https://www.selleckchem.com/products/dmh1.html The COMOC-MG (Compression Of Myometrium and OCclusion of uterine artery by Dr. Mahesh Gupta), a modified B-Lynch stitch technique, utilized polyglycolic acid double strand suture with 80 mm long straight taper point and 50 mm half circle round bodied needle. Its dual action of causing hemostatic compression as well as reduced uterine blood flow, in managing PPH is exemplified using 3 cases. The COMOC-MG stitch technique was found to be effective, with fewer complications, in controlling post-partum haemorrhage (PPH). One subsequent full-term pregnancy occurred after 6 years of this surgery. The COMOC-MG stitch technique is a valuable and safe alternative to B-Lynch or other modified B-Lynch suturing techniques for successful management of atonic PPH, while preserving fertility. It is uncertain how different academic medical departments differ in academic productivity as assessed by commonly used bibliometric measures, eg, the h-index (the maximum value of h such that an author has published h papers that have each been cited at least h times). This project examined whether departments in the University of Iowa's Carver College of Medicine differed in h-indices of tenured faculty members. Based on 2020 data obtained from the College (and other University sources), the author compiled three data sets of Scopus h-indices of tenured faculty members identified by department, varying in size due to slightly different inclusion criteria (N's=334, 341, and 354). Analyses compared h-indices between ranks and among departments. In the basic data set (N=334), h-indices of the 230 (69%) full and 104 (31%) associate professors differed based on a t-test, means (standard deviations)=37 (17) and 20 (7), respectively, p<0.0001. For both full and associate professors separately, departmen Multiple factors probably contributed to departmental differences and should be further investigated. The relationship between time-use behaviors and