13 research outputs found

    Assessment of knowledge and awareness among the pregnant women about their medication use in a tertiary care hospital

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    Background: Pregnancy is a physiological state where drug therapy is of particular concern. The pertinent use of drugs during pregnancy is beneficial as it affects not only the health of the pregnant woman but also the developing fetus. The study was carried out to access the knowledge and awareness regarding the drug use among pregnant women.Methods: Cross sectional descriptive study was conducted among 150 pregnant women for six-month duration. All the information was acquired through direct interview with the subjects and from treatment chart of subjects which were then recorded in a data collection form.Results: Majority of the subjects were under the age group of 18-28 years (50%). Most of the subjects predominantly has tertiary level of education (69%). Furthermore, 57% of the subjects were at the third trimester of their pregnancy. Knowledge regarding use of their own medications were significantly high (95%), which suggest that the subjects were well aware of their medications. Besides, 82% of the subjects had knowledge about the medications that were not to be consumed during pregnancy. In addition, 89% of the pregnant women did not take any over the counter medications and about 92% of the subjects did not treat themselves with any ayurvedic or homeopathic medications.Conclusions: Significant number of subjects were aware about their medication use. They ensured themselves and their developing fetus a better health.

    The clustering of galaxies in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey : BAO measurement from the LOS-dependent power spectrum of DR12 BOSS galaxies

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    HGM is grateful for support from the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council through the grant ST/I001204/1. WJP is grateful for support from the UK Science and Technology Facilities Research Council through the grant ST/I001204/1, and the European Research Council through the grant “Darksurvey”, reference 614030. FSK acknowledges the support of the Karl-Schwarzschild Program from the Leibniz Society.[abridged] We present an anisotropic analysis of the baryonic acoustic oscillation (BAO) scale in the twelfth and final data release of the Baryonic Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). We independently analyse the LOWZ and CMASS galaxy samples: the LOWZ sample contains contains 361\,762 galaxies with an effective redshift of zLOWZ=0.32z_{\rm LOWZ}=0.32, and the CMASS sample consists of 777\,202 galaxies with an effective redshift of zCMASS=0.57z_{\rm CMASS}=0.57. We extract the BAO peak position from the monopole power spectrum moment, α0\alpha_0, and from the ÎŒ2\mu^2 moment, α2\alpha_2. We report H(zLOWZ)rs(zd)=(11.64±0.62)⋅103 kms−1H(z_{\rm LOWZ})r_s(z_d)=(11.64\pm0.62)\cdot10^3\,{\rm km}s^{-1} and DA(zLOWZ)/rs(zd)=6.85±0.17D_A(z_{\rm LOWZ})/r_s(z_d)=6.85\pm0.17 with a cross-correlation coefficient of rHDA=0.42r_{HD_A}=0.42, for the LOWZ sample; and H(zCMASS)rs(zd)=(14.56±0.38)⋅103 kms−1H(z_{\rm CMASS})r_s(z_d)=(14.56\pm0.38)\cdot10^3\,{\rm km}s^{-1} and DA(zCMASS)/rs(zd)=9.42±0.13D_A(z_{\rm CMASS})/r_s(z_d)=9.42\pm0.13 with a cross-correlation coefficient of rHDA=0.51r_{HD_A}=0.51, for the CMASS sample. We combine these results with the measurements of the BAO peak position in the monopole and quadrupole correlation function of the same dataset \citep[][companion paper]{Cuestaetal2015} and report the consensus values: H(zLOWZ)rs(zd)=(11.64±0.70)⋅103 kms−1H(z_{\rm LOWZ})r_s(z_d)=(11.64\pm0.70)\cdot10^3\,{\rm km}s^{-1} and DA(zLOWZ)/rs(zd)=6.76±0.15D_A(z_{\rm LOWZ})/r_s(z_d)=6.76\pm0.15 with rHDA=0.35r_{HD_A}=0.35 for the LOWZ sample; and H(zCMASS)rs(zd)=(14.66±0.42)⋅103 kms−1H(z_{\rm CMASS})r_s(z_d)=(14.66\pm0.42)\cdot10^3\,{\rm km}s^{-1} and DA(zCMASS)/rs(zd)=9.47±0.13D_A(z_{\rm CMASS})/r_s(z_d)=9.47\pm0.13 with rHDA=0.54r_{HD_A}=0.54 for the CMASS sample.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Risk factors for Coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) death in a population cohort study from the Western Cape province, South Africa

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    Risk factors for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) death in sub-Saharan Africa and the effects of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and tuberculosis on COVID-19 outcomes are unknown. We conducted a population cohort study using linked data from adults attending public-sector health facilities in the Western Cape, South Africa. We used Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted for age, sex, location, and comorbidities, to examine the associations between HIV, tuberculosis, and COVID-19 death from 1 March to 9 June 2020 among (1) public-sector “active patients” (≄1 visit in the 3 years before March 2020); (2) laboratory-diagnosed COVID-19 cases; and (3) hospitalized COVID-19 cases. We calculated the standardized mortality ratio (SMR) for COVID-19, comparing adults living with and without HIV using modeled population estimates.Among 3 460 932 patients (16% living with HIV), 22 308 were diagnosed with COVID-19, of whom 625 died. COVID19 death was associated with male sex, increasing age, diabetes, hypertension, and chronic kidney disease. HIV was associated with COVID-19 mortality (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 2.14; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.70–2.70), with similar risks across strata of viral loads and immunosuppression. Current and previous diagnoses of tuberculosis were associated with COVID-19 death (aHR, 2.70 [95% CI, 1.81–4.04] and 1.51 [95% CI, 1.18–1.93], respectively). The SMR for COVID-19 death associated with HIV was 2.39 (95% CI, 1.96–2.86); population attributable fraction 8.5% (95% CI, 6.1–11.1)

    The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and Natural Law

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    In Natural Law and Natural Rights, John Finnis delves into the past, attempting to revitalise the Thomist natural law tradition cut short by opposing philosophers such as David Hume. In this article, Finnis’s efforts at revival are assessed by way of comparison with—and, indeed, contrast to—the life and art of musician David Bowie. In spite of their extravagant differences, there exist significant points of connection that allow Bowie to be used in interpreting Finnis’s natural law. Bowie’s work—for all its appeals to a Nietzschean ground zero for normative values—shares Finnis’s concern with ordering affairs in a way that will realise humanity’s great potential. In presenting enchanted worlds and evolved characters as an antidote to all that is drab and pointless, Bowie has something to tell his audience about how human beings can thrive. Likewise, natural law holds that a legal system should include certain content that guides people towards a life of “flourishing”. Bowie and Finnis look to the past, plundering it for inspiration and using it as fuel to boost humankind forward. The analogy of Natural Law and Natural Rights and Bowie’s magpie-like relationship to various popular music traditions ultimately reveals that natural law theory is not merely an objective and unchanging edict to be followed without question, but a legacy that is to be recreated by those who carry it into the future. Law’s instruments of critique must not forget these transformative qualities.Arts, Education & Law Group, School of LawFull Tex

    MBE of dilute-nitride optoelectronic devices

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    Molecular beam epitaxy of dilute-nitride materials has progressed a long way towards claiming its unique place as a key technology, which enables the development of new types of optoelectronics devices. This chapter begins by reviewing the technological particularities related to incorporation of nitrogen into III–V materials when using plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy. We then focus on describing the interplay between the growth parameters and nitrogen incorporation processes in dilute-nitride arsenides (III-N–As). Emphasis is laid on nitrogen-related growth kinetics that is accompanied by various bonding configurations and formation of several types of defects. An overview is provided also for dilute-nitride antimonides (III-N–Sb) and dilute-nitride phosphides (III-N–P). Finally, we review the growth optimisation and properties of several classes of dilute-nitride heterostructures for optoelectronics. These include uncooled long-wavelength laser diodes, SESAMs, VECSELs, enabling yellow emission by frequency doubling, and high-efficiency multijunction solar cells for concentrated photovoltaic systems

    Law, the Digital and Time: The Legal Emblems of Doctor Who

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    This article is about time. It is about time, or more precisely, about the absence of time in law’s digital future. It is also about time travelling and the seemingly ever-popular BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who. Further, it is about law’s timefullness; about law’s pictorial past and the ‘visual baroque’ of its chronological fused future. Ultimately, it is about a time paradox of seeing time run to a time when time runs ‘No More!’ This ‘timey-wimey’ article is in three parts. The first part looks to a hazy remembered past of the legal emblem tradition as presented in Peter Goodrich’s Legal Emblems and the Art of Law to learn visual literacy and also to glimpse the essential elements of modern legality with authority, decision and violence. The second part maps how these images and icons of modern legality are manifest in the Doctor Who fiftieth year anniversary special ‘The Day of the Doctor.’ The third stage looks beyond these first order meanings to understand the chronological chaos of ‘The Day of the Doctor.’ The technicity of the image as a portal through time and space that the narrative revolves around charts the implications for the digital end of time for law.Arts, Education & Law Group, School of LawFull Tex
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