62 research outputs found

    In the loop:a realist approach to structure and agency in the practice of strategy

    Get PDF
    This paper introduces and illustrates a critical realist approach to the practice of strategy, combining Archer’s stratified ontology for structure, culture and agency with her work on reflexivity, to provide strategy-as-practice with an innovative theoretical lens. By maintaining the ontic differentiation between structure and agency this approach renders the conditions of action analytically separable from the action itself, thereby facilitating the examination of their interplay, one upon the other, at variance through time, in strategy formation and strategizing. It therefore offers the field a fruitful methodological means of exploring the increasingly complex empirical implications of some practice theoretical claims

    Impact of endometriosis on obstetric outcome after natural conception: a multicenter Italian study

    Get PDF
    Purpose To evaluate obstetric outcome in women with endometriosis who conceive naturally and receive standard obstetric care in Italy. Methods Cases were consecutive women with endometriosis managed in eleven Italian referral centers. Controls were women in whom endometriosis was excluded. All women filled in a questionnaire addressing previous natural pregnancies. Marginal logistic regression models were fitted to evaluate the impact of endometriosis on obstetric outcome. A post hoc analysis was performed within the endometriosis group comparing women with severe adenomyosis versus women with absent or mild adenomyosis. Results Three hundred and fifty-five pregnancies in endometriosis group and 741 pregnancies in control group were included. Women with endometriosis had a higher risk of preterm delivery < 34 weeks (6.4% vs 2.8%, OR 2.42, 95% CI 1.22–4.82), preterm delivery < 37 weeks (17.8% vs 9.7%, OR 1.98, 95% CI 1.23–3.19), and neonatal admission to Intensive Care Unit (14.1% vs 7.0%, OR 2.04, 95% CI 1.23–3.36). At post hoc analysis, women with endometriosis and severe adenomyosis had an increased risk of placenta previa (23.1% vs 1.8%, OR 16.68, 95% CI 3.49–79.71), cesarean delivery (84.6% vs 38.9%, OR 8.03, 95% CI 1.69–38.25) and preterm delivery < 34 weeks (23.1% vs 5.7%, OR 5.52, 95% CI 1.38–22.09). Conclusion Women with endometriosis who conceive naturally have increased risk of preterm delivery and neonatal admission to intensive care unit. When severe adenomyosis is coexistent with endometriosis, women may be at increased risk of placenta previa and cesarean delivery. Trial registration Clinical trial registration number: NCT03354793

    When more is not better: 10 'don'ts' in endometriosis management. An ETIC* position statement

    Get PDF
    41noETIC Endometriosis Treatment Italian ClubopenA network of endometriosis experts from 16 Italian academic departments and teaching hospitals distributed all over the country made a critical appraisal of the available evidence and definition of 10 suggestions regarding measures to be de-implemented. Strong suggestions were made only when high-quality evidence was available. The aim was to select 10 low-value medical interventions, characterized by an unfavorable balance between potential benefits, potential harms, and costs, which should be discouraged in women with endometriosis. The following suggestions were agreed by all experts: do not suggest laparoscopy to detect and treat superficial peritoneal endometriosis in infertile women without pelvic pain symptoms; do not recommend controlled ovarian stimulation and IUI in infertile women with endometriosis at any stage; do not remove small ovarian endometriomas (diameter <4 cm) with the sole objective of improving the likelihood of conception in infertile patients scheduled for IVF; do not remove uncomplicated deep endometriotic lesions in asymptomatic women, and also in symptomatic women not seeking conception when medical treatment is effective and well tolerated; do not systematically request second-level diagnostic investigations in women with known or suspected non-subocclusive colorectal endometriosis or with symptoms responding to medical treatment; do not recommend repeated follow-up serum CA-125 (or other currently available biomarkers) measurements in women successfully using medical treatments for uncomplicated endometriosis in the absence of suspicious ovarian cysts; do not leave women undergoing surgery for ovarian endometriomas and not seeking immediate conception without post-operative long-term treatment with estrogen-progestins or progestins; do not perform laparoscopy in adolescent women (<20 years) with moderate-severe dysmenorrhea and clinically suspected early endometriosis without prior attempting to relieve symptoms with estrogen-progestins or progestins; do not prescribe drugs that cannot be used for prolonged periods of time because of safety or cost issues as first-line medical treatment, unless estrogen-progestins or progestins have been proven ineffective, not tolerated, or contraindicated; do not use robotic-assisted laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis outside research settings. Our proposal is to better address medical and surgical approaches to endometriosis de-implementing low-value interventions, with the aim to prevent unnecessary morbidity, limit psychological distress, and reduce the burden of treatment avoiding medical overuse and allowing a more equitable distribution of healthcare resources.openAlio, L; Angioni, S; Arena, S; Bartiromo, L; Bergamini, V; Berlanda, N; Bonin, C; Busacca, M; Candiani, M; Centini, G; D’Alterio, M N; Di Cello, A; Exacoustos, C; Fedele, L; Frattaruolo, M P; Incandela, D; Lazzeri, L; Luisi, S; Maiorana, A; Maneschi, F; Martire, F; Massarotti, C; Mattei, A; Muzii, L; Ottolina, J; Perandini, A; Perelli, F; Pino, I; Porpora, M G; Raimondo, D; Remorgida, V; Seracchioli, R; Solima, E; Somigliana, E; Sorrenti, G; Venturella, R; Vercellini, P; Viganó, P; Vignali, M; Zullo, F; Zupi, EAlio, L; Angioni, S; Arena, S; Bartiromo, L; Bergamini, V; Berlanda, N; Bonin, C; Busacca, M; Candiani, M; Centini, G; D’Alterio, M N; Di Cello, A; Exacoustos, C; Fedele, L; Frattaruolo, M P; Incandela, D; Lazzeri, L; Luisi, S; Maiorana, Anna; Maneschi, F; Martire, F; Massarotti, C; Mattei, A; Muzii, L; Ottolina, J; Perandini, A; Perelli, F; Pino, Ida; Porpora, M G; Raimondo, D; Remorgida, V; Seracchioli, R; Solima, E; Somigliana, E; Sorrenti, G; Venturella, R; Vercellini, P; Vigano', Paola; Vignali, M; Zullo, F; Zupi,

    Artificial boundaries and formulations for the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations. Applications to air and blood flows.

    Get PDF
    International audienceWe deal with numerical simulations of incompressible Navier-Stokes equations in truncated domain. In this context, the formulation of these equations has to be selected carefully in order to guarantee that their associated artificial boundary conditions are relevant for the considered problem. In this paper, we review some of the formulations proposed in the literature, and their associated boundary conditions. Some numerical results linked to each formulation are also presented. We compare different schemes, giving successful computations as well as problematic ones, in order to better understand the difference between these schemes and their behaviours dealing with systems involving Neumann boundary conditions. We also review two stabilization methods which aim at suppressing the instabilities linked to these natural boundary conditions

    Septic arthritis in children

    No full text
    Osteoarticular infections are a form of diagnostic and therapeutic emergency in infants and children, even if relatively rare. Despite decades of experience with different protocols, and multiple clinical trials, today it is still difficult to determine what kind of antibiotics is really effective, what kind of associations are required, which is the optimal time range of a treatment, when and on which subjects to base the transition from a parenteral treatment to an oral one. Current philosophy aims more and more at reducing hospitalization and costs, and wants to decrease the discomfort in the family. The purpose of these guidelines is to promote a reasoned clinical and therapeutic approach, in a context of diagnostic probabilities that offer the best chance of success in reducing hospitalization with a rapid transition to an oral treatment, and then outpatient, and thus educing totally the processing time

    Le fratture articolari nell'età evolutiva

    No full text
    L*interessamento articolare nei bambini e negli adolescenti avviene nei traumi delle fisi e nelle fratture complesse delle metafisi che coinvolgono i piatti di accrescimento. La caratteristica più importante nei traumi scheletrici dell*età evolutiva è la presenza dei piatti di accrescimento e di uno spesso periostio. Il periostio nei bambini contribuisce notevolmente ad una rapida guarigione della frattura ed aiuta nella riduzione e nel mantenimento della riduzione di una frattura. È importante evidenziare che come nell*adulto le fratture intra-articolari richiedono una riduzione anatomica, allo stesso modo i traumi articolari dei bambini richiedono una riduzione perfetta. Infatti nelle lesioni intra-articolari nei bambini il ruolo del periostio nel mantenimento della riduzione non è più valido. L*interessamento intra-articolare nei traumi scheletrici dell*età evolutiva avviene soprattutto al gomito, al ginocchio ed al collopiede. In questo studio sono state riviste le fratture articolari trattate nel periodo 2004-2006 e gli autori precisano le basi del trattamento, le principali complicazioni ed i risultati
    • …
    corecore