89 research outputs found

    Multimodal freight transportation: sustainability challenges

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    Due to globalization in trade, the development of multimodal cargo shipments and the related transport needs have created a range of challenges. Interestingly, sustainability of multimodal freight transportation is still subject to minor consideration, on the grounds that economic interests are frequently positioned much higher than social or environmental objectives. This proposed research plan is needed to assess whether and to what extent the multimodal freight system is achieving the results in the sustainability dimensions: economic, social and environmental. Thus, it will carry out a critical appraisal of the multimodal freight transportation sector to provide an up-to-date knowledge on the sustainability challenges and the potential solutions through doctoral research. This paper structured to present a review of existing literature on freight transportation and multimodal freight transport highlighting the sustainability concerns with multimodal freight transport systems. It also highlights the gaps in knowledge with a justification on the need to address these gaps for the system to function optimally. It also covers the methodology that would be applied and the sources of data that would be reviewed to ensure the aim and objectives are clearly addressed. The paper concludes by discussing the significance of the expected findings in the light of sustainability in multimodal freight transport to the academia, policy makers and the freight transportation industry

    North Sea Wrecks - An interdisciplinary approach towards understanding the risks posed by wrecks containing munitions in the North Sea

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    Shipwrecks and dumped munitions continue to be a major hazard in the North Sea. Research within the EU Interreg project North Sea Wrecks (NSW), in cooperation with DLR, is generating new insights into the status of wrecks, the potential leakage of pollutants from munitions loads and the effects of contamination on exposed marine organisms in the North Sea environment. Further, historical documents are compared to models and visual inspections of the wreck. Samples of water, sediment and organisms are being analysed. Combining the results of these different fields of research allows for a better understanding of the environmental risks deriving from these wrecks. The extended article will detail the wreck of the SMS Mainz as a case study

    Homicide and geographic access to gun dealers in the United States

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Firearms are the most commonly used weapon to commit homicide in the U.S. Virtually all firearms enter the public marketplace through a federal firearms licensee (FFL): a store or individual licensed by the federal government to sell firearms. Whether FFLs contribute to gun-related homicide in areas where they are located, in which case FFLs may be a homicide risk factor that can be modified, is not known.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Annual county-level data (1993–1999) on gun homicide rates and rates of FFLs per capita were analyzed using negative binomial regression controlling for socio-demographic characteristics. Models were run to evaluate whether the relation between rates of FFLs and rates of gun homicide varied over the study period and across counties according to their level of urbanism (defined by four groupings, as below). Also, rates of FFLs were compared against FS/S – which is the proportion of suicides committed by firearm and is thought to be a good proxy for firearm availability in a region – to help evaluate how well the FFL variable is serving as a way to proxy firearm availability in each of the county types of interest.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In major cities, gun homicide rates were higher where FFLs were more prevalent (rate ratio [RR] = 1.70, 95% CI 1.03–2.81). This association increased (p < 0.01) from 1993 (RR = 1.69) to 1999 (RR = 12.72), due likely to federal reforms that eliminated low-volume dealers, making FFL prevalence a more accurate exposure measure over time. No association was found in small towns. In other cities and in suburbs, gun homicide rates were significantly lower where FFLs were more prevalent, with associations that did not change over the years of the study period. FFL prevalence was correlated strongly (positively) with FS/S in major cities only, suggesting that the findings for how FFL prevalence relates to gun homicide may be valid for the findings pertaining to major cities but not to counties of other types.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Modification of FFLs through federal, state, and local regulation may be a feasible intervention to reduce gun homicide in major cities.</p

    Patients' functioning as predictor of nursing workload in acute hospital units providing rehabilitation care: a multi-centre cohort study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Management decisions regarding quality and quantity of nurse staffing have important consequences for hospital budgets. Furthermore, these management decisions must address the nursing care requirements of the particular patients within an organizational unit. In order to determine optimal nurse staffing needs, the extent of nursing workload must first be known. Nursing workload is largely a function of the composite of the patients' individual health status, particularly with respect to functioning status, individual need for nursing care, and severity of symptoms. The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and the derived subsets, the so-called ICF Core Sets, are a standardized approach to describe patients' functioning status. The objectives of this study were to (1) examine the association between patients' functioning, as encoded by categories of the Acute ICF Core Sets, and nursing workload in patients in the acute care situation, (2) compare the variance in nursing workload explained by the ICF Core Set categories and with the Barthel Index, and (3) validate the Acute ICF Core Sets by their ability to predict nursing workload.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Patients' functioning at admission was assessed using the respective Acute ICF Core Set and the Barthel Index, whereas nursing workload data was collected using an established instrument. Associations between dependent and independent variables were modelled using linear regression. Variable selection was carried out using penalized regression.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In patients with neurological and cardiopulmonary conditions, selected ICF categories and the Barthel Index Score explained the same variance in nursing workload (44% in neurological conditions, 35% in cardiopulmonary conditions), whereas ICF was slightly superior to Barthel Index Score for musculoskeletal conditions (20% versus 16%).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>A substantial fraction of the variance in nursing workload in patients with rehabilitation needs in the acute hospital could be predicted by selected categories of the Acute ICF Core Sets, or by the Barthel Index score. Incorporating ICF Core Set-based data in nursing management decisions, particularly staffing decisions, may be beneficial.</p

    Human cathepsin D.

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    DETERMINATION OF THE PHOSPHORYLATION, UNCOVERING OF MANNOSE 6-PHOSPHATE GROUPS AND TARGETING OF LYSOSOMAL-ENZYMES

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    There are at least three stages in the targeting of soluble lysosomal enzymes: transfer of N-acetylglucosaminyl 1-phosphate to high-mannose oligosaccharide side chains, removal of N-acetylglucosamine and recognition of the "uncovered" mannose 6-phosphate residues. Defects in the transfer reaction cause mucolipidoses II and III. Those in the subsequent stages of the targeting may result in similar clinical disorders. To differentiate between possible defects of the targeting in cultured cells we have developed a procedure for a combined detection of the phosphorylation, uncovering of the transferred phosphate residues and the targeting of lysosomal enzymes. For this purpose cultured cells are metabolically labelled with [32P]phosphate and a lysosomal enzyme, such as cathepsin D, is isolated from the labelled cells and the medium by immunoprecipitation. The immunoprecipitates are dissolved with sodium dodecylsulphate and incubated in the presence and absence of calf intestine alkaline phosphatase. We show that the treatment of the denatured protein results in hydrolysis of phosphomonoester groups and that the phosphodiester and the peptide bonds remain intact. The initial and the residual radioactivity associated with the lysosomal enzyme which represent the total phosphate and the phosphodiester groups, respectively, are determined by gel-electrophoresis, fluorography and densitometry. This procedure extends one of the previously established methods for the diagnosis of mucolipidoses II and III
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