634 research outputs found
Plant community response to novel silvicultural treatments in Great Lakes northern hardwoods
The objective of this dissertation is to assess plant community response across a range of silvicultural disturbances and test ecological hypotheses to better inform ecologists and forest managers. To provide context for the utility of revising silvicultural systems, I review natural disturbance regimes and historical practices that have shaped contemporary Great Lakes northern hardwood forests (Chapter 2). Further, I identify important ways to expand the silvicultural toolbox and better emulate natural disturbance regimes. Building on this theoretical underpinning, I investigate the initial regeneration and plant community response to two novel silvicultural experiments: the Northern Hardwood Experiment for Enhancing Diversity (NHSEED) near Alberta, Michigan, and a strip clearcut experiment near Mountain Iron, Michigan. Three themes emerged from the findings in this dissertation. First, seedlings and saplings receive few benefits from reduced canopy cover if they cannot overcome additional limitations. For example, yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis Britt.) seedling density was better predicted by conspecific overstory basal area and litter depth variation than silvicultural treatments (Chapter 3), and sugar maple recruitment into the sapling size class in clearcut strips may be limited by deer browse (Chapter 5). Second, silvicultural disturbances tend to favor low-mass fruit, long-lived fruit, or vegetative reproduction, except for sugar maple which relies on robust advance regeneration to benefit from overstory disturbances (Chapters 3, 4 and 5). Third, the relationship between disturbance severity and diversity is not conclusive. Initial responses to silvicultural disturbances did not follow the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, which proposes that diversity is maximized at intermediate levels of disturbance intensity or frequency (Chapter 4). Moreover, taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity do not always respond similarly to disturbances (Chapter 4), suggesting that both indices should be incorporated into informed management decisions. Integrating these findings into management planning may allow better predictions to silvicultural disturbances now and in the future
Managing Oregon’s Aquatic Resources : A Dynamic Segmentation Application
Many of Oregon\u27s salmon, the cultural icon of the region, are imperil. Salmon runs ranging from the Snake River to the Oregon coast, from chinook to coho to steelhead to cut-throat are being protected or candidates for protection under the federal Endangered Species Act of 1973. As Oregon\u27s salmon decline natural resource agencies, such as Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW), are seeing substantial funding cutbacks. In order to compensate for lost personnel and rising work-loads, ODFW is increasingly turning to new technologies, such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS). This thesis describes the creation of a dynamic segmentation GIS system at ODFW and how dynamic segmentation can improve information management for aquatic resources within ODFW and across agency boundaries. Through custom programs, a linear referencing system was created, allowing non-GIS stream data to be linked to GIS representations of streams by using the milepoint of where the data occurred in a stream and what stream it occurred on. The dynamic segmentation data model allows salmon managers access to ODFW\u27s institutional database in a new graphic way, provides a more robust set of analytical tools for habitat analysis, and enables ODFW to share databases with other resource management agencies using the system easily
Physicians’ Perspective From a Survey
Background: As a result of demographic changes, physicians are required to
deliver needed services with limited resources. Research suggests that tablet
PCs with access to patient data may streamline clinical workflow. A recent
study found tablets with mobile electronic medical records (EMRs) can
facilitate data retrieval and produce time savings across the clinical routine
within hospital settings. However, the reasons for these time savings,
including details on how tablets were being used, remain unclear. The same
applies to physicians’ perceptions of this tool within an inpatient setting.
Objective: This study examined physicians’ perception of tablets with EMRs in
an inpatient setting. The rationale was to identify both subjective and
objective factors that impacted the successful implementation and use of
tablets running an EMR. Methods: We developed a 57-item survey questionnaire
designed to examine users’ perception of and attitude toward tablets, which
was administered to 14 participating physicians following 7 weeks of tablet
use. Five participants volunteered to participate in a second study that
investigated physicians’ patterns of tablet use within the EMR environment by
digitally tracking and storing usage behavior. Statistical analyses of
questionnaire results included mean values with their bootstrapped 95%
confidence intervals and multivariate analysis of variance to identify
predictors of tablet use. Results: Physicians reported high degrees of
satisfaction with the tablets. There was a general consensus among physicians
that tablet use streamlined clinical workflow through optimized data retrieval
(rated 0.69, 0.23-1.15 points better than control) and improved communication
with patients and other physicians (rated 0.85, 0.54-1.15 and 0.77, 0.38-1.15
points better than control, respectively). Age (F3,11=3.54, P=.04),
occupational group (F1,11=7.17, P=.04), and attitude toward novel technologies
(F1,11=10.54, P=.02) predicted physicians’ satisfaction with the devices and
their motivation regarding their further use. Tracking data yielded that only
a few of the available functions were used frequently. Conclusions: Although
tablet PCs were consistently perceived as beneficial, several factors
contributed to the fact that their full potential was not fully exploited.
Training in functionality and providing a reliable infrastructure might foster
successful tablet implementation
Assessment of bacterial superficial contamination in classical or ritually slaughtered cattle using metagenetics and microbiological analysis
The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of the slaughter technique (Halal vs. Classical slaughter) on the superficial contamination of cattle carcasses, by using traditional microbiological procedures and 16S rDNA metagenetics. The purpose was also to investigate the neck area to identify bacteria originating from the digestive or the respiratory tract. Twenty bovine carcasses (10 from each group) were swabbed at the slaughterhouse, where both slaughtering methods are practiced. Two swabbing areas were chosen: one “legal” zone of 1,600 cm2 (composed of zones from rump, flank, brisket and forelimb) and locally on the neck area (200 cm2). Samples were submitted to classical microbiology for aerobic Total Viable Counts (TVC) at 30°C and Enterobacteriaceae counts, while metagenetic analysis was performed on the same samples. The classical microbiological results revealed no significant differences between both slaughtering practices; with values between 3.95 and 4.87 log CFU/100 cm2 and 0.49 and 1.94 log CFU/100 cm2, for TVC and Enterobacteriaceae respectively. Analysis of pyrosequencing data showed that differences in the bacterial population abundance between slaughtering methods were mainly observed in the “legal” swabbing zone compared to the neck area. Bacterial genera belonging to the Actinobacteria phylum were more abundant in the “legal” swabbing zone in “Halal” samples, while Brevibacterium and Corynebacterium were encountered more in “Halal” samples, in all swabbing areas. This was also the case for Firmicutes bacterial populations (families of Aerococcaceae, Planococcaceae). Except for Planococcoceae, the analysis of Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) abundances of bacteria from the digestive or respiratory tract revealed no differences between groups. In conclusion, the slaughtering method does not influence the superficial microbiological pattern in terms of specific microbiological markers of the digestive or respiratory tract. However, precise analysis of taxonomy at the genus level taxonomy highlights differences between swabbing areas. Although not clearly proven in this study, differences in hygiene practices used during both slaughtering protocols could explain the differences in contamination between carcasses from both slaughtering groups
Prevalence of cutaneous adverse events associated with long-term disease-modifying therapy and their impact on health-related quality of life in patients with multiple sclerosis: a cross-sectional study
Improvements in quality of life over 2 years with cladribine tablets in people with relapsing multiple sclerosis: The CLARIFY-MS study
Cladribine tablets; Multiple sclerosis; Quality of lifePastilles de cladribina; Esclerosi mĂşltiple; Qualitat de vidaPastillas de cladribina; Esclerosis mĂşltiple; Calidad de vidaBackground:
Multiple sclerosis (MS) negatively affects health-related quality of life (HRQoL).
Objective:
To evaluate HRQoL in people with highly active relapsing MS treated with cladribine tablets (CladT; 3.5 mg/kg cumulative dose over 2 years) in CLARIFY-MS.
Methods:
Changes in the MS quality of life (MSQoL)-54 scores were analysed using a repeated mixed-effects linear model. Subgroup analyses were performed for participants who were pretreatment-naĂŻve and those pretreated with disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) before initiating CladT. Safety and tolerability of CladT were also assessed.
Results:
MSQoL-54 physical (mean change = 4.86; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 3.18, 6.53) and mental health (4.80; 95% CI = 3.13, 6.46) composite scores (primary endpoints) showed significant improvement at Month 24 versus Baseline (p < 0.0001). Changes in the MSQoL-54 scores were consistent across the pretreatment-naïve and DMT-pretreated subgroups. No new severe or opportunistic infections occurred. Most post-baseline lymphopenia events were Grade 1–2 in severity. Transient Grade-3 lymphopenia was observed in 19.7% (95/482) of participants. Grade-4 lymphopenia was not observed.
Conclusions:
CladT treatment significantly improved the mean MSQoL-54 physical and mental health composite scores over 2 years. CladT efficacy in HRQoL, relapse rates and Expanded Disability Status Scale scores demonstrates its multidimensional effects in MS treatment.This work was supported by Merck (CrossRef Funder ID: 10.13039/100009945)
- …