75 research outputs found

    The food superstore revolution: changing times, changing research agendas in the UK

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    This paper considers the changing scope of research into UK food superstores over a 30-year period. Rather than catalogue changing market shares by format, we seek instead to show how change links to national policy agendas. Academic research has evolved to address the growing complexities of the social, technological, economic and political impacts of the superstore format. We exemplify this by tracing the progression of retail change in Portsmouth, Hampshire, over 30 years. We discover that academic research can conflict with the preconceptions of some public policymakers. The position is exacerbated by a progressive decline in public information – and a commensurate rise in factual data held by commercial data companies – that leaves policymakers with a choice of which data to believe. This casts a shadow over the objectivity of macro-policy as currently formulated. Concerns currently arise because the UK Competition Commission (2008 but ongoing) starts each inquiry afresh with a search for recent data. Furthermore, it has recently called for changes to retail planning – the very arena in which UK superstore research commenced

    High mortality due to sepsis in Native Hawaiians and African Americans: The Multiethnic Cohort.

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    Background/objectivesSepsis is a severe systemic response to infection with a high mortality rate. A higher incidence has been reported for older people, in persons with a compromised immune system including cancer patients, and in ethnic minorities. We analyzed sepsis mortality and its predictors by ethnicity in the Multiethnic Cohort (MEC).Subjects/methodsAmong 191,561 white, African American, Native Hawaiian, Japanese American, and Latino cohort members, 49,347 deaths due to all causes and 345 deaths due to sepsis were recorded during follow-up from 1993-96 until 2010. Cox proportional hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated and adjusted for relevant confounders. In addition, national death rates were analyzed to compare mortality by state.ResultsAge-adjusted rates of sepsis death were 5-times higher for Hawaii than Los Angeles (14.4 vs. 2.7 per 100,000). By ethnicity, Native Hawaiians had the highest rate in Hawaii (29.0 per 100,000) and African Americans in Los Angeles (5.2 per 100,000). In fully adjusted models, place of residence was the most important predictor of sepsis mortality (HR = 7.18; 95%CI: 4.37-11.81 Hawaii vs. Los Angeles). African Americans showed the highest risk (HR = 2.08; 95% CI: 1.16-3.75) followed by Native Hawaiians (HR = 1.88; 95% CI: 1.34-2.65) as compared to whites. Among cohort members with cancer (N = 49,794), the 2-fold higher sepsis mortality remained significant in Native Hawaiians only. The geographic and ethnic differences in the MEC agreed with results for national death data.ConclusionsThe finding that African Americans and Native Hawaiians experience a higher mortality risk due to sepsis than other ethnic groups suggest ethnicity-related biological factors in the predisposition of cancer patients and other immune-compromising conditions to develop sepsis, but regional differences in health care access and death coding may also be important

    Experimental Approach to Mimic and Study Degradation of Solvents Used for Post-combustion CO 2 Capture

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    International audienceA degradation experimental protocol with 30%-wt MEA solvent has been applied successfully on a lab-scale experiment set up to simulate the operating conditions seen by the solvent during cycles of absorption and stripping of the CO2 capture process.Degradation campaign lasted about 750 hours (750 cycles) in the presence of a synthetic flue gas containing 82% of N2, 15% of CO2, 3% of O2. An important number of degradation products (more than 30) was detected and most of the species were identified in agreement with literature

    Unidirectional electric field-induced spin-state switching in spin crossover based microelectronic devices

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    International audienceWe report on a molecular spin-state switching phenomenon induced by an electric field in micrometric objects of the [Fe(Htrz)2(trz)](BF4) spin crossover complex, organized between interdigitated electrodes. By applying an electric field step of 40 kV/cm at temperatures within the thermal hysteresis region of the first-order spin transition, the iron(II) ions are switched from the metastable high spin to the stable low spin state obtaining a rather incomplete transition but perfectly reversible by heating. A model based on the interaction between the electric field and the electric dipolar moment of spin crossover complexes, grasps the main features of the experimental data
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