545 research outputs found
Catch trend of the commercial trawl fisheries of Rameswaram
The present report summarises the catch details of some of the commercially important fishes landed by the trawlers operating from Rameswaram during the years 1980 and 1981. The silverbellies, formed the major group, indicating the availability of silverbellies in large quantities throughout the year, followed by Elasmobranchs and Penaeid prawns in the landings. Quarterrwise landings of trawlnets and monthwise landings of prawns and other groups were portrayed
Marine fisheries of the north-east coast of India during 2008
The north-east region of India comprises of the
states of West Bengal and Orissa. There are about
100 landing centres distributed in these two coastal
states, of which most of them record seasonal fishing.
The estimated marine fish landings in this region was
4.83 lakh t in 2008, which formed about 15% of the
total ‘all India landings’
AMCIS 2022 Awards Luncheon
This is a video recording and PDF document with the AMCIS 2022 Awards Ceremony
Estimation of burden of tuberculosis in India for the year 2000
Background & objectives: Data on the burden of tuberculosis (TB) in India are vital for
programme planners to plan the resource requirements and for monitoring the nation-wide TB
control programme. There was a need to revise the earlier estimate on the burden of TB in India
based on the increase in population and current epidemiological data. This study estimates the
burden of disease for the year 2000 based on recent prevalence of TB and annual risk of
tuberculosis infection (ARTI) estimates.
Methods: Data on prevalence generated among adults by the Tuberculosis Research Centre (TRC),
Chennai, among children by National Tuberculosis Institute (NTI), Bangalore, and the ARTI
estimates from the nation-wide sample survey by NTI and TRC were used for the estimation.
The prevalence of disease corresponding to 1 per cent ARTI was extrapolated to different parts
of the country using the estimates of ARTI and the population in those areas and added together
to get the total cases. Abacillary cases that required treatment were estimated from X-ray
abnormals. The estimates of bacillary, abacillary and extrapulmonary cases were then combined
to get the national burden.
Results: The estimated number of bacillary cases was 3.8 million (95% CI: 2.8 - 4.7). The
number of abacillary cases was estimated to be 3.9 million and that for extrapulmonary cases
was 0.8 million giving a total burden of 8.5 million (95% CI: 6.3-10.4) for 2000.
Interpretation & conclusion: The present estimate differs from the earlier estimates because we
have included the disease burden of X-ray cases that are likely to breakdown to bacillary cases
in a one year period, and extrapulmonary TB cases. The current estimates provided baseline
information for advocacy and planning resource allocation for TB control activities. Also, these
estimates can be compared with that in future years to measure the long term impact of TB
control activities in India
Association of conversion & cure with initial smear grading among new smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis patients treated with Category I regimen
Background & objective: Early diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) is important for initiating treatment
to gain cure. The present investigation was undertaken to study the association of conversion
and cure with initial smear grading among pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) patients registered in
a directly observed treatment – short course (DOTS) programme in Tiruvallur district, south
India.
Methods: All new smear positive cases registered from May, 1999 to December, 2002 were analysed
for conversion and cure related to initial smear grading.
Results: Of the 1463 patients, 1206(82.4%) were converted at the end of the intensive phase and
1109 (75.8%) were declared ‘cured’ after the completion of treatment. The cure rate decreased
as the initial smear grading increased and the decrease in trend was statistically significant
(P=0.01). Similarly, a significant decrease in conversion rate was also observed with increase in
initial smear grading (P<0.001). In multivariate analysis, lower cure rate was significantly
associated with patient’s age (AOR=1.5, 95% CI=1.1-2.1), alcoholism (AOR=1.7, 95% CI 1.2-
2.4) and conversion at the end of intensive phase (AOR=3.5, 95% CI= 2.6-4.8).
Interpretation & conclusion: Cure and conversion rates were linearly associated with initial
smear grading. High default and death rates were responsible for low cure and conversion. The
proportion of patients who required extension of treatment and those who had an unfavourable
treatment outcome were significantly higher among patients with a 3+ initial smear grading.
This reiterates the need to pay more attention in motivating these patients to return to regular
treatment and sustained commitment in the control of tuberculosis. There is a need to extend
the treatment for one more month in the intensive phase of treatment
On unusual heavy landing of cat fish Tachysurus dussumieri (Valenciennes) at Kasimedu, Madras
An unusual catch of cat fishes was recorded from 'Eda valai' (Bag net) netters. Out of that, 14 t was netted iix a single haul by 'Eda valai' opeiated by a catamaran at a depth of 10-15 m. 'Eda valai' is a traditional boat seine usually operated in shallow coastal areas with an extremely wide rectangular mouth or nearly square, measuring 20 m to catch pelagic shoals
Active community surveillance of the impact of different tuberculosis control measures, Tiruvallur, South India, 1968-2001
Background: Tuberculosis is curable, but community surveys documenting epidemiological
impact of the WHO-recommended DOTS strategy on tuberculosis prevalence
have not been published. We used active community surveillance to compare
the impact of DOTS with earlier programmes.
Methods: We conducted tuberculosis disease surveys using random cluster sampling of a
rural population in South India approximately every 2.5 years from 1968 to
1986, using radiography as a screening tool for sputum examination. In 1999,
DOTS was implemented in the area. Prevalence surveys using radiography and
symptom screening were conducted at the start of DOTS implementation and
after 2.5 years.
Results: From 1968 to 1999, culture-positive and smear-positive tuberculosis declined by
2.3 and 2.5% per annum compared with 11.9 and 5.6% after DOTS
implementation. The 2.5 year period of DOTS implementation accounted for
one-fourth of the decline in prevalence of culture-positive tuberculosis over 33
years. Multivariate analysis showed that prevalence of culture-positive tuberculosis
decreased substantially (10.0% per annum, 95% CI: 2.8–16.6%) owing
to DOTS after only slight declines related to temporal trends (2.1% annual
decline, 95% CI: 1.1–3.2%) and short-course chemotherapy (1.5% annual
decline, 95% CI: �9.7% to 11.5%). Under DOTS, the proportion of total cases
identified through clinical care increased from 81 to 92%.
Conclusions: Following DOTS implementation, prevalence of culture-positive tuberculosis
decreased rapidly following a gradual decline for the previous 30 years. In the
absence of a large HIV epidemic and with relatively low levels of rifampicin
resistance, DOTS was associated with rapid reduction of tuberculosis prevalenc
Is it worth treating category I failure patients with category II regimen?
Background: Very little information is available on the drug susceptibility profile among patients who are treated with
standardized short-course chemotherapy regimens under programme conditions.
Methods: Sputum samples were collected from new sputum smear-positive patients declared ‘failure’ after treatment with
Category I regimen under tuberculosis control programme using DOTS strategy from a rural area of Tamil Nadu.
Results: Of 1463 patients started on Category I regimen between May1999 and December 2002, 74 cases were declared
as ‘failures’ (smear positive at 5/6 months of treatment). We collected sputum samples from 60 (81%) of 74 ‘failures’ and
27% (16 of 60) of them were culture-negative for M tuberculosis and 17% (10 of 60) had organisms resistant to Isoniazid
and Rifampicin (MDR TB).
Conclusion: Based on the drug susceptibility profile at the time of ‘failure’, treating Category I ‘failures’ with Category
II regimen with close monitoring appears to be justified
Influence of drug susceptibility on treatment outcome and susceptibility profile of 'failures' to category II regimen
Objective: To assess the influence of drug resistance on treatment outcome among patients treated with Category-II regimen
and document drug susceptibility pattern of “Failures” to this regimen.
Design: A retrospective analysis of patients registered from May 1999 through December 2004.
Results: Treatment success was 42% among 572 patients and was similar among patients with fully susceptible or resistant but
non-MDR organisms (41% of 254 and 40% of 128 patients, respectively). Among 49 MDR-TB patients, 27% had successful
treatment outcome. The failure rates among patients with fully susceptible, resistant but non-MDR and MDR bacilli, were 6%,
12% and 27% respectively. Default was significantly higher among males (53% vs. 34%: p<0.01) smokers (57% vs. 36%: p
<0.001), alcoholics (58% vs. 39%: p <0.001) and patients with higher initial smear grading (2+ or 3+, 56% vs. scanty or 1+,
44%: p <0.01). DST results were available for 60% (31 of 52) of failures and 10 had MDR-TB.
Conclusion: The low success rate to the re-treatment regimen was mainly due to non-compliance. Failure was observed among
9% of patients and MDR-TB was 32% among Category II failures. The currently recommended Category II regimen appears
to be adequate for majority of re-treatment cases
A future for intelligent autonomous ocean observing systems
Ocean scientists have dreamed of and recently started to realize an ocean observing revolution with autonomous observing platforms and sensors. Critical questions to be answered by such autonomous systems are where, when, and what to sample for optimal information, and how to optimally reach the sampling locations. Definitions, concepts, and progress towards answering these questions using quantitative predictions and fundamental principles are presented. Results in reachability and path planning, adaptive sampling, machine learning, and teaming machines with scientists are overviewed. The integrated use of differential equations and theory from varied disciplines is emphasized. The results provide an inference engine and knowledge base for expert autonomous observing systems. They are showcased using a set of recent at-sea campaigns and realistic simulations. Real-time experiments with identical autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) in the Buzzards Bay and Vineyard Sound region first show that our predicted time-optimal paths were faster than shortest distance paths. Deterministic and probabilistic reachability and path forecasts issued and validated for gliders and floats in the northern Arabian Sea are then presented. Novel Bayesian adaptive sampling for hypothesis testing and optimal learning are finally shown to forecast the observations most informative to estimate the accuracy of model formulations, the values of ecosystem parameters and dynamic fields, and the presence of Lagrangian Coherent Structures
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