6,490 research outputs found

    An integrated approach to the prevention and promotion of health in the workplace: a review from international experience

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    This paper reports the results of a review of health promotion programmes in the workplace. The aim of this review was to ascertain evidence of success in health promotion in the workplace. Workplace health promotion (WHP) programmes help to improve employee health by optimising an organisationā€™s overall economic, structural and cultural environment. It also tends to reach the healthy workers at the best companies, which are employing the healthier individuals in the formal sectors of the economy. The workplace is viewed as an effective setting for health promotion in order to achieve the goal of ā€œHealth for Allā€, and for other benefits such as reducing and controlling healthcare costs as a result of the growing epidemics of communicable andĀ  non-communicable diseases. Strategies to facilitate workplace health promotion include health education, behaviour-directed prevention, and incorporating the organisationā€™s development strategy into human resources policies to make prevention the essential part of the entire corporate strategy. A healthy, motivated and contented workforce is fundamental to the future social and economic wellbeing of any nation. The protection of employees against exposure to various occupational hazards can be achieved through implementing integrated programmes to improve employeesā€™ wellness and promoting a health- and safety-oriented culture in the workplace

    On differential uniformity of maps that may hide an algebraic trapdoor

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    We investigate some differential properties for permutations in the affine group, of a vector space V over the binary field, with respect to a new group operation āˆ˜\circ, inducing an alternative vector space structure on VV .Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1411.768

    Knowledge and experiences of needle prick injuries (NPI) among nursing students at a

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    Background: Healthcare workers and students on training who are directly involved in treating and nursing patients face a great risk of acquiring blood-borne infections from the workplace. Needle prick injuries (NPI) are the commonest route by which such infections are transmitted from patients to healthcare providers. Nursing students on training are no exception, as they get exposed to acciden- tal needle pricks and contamination during their hospital activities. Lack of appropriate resources, knowledge and skills, coupled with the unavailability of the universal standard precautionary procedures and compliance thereof, constitute high risks for needle prick injuries. Adequate knowledge and adherence to safety practices could prevent the occurrence of NPI and the related consequences. A survey was conducted among nursing students at a specific university in Gauteng to assess their knowledge of NPI, to identify and describe factors that contribute to the occurrence of NPI, and to discover the circumstances of needle prick accidents among the targeted group of students. Methods: A cross-sectional quantitative survey was conducted among nursing students from the second to the fourth year of study registered at the specific university for the 2007 academic year. Questionnaires were hand delivered to a convenient sample of nursing students attending mandatory nursing classes. Those who consented signed a consent form. Participants completed and handed back the questionnaires to the researchers on the same day that they were delivered. Data collected included factors contributing to NPI and high-risk procedures leading to NPI, as perceived by these students. A knowledge assessment of NPI guidelines, policies and protocols and prevalence of NPI among these students was also done. Results: A response rate of 96 (74%) was achieved. The average age of the respondents was 23 years, with a minimum age of 18 and a maximum age of 35. The sample consisted of more females than males. The majority of respondents were in the second year of study. The majority (56%) rated needle recapping, disposing used needles (28.1%) and cleaning sharp instruments (56.3%) as extremely high-risk procedures. Furthermore, 30.2% of the respondents thought suturing and blood taking (33.3%) were high-risk procedures for NPI, while 25% rated administering injections, 35.5% rated blood transfusion and 74.8% rated the lack of adequate containers for sharps disposal to be highly associated with the risk of NPI. A significant proportion of the respondents rated the lack of knowledge about NPI (policies and protocols) at institutions of clinical training as an extremely high risk, followed by the lack of accompaniment and in-service training. Only 16.0% of the respondents had suffered NPI and only 8.3% had reported the incident. Conclusion: Procedures rated as high risk were considered to be most likely associated with the occurrence of NPI. Appropriate guide- lines, adequate knowledge and the enforcement of compliance with standard precautionary measures could reduce the incidence of NPI among nursing students. South African Family Practice Vol. 50 (5) 2008: pp. 48-48

    Manufacturing cement-based materials and building products via extrusion: From laboratory to factory

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    Manufacturing is critical to the economies of the UK and many other countries in the rest of the world. However, manufacturing of cement-based materials and building products predominantly remains based on old batch processing such as casting and pressing technologies and this may limit the applications and performance of the materials and products formed. In this paper, research is reported on transforming manufacturing of precast cement-based materials and building products from in batches to continuous processes via extrusion. Techniques used for producing plastic products are transferred into manufacturing cement-based building products like flat and corrugated sheet tiles, down pipes, door/window frames, door panels, solid wall/facade panels, honeycomb wall/facade panels etc. at laboratory and factory scales. In combination with sustainable cementitious materials with low carbon and low energy as matrix, this enables sustainable building products with key characteristics required by the 21st century can be manufactured via extrusion. The cement-based building products extrusion technique has been successfully transferred to industry. For instance, fibre reinforced cement-based partition wall panels, with a honeycomb cross section as large as 600 mm wide and 90 mm high, have been produced by a continuous extrusion process in a precast concrete products factory in Hangzhou, China.European Commission Seventh Framework Programme, (grant agreement no. 262954) and from the Hong Kong Research Grants Council through grants 6091/00E, 6226/01E, 6273/03E and 6167/06

    Digit-only sauropod pes trackways from China - evidence of swimming or a preservational phenomenon?

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    For more than 70 years unusual sauropod trackways have played a pivotal role in debates about the swimming ability of sauropods. Most claims that sauropods could swim have been based on manus-only or manus-dominated trackways. However none of these incomplete trackways has been entirely convincing, and most have proved to be taphonomic artifacts, either undertracks or the result of differential depth of penetration of manus and pes tracks, but otherwise showed the typical pattern of normal walking trackways. Here we report an assemblage of unusual sauropod tracks from the Lower Cretaceous Hekou Group of Gansu Province, northern China, characterized by the preservation of only the pes claw traces, that we interpret as having been left by walking, not buoyant or swimming, individuals. They are interpreted as the result of animals moving on a soft mud-silt substrate, projecting their claws deeply to register their traces on an underlying sand layer where they gained more grip during progression. Other sauropod walking trackways on the same surface with both pes and manus traces preserved, were probably left earlier on relatively firm substrates that predated the deposition of soft mud and silt . Presently, there is no convincing evidence of swimming sauropods from their trackways, which is not to say that sauropods did not swim at all

    Accelerated gas-liquid visible light photoredox catalysis with continuous-flow photochemical microreactors

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    In this protocol, we describe the construction and use of an operationally simple photochemical microreactor for gas-liquid photoredox catalysis using visible light. The general procedure includes details on how to set up the microreactor appropriately with inlets for gaseous reagents and organic starting materials, and it includes examples of how to use it to achieve continuous-flow preparation of disulfides or trifluoromethylated heterocycles and thiols. The reported photomicroreactors are modular, inexpensive and can be prepared rapidly from commercially available parts within 1 h even by nonspecialists. Interestingly, typical reaction times of gas-liquid visible light photocatalytic reactions performed in microflow are lower (in the minute range) than comparable reactions performed as a batch process (in the hour range). This can be attributed to the improved irradiation efficiency of the reaction mixture and the enhanced gas-liquid mass transfer in the segmented gas-liquid flow regime

    A transcriptomic snapshot of early molecular communication between Pasteuria penetrans and Meloidogyne incognita

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    Ā© The Author(s). 2018Background: Southern root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita (Kofoid and White, 1919), Chitwood, 1949 is a key pest of agricultural crops. Pasteuria penetrans is a hyperparasitic bacterium capable of suppressing the nematode reproduction, and represents a typical coevolved pathogen-hyperparasite system. Attachment of Pasteuria endospores to the cuticle of second-stage nematode juveniles is the first and pivotal step in the bacterial infection. RNA-Seq was used to understand the early transcriptional response of the root-knot nematode at 8 h post Pasteuria endospore attachment. Results: A total of 52,485 transcripts were assembled from the high quality (HQ) reads, out of which 582 transcripts were found differentially expressed in the Pasteuria endospore encumbered J2 s, of which 229 were up-regulated and 353 were down-regulated. Pasteuria infection caused a suppression of the protein synthesis machinery of the nematode. Several of the differentially expressed transcripts were putatively involved in nematode innate immunity, signaling, stress responses, endospore attachment process and post-attachment behavioral modification of the juveniles. The expression profiles of fifteen selected transcripts were validated to be true by the qRT PCR. RNAi based silencing of transcripts coding for fructose bisphosphate aldolase and glucosyl transferase caused a reduction in endospore attachment as compared to the controls, whereas, silencing of aspartic protease and ubiquitin coding transcripts resulted in higher incidence of endospore attachment on the nematode cuticle. Conclusions: Here we provide evidence of an early transcriptional response by the nematode upon infection by Pasteuria prior to root invasion. We found that adhesion of Pasteuria endospores to the cuticle induced a down-regulated protein response in the nematode. In addition, we show that fructose bisphosphate aldolase, glucosyl transferase, aspartic protease and ubiquitin coding transcripts are involved in modulating the endospore attachment on the nematode cuticle. Our results add new and significant information to the existing knowledge on early molecular interaction between M. incognita and P. penetrans.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio

    Estrogen Receptor-Ī± Mediates Diethylstilbestrol-Induced Feminization of the Seminal Vesicle in Male Mice

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    Background: Studies have shown that perinatal exposure to the synthetic estrogen diethylstilbestrol (DES) leads to feminization of the seminal vesicle (SV) in male mice, as illustrated by tissue hyperplasia, ectopic expression of the major estrogen-inducible uterine secretory protein lactoferrin (LF), and reduced expression of SV secretory protein IV (SVS IV)

    Anomalous tqĪ³tq\gamma coupling effects in exclusive radiative B-meson decays

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    The top-quark FCNC processes will be searched for at the CERN LHC, which are correlated with the B-meson decays. In this paper, we study the effects of top-quark anomalous interactions tqĪ³tq\gamma in the exclusive radiative Bā†’Kāˆ—Ī³B\to K^*\gamma and Bā†’ĻĪ³B\to\rho\gamma decays. With the current experimental data of the branching ratios, the direct CP and the isospin asymmetries, bounds on the coupling ĪŗtcRĪ³\kappa_{tcR}^{\gamma} from Bā†’Kāˆ—Ī³B\to K^*\gamma and ĪŗtuRĪ³\kappa_{tuR}^{\gamma} from Bā†’ĻĪ³B\to \rho\gamma decays are derived, respectively. The bound on āˆ£ĪŗtcRĪ³āˆ£|\kappa_{tcR}^{\gamma}| from B(Bā†’Kāˆ—Ī³){\mathcal B}(B\to K^{*}\gamma) is generally compatible with that from B(Bā†’XsĪ³){\mathcal B}(B\to X_{s}\gamma). However, the isospin asymmetry Ī”(Kāˆ—Ī³)\Delta(K^{*}\gamma) further restrict the phase of ĪŗtcRĪ³\kappa_{tcR}^{\gamma}, and the combined bound results in the upper limit, B(tā†’cĪ³)<0.21\mathcal B(t\to c\gamma)<0.21%, which is lower than the CDF result. For real ĪŗtcRĪ³\kappa_{tcR}^{\gamma}, the upper bound on B(tā†’cĪ³)\mathcal B(t\to c\gamma) is about of the same order as the 5Ļƒ5\sigma discovery potential of ATLAS with an integrated luminosity of 10fbāˆ’110 {\rm fb}^{-1}. For Bā†’ĻĪ³B\to\rho\gamma decays, the NP contribution is enhanced by a large CKM factor āˆ£Vud/Vtdāˆ£|V_{ud}/V_{td}|, and the constraint on tuĪ³tu\gamma coupling is rather restrictive, B(tā†’uĪ³)<1.44Ɨ10āˆ’5\mathcal B(t\to u\gamma)<1.44\times 10^{-5}. With refined measurements to be available at the LHCb and the future super-B factories, we can get close correlations between Bā†’VĪ³B\to V \gamma and the rare tā†’qĪ³t\to q\gamma decays, which will be studied directly at the LHC ATLAS and CMS.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, pdflate
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