The National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conducted a workshop in January 2006, entitled "Prioritizing a Research Agenda for Orofacial Clefts." The goals of the meeting were to review existing research on orofacial clefts (OFCs), identify gaps in knowledge that need additional public health research, and develop a prioritized research agenda that can help guide future public health research. Experts in the field of epidemiology, public health, genetics, psychology, speech pathology, dentistry, and health economics participated to create the research agenda. Research gaps identified by the participants for additional public health research included: the roles of maternal nutrition, obesity, and diabetes in the etiology of OFCs; psychosocial outcomes for children with OFCs; the quality of life for families and children with OFCs; and the health care costs of OFCs. To create the research agenda, the participants prioritized the research gaps by public health importance, feasibility, and outcomes of interest. This report summarizes the workshop. 相似文献
Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) after one anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB) remains a concern. We reviewed the current literature on revisional surgery after OAGB for GORD. MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PubMed databases were searched. We identified 21 studies, appraising 13,658 OAGB patients. A total of 230 (1.6%) patients underwent revisional surgery for GORD. Revision to Roux-en-Y configuration was performed in 211 (91.7%) patients. Six (2.6%) patients had a Braun entero-enterostomy added to the OAGB. Thirteen (5.6%) patients underwent excluded stomach fundoplication (ESF). Reflux symptoms resolved in 112 (48.6%) patients, persisted in 13 (5.6%) patients, and were not reported in 105 (45.6%) patients. Revisional surgery after OAGB for GORD appears to be rare, and when required, conversion to Roux-en-Y configuration is the commonest choice.
We investigated the brain regions that mediate the processing of emotional speech in men and women by presenting positive and negative words that were spoken with happy or angry prosody. Hence, emotional prosody and word valence were either congruous or incongruous. We assumed that an fRMI contrast between congruous and incongruous presentations would reveal the structures that mediate the interaction of emotional prosody and word valence. The left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) was more strongly activated in incongruous as compared to congruous trials. This difference in IFG activity was significantly larger in women than in men. Moreover, the congruence effect was significant in women whereas it only appeared as a tendency in men. As the left IFG has been repeatedly implicated in semantic processing, these findings are taken as evidence that semantic processing in women is more susceptible to influences from emotional prosody than is semantic processing in men. Moreover, the present data suggest that the left IFG mediates increased semantic processing demands imposed by an incongruence between emotional prosody and word valence. 相似文献
BACKGROUND: Accurate surveillance for pneumonia requires standardized classification of chest radiographs. Digital imaging permits rapid electronic transfer of data to radiologists, and recent improvements in digital camera technology present high quality, yet cheaper, options. METHODS: We evaluated the comparative utility of digital camera versus film digitizer in capturing chest radiographs in a pneumonia surveillance system in rural Thailand using a panel of radiologists; the gold standard was the hard-copy radiograph. We calculated sensitivity and specificity and conducted a receiver operator characteristics (ROC) analysis. RESULTS: Of the 192 radiographs from patients with clinical pneumonia, 166 (86%) were classified as pneumonia on the hard copies. Sensitivity and specificity for identifying pneumonia were 89% and 73% for the camera and 90% and 65% for the digitizer. In the ROC analysis, there was no statistically significant difference in the area under the curve (camera, 0.86; film digitizer, 0.91, p = 0.29). The digital camera set cost 965 dollars compared to 3000 dollars for the film digitizer. CONCLUSION: Detection of pneumonia was not measurably compromised by using digital cameras compared with film digitizers. The 3-fold lower cost of the digital camera makes this technology an affordable and widely accessible alternative for surveillance systems, vaccine trials, and perhaps clinical use. 相似文献
Sustainable development (SD) as popularized by the Brundtland Commission and politically enshrined in the Sustainable Development Goals has been the explicit focus of sustainability science. While there is broad agreement that the trend of human well-being () over time should serve as a sustainability criterion, the literature so far has mostly addressed this in terms of its determinants rather than focusing on itself. There is broad agreement that an indicator for should have multiple constituents, clearly going beyond gross domestic product. Here, we propose a tailor-made indicator to serve precisely this purpose following a set of specified desiderata, including its applicability to flexibly defined subnational populations by gender, place of residence, ethnicity, and other relevant characteristics. The indicator, years of good life (YoGL), reflects the evident fact that in order to be able to enjoy any quality of life, one has to be alive and thus is primarily based on life expectancy. However, since mere survival is not considered good enough, life years are counted conditional on meeting minimum standards in two dimensions: the objective dimension of capable longevity (consisting of being out of absolute poverty and enjoying minimal levels of physical and cognitive health) and the subjective dimension of overall life satisfaction. We illustrate the calculation of this indicator for countries and subpopulations at different stages of development and with different degrees of data availability.Sustainability science refers to the most comprehensive scholarly effort to understand the interactions between natural and social systems in order to assess whether certain developmental pathways can be considered sustainable. This should also include the possible negative effects of environmental changes, such as climate change and biodiversity loss, on future human well-being. In this paper, we propose a tailor-made indicator to assess long-term human well-being as the ultimate end of sustainable development. This indicator, called “years of good life” (YoGL), is designed in such a way that it can be both empirically measured—which is the focus of this paper—and modeled in its long-term future trends—which will be the focus of future work.When assessing changes over time in the well-being of certain human populations (or subpopulations, as defined, e.g., by gender, ethnicity, urban/rural place of residence, or other social groupings), one can focus on the determinants or the constituents of well-being. In sustainability science, thus far, empirical and theoretical research has placed more emphasis on studying the determinants, including environmental services (1), whereas specifying its constituents has received less systematic attention, often leaving us with nothing but the unspecific notion of “utility.” The focus on determinants has led to the concept of “inclusive wealth” (IW) which can be used to assess whether a society is on a sustainable development trajectory in terms of the productive base necessary to maintain a high standard of living in the future (2). However, empirically measuring the values and relative effects of the different capitals determining human well-being remains extremely challenging and “no current attempt to date can be said to be fully inclusive” (3).The idea behind YoGL, on the other hand, is to study sustainability by focusing explicitly on the constituents of well-being and its change over time. In doing so, YoGL avoids several of the pitfalls by which the IW approach is plagued (3, 4). For example, rather than making contestable quantitative assessments of the relative contributions of the different determinants of well-being, the demographic approach underlying YoGL provides numerical values of human well-being directly, expressed as the average number of years of good life a person can expect to live as part of a given subpopulation under the conditions of a specified point in time. Based on the assumed universal nature of its unit of measurement—YoGL lived today in one specific population has the same meaning as YoGL lived in the future or in another population—the indicator has a time-independent meaning. This also avoids the pitfalls of specifying a rate at which to discount future well-being, which have become apparent at least since the debates around the Stern report (5). YoGL allows us to directly compare human well-being across different subpopulations and generations. Moreover, while all estimates of the different determinants of future human well-being are highly sensitive to population growth, as a measure referring to per-person well-being the derivation of YoGL is not directly affected by assumptions about the future trajectory of population size. Finally, as stressed by Dasgupta (6), the nature of determinants can change over time and across places depending on different commodities and technological regimes, whereas the constituents of well-being—as used in YoGL—are arguably shared across space and time.In the following, we will first present the proposed design of the indicator. We will then provide a step-by-step user’s guide for empirically deriving YoGL based on the most appropriate available data source, before offering examples of how it can be calculated based on auxiliary information on populations for which the necessary data are not yet fully available. We will close with a discussion and brief outlook as to what is still needed to use this indicator for the assessment of sustainability. 相似文献
We have characterized a new abnormal hemoglobin (Hb) at position 32 of the alpha-globin chain. The proband, a 38-year-old woman of Surinamese Black ancestry, was referred to the Academic Hospital in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, after 3 years of Prednisone treatment in Surinam. Kidney failure was diagnosed at the Nephrology Department, Free University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; the cortisone treatment was interrupted and dialysis was started. At this stage, a microcytic hypochromic anemia was observed with high reticulocyte (40%) and ferritin (500 microg/L) levels, and hemoglobinopathy was suspected. No abnormal bands were visible on alkaline electrophoresis and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The Hb A2 level was normal (2.7%) and the erythrocyte count was low (3.59 x 10(12)/L) with a normal haptoglobin level (68 mg/100 mL). None of the common alpha-thalassemia (thal) deletion defects were present. The beta-globin gene sequence was normal but the alpha2-globin gene sequence revealed an ATG-->ATA transition at codon 32, changing the methionine into an isoleucine residue. The mutation, called Hb Amsterdam, was observed in the mother of the proband, who was also heterozygous for the--alpha3.7-thal deletion and affected by a moderate microcytic hypochromic anemia. Both Hb Amsterdam and the--alpha(-3.7) allele were found in association with a new polymorphism, IVS-I-39 (C-->T), previously observed in our laboratory in seven patients of African origin, on both the alpha1 and alpha2 genes. In addition, Hb Amsterdam was also associated with the common African alpha2 polymorphism (G-->CTCGGCCC at position 7238 and T-->G at position 7174). Hb Amsterdam is the first mutation ever described at codon alpha32, a position involved in alpha1/beta1 interaction. The possibility of a contribution of this mutation to the nephropatic state of the proband is discussed. 相似文献
International Journal of Legal Medicine - The polyvinyl alcohol method (PVAL) is known as an effective technique to thoroughly collect traces of gunshot residue (GSR) from different surfaces, e.g.,... 相似文献