19 research outputs found
Sexagem de embriões bovinos produzidos in vitro pela velocidade de desenvolvimento e alteração no metabolismo de glicose.
Alternativas para sexagem de embriões bovinos produzidos in vitro.
bitstream/item/170491/1/Boletim40.pd
Indução da resistência ao anti-helmíntico monepantel em Haemonchus contortus (resultados preliminares).
Patient-reported impact of spondyloarthritis on work disability and working life: the ATLANTIS survey
Background: The aim was to establish how patients experience the impact of spondyloarthritis (SpA) on work disability
and working life. Methods: The survey was performed in 17/20 regions in Italy (1 January to 31 March 2013). A multiple-choice
questionnaire was published on the official website of the sponsor - the National Association of Rheumatic Patients
(ANMAR) - and hard-copies were distributed at outpatient clinics for rheumatic patients.
Results: Respondents (n = 770) were of both sexes (56 % men), educated (62 % at high school or more), of working
age (75 % aged 6460 years), and affected by SpA. The most common types diagnosed were ankylosing spondylitis (AS)
(39 %) and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) (36 %). Respondents were working full-time (45 %), part-time (8 %) or had retired (22 %);
15 % were unemployed (for reasons linked to the disease or for other reasons, students or housewives). Patients reported
disability (39 %), were receiving disability benefits (34 %), were experiencing important limitations that were hindering
their professional development/career (36 %) and some had to change/leave their job or lost it because of SpA (21 %).
Employed respondents (n = 383) had worked on average 32.2 h in the last 7 days. More hours of work were lost over the
last 7 days due to SpA (2.39 h vs 1.67 h). The indirect costs of the disease amounted to \u20ac106/week for patients reporting
well-being/good physical conditions/improvement and \u20ac216/week for those reporting permanent impairment.
Conclusions: Most patients were in the midst of their productive years and were experiencing considerable difficulties in
carrying out their job because of the disease: half of them reported disability and one third were experiencing important
limitations in their career perspective
Patient-reported impact of spondyloarthritis on work disability and working life: the ATLANTIS survey
Background: The aim was to establish how patients experience the impact of spondyloarthritis (SpA) on work disability
and working life. Methods: The survey was performed in 17/20 regions in Italy (1 January to 31 March 2013). A multiple-choice
questionnaire was published on the official website of the sponsor - the National Association of Rheumatic Patients
(ANMAR) - and hard-copies were distributed at outpatient clinics for rheumatic patients.
Results: Respondents (n = 770) were of both sexes (56 % men), educated (62 % at high school or more), of working
age (75 % aged ≤60 years), and affected by SpA. The most common types diagnosed were ankylosing spondylitis (AS)
(39 %) and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) (36 %). Respondents were working full-time (45 %), part-time (8 %) or had retired (22 %);
15 % were unemployed (for reasons linked to the disease or for other reasons, students or housewives). Patients reported
disability (39 %), were receiving disability benefits (34 %), were experiencing important limitations that were hindering
their professional development/career (36 %) and some had to change/leave their job or lost it because of SpA (21 %).
Employed respondents (n = 383) had worked on average 32.2 h in the last 7 days. More hours of work were lost over the
last 7 days due to SpA (2.39 h vs 1.67 h). The indirect costs of the disease amounted to €106/week for patients reporting
well-being/good physical conditions/improvement and €216/week for those reporting permanent impairment.
Conclusions: Most patients were in the midst of their productive years and were experiencing considerable difficulties in
carrying out their job because of the disease: half of them reported disability and one third were experiencing important
limitations in their career perspective
Coloração com BCB como indicador de viabilidade em embriões bovinos produzidos in vitro.
A produção in vitro (PIV) de embriões contribui para o melhoramento genético e para a produção na pecuária, e maiores benefícios podem ser obtidos com a determinação precoce e não invasiva da viabilidade embrionária.Editores técnicos: Alexandre Berndt, Ana Rita Araujo Nogueira, Bianca Baccili Zanotto Vigna, Juliana Gonçalves Costa, Lea Chapaval, Manuel Antonio Chagas Jacinto, Patricia Menezes Santos
Citizenship for children: By soil, by blood, or by paternalism?
Do states have a right to exclude prospective immigrants as they see fit? According to statists the answer is a qualified yes. For these authors, self-determining political communities have a prima facie right to exclude, which can be overridden by the claims of vulnerable groups such as refugees and children born in the state’s territory. However, there is a concern in the literature that statists have not yet developed a theory that can protect children born in the territory from being excluded from the political community. For if the self-determining political community has the right to decide who should form the self in the first place, then that right should count against both newcomers by immigration and newcomers by birth. Or so the concern goes. In this essay, I defend statism against this line of criticism and provide a liberal justification for the inclusion of children born within the state’s borders. My account leads to some surprising implication for citizenship law, as well as immigration arrangements in the area of asylum and unauthorized immigration