43 research outputs found
PrivacyScore: Improving Privacy and Security via Crowd-Sourced Benchmarks of Websites
Website owners make conscious and unconscious decisions that affect their
users, potentially exposing them to privacy and security risks in the process.
In this paper we introduce PrivacyScore, an automated website scanning portal
that allows anyone to benchmark security and privacy features of multiple
websites. In contrast to existing projects, the checks implemented in
PrivacyScore cover a wider range of potential privacy and security issues.
Furthermore, users can control the ranking and analysis methodology. Therefore,
PrivacyScore can also be used by data protection authorities to perform
regularly scheduled compliance checks. In the long term we hope that the
transparency resulting from the published benchmarks creates an incentive for
website owners to improve their sites. The public availability of a first
version of PrivacyScore was announced at the ENISA Annual Privacy Forum in June
2017.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. A german version of this paper discussing the
legal aspects of this system is available at arXiv:1705.0888
Best Practices for Notification Studies for Security and Privacy Issues on the Internet
Researchers help operators of vulnerable and non-compliant internet services
by individually notifying them about security and privacy issues uncovered in
their research. To improve efficiency and effectiveness of such efforts,
dedicated notification studies are imperative. As of today, there is no
comprehensive documentation of pitfalls and best practices for conducting such
notification studies, which limits validity of results and impedes
reproducibility. Drawing on our experience with such studies and guidance from
related work, we present a set of guidelines and practical recommendations,
including initial data collection, sending of notifications, interacting with
the recipients, and publishing the results. We note that future studies can
especially benefit from extensive planning and automation of crucial processes,
i.e., activities that take place well before the first notifications are sent.Comment: Accepted to the 3rd International Workshop on Information Security
Methodology and Replication Studies (IWSMR '21), colocated with ARES '2
Uterine Fibroids and Infertility
Infertility is a disease of the reproductive system defined by the failure to achieve a clinical pregnancy after 12 months or more of regular unprotected sexual intercourse. Uterine fibroids are the most common tumor in women, and their prevalence is high in patients with infertility. Fibroids may be the sole cause of infertility in 2-3% of women. Depending on their location in the uterus, fibroids have been implicated in recurrent pregnancy loss as well as infertility. Pregnancy and live birth rates appear to be low in women with submucosal fibroids; their resection has been shown to improve pregnancy rates. In contrast, subserosal fibroids do not affect fertility outcomes and their removal does not confer any benefit. Intramural fibroids appear to reduce fertility, but recommendations concerning their treatment remain unclear. Myomectomy should be discussed individually with the patient; other potential symptoms such as dysmenorrhea or bleeding disorders should be included in the indication for surgery
Вплив природних та штучних радіонуклідів на стан здоров'я людини (огляд)
Здійснено огляд основних етапів досліджень з впливу природних та штучних радіонуклідів на стан здоров'я людини. Розглянуто методи профілактики захворювань спровокованих радіоактивним випромінюванням. На основі узагальнення наукової літератури про вплив радіонуклідів на людину запропоновано можливі шляхи розширення лікувальних процедур з використанням водних розчинів, які містять іони калію і мають радіоактивність в діапазоні 20-400 Бк/л, що спричинено радіонуклідом 40К і залежить від концентрації іонів калію
Impact of nicotine and maternal BMI on fetal birth weight
Data from 110.047 singleton pregnancies, achieved from the German Perinatal Survey in Schleswig-Holstein and registered between 2010 and 2017 were analyzed in August 2018 concerning maternal BMI and smoking. The BMI was taken from the maternity log. Information concerning the smoking status were self-reported and further subdivided into the following four categories: a) non-smokers; b) 1-7 cigarettes/day; c) 8-14 cigarettes/ day; and d) ≥ 15 cigarettes/ day. Furthermore, we classified women by their BMI into underweight, normal weight, overweight and obese. Comparisons between non-smokers and the respective smoking group, and their relationship with maternal BMI were performed by the t-test (birth weight). A number of 97.092 women (88.2%) were non-smokers and 12.955 (11.8%) were smokers. Furthermore 10.3% of women of normal weight smoked during pregnancy, but both high and low BMI were associated with a high prevalence of smoking. The proportion of smokers was highest (18.1%) among underweight women (BMI ≤ 18.5 kg/m2). A large number of smokers (15.5%) were registered in the obesity group (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2). Mean birth weight (≥ 37 + 0 gestational age) increased with increasing maternal BMI, and was reduced by smoking for every BMI category. The differences between smokers and non-smokers were always highly significant (p < 0.001). Mean birth weight varied between 2995 g in underweight frequent smokers and 3607 g in obese non-smokers. Conclusion Both maternal BMI and smoking during pregnancy influences the birth weight and therefore pregnancy outcome. Smoking during pregnancy was significantly associated with low birth weight. Pregnant women should be advised to cease or at least reduce smoking in order to improve the birth weight of the newborn and to minimize child morbidities
Live Birth Rates after Active Immunization with Partner Lymphocytes
Although many potential causes have been established for recurrent implantation failure (RIF) and recurrent miscarriage (RM), about 50% of these remain idiopathic. Scientific research is focused on immunological risk factors. In the present study, we aim to evaluate live birth rates after immunization with paternal lymphocytes (lymphocyte immunotherapy (LIT)). This retrospective study consisted of 148 couples with a history of RM and/or RIF. The women underwent immunization with lymphocytes of their respective partners from November 2017 to August 2019. Fifty-five patients (43%) had live births. Stratified by indication (RM, RIF, combined), live birth rates in the RM and the combined group were significantly higher than that in the RIF group (53%, 59% and 33%, respectively, p = 0.02). The difference was especially noticeable during the first 90 days after immunization (conception rate leading to live births: 31%, 23% and 8% for RM, the combined group and RIF, respectively; p = 0.005), while there was no difference between groups during the later follow-up. LIT was associated with high live birth rates, especially in women with recurrent miscarriage. In view of the limited data from randomized studies, LIT cannot be recommended as routine therapy. However, it may be considered in individual cases
Ectopic pregnancy in noncommunicating horn of unicornuate uterus: 3D-ultrasound and primary laparoscopic management.
Unicornuate uterus with pregnancy in the noncommunicating rudimentary horn is extremely rare. Diagnosis requires awareness, high suspicion index, 3D ultrasound, and MRI. If missed, it can be catastrophic. Treatment varies across literature. We present a case where detection was done by 3D ultrasound and primary laparoscopic surgery done for treatment
Video Feedback and Video Modeling in Teaching Laparoscopic Surgery: A Visionary Concept from Kiel
Learning curves for endoscopic surgery are long and flat. Various techniques and methods are now available for surgical endoscopic training, such as pelvitrainers, virtual trainers, and body donor surgery. Video modeling and video feedback are commonly used in professional training. We report, for the first time, the application of video modeling and video feedback for endoscopic training in gynecology. The purpose is to present an innovative method of training. Attendees (residents and specialists) of minimally invasive surgery courses were asked to perform specific tasks, which were video recorded in a multimodular concept. Feedback was given later by an expert at a joint meeting. The attendees were asked to fill a questionnaire in order to assess video feedback given by the expert. The advantages of video feedback and video modeling for the development of surgical skills were given a high rating (median 84%, interquartile ranges (IQR) 72.5-97.5%, n = 37). The question as to whether the attendees would recommend such training was also answered very positively (median 100%, IQR 89.5-100%, n = 37). We noted a clear difference between subjective perception and objective feedback (58%, IQR 40.5-76%, n = 37). Video feedback and video modeling are easy to implement in surgical training setups, and help trainees at all levels of education