73 research outputs found

    A Comparison of Depression and Anxiety among University Students in Nine Countries during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

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    The mental health of young adults, particularly students, is at high risk during the COVID-19 pandemic. The purpose of this studywas to examine differences inmental health between university students in nine countries during the pandemic. The study encompassed 2349 university students (69% female) from Colombia, the Czech Republic (Czechia), Germany, Israel, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, Turkey, and Ukraine. Participants underwent the following tests: Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7), Exposure to COVID-19 (EC-19), Perceived Impact of Coronavirus (PIC) on students’ well-being, PhysicalActivity (PA), andGeneral Self-ReportedHealth (GSRH). The one-wayANOVAshowed significant differences between countries. The highest depression and anxiety risk occurred in Turkey, the lowest depression in the Czech Republic and the lowest anxiety in Germany. The 2 independence test showed that EC-19, PIC, and GSRHwere associatedwith anxiety and depression inmost of the countries, whereas PA was associated in less than half of the countries. Logistic regression showed distinct risk factors for each country. Gender and EC-19 were the most frequent predictors of depression and anxiety across the countries. The role of gender and PA for depression and anxiety is not universal and depends on cross-cultural differences. Students’mental health should be addressed froma cross-cultural perspective

    Battle of Postdisaster Response and Restoration

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    [EN] The paper presents the results of the Battle of Postdisaster Response and Restoration (BPDRR) presented in a special session at the first International water distribution systems analysis & computing and control in the water industry (WDSA/CCWI) Joint Conference, held in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, in July 2018. The BPDRR problem focused on how to respond and restore water service after the occurrence of five earthquake scenarios that cause structural damage in a water distribution system. Participants were required to propose a prioritization schedule to fix the damages of each scenario while following restrictions on visibility/nonvisibility of damages. Each team/approach was evaluated against six performance criteria: (1) time without supply for hospital/firefighting, (2) rapidity of recovery, (3) resilience loss, (4) average time of no user service, (5) number of users without service for eight consecutive hours, and (6) water loss. Three main types of approaches were identified from the submissions: (1) general-purpose metaheuristic algorithms, (2) greedy algorithms, and (3) ranking-based prioritizations. All three approaches showed potential to solve the challenge efficiently. The results of the participants showed that for this network, the impact of a large-diameter pipe failure on the network is more significant than several smaller pipes failures. The location of isolation valves and the size of hydraulic segments influenced the resilience of the system during emergencies. On average, the interruptions to water supply (hospitals and firefighting) varied considerably among solutions and emergency scenarios, highlighting the importance of private water storage for emergencies. The effects of damages and repair work were more noticeable during the peak demand periods (morning and noontime) than during the low-flow periods; and tank storage helped to preserve functionality of the network in the first few hours after a simulated event. (C) 2020 American Society of Civil Engineers.Paez, D.; Filion, Y.; Castro-Gama, M.; Quintiliani, C.; Santopietro, S.; Sweetapple, C.; Meng, F.... (2020). Battle of Postdisaster Response and Restoration. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management. 146(8):1-13. https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0001239S1131468Balut A. R. Brodziak J. Bylka and P. Zakrzewski. 2018. “Battle of post-disaster response and restauration (BPDRR).” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Bibok A. 2018. “Near-optimal restoration scheduling of damaged drinking water distribution systems using machine learning.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Castro-Gama M. C. Quintiliani and S. Santopietro. 2018. “After earthquake post-disaster response using a many-objective approach a greedy and engineering interventions.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Cimellaro, G. P., Tinebra, A., Renschler, C., & Fragiadakis, M. (2016). New Resilience Index for Urban Water Distribution Networks. Journal of Structural Engineering, 142(8). doi:10.1061/(asce)st.1943-541x.0001433Cover, T., & Hart, P. (1967). Nearest neighbor pattern classification. IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 13(1), 21-27. doi:10.1109/tit.1967.1053964Creaco, E., Franchini, M., & Alvisi, S. (2010). Optimal Placement of Isolation Valves in Water Distribution Systems Based on Valve Cost and Weighted Average Demand Shortfall. Water Resources Management, 24(15), 4317-4338. doi:10.1007/s11269-010-9661-5Deb, K., Mohan, M., & Mishra, S. (2005). Evaluating the ε-Domination Based Multi-Objective Evolutionary Algorithm for a Quick Computation of Pareto-Optimal Solutions. Evolutionary Computation, 13(4), 501-525. doi:10.1162/106365605774666895Deuerlein J. D. Gilbert E. Abraham and O. Piller. 2018. “A greedy scheduling of post-disaster response and restoration using pressure-driven models and graph segment analysis.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Deuerlein, J. W. (2008). Decomposition Model of a General Water Supply Network Graph. Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, 134(6), 822-832. doi:10.1061/(asce)0733-9429(2008)134:6(822)Di Nardo, A., Di Natale, M., Giudicianni, C., Santonastaso, G. F., & Savic, D. (2018). Simplified Approach to Water Distribution System Management via Identification of a Primary Network. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 144(2), 04017089. doi:10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000885Eliades D. G. M. Kyriakou S. Vrachimis and M. M. Polycarpou. 2016. “EPANET-MATLAB toolkit: An open-source software for interfacing EPANET with MATLAB.” In Proc. 14th Int. Conf. on Computing and Control for the Water Industry (CCWI) 8. The Hague The Netherlands: International Water Conferences. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.831493.Fragiadakis, M., Christodoulou, S. E., & Vamvatsikos, D. (2013). Reliability Assessment of Urban Water Distribution Networks Under Seismic Loads. Water Resources Management, 27(10), 3739-3764. doi:10.1007/s11269-013-0378-0Gilbert, D., Abraham, E., Montalvo, I., & Piller, O. (2017). Iterative Multistage Method for a Large Water Network Sectorization into DMAs under Multiple Design Objectives. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 143(11), 04017067. doi:10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000835Hill, D., Kerkez, B., Rasekh, A., Ostfeld, A., Minsker, B., & Banks, M. K. (2014). Sensing and Cyberinfrastructure for Smarter Water Management: The Promise and Challenge of Ubiquity. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 140(7), 01814002. doi:10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000449Hwang, H. H. M., Lin, H., & Shinozuka, M. (1998). Seismic Performance Assessment of Water Delivery Systems. Journal of Infrastructure Systems, 4(3), 118-125. doi:10.1061/(asce)1076-0342(1998)4:3(118)Li Y. J. Gao C. Jian C. Ou and S. Hu. 2018. “A two-stage post-disaster response and restoration method for the water distribution system.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Liu, W., Zhao, Y., & Li, J. (2014). Seismic functional reliability analysis of water distribution networks. Structure and Infrastructure Engineering, 11(3), 363-375. doi:10.1080/15732479.2014.887121Luong, H. T., & Nagarur, N. N. (2005). Optimal Maintenance Policy and Fund Allocation in Water Distribution Networks. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 131(4), 299-306. doi:10.1061/(asce)0733-9496(2005)131:4(299)MacQueen J. B. 1967. “Some methods for classification and analysis of multivariate observations.” In Vol. 1 of Proc. 5th Berkeley Symp. on Mathematical Statistics and Probability 281–297. Berkeley: University of California Press.Mahmoud, H. A., Kapelan, Z., & Savić, D. (2018). Real-Time Operational Response Methodology for Reducing Failure Impacts in Water Distribution Systems. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 144(7), 04018029. doi:10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000956Meng, F., Fu, G., Farmani, R., Sweetapple, C., & Butler, D. (2018). Topological attributes of network resilience: A study in water distribution systems. Water Research, 143, 376-386. doi:10.1016/j.watres.2018.06.048Ostfeld, A., Uber, J. G., Salomons, E., Berry, J. W., Hart, W. E., Phillips, C. A., … Walski, T. (2008). The Battle of the Water Sensor Networks (BWSN): A Design Challenge for Engineers and Algorithms. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 134(6), 556-568. doi:10.1061/(asce)0733-9496(2008)134:6(556)Paez D. Y. Filion and M. Hulley. 2018a. “Battle of post-disaster response and restoration (BPDRR)—Problem description and rules.” Accessed June 14 2019. https://www.queensu.ca/wdsa-ccwi2018/problem-description-and-files.Paez, D., Suribabu, C. R., & Filion, Y. (2018). Method for Extended Period Simulation of Water Distribution Networks with Pressure Driven Demands. Water Resources Management, 32(8), 2837-2846. doi:10.1007/s11269-018-1961-1Salcedo C. A. Aguilar P. Cuero S. Gonzalez S. Muñoz J. Pérez A. Posada J. Robles and K. Vargas. 2018. “Determination of the hydraulic restoration capacity of b-city involving a multi-criteria decision support model.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Santonastaso G. F. E. Creaco A. Di Nardo and M. Di Natale. 2018. “Post-disaster response and restauration of B-town network based on primary network.” In Vol. 1 of Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Sophocleous S. E. Nikoloudi H. A. Mahmoud K. Woodward and M. Romano. 2018. “Simulation-based framework for the restoration of earthquake-damaged water distribution networks using a genetic algorithm.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Sweetapple C. F. Meng R. Farmani G. Fu and D. Butler. 2018. “A heuristic approach to water network post-disaster response and restoration.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems.Tabucchi, T., Davidson, R., & Brink, S. (2010). Simulation of post-earthquake water supply system restoration. Civil Engineering and Environmental Systems, 27(4), 263-279. doi:10.1080/10286600902862615Taormina, R., Galelli, S., Tippenhauer, N. O., Salomons, E., Ostfeld, A., Eliades, D. G., … Ohar, Z. (2018). Battle of the Attack Detection Algorithms: Disclosing Cyber Attacks on Water Distribution Networks. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 144(8), 04018048. doi:10.1061/(asce)wr.1943-5452.0000969Walski, T. M. (1993). Water distribution valve topology for reliability analysis. Reliability Engineering & System Safety, 42(1), 21-27. doi:10.1016/0951-8320(93)90051-yWang, Y., Au, S.-K., & Fu, Q. (2010). Seismic Risk Assessment and Mitigation of Water Supply Systems. Earthquake Spectra, 26(1), 257-274. doi:10.1193/1.3276900Yoo, D. G., Kang, D., & Kim, J. H. (2016). Optimal design of water supply networks for enhancing seismic reliability. Reliability Engineering & System Safety, 146, 79-88. doi:10.1016/j.ress.2015.10.001Zhang Q. F. Zheng K. Diao B. Ulanicki and Y. Huang. 2018. “Solving the battle of post-disaster response and restauration (BPDRR) problem with the aid of multi-phase optimization framework.” In Proc. 1st Int. WDSA/CCWI 2018 Joint Conf. 14. Kingston Canada: Open Journal Systems

    Diseño del programa de salud ocupacional para la empresa simac ltda de buenaventura

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    Los programas de salud ocupacional constituyen una estrategia de tipo preventivo orientados a lograr mejorías en las condiciones de trabajo, seguridad, bienestar, productividad y en general un clima organizacional saludable; En concordancia con las actuales exigencias de competitividad y desarrollo de recurso humano. La salud de los trabajadores es una condición indispensables para el desarrollo socio económico del país, su preservación y conservación son actividades de interés social y sanitaria en la que participan el gobierno los dirigentes y empleados Ley 9/79 Art.81. Lo fundamental en la ejecución del programa de salud ocupacional es que se desarrollen medidas preventivas destinadas a evitar los accidentes de trabajo y las enfermedades profesionales lo que constituye un compromiso moral y legal del empresario y se mide por el cumplimiento de las actividades y el control efectivo de los factores de riesgos a los que están expuestos los trabajadores.1.Justificación2.Objetivo general3.Objetivo especifico4.Historia de la actividad económica5.Historia de la empresa6.Marco legal7.DefiniciónPregradoProfesional en Seguridad y Salud en el Trabaj

    Studies of human antiviral CD8+ lymphocytes using class I peptide tetramers.

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    Understanding the interactions between a host and a pathogen relies crucially on quantitative measurements of immune responses. Until recently, measurements of the levels of cellular immune responses, i.e. those mediated by CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes have depended largely on culture in vitro and subsequent measurement of specific functions (such as cytolysis). More recently, new technologies based around tetrameric class I peptide complexes (tetramers) have allowed immunologists to measure CD8+ T lymphocyte levels directly ex vivo and independently of function. Since CD8+ lymphocytes play a key role in a number of important human viral infections, these tools have yielded useful insights into the dynamics, phenotype and function of human antiviral lymphocyte populations. In this review we describe some of the basic aspects of the biology of virus-specific CD8+ lymphocytes, and the current methods available to detect them. The use of tetramers has, in just four years, transformed our understanding of the immune responses against HIV, HTLV-1, HBV, HCV, CMV and EBV, and holds promise in a number of areas where quantitative analysis of the antiviral response in terms of both number and function is critical

    Studies of human antiviral CD8+ lymphocytes using class I peptide tetramers.

    No full text
    Understanding the interactions between a host and a pathogen relies crucially on quantitative measurements of immune responses. Until recently, measurements of the levels of cellular immune responses, i.e. those mediated by CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes have depended largely on culture in vitro and subsequent measurement of specific functions (such as cytolysis). More recently, new technologies based around tetrameric class I peptide complexes (tetramers) have allowed immunologists to measure CD8+ T lymphocyte levels directly ex vivo and independently of function. Since CD8+ lymphocytes play a key role in a number of important human viral infections, these tools have yielded useful insights into the dynamics, phenotype and function of human antiviral lymphocyte populations. In this review we describe some of the basic aspects of the biology of virus-specific CD8+ lymphocytes, and the current methods available to detect them. The use of tetramers has, in just four years, transformed our understanding of the immune responses against HIV, HTLV-1, HBV, HCV, CMV and EBV, and holds promise in a number of areas where quantitative analysis of the antiviral response in terms of both number and function is critical

    A Comparison of Depression and Anxiety among University Students in Nine Countries during the COVID-19 Pandemic

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    La salud mental de los adultos jóvenes, particularmente los estudiantes, está en alto riesgo durante la pandemia de COVID-19 pandemia. El propósito de este estudio fue examinar las diferencias en salud mental entre estudiantes universitarios en nueve países durante la pandemia. El estudio abarcó a 2349 estudiantes universitarios (69% mujeres) de Colombia, República Checa (Chequia), Alemania, Israel, Polonia, Rusia, Eslovenia, Turquía y Ucrania. Los participantes se sometieron a las siguientes pruebas: Cuestionario de Salud del Paciente (PHQ-8), Ansiedad Generalizada (GAD-7), Exposición a COVID-19 (EC-19), Impacto percibido del coronavirus (PIC) en los estudiantes bienestar, actividad física (PA) y salud general autoinformada (GSRH). El ANOVA de una vía mostró diferencias significativas entre países. El mayor riesgo de depresión y ansiedad ocurrió en Turquía, el depresión más baja en la República Checa y la ansiedad más baja en Alemania. El χ 2 prueba de independencia mostró que EC-19, PIC y GSRH se asociaron con ansiedad y depresión en la mayoría de los países, mientras que la AP se asoció en menos de la mitad de los países. La regresión logística mostró distintos factores de riesgo para cada país. El sexo y el EC-19 fueron los predictores más frecuentes de depresión y ansiedad en los países. El papel del género y la AF para la depresión y la ansiedad no es universal y depende de diferencias transculturales. La salud mental de los estudiantes debe abordarse desde una perspectiva intercultural.The mental health of young adults, particularly students, is at high risk during the COVID-19 pandemic. The purpose of this study was to examine differences in mental health between university students in nine countries during the pandemic. The study encompassed 2349 university students (69% female) from Colombia, the Czech Republic (Czechia), Germany, Israel, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, Turkey, and Ukraine. Participants underwent the following tests: Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7), Exposure to COVID-19 (EC-19), Perceived Impact of Coronavirus (PIC) on students’ well-being, Physical Activity (PA), and General Self-Reported Health (GSRH). The one-way ANOVA showed significant differences between countries. The highest depression and anxiety risk occurred in Turkey, the lowest depression in the Czech Republic and the lowest anxiety in Germany. The χ 2 independence test showed that EC-19, PIC, and GSRH were associated with anxiety and depression in most of the countries, whereas PA was associated in less than half of the countries. Logistic regression showed distinct risk factors for each country. Gender and EC-19 were the most frequent predictors of depression and anxiety across the countries. The role of gender and PA for depression and anxiety is not universal and depends on cross-cultural differences. Students’ mental health should be addressed from a cross-cultural perspective

    Application of Neutron Activation Analysis for Determination of As, Cr, Hg, and Se in Mosses in the Metropolitan Area of the Valley of Toluca, Mexico

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    This research presents a study of environmental monitoring at different sampling sites from the Metropolitan Area of the Valley of Toluca (MAVT), Mexico, using mosses (Leskea angustata (Tayl.) and Fabronia ciliaris (Brid.)) and soil samples. The epiphytic mosses and soils were sampled in two campaigns within two periods of the year, a rainy and dry-cold season. The selected sampling sites included urban regions (UR), transitional regions (TR), and protected natural areas (PA). The samples were analyzed by the Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA) to determine As, Cr, Hg, and Se principally. However, due to the versatility of the analytic technique used, other elements including Cs, Co, Sc, Sb, Rb, Ce, La, Eu, and Yb were also detected. Statistical analysis (As, Cr, Hg, and Se) was carried out with principal components and cluster analysis methods; this revealed that a good correlation exists between metal content in mosses and the degree of pollution in the areas sampled. The obtained results in mosses showed that the concentrations of As, Cr, Co, Cs, Rb, Ce, La, and Yb increased with respect to the concentrations obtained during the first sampling, whereas Se, Sc, Sb and Eu, concentrations were decreased. For As and Hg, the concentrations were similar in both sampling periods. The soil samples present the most significant concentration
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