1,557 research outputs found
Hindu Bioethics for the Twenty-First Century
In his Cross Cultural Perspectives in Medical Ethics: Readings, Robert Veatch observes, The religions of Judaism and Christianity and the secular thought of the political philosophy of liberalism in the Anglo-American West are not the only alternatives to a Hippocratic medical ethic. In fact, the new pluralistic approach to world cultures is introducing us to several religious and philosophical alternatives from outside the Anglo-American West. Just as alternative medicine is becoming recognized and respected, and is being incorporated into mainstream medicine, there is a growing admission that the ethical problems we face today have dimensions that are not adequately addressed by the standard responses to Judaism, Christianity, and secular philosophies. From among these new Eastern perspectives, Hindu bioethics stands out. Its strength lies in the fact that it is integrated in an indigenous system of medicine, and is more alive today than at any time in its 2000 year history. It addresses the preventative and promotive aspects of medicine; mind-body connections; connections between the microcosmos and macrocosmos; and relies solely on nature
Erratum: Studying Links via Closed Braids IV: Composite Links and Split Links
The purpose of this erratum is to fill a gap in the proof of the `Composite
Braid Theorem' in the manuscript "Studying Links Via Closed Braids IV:
Composite Links and Split Links (SLVCB-IV)", Inventiones Math, \{bf 102\} Fasc.
1 (1990), 115-139. The statement of the theorem is unchanged. The gap occurs on
page 135, lines to , where we fail to consider the case: if and all 4 vertices of valence 2 are bad.
At the end of this Erratum we make some brief remarks on the literature, as
it has evolved during the 14 years between the publication of SLVCB-IV and the
submission of this Erratum.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. This is an Erratum to "Studying Links Vai Closed
Braids IV: Composite Links and Split Links", Inventiones Math., 102 Facs. 1
(190), 115-13
Cromwell's Edinburgh press and the development of print culture in Scotland
Alasdair Mann, the noted scholar of book culture in early modern Scotland, has suggested that a significant change had occurred in Scotland's relationship with the printed word by the late seventeenth century. This study sets out to explain how the interregnum served as a ‘watershed’ during which a consumer demand was created for popular print and how this in turn necessitated a significant increase in the production and distribution of printed material. Beginning with the sale of the press and patent of Evan Tyler to the London Stationers’ Company in 1647, the article charts the key factors that transformed Scotland's printing industry from the production of official declarations and works for foreign markets to the production of polemical texts for a Scottish audience. These developments also witnessed publication of the first serial news journal and the growth of a competitive market for up-to-date printed news. More than just an anomaly that flourished during a decade of occupation, these fundamental changes altered Scotland by introducing the large-scale consumption of chapbooks and printed ephemera, thereby initiating the nation's enduring print culture
Spectral infrared hemispherical reflectance measurements for LDEF tray clamps
Infrared hemispherical reflectance measurements that were made on 58 chromic acid anodized tray clamps from LDEF are described. The measurements were made using a hemiellipsoidal mirror reflectometer with interferometer for wavelengths between 2-15 microns. The tray clamps investigated were from locations about the entire spacecraft and provided the opportunity for comparing the effects of atomic oxygen at each location. Results indicate there was essentially no dependence on atomic oxygen fluence for the surfaces studied, but there did appear to be a slight dependence on solar radiation exposure. The reflectances of the front sides of the tray clamps consistently were slightly higher than for the protected rear tray clamp surfaces
Minimal Bending Energies of Bilayer Polyhedra
Motivated by recent experiments on bilayer polyhedra composed of amphiphilic
molecules, we study the elastic bending energies of bilayer vesicles forming
polyhedral shapes. Allowing for segregation of excess amphiphiles along the
ridges of polyhedra, we find that bilayer polyhedra can indeed have lower
bending energies than spherical bilayer vesicles. However, our analysis also
implies that, contrary to what has been suggested on the basis of experiments,
the snub dodecahedron, rather than the icosahedron, generally represents the
energetically favorable shape of bilayer polyhedra
Impact of Caesarean section on subsequent fertility: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
STUDY QUESTION: Is there an association between a Caesarean section and subsequent fertility? SUMMARY ANSWER: Most studies report that fertility is reduced after Caesarean section compared with vaginal delivery. However, studies with a more robust design show smaller effects and it is uncertain whether the association is causal. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: A previous systematic review published in 1996 summarizing six studies including 85 728 women suggested that Caesarean section reduces subsequent fertility. The included studies suffer from severe methodological limitations. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: Systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies comparing subsequent reproductive outcomes of women who had a Caesarean section with those who delivered vaginally. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Searches of Cochrane Library, Medline, Embase, CINAHL Plus and Maternity and Infant Care databases were conducted in December 2011 to identify randomized and non-randomized studies that compared the subsequent fertility outcomes after a Caesarean section and after a vaginal delivery. Eighteen cohort studies including 591 850 women matched the inclusion criteria. Risk of bias was assessed by the Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS). Data extraction was done independently by two reviewers. The meta-analysis was based on a random-effects model. Subgroup analyses were performed to assess whether the estimated effect was influenced by parity, risk adjustment, maternal choice, cohort period, and study quality and size. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: The impact of Caesarean section on subsequent pregnancies could be analysed in 10 studies and on subsequent births in 16 studies. A meta-analysis suggests that patients who had undergone a Caesarean section had a 9% lower subsequent pregnancy rate [risk ratio (RR) 0.91, 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.87, 0.95)] and 11% lower birth rate [RR 0.89, 95% CI (0.87, 0.92)], compared with patients who had delivered vaginally. Studies that controlled for maternal age or specifically analysed primary elective Caesarean section for breech delivery, and those that were least prone to bias according to the NOS reported smaller effects. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: There is significant variation in the design and methods of included studies. Residual bias in the adjusted results is likely as no study was able to control for a number of important maternal characteristics, such as a history of infertility or maternal obesity. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: Further research is needed to reduce the impact of selection bias by indication through creating more comparable patient groups and applying risk adjustment
National Vascular Registry: 2014 Progress Report.
The National Vascular Registry is commissioned by the Healthcare Quality Improvement
Partnership (HQIP) to measure the quality and outcomes of care for patients who undergo
major vascular surgery in NHS hospitals in England and Wales. It aims to provide
comparative information on the performance of NHS hospitals and thereby support local
quality improvement as well as inform patients about the care delivered in the NHS. As
such, all NHS hospitals in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland are encouraged to
participate in the Registry.
The measures used to describe the patterns and outcomes of care are drawn from various
national guidelines including: the “2014 The Provision of Services for Patients with Vascular
Disease” and the Quality Improvement Frameworks published by the Vascular Society, and
the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines on stroke and
peripheral arterial disease.
In 2014, the Registry published NHS trust and surgeon-level information for elective infrarenal
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) repair and carotid endarterectomy on the Registry
website. From 28 October, information on both procedures has been available on the
www.vsqip.org.uk website for all UK NHS trusts that currently perform them. For English
NHS trusts, the same information was published for individual consultants, as part of NHS
England’s “Everyone Counts: Planning for Patients 2013/4” initiative. Consultant-level
information was also published for NHS hospitals in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
for consenting surgeons.
This progress report aims to complement that information by (1) providing an overview of
care delivered by the NHS at a national level, and (2) describing various developments
within the National Vascular Registry. The Registry will publish its next annual report on
major vascular surgery in November 2015
National Vascular Registry: 2015 Annual Report.
The National Vascular Registry is commissioned by the Healthcare Quality Improvement
Partnership (HQIP) to measure the quality and outcomes of care for patients who undergo
major vascular surgery in NHS hospitals in England and Wales. It aims to provide
comparative information on the performance of NHS vascular units and thereby support
local quality improvement as well as inform patients about major vascular interventions
delivered in the NHS. As such, all NHS hospitals in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern
Ireland are encouraged to participate in the Registry.
The measures used to describe the patterns and outcomes of care are drawn from various
national guidelines including: the “Provision of Services for Patients with Vascular Disease”
document and the Quality Improvement Frameworks published by the Vascular Society, and
the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines on stroke and
peripheral arterial disease.
This report provides a description of the care provided by NHS vascular units, and contains
information on the process and outcomes of care for: (i) patients undergoing abdominal
aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair, (ii) patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy, (iii) patients
undergoing a revascularisation procedure (angioplasty/stent or bypass) or major
amputation for lower-limb peripheral arterial disease (PAD). In addition, the report
presents the findings of an organisational audit conducted in August 2015
Structure determination of Murine Norovirus NS6 proteases with C-terminal extensions designed to probe protease-substrate interactions
Noroviruses are positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses. They encode an NS6 protease that cleaves a viral polyprotein at specific sites to produce mature viral proteins. In an earlier study we obtained crystals of murine norovirus (MNV) NS6 protease in which crystal contacts were mediated by specific insertion of the C-terminus of one protein (which contains residues P5-P1 of the NS6-7 cleavage junction) into the peptide binding site of an adjacent molecule, forming an adventitious protease-product complex. We sought to reproduce this crystal form to investigate protease–substrate complexes by extending the C-terminus of NS6 construct to include residues on the C-terminal (P′) side of the cleavage junction. We report the crystallization and crystal structure determination of inactive mutants of murine norovirus NS6 protease with C-terminal extensions of one, two and four residues from the N-terminus of the adjacent NS7 protein (NS6 1′, NS6 2′, NS6 4′). We also determined the structure of a chimeric extended NS6 protease in which the P4-P4′ sequence of the NS6-7 cleavage site was replaced with the corresponding sequence from the NS2-3 cleavage junction (NS6 4′ 2|3).The constructs NS6 1′ and NS6 2′ yielded crystals that diffracted anisotropically. We found that, although the uncorrected data could be phased by molecular replacement, refinement of the structures stalled unless the data were ellipsoidally truncated and corrected with anisotropic B-factors. These corrections significantly improved phasing by molecular replacement and subsequent refinement.The refined structures of all four extended NS6 proteases are very similar in structure to the mature MNV NS6—and in one case reveal additional details of a surface loop. Although the packing arrangement observed showed some similarities to those observed in the adventitious protease-product crystals reported previously, in no case were specific protease–substrate interactions observed
Euclidean Mahler measure and twisted links
If the twist numbers of a collection of oriented alternating link diagrams
are bounded, then the Alexander polynomials of the corresponding links have
bounded euclidean Mahler measure (see Definition 1.2). The converse assertion
does not hold. Similarly, if a collection of oriented link diagrams, not
necessarily alternating, have bounded twist numbers, then both the Jones
polynomials and a parametrization of the 2-variable Homflypt polynomials of the
corresponding links have bounded Mahler measure.Comment: This is the version published by Algebraic & Geometric Topology on 7
April 200
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