238 research outputs found
Applications of medical wireless LAN systems (MedLAN)
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Journal of Medical Marketing. The definitive publisher-authenticated version "Konstantinos A. Banitsas, R.S.H. Istepanian, Sapal Tachakra. Applications of medical Wireless LAN systems (MedLAN). Journal of Medical Marketing, Volume 2, Number 2, 1 January 2002 , pp. 136-142(7)" is available online at: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/pal/jomm/2002/00000002/00000002/art00008.In this paper the Wireless LAN (WLAN) networking principals are presented along with some of the implementation scenarios dedicated for Accidents and Emergencies wards. Preliminary simulation results of the MedLAN concept are also presented together with ongoing and future work in this area
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Health and mobility: Current status and future paradigms
The movement of telemedicine to the wireless and mobile Internetable applications is imminent in the next few years. This migration from the desktop platforms to the wireless and mobile configurations will have significant impact on the future health care delivery system and their globalisation. The recent telecommunications and biomedical computing advances will significantly enhance the current methodologies of telemedicine and telecare systems. This editorial will present some of the evolutionary issues and important aspects that have to be considered in the developing technologies for the next generation of Internet and Third Generation of Mobile Systems (3G), geared for future telemedical applications. These will provide new dimensions to existing medical services and areas of outreach, that are not possible in the current generation and will have tremendous impact on how the health care delivery will be shaped for the 21 Century
Irrigation Scheduling in Crop Management System
Center pivor systems are widely used to suppress the irrigation needs of agricultural fields. In this article, we propose an autonomous to improve the low efficiency of this method of irrigation, developing a system based on the water requirement of the plantation, through field data (local temperature, local wind, soil moisture and precipitation forecast) and soil evapotranspiration calculation. The stored information will allow to calculatem the real evapotranspiration, not being necessary to restrict to lysometric measures. Accordingly, it is possible to schedule the irrigation for the period in which it has the lowest cost, considering the energy produced locally and the price of energy bought in the main market. Irrigation must be carried out within the time interval in which the plantation does not reach the wilding point, so it will be carried out at the time of the lowest cost.The present work was done and funded in the scope of the following project: Eco Rural IoT project funded by TETRAMAX-VALUECHAIN-TTX-1, and UID/EEA/00760/2019 funded by FEDER Funds through COMPETE program and by National Funds through FCT.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Ten Years of Mixing Cocktails: A Review of Combination Effects of Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals
In the last 10 years, good evidence has become available to show that the combined effects of endocrine disruptors (EDs) belonging to the same category (e.g., estrogenic, antiandrogenic, or thyroid-disrupting agents) can be predicted by using dose addition. This is true for a variety of end points representing a wide range of organizational levels and biological complexity. Combinations of EDs are able to produce significant effect, even when each chemical is present at low doses that individually do not induce observable effects. However, comparatively little is known about mixtures composed of chemicals from different classes of EDs. Nevertheless, I argue that the accumulated evidence seriously undermines continuation with the customary chemical-by-chemical approach to risk assessment for EDs. Instead, we should seriously consider group-wise regulation of classes of EDs. Great care should be taken to define such classes by using suitable similarity criteria. Criteria should focus on common effects, rather than common mechanisms. In this review I also highlight research needs and identify the lack of information about exposure scenarios as a knowledge gap that seriously hampers progress with ED risk assessment. Future research should focus on investigating the effects of combinations of EDs from different categories, with considerable emphasis on elucidating mechanisms. This strategy may lead to better-defined criteria for grouping EDs for regulatory purposes. Also, steps should be taken to develop dedicated mixtures exposure assessment for EDs
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Modelling issues of wireless LANs for accident and emergency departments
The paper provides an overview of the application scenarios and modelling issues of Wireless Local Area Networks (WLAN) in hospital and clinical ward environments and presents the concept of MedLAN system, dedicated to these environments. Furthermore, it discusses the potential problems when implementing such systems
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The effect of board of directors attributes on corporate risk-taking: before and during COVID-19
This study investigates the effect of the board of directors’ attributes on the corporate risk-taking of listed financial firms in Oman. A total of seven board attributes such as board ownership, shareholder ownership, CEO duality, board structure, audit committee independence, audit committee and board gender diversity are assimilated into an index for this study. The sample consists of 168 firm-year observations for financial firms listed on the Muscat Stock Exchange for the period 2016 to 2021. Before COVID, the board had no significant impact on corporate risk-taking. However, during COVID, a strong board took low risks indicating the appropriate assessment of the pandemic and cautiously steering the company activities. The result has important practical implications indicating that board attributes are crucial for crisis periods as they can help in navigating the company’s decision-making
Hand and foot morphology maps invasion of terrestrial environments by pterosaurs in the mid-Mesozoic
Pterosaurs, the first true flying vertebrates, played a crucial role in Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems. However, our understanding of their ability to move around on the ground and, more broadly, their terrestrial paleoecology remains limited. Here, we demonstrate an unexpectedly high degree of variation in the hands and feet of pterosaurs, comparable with that observed in extant birds. This suggests that pterosaurs were adapted to a remarkably broad range of non-aerial locomotor ecologies. Small, early, long-tailed pterosaurs (non-pterodactyliforms) exhibit extreme modifications in their hand and foot proportions indicative of climbing lifestyles. By contrast, the hands and feet of later, short-tailed pterosaurs (pterodactyliforms) typically exhibit morphologies consistent with more ground-based locomotor ecologies. These changes in proportions correlate with other modifications to pterosaur anatomy, critically, the separation along the midline of the flight membrane (cruropatagium) that linked the hindlimbs, enabling a much more effective locomotory ability on the ground. Together, these changes map a significant event in tetrapod evolution: a mid-Mesozoic colonization of terrestrial environments by short-tailed pterosaurs. This transition to predominantly ground-based locomotor ecologies did not occur as a single event coinciding with the origin of short-tailed forms but evolved independently within each of the four principal radiations: euctenochasmatians, ornithocheiroids, dsungaripteroids, and azhdarchoids. Invasion of terrestrial environments by pterosaurs facilitated the evolution of a wide range of novel feeding ecologies, while the freedom from limitations imposed by climbing permitted an increase in body size, ultimately enabling the evolution of gigantism in multiple lineages
Evaluation of a computer-assisted cognitive remediation program for young people with psychosis: A pilot study
202101 bcrcVersion of RecordSelf-fundedPublishe
‘Albania: €1’ or the story of ‘big policies, small outcomes’: how Albania constructs and engages its diaspora
Since the fall of the communist regime in the early 1990s, Albania has experienced one of the most significant emigrations in the world as a share of its population. By 2010 almost half of its resident population was estimated to be living abroad – primarily in neighbouring Greece and Italy, but also in the UK and North America. This chapter discusses the emergence and establishment of the Albanian diaspora, its temporal and geographical diversity, and not least its involvement with Albania itself. Albania’s policymaking and key institutions are considered, with a focus on matters of citizenship; voting rights; the debate on migration and development; and not least the complex ways in which kin-state minority policies – related to ethnic Albanians living in Kosovo, Montenegro, southern Serbia, Macedonia and Greece – are interwoven with Albania’s emigration policies
Preventive Use of Azacitidine in Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia after Haploidentical Allo-BMT
Background. Haploidentical bone marrow transplantation (BMT) can be a reliable alternative if a fully matched donor is not available. The main challenges after BMT are a relapse of major disease, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), and infections. Azacitidine possesses antileukemic effect together with immunomodulating properties and being administered soon after BMT can significantly improve the outcome.
Aim. To study azacitidine effect on the outcome of haploidentical BMT in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in the early post-transplantation period.
Materials & Methods. The trial included 18 AML patients who received haploidentical BMT at VA Almazov National Medical Research Center. In all patients MRD-negative remission was achieved on the 30th day after BMT. Azacitidine therapy was initiated not earlier than 2 months after BMT with a complete engraftment of transplant and no GVHD. Azacitidine 100 mg/day was administered on D1–D5 every 28 days within a year after BMT. When a molecular relapse was detected, donor lymphocytes were additionally infused during every other cycle of therapy.
Results. Eleven patients received preventive azacitidine treatment, 7 patients were included in control group. Median onset of azacitidine treatment after haploidentical BMT was 4 months (range 2–10 months), median number of azacitidine courses was 3.5 (range 1–9). During azacitidine treatment acute GVHD was identified in 5 (45.4 %) patients. In 4 of them an exacerbation of earlier GVHD was detected (3 with cutaneous form and 1 with intestinal form), and only in 1 patient de novo acute intestinal GVHD was discovered.
Conclusion. Azacitidine treatment of AML patients after haploidentical allo-BMT is safe and well tolerated. Preventive azacitidine treatment after haploidentical BMT improves overall survival of AML patients
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