Title: Tijdschrift Voor Nederlandse Taal-en Letterkunde
Full Journal Title: Tijdschrift Voor Nederlandse Taal-en Letterkunde
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? van Dijk, Y. (2010), ‘Do not you wait for inspiration’ Plagiarism, imitation and re-enactment in the novels of Arnon Grunberg. Tijdschrift Voor Nederlandse Taal-en Letterkunde, 126 (3), 228-241.
Abstract: the work of the succesful Dutch author Arnon Grunberg seems to be intertextual in a postmodern way: he recycles, quotes and refers to existing stories and novels. However, the functions of this intertextuality are different in Grunberg’s oeuvre than they were in postmodernism. Here I try to give a more adequate description and interpretation of intertextuality in his novels. We may speak of imitation (Mary Orr) or parody (Linda Hutcheon): biblical stories for example are rewritten by Grunberg, with an emphasis on difference. The aim is not to undermine the source-text, but rather to place the new text in a context of universal stories about humanity. and in the case of the ‘culture-text’ of the Holocaust, parody and ‘re-enactment’ (Ernst van Alphen) seem to be ways to come to terms with the past.
Keywords: Imitation, Interpretation, Plagiarism
Full Journal Title: Tissue Antigens
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? Kamdi, A.S., Kandavalli, N.B., Emusu, D., Jain, N., Mamtani, M. and Porterfield, J.R. (2011), Weak or absent evidence for the association of HLA-DR antigens with risk of thyroid carcinoma: A meta-analysis of observational studies. Tissue Antigens, 78 (5), 382-389.
Full Text: 2011\Tis Ant78, 382.pdf
Abstract: Inconsistent reports of associations between human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR and thyroid cancers exist. We conducted a comprehensive search of the PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science databases. Using random-effects modeling, subgroup analyses, meta-regression and prediction interval (PI) estimation, we combined the existing evidence from 13 studies (977 cases of thyroid cancer and 3735 controls). Only HLA-DR1 and HLA-DR11 were significantly associated; however, the evidence for HLA-DR11 came from only three studies while that for HLA-DR1 had large between-study heterogeneity. All the PIs estimated in the study straddled unity. Therefore, current evidence for the studied association is incomplete as well as uncertain. Attempts to include HLA-DR typing as a prognostic or therapeutic marker may be premature at this time.
Keywords: Association, Autoimmune-Thyroiditis, Cancer, Carcinoma, Class-II Antigen, Databases, Expression, Graves-Disease, Hashimotos-Thyroiditis, Human, Human Leukocyte Antigen, Iodine Sufficiency, Major Histocompatibility Complex, Major Histocompatibility Complex, Meta Analysis, Meta-Analysis, Modeling, Observational, Observational Studies, PI, Population, Pubmed, Risk, Science, Scopus, Susceptibility, Thyroid Carcinoma, Web of Science
Title: Tobacco Control
Full Journal Title: Tobacco Control
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? Scollo, M., Lal, A., Hyland, A. and Glantz, S. (2003), Review of the quality of studies on the economic effects of smoke-free policies on the hospitality industry. Tobacco Control, 12 (1), 13-20.
Full Text: 2003\Tob Con12, 13.pdf
Abstract: Objective: To compare the quality and funding source of studies concluding a negative economic impact of smoke-free policies in the hospitality industry to studies concluding no such negative impact. Data sources: Researchers sought all studies produced before 3 1 August 2002. Articles published in scientific journals were located with MEDLINE, Science Citation Index, Social Sciences Citation Index, Current Contents, PsychInfo, Econlit, and Healthstar. Unpublished studies were located from tobacco company websites and through internet searches. Study selection: 97 studies that made statements about economic impact were included. 93% of the studies located met the selection criteria as determined by consensus between multiple reviewers. Data extraction: Findings and characteristics of studies (apart from funding source) were classified independently by two researchers. A third assessor blind to both the objective of the present stud and to funding source also classified each study. Data synthesis: In studies concluding a negative impact, the odds of using a subjective outcome measure was 4.0 times (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.4 to 9.6; p = 0.007) and the odds of not being peer reviewed was 20 times (95% Cl 2.6 to 166.7; p = 0.004) that of studies concluding no such negative impact. All of the studies concluding a negative impact were supported by the tobacco industry. 94% of the tobacco industry supported studies concluded a negative economic impact compared to none of the non-industry supported studies. Conclusion: All of the best designed studies report no impact or a positive impact of smoke-free restaurant and bar laws on sales or employment. Policymakers can act to protect workers and patrons from the toxins in secondhand smoke confident in rejecting industry claims that there will be an adverse economic impact.
Keywords: Characteristics, Confidence, Consensus, Criteria, Economic, Employment, Extraction, Funding, Impact, Interval, Journals, Laws, Measure, Outcome, Peer-Reviewed, Policies, Quality, Quality of, Science Citation Index, Scientific Journals, Selection Criteria, Source, Sources, Synthesis, Tobacco
? Byrne, F. and Chapman, S. (2005), The most cited authors and papers in tobacco control. Tobacco Control, 14 (3), 155-160
Full Text: 2005\Tob Con14, 155.pdf
Keywords: Authors, Citations, Control, Papers, Tobacco, Tobacco Control
? Lee, J.G.L., Griffin, G.K. and Melvin, C.L. (2009), Tobacco use among sexual minorities in the USA, 1987 to May 2007: A systematic review. Tobacco Control, 18 (4), 275-282.
Full Text: 2009\Tob Con18, 275.pdf
Abstract: Objectives: This paper examines the prevalence of tobacco use among sexual minorities in the US through a systematic review of literature from 1987 to May 2007. Methods: Seven databases were searched for peer-reviewed research (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Cochrane Library via Wiley InterScience, Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), Health Source: Nursing/Academic, Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) Web of Science, PsycINFO via EBSCO Host and PUBMED). No language restrictions were used. Abstracts were identified in the literature search (n = 734) and were independently read and coded for inclusion or exclusion by two reviewers. When agreement was not reached, a third reviewer acted as arbitrator. Abstracts were included if they presented data collected in the US from 1987 to May 2007 and reported prevalence or correlation of tobacco use with sexual minority status. Studies reporting data from HIV-positive samples were excluded. The identified articles (n = 46) were independently read by two reviewers who recorded key outcome measures, including prevalence and/or odds ratios of tobacco use, sample size and domain of sexuality (identity, behaviour, or desire). Factors relating to study design and methodology were used to assess study quality according to nine criteria. Results: In the 42 included studies, 119 measures of tobacco prevalence or association were reported. The available evidence points to disparities in smoking among sexual minorities that are significantly higher than among the general population. Conclusions: Ongoing, targeted interventions addressing smoking among sexual minorities are warranted in tobacco control programs.
Keywords: Bisexual College-Students, Cigarette-Smoking, Cochrane, Control, Databases, Design, Disparities, Education, Factors, Health, Health-Related Behaviors, Heterosexual Women, Identity, Interventions, ISI, Literature, Methodology, Methods, Minorities, Nursing, Of-The-Literature, Outcome, Points, Prevalence, Pubmed, Research, Review, Risk-Factors, Same-Sex, Science, Scientific Information, Smoking, Substance-Use Behaviors, Systematic, Systematic Review, Tobacco, Tobacco Control, Transgender Community, United-States, US, Web of Science
? Brown, T., Platt, S. and Amos, A. (2014), Equity impact of interventions and policies to reduce smoking in youth: Systematic review. Tobacco Control, 23 (E2), Article Number: e98.
Full Text: 2014\Tob Con23, e98.pdf
Abstract: Objective A systematic review to assess the equity impact of interventions/policies on youth smoking. Data sources Biosis, Cinahl, Cochrane Library, Conference Proceedings Citation Index, Embase, Eric, Medline, Psycinfo, Science Citation Index Expanded, Social Sciences Citation Index and tobacco control experts. Published January 1995 to October 2013. Study selection Primary studies of interventions/policies reporting smoking-related outcomes in youth (11-25 years) of lower compared to higher socioeconomic status (SES). Data extraction References were screened and independently checked. Studies were quality assessed; characteristics and outcomes were extracted. Data synthesis A narrative synthesis by intervention/ policy type. Equity impact was assessed as: positive (reduced inequity), neutral (no difference by SES), negative (increased inequity), mixed (equity impact varied) or unclear. Thirty-eight studies of 40 interventions/policies were included: smokefree (12); price/tax (7); mass media campaigns (1); advertising controls (4); access controls (5); school-based programmes (5); multiple policies (3), individual-level cessation support (2), individual-level support for smokefree homes (1). The distribution of equity effects was: 7 positive, 16 neutral, 12 negative, 4 mixed, 1 unclear. All 7 positive equity studies were US-based: price/tax (4), age-of-sales laws (2) and text-messaging cessation support (1). A British school-based intervention (A Stop Smoking in Schools Trial (ASSIST)) showed mixed equity effects (neutral and positive). Most neutral equity studies benefited all SES groups. Conclusions Very few studies have assessed the equity impact of tobacco control interventions/policies on young people. Price/tax increases had the most consistent positive equity impact. There is a need to strengthen the evidence base for the equity impact of youth tobacco control interventions.
Keywords: Access, Adolescents, Advertising, Biosis, Characteristics, Childhood Asthma, Citation, Conference, Control, Data, Distribution, Effects, Equity, Evidence, Experts, Exposure, Extraction, Free Legislation, Groups, Impact, Intervention, Interventions, Laws, Mass Media, Media, Medline, Negative, Nov, Outcomes, Policies, Policy, Prevention, Proceedings, Programmes, Quality, Randomized-Trial, References, Reporting, Review, School, Science, Science Citation Index, Science Citation Index Expanded, Sciences, Se, Secondhand Smoke, Selection, Ses, Smoking, Social Sciences, Social Sciences Citation Index, Socioeconomic Status, Socioeconomic-Status, Sources, Support, Synthesis, Systematic, Systematic Review, Text Messaging, Tobacco, Tobacco-Control Policies, Young, Youth
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