Freeform's The Bold Type recently came to an end after five seasons, leaving fans missing the series already. The finale was heartwarming and beautifully wrapped up each of Kat, Jane, and Sutton's stories. It had fans crying finally watching them all get the happy endings they deserve.
At the start of season 5, Sutton is struggling with her separation from Richard. When he asks for a divorce, not only does she have to cope with losing her husband but everyone at Scarlet starts treating her too delicately. Even when she tries to move on by throwing a divorce party, Kat and Jane encourage her to not hide her sadness.
Jane is also trying to cope with receiving a performance review from Addison and Adena comes back into Kat's life leaving her with questions about what role she plays in her life. These challenges bring the women together to comfort each other like always.
This episode has one of the most impactful sequences in the series. As "Someone To You" by Banners plays, viewers see Sutton fight for the benefits of her dream job, Jane settle a lawsuit against one of her articles, and Kat come to the realization that she wants to have a relationship with Adena. It is a montage that brought happy and sad tears to fans.
"No Feminism In The Champagne Room" brings some real-world issues to the forefront for Jane, Kat, and Sutton. It remains an amazing episode for fans to watch and see how far the girls have come in their careers and in their lives.
"Some Kind Of Wonderful" featured the wedding viewers had been waiting for. Sutton and Richard's relationship was not short on drama, so their wedding was not going to be any different. Sutton admits to Richard that she wants to stay in New York City for her job and Richard ultimately accepts it and supports her dreams and their wedding goes as planned.
Not only is this a big episode for Sutton, but it's an equally game-changing installment for Jane. She decides to break up with Alex and to go through with her preventative mastectomy. It is a memorable episode that showcases the love and sisterhood of Kat, Jane, and Sutton that holds the show together.
This episode is one of the biggest for Kat and Adena's relationship. Kat stands up for Adena after a man yells anti-Muslim remarks towards her and after realizing that Adena doesn't have the privilege to fight back in those situations, they reconcile. Kat also realizes that she has feelings for Adena and they finally kiss.
"If You Can't Do It With Feeling" also has big moments for Jane's relationship with Alex and huge progress for Sutton in her move to the fashion department at Scarlet. It is definitely one of the episodes that got viewers hooked when the show was starting out.
"Before Tequilla Sunrise" has some of Scarlet's finest stuck in the office due to the president being in the area. It is a fun episode full of fan-favorite moments, like Jane and Sutton getting caught in Jacqueline's office but it also has its more serious moments.
Jane is debating on whether or not she wants to stay at Scarlet and Kat rushes to the airport to be with Adena before she is sent back home. It is an impactful episode that puts pressure on each of the girls about their future.
This episode is one of the most heartwarming and realistic to watch. When Jane is confronted with her mother's death through an article focused on breast cancer, she struggles to separate her emotions and her truth from her work. It opens up a whole aspect of Jane's character and allowed viewers to see a more vulnerable side of her.
Kat also takes a controversial and bold approach to her social media campaign for breast cancer awareness month and Sutton stretches herself a little too thin in order to impress Oliver in her new job. All of the girls come together to support Jane at the end of the episode, where she gets tested for the BRCA gene that can indicate the likelihood of her getting breast cancer.
The series finale was widely anticipated by fans and lived up to their expectations. Jane, Kat, and Sutton all came into their own in this episode. Jane was able to let go of her dream of taking over for Jacqueline and focus solely on her writing. Kat took a huge leap and committed to becoming Scarlett's new Editor-in-Chief and being with Adena. Sutton was confident in her skills and career and got her deserved happy ending with Richard.
Overall it was a beautiful and well-crafted finale. Fans were able to see all of the main characters happy and see that they were set up to do amazing things after the show's end. It is definitely a finale that left fans feeling satisfied.
"O Hell No" was only the second episode of the series and it really established the tone and topics that the series would cover. Jane is assigned to write an article about the "best orgasm" but can't really rely on experience since she's never had one.
The conversations she has with Jane and Kat about it sold viewers on their relationship as best friends for life. There is no shame directed towards Jane, only support from her friends. A sex-positive episode of the show that's targeted to young adults clearly makes it one of the best of the series.
"Carry The Weight" tackles the unfortunately common experience of sexual assault against women. Jane writes an article about an activist for sexual assault awareness and in turn learns about Jacqueline's own experience with it.
Viewers still get chills when Jacqueline takes the weight from the activist and figuratively stands with all of the other women who have been assaulted. It is such a raw episode that impacted all viewers, but women especially by how strong ladies are even after they've experienced the worst.
In the penultimate episode of the series, Kat is in the process of finding her stride again. She is getting her movement "Don't Turn Away" off the ground and is even offered funding and a platform with Scarlett. It is a win that fans needed to see Kat get after a season of struggling with finding herself and her career.
Sutton starts seeing a therapist about her drinking and is hit with even more after Richard asks to meet with her too. Jane makes it through her struggles with guiding Addison and reignites her love of writing, to only be asked by Jacqueline if she would be interested in taking over as editor-in-chief. It is an episode that sets all of the women up for big and important changes in the series finale.
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Introduction: Acute bronchiolitis is one of the most common respiratory infections in infancy. Although most infants with bronchiolitis do not get hospitalized, infants with hospitalized bronchiolitis are more likely to develop wheeze exacerbations during the first years of life. The objective of this prospective cohort study was to develop machine learning models to predict incidence and persistence of wheeze exacerbations following the first hospitalized episode of acute bronchiolitis.
Methods: One hundred thirty-one otherwise healthy term infants hospitalized with the first episode of bronchiolitis at a tertiary pediatric hospital in Athens, Greece, and 73 age-matched controls were recruited. All patients/controls were followed up for 3 years with 6-monthly telephone reviews. Through principal component analysis (PCA), a cluster model was used to describe main outcomes. Associations between virus type and the clusters and between virus type and other clinical characteristics and demographic data were identified. Through random forest classification, a prediction model with smallest classification error was identified. Primary outcomes included the incidence and the number of caregiver-reported wheeze exacerbations.
Results: PCA identified 2 clusters of the outcome measures (Cluster 1 and Cluster 2) that were significantly associated with the number of recurrent wheeze episodes over 3-years of follow-up (Chi-Squared, p < 0.001). Cluster 1 included infants who presented higher number of wheeze exacerbations over follow-up time. Rhinovirus (RV) detection was more common in Cluster 1 and was more strongly associated with clinical severity on admission (p < 0.01). A prediction model based on virus type and clinical severity could predict Cluster 1 with an overall error 0.1145 (sensitivity 75.56% and specificity 91.86%).
Conclusion: A prediction model based on virus type and clinical severity of first hospitalized episode of bronchiolitis could predict sensitively the incidence and persistence of wheeze exacerbations during a 3-year follow-up. Virus type (RV) was the strongest predictor.
Acute bronchiolitis is a common respiratory condition in infancy. Although most infants with bronchiolitis are managed in primary care, the number of hospitalizations and associated complications remains high (1). This condition impacts not only on healthcare resources' utilization, but also on caregivers' anxiety and on family quality time (2).
Not all episodes of hospitalized bronchiolitis are severe. The severity of episodes of hospitalized bronchiolitis ranges from moderate, where infants just require observation and supportive therapies (supplemental oxygen, fluids, and nutrition) to high severity, where infants can require intensive care admission and/or die (8). Observational studies have identified risk factors for higher severity of bronchiolitis, such as age, prematurity, chronic lung disease and viral etiology. RSV has been considered as the trigger of more severe episodes of acute bronchiolitis. Some case control studies have associated RV, MPV and other viruses with increased clinical severity as well (9). The role of multiple viral agents in bronchiolitis pathogenesis has been repeatedly reported, with up to 61% of infants with bronchiolitis testing positive for multiple viruses (7). Viral co-infections have also been associated with increased disease severity and prolonged hospital stay (10).
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