281 research outputs found
Characterization of noncontact piezoelectric transducer with conically shaped piezoelement
The characterization of a dynamic surface displacement transducer (IQI Model 501) by a noncontact method is presented. The transducer is designed for ultrasonic as well as acoustic emission measurements and, according to the manufacturer, its characteristic features include a flat frequency response range which is from 50 to 1000 kHz and a quality factor Q of less than unity. The characterization is based on the behavior of the transducer as a receiver and involves exciting the transducer directly by transient pulse input stress signals of quasi-electrostatic origin and observing its response in a digital storage oscilloscope. Theoretical models for studying the response of the transducer to pulse input stress signals and for generating pulse stress signals are presented. The characteristic features of the transducer which include the central frequency f sub o, quality factor Q, and flat frequency response range are obtained by this noncontact characterization technique and they compare favorably with those obtained by a tone burst method which are also presented
The Indochinese Refugee Movement and the Launch of Canada’s Private Sponsorship Program
Introduction to 32.2: Special IssueThe Indochinese Refugee Movement and the Launch of Canada’s Private Sponsorship ProgramGuest Editors: Michael J. Molloy and James C. Simeo
York 2010 International Conference : Forced Displacement, Protection Standards and the Supervision of the 1951 Convention and its 1967 Protocol and other International Instruments, Centre for Refugee Studies, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, May 17-20, 2010; evaluation report
DraftThis is a brief evaluation report regarding the York 2010 International Conference on “Forced Displacement, Protection Standards and Supervision”. Although there were few respondents, all international conference participants were invited to complete and submit an online questionnaire. It was hoped that a consensus could be forged among the expert participants on a number of legal issues and concerns raised during the course of the conference
One-dimensional wave propagation in rods of variable cross section: A WKBJ solution
As an important step in the characterization of a particular dynamic surface displacement transducer (IQI Model 501), a one-dimensional wave propagation in isotropic nonpiezoelectric and piezoelectric rods of variable cross section are presented. With the use of the Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin-Jeffreys (WKBJ) approximate solution technique, an approximate formula, which relates the ratio of the amplitudes of a propagating wave observed at any two locations along the rod to the ratio of the cross sectional radii at these respective locations, is derived. The domains of frequency for which the approximate solution is valid are discussed for piezoelectric and nonpiezoelectric materials
Terrorism and Asylum (RLI Working Paper Series Mini-volume)
Contents
31. Introduction (page 1)
Guest editor: James C. Simeon
32. Refugees, terrorism and Article 1 of the Refugee Convention (page 6)
Patricia Tuitt
33. An introduction to the common security narrative of terrorism and asylum and its influence on Austrian migration law (page 17)
Julia Kienast
34. The fight against terrorism and the need for international protection: the Hungarian solution (page 32)
Barbara Kőhalmi and Anita Rozália Nagy-Nádasdi
35. Manufacturing fear: The social component of anti-immigration policies in the United States (page 46)
Selina March
36. Terrorism and exclusion from asylum in international and national law (page 56)
James C. Simeo
Simulated cost-effectiveness and long-term clinical outcomes of addiction care and antibiotic therapy strategies for patients with injection drug use-associated infective endocarditis
Importance: Emerging evidence supports the use of outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) and, in many cases, partial oral antibiotic therapy for the treatment of injection drug use-associated infective endocarditis (IDU-IE); however, long-term outcomes and cost-effectiveness remain unknown.
Objective: To compare the added value of inpatient addiction care services and the cost-effectiveness and clinical outcomes of alternative antibiotic treatment strategies for patients with IDU-IE.
Design, Setting, and Participants: This decision analytical modeling study used a validated microsimulation model to compare antibiotic treatment strategies for patients with IDU-IE. Model inputs were derived from clinical trials and observational cohort studies. The model included all patients with injection opioid drug use (N = 5 million) in the US who were eligible to receive OPAT either in the home or at a postacute care facility. Costs were annually discounted at 3%. Cost-effectiveness was evaluated from a health care sector perspective over a lifetime starting in 2020. Probabilistic sensitivity, scenario, and threshold analyses were performed to address uncertainty.
Interventions: The model simulated 4 treatment strategies: (1) 4 to 6 weeks of inpatient intravenous (IV) antibiotic therapy along with opioid detoxification (usual care strategy), (2) 4 to 6 weeks of inpatient IV antibiotic therapy along with inpatient addiction care services that offered medication for opioid use disorder (usual care/addiction care strategy), (3) 3 weeks of inpatient IV antibiotic therapy along with addiction care services followed by OPAT (OPAT strategy), and (4) 3 weeks of inpatient IV antibiotic therapy along with addiction care services followed by partial oral antibiotic therapy (partial oral antibiotic strategy).
Main Outcomes and Measures: Mean percentage of patients completing treatment for IDU-IE, deaths associated with IDU-IE, life expectancy (measured in life-years [LYs]), mean cost per person, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs).
Results: All modeled scenarios were initialized with 5 million individuals (mean age, 42 years; range, 18-64 years; 70% male) who had a history of injection opioid drug use. The usual care strategy resulted in 18.63 LYs at a cost of 412 150 per person. Compared with the OPAT strategy, the partial oral antibiotic strategy had an ICER of 100 000 per LY threshold.
Conclusions and Relevance: In this decision analytical modeling study, incorporation of OPAT or partial oral antibiotic approaches along with addiction care services for the treatment of patients with IDU-IE was associated with increases in the number of people completing treatment, decreases in mortality, and savings in cost compared with the usual care strategy of providing inpatient IV antibiotic therapy alone
Image‐based computational fluid dynamics for estimating pressure drop and fractional flow reserve across iliac artery stenosis: a comparison with in‐vivo measurements
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and time‐resolved phase‐contrast magnetic resonance imaging (PC‐MRI) are potential non‐invasive methods for the assessment of the severity of arterial stenoses. Fractional flow reserve (FFR) is the current “gold standard” for determining stenosis severity in the coronary arteries but is an invasive method requiring insertion of a pressure wire. CFD derived FFR (vFFR) is an alternative to traditional catheter derived FFR now available commercially for coronary artery assessment, however, it can potentially be applied to a wider range of vulnerable vessels such as the iliac arteries. In this study CFD simulations are used to assess the ability of vFFR in predicting the stenosis severity in a patient with a stenosis of 77% area reduction (>50% diameter reduction) in the right iliac artery. Variations of vFFR, overall pressure drop and flow split between the vessels were observed by using different boundary conditions. Correlations between boundary condition parameters and resulting flow variables are presented. The study concludes that vFFR has good potential to characterise iliac artery stenotic disease
Are Foreign Firms Privileged By Their Host Governments? Evidence From The 2000 World Business Environment Survey
Using the data from World Business Environment Survey (WBES) on over 10,000 firms across eighty one countries, this paper finds preliminary evidence that foreign firms enjoy significant regulatory advantages - as perceived by the firms themselves - over domestic firms. The findings on regulatory advantages of foreign firms hold with a variety of alternative measures of regulations and with or without firm- and country-level attributes and industry and country controls. There is also evidence that foreign firms' regulatory advantages are especially substantial vis-a-vis the politically weak domestic firms. Furthermore, the regulatory advantages of foreign firms appear stronger in corrupt countries than in non-corrupt countries
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