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Item Introducing the Turkey Protest, Repression, and Pro-Government Rally Dataset (TPRPGRD)(Taylor & Francis, 2022-08-28) Kahvecioğlu, Anıl; Demirel-Pegg, Tijen; Aytürk, İ̇lker; Political Science, School of Liberal ArtsThe repression-protest nexus in authoritarian regimes has attracted scholarly attention of contention scholars for a long time. However, studies have generally overlooked pro-government actors’ role in contentious dynamics. This article introduces an original event dataset on protests, repression, and pro-government rallies in Turkey under the rule of the Justice and Development Party during a period in which authoritarianism has increased in intensity. Using protest event analysis, this dataset includes actions of governments, pro-government actors, and dissidents hand-coded from two newspapers between 1 January 2013, and 31 December 2016. The dataset enables researchers to study pro-government rallies (PGRs), anti-government protests, and state actions during a heightened period of contention in Turkey.Item Low CD34+ Cell Doses Are Associated with Increased Cost and Worse Outcome after Tandem Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation in Patients with Relapsed or Refractory Germ Cell Tumors(Elsevier, 2018) Hyder, Mustafa A.; Goebel, W. Scott; Ervin, Kirsten D.; Schwartz, Jennifer E.; Robertson, Michael J.; Thakrar, Teresa C.; Albany, Costantine; Farag, Sherif S.; Medicine, School of MedicineTandem autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) improves long-term survival of platinum-refractory germ cell tumor (GCT) patients. Studies, predominantly in lymphoma, showed that CD34+ cell doses > 5.0 × 106/kg/single transplant led to decreased resource utilization. Because most GCT patients have received prior cisplatin-based treatment, collecting >10 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg is challenging. We analyzed the effect of CD34+ cell dose on resource utilization and outcome in 131 GCT patients, median age 29.5 years (range, 16 to 58), undergoing tandem ASCT. Of 262 individual transplants performed, 120 were performed as inpatient and 142 as planned outpatient. Overall, median CD34+ dose per transplant was 3.1 × 106/kg (range, .8 to 16.0), with no significant difference between inpatient and outpatient transplants. Patients were divided into quartiles based on the CD34 cell dose infused: Q1, .8 to 1.9 × 106/kg; Q2, 2.0 to 2.9 × 106/kg; Q3, 3.0 to 4.1 × 106/kg; and Q4, 4.2 to 16.0 × 106/kg. For all patients higher CD34+ cell doses were associated with significantly shorter times to neutrophil (P <.001) and platelet recovery (P <.001). For inpatient transplants higher CD34+ doses were significantly associated with shorter length of hospital stay (P <.001); fewer days of filgrastim (P <.001), i.v. antibiotic (P = .012), and antifungal (P = .03) usage; and fewer RBC (P = .001) and platelet units transfused (P <.001), resulting in overall lower cost of care (P < .001). Of the 142 planned outpatient transplants, 100 admissions were required for a median length of hospital stay of 7.0 days (range, 1 to 18). Although there was no significant difference in the rates of hospitalization between patients in different CD34+ cell dose quartiles, a significant trend was observed for shorter hospitalization (P = .01) and fewer RBC (P = .002) and platelet (P = .005) transfusions with higher CD34+ cell dose quartiles. Patients receiving CD34+ cell doses in the lowest dose quartile (Q1) had significantly worse progression-free survival and overall survival compared with patients receiving higher CD34+ cell doses. Overall, resource utilization, including cost of care, is significantly reduced when patients receive higher CD34+ cell doses, indicating greater efforts to improve peripheral blood stem cell collection in this population are needed.Item Mobilizing Children to Aid the War Effort: Advancing Progressive Aims Through the Work of the Child Welfare Committee of the Indiana Woman's Council of National Defense and the Children's Bureau during World War One(2019-07) Jarnecke, Meaghan L.; Morgan, Anita; Cramer, Kevin; Robertson, Nancy MarieThis thesis examines the motivations of the Woman’s Council of National Defense. It will examine how women in Indiana and Illinois organized their state and local councils of defense as they embraced home-front mobilization efforts. It will also show that Hoosier women, like women across the United States, became involved in World War One home-front mobilization, in part, to prove their responsibility to the government in order to make an irrefutable claim for suffrage. As a result of extensive home-front mobilization efforts by women, the government was able to fulfill its own agenda of creating a comprehensive record of its citizens, thus guaranteeing a roster of citizens eligible for future wartime mobilization. By examining the Child Welfare Committee and the Children’s Year in a broad view, this thesis supports the assertions of historians like Robert G. Barrows, William J. Breen, and Lynn Dumenil, who have shown how Progressive-minded women advanced Progressive reforms by embracing the war effort and using it to their own advantage.