before exposure to 50 or 80 mM uranyl acetate for two hours at pH<3. To evaluate the impact of uranium, growth in these conditions were compared and the same rates of cells survival were observed in control and uranyl exposed cultures. Additionally, this impact was analyzedby two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis proteomics to discover protein actors specifically present or accumulated in contact with uranium.Exposure to uranium resulted in differential accumulation of proteins associated with oxidative stress and in the accumulation of the NADH/quinone oxidoreductase WrbA.