24 research outputs found

    MODELLING AND LONG TERM DYNAMICS OF CRAB CAVITIES IN THE LHC

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    Abstract The High Luminosity upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) aims to achieve an integrated luminosity of 250-300 fb −1 per year. This upgrade includes the use of crab cavities to mitigate the geometric loss of luminosity arising from the beam crossing angle. The tight space constraints at the location of the cavities leads to cavity designs which are axially non-symmetric and have a potentially significant effect on the long term dynamics and dynamic aperture of the LHC. In this paper we present the current status of advanced modelling of crab cavities

    The ongoing impacts of hepatitis C - a systematic narrative review of the literature

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    Extent: 13p.BackgroundMany countries have developed, or are developing, national strategies aimed at reducing the harms associated with hepatitis C infection. Making these strategies relevant to the vast majority of those affected by hepatitis C requires a more complete understanding of the short and longer term impacts of infection. We used a systematic approach to scope the literature to determine what is currently known about the health and psychosocial impacts of hepatitis C along the trajectory from exposure to ongoing chronic infection, and to identify what knowledge gaps remain.MethodsPubMed, Current Contents and PsychINFO databases were searched for primary studies published in the ten years from 2000-2009 inclusive. Two searches were conducted for studies on hepatitis C in adult persons focusing on: outcomes over time (primarily cohort and other prospective designs); and the personal and psychosocial impacts of chronic infection. All retrieved studies were assessed for eligibility according to specific inclusion/exclusion criteria, data completeness and methodological coherence. Outcomes reported in 264 included studies were summarized, tabulated and synthesized.ResultsInjecting drug use (IDU) was a major risk for transmission with seroconversion occurring relatively early in injecting careers. Persistent hepatitis C viraemia, increasing age and excessive alcohol consumption independently predicted disease progression. While interferon based therapies reduced quality of life during treatment, improvements on baseline quality of life was achieved post treatment--particularly when sustained viral response was achieved. Much of the negative social impact of chronic infection was due to the association of infection with IDU and inflated assessments of transmission risks. Perceived discrimination was commonly reported in health care settings, potentially impeding health care access. Perceptions of stigma and experiences of discrimination also had direct negative impacts on wellbeing and social functioning.ConclusionsHepatitis C and its management continue to have profound and ongoing impacts on health and social well being. Biomedical studies provided prospective information on clinical aspects of infection, while the broader social and psychological studies presented comprehensive information on seminal experiences (such as diagnosis and disclosure). Increasing the focus on combined methodological approaches could enhance understanding about the health and social impacts of hepatitis C along the life course.Emma R Miller, Stephen McNally, Jack Wallace, Marisa Schlichthors

    Hand washing. Safe alternative to prevent infections

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    Infections affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide and it is a major global problem for patient safety. Proper hand washing becomes vitally important to decrease the possibility of infection transmission by medical and nursing personnel. For these reasons, this paper aims to comment on the main theoretical elements that justify that proper hand washing prevents nosocomial infections. It was concluded that washing hands after contact with patients is an obstacle to bacterial spread, especially from one patient to another, and therefore prevents nosocomial infections, so common in our hospitals

    The role of Nursing against COVID-19

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    A vision of the role performed against the COVID-19 pandemic, is presented, from the Nursing profession. The main aspects related to the nursing situation in the region of the Americas and Cuba, their contribution to confronting the pandemic, their leadership in the surveillance and health care of the population as well as of prevention and health education related to this disease were analyzed

    Quantification and progress over time of specific antibodies against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in breast milk of lactating women vaccinated with BNT162b2 Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus disease 2019 vaccine (LacCOVID)

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    Background: several observational studies demonstrated the passage of postvaccine antibodies through breast milk in women vaccinated against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), mostly with messenger RNA (mRNA)-based vaccines, but lacked long-term data. Methods: a 6-month prospective cohort study was performed to determine severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccine-induced antibody levels in the breast milk of 33 lactating healthcare workers at different timepoints after mRNA BNT162b2 Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccination. Moreover, we examined the correlation of SARS-CoV-2 antibody levels between serum and breast milk, adverse events related to vaccination, and rate of SARS-CoV-2 infections. Results: mothers' median age was 38 (interquartile range [IQR], 36-39) years and 15 (IQR, 10-22) months for infants. Median (IQR) SARS-CoV-2 immunoglobulin G (IgG) spike protein subunit S1 (S1) vaccine-induced levels at different timepoints for serum-milk pairs were 519 (234-937) to 1 (0-2.9) arbitrary units (AU)/mL at 2 weeks after first dose and 18 644 (9923-29 264) to 78 (33.7-128), 12 478 (6870-20 801) to 50.4 (24.3-104), 4094 (2413-8480) to 19.9 (10.8-51.9), 1350 (831-2298) to 8.9 (7.8-31.5) AU/mL at 2, 4, 12 and 24 weeks after second dose, respectively. We observed a positive correlation of antibody levels between serum and breast milk, no serious adverse events related to vaccination, and 2 (6%) COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough infections. Conclusions: women vaccinated with Pfizer-BioNTech transmit antibodies into breast milk with a positive correlation with serum levels. Both decreased over time in a 6-month follow-up

    Presence of Human Bocavirus 1 in Hospitalised Children with Acute Respiratory Tract Infections in Latvia and Lithuania / Cilvēka BokavÄ«rusa 1 KlātbĆ«tne Latvijā Un Lietuvā Hospitalizētiem Bērniem Ar AkĆ«tām ElpceÄ«u SlimÄ«bām

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    Funding Information: This study was supported by Republic of China (Taiwan)-Republic of Latvia-Republic of Lithuania scientific collaboration project, "Establishing of the framework to track molecular epidemiology of Parvoviruses and to correlate sequence variability with different clinical manifestations" (Research Council of Latvia Nr. gr. 6-25/2012/0026, Research Council of Lithuania TAPLLT02/201) and by project Nr. RSU ZP 17/2013 "Epidemiology, pathogenicity of human Bocavirus (HBoV) species and possible association with lower respiratory tract illnesses and acute gastroenteritis in children". We are grateful to Rita Nikitenkiene and Irina Maksimova for technical help. Publisher Copyright: © 2016 by Zaiga Nora-Krƫkle. Copyright: Copyright 2016 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Human bocavirus 1 (HBoV1) is a parvovirus recently found to be a possible aetiologic agent of acute respiratory disease in children. We conducted the first clinical and molecular study on this virus in Latvia (LV) and Lithuania (LT). The aim of the study was to determine the occurrence of HBoV1 in respiratory tract samples taken from hospitalised children with acute respiratory tract infections in LV and LT. In total 186 children with age one to 50 months, and who fulfilled criteria of acute respiratory tract infection, including lower respiratory tract infections, with or without fever, were included in this study. A nasopharyngeal aspirate was obtained from each patient on admission. DNA was isolated and polimerase chain reaction (PCR) performed targeting the HBoV1 NS1sequence. HBoV1 positive samples were sequenced and phylogenetic analysis was performed. HBoV1 sequence was detected in 42 (32%) of 130 LV and in 8 (14%) of 56 LT samples. In LV the majority of patients with HBoV1 infection were observed in February while in LT in October. The phylogenetic tree for HBoV1 indicated that isolates of HBoV1 cluster closely and include almost all of the isolates in this study. HBoV1 is common in Latvia and Lithuania and might be a significant pathogen that contributes to acute respiratory tract infections in children.Peer reviewe
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