6,220 research outputs found
Screening tests, information, and the health-education gradient
The association between health outcomes and education - the health-education gradient - is widely documented but little is known about its source. Using microeconomic data on a sample of individuals aged 50+ in eight European countries, we find that education and cognitive skills (such as verbal fluency) are associated with a greater propensity for standard screening tests (mammography and colonoscopy). In order to study the role of information on the decision to screen, we test whether the health-education gradient varies with the quality of the information provided by the health care system, as proxied by the quality of the General Practitioner. Using an Instrumental Variable approach to control for the potential endogeneity of the GP quality score, we find evidence of a strong and significant complementarity between education and quality of primary care. We interpret this result as evidence that health-education gradient can be explained, at least in part, by the fact that better educated individuals are more able to process and internalize health related information as provided by GPs
Integrated structure electromagnetic optimization of large space antenna reflectors
The requirements for extremely precise and powerful large space antenna reflectors have motivated the development of a procedure for shape control of the reflector surface. A mathematical optimization procedure has been developed which improves antenna performance while minimizing necessary shape correction effort. In contrast to previous work which proposed controlling the rms distortion error of the surface thereby indirectly improving antenna performance, the current work includes electromagnetic (EM) performance calculations as an integral of the control procedure. The application of the procedure to a radiometer design with a tetrahedral truss backup structure demonstrates the potential for significant improvement. The results indicate the benefit of including EM performance calculations in procedures for shape control of large space antenna reflectors
FRI0569 SERUM AMYLOID A: ASSESSMENT OF REFERENCE VALUE AND COMPARISON OF SERUM CONCENTRATION IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS AND PATIENTS WITH BEHÇET SYNDROME
Background:Serum amyloid A (SAA) is a family of acute-phase reactants. The rise of SAA concentration in blood circulation is a clinical marker of active inflammation in several auto-inflammatory diseases, including Behçet syndrome (BS). Despite its practical and analytical advantages, SAA measurement by ELISA has been mainly used as a research tool rather than for the routine laboratory testing due to the lack of a robust reference data in the literature.Objectives:Using the recommended procedures of the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC), we aimed to develop the SAA reference interval for a well-defined Italian healthy population (HC). Secondly, we compared the SAA serum concentration between HC and patients with BS.Methods:Sera specimens were collected from adult healthy blood donors after rule out the exclusion criteria (inflammatory disorders, ongoing infections, pregnancy and breastfeeding, obesity, using oral contraceptives, use of any medication, or consumed of alcohol), and from unselected BS patients fulfilling the International Study Group (ISG) classification criteria. Serum SAA concentrations were detected and quantified with a commercial solid phase sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Human SAA ELISA kit, IBL International GmbH, Hamburg, Germany) used on automated analyzer (Immunomat, SERION Diagnostic, Alifax, Polverara (PD), Italy) according to the manufacturer's protocol. Statistical analysis and data normalization of HC SAA values were carried out to determine the reference cut off. In the second step of the study, HC and BS patients were stratified in two groups according to the cut-off value.Results:We recruited 141 HC (84 M and 57 F; mean age, 44.5±13.2 years) and 63 BS patients (39 M and 24 F mean age, 45.3±13.2 years) assayed for SAA. The reference cut-off was calculated as 225 ng/ml. No statistically significant differences were found between males and females when SAA means were compared, suggesting that not gender-partitioned reference range is recommended for this analyte. After the stratification according to the cut-off value (group 1: 225 ng/ml), we found 53/63 (84.1%) BS patients and 133/141 (94.3%) HC with concentration less than cut-off value, respectively. We identified 10/63 (15.9%) BS patients and 8/141 (5.7%) HC within the second group. The difference was statistically significant (p=0.0177; OR: 3.14, 95% CI: 1.17-3.38).Conclusion:This study allowed to define a widely accepted reference cut-off for the SAA detected by ELISA, responding to an unmet need of laboratory medicine. We found a statistically significant higher frequency of BS patients compared with HC when SAA values is higher than cut-off (225 ng/ml). This preliminary data could add significant information for better clarify the role of SAA as biomarker of inflammation and in guidance of clinical practice. Further studies will be required to stratify SAA values in relation to disease activity of BS.Disclosure of Interests:Teresa Carbone: None declared, Maria Carmela Padula: None declared, Vito Pafundi: None declared, Carlo Schievano: None declared, Nancy Lascaro: None declared, Angela Padula: None declared, Pietro Leccese: None declared, Salvatore D'Angelo Consultant of: AbbVie, Biogen, BMS, Celgene, Eli Lilly, MSD, Novartis, and UCB, Speakers bureau: AbbVie, BMS, Celgene, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Pfizer, and Sanof
A First Step for the Molecular Characterization of Neurological Involvement of Behçet Syndrome: an Italian Pivotal Study
Behçet syndrome (BS) is a vasculitis characterized by several clinical manifestations including the rare neurological involvement (neuro-BS, NBS). The aim of our pivotal study was to investigate the mutational status of several inflammation-related genes in a cohort of Italian patients with and without the neurological involvement (20 NBS vs 40 no-NBS patients). The preliminary in silico single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) selection and primer design were performed by NCBI Primer-Blast tool. Genomic DNA was isolated and amplified using PCR. PCR amplicons were sequenced and bioinformatically analysed. Twelve tagSNPs were selected and genotyped: ERAP1 rs30187, rs17482078, and rs27044; IL10 rs1800872 and rs1518111, IL12A rs17810546, IL23R rs17375018, IL23R-IL12RB2 rs924080, STAT4 rs7572482, CCR1 rs7616215, KLRC4 rs2617170, and UBAC2 rs3825427. ERAP1 and IL23R SNPs showed statistically significant higher frequencies in NBS group than no-NBS. ERAP1 rs30187 AA was more common in no-NBS patients (20.0% NBS vs 47.5% no-NBS; p < 0.05), while rs17482078 GA frequency was higher in NBS patients (55.0% NBS vs 22.5% no-NBS; p < 0.05, OR: 4.21). IL23R rs17375018 GG was more frequent in NBS group (65.0% NBS vs 40.0% no-NBS; p < 0.05), according to a previous finding. No other statistically significant differences were found. In conclusion, ERAP1 and IL23R SNPs were found associated with neurological involvement of BS. Additional and larger analyses were required to verify our preliminary findings
The repayment of unsecured debt by European households
The existing literature that estimates the incidence of arrears relies on either household survey data or administrative data derived from the lender's records of their borrowers. But estimates based on these different sources will give different estimates of arrears. Moreover, the estimates are not useful for policy analysis or for a bank's lending decision, since they ignore the fact that some households do not borrow. The paper discusses the selection issues that are involved in using either source of data and is the first paper to bound the estimate of the household's underlying propensity to repay. To demonstrate the methodology, it uses data from the European Union Survey of Income and Living Conditions survey for 2008 to estimate the factors that affect repayment among Eurozone households
Informal Credit Markets, Judicial Costs and Consumer Credit: Evidence from Firm Level Data
CSEF Working Paper No. 15
Small size boundary effects on two-pion interferometry
The Bose-Einstein correlations of two identically charged pions are derived
when these particles, the most abundantly produced in relativistic heavy ion
collisions, are confined in finite volumes. Boundary effects on single pion
spectrum are also studied. Numerical results emphasize that conventional
formulation usually adopted to describe two-pion interferometry should not be
used when the source size is small, since this is the most sensitive case to
boundary effects. Specific examples are considered for better illustration.Comment: more discussion on Figure4 and diffuse boundar
Spatial and temporal analysis of the distribution of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Buenos Aires Province, and its relation to rodent distribution, agricultural and demographic variables
We studied the spatial and temporal distribution of Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) cases from 1998 to 2001 in the Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. HPS is a severe viral disease whose natural reservoir are rodents of the subfamily Sigmodontinae (Muridae) and which occurs in many countries of South and North America. We considered two spatial arrangements: cells of 18.5 x 18.5 km2; and departments, the political subdivisions of the province, as spatial units. We tested the departure from a Poisson distribution of the number of cases per cell and per month with the Variance/Mean index, while the interaction between spatial and temporal clustering was tested by means of the Knox and Mantel tests. We constructed probability maps in which the HPS rates per department were considered Poisson variates according to population, area and the product of population and area. We analysed the relation between rodent distribution, environmental and demographic variables and HPS cases conducting preliminary univariate analysis from which we selected variables to enter in general linearized models. We found that both the spatial and temporal distribution of cases is strongly aggregated. The spatiotemporal interaction appears to be related to a strong seasonality and the existence of particular ecological conditions rather than epidemic transmission of the disease. The main explanatory variables for the distribution of HPS cases among the departments of the Buenos Aires Province were human population, the distribution of the rodent Oxymycterus rufus and evapotranspiration. The last two variables are probably indicators of favourable ecological conditions for the reservoirs, which encompass other variables not taken into account in this study.Fil:Busch, M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Cavia, R. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Carbajo, A.E. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil:Padula, P. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina
A Preliminary Analysis of Anthropogenic and Natural Impacts on a Volcanic Lake Ecosystem in Southern Italy by UAV-Based Monitoring
Lakes play an important role in providing various ecosystem services. However, stressors such as climate change, land use, or land-cover change threaten the ecological functions of lakes. National and international legislations address these threats and establish consistent, long-term monitoring schemes. Remote sensing techniques based on the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) have recently been demonstrated to provide accurate and low-cost spatio-temporal views for the assessment of the ecological status of aquatic ecosystems and the identification of areas at risk of contamination. Few studies have been carried out so far on the employment of these tools in the monitoring of lakes. Therefore, high-resolution UAV surveys were used to analyse and evaluate natural and anthropogenic impacts on the habitat status of a volcanic lake in a protected area. Five UAV flights took place during a year-long cycle (November 2020 to November 2021) in a volcanic lake located in southern Italy. For each flight performance, an orthomosaic of georeferenced RGB images was obtained, and the different features of interest were monitored and quantified using automated processing in a GIS environment. The UAV images made it possible not only to estimate the flooded shores but also to detect the impact of human-made structures and infrastructures on the lagoon environment. It has been possible to observe how the rapid changes in lake-water level have led to the submersion of about 90.000 m(2) of terrain in winter, causing the fragmentation and degradation of habitats, while the connectivity of the natural ecosystem has been threatened by the presence of the road around the lake. The proposed methodology is rather simple and easily replicable by decision makers and local administrators and can be useful for choosing the best restoration interventions
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