1,812 research outputs found

    Investment intermediaries in economic development: Linking public pension funds to urban revitalization

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    It is difficult for large investors, such as pension funds, to make investments in EDMs because they must make very large investments. The investments in communities of need, however, are usually small. The most successful strategy to overcome these two problems is for investors to work in concert with intermediaries that can aggregate the investments and community partners that understand both the need of communities and know how to tell “the story” to investors.

    Rift Valley Fever: An Economic Assessment of Agricultural and Human Vulnerability

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    This research focused on the assessment of the U.S. agricultural sector and human vulnerability to a Rift Valley Fever (RVF) outbreak and the implications of a select set of alternative disease control strategies. Livestock impact assessment is done by using an integrated epidemic/economic model to examine the extent of RVF spread in the Southeast Texas livestock population and its consequences plus the outcome of implementing two different control strategies: emergency vaccination and larvicide vector control separately plus when they are used simultaneously. Human impact assessment utilized an inferential procedure, which comprises of a cost of illness calculation to assess the dollar cost of human illnesses and deaths, as well as a Disability Adjusted Life Year calculation to give an estimate of the burden of disease on public health as a whole. Results indicate substantial potential losses to the U.S., where combined livestock and human national costs ranged from 121millionto121 million to 2.3 billion.Rift Valley Fever, Outbreak, Welfare, Vaccination, Larvicide., Environmental Economics and Policy, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Food Security and Poverty, Health Economics and Policy,

    Core flexibility of a truncated metazoan mitochondrial tRNA

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    Secondary and tertiary structures of tRNAs are remarkably preserved from bacteria to humans, the notable exception being the mitochondrial (m) tRNAs of metazoans, which often deviate substantially from the canonical cloverleaf (secondary) or ‘L’-shaped (tertiary) structure. Many metazoan mtRNAs lack either the TψC (T) or dihydrouridine (D) loops of the canonical cloverleaf, which are known to confer structural rigidity to the folded structure. Thus, the absence of canonical TψC–D interactions likely results in greater dispersion of anticodon-acceptor interstem angle than for canonical tRNAs. To test this hypothesis, we have assessed the dispersion of the anticodon-acceptor angle for bovine mtRNASer(AGY), which lacks the canonical D arm and is thus incapable of forming stabilizing interarm interactions. Using the method of transient electric birefringence (TEB), and by changing the helical torsion angle between a core mtRNA bend and a second bend of known angle/rigidity, we have demonstrated that the core of mtRNASer(AGY) has substantially greater flexibility than its well-characterized canonical counterpart, yeast cytoplasmic tRNAPhe. These results suggest that increased flexibility, in addition to a more open interstem angle, would allow both noncanonical and canonical mtRNAs to utilize the same protein synthetic apparatus

    Rapid Effective Trace-Back Capability Value in Reducing the Cost of a Foot and Mouth Disease Event

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    This study evaluates how the availability of animal tracing affects the cost of a hypothetical Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) outbreak in the Texas High Plains using alternative tracing scenarios. To accomplish this objective, the AusSpread epidemic disease spread model (Ward et al., 2006) is used to simulate a High Plains FMD outbreak under different animal tracing possibilities. A simple economic costing module (Elbakidze, 2008) is used to determine the savings in terms of animal disease mitigation costs from rapid, effective trace-back. The savings from increased traceability are then be compared to the cost of a functional National Animal Identification System (NAIS). Initial results indicate that rapid, effective tracing reduces the overall cost of disease outbreaks and that the benefits per animal in terms of reduced cost of an outbreak more than outweigh the annualized cost per animal of implementing a NAIS. A value of time related to controlling an outbreak is estimated to have increased benefits from an identification system that incorporates a rapid response capability. We also find the level of benefits vary depending on the location of initial infection and whether or not welfare slaughter occurs.Traceability, Foot and Mouth Disease, Economics, Agricultural and Food Policy, Livestock Production/Industries,

    Low efficacy of the combination artesunate plus amodiaquine for uncomplicated falciparum malaria among children under 5 years in Kailahun, Sierra Leone.

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    OBJECTIVE: In 2004, Sierra Leone adopted artesunate plus amodiaquine as first-line antimalarial treatment. We evaluated the efficacy of this combination in Kailahun, where a previous study had shown 70.2% efficacy of amodiaquine in monotherapy. METHODS: Method and outcome classification of the study complied with WHO guidelines. Children 6-59 months with uncomplicated malaria were followed-up for 28 days. PCR genotyping was used to distinguish recrudescence from reinfection. Reinfections were reclassified as cured. RESULTS: Of 172 children who were referred to the study clinic, 126 satisfied inclusion criteria and were enrolled. No early treatment failures were reported. The day 14, efficacy was 98.2% (95% CI: 93.8-99.8). Of 65 recurrent parasitaemias analysed by PCR, 17 were recrudescences. The PCR-adjusted day 28 efficacy was 84.5% (95% CI: 76.4-90.7). All true failures occurred in the last 8 days of follow-up. Of 110 children who completed the 28-day follow-up, 54 (49.1%) experienced a novel infection. CONCLUSION: The efficacy of this combination was disappointing. The high reinfection rate suggested little prophylactic effect. In Kailahun a more efficacious combination might be necessary in the future. The efficacy of AS + AQ needs to be monitored in Kailahun and in the other regions of Sierra Leone
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