26 research outputs found

    Examining the role of three sets of innovation attributes for determining adoption of the interbank mobile payment service

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    The interbank mobile payment service (IMPS) is a very recent technology in India that serves the very critical purpose of a mobile wallet. To account for the adoption and use of IMPS by the Indian consumers, this study seeks to compare three competing sets of attributes borrowed from three recognized pieces of work in the area of innovations adoption. This study aims to examine which of the three sets of attributes better predicts the adoption of IMPS in an Indian context. The research model is empirically tested and validated against the data gathered from 323 respondents from different cities in India. The findings are analysed using the SPSS analysis tool, which are then discussed to derive the key conclusions from this study. The research implications are stated, limitations listed and suggestions for future research on this technology are then finally made

    Pathological score for the evaluation of allograft rejection in human hand (composite tissue) allotransplantation

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    The experience obtained from the human hand allografts (HHA) performed to date suggests that the skin is a priviledged target of allograft rejection in this setting. The aim of this study was to establish a pathological score for assessing the severity of HHA rejection. The pathological slides of 89 skin biopsies obtained from the allografted limbs of six HHA recipients from day 0 to 5 years post-graft were retrospectively examined. According to the severity of the pathological changes observed, the following grades of rejection are proposed: 0: no rejection, I: mild rejection, II: moderate rejection, III: severe rejection, IV: very severe rejection. This grading system can be used as a basis for monitoring allograft rejection and for assessing the effects of the immunosuppressive treatment aiming at reversing HHA rejection; it can also be used for monitoring rejection of other skin-containing CTA

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    Cultural influences on the use of effectuation in entrepreneurship The case of German student entrepreneur

    Keratotic skin lesions and other risk factors are associated with skin cancer in organ-transplant recipients: a case-control study in The Netherlands, United Kingdom, Germany, France, and Italy.

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    This study examines the association of keratotic skin lesions with the development of skin cancer in 915 solid organ-transplant recipients in five European countries. In a hospital-based case\u2013control study, cases with squamous- and basal-cell carcinoma were compared with controls without skin cancer. Questionnaires, scrutiny of medical charts, and skin examination were delivered according to a standardized protocol. Keratotic skin lesions and viral warts were counted on different body sites. Keratotic skin lesions were strongly associated with an increased risk of squamous-cell carcinoma, with adjusted odds ratios of 4.1 (2.4;7.0) and 12.1 (6.1;24) for 1\u201349 and 50 and more keratotic skin lesions compared with no lesions, respectively. Keratotic skin lesions were also associated with basal-cell carcinoma with adjusted odds ratios of 2.9 (1.7;4.9) and 4.0 (1.7;9.2) for 1\u201349 and 50 and more lesions, respectively. Lighter skin types and painful sunburns were also significantly associated with an increased risk of squamous- and basal-cell carcinoma. Keratotic skin lesions are strongly associated with skin cancer and are, thus, an important clinical criterion for identifying those organ-transplant recipients at an increased risk of skin cancers who should be offered more intensive skin surveillanc
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