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2021 ◽  
pp. 420-436
Author(s):  
Andrew S. Bledsoe

This chapter explores the origins, conduct, and consequences of the 1863 Tullahoma and Chickamauga campaigns, part of the Union strategy to capture the critical Confederate transportation hub at Chattanooga. These campaigns turned on the politics of command, with discord on both sides shaping events and the personalities of commanders Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans and Gen. Braxton Bragg playing important roles in the outcome of these conflicts. The campaigns also resulted in widespread disruption in Georgia, Alabama, and middle and east Tennessee as widespread foraging, food shortages, and a growing number of refugees and displaced persons felt its effects. Guerrillas ranged through the Tennessee River Valley, preying upon soldiers and civilians alike. Unionists in the region found themselves in complicated and painful situations as they negotiated the difficult environment of invasion and military occupation. Both sides also experienced significant defeats in these campaigns; the Confederates, who lost most of Tennessee during the Tullahoma Campaign, and the Union, losing at the Battle of Chickamauga. These issues of discord, disruption, and defeat also played out against the backdrops of emancipation and national political consequences bearing on the coming 1864 U.S. presidential election. As the chapter demonstrates, the consequences of these campaigns were important for the Union’s continuing effort to secure Chattanooga and carry the war deep into the Confederate heartland in 1864.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas S. Gladstone ◽  
Evelyn B. Pieper ◽  
Sarah W. Keenan ◽  
Audrey T. Paterson ◽  
Michael E. Slay ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
David Petersen ◽  
Kelsey L. Grabeel ◽  
J. Michael Lindsey ◽  
Cameron Watson ◽  
Melanie Dixon ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Corinne B. Tandy ◽  
Jennifer M. Jabson Tree

Abstract Background Despite vaccination being one of the safest and most successful public health tools to control infectious diseases, some people still doubt the efficacy and safety of vaccines. In order to address vaccine hesitancy and anti-vaccination sentiment, it is necessary to understand vaccination attitude development and vaccination behaviors. The objective of this project was to qualitatively investigate general vaccination attitudes and behavior with an additional emphasis on pertussis vaccination. Methods To identify factors that influence attitudes toward vaccination and behaviors in East Tennessee, eleven one-on-one interviews were conducted with participants recruited through convenience and purposive sampling. Interview protocol and deductive codes were developed using the Triadic Theory of Influence as a theoretical framework. Interview transcripts were analyzed qualitatively and themes were identified through constant comparison of interviews, considering both deductively and inductively coded data. Results Most participants (8) held positive attitudes towards vaccination. Participants (8) comfortable with vaccinating themselves or their children said they followed recommendations of doctors. Vaccine hesitant participants’ (3) most frequently cited concern was safety and concern about side effects. These participants also reported that they referenced non-academic or professional sources and felt confident about their knowledge of vaccines and diseases. Vaccine hesitant participants had low perception of risk of vaccine-preventable diseases, particularly pertussis. Participants with children reported that friends and family were influential when deciding to vaccinate their children. Conclusions This study identified themes in the attitudes towards vaccination of participants recruited in East Tennessee. We found that risk perception and family and social group attitudes were the primary influences on vaccination decision making. We recommend that future research includes anti-vaccination participants in their research, if possible, and further explore the relationship between perception of one’s own knowledge and health behavior outcomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelsey Leonard Grabeel ◽  
Jenny C. Moore

Background: Starting in the 1990s, health care providers began prescribing opioids to patients as pain relievers, believing they were safe. However, many patients became addicted to these pills. In 2017, the US Department of Health and Human Services declared a public health emergency to fight the opioid epidemic. This crisis was prevalent in East Tennessee, where many residents were prescribed opioids.Case Presentation: Librarians at an academic medical center library in East Tennessee analyzed the health information requests related to pain, mental health, and addiction over the last fifteen years. We reviewed the pattern of requests related to these topics, the counties requesting this information, and the impact that these hospital policies had on these requests.Conclusions: From 2005 to 2014, there were few requests about mental health, pain, and substance abuse. However, once the library moved into the hospital and there was an increase in awareness of opioid addiction, requests on those topics increased. Most of the requests were about pain, with the height occurring in 2017, during which year the public health emergency to fight the epidemic was declared. Additionally, 2017 was the year the hospital implemented visitor limitations for patients with infections associated with intravenous drug use, which might explain the drastic drop in substance abuse information requests in 2018. Future outreach will target counties that have a high opioid prescription rate.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Corinne Tandy ◽  
Jennifer M. Jabson Tree

Abstract Background Despite vaccination being one of the safest and most successful public health tools to control infectious diseases, some people still doubt the efficacy and safety of vaccines. In order to address vaccine hesitancy and anti-vaccination sentiment, it is necessary to understand vaccination attitude development and vaccination behaviors. The objective of this project was to qualitatively investigate general vaccination attitudes and behavior with an additional emphasis on pertussis vaccination. Methods To identify factors that influence attitudes toward vaccination and behaviors in East Tennessee, eleven one-on-one interviews were conducted with participants recruited through convenience and purposive sampling. Interview protocol and deductive codes were developed using the Triadic Theory of Influence as a theoretical framework. Interview transcripts were analyzed qualitatively and themes were identified through constant comparison of interviews, considering both deductively and inductively coded data. Results Most participants (8) held positive attitudes towards vaccination. Participants (8) comfortable with vaccinating themselves or their children said they followed recommendations of doctors. Vaccine hesitant participants’ (3) most frequently cited concern was safety and concern about side effects. These participants also reported that they referenced non-academic or professional sources and felt confident about their knowledge of vaccines and diseases. Vaccine hesitant participants had low perception of risk of vaccine-preventable diseases, particularly pertussis. Participants with children reported that friends and family were influential when deciding to vaccinate their children. Conclusions This study identified themes in the attitudes towards vaccination of participants recruited in East Tennessee. We found that risk perception and family and social group attitudes were the primary influences on vaccination decision making. We recommend that future research includes anti-vaccination participants in their research, if possible, and further explore the relationship between perception of one’s own knowledge and health behavior outcomes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brittni R. Kelley ◽  
J. Christopher Ellis ◽  
Annabel Large ◽  
Liesel G. Schneider ◽  
Daniel Jacobson ◽  
...  

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