7,112 research outputs found
Impact of violence against women on severe acute maternal morbidity in the intensive care unit, including neonatal outcomes: a caseâcontrol study protocol in a tertiary healthcare facility in Lima, Peru
Introduction Preventing and reducing violence against women (VAW) and maternal mortality are Sustainable Development Goals. Worldwide, the maternal mortality ratio has fallen about 44% in the last 25 years, and for one maternal death there are many women affected by severe acute maternal morbidity (SAMM) requiring management in the intensive care unit (ICU). These women represent the most critically ill obstetric patients of the maternal morbidity spectrum and should be studied to complement the review of maternal mortality. VAW has been associated with all-cause maternal deaths, and since many women (30%) endure violence usually exerted by their intimate partners and this abuse can be severe during pregnancy, it is important to determine whether it impacts SAMM. Thus, this study aims to investigate the impact of VAW on SAMM in the ICU. Methods and analysis This will be a prospective case-control study undertaken in a tertiary healthcare facility in Lima-Peru, with a sample size of 109 cases (obstetric patients admitted to the ICU) and 109 controls (obstetric patients not admitted to the ICU selected by systematic random sampling). Data on social determinants, medical and obstetric characteristics, VAW, pregnancy and neonatal outcome will be collected through interviews and by extracting information from the medical records using a pretested form. Main outcome will be VAW rate and neonatal mortality rate between cases and controls. VAW will be assessed by using the WHO instrument. Binary logistic followed by stepwise multivariate regression and goodness of fit test will assess any association between VAW and SAMM. Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval has been granted by the La Trobe University, Melbourne-Australia and the tertiary healthcare facility in Lima-Peru. This research follows the WHO ethical and safety recommendations for research on VAW. Findings will be presented at conferences and published in peer-reviewed journals
Polarized 3 parton production in inclusive DIS at small x
Azimuthal angular correlations between produced hadrons/jets in high energy
collisions are a sensitive probe of the dynamics of QCD at small x. Here we
derive the triple differential cross section for inclusive production of 3
polarized partons in DIS at small x using the spinor helicity formalism. The
target proton or nucleus is described using the Color Glass Condensate (CGC)
formalism. The resulting expressions are used to study azimuthal angular
correlations between produced partons in order to probe the gluon structure of
the target hadron or nucleus. Our analytic expressions can also be used to
calculate the real part of the Next to Leading Order (NLO) corrections to
di-hadron production in DIS by integrating out one of the three final state
partons.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures; version accepted for publication in Physics
Letters
M dwarf stars in the light of (future) exoplanet searches
We present a brief overview of a splinter session on M dwarf stars as planet
hosts that was organized as part of the Cool Stars 17 conference. The session
was devoted to reviewing our current knowledge of M dwarf stars and exoplanets
in order to prepare for current and future exoplanet searches focusing in low
mass stars. We review the observational and theoretical challenges to
characterize M dwarf stars and the importance of accurate fundamental
parameters for the proper characterization of their exoplanets and our
understanding on planet formation.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Summary of the splinter session "M dwarf stars in
the light of (future) exoplanet searches" held at the 17th Cambridge Workshop
on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun, June 28th 2012, Barcelona,
Spain. Submitted for publication in Astronomische Nachrichten - Astronomical
Notes (AN) 334, Issue 1-2, Eds Klaus Strassmeier and Mercedes L\'opez-Morale
Dilepton low suppression as an evidence of the Color Glass Condensate
The dilepton production is investigated in proton-nucleus collisions in the
forward region using the Color Glass Condensate approach. The transverse
momentum distribution (), more precisely the low region, where the
saturation effects are expected to increase, is analyzed. The ratio between
proton-nucleus and proton-proton differential cross section for RHIC and LHC
energies is evaluated, showing the effects of saturation at small , and
presenting a Cronin type peak at moderate . These features indicate the
dilepton as a most suitable probe to study the properties of the saturated
regime and the Cronin effect.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, replaced with the version to appear in Physical
Review
Unitarity Corrections to the Proton Structure Functions through the Dipole Picture
We study the dipole picture for the description of the deep inelastic
scattering, focusing on the structure functions which are driven directly by
the gluon distribution. One performs estimates using the effective dipole cross
section given by the Glauber-Mueller approach in QCD, which encodes the
corrections due to the unitarity effects associated with the saturation
phenomenon. We also address issues about frame invariance of the calculations
when analysing the observables.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. Version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Phase Transition in Sexual Reproduction and Biological Evolution
Using Monte Carlo model of biological evolution we have discovered that
populations can switch between two different strategies of their genomes'
evolution; Darwinian purifying selection and complementing the haplotypes. The
first one is exploited in the large panmictic populations while the second one
in the small highly inbred populations. The choice depends on the crossover
frequency. There is a power law relation between the critical value of
crossover frequency and the size of panmictic population. Under the constant
inbreeding this critical value of crossover does not depend on the population
size and has a character of phase transition. Close to this value sympatric
speciation is observed.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Shadowing of gluons in perturbative QCD: A comparison of different models
We investigate the different perturbative QCD-based models for nuclear
shadowing of gluons. We show that in the kinematic region appropriate to RHIC
experiment, all models give similar estimates for the magnitude of gluon
shadowing. At scales relevant to LHC, there is a sizable difference between
predictions of the different models.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
The Wilson renormalization group for low x physics: towards the high density regime
We continue the study of the effective action for low physics based on a
Wilson renormalization group approach. We express the full nonlinear
renormalization group equation in terms of the average value and the average
fluctuation of extra color charge density generated by integrating out gluons
with intermediate values of . This form clearly exhibits the nature of the
phenomena driving the evolution and should serve as the basis of the analysis
of saturation effects at high gluon density at small .Comment: 14 pages, late
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