28 research outputs found

    Research ethics committees: agents of research policy?

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    The purpose of this commentary is to describe the unintended effects ethics committees may have on research and to analyse the regulatory and administrative problems of clinical trials. DISCUSSION: The Finnish law makes an arbitrary distinction between medical research and other health research, and the European Union's directive for good clinical trials further differentiates drug trials. The starting point of current rules is that clinical trials are lesser in the interest of patients and society than routine health care. However, commercial interests are not considered unethical. The contrasting procedures in research and normal health care may tempt physicians to continue introducing innovations into practice by relying on unsystematic and uncontrolled observations. Tedious and bureaucratic rules may lead to the disappearance of trials initiated by researchers. Trying to accommodate the special legislative requirements for new drug trials into more complex interventions may result in poor designs with unreliable results and increased costs. Meanwhile, current legal requirements may undermine the morale of ethics committee members. CONCLUSION: The aims and the quality of the work of ethics committees should be evaluated, and a reformulation of the EU directive on good clinical trials is needed. Ethical judgement should consider the specific circumstance of each trial, and ethics committees should not foster poor research for legal reasons

    Mobile Phones and Social Signal Processing for Analysis and Understanding of Dyadic Conversations

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    Social Signal Processing is the domain aimed at bridging the social intelligence gap between humans and machines via modeling, analysis and synthesis of nonverbal behavior in social interactions. One of the main challenges of the domain is to sense unobtrusively the behavior of social interaction participants, one of the key conditions to preserve the spontaneity and naturalness of the interactions under exam. In this respect, mobile devices offer a major opportunity because they are equipped with a wide array of sensors that, while capturing the behavior of their users with an unprecedented depth, are still invisible. This is particularly important because mobile devices are part of the everyday life of a large number of individuals and, hence, they can be used to investigate and sense natural and spontaneous scenarios

    Evaluation of the selfitis behavior scale across two Persian-speaking countries, Iran and Afghanistan: advanced psychometric testing in a large-scale sample

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    Selfitis—which started off as a hoax but has now been investigated empirically—has been defined as the obsessive–compulsive desire to take photos of oneself and post them on social media. Furthermore, a scale to assess selfitis, the Selfitis Behavior Scale (SBS), has been developed. This study applied advanced psychometric testing methods, including confirmatory factor analysis (utilizing classical test theory) and the Rasch model (utilizing modern test theory), to examine the psychometric properties among Persian speakers (in Iran and Afghanistan). The participants (3163 Iranians and 1100 Afghanistani) completed an online survey posted on Instagram pages. The SBS showed promising properties, including satisfactory reliability (e.g., internal consistency and test–retest reliability), excellent construct validity (e.g., good fit in the CFA and Rasch models), and acceptable measurement invariance across Iranian and Afghan samples. Consequently, the SBS is a valid and reliable instrument for assessing selfitis among Persian-speaking samples

    An outbreak of gastroenteritis from a non-chlorinated community water supply

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    Study objective: To determine the source and the extent of a community wide outbreak of gastroenteritis. Design: A matched case-control study with postal questionnaires. Subtyping of campylobacter strains by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Setting: A rural municipality with a population of 8600 in southern Finland, August 2000. Two thirds of the population receive non-chlorinated ground water from the municipal water supply. Participants: Cases were randomly selected among residents of the municipality who contacted the municipal health centre because of gastroenteritis and had illness onset between 31 July and 20 August 2000. Community controls were identified from the population registry and matched according to sex, year of birth, and postal code. Main results: Four hundred and sixty three persons contacted the municipal health centre because of gastroenteritis. Campylobacter jejuni was isolated from stool samples of 24 persons. One hundred and thirty seven cases and 388 controls were enrolled in the case-control study. In multivariate analysis, drinking unboiled water from the municipal supply was significantly associated with illness (odds ratio 11.1, 95% confidence interval 1.4 to 90.2). C jejuni was isolated from one tap water sample. The water isolate and all but one of the patient isolates were indistinguishable by PFGE. Conclusions: Combining epidemiological investigation with molecular subtyping methods provided strong evidence that water was the source of the outbreak. Non-chlorinated small ground water systems may be susceptible to waterborne outbreaks and constitute a risk to rural populations

    Occurrence and mobility of thiolated arsenic in legacy mine tailings.

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    We studied the occurrence of dissolved thiolated Arsenic (As) in legacy tailings systems in Ontario and Nova Scotia, Canada, and used aqueous and mineralogical speciation analyses to assess its governing geochemical controls. Surface-accessible and inundated tailings in Cobalt, Ontario, contained ~1 wt-% As mainly hosted in secondary arsenate minerals (erythrite, yukonite, and others) and traces of primary sulfide minerals (cobaltite, gersdorffite and others). Significant fractions of thiolated As (up to 5.9 % of total dissolved As) were detected in aqueous porewater and surface water samples from these sites, comprising mostly monothioarsenate, and smaller amounts of di- and tri-thioarsenates as well as methylated thioarsenates. Tailings at the Goldenville and Montague sites in Nova Scotia contained less (<0.5 wt-%) As, hosted mostly in arsenopyrite and As-bearing pyrite, than the Cobalt sites, but exhibited higher proportions of dissolved thiolated As (up to 17.3 % of total dissolved As, mostly mono- and di-thioarsenate and traces of tri-thioarsenate). Dissolved thiolated As was most abundant in sub-oxic porewaters and inundated tailings samples across the studied sites, and its concentrations were strongly related to the prevailing redox conditions and porewater hydrochemistry, and to a lesser extent, the As-bearing mineralogy. Our novel results demonstrate that thiolated As species play an important role in the cycling of As in mine waste systems and surrounding environments, and should be considered in mine waste management strategies for high-As sites

    Outcome signature genes in breast cancer: is there a unique set?

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