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Hickey, M. Gail 숙명여자대학교 아시아여성연구소 2004 Asian Women Vol.19 No.-
The degree of distance between immigrants' birth culture and resettlement culture is directly connected to the degree of acculturation stress. Collectivist cultures, such as those found in the Mideast and Asia, differ significantly from individualistic cultures, such as mainstream cultures of Europe and the United States. This oral history study explored Muslim immigrants' identity negotiations and renegotiations in U.S. American cultural settings. Emergent themes included gender differences, maintenance of ethnic culture, family role and child rearing differences, and discrimination. Muslim students experienced home and school as separate spheres of existence, with adults demanding opposing behaviors and attitudes in each milieu.
HICKEY, M. Gail Asian Center for Women's Study ; Ewha Womans Unive 2004 Asian Journal of Women's Studies(AJWS) Vol.10 No.2
Migration challenges traditional female roles, yet Asm mmigraut women s bold on their etbruc heatage usually r e m m qutte strong. Daughters of Asian immigantS thus live much of their childhood wedged between two cultures. The intense pressure to conform to American ideals while re- e h c customs results m a perplexing sense of duality. Fix young adult Asm-American daughters were intenimed about their experiences, with p d & emphasis on the mpact of Asian cultural tradition on their lives. In thex own words, these young women discuss Asian concepts of f a d y , child reaxing, and danng customs. Analysis reflects the unique ways these daughters choose to maintam th& Asian heritage.
Size-Controlled Self-Assembly of Superparamagnetic Polymersomes
Hickey, Robert J.,Koski, Jason,Meng, Xin,Riggleman, Robert A.,Zhang, Peijun,Park, So-Jung American Chemical Society 2014 ACS NANO Vol.8 No.1
<P>We report the size-controlled self-assembly of polymersomes through the cooperative self-assembly of nanoparticles and amphiphilic polymers. Polymersomes densely packed with magnetic nanoparticles in the polymersome membrane (magneto-polymersome) were fabricated with a series of different sized iron oxide nanoparticles. The distribution of nanoparticles in a polymersome membrane was size-dependent; while small nanoparticles were dispersed in a polymer bilayer, large particles formed a well-ordered superstructure at the interface between the inner and outer layer of a bilayer membrane. The yield of magneto-polymersomes increased with increasing the diameter of incorporated nanoparticles. Moreover, the size of the polymersomes was effectively controlled by varying the size of incorporated nanoparticles. This size-dependent self-assembly was attributed to the polymer chain entropy effect and the size-dependent localization of nanoparticles in polymersome bilayers. The transverse relaxation rates (<I>r</I><SUB>2</SUB>) of magneto-polymersomes increased with increasing the nanoparticle diameter and decreasing the size of polymersomes, reaching 555 ± 24 s<SUP>–1</SUP> mM<SUP>–1</SUP> for 241 ± 16 nm polymersomes, which is the highest value reported to date for superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles.</P><P><B>Graphic Abstract</B> <IMG SRC='http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/publisher/achs/journals/content/ancac3/2014/ancac3.2014.8.issue-1/nn405012h/production/images/medium/nn-2013-05012h_0007.gif'></P><P><A href='http://pubs.acs.org/doi/suppl/10.1021/nn405012h'>ACS Electronic Supporting Info</A></P>
Hickey, Robert J.,Seo, Myungjoo,Luo, Qingjie,Park, So-Jung American Chemical Society 2015 Langmuir Vol.31 No.14
<P>Here we report a novel approach to prepare all-nanoparticle vesicles using ligand-stabilized gold particles as a building block. Hydroxyalkyl-terminated gold nanoparticles were spontaneously organized into well-defined hollow vesicle-like assemblies in water without any template. The unusual anisotropic self-assembly was attributed to the ligand rearrangement on nanoparticles, which leads to increased hydroxyl group density at the nanoparticle/water interface. One-dimensional strings were formed instead of vesicles with increasing surface ligand density, which supports the hypothesis. The size and the wall thickness of vesicles were controlled by adjusting the concentration of nanoparticles or by adding extra surfactants. The work presented here highlights the dynamic nature of surface ligands on gold particles and demonstrates that the combination of ligand rearrangement and the hydrophobic effect can be used as a versatile tool for anisotropic self-assembly of nanoparticles.</P><P><B>Graphic Abstract</B> <IMG SRC='http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/publisher/achs/journals/content/langd5/2015/langd5.2015.31.issue-14/la503903n/production/images/medium/la-2014-03903n_0008.gif'></P><P><A href='http://pubs.acs.org/doi/suppl/10.1021/la503903n'>ACS Electronic Supporting Info</A></P>
Rapid deployment of an emergency department-intensive care unit for the COVID-19 pandemic
Sean Hickey,Kusum S. Mathews,Jennifer Siller,Judah Sueker,Mitali Thakore,Deepa Ravikumar,Ruben E Olmedo,Jolion McGreevy,Roopa Kohli-Seth,Brendan Carr,Evan S. Leibner 대한응급의학회 2020 Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine Vol.7 No.4
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic mandated rapid, flexible solutions to meet the anticipated surge in both patient acuity and volume. This paper describes one institution’s emergency department (ED) innovation at the center of the COVID-19 crisis, including the creation of a temporary ED–intensive care unit (ICU) and development of interdisciplinary COVID-19–specific care delivery models to care for critically ill patients. Mount Sinai Hospital, an urban quaternary academic medical center, had an existing five-bed resuscitation area insufficiently rescue due to its size and lack of negative pressure rooms. Within 1 week, the ED-based observation unit, which has four negative pressure rooms, was quickly converted into a COVID-19–specific unit, split between a 14-bed stepdown unit and a 13-bed ED-ICU unit. An increase in staffing for physicians, physician assistants, nurses, respiratory therapists, and medical technicians, as well as training in critical care protocols and procedures, was needed to ensure appropriate patient care. The transition of the ED to a COVID-19–specific unit with the inclusion of a temporary expanded ED-ICU at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic was a proactive solution to the growing challenges of surging patients, complexity, and extended boarding of critically ill patients in the ED. This pandemic underscores the importance of ED design innovation with flexible spacing, interdisciplinary collaborations on structure and services, and NP ventilation systems which will remain important moving forward.
In the Eye of the Typhoon: Taiwan and the Growing Dispute in the South China Sea
( Dennis Hickey ) 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2016 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.40 No.4
In this study I analyze Taiwan`s policy toward the South China Sea dispute. I also examine two options that Taipei may wish to con-sider to address the growing instability in the area. I suggest that while some minor adjustments in policy might be warranted, it appears likely that Taiwan will resist significant changes to its present policy.
M. Gail HICKEY 이화여자대학교 아시아여성학센터 2004 Asian Journal of Women's Studies(AJWS) Vol.10 No.2
Migration challenges traditional female roles, yet Asian immigrant women’s hold on their ethnic heritage usually remains quite strong. Daughters of Asian immigrants thus live much of their childhood wedged between two cultures. The intense pressure to conform to American ideals while retaining ethnic customs results in a perplexing sense of duality. Five young adult Asian-American daughters were interviewed about their experiences, with particular emphasis on the impact of Asian cultural tradition on their lives. In their own words, these young women discuss Asian concepts of family, child rearing, and dating customs. Analysis reflects the unique ways these daughters choose to maintain their Asian heritage.