12 research outputs found
Variability of SCC mec in the Zurich area
A periodic survey of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in Zurich in 2004 and 2006 revealed a consistently low prevalence of MRSA. SCCmec and ccr typing showed fluctuations in the proportions of SCCmec types and in the carriage of mobile virulence determinants. Together with the presence of variant SCCmecs these findings suggest a high clonal diversity and level of SCCmec recombination. The prevalence of a local "drug clone", associated with low-level methicillin resistance and rapid growth, significantly decreased. This clone had spread among intraveneous drug users, steadily increasing from 1994 to 2001 and was dominant in 2001. Apparently, changes in the management of the Zurich drug scene have restricted the spread of this clon
Variability of SCCmec in the Zurich area
A periodic survey of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in Zurich in 2004 and 2006 revealed a consistently low prevalence of MRSA. SCCmec and ccr typing showed fluctuations in the proportions of SCCmec types and in the carriage of mobile virulence determinants. Together with the presence of variant SCCmecs these findings suggest a high clonal diversity and level of SCCmec recombination. The prevalence of a local "drug clone", associated with low-level methicillin resistance and rapid growth, significantly decreased. This clone had spread among intraveneous drug users, steadily increasing from 1994 to 2001 and was dominant in 2001. Apparently, changes in the management of the Zurich drug scene have restricted the spread of this clone
Komani [Dalmace] (Albanie)
DĂ©roulement de la campagne 2011 Les opĂ©rations de terrain sur le site de Komani (Dal- mace) ont Ă©tĂ© menĂ©es au cours de quatre semaines, du 3 aoĂ»t au 2 septembre 2011. Ă l'issue de la campagne de l'an dernier, nous avions prĂ©vu de concentrer nos efforts sur la fouille de trois composants du site : l'habitat (zone 1), la nĂ©cropole (zones 2 et 3) et le secteur de l'Ăglise Saint-Georges (zone 3). NĂ©anmoins, le prĂ©visionnel des opĂ©rations, contrariĂ© d'une part par des nĂ©cessitĂ©s de sĂ©curitĂ© et d'a..
Komani [Dalmace] (Albanie)
DĂ©roulement de la campagne 2011 Les opĂ©rations de terrain sur le site de Komani (Dal- mace) ont Ă©tĂ© menĂ©es au cours de quatre semaines, du 3 aoĂ»t au 2 septembre 2011. Ă l'issue de la campagne de l'an dernier, nous avions prĂ©vu de concentrer nos efforts sur la fouille de trois composants du site : l'habitat (zone 1), la nĂ©cropole (zones 2 et 3) et le secteur de l'Ăglise Saint-Georges (zone 3). NĂ©anmoins, le prĂ©visionnel des opĂ©rations, contrariĂ© d'une part par des nĂ©cessitĂ©s de sĂ©curitĂ© et d'a..
Audiovisual translation in second language acquisition. Integrating subtitling in the foreign-language curriculum
Collateral reports and cross-informant agreement about adult psychopathology in 14 societies
To advance international mental health assessment, instruments that have been internationally validated are needed. To this end, we analyzed ratings from 14 societies on the Adult Behavior Checklist (ABCL), a collateral-report form parallel to the Adult Self-Report (ASR; Achenbach and Rescorla 2003) for ages 18 to 59. Both the ABCL and the ASR assess problems, personal strengths, and adaptive functioning. For a sample of 8322 see note below collaterals, we found strong consistency across societies regarding which ABCL problem items tended to obtain relatively low, medium, or high ratings. Most societal effect sizes (ESs) for problem scale scores were small to medium (< 13.9 %), but the ES for the ABCL Personal Strengths scale was 25 %. For most of the same participants (N = 8,302), we analyzed cross-informant agreement between self-reports on the ASR and collateral reports on the ABCL. Cross-informant correlations for problem scale scores averaged.47, with considerable societal variation. Problem score means were higher on the ASR than the ABCL in every society, but the size of the difference varied across societies. Mean item ratings on the ABCL and ASR were highly correlated within every society (mean r = .92), but within-dyad item rating agreement varied widely in every society (mean r = .39). In all societies, non-corroboration of self-reported deviance and of collateral-reported deviance was common. Overall findings indicated considerable similarity but also some important differences in collateral-reported problems and adaptive functioning across 14 societies.Department of Applied Social Science
The intersection of gender and generation in Albanian migration, remittances and transnational care
The Albanian case represents the most dramatic instance of post-communist migration: about one million Albanians, a quarter of the country's total population, are now living abroad, most of them in Greece and Italy, with the UK becoming increasingly popular since the late 1990s. This paper draws on three research projects based on fieldwork in Italy, Greece, the UK and Albania. These projects have involved in-depth interviews with Albanian migrants in several cities, as well as with migrant-sending households in different parts of Albania. In this paper we draw out those findings which shed light on the intersections of gender and generations in three aspects of the migration process: the emigration itself, the sending and receiving of remittances, and the care of family members (mainly the migrants' elderly parents) who remain in Albania. Theoretically, we draw on the notion of `gendered geographies of power and on how spatial change and separation through migration reshapes gender and generational relations. We find that, at all stages of the migration, Albanian migrants are faced with conflicting and confusing models of gender, behavioural and generational norms, as well as unresolved questions about their legal status and the likely economic, social and political developments in Albania, which make their future life plans uncertain. Legal barriers often prevent migrants and their families from enjoying the kinds of transnational family lives they would like