2,083 research outputs found
The potential impact of BCG vaccine supply shortages on global paediatric tuberculosis mortality.
BACKGROUND: The Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine is provided to over 100 million neonates annually to protect against childhood tuberculosis (TB). Recent BCG manufacturing interruptions highlight global supply risks. We estimated the potential impact of BCG shortfalls on global paediatric (<15 years) TB mortality. METHODS: A static mathematical model was employed to estimate the number of paediatric TB deaths avoided by usual levels of BCG coverage, and potential additional TB deaths in the first 15 years of life due to 1-year BCG supply shortfalls of 6.3 % (as occurred in 2015) to 27.6 % (as anticipated without mitigating action in 2015) assuming no catch-up campaigns. RESULTS: BCG coverage without shortfalls, estimated at 90 % globally, was estimated to avoid 117,132 (95 % uncertainty range (UR): 5049-306,911) TB deaths globally per birth cohort in the first 15 years of life. An estimated 11,713 (UR: 505-30,691) additional TB deaths would occur in the first 15 years of life per 10 % (26 million dose) annual supply shortfall. A 16.5 million dose (6.3 %) shortfall as reported at the close of 2015, reflecting 84 % global coverage, was estimated as associated with 7433 (95 % UR: 320-19,477) excess TB deaths in the affected cohort in the first 15 years. A possible 24,914 (UR: 1074-65,278) additional deaths were avoided due to prompt shortfall reduction measures in 2015. CONCLUSIONS: BCG shortages could greatly increase paediatric TB mortality. Although rapid action in 2015 minimised BCG shortfalls, avoiding a large number of potential additional deaths, the possible public health impact of even relatively small shortfalls highlights the critical importance of ensuring secure future manufacturing capacity and global BCG supply continuity
Resolving the Outer Disks and Halos of Nearby Galaxies
In a hierarchical merging scenario, the outer parts of a galaxy are a fossil
record of the galaxy's early history. Observations of the outer disks and halos
of galaxies thus provide a tool to study individual galaxy histories and test
formation theories. Locally, an impressive effort has been made to understand
the halo of the Milky Way, Andromeda, and M33. However, due to the stochastic
nature of halo formation, a better understanding of this process requires a
large sample of galaxies with known halo properties. The GHOSTS project (PI: R.
de Jong) aims to characterize the halos and outer portions of 14 nearby (D=4-14
Mpc) spiral galaxies using the Hubble Space Telescope. Detection of individual
stars in the outer parts of these galaxies enables us to study both the
morphological properties of the galaxies, and determine the stars' metallicity
and age.Comment: Contributed talk; to appear in the proceedings of "Galaxies in the
Local Volume" Sydney 8-13 July 200
Quality of refrigerated raw milk from buffalo cows (Bubalus bubalis bubalis) in different farms and seasons in Brazil
The present research aimed to examine the chemical and microbiological characteristics of refrigerated raw milk collected from buffalo-only dairy herds from different farms and seasons. Samples were collected from twelve farms producing buffalo milk, located in the Mideast region of SĂŁo Paulo state, in Brazil, once a month throughout the dairy calendar year from 2011 to 2014. The analysis of fat, protein, lactose, dry extract, and total solids contents were carried out using Infrared Absorption. Residues for antimicrobial analysis were carried out using Delvo Test Kit technique, and both somatic cell count and standard plate count analysis were carried out using Flow Cytometry. The analysis of the chemical components as well as for the microbiological analysis of SPC proved to be statistically significant throughout the period. No antibiotic residues were found in the totality of the sample, hence indicating that the farmers complied with the current sanitary legislation in that country, as well as SCC; however, higher values were found for the SPC. Significant results for all parameters analyzed were found among the farms, indicating that price incentives paid for the quality of raw milk could be an alternative to dairy processing companies, favoring yield and quality of the final product
On the Spatial Distribution of Stellar Populations in the Large Magellanic Cloud
We measure the angular correlation function of stars in a region of the Large
Magellanic Cloud (LMC) that spans 2 degrees by 1.5 degrees. We find that the
correlation functions of stellar populations are represented well by
exponential functions of the angular separation for separations between 2 and
40 arcmin (corresponding to ~ 30 pc and 550 pc for an LMC distance of 50 kpc).
The inner boundary is set by the presence of distinct, highly correlated
structures, which are the more familiar stellar clusters, and the outer
boundary is set by the observed region's size and the presence of two principal
centers of star formation within the region. We also find that the
normalization and scale length of the correlation function changes
systematically with the mean age of the stellar population. The existence of
positive correlation at large separations (~300 pc), even in the youngest
population, argues for large-scale hierarchical structure in current star
formation. The evolution of the angular correlation toward lower normalizations
and longer scale lengths with stellar age argues for the dispersion of stars
with time. We show that a simple, stochastic, self-propagating star formation
model is qualitatively consistent with this behavior of the correlation
function.Comment: 30 pages, 13 Figures. Scheduled for publication in AJ in June 199
Babo1, formerly Vop1 and Cop1/2, is no eyespot photoreceptor but a basal-body protein illuminating cell division in Volvox carteri.
von der Heyde EL, Hallmann A. Babo1, formerly Vop1 and Cop1/2, is no eyespot photoreceptor but a basal-body protein illuminating cell division in Volvox carteri. The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology. 2020;102(2):276-298.In photosynthetic organisms many processes are light-dependent and sensing of light requires light-sensitive proteins. The supposed eyespot-photoreceptor protein Babo1 (formerly Vop1) has previously been classified as an opsin due to the capacity for binding retinal. Here, we analyze Babo1 and provide evidence that it is no opsin. Due to the localization at the basal bodies, the former Vop1 and Cop1/2 proteins were renamed V.c. Babo1 and C.r. Babo1. We reveal a large family of more than sixty Babo1-related proteins from a wide range of species. The detailed subcellular localization of fluorescence-tagged Babo1 shows that it accumulates at the basal apparatus. More precisely, it is located predominantly at the basal bodies and to a lesser extent at the four strands of rootlet microtubules. We trace Babo1 during basal body separation and cell division. Dynamic structural rearrangements of Babo1 particularly occur right before the first cell division. In four-celled embryos Babo1 was exclusively found at the oldest basal bodies of the embryo and on the corresponding d-roots. The unequal distribution of Babo1 in four-celled embryos could be an integral part of a geometrical system in early embryogenesis, which establishes the anterior-posterior polarity and influences the spatial arrangement of all embryonic structures and characteristics. Due to its retinal-binding capacity, Babo1 could also be responsible for the unequal distribution of retinoids, knowing that such concentration gradients of retinoids can be essential for the correct patterning during embryogenesis of more complex organisms. Thus, our findings push the Babo1 research in another direction. © 2019 The Authors The Plant Journal © 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Warped Phenomenology of Higher-Derivative Gravity
We examine the phenomenological implications at colliders for the existence
of higher-derivative gravity terms as extensions to the Randall-Sundrum model.
Such terms are expected to arise on rather general grounds, e.g., from string
theory. In 5-d, if we demand that the theory be unitary and ghost free, these
new contributions to the bulk action are uniquely of the Gauss-Bonnet form. We
demonstrate that the usual expectations for the production cross section and
detailed properties of graviton Kaluza-Klein resonances and TeV-scale black
holes can be substantially altered by existence of these additional
contributions. It is shown that measurements at future colliders will be highly
sensitive to the presence of such terms.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figure
Generalized contact process on random environments
Spreading from a seed is studied by Monte Carlo simulation on a square
lattice with two types of sites affecting the rates of birth and death. These
systems exhibit a critical transition between survival and extinction. For
time- dependent background, this transition is equivalent to those found in
homogeneous systems (i.e. to directed percolation). For frozen backgrounds, the
appearance of Griffiths phase prevents the accurate analysis of this
transition. For long times in the subcritical region, spreading remains
localized in compact (rather than ramified) patches, and the average number of
occupied sites increases logarithmically in the surviving trials.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
British Society of Paediatric Dentistry: a policy document on dental neglect in children
The British Society of Paediatric Dentistry's (BSPD) first policy document on dental neglect was published online in 2009. It proposed a new original definition of dental neglect, discussed the identification of dental neglect and recommended adopting a tiered response, with three stages of intervention according to level of concern. Furthermore, it detailed how the dental team should both contribute to the child protection process and implement wider measures to safeguard and promote children's welfare. Since 2009, these concepts have been widely adopted in the UK and beyond. Furthermore, there have been significant advances in both research and practice. Policy documents produced by the BSPD represent a majority view, based on the consideration of currently available evidence, and are tailored to a UK working environment. Although this updated document's recommendations remain broadly unchanged, this version reflects the professions' progress in understanding dental neglect and minor updates to terminology and, following a consultation process, has been amended to address the needs of two main audiences—dental professionals and nondental health and social care professionals—in order to enhance interdisciplinary working
A high resolution imaging detector for TeV gamma-ray astronomy
Details are presented of an atmospheric Cherenkov telescope for use in very high energy gamma-ray astronomy which consists of a cluster of 109 close-packed photomultiplier tubes at the focus of a 10 meter optical reflector. The images of the Cherenkov flashes generated both by gamma-ray and charged cosmic-ray events are digitized and recorded. Subsequent off-line analysis of the images improves the significance of the signal to noise ratio by a factor of 10 compared with non-imaging techniques
Optical properties of the pseudogap state in underdoped cuprates
Recent optical measurements of deeply underdoped cuprates have revealed that
a coherent Drude response persists well below the end of the superconducting
dome. In addition, no large increase in optical effective mass has been
observed, even at dopings as low as 1%. We show that this behavior is
consistent with the resonating valence bond spin-liquid model proposed by Yang,
Rice, and Zhang. In this model, the overall reduction in optical conductivity
in the approach to the Mott insulating state is caused not by an increase in
effective mass, but by a Gutzwiller factor, which describes decreased coherence
due to correlations, and by a shrinking of the Fermi surface, which decreases
the number of available charge carriers. We also show that in this model, the
pseudogap does not modify the low-temperature, low-frequency behavior, though
the magnitude of the conductivity is greatly reduced by the Gutzwiller factor.
Similarly, the profile of the temperature dependence of the microwave
conductivity is largely unchanged in shape, but the Gutzwiller factor is
essential in understanding the observed difference in magnitude between ortho-I
and -II YBaCuO.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
- …