40 research outputs found
Children’s rights online: challenges, dilemmas and emerging directions
In debates over internet governance, the interests of children figure unevenly, and only partial progress has been made in supporting children’s rights online globally. This chapter examines how the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is helpful in mapping children’s rights to provision, protection and participation as they apply online as well as offline. However, challenges remain. First, opportunities and risks are positively linked, policy approaches are needed to resolve the potential conflict between protection on the one hand, and provision and participation on the other. Second, while parents may be relied on to some degree to balance their child’s rights and needs, the evidence suggests that a minority of parents are ill-equipped to manage this. Third, resolution is needed regarding the responsibility for implementing digital rights, since many governments prefer self-regulation in relation to internet governance. The chapter concludes by calling for a global governance body charged with ensuring the delivery of children’s rights
Non-invasive management of peripheral arterial disease.
BACKGROUND: Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is common and symptoms can be debilitating and lethal. Risk management, exercise, radiological and surgical intervention are all valuable therapies, but morbidity and mortality rates from this disease are increasing. Circulatory enhancement can be achieved using simple medical electronic devices, with claims of minimal adverse side effects. The evidence for these is variable, prompting a review of the available literature. METHODS: Embase and Medline were interrogated for full text articles in humans and written in English. Any external medical devices used in the management of peripheral arterial disease were included if they had objective outcome data. RESULTS: Thirty-one papers met inclusion criteria, but protocols were heterogenous. The medical devices reported were intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC), electronic nerve (NMES) or muscle stimulators (EMS), and galvanic electrical dressings. In patients with intermittent claudication, IPC devices increase popliteal artery velocity (49-70 %) and flow (49-84 %). Gastrocnemius EMS increased superficial femoral artery flow by 140 %. Over 4.5-6 months IPC increased intermittent claudication distance (ICD) (97-150 %) and absolute walking distance (AWD) (84-112 %), with an associated increase in quality of life. NMES of the calf increased ICD and AWD by 82 % and 61-150 % at 4 weeks, and 26 % and 34 % at 8 weeks. In patients with critical limb ischaemia IPC reduced rest pain in 40-100 % and was associated with ulcer healing rates of 26 %. IPC had an early limb salvage rate of 58-83 % at 1-3 months, and 58-94 % at 1.5-3.5 years. No studies have reported the use of EMS or NMES in the management of CLI. CONCLUSION: There is evidence to support the use of IPC in the management of claudication and CLI. There is a building body of literature to support the use of electrical stimulators in PAD, but this is low level to date. Devices may be of special benefit to those with limited exercise capacity, and in non-reconstructable critical limb ischaemia. Galvanic stimulation is not recommended
Freeze drying vs microwave drying–methods for synthesis of sinteractive thoria powders
PVA aided microwave synthesis: A novel route for the production of nanocrystalline thoria powder
Language-Based Mechanisms for Privacy-by-Design
Part 3: Language and PrivacyInternational audienceThe privacy by design principle has been applied in system engineering. In this paper, we follow this principle, by integrating necessary safeguards into the program system design. These safeguards are then used in the processing of personal information. In particular, we use a formal language-based approach with static analysis to enforce privacy requirements. To make a general solution, we consider a high-level modeling language for distributed service-oriented systems, building on the paradigm of active objects. The language is then extended to support specification of policies on program constructs and policy enforcement. For this we develop (i) language constructs to formally specify privacy restrictions, thereby obtaining a policy definition language, (ii) a formal notion of policy compliance, and (iii) a type and effect system for enforcing and analyzing a program’s compliance with the stated polices
Studies on the Chemical Compatibility of Alloy D9 with B4C in the Presence of Sodium
AbstractBoron carbide containing boron enriched in 10B isotope (10B ∼ 67 at. %) will be used as the control rod material in India's fast breeder reactors. The enriched boron carbide will be produced by high temperature reaction between enriched elemental boron and carbon. The control rod will consist of high-density boron carbide pellets enclosed in D9 clad tubes. The boron carbide pellets will be surrounded by liquid sodium since the tube is of vented type. Out-of-pile chemical compatibility of boron carbide with D9 alloy in the presence of liquid sodium has been studied by carrying out isothermal annealing of closed capsules containing sodium and boron carbide at 973K for a period ranging from 1000 – 5000h. The extent of reaction was evaluated by visual examination, metallographic analysis, chemical analysis and electron probe microanalysis (EPMA). The results of these measurements are discussed in detail in this paper
