2 resultados para Trabajos de investigacion
em Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Pública de Navarra - Espanha
Resumo:
Entre las peculiaridades en nuestra sociedad occidental actual figura la presencia invasiva de la nueva cultura mediática del consumo y los cambios que esta ha provocado en el entorno de cada sujeto. En la medida en que niños y adolescentes pasan menos tiempo con su familia y se exponen más a los medios, éstos adquieren mayor protagonismo en la construcción de su universo cultural convirtiéndose en una fuente de heteronomía y perjudicando a las instituciones educativas. Afortunada o desafortunadamente, este fenómeno evoluciona de forma inmediata y cualquier estudio queda obsoleto en un periodo de tiempo muy reducido. Sin embargo, es necesario realizar trabajos que permitan conocer la sociedad del momento, sus transformaciones y sus nuevas formas de vida. Para ello y con el objetivo de encontrar alternativas que impidan la disociación del proceso de socialización, se ha realizado una pequeña investigación teórica sobre los diferentes agentes socializadores y su cambio de rol así como un estudio de caso en busca de evidencias empíricas que han permitido extraer conclusiones al respecto.
Resumo:
Background: Infection with multiple types of human papillomavirus (HPV) is one of the main risk factors associated with the development of cervical lesions. In this study, cervical samples collected from 1, 810 women with diverse sociocultural backgrounds, who attended to their cervical screening program in different geographical regions of Colombia, were examined for the presence of cervical lesions and HPV by Papanicolau testing and DNA PCR detection, respectively. Principal Findings: The negative binomial distribution model used in this study showed differences between the observed and expected values within some risk factor categories analyzed. Particularly in the case of single infection and coinfection with more than 4 HPV types, observed frequencies were smaller than expected, while the number of women infected with 2 to 4 viral types were higher than expected. Data analysis according to a negative binomial regression showed an increase in the risk of acquiring more HPV types in women who were of indigenous ethnicity (+37.8%), while this risk decreased in women who had given birth more than 4 times (-31.1%), or were of mestizo (-24.6%) or black (-40.9%) ethnicity. Conclusions: According to a theoretical probability distribution, the observed number of women having either a single infection or more than 4 viral types was smaller than expected, while for those infected with 2-4 HPV types it was larger than expected. Taking into account that this study showed a higher HPV coinfection rate in the indigenous ethnicity, the role of underlying factors should be assessed in detail in future studies.