2 resultados para Political Realism

em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal


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Este breve ensaio sobre o poeta e escritor russo Vladimir Mayakovsky é uma modesta tentativa de contribuir para um (re)descobrimento ou para uma simples revisitação da produção literária russa do período soviético, que, por razões muitas vezes apenas de ordem política e não estética, caiu no esquecimento, não sendo traduzida na sua totalidade, como é o caso de Mayakovsky, ou, pura e simplesmente, sendo votada ao “ostracismo”, porque rotulada, a priori ou ab initio, como obras escritas dentro das paredes estreitas do “realismo socialista”, padecendo de falta de criatividade e norteandose, aberta ou dissimuladamente, pelos princípios rígidos e imutáveis de um totalitarismo inflexível. Contudo, nem toda a literatura soviética pode ser enquadrada no realismo socialista, valendo a pena conhecê-la e analisá-la.

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Introduction: Healthcare improvements have allowed prevention but have also increased life expectancy, resulting in more people being at risk. Our aim was to analyse the separate effects of age, period and cohort on incidence rates by sex in Portugal, 2000–2008. Methods: From the National Hospital Discharge Register, we selected admissions (aged ≥49 years) with hip fractures (ICD9-CM, codes 820.x) caused by low/moderate trauma (falls from standing height or less), readmissions and bone cancer cases. We calculated person-years at risk using population data from Statistics Portugal. To identify period and cohort effects for all ages, we used an age–period–cohort model (1-year intervals) followed by generalised additive models with a negative binomial distribution of the observed incidence rates of hip fractures. Results: There were 77,083 hospital admissions (77.4 % women). Incidence rates increased exponentially with age for both sexes (age effect). Incidence rates fell after 2004 for women and were random for men (period effect). There was a general cohort effect similar in both sexes; risk of hip fracture altered from an increasing trend for those born before 1930 to a decreasing trend following that year. Risk alterations (not statistically significant) coincident with major political and economic change in the history of Portugal were observed around birth cohorts 1920 (stable–increasing), 1940 (decreasing–increasing) and 1950 (increasing–decreasing only among women). Conclusions: Hip fracture risk was higher for those born during major economically/politically unstable periods. Although bone quality reflects lifetime exposure, conditions at birth may determine future risk for hip fractures.