391 research outputs found
A review of post-caesarean infectious morbidity: how to prevent and treat
Post-caesarean infectious complications result in significant maternal morbidity and mortality as well as increased readmissions and increased health care cost worldwide. This review provides a discussion of several risk factors that have been identified which predispose women to post-surgical infection. We also provide an overview of strategies for infection prevention including antibiotics, surgical techniques and negative pressure wound therapy. Criteria for diagnosis of wound infection are provided, as well as appropriate treatment regimens. Given the impact of maternal post caesarean infection, it is important for women’s health care providers to understand how to prevent these infections, as well as recognise and treat them
Protein binding of β-lactam antibiotics in critically Ill patients: can we successfully predict unbound concentrations?
The use of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) to optimize beta-lactam dosing in critically ill patients is growing in popularity, although there are limited data describing the potential impact of altered protein binding on achievement of target concentrations. The aim of this study was to compare the measured unbound concentration to the unbound concentration predicted from published protein binding values for seven beta-lactams using data from blood samples obtained from critically ill patients. From 161 eligible patients, we obtained 228 and 220 plasma samples at the midpoint of the dosing interval and trough, respectively, for ceftriaxone, cefazolin, meropenem, piperacillin, ampicillin, benzylpenicillin, and flucloxacillin. The total and unbound beta-lactam concentrations were measured using validated methods. Variabilities in both unbound and total concentrations were marked for all antibiotics, with significant differences being present between measured and predicted unbound concentrations for ceftriaxone and for flucloxacillin at the mid-dosing interval (
A first-order phase transition at the random close packing of hard spheres
Randomly packing spheres of equal size into a container consistently results
in a static configuration with a density of ~64%. The ubiquity of random close
packing (RCP) rather than the optimal crystalline array at 74% begs the
question of the physical law behind this empirically deduced state. Indeed,
there is no signature of any macroscopic quantity with a discontinuity
associated with the observed packing limit. Here we show that RCP can be
interpreted as a manifestation of a thermodynamic singularity, which defines it
as the "freezing point" in a first-order phase transition between ordered and
disordered packing phases. Despite the athermal nature of granular matter, we
show the thermodynamic character of the transition in that it is accompanied by
sharp discontinuities in volume and entropy. This occurs at a critical
compactivity, which is the intensive variable that plays the role of
temperature in granular matter. Our results predict the experimental conditions
necessary for the formation of a jammed crystal by calculating an analogue of
the "entropy of fusion". This approach is useful since it maps
out-of-equilibrium problems in complex systems onto simpler established
frameworks in statistical mechanics.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figure
Everybody’s Hacking:Participation and the Mainstreaming of Hackathons
Hackathons have become a popular tool for bringing people together to imagine new possibilities for technology. Despite originating in technology communities, hackathons have now been widely adopted by a broad range of organisations. This mainstreaming of hackathons means they encompass a very different range of attendees and activities than they once did, to the extent that some events billed as hackathons may involve no coding at all. Given this shift away from production of code, they might instead be seen as an increasingly popular participatory design activity, from which designers and researchers in HCI can learn. Through fieldwork at six hackathons that targeted non-technical communities, we identify the types of activities and contributions that emerge through these events and the barriers and tensions that might exist. In doing so, we contribute a greater understanding of hackathons as a growing phenomenon and as a potential tool for participatory research.Publisher PD
A Dynamic Ocean Management Tool to Reduce Bycatch and Support Sustainable Fisheries
Seafood is anessential sourceofprotein formore than3billionpeopleworldwide, yet bycatchof threatened species in capture fisheries remains a major impediment to fisheries sustainability. Management measures designed to reduce bycatch often result in significant economic losses and even fisheries closures. Static spatial management approaches can also be rendered ineffective by environmental variability and climate change, as productive habitats shift and introduce new interactions between human activities and protected species. We introduce a new multispecies and dynamic approach that uses daily satellite data to track ocean features and aligns scales of management, species movement, and fisheries. To accomplish this, we create species distribution models for one target species and three bycatch-sensitive species using both satellite telemetry and fisheries observer data. We then integrate species-specific probabilities of occurrence into a single predictive surface, weighing the contribution of each species by management concern. We find that dynamic closures could be 2 to 10 times smaller than existing static closures while still providing adequate protection of endangered nontarget species. Our results highlight the opportunity to implement near real time management strategies that would both support economically viable fisheries and meet mandated conservation objectives in the face of changing ocean conditions. With recent advances in eco-informatics, dynamic management provides a new climate-ready approach to support sustainable fisheries
Jamming II: Edwards' statistical mechanics of random packings of hard spheres
The problem of finding the most efficient way to pack spheres has an
illustrious history, dating back to the crystalline arrays conjectured by
Kepler and the random geometries explored by Bernal in the 60's. This problem
finds applications spanning from the mathematician's pencil, the processing of
granular materials, the jamming and glass transitions, all the way to fruit
packing in every grocery. There are presently numerous experiments showing that
the loosest way to pack spheres gives a density of ~55% (RLP) while filling all
the loose voids results in a maximum density of ~63-64% (RCP). While those
values seem robustly true, to this date there is no physical explanation or
theoretical prediction for them. Here we show that random packings of
monodisperse hard spheres in 3d can pack between the densities 4/(4 + 2 \sqrt
3) or 53.6% and 6/(6 + 2 \sqrt 3) or 63.4%, defining RLP and RCP, respectively.
The reason for these limits arises from a statistical picture of jammed states
in which the RCP can be interpreted as the ground state of the ensemble of
jammed matter with zero compactivity, while the RLP arises in the infinite
compactivity limit. We combine an extended statistical mechanics approach 'a la
Edwards' (where the role traditionally played by the energy and temperature in
thermal systems is substituted by the volume and compactivity) with a
constraint on mechanical stability imposed by the isostatic condition.
Ultimately, our results lead to a phase diagram that provides a unifying view
of the disordered hard sphere packing problem.Comment: 55 pages, 19 figures, C. Song, P. Wang, H. A. Makse, A phase diagram
for jammed matter, Nature 453, 629-632 (2008
Sleep disturbance in dementia or mild cognitive impairment: a realist review of general practice
Background: Sleep disturbance (SD) is a prevalent condition among people living with dementia (PLwD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Its assessment and management within primary care is complex due to the comorbidities, older age and cognitive impairment typical of this patient group. Aim: This study aimed to explore how primary care clinicians assess, understand, and manage SD for PLwD or MCI; if and why such initiatives work; and how people and their carers experience SD and its treatment. Design and setting: A realist review of existing literature was conducted in 2022. Methods: Six bibliographic databases were searched. Context-Mechanism-Outcome Configurations (CMOCs) were developed and refined. Results: Sixty records were included from 1,869 retrieved hits and 19 CMOCs were developed. Low awareness of and confidence in the treatment of SD among primary care clinicians and service users, combined with time and resource constraints, meant that identifying SD was difficult and not prioritised. Medication was perceived by clinicians and service users as the primary management tool, resulting in inappropriate or long-term prescription. Rigid nursing routines in care homes were reportedly not conducive to good quality sleep. Conclusion: In primary care, SD among PLwD or MCI is not adequately addressed. Over-reliance on medication, under-utilisation of non-pharmacological strategies, and inflexible care home routines were reported due to low confidence and resource constraints. This does not constitute effective and person-centred care. Future work should consider ways to tailor the assessment and management of SD to the needs of individuals and their informal carers without overstretching services
Sleep disturbance in people living with dementia or mild cognitive impairment: a realist review of general practice
BACKGROUND: Sleep disturbance is a prevalent condition among people living with dementia (PLwD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Its assessment and management within primary care is complex because of the comorbidities, older age, and cognitive impairment typical of this patient group. AIM: To explore how primary care clinicians assess, understand, and manage sleep disturbance for PLwD or MCI; if and why such initiatives work; and how people and their carers experience sleep disturbance and its treatment. DESIGN AND SETTING: A realist review of existing literature conducted in 2022. METHOD: Six bibliographic databases were searched. Context-mechanism-outcome configurations (CMOCs) were developed and refined. RESULTS: In total, 60 records were included from 1869 retrieved hits and 19 CMOCs were developed. Low awareness of and confidence in the treatment of sleep disturbance among primary care clinicians and patients, combined with time and resource constraints, meant that identifying sleep disturbance was difficult and not prioritised. Medication was perceived by clinicians and patients as the primary management tool, resulting in inappropriate or long-term prescription. Rigid nursing routines in care homes were reportedly not conducive to good-quality sleep. CONCLUSION: In primary care, sleep disturbance among PLwD or MCI is not adequately addressed. Over-reliance on medication, underutilisation of non-pharmacological strategies, and inflexible care home routines were reported as a result of low confidence in sleep management and resource constraints. This does not constitute effective and person-centred care. Future work should consider ways to tailor the assessment and management of sleep disturbance to the needs of individuals and their informal carers without overstretching services
Threshold-Dependent BMP-Mediated Repression: A Model for a Conserved Mechanism That Patterns the Neuroectoderm
Subdivision of the neuroectoderm into three rows of cells along the dorsal-ventral axis by neural identity genes is a highly conserved developmental process. While neural identity genes are expressed in remarkably similar patterns in vertebrates and invertebrates, previous work suggests that these patterns may be regulated by distinct upstream genetic pathways. Here we ask whether a potential conserved source of positional information provided by the BMP signaling contributes to patterning the neuroectoderm. We have addressed this question in two ways: First, we asked whether BMPs can act as bona fide morphogens to pattern the Drosophila neuroectoderm in a dose-dependent fashion, and second, we examined whether BMPs might act in a similar fashion in patterning the vertebrate neuroectoderm. In this study, we show that graded BMP signaling participates in organizing the neural axis in Drosophila by repressing expression of neural identity genes in a threshold-dependent fashion. We also provide evidence for a similar organizing activity of BMP signaling in chick neural plate explants, which may operate by the same double negative mechanism that acts earlier during neural induction. We propose that BMPs played an ancestral role in patterning the metazoan neuroectoderm by threshold-dependent repression of neural identity genes
State incapacity by design : understanding the Bihar story
governed particularly badly between 1990 and 2005, and has since experienced something
of a ‘governance miracle’. How can we account for the 1990–2005 deterioration? The answer
lies in the interaction of three factors. The first was the type of leadership exercised by Lalu
Prasad Yadav, who was Chief Minister throughout most of this period – even when his wife
formally occupied the post. The second lies in electoral politics: the need to maintain the
enthusiasm and morale of an electoral coalition that Yadav had constructed from a number
of poorer and historically oppressed groups. Such was the scale of poverty among this core
electoral coalition that Yadav had limited prospects of maintaining its cohesion and
allegiance through the normal processes of promising ‘development’ and using networks of
political patronage to distribute material resources to supporters. More important, that
strategy would have involved a high level of dependence on the government apparatus, that
was dominated by people from a number of historically-dominant upper castes. That is our
third factor. Yadav preferred to mobilise his supporters on the basis of continual confrontation
with this historically oppressive elite. He kept public sector jobs vacant rather than appoint
qualified people – who were mainly from the upper cases. He tried to micro-manage the state
apparatus from the Chief Minister’s office. He denuded the public service of staff. He was
then unable to use it to deliver ‘development’. We show that, among other things, the Bihar
state government sacrificed large potential fiscal transfers from the Government of India
designed for anti-poverty programmes because it was unable to complete the relevant
bureaucratic procedures. Yadav knowingly undermined the capacity of the state apparatus.
There are parallels in many other parts of the world. Low state capacity is often a political
choice.
Keywords: India; Bihar; politics; capacity building; state capacity; governance
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