50 research outputs found

    South by Southwest: Faulkner and Greater Mexico

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    Optimizing Phase Settings of High-Frequency Voltage Regulators for Power Delivery Applications

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    Every new computer server introduced to the market aims at delivering the best tradeoff between performance and power consumption. This goal is crucial in the case of servers for cloud computing hardware infrastructure. In this context, power delivery (PD) experts are adopting higher frequency switching voltage regulators (VR) to reduce platform’s cost as well as total cost of ownership (TCO). Because of this fact, the real estate of components, such as voltage regulators and output inductors, is shrinking as VR frequency increases. As a consequence, achieving the best performance of the VR implies looking into phase shedding schemes, as well as EM coupled inductor design, among other techniques, to mitigate power losses. This paper focuses on the study of the best angle arrangement possible for high frequency VR applications, by exploring angle settings under light load scenarios, aiming to minimize VR’s power loss and output’s voltage ripple

    Care bundle for the prevention of peripheral venous catheter blood stream infections at a secondary care university hospital: implementation and results

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    Background: Venous catheterization for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes is part of routine hospital practice, as approximately 70% of hospitalized patients have a peripheral venous catheter (PVC). This practice, however, can lead to both local complications, (e.g., chemical, mechanical and infectious phlebitis) and systemic complications (e.g., PVC-related bloodstream infections [PVC-BSIs]). Surveillance data and activities are central to preventing nosocomial infections, phlebitis and improving patient care and safety. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of a care bundle on reducing PVC-BSI rates and phlebitis at a secondary care hospital in Mallorca, Spain. Methods: Three-phase intervention study targeting hospitalized patients with a PVC. The VINCat criteria were used to define PVC-BSIs and calculate incidence. In phase I (August-December 2015), we retrospectively analyzed baseline PVC-BSI rates at our hospital. In phase II (2016-2017), we conducted safety rounds and developed a care bundle with the goal of reducing PVC-BSI rates. In phase III (2018), we expanded the PVC-BSI bundle to prevent phlebitis and analyzed its impact. Results: The incidence of PVC-BSIs decreased from 0.48 episodes per 1000 patient-days in 2015 to 0.17 episodes per 1000 patient-days in 2018. The 2017 safety rounds also detected a reduction in phlebitis (from 4.6% of 2.6%). Overall, 680 healthcare professionals were trained in catheter care and five safety rounds were conducted to assess bedside care. Conclusion: Implementation of a care bundle significantly reduced PVC-BSI rates and phlebitis at our hospital. Continuous surveillance programs are needed to adapt measures to improve patient care and guarantee safety

    Effectiveness of influenza vaccination programme in preventing hospital admissions, Valencia, 2014/15 early results

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    Preliminary results for the 2014/15 season indicate low to null effect of vaccination against influenza A(H3N2)-related disease. As of week 5 2015, there have been 1,136 hospital admissions, 210 were due to influenza and 98% of subtype A strains were H3. Adjusted influenza vaccine effectiveness was 33% (range: 6–53%) overall and 40% (range: 13% to 59%) in those 65 years and older. Vaccination reduced by 44% (28–68%) the probability of admission with influenza.The study was funded by a contract between FISABIO and Sanofi-Pasteur

    Overproduction of a Trichoderma harzianum chitinase and analysis of its biotechnological potential to produce chitooligosaccharides

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    Trabajo presentado en la 7ª ed. del congreso internacional "FEMS" organizado por la Sociedad Española de Microbiología y la Federación Europea de Sociedades Microbiológicas en el Centro de Convenciones Feria Valencia (Valencia, España) durante los días 9 al 13 de julio de 2017.BACKGROUNDS: Chitooligosaccharides (COS) are β-(1,4)-linked oligomers of N-acetyl-glucosamine (GlcNAc) and glucosamine (GlcN) formed by chemical or enzymatic hydrolysis of chitosan or chitin. The growing biotechnological interest of COS in fields such as food or health increases the demand of the producing enzymes as well as their characterization and functional improvement. | OBJETIVES: Express a chitinase of 42 kDa from Trichoderma harzianum in a heterologous system, obtain protein levels compatible with its crystallization for the future protein structural resolution and evaluate the ability of the recombinant protein to produce COS. | METHODS: The chitinase gene cDNA from T. harzianum was expressed in Pichia pastoris using a restriction-free cloning strategy, production of heterologous protein was analysed and escalated up to a 5 L fermenter level. Recombinant protein was purified and some crystals were obtained which allows undertake the protein structural resolution. Synthesis of oligosaccharides from different substrates were evaluated and optimized using the recombinant enzyme. HPAEC-PAD on a Dionex ICS3000 system and Mass Spectrometry were used in the reaction studies and product characterization. | CONCLUSIONS: A chitinase of 42 kDa from T. harzianum was overexpressed in P. pastoris, the recombinant protein was purified, characterized and crystallized for the protein structural resolution. Production of COS mediated by this enzyme was evaluated and some of the molecules formed were characterized.N

    Dust environment and dynamical history of a sample of short-period comets: II. 81P/Wild 2 and 103P/Hartley 2

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    Aims. This paper is a continuation of the first paper in this series, where we presented an extended study of the dust environment of a sample of short-period comets and their dynamical history. On this occasion, we focus on comets 81P/Wild 2 and 103P/Hartley 2, which are of special interest as targets of the spacecraft missions Stardust and EPOXI. Methods. As in the previous study, we used two sets of observational data: a set of images, acquired at Sierra Nevada and Lulin observatories, and the Afρ data as a function of the heliocentric distance provided by the amateur astronomical association Cometas-Obs. The dust environment of comets (dust loss rate, ejection velocities, and size distribution of the particles) was derived from our Monte Carlo dust tail code. To determine their dynamical history we used the numerical integrator Mercury 6.2 to ascertain the time spent by these objects in the Jupiter family Comet region. Results. From the dust analysis, we conclude that both 81P/Wild 2 and 103P/Hartley 2 are dusty comets, with an annual dust production rate of 2.8 × 109 kg yr-1 and (0.4-1.5) × 109 kg yr-1, respectively. From the dynamical analysis, we determined their time spent in the Jupiter family Comet region as ~40 yr in the case of 81P/Wild 2 and ~1000 yr for comet 103P/Hartley 2. These results imply that 81P/Wild 2 is the youngest and the most active comet of the eleven short-period comets studied so far, which tends to favor the correlation between the time spent in JFCs region and the comet activity previously discussed

    Immigration and the Border Politics and Policy in the New Latino Century

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    Contributors address immigration and border politics and policies, focusing on the fourth wave of immigration and the lives of Mexican and Latino immigrants.Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I: Setting the Stage-Binational Lives -- Chapter One: Formal and Informal Institutions in the Construction of Transnational Lives -- Chapter Two: Looking North and the Immigrant's Social Imaginary -- Part II: Immigrants and Civic Life -- Chapter Three: Latino Immigrants -- Chapter Four: The Political Consequences of Latino Immigrant Transnational Ties -- Chapter Five: From Naturalized Citizen to Voter -- Chapter Six: At Home Abroad? -- Part III: Immigration and Public Policy -- Chapter Seven: U.S. and Mexican Schools as Regulators of Dropout Rates for Chicano Students -- Chapter Eight: Eligibility, Enrollment, Utilization -- Chapter Nine: Cultural Sensitivity or Cultural Innovation? -- Chapter Ten: Policy Actors and the Immigration Policy Process -- Part IV: Political Reactions to Immigration -- Chapter Eleven: Rhetoric and Realities -- Chapter Twelve: Indecent Proposal? -- Chapter Thirteen: Proposition 200 in Arizona -- Chapter Fourteen: Are Anti-Immigrant Statements Racist or Nativist? -- Part V: Immigrants and Leadership -- Chapter Fifteen: Latino Youth Activists in the Age of Globalization -- Chapter Sixteen: The Emerging Community Leadership and Transnational Politics of Mexican National Immigrants in New England -- Contributors -- IndexContributors address immigration and border politics and policies, focusing on the fourth wave of immigration and the lives of Mexican and Latino immigrants.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
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