• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Human smoking behaviour, cigarette testing protocols, and constituent yields

Hammond, David January 2005 (has links)
The issue of how to test and ultimately regulate tobacco products represents a critical challenge for the public health community. Although the current international testing regime for conventional cigarettes is widely acknowledged to be seriously flawed, there is a lack of data to guide potential alternatives, particularly in the area of human puffing behaviour. The current study sought to: 1) collect naturalistic measures of smoking behaviour, 2) examine the extent to which levels of tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide from each of five testing protocols were associated with measures of nicotine uptake among smokers, and 3) examine the validity of self-report measures of smoking behaviour. These questions were examined through two different studies. First, a field study of smoking behaviour was conducted with 59 adult smokers, who used a portable device to measure smoking topography over the course of 3 one-week trials. Participants were asked to smoke their usual ?regular-yield? brand through the device for Trial 1 and again, 6 weeks later, at Trial 2. Half the subjects were then randomly assigned to smoke a ?low-yield? brand for Trial 3. The smoke intake and constituent yield of each brand was then tested under five testing protocols: ISO, Massachusetts, Canadian, a Compensatory protocol, and a Human Mimic regime. Participants also completed self-report measures of puffing behaviour at recruitment and immediately following each of the three one-week smoking trials. Several of these self-report measures were subsequently included in the Waves 2 and 3 of the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation (ITC) Survey?an international cohort survey of adult smokers from Canada, Australia, the US, and the UK. <br /><br /> The results of the field study indicate a high degree of stability in puffing behaviour within the same smoker over time, but considerable variability between smokers, including those smoking the same brand. Puffing behaviour was strongly associated with cotinine levels, particularly when included in an interaction term with cigarettes per day (<em>Part r</em> = . 50, <em>p</em><. 001). Smokers who were switched to a ?low-yield? cigarette increased their total smoke intake per cigarette by 40% (<em>p</em>=. 007), with no significant change in their in salivary cotinine levels. <br /><br /> The results indicate systematic differences between human puffing behaviour and the puffing regimes used by machine testing protocols. The puffing behaviour observed among participants during the one-week smoking trials was significantly more intense than the puffing parameters of the ISO and Compensatory testing regimes. When cigarette brands were machine tested using participants? actual puffing behaviour, the results suggest that participants ingested two to four times the level of tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide indicated by the ISO regime, and twice the amounts generated by the Compensatory regime for ?regular-yield? brands. The Canadian and Massachusetts regimes produced yields much closer to the ?Human Mimic? yields, although nowhere near a maximum or intense standard, as they were designed to do. Only the nicotine yields from the Human Mimic regime were correlated with measures of nicotine uptake among smokers, and only moderately so (<em>Part r</em> = . 31, <em>p</em>=. 02). <br /><br /> Self-report measures of puffing behaviour collected during the field study were moderately correlated with physiological measures of puffing and exposure. Self-report measures of puff depth and puff number showed some promise as predictors of salivary cotinine, although the results are characterized by inconsistencies across models. The self-report measures included in the ITC survey were only weakly associated with age and cigarettes per day, with modest between-country differences. <br /><br /> Overall, this research highlights the importance of puffing behaviour as a determinant of smoke exposure, and provides strong evidence of compensatory smoking for ?low-yield? brands. The findings also highlight the variability in human smoking behaviour and the limitations associated with machine testing protocols. Perhaps most important, the findings underscore the immediate need to revise the ISO protocol, which systematically underestimates smoking behaviour among humans and exaggerates differences between cigarette brands.
2

Human smoking behaviour, cigarette testing protocols, and constituent yields

Hammond, David January 2005 (has links)
The issue of how to test and ultimately regulate tobacco products represents a critical challenge for the public health community. Although the current international testing regime for conventional cigarettes is widely acknowledged to be seriously flawed, there is a lack of data to guide potential alternatives, particularly in the area of human puffing behaviour. The current study sought to: 1) collect naturalistic measures of smoking behaviour, 2) examine the extent to which levels of tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide from each of five testing protocols were associated with measures of nicotine uptake among smokers, and 3) examine the validity of self-report measures of smoking behaviour. These questions were examined through two different studies. First, a field study of smoking behaviour was conducted with 59 adult smokers, who used a portable device to measure smoking topography over the course of 3 one-week trials. Participants were asked to smoke their usual ?regular-yield? brand through the device for Trial 1 and again, 6 weeks later, at Trial 2. Half the subjects were then randomly assigned to smoke a ?low-yield? brand for Trial 3. The smoke intake and constituent yield of each brand was then tested under five testing protocols: ISO, Massachusetts, Canadian, a Compensatory protocol, and a Human Mimic regime. Participants also completed self-report measures of puffing behaviour at recruitment and immediately following each of the three one-week smoking trials. Several of these self-report measures were subsequently included in the Waves 2 and 3 of the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation (ITC) Survey?an international cohort survey of adult smokers from Canada, Australia, the US, and the UK. <br /><br /> The results of the field study indicate a high degree of stability in puffing behaviour within the same smoker over time, but considerable variability between smokers, including those smoking the same brand. Puffing behaviour was strongly associated with cotinine levels, particularly when included in an interaction term with cigarettes per day (<em>Part r</em> = . 50, <em>p</em><. 001). Smokers who were switched to a ?low-yield? cigarette increased their total smoke intake per cigarette by 40% (<em>p</em>=. 007), with no significant change in their in salivary cotinine levels. <br /><br /> The results indicate systematic differences between human puffing behaviour and the puffing regimes used by machine testing protocols. The puffing behaviour observed among participants during the one-week smoking trials was significantly more intense than the puffing parameters of the ISO and Compensatory testing regimes. When cigarette brands were machine tested using participants? actual puffing behaviour, the results suggest that participants ingested two to four times the level of tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide indicated by the ISO regime, and twice the amounts generated by the Compensatory regime for ?regular-yield? brands. The Canadian and Massachusetts regimes produced yields much closer to the ?Human Mimic? yields, although nowhere near a maximum or intense standard, as they were designed to do. Only the nicotine yields from the Human Mimic regime were correlated with measures of nicotine uptake among smokers, and only moderately so (<em>Part r</em> = . 31, <em>p</em>=. 02). <br /><br /> Self-report measures of puffing behaviour collected during the field study were moderately correlated with physiological measures of puffing and exposure. Self-report measures of puff depth and puff number showed some promise as predictors of salivary cotinine, although the results are characterized by inconsistencies across models. The self-report measures included in the ITC survey were only weakly associated with age and cigarettes per day, with modest between-country differences. <br /><br /> Overall, this research highlights the importance of puffing behaviour as a determinant of smoke exposure, and provides strong evidence of compensatory smoking for ?low-yield? brands. The findings also highlight the variability in human smoking behaviour and the limitations associated with machine testing protocols. Perhaps most important, the findings underscore the immediate need to revise the ISO protocol, which systematically underestimates smoking behaviour among humans and exaggerates differences between cigarette brands.
3

A influência da indústria na regulamentação Sulamericana: a defesa de interesses técnicos do setor de máquinas e equipamentos para manejo de áreas verdes na regulamentação de produtos

Reguly, Maria Cristina Werle 25 March 2015 (has links)
Submitted by Maicon Juliano Schmidt (maicons) on 2015-06-09T19:49:14Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Maria Cristina Werle Reguly.pdf: 2250088 bytes, checksum: 7ce555929140da16d2e4da02acf720f7 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2015-06-09T19:49:14Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Maria Cristina Werle Reguly.pdf: 2250088 bytes, checksum: 7ce555929140da16d2e4da02acf720f7 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-03-25 / Nenhuma / A participação das empresas na elaboração de regulamentos de produtos é uma prática existente há mais de 30 anos na Europa e nos Estados Unidos. Porém, a interação entre governo e indústria na América do Sul possui singularidades quando comparado ao dos Estados Unidos e ao da União Europeia decorrentes, principalmente das divergências sociopolíticas culturais e econômicas. O foco central desta dissertação é a apresentação de uma forma de organizar a defesa dos interesses das empresas de um setor da indústria quando da elaboração do conteúdo de regulamentos de produtos emitidos pelos países da América do Sul. Para atingir o objetivo iniciou-se pela análise dos fatores determinantes no processo de defesa de interesses de empresas sobre os regulamentos de produtos publicados pelos governos e órgãos reguladores na União Europeia e Estados Unidos. Posteriormente foram avaliadas a presença e a aplicabilidade destes no cenário sul-americano, mostrando que apesar da presença dos fatores a aplicabilidade requer adaptações. O uso do design research como método de pesquisa proporcionou, devido à sua abordagem prescritiva, uma interação entre teoria e pragmatismo. A validação qualitativa do proposto ocorreu através da avaliação por especialistas no assunto usando a técnica de entrevista semiestruturada em dois momentos distintos. Além disso, observação direta em reuniões e a participação em um grupo de foco sobre o assunto contribuíram para enriquecer o conhecimento acerca do tema. Como resultado é apresentado uma forma de organização e os principais fatores a serem observados nos processos de defesa de interesses de empresas fabricantes nas tratativas com os formuladores de leis e regulamentos dos países da América do Sul. Devido a limitação temporal deste Mestrado, falta o detalhamento da aplicação do proposto. / The participation of companies in the product regulation is a practice that exists for more than 30 years in Europe and United States. However, the interaction between government and industry in South America has singularities compared to the US and the European Union mainly due to socio-political and economic differences. The main focus of this work is the presentation of a framework with factors that guide the companies from a specific industrial sector to exert influence on the content of product regulations issued by the countries of South America. To achieve the goal it was started by the analysis of the determining factors on the business lobby regarding product regulations published by governments and regulators in the European Union and the USA. As next the presence and the applicability of these in the South American scenario were evaluated, showing that despite the presence of the factors the applicability requires adaptations. The use of design research as method provided, due to its prescriptive approach, an interaction between theory and praxis. The qualitative validation was performed through the evaluation by experts in the field using a semi-structured interview technique at two different times of the research. In addition, direct observation at meetings and participation in a workshop helped to highlight and enrich the knowledge on the subject. As a result a framework and the main factors to be observed in the influence process of firms when interacting with the policy makers of the South American countries is presented. This includes the establishment of an interest group. Due to time limitation of this Master program, the application of the propositions is not described.

Page generated in 0.1231 seconds