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1 blood oxygen levels while diving to prevent drowning.
2 declines in BGB followed by widespread marsh drowning.
3 e and/or changes in currents leading to reef drowning.
4 esuscitation related to the resuscitation of drowning.
5 ting data from studies of resuscitation from drowning.
6 rticles on the subject of resuscitation from drowning.
7 in Great Britain that appeared to be due to drowning.
8 cies, supporting a species predisposition to drowning.
9 7 or external cooling in a rat model of near-drowning.
10 hermia affects neurologic outcome after near-drowning.
11 pected chiefly because of a near-drowning or drowning.
12 such changes could lead to swim failure and drowning.
13 aters during the monsoon season and to avoid drowning.
14 he ability to establish prognosis after near-drowning.
15 olymorphic ventricular tachycardia [6], near-drowning [2], exertional syncope [1], symptoms on therap
16 0-14 years were HIV/AIDS, road injuries, and drowning (25.2%), whereas transport injuries were the le
19 ia (81 516 [72 150-94 477]; 5.5% [4.9-6.2]); drowning (77 460 [72 474-85 952]; 5.2% [4.9-5.5]); and d
21 subjects (mean age, 24.2 years) who died of drowning and a control group of 12 consecutive male subj
22 Moreover, separate risk-adjusted analysis of drowning and asphyxiated donors was similar to other MOD
24 nd and foreign-body aspiration may accompany drowning and near-drowning, but few details regarding su
27 ths from unintentional (transport, falls and drownings) and intentional (assault and suicide) injurie
29 for suspected opioid-associated emergencies, drowning, and harm from CPR to victims not in cardiac ar
30 resuscitation from cardiac arrest following drowning, and other drowning-related publications from t
31 k of external causes (eg, homicide, suicide, drowning, and related to disasters, mechanical, transpor
34 have focused on creating systems to prevent drowning, but an average of 4000 fatal and 8000 nonfatal
35 y aspiration may accompany drowning and near-drowning, but few details regarding such patients are av
37 rtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) that died from drowning bycatch in fisheries and 44 live or freshly dea
38 Late Miocene, between 11 and 7 Ma, a partial drowning caused the reef area on the Queensland Plateau
42 include resuscitation of cardiac arrest from drowning, extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation f
46 During the last few decades, mortality from drowning has decreased in the United States for unknown
47 many other substantial public health issues, drowning has not benefitted from the targeted attention
49 xygen, mechanism of death by asphyxiation or drowning, history of cigarette use (>=20 pack-years), hi
50 .77), falls (HR = 3.17, 95% CI: 2.19, 4.59), drowning (HR = 3.16, 95% CI: 1.85, 5.39), and road injur
53 mes of utilizing donor lungs from victims of drowning in artificial bodies of water (i.e., swimming p
55 t into human torpor-like states such as near drowning in cold water and induced hypothermia for surge
58 this subject focusing primarily on cases of drowning in naturally occurring bodies of water (i.e., d
60 ually warm polar temperatures, repeated reef-drowning in the tropics and a series of oceanic anoxic e
62 , we estimate the frequency and size of mass drownings in the Mara River and model the fate of carcas
64 den visitor, identified additional suspected drowning incidents, which were significantly more common
74 tion airway sediment is highly suggestive of drowning; multidetector CT findings of pan sinus fluid,
75 nd of the ice cover season when fatal winter drownings occur most often and light limits the growth a
78 r the current climate trajectory (SSP2-4.5), drowning of ~75% of Louisiana's coastal wetlands is a pl
79 or airway disease; 2) an etiology of arrest drowning or asphyxia; 3) higher pH, and 4) bilateral rea
83 f a personal and/or family history of a near-drowning or drowning was determined by review of the med
86 g transport; approach to resuscitation after drowning; passive ventilation; minimizing pauses during
89 ed with nondrowning cardiac arrest patients, drowning patients had a 13 times higher prevalence of ov
90 suffocation, road traffic accidents, burns, drowning, physical assault, firearm or sharp instrument
93 e for effective interventions; (2) reframing drowning prevention in health and sustainable developmen
95 Ensuring that the UN resolution on global drowning prevention is a catalyst for action requires po
96 ssembly's adoption of a resolution on global drowning prevention is a historic first, and offers an e
97 icipants from 17 countries with expertise in drowning prevention research, resuscitation, and program
98 catalyst for action requires positioning of drowning prevention within global health and sustainable
99 , and political contexts in the emergence of drowning prevention, and it also identifies opportunitie
104 cardiac arrest following drowning, and other drowning-related publications from the American Heart As
107 p with scientific expertise in the fields of drowning research, resuscitation research, emergency med
108 Events such as perinatal asphyxia, near drowning, respiratory arrest, and near sudden infant dea
113 t an average of 4000 fatal and 8000 nonfatal drownings still occur annually in the United States-like
116 dence and post-mortem examinations indicated drowning to be the most likely cause of death with no un
117 hese would comprise increases in deaths from drownings, transport, assault and suicide, offset partly
118 hout other identifiable causes of death (eg, drowning, trauma, exposure to toxic substances, or suici
120 tter were determined sequentially after near-drowning using quantitative 1H nuclear magnetic resonanc
121 eployment of search-and-rescue operations in drowning victims and the importance of education on opio
122 hophysiology, and treatments applied to near-drowning victims are discussed, with an emphasis on the
125 nd central nervous system infections in near-drowning victims who have aspirated water laden with spo
126 and/or family history of a near-drowning or drowning was determined by review of the medical records
131 beries, hostilities, electric shocks, fires, drownings, work accidents, terror attacks, or large-scal