text stringlengths 59 1.12k |
|---|
the descent. The feeling in my fingers returned within the hour, but it took almost a month for numbness in my toes to disappear. Our descent was quick and soon |
we were back where we started. The doubt and anxiety I harboured for weeks about reaching the summit had vanished, replaced by overpowering fatigue. If I wasn't so tired I |
might have felt proud for having stood closer to outer space than anywhere else on Earth - but, alas, all I could muster was a modicum of relief that I |
went up a hill and made it back down. IF YOU GO The weather in Ecuador is pleasant year-round and Chimborazo can be climbed in any season. The official currency |
in Ecuador is the U.S. dollar. WHERE TO STAY Accommodations in Ecuador are cheap. In Quito, I have paid less than $10 for a private room with a shared bath |
top-notch hotel like the Royal Quito Radisson cost between $100 and $140 per night. At the Urbina train station, guest rooms start at $14; home-cooked meals are $5 for breakfast |
and $8 for dinner. If you request the local delicacy, guinea pig, you can hand pick it from the farm across the road. The train station is managed by the |
carriers do. Delta Air Lines is among the cheapest and a flight from Montreal to Quito connecting through their hub in Atlanta costs between $900 and $1,300. The Urbina train |
station is a 20-minute taxi ride from Riobamba ($15), which is a four-hour bus ride south from Quito ($8). You can get to Urbina directly on the Quito-Riobamba bus by |
asking the driver to stop at the Urbina turnoff. The train station is a one-kilometre walk along a dirt road from the highway. Do not attempt this walk if you |
Virtual Environment For Radiotherapy Training Virtual Environment For Radiotherapy Training, or VERT is both a generic term for VR dedicated to radiotherapy practice, and the name of the first such environment created by the University of Hull in 2009. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases |
which may match this term. Related Dictionary Entries for Virtual Environment For Radiotherapy Training: Resources in our database matching the Term Virtual Environment For Radiotherapy Training: Results by page All trainee radiographers in the UK will learn how to treat cancer on virtual patients using Virtual Environment Radiotherapy Training (VERT), |
a development by the University of Hull and the Princess Royal Hospital. Pharmacist training has joined surgeon training, and midwifery, on the ranks of medical professionals to be trained on patient interaction and condition diagnosis via virtual reality. The Virtual Dental Implant Training Simulation Program or VDITS is designed to |
help students in diagnostics, decision making and treatment protocols. However, its use is ultimately limited because VDITS is a fishbowl VR interface, not an immersive one - it expects participation via monitor screen, mouse and keyboard, rather than a full on virtual experience, at least at this stage. A method |
of training the brain through means of stroboscopics bears a striking resemblance to the basic technology underlying all VR display systems. Could VR really be used to enhance memory, even more efficiently than the physical world-based trials? A simple online game, based on the difficult prospect of convincing an organisation |
that a serious game or VR environment is ideal for their training needs. Based heavily on actual case studies. A unique study by human factors/ergonomics researchers in Norfolk, Virginia, USA, has concluded that VR simulators may well be the best way to prepare surgeons for battlefield medicine, as it is |
ideal for creating a safe replica of the in high-stress, high-workload conditions combat zones present. Conditions which traditional training cannot replicate, and which often cause issues in medical staff encountering it live for the first time. Resource Type not Available A BBC article on the use of Virtual Battle Space |
2, a low-cost VR training simulation for the military. The british MoD is currently using it, to train troops prior to actual deployment. Resource Type not Available A response to the Telegraph's April 2009 stance that training in virtual reality for medical professionals, notably surgeons, is a complete waste of |
time. Industry News containing the Term Virtual Environment For Radiotherapy Training: Results by page Radiotherapy used to treat brain tumours may lead to a decline in mental function many years down the line, say Dutch researchers. A study of 65 patients, 12 years after they were treated, found those who |
had radiotherapy wer... While there is not any snow in the immediate forecast, TxDOT is making sure the snow plow drivers are prepared for the next winter blast. This is the the first year TxDOT invested in virtual reality snow plow training. BMW has opened a ?33 million technical training |
facility in Unterschleissheim near Munich, Germany. The BMW Group Sales and Aftersales Training Academy as it is known is supposed to become the primary training facility for 45,000 BMW employ... (Press Release) FlightSafety International has announced the introduction of Virtual Reality training for pilots and maintenance technicians who operate business |
aircraft, and will be displaying the technology at their exhibit (#4231) at th... Rugby players worldwide could benefit from a new virtual reality training programme created at Queen's University Belfast. Team members from Ulster Rugby have been working with researchers in the School of Psychology at Quee... |
Central banks have always been important players in financial markets. They set key interest rates, which are at the origination of the monetary transmission process, they are monopoly suppliers of base money, and they perform a number of other tasks and functions. Central banks can better perform their mission and |
fulfil their goals when they are understood by the public and other policy makers. One of the youngest members of the central banking community is the Eurosystem (a supranational central banking system). The purpose of this column is to highlight some of its organisational features through a systematic comparison with |
other central banks. The Eurosystem comprises the European Central Bank (ECB) and the national central banks (NCBs) of those EU Member States that have adopted the euro (and, therefore, make up the euro area). With the launch of the euro on 1 January 1999, the Eurosystem acquired responsibility for setting |
the single monetary policy in the euro area. The Eurosystem is led by the Governing Council of the ECB, which is in charge of formulating monetary policy. We compare the Eurosystem to the US Federal Reserve System (the “Fed”, which was established in 1914), and the Bank of Japan (“BoJ”, |
which was established in 1882). Organisational framework and institutional features The governing bodies of the Eurosystem are the Governing Council and the Executive Board. The latter consists of the President, the Vice President, and four board members. Its main task is to implement the decisions of the Governing Council, which |
currently consists of the Executive Board members plus the 16 governors of the euro area NCBs (see Figure 1). Figure 1. Organisational framework of the Eurosystem Note: NCBs refers to the National Central Banks of the 16 euro area countries from January 2009. Source: Gerdesmeier, Mongelli and Roffia (2007). The |
institutional arrangements of the Eurosystem in some ways resemble those of the Fed (see Figure 2) –, both are federal central bank systems. The Fed became more centralised with the Banking Act of 1935. For its part, the ECB has in principle a role similar to that of the Fed’s |
Board of Governors, while the 16 NCBs of the Eurosystem play a role similar to the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks in the US. In a similar fashion, the President of the ECB chairs the Governing Council meetings in much the same way as the Chairman of the Fed’s Board |
of Governors chairs meetings of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) that is responsible for formulating monetary policy in the US. While the structures of the Eurosystem and the Fed share many similarities, there are also some key differences. One concerns voting rights. Currently, all NCB governors have an equal |
vote in all policy decisions taken by the Eurosystem Governing Council. Participation in FOMC voting, in contrast, is more restricted – all seven members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System have a permanent voting right, as does the President of the New York Fed, whereas the |
Presidents of the Chicago and Cleveland branches alternate annually, and the other nine reserve bank presidents share only four votes on a rotating basis, although they do all attend the FOMC meetings and participate in the discussions even when they cannot vote. The voting system of the Governing Council will |
change when more countries adopt the euro. Figure 2. Organisational framework of the Federal Reserve System Notes: FRBs are the regional Federal Reserve Banks of the 12 districts. The solid arrow in the implementation stage denotes the fact that the FRBNY is entrusted with a conduct of open market operations. |
The dashed arrow in the implementation stage denotes the fact that the Board of Directors of each Fed bank sets the discount rate (subject to the approval of the Board of Governors). Source: Pollard (2003). The Bank of Japan’s decision-making body is its Poicy Board (see Figure 3). The Board |
comprises the Governor, two Deputy Governors, and six appointed members. Each of these nine members is appointed by the Cabinet for five years, and his or her appointment must be approved by the Diet. The board members elect the Chairman of the Policy Board among themselves. Since September 2006, the |
Governor of the Bank has also been appointed Chairman of the Policy Board. The Policy Board takes its decisions by a majority vote. The BoJ operates more as a head office than a federal system of central banks and is in charge of 32 domestic local branches (LBs) and 12 |
local offices (LOs). Figure 3. Organisational framework of the Bank of Japan Source: Bank of Japan (2003). The monetary policy framework The table below provides an overview of the institutional and policy-making frameworks of the Eurosystem, the US Federal Reserve System, and the Bank of Japan. There are some differences |
pillar focuses on longer-term inflation outlook based on monetary analysis||Focus on economic forecasts; rates adjusted to optimise expected outcomes and minimise risks of deviating from those outcomes (factoring in costs of those deviations). Preference forgradualism unless risks dictate more aggressive action|| Two perspectives strategy, the first focusing on short-term inflation |
in which the central banks operate A factor that is contributing to reducing the differences between the Eurosystem, the Fed, and the BoJ are the declining “internal” differentials in their economic and financial environment. A few examples will suffice. From 1980 to 2008, inflation dispersion in the US remained within |
a considerably narrow range, whereas in the euro area it trended downward reaching levels comparable to those in the US just prior to the launch of the euro (ECB 2008). Inflation differentials in Japan have remained at a very low level since the 1980s. Differentials in economic growth have all |
sharply declined over the last 10-15 years. All things considered, the Fed and the BoJ still operate in a more harmonious economic and financial environment. Other tasks of the Eurosystem, the Fed, and the BoJ In addition to the monetary policy function, all three central banks perform diverse other functions |
(2004), Gerdesmeier, Mongelli and Roffia (2007) and Pollard (2003). The status and the mandate of the three central banks differ somewhat. This reflects different historical conditions, as well as national characteristics, at the time of their creation. However, changes to central banking practices (especially trends towards greater independence and transparency) |
and changes to the general economic and financial environment over the past two decades have clearly reduced the differences among these monetary authorities. In particular, regarding the monetary policy strategy, the ECB has a two-pillar strategy, the FED has multiple indicators, and the BoJ has multiple indicators and focuses on |
money and financial assets. In terms of objectives, the ECB has a price stability objective, the Fed has multiple objectives, and the BoJ has a range for inflation developments. In this column, we compared the institutional structures and monetary policy frameworks of the three most important central banks. In future |
work, we will investigate the frequency and amplitude of the setting of the respective key policy interest rates in a descriptive analysis and from the perspective of a Taylor-rule framework. This may allow us to judge how much the actual monetary policies differ among the three central banks. Note: The |
views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Central Bank. Bank of Japan (2003), “About the Bank of Japan.” Annual Review, 78-118. Blinder, Alan S. (2004), The Quiet Revolution: Central Banking Goes Modern, New Haven: Yale University Press. European Central Bank (2004), |
The Monetary Policy of the ECB, 2nd edition, European Central Bank, Frankfurt am Main. European Central Bank (2008), 10th Anniversary of the ECB, Special Edition of the ECB Monthly Bulletin, June 2008. Gerdesmeier, Dieter, Jung-Duk Lichtenberger and Francesco P. Mongelli (2005), “A Brief Comparison of the Eurosystem, the US Federal |
Reserve System, and the Bank of Japan.” In Elements of the Euro Area: Integrating Financial Markets, edited by Jesper Berg, Mauro Grande and Francesco Paolo Mongelli, pp: 33-52. Aldershot: Global Financial Series, Ashgate. Gerdesmeier, Dieter, Barbara Roffia and Francesco P. Mongelli (2007), “The Eurosystem, the US Federal Reserve, and the |
Bank of Japan: Similarities and Differences.” Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 39:7, 1785-1819. Pollard, Patricia S. (2003), “A Look inside Two Central Banks: The European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve.” Review of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, January/February, 11-30. |
The currency union was created in an effort to integrate the economies and financial markets of European countries. But the two-year-old financial crisis “has created de-integrating forces” that have put the euro in jeopardy, IMF fund officials wrote. “Financial markets in parts of the region remain under acute stress, raising questions about the viability of the monetary union itself,” they wrote. Europe’s financial problems |
are among the chief dangers facing the world’s weak economic recovery, undercutting global trade and causing investors to shy away from risky investments. The euro crisis has already become a drag on growth, from the United States to China. In its report, the IMF warned that the crisis is reaching a point where a mild recession could give way to a more destabilizing round |
of deflation. Just as prices that rise too quickly can hurt a nation’s economy, falling prices can create a corrosive spiral that leaves consumers hesitant to spend because they hope prices will fall in the future. Meanwhile, companies and households can be pushed into bankruptcy as real estate and other asset prices fall, and banks can be saddled with potentially ruinous levels of bad |
loans. The risk of a “debt-deflation spiral” is “significant” in troubled countries such as Italy and Spain that desperately need their economies to begin growing, the agency said. New data from the Spanish central bank on Wednesday highlighted the troubling dynamics: a steady drain of deposits from banks, falling real estate and asset prices, a continued rise in bad loans. The country is in |
the process of negotiating a $120 billion bailout of its banks to be paid for from Europe’s rescue fund. But the terms and timing of the bailout remain unclear, as do other key conditions — notably the degree to which the Spanish government would have to guarantee that the money will be repaid. European leaders have convened a long series of summits, changed regional |
treaties, agreed to bailouts and taken steps toward common budgets, banking oversight and jointly issued debt. But the plans have yet to take effect in full, many crucial issues remain unresolved, and national leaders have been slow to find ways to kick-start economic growth. Referring also to a “potential deflationary scenario” in Europe, Carl Weinberg, chief economist at the High Frequency Economics consulting firm, |
said that to date “there are no policy measures in sight that can make a difference in the process that is causing the downturn or in the downturn itself.” The risks are so great that the IMF has been persistently upping the pressure on the European Central Bank to use its powerful economic tools to address the crisis — or at least buy more |
time for Europe’s political leaders. In a series of interviews, reports and statements this week, the IMF’s top economists have urged the ECB to intervene more directly in European bond markets and take other steps to ensure that the governments of Italy and Spain, for example, remain able to borrow money on their own and avoid the need for an international bailout. The ECB |
recently cut interest rates to a historic low. But ECB President Mario Draghi has been hesitant to use more of what he calls “non-standard measures” — steps such as bond buying that the bank has used at different points in the crisis but that some euro zone countries, most notably Germany, have opposed. In its report, however, the IMF suggested the ECB consider a |
wide range of steps — including the type of “quantitative easing” the U.S. Federal Reserve has used to increase the money supply and boost growth, as well as steps to hold down the borrowing costs of troubled governments. |
HISTORY | RELIGION The Great Islamic Rabbi The Life and World of One of Civilization's Greatest Minds By Joel L. Kraemer Doubleday. 621 pp. $35 There are few things all Jews can agree on, but one may be that there is no figure in Judaism in the last 1,000 years who is as revered as Moses ben Maimon (1135-1204), better known by the Greek |
form of his name, Maimonides. Reformers and ultra-traditionalists, rationalists and mystics claim him as their inspiration. He created the template for medieval and modern Jewish thinking on matters stretching from law to science, medicine to philosophy, messianism to politics. Joel L. Kraemer's extensive biography Maimonides brings this venerated rabbi and physician to life for a new generation of readers. It is the work of |
a scholar deeply engaged with Maimonides' ideas and the world in which he lived; the book is lucid, entertaining and incisive. While many biographies of Maimonides have been written, Kraemer does what few have attempted: He presents the great Jewish sage as deeply embedded in an Islamic cultural, religious and intellectual milieu. The book is divided into two parts: an analysis of the Islamic |
context in which Maimonides lived, describing in detail the places he frequented (Spain, Morocco, the Holy Land and Egypt) and the people he met; and a survey of his writings, including volumes of letters and records of his extensive medical practice as well as his 14-volume code of Jewish law, Mishneh Torah, and his philosophical masterwork, The Guide for the Perplexed. Among Maimonides scholars |
there is a long-standing debate regarding the allegation that as an adolescent he and his family converted to Islam (either in his Spanish hometown of Córdoba or later in the Moroccan city of Fez) to avoid the ire of the Almohad dynasty, and that he lived as a Muslim until early adulthood. No credible evidence of this exists in Jewish sources. We know, however, |
that many in his family's social class did feign conversion to survive the militant Islamic regime that expanded across Northern Africa and much of the Iberian peninsula in his lifetime. Citing four Arabic sources, Kraemer surmises that Maimonides "practiced Islam in Fez and eventually left and sailed to Acre. We do not know whether he was already a practicing Muslim when he came to |
Fez." The Jewish position has been that Maimonides did not convert but rather engaged in "taqiyya" or dissimulation and, at most, lived as if he were a Muslim, something quite common of Jews in that perilous period. As I read Kraemer, that distinction (outright conversion vs. dissimulation) may be important to many Jews, but it is practically irrelevant to this biography. By Kraemer's lights, |
Maimonides did not simply live and work among Muslims; his entire worldview was infused with Islamic methods, ideas and ideology. The author argues, for example, that the subtle balance in Maimonides's legal code between "preservation of tradition on one side, and change and progress on the other" stems from his melding of the Talmudic tradition with key principles of Islamic legal interpretation. I, too, |
have sensed the Islamic influence on Maimonides, especially when reading his works with Muslim colleagues. Once, when discussing passages from The Guide for the Perplexed and Mishneh Torah, a Muslim scholar insisted that Maimonides' positions were "pure Islam" and that "Ibn Maimun" -- as he is known in Arabic -- "is a small 'm' Muslim," citing chapter and verse of thinkers Maimonides never mentions. |
The fact that Maimonides cites some Islamic sources, especially the philosopher Abu Nasar al-Farabi (c. 870-950), is well known. More subtle is the way even his ostensibly Jewish positions, and the methods he uses to reach them, appear to be taken, sometimes verbatim, from the Muslim tradition. One of Maimonides' great theological innovations, for example, was his Thirteen Principles of Faith, a list of |
Judaism's central beliefs. As Judaism is a religion founded on law and not on belief per se, no such creed had been attempted before. But the notion of principles, or pillars, of faith had existed for some time in Islam, and Kraemer contends that several of Maimonides's specific articles of faith -- including the first (God's existence), second (divine unity) and particularly the third |
(God is not a corporeal being) -- reflect the influence of such Islamic thinkers as al-Farabi, Ibn Sina and Ibn Tumart, founder of the Almohad movement. Two ironies emerge from Kraemer's book. First, that the great architect of medieval and modern Judaism seems to have lived for a time, at least outwardly, as a Muslim; whether this was a feigned or true conversion, he |
was an insider in Muslim culture. And second, that what is often considered original in Maimonides is not very original at all. Throughout the book, Kraemer shows how many of Maimonides' contributions are derivative, not just of Aristotle and Plato, but also of Muslim thinkers. He notes that Maimonides's discussion of the five types of speech in Jewish law employs the same five categories |
contained in Islamic jurisprudence. He shows that Maimonides's prohibition of using sacred poems for mundane purposes (such as setting them to music at communal gatherings) is taken directly from a commentary on Plato's Republic by the Muslim philosopher Averroes. Kraemer's subtitle, One of Civilization's Greatest Minds, is unfortunate, because the book undermines this claim throughout. Kraemer shows that for Jews and Judaism, Maimonides was |
certainly an innovator, and the depth of his knowledge and compassion was truly astounding. But as a contributor to the ideas of Western (including medieval Islamic) civilization, he did not have much new to offer. · Shaul Magid is professor of Jewish Studies at Indiana University/Bloomington and the author, most recently, of "From Metaphysics to Midrash." |
Chloride Water Treatment Chlorides are widely distributed in nature as salts of sodium (NaCl), potassium (KCl), and calcium (CaCl2). Chloride in water can be a residual of chlorine and has been attributed to use of salt to de-ice roads. Other |
sources of chloride in ground water may be related to sea water trapped in sediments, the use of inorganic fertilizers, landfill leachates, septic tank effluents, animal feeds, and industrial effluents. High levels can contribute to corrosivity of plumbing and may |
be accompanied by high sodium levels which may be a health concern. Chlorides can corrode metals and affect the taste of food products. Therefore, water that is used in industry or processed for any use has a recommended maximum chloride |
level. The recommended treatment method to reduce Chloride is a Reverse Osmosis System . Reverse Osmosis will remove 90 - 95% of the chlorides, because of its salt rejection capabilities. |
The research presents an unusual finding, contradicting previous evidence that showed humpbacks in the same ocean basin all croon a very similar song. Scientists believe the differences in song between the two populations most likely indicate a limited exchange between the two regions. The findings may also shed new light on how whale culture spreads. Elephants & Hippos – Saving Wildlife Hoofed Mammals – |
Why M.C.A.?: German Prisoners of War, World War One, before Y.M.C.A. Hut This original ink-and-wash cartoon from World War I by Bruce Bairnsfather (1888-1959) depicts German prisoners of war lounging |
before a hut with a YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association) sign. The cartoon is on a grey board. The witty holograph caption is on the back. Bairnsfather was a British |
army officer who was trained as an artist; while serving on the Western front in 1914-15, he made drawings of war scenes that were published in British magazines. He is |
Stem Cells May Help Treat Heart Failure Study Shows Injection of Bone-Marrow Stem Cells May Extend Lives of Heart Failure Patients Aug. 30, 2010 (Stockholm, Sweden) -- Giving people with chronic heart failure injections of their own bone-marrow stem cells appears to improve their heart function and extend their lives, new research suggests. The benefits of the stem cell treatment |
were apparent within three months and persisted for the five years the patients were followed, says researcher Bodo-Eckehard Strauer, MD, of Heinrich Heine University in Dusseldorf, Germany. This isn't the first time doctors have reported that stem cells may help improve the health of people with heart failure or other heart conditions. But the 391-patient study is one of the |
biggest tests to date of stem cell therapy for heart disease -- and the first to show that the treatment cuts the risk of death in chronic heart failure, Strauer tells WebMD. The treatment "has almost no risks and is effective when used on top of other treatments for chronic heart failure," he says. The findings were reported here at |
the European Society of Cardiology Congress. Stem Cells and Scarred Heart Tissue One major cause of heart failure occurs when the heart muscle becomes scarred and loses its ability to pump enough blood throughout the body, often after a massive heart attack. "The hope is that by injecting stem cells into the scarred area, you will bring life back to |
that area and induce healthy muscle," says American Heart Association spokeswoman Mariell Jessup, MD, medical director of the Penn Heart and Vascular Center at the University of Pennsylvania. Stem cells are at an early stage of maturation and therefore have the potential to become many different types of cells, including those in the heart muscle. Treatment With Stem Cells In |
the study, bone marrow stem cells were taken from the area at the top of the patient’s pelvic bone. Then they were processed in the lab in such a way as to allow them to be injected into the scarred heart muscle. Nearly five years after the study started, seven of the 191 patients who had the stem cell treatment |
had died vs. 32 of 200 patients who did not have the treatment -- a substantial difference. The stem cell treatment improved the heart's ability to pump blood and restored blood flow to oxygen-starved heart muscle. Patients were able to exercise more. They also reported improved quality of life, Strauer says. No patient experienced side effects, he says. All patients |
continued to receive optimal medical treatment throughout the study. "There's been ongoing excitement about using stem cells to treat heart disease for some time and this study certainly adds to it," Jessup tells WebMD. But the therapy is not ready for prime time, she says. One of the reasons: In the study, people knew whether they were getting the stem |
cell treatment, she says. "It's not like the traditional randomized, controlled trial where people don't know whether they are getting the experimental treatment. That's what we really need," Jessup says. Also, there may be "some increase in potentially life-threatening [irregular heartbeats]. You can't discount that and say there are no risks," she says. This study was presented at a medical |
conference. The findings should be considered preliminary as they have not yet undergone the "peer review" process, in which outside experts scrutinize the data prior to publication in a medical journal. |
Average fructose intake in the U.S. is staggering: Americans currently consume approx. 150 pounds of sugar a year, which is 20 times the amount their European ancestors would have ingested |
from fruit (Data from USDA). This intake is mainly due to added sugar, high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) in particular, in sugary soft drinks and bakery products. HFCS was introduced in |
the 1960s and, since then, annual per capita consumption has increased from 0 to 29 kilograms in 2001, while sucrose intake has decreased from 44 to 30 kg. This increase |
in fructose consumption correlates with a rise in the prevalence of hypertension and evidence from animal models suggests fructose can raise BP. In a cross-sectional study of 4,528 participants from |
NHANES without a history of hypertension, dietary fructose ≥ 74 g/d (corresponding to 2.5 sugary soft drinks) was independently associated with elevated SBP after adjusting for demographics, comorbidities, physical activity, |
total kilocalorie intake, and dietary confounders such as total carbohydrate, alcohol, salt, and potassium intake. Furthermore, in a prospective analysis of 810 adults by Chen et al. cutting out one |
sugar-sweetened beverage per day was associated with a 1.8/1.1-mmHg reduction in BP over 18 months after controlling for potential confounders. How fructose might raise BP is not known, but an |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.