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2021 ◽  
pp. 194855062110301
Author(s):  
Yuthika U. Girme ◽  
Chris G. Sibley ◽  
Benjamin W. Hadden ◽  
Michael T. Schmitt ◽  
Jeffrey M. Hunger

Single adults, on average, experience worse well-being compared to coupled adults. But why? The current research bridged interpersonal and intergroup perspectives to examine the influence of social support and social discrimination on single versus coupled adults’ well-being. We drew on a nationally representative prospective study from New Zealand (Study 1, N = 4,024) and an integrative data analysis of three North American data sets examining peoples’ general (Study 2, N = 806) and day-to-day (Study 2, N = 889 and 9,228 observations) social experiences. The results demonstrated that single adults reported lower life satisfaction compared to coupled adults, and this may be partly due to single adults reporting lower perceptions of social support availability and greater experiences of negative treatment and discrimination compared to coupled adults. These novel findings move away from stereotypical assumptions about singlehood and highlight the important role of social relationships and interactions in determining single adults’ happiness and well-being.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Erjola Likaj ◽  
Larisa Shehaj ◽  
Alma Idrizi ◽  
Myftar Barbullushi

Abstract Background and Aims Diabetes mellitus was prevalent in nearly 0.8 % of the adult population and assent in our modest hemodialytic population in 1990. Changing of lifestyle and nutrition, increase in longevity, aging population, and stress have brought to increase of this morbid condition. Nowadays, with a galloping rise, we have a prevalence of 11,1 % of DM in the adult population and nearly 22% of hemodialysis patients whose primary diagnosis is diabetes. Despite this, data of EUROSTAT put us in the first place for mortality due to diabetes. It's time to act! Method We analyzed the number of diabetic patients in Albania second the IDF data and the number of diabetic nephropathy patients hospitalized during this decade in our Departement of Nephrology according the Statistical Department of UHC "Mother Theresa". Results In 2010 there were 4.5% diabetics in the adult population in Albania and in 2019 there were 9%, so doubling of numbers. Diabetic nephropathy is increasing too and now is our everyday clinical practice challenge, in 2010 there were 54 patients hospitalized for DN and its complications and in 2019 this number increased to 164 patients. Diabetics on hemodialysis are now more and more present with their problems and difficulties that need not only nephrologists but a multidisciplinary approach. Diabetic nephropathy in 2011 had only 11,3% of the hemodialytic pie and now is reaching 17,2% of the primary cause of ESRD in our hemodialytic population, regarding ERA EDTA registry, but our 2020 numbers rise to 22%. We are below the European and North American data but in incident patients it is becoming the second predominant cause of renal failure, after the hypertensive nephrosclerosis, reaching 25%-27%. Mortality in this population is a crucial point, we stand first in Europe with 110 deaths/ million inhabitants despite the reimbursement range is three-fold compared to 10 years ago An increasing number is translated into increased problems especially in vascular access, cardiovascular problems, diabetic foot problems, glycemic control, etc. Conclusion Nephrology Units and Hemodialysis Units too are being invaded by diabetics Caring about the glycemic levels, type of hypoglycemia drugs, time and dosage, eating or not during the hemodialysis session, are every session challenges. Cardiovascular problems with frequent hypotensions, coronary heart disease, and cardiac heart failure are other difficult to manage fields. But the most important and continuous care is that of vascular access, the "Achille's Heel" of our patients. Results from our studies reveal diabetes like the second cause of arteriovenous fistulas failure, after the age of patients so we are reinforcing the whole medical chain for referring patients in the fourth stage of CKD for the creation of permanent vascular access, especially diabetics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Esch ◽  
Kevin McCann ◽  
Caroline Kamm ◽  
Bernal Arce ◽  
Oliver Carroll ◽  
...  

Abstract A growing challenge with industrialized agriculture is compensating farmers for devoting land towards producing ecosystem services, at a time when global food demands are accelerating. Here, we explore revenue thresholds that Payment for Ecosystem Service programs (PES) must approach to be competitive in present-day crop markets, amalgamating long-term North American data especially from Canada on input costs, crop yields, crop revenues after expenses, government subsidies, and land use. Two trends suggest that PES markets with stable revenues can be increasingly competitive, with inflation-adjusted farm input costs now 50x higher than a century earlier and increasingly high revenue instability including net losses for some crops in some years. Since 1994, crop revenues in some regions have averaged $39 acre− 1 US, peaking at $412 but losing money 25.3% of time. Importantly, these data show how government subsidies have been a major stabilizing force, increasing revenues by 37.6% while reducing the frequency of losses by 50% - societal compensation to North American farmers is already the norm. PES programs could be most feasible on marginal lands, which are often targeted for retirement due to higher input requirements. However, trends in Canada reveal that marginal land cropping has increased by 5.2 million acres since 1990 and now constitutes 28.8% of all cropland. Our work reinforces how revenue instability simultaneously creates and constrains opportunities for PES markets, favoring market competitiveness because of shrinking crop revenues but pressuring farmers to expand production, including on marginal lands, as they struggle to offset revenue shortfalls while attempting to capitalize on growing global food demands.


2021 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
KLAUDIA LISOWSKA-ŁYSIAK ◽  
RYSZARD LAUTERBACH ◽  
JACEK MIĘDZOBRODZKI ◽  
MAJA KOSECKA-STROJEK

Staphylococci are among the most frequent human microbiota components associated with the high level of bloodstream infection (BSI) episodes. In predisposed patients, there is a high risk of transformation of BSI episodes to sepsis. Both bacterial and host factors are crucial for the outcomes of BSI and sepsis. The highest rates of BSI episodes were reported in Africa, where these infections were up to twice as high as the European rates. However, there remains a great need to analyze African data for comprehensive quantification of staphylococcal BSI prevalence. The lowest rates of BSI exist in Australia. Asian, European, and North American data showed similar frequency values. Worldwide analysis indicated that both Staphylococcus aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) are the most frequent BSI agents. In the second group, the most prevalent species was Staphylococcus epidermidis, although CoNS were not identified at the species level in many studies. The lack of a significant worldwide decrease in BSI episodes indicates a great need to implement standardized diagnostic methods and research etiological factors using advanced genetic methods.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2503-2503
Author(s):  
Adriana Fonseca ◽  
Cecile Faure-Conter ◽  
Matthew Murray ◽  
Jason R. Fangusaro ◽  
Stewart Goldman ◽  
...  

2503 Background: CNS-NGGCT are rare tumors that have been successfully treated with multimodal therapies. With a 5-yr EFS and OS of 72-84% and 82-93% respectively, surveillance and relapse detection is essential. Tumor marker (TM) elevation has proven to be a highly sensitive method of relapse detection in extra-cranial-NGGCT. We aim to determine the role of TM for relapse surveillance in children and adolescents with CNS-NGGCTs. Methods: European and North American data from germ cell tumor trials (SIOP GCT96, SFOP-TGM TC 90/92, COG-ACNS0122 and COG-ACNS1123) were pooled for analysis. Additionally, patients treated in the UK, Germany and France under strict protocol-guidelines were included. Details regarding imaging, pathology and TM elevation at diagnosis and relapse were collected. We report the proportion of relapses detectable by TM elevation. Results: Four-hundred and eighty-four patients enrolled in prospective cooperative group CNS-NGGCT trials from 1989 to 2016 were pooled for analysis. One-hundred and thirteen (23%) patients experienced a relapse/progression (SIOP GCT96: n = 57; SFOP TGM TC 90-92 n = 23, COG-ACNS0122 n = 16 & COG-ACNS1123 n = 17) and constitute the population of this report. Median age at diagnosis was 13 (range:1-30) years. The most common primary location was pineal in n = 60 (53%) patients. The site of relapse was available for 100 patients, 48 patients relapsed locally, 36 relapsed with distant disease, combined relapses were seen in 22 patients and 4 patients relapsed with TM elevation alone. TM in serum and/or CSF at diagnosis was available in 93(82%) patients, and in 90(80%) patients at the time of relapse. Eighty-four patients had TM available at both timepoints. At diagnosis 81 (96%) patients had TM elevation and 3 (4%) had negative TM. At relapse, 74(94%) patients with positive TM at diagnosis had TM elevation, while 7(6%) had TM negative. Conversely, 2/3 patients with negative TM at diagnosis, relapsed with elevated TM. Conclusions: Herein, we have assembled the largest prospective cohort to date of relapsed intracranial germ cell tumors. TM are highly sensitive detecting relapse/progression in CNS-NGGCT patients with elevated TM at diagnosis. The routine use of TM for relapse surveillance in patients with CNS-NGGCT can decrease the frequency of cross-sectional imaging, therefore, reducing lengthy hospital visits, sedation procedures and decreasing health-care costs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 629-635 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary Gamme ◽  
Jerry T. Dang ◽  
Noah Switzer ◽  
Richdeep Gill ◽  
Daniel W. Birch ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Arrigoni ◽  
Weiliang Lu ◽  
Anatoliy V. Swishchuk ◽  
Stephane Goutte

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis H. Amato ◽  
Arthur Zillante ◽  
Christie H Amato

Purpose – This paper aims to examines whether firms’ eco-friendly advertising claims are supported by environmentally friendly behavior. Design/methodology/approach – The paper develops a game theory model to determine the circumstances under which firms’ environmental claims will be supported by the adoption of best environmental practice. Least squares regression is used to test major theoretical implications. Findings – The theoretical model suggests that the credence good nature of un-monitored environmental claims prohibits consumer validation; firms have an incentive to advertise green but no incentive to adopt best environmental practice. Third-party monitoring transforms the game, making eco-friendly outcomes possible. Empirical models based on North American data suggest that firm profit rates are related to verifiable environmental claims and to easily accessible external ratings of environmental performance. Originality/value – Unlike previous game theoretical models for similar goods, the eco-friendly outcome does not require a repeated game. The importance of the single period game is that continued patronage is not required for the firm to produce goods containing the desired attributes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 243-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Mokros ◽  
Elmar Habermeyer ◽  
Craig S. Neumann ◽  
Frank Schilling ◽  
Robert D. Hare ◽  
...  

The Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) is a clinician rating instrument for psychopathic personality disorder. Although the instrument is routinely used in forensic assessment in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland, data on its psychometric properties in German-speaking countries are lacking. Based on a national sample of adult male sexual offenders assessed at a federal evaluation unit in Austria (N = 1,046), reliability and factor structure were estimated. More specifically, measurement invariance was assessed with respect to the North American normative data of male offenders. In the sample, the PCL-R achieved similar levels of reliability as those reported in the manual for North American male offenders. According to confirmatory factor analysis, a four-factor model of psychopathy described the data well. More specifically, weak measurement invariance (i.e., equivalence of loadings, not of thresholds) held in comparison with the North American data. The present findings support the suitability of the PCL-R for assessment purposes in German-speaking countries. However, the total score is not directly comparable to North American data given that only weak measurement invariance was observed.


ISRN Ecology ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Cunze ◽  
Marion Carmen Leiblein ◽  
Oliver Tackenberg

Ambrosia artemisiifolia L., native to North America, is a problematic invasive species, because of its highly allergenic pollen. The species is expected to expand its range due to climate change. By means of ecological niche modelling (ENM), we predict habitat suitability for A. artemisiifolia in Europe under current and future climatic conditions. Overall, we compared the performance and results of 16 algorithms commonly applied in ENM. As occurrence records of invasive species may be dominated by sampling bias, we also used data from the native range. To assess the quality of the modelling approaches we assembled a new map of current occurrences of A. artemisiifolia in Europe. Our results show that ENM yields a good estimation of the potential range of A. artemisiifolia in Europe only when using the North American data. A strong sampling bias in the European Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) data for A. artemisiifolia causes unrealistic results. Using the North American data reflects the realized European distribution very well. All models predict an enlargement and a northwards shift of potential range in Central and Northern Europe during the next decades. Climate warming will lead to an increase and northwards shift of A. artemisiifolia in Europe.


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