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Boletín diario de información científica N° 50Asociación Peruana de Bibliotecas Académicas ALTAMIRA 25 June 2020 (has links)
Boletín que incluye información científica sobre el COVID-19, incluye artículos científicos y artículos preprint actualizados al 25 de Junio de 2020.
Tipo
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Boletín diario de información científica N° 51Asociación Peruana de Bibliotecas Académicas ALTAMIRA 26 June 2020 (has links)
Boletín que incluye información científica sobre el COVID-19, incluye artículos científicos y artículos preprint actualizados al 26 de Junio de 2020. Tipo
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Boletín diario de información científica N° 55Asociación Peruana de Bibliotecas Académicas ALTAMIRA 03 July 2020 (has links)
Boletín que incluye información científica sobre el COVID-19, incluye artículos científicos y artículos preprint actualizados al 03 de Julio de 2020.
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Boletín diario de información científica N° 45Asociación Peruana de Bibliotecas Académicas ALTAMIRA 18 June 2020 (has links)
Boletín que incluye información científica sobre el COVID-19, incluye artículos científicos y artículos preprint actualizados al 18 de Junio de 2020.
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Boletín diario de información científica N° 46Asociación Peruana de Bibliotecas Académicas ALTAMIRA 19 June 2020 (has links)
Boletín que incluye información científica sobre el COVID-19, incluye artículos científicos y artículos preprint actualizados al 19 de Junio de 2020.
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Novel 2019 coronavirus infection in children / Infección por el nuevo coronavirus 2019 en niñosLlaque Quiroz, Patricia Beatriz 01 January 2020 (has links)
COVID-19 is rarely reported in children and they are mildly affected in most cases. The most common clinical presentation of COVID-19 is cough, fever and sore throat; severe cases show tachypnea. The course of the disease is from one to two weeks. Laboratory findings are nonspecific; lymphopenia, elevation of C-reactive protein and procalcitonin have been described. Early chest X-ray is usually normal, and the most common tomographic findings are consolidations with halo, ground-glass opacities and tiny nodules which mainly affects subpleural areas. Management of the disease is supportive; in severe cases, it should be focused on respiratory support. It is recommended to limit the handling of respiratory secretions and to follow the same preventive measures provided to adults. / Revisión por pares
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Minoritetsaktieägarskydd enligt 2019 års fusionsdirektiv / Minority shareholder protection under the2019 Merger DirectiveSchwartz, Erik January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Décomposition photocatalytique du méthanol sur des nanosphères de TiO₂ chargées de métalVu, Thuy-Dung 21 October 2019 (has links)
353121\u / The utilization of solar light-driven photocatalysts has attracted an increasing attention in creating green energy and purifying environment from harmful pollutants. In photocatalysis technology, semiconductor-based photocatalysis has diverse applications including the decomposition of organic pollutants. In particular, titanium dioxide (TiO₂)-based photocatalysts have been extensively studied because of their low cost and outstanding physical and chemical properties. However, the photocatalytic performance of TiO₂ is not very high due to the weak light absorption and the fast charge carrier recombination. Therefore, the main target of the research presented in this thesis is to develop new methods to prepare more efficient materials based on TiO₂ for organic pollutants decomposition. For this purpose, the uniform titanate nanodisks (TNDs) with an average diameter of 22 nm were first synthesized by using different types of capping agents, including benzyl alcohol (BA), benzyl ether (BE) and oleylamine (OM). SiO₂ nanospheres (SiO₂ NSs) in nanoscale diameter as the core of the structure were then coated with TNDs using a layer-by-layer deposition technique in the presence of polyethylenimine (PEI) solution to design the TND-PEI/SiO₂ NSs. Based on the developed TND-PEI/SiO₂ NSs, creating a heterojunction between TiO₂ and other visible light active semiconductors is one of the interesting ways to optimize and enhance performance of TiO₂ in the visible region. In order to synthesize these TiO₂-based heterojunction composites, several cation (Cu²⁺, Ni²⁺, and Pt²⁺) solutions were loaded over TND-PEI/SiO₂ NSs to obtain CuO/TiO₂/SiO₂, Ni²⁺/TiO₂/SiO₂ or Pt²⁺/TiO₂/SiO₂ materials, respectively. The co-existence of CuO, Ni²⁺, and Pt²⁺ functioning as co-catalysts led to a remarkable enhancement of the photocatalytic performance of TiO₂. The new developed materials have shown not only high porosity and high specific surface area, but also strong solar light absorption. As a result, the photocatalytic activity of these new materials and the effect of different co-catalysts were investigated in the photocatalytic decomposition of methanol. TiO₂-based heterojunction composites (CuO/TiO₂/SiO₂) was further treated by H₂S. This non-metal doping TiO₂ is a well-known and effective way to decrease the band gap, which can result in the absorption of more visible light. The photodegradation of methanol in aqueous solution was deployed to test the photocatalytic activities of TiO₂-based material and further widens its applications in water treatment. These modifications proved that the light absorption of CuO/TiO₂ was improved compared with Ni²⁺/TiO₂ and Pt²⁺/TiO₂. CuO/TiO₂ material after H₂S treatment was found to exhibit a good performance in the degradation of methanol from aqueous solutions under solar light irradiation.
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Guideline Development and Evidence Synthesis in Gastrointestinal Bleeding Prophylaxis and Coronavirus Disease 2019Ye, Zhikang January 2021 (has links)
The field of guideline development has made considerable progress in the past twenty
years, particularly after the introduction of GRADE in 2004. However, there are many
shortcomings in current guideline development including failure to use GRADE, low
quality systematic reviews, and excessive delays from the publication of practice
changing evidence to new recommendations. The objective of this thesis is to describe
the development of evidence-based recommendations, to document methodological
issues that arose and describe how the research team addressed the questions, and to
document how the ultimate guidelines contributed to optimization of treatment in
clinical practice. The relevant guidelines address the issues of gastrointestinal bleeding
prophylaxis and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
The thesis begins by presenting three methodological issues that arose during the
planning and implementation of the guideline process and the initial process of how the
research team addressed the challenges. The thesis subsequently presents a published
paper that documents recommendations regarding gastrointestinal bleeding prophylaxis
in critically ill patients. Then, this thesis presents a published systematic review and
meta-analysis addressing efficacy and safety of corticosteroids in COVID-19 based on
direct evidence from patients with COVID-19, and indirect evidence from acute
respiratory distress syndrome, community-acquired pneumonia, severe acute
respiratory syndrome, middle east respiratory syndrome and influenza. Further, the
thesis includes a published paper describing recommendations regarding corticosteroids, convalescent plasma and antiviral drugs in COVID-19 on the basis of evidence
available very early during the pandemic. This thesis ends by presenting how the
methodological issues were ultimately addressed in the relevant guidelines, the
importance of the guidelines themselves, and presents perspectives on future research
and opportunities in guideline development. / Thesis / Candidate in Philosophy
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Report of the 2018-2019 Research and Graduate Affairs CommitteeO'Donnell, James M., Anand, Sridhar, Brown, Stacy D., Fuji, Kevin T., Guy, R. Kiplin, Kawaguchi-Suzuki, Marina, Meier, Kathryn E., Nelson, Cassandra E., Vyas, Ami, Block, Kristen F., Farrell, Dorothy F. 01 December 2019 (has links)
The 2018-2019 Research and Graduate Affairs Committee (RGAC) was charged with critically evaluating the leadership development support necessary for pharmacy researchers, including postdoctoral trainees, to develop the skills needed to build and sustain successful research programs and analyzing how well those needs are being met by existing programs both within AACP and at other organizations.
The RGAC identified a set of skills that could reasonably be expected to provide the necessary foundation to successfully lead a research team and mapped these skills to the six domains of graduate education in the pharmaceutical sciences established by the 2016-2017 RGAC (Table 1). In addition, the RGAC identified competency in team science and the bench-to-bedside-to-beyond translational spectrum as being critical elements of research leadership. The universality of these skills and their value prompted the RGAC to make two related recommendations to AACP
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