342 research outputs found

    Dams

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    THE ordinary excavated dam is usually considered a simple proposition but there is often more to it than just finding the clay and sinking a hole

    Soil conservation : contour banks must be maintained

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    The wet winter of 1963 showed up faults in many contour bank systems and emphasised that banks won\u27t last forever without maintenance. This article tells where to look for weaknesses and how to treat them

    Soil conservation : build contour banks with a disc plough

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    Heavy earthmoving machinery is not necessary for contouring; most farmers are already equipped to do the job themselves. This article by soil conservation advisers G. W. Spencer and D. J. Carder tells how to build contour banks with a disc plough

    Immunohistochemical detection of ERβ in breast cancer: towards more detailed receptor profiling?

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    Oestrogen receptor (ER) is used routinely to predict endocrine responsiveness in patients with breast cancer. A second ER, ERβ has been described but its significance remains undefined; most studies have described mRNA levels rather than protein expression. Here, we demonstrate for the first time, immunohistochemical detection of ERβ in archival breast tumours. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaignhttp://www.bjcancer.co

    Quarter-mile walk test sensitive to training-induced fitness changes

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    BACKGROUND: Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is an important aspect of the overall health of an individual and its monitoring must be promoted in the general population. Thus, the aim of the study was to cross-validate and improve CRF estimation based on quarter-mile Rockport Fitness Walking Test. METHODS: Thirty participants (31.4±7.99 years) were randomized in either a four-week aerobic training group (10 men and 10 women) or a control group (eight men and two women). CRF was assessed via VO2max test and estimated via quarter-mile Rockport Fitness and Ebbeling treadmill tests, before and after the training intervention. The original quarter-mile Rockport VO2max estimation was found to greatly overestimate CRF by 22 mL/kg/min. When its coefficient was updated according to our data, it largely improved (by 6.8 mL/kg/min). Furthermore, a new algorithm for predicting VO2max was designed using multi-linear regression analysis. RESULTS: The original quarter-mile Rockport Fitness Walking Test was not sensitive to CRF changes. It showed changes in VO2max, which were significantly different from the actual observed changes (-1.1±4.08 vs. 1.61±2.84, P=0.02, respectively). The Ebbeling treadmill test appeared to systematically overestimate CRF changes. Our new algorithm showed improved sensitivity for detecting CRF changes and stability. CONCLUSIONS: The original quarter-mile Rockport Fitness Walking Test equation for predicting VO2max was neither accurate nor sensitive to changes in CRF, most likely due to cardiovascular drift. Our new algorithm, based on the same brisk walking test, can provide a more accurate estimate of CRF, which is also sensitive to VO2max changes, in a broad age range (18 to 50 years)

    Is palliative care support associated with better quality end-of-life care indicators for patients with advanced cancer? A retrospective cohort study.

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    OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to establish the association between timing and provision of palliative care (PC) and quality of end-of-life care indicators in a population of patients dying of cancer. SETTING: This study uses linked cancer patient data from the National Cancer Registry, the electronic medical record system used in primary care (SystmOne) and the electronic medical record system used within a specialist regional cancer centre. The population resided in a single city in Northern England. PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective data from 2479 adult cancer decedents who died between January 2010 and February 2012 were registered with a primary care provider using the SystmOne electronic health record system, and cancer was certified as a cause of death, were included in the study. RESULTS: Linkage yielded data on 2479 cancer decedents, with 64.5% who received at least one PC event. Decedents who received PC were significantly more likely to die in a hospice (39.4% vs 14.5%, P<0.005) and less likely to die in hospital (23.3% vs 40.1%, P<0.05), and were more likely to receive an opioid (53% vs 25.2%, P<0.001). PC initiated more than 2 weeks before death was associated with avoiding a hospital death (≥2 weeks, P<0.001), more than 4 weeks before death was associated with avoiding emergency hospital admissions and increased access to an opioid (≥4 weeks, P<0.001), and more than 33 weeks before death was associated with avoiding late chemotherapy (≥33 weeks, no chemotherapy P=0.019, chemotherapy over 4 weeks P=0.007). CONCLUSION: For decedents with advanced cancer, access to PC and longer duration of PC were significantly associated with better end-of-life quality indicators

    Soil conservation handbook

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    Soil Conservation means, basically sound land management. With good management the Ste\u27s resources of productive land can be bot only maintained but actually improved. It is a question of deciding the best use for each soil type and situation. Profitable Production must be kept up in changing economic conditions without destroying land assets in the process.https://researchlibrary.agric.wa.gov.au/books/1014/thumbnail.jp

    Estimating primary production at depth from remote sensing

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    By use of a common primary-production model and identical photosynthetic parameters, four different methods were used to calculate quanta 1Q2 and primary production 1P2 at depth for a study of high-latitude North Atlantic waters. The differences among the four methods relate to the use of pigment information in the upper water column. Methods 1 and 2 use pigment biomass 1B2 as an input and a subtropical, empirical relation between K d 1diffuse attenuation coefficient2 and B to estimate Q at depth. Method 1 uses measured B, but Method 2 uses B derived from the Coastal Zone Color Scanner 1subtropical algorithm2 as inputs. Methods 3 and 4 use the phytoplankton absorption coefficient 1a ph 2 instead of B as input, and Method 3 uses empirically derived a ph 14402 and K d values, and Method 4 uses analytically derived a ph 14402 and a 1total absorption coefficient2 values based on the same remote measurements as Method 2. When the calculated and the measured values of Q1z2 and P1z2 were compared, Method 4 provided the closest results 3for P1z2, r 2 5 0.95 1n 5 242, and for Q1z2, r 2 5 0.92 1n 5 1124. Method 1 yielded the worst results 3for P1z2, r 2 5 0.56 and for Q1z2, r 2 5 0.814. These results indicate that one of the greatest uncertainties in the remote estimation of P can come from a potential mismatch of the pigment-specific absorption coefficient 1a ph *2, which is needed implicitly in current models or algorithms based on B. We point out that this potential mismatch can be avoided if we arrange the models or algorithms so that they are based on the pigment absorption coefficient 1a ph 2. Thus, except for the accuracy of the photosynthetic parameters and the above-surface light intensity, the accuracy of the remote estimation of P depends on how accurately a ph can be estimated, but not how accurately B can be estimated. Also, methods to derive a ph empirically and analytically from remotely sensed data are introduced. Curiously, combined application of subtropical algorithms for both B and K d to subarctic waters apparently compensates to some extent for effects that are due to their similar and implicit pigment-specific absorption coefficients for the calculation of Q1z2
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