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Browsing by Subject "Consumption"
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Item Adaptability(2018) Fox, Hannah; Hudnall, KatieAt the core of humanity is a driving force to create and change our environments to better suit our liking. In this century, the need fo hand-making in the developed world is becoming obsolete. As privileged Americans we no longer need to make utilitarian objects using these processes to stay warm or even to survive. Everything we "need" is mass produced in factories we will never visit, by machines most of us could not even begin to operate or comprehend. The most abundant of these commodities are made from plastic. An entirely unnatural and man-made material, plastic is used an discarded at a rate unmatched by almost any other substance. My thesis work utilizes recycled material, specifically polypropylene biohazard bags, to identify the destructive realities of human waste and consumption in contemporary society. By confronting viewers with grotesque overwhelming forms of melted plastic the work is a rumination on human adaptation to technologically-driven wasteful consumerist life in the 21st century.Item Community Conditions Favorable for Substance Use(The Center for Health Policy, 2018-04-01) Jacinto, Corey; Greene, Marion S.The probability of whether an individual engages in substance use is associated with several risk and protective factors. Effective prevention requires understanding these factors. The social-ecological model considers the complex interactions between individual, relationship, community, and societal factors. This can help us understand substance use in a public health context and design strategies to address the problem across multiple levels.Item Demonstration of patient in window-tent(Indiana State Board of Health, 1906-12) Kny-Scheerer CompanyDr. S.A. Knopf's window-tent in position with patient in bed looking through the celluloid window into the room but breathing outdoor air only.Item "Drinking in the Dark" (DID): a simple mouse model of binge-like alcohol intake(Wiley, 2014-07) Thiele, Todd E.; Crabbe, John C.; Boehm, Stephen L. II; Psychology, School of ScienceOne of the greatest challenges that scientists face when studying the neurobiology and/or genetics of alcohol (ethanol) consumption is that most preclinical animal models do not voluntarily consume enough ethanol to achieve pharmacologically meaningful blood ethanol concentrations (BECs). Recent rodent models have been developed that promote binge-like levels of ethanol consumption associated with high BECs (i.e., ≥100 mg/dl). This unit describes procedures for an animal model of binge-like ethanol drinking which has come to be called "drinking in the dark" (DID). The "basic" variation of DID involves replacing the water bottle with a bottle containing 20% ethanol for 2 to 4 hr, beginning 3 hr into the dark cycle, on cages of singly-housed C57BL/6J mice. Using this procedure, mice typically consume enough ethanol to achieve BECs >100 mg/dl and to exhibit behavioral evidence of intoxication. An alternative two-bottle (ethanol and water) procedure is also described.Item Indoor view of temporary cottages(Indiana State Board of Health, 1907-02)Interior of tent at Mt. Summit ColonyItem Interior view of tent-like cottage for sufferers of tuberculosis.(Indiana State Board of Health, 1906-06)[The Tucker Tent, interior view]Item A knock-down shack for sufferers of Tuberculosis, displayed outside the Federal Building on Ohio Street.(Indiana State Board of Health, 1913-08)[Text within picture] Approximately 4,000 people now living in Marion County have Consumption. Buy Red Cross Seals and help fight Tuberculosis.Item Orphans due to parents dying from tuberculosis in Terre Haute.(Indiana State Board of Health, 1909-12) Knowlton, MilliardThe children in Vigo County Home for Dependent Children what are charges on the county because one or both parents were dead of consumption or incapacitated thereby. The number is 34, or 45.3 per cent. of the total.