76 resultados para Hervé Bouchard
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INTRODUCTION : L'alliance familiale : une jonction entre les approches développementale, familiale et systémique / Nicolas Pavez, France Frascarolo-Moutinot et Hervé Tissot - LA TRIADE PARENTS-BEBE : THEORIE ET EVALUATION DES INTERACTIONS : Le modèle de l'alliance familiale et le Jeu Trilogique de Lausanne (LTP) / Nicolas Favez - Observation des interactions triadiques en périnatalité : le Jeu du Change / Jérôme Rime et Werner Stadlmayr - Observation des interactions dans les familles avec plusieurs enfants : le Jeu du Pique-Nique / France Frascarolo-Moutinot et Nicolas Favez - L'observation du coparentage dans les familles biparentales : influence du contexte et de l'âge de l'enfant / Regina Kuersten-Hogan et James P. McHale - LE DEVELOPPEMENT NORMATIF DE LA GROSSESSE A L'ECOLE : La capacité triangulaire du bébé : une illustration à l'aide de deux cas contrastés / Elisabeth Fivaz-Depeursinge et Nicolas Favez - L'alliance coparentale prénatale comme prédicteur des perceptions du coparentage au post-partum / Sarah J. Schappe-Sullivan, Claire M. Kamp Dush et Daniel J. Bower - L'évolution de l'alliance familiale et son impact sur l'enfant à l'âge de 5 ans : une étude longitudinale en Suisse / Nicolas Favez, France Frascarolo-Moutinot et Chloé Lavanchy Scaiola - L'évolution de l'alliance familiale et son impact sur l'enfant à l'âge de 4 ans : une étude longitudinale en Italie / Alessandra Simonelli, Mara Bighin et Francesca De Palo - LA THÉRAPIE AVEC LES TRIADES : Alliance familiale dans les troubles fonctionnels et du comportement du nourrisson : évaluation avant et après une intervention thérapeutique. Une étude exploratoire / Marie-Joëlle Hervé... et al. - Le Jeu Trilogique de Lausanne (LTP) en clinique : application dans le contexte d'interventions de soutien à la relation parents-enfants / Silvia Mazzoni et Anna Lubrano Lavadera - Les comportements relationnels de l'enfant comme porte d'entrée pour intervenir sur le système familial / Chloé Lavanchy Scaiola et Kaija Puura - Le Reflective Family Play : un traitement de la famille entière centré sur l'attachement et le système familial / Diane Philipp et Christie Hayos - APPLICATIONS SPECIFIQUES : Le coparentage comme construit universel caractérisant diverses formes familiales : avancées et perspectives / James McHale et Rahael Kurrien - Les alliances coparentales dans les familles lesboparentales / Salvatore D'Amore, Alessandra Simonelli et Marina Miscioscia - Alliance familiale entre père, mère et leur bébé conçu par fécondation in vitro / Joëlle Darwiche... et al. - CONCLUSION : Le bébé dans la triade précoce / Nicolas Pavez, France Frascarolo-Moutinot et Hervé Tissot
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La criminalistique prend une place de plus en plus grande dans l'enquête judiciaire. Les enjeux scientifiques depuis la scène d'investigation jusqu'au procès pénal sont multiples. De nombreux intervenants sont amenés à se côtoyer : techniciens, scientifiques, médecins légistes, enquêteurs et magistrats. Des tensions sont perceptibles entre ceux-ci mais également quant à la place de la science dans le processus pénal. La raison principale de cette situation est que la prise en compte de l'indice matériel, dans l'enquête judiciaire et le procès pénal, n'est pas clairement établie. La formation des juristes et des enquêteurs ne leur permet pas de superviser les enquêtes scientifiques. Le rôle et la place des scientifiques dans l'enquête criminelle doivent être réexaminés. Par ailleurs, les méthodes de raisonnement en matière d'investigations scientifiques dans une affaire judiciaires sont complexes. Leur mauvaise appréhension participe aux tensions qui sont relevées. Ces méthodes doivent être approfondies. Le raisonnement médical constitue un modèle possible. Il s'enrichit de travaux menés en sémiotique. La résolution des tensions passe par la mise en place d'un nouveau personnage, le coordinateur criminalistique. Cela constitue un changement paradigmatique et une nouvelle activité scientifique complexe. Ce scientifique s'associe à l'enquêteur et au magistrat tout au long du processus judiciaire, depuis la scène d'investigation jusqu'au procès pénal. Ce paradigme s'impose quel que soit le modèle judiciaire, accusatoire ou inquisitoire et les structures institutionnelles. Cette thèse propose que ce coordinateur criminalistique soit un scientifique de haut niveau qui bénéficie d'une solide formation théorique et pratique. Cette approche est fondamentalement éthique car elle se focalise sur un témoin matériel, garantit la préservation des droits humains et définit un processus transparent et équilibré dans l'élaboration de la preuve.
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Développés il y a plus d'une quinzaine d'années aux USA, les AP-DRG (All patient Diagnosis related groups) ont permis, malgré leur ancienneté, de conduire des expériences très utiles et de préparer divers cantons suisses à un futur système de financement, mieux que toutes les théories invoquées à ce sujet n'auraient pu le faire. [Auteurs]
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Exposure to various pesticides has been characterized in workers and the general population, but interpretation and assessment of biomonitoring data from a health risk perspective remains an issue. For workers, a Biological Exposure Index (BEI®) has been proposed for some substances, but most BEIs are based on urinary biomarker concentrations at Threshold Limit Value - Time Weighted Average (TLV-TWA) airborne exposure while occupational exposure can potentially occurs through multiple routes, particularly by skin contact (i.e.captan, chlorpyrifos, malathion). Similarly, several biomonitoring studies have been conducted to assess environmental exposure to pesticides in different populations, but dose estimates or health risks related to these environmental exposures (mainly through the diet), were rarely characterized. Recently, biological reference values (BRVs) in the form of urinary pesticide metabolites have been proposed for both occupationally exposed workers and children. These BRVs were established using toxicokinetic models developed for each substance, and correspond to safe levels of absorption in humans, regardless of the exposure scenario. The purpose of this chapter is to present a review of a toxicokinetic modeling approach used to determine biological reference values. These are then used to facilitate health risk assessments and decision-making on occupational and environmental pesticide exposures. Such models have the ability to link absorbed dose of the parent compound to exposure biomarkers and critical biological effects. To obtain the safest BRVs for the studied population, simulations of exposure scenarios were performed using a conservative reference dose such as a no-observed-effect level (NOEL). The various examples discussed in this chapter show the importance of knowledge on urine collections (i.e. spot samples and complete 8-h, 12-h or 24-h collections), sampling strategies, metabolism, relative proportions of the different metabolites in urine, absorption fraction, route of exposure and background contribution of prior exposures. They also show that relying on urinary measurements of specific metabolites appears more accurate when applying this approach to the case of occupational exposures. Conversely, relying on semi-specific metabolites (metabolites common to a category of pesticides) appears more accurate for the health risk assessment of environmental exposures given that the precise pesticides to which subjects are exposed are often unknown. In conclusion, the modeling approach to define BRVs for the relevant pesticides may be useful for public health authorities for managing issues related to health risks resulting from environmental and occupational exposures to pesticides.
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Captan and folpet are two fungicides largely used in agriculture, but biomonitoring data are mostly limited to measurements of captan metabolite concentrations in spot urine samples of workers, which complicate interpretation of results in terms of internal dose estimation, daily variations according to tasks performed, and most plausible routes of exposure. This study aimed at performing repeated biological measurements of exposure to captan and folpet in field workers (i) to better assess internal dose along with main routes-of-entry according to tasks and (ii) to establish most appropriate sampling and analysis strategies. The detailed urinary excretion time courses of specific and non-specific biomarkers of exposure to captan and folpet were established in tree farmers (n = 2) and grape growers (n = 3) over a typical workweek (seven consecutive days), including spraying and harvest activities. The impact of the expression of urinary measurements [excretion rate values adjusted or not for creatinine or cumulative amounts over given time periods (8, 12, and 24 h)] was evaluated. Absorbed doses and main routes-of-entry were then estimated from the 24-h cumulative urinary amounts through the use of a kinetic model. The time courses showed that exposure levels were higher during spraying than harvest activities. Model simulations also suggest a limited absorption in the studied workers and an exposure mostly through the dermal route. It further pointed out the advantage of expressing biomarker values in terms of body weight-adjusted amounts in repeated 24-h urine collections as compared to concentrations or excretion rates in spot samples, without the necessity for creatinine corrections.
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Agricultural workers are exposed to folpet, but biomonitoring data are limited. Phthalimide (PI), phthalamic acid (PAA), and phthalic acid (PA) are the ring metabolites of this fungicide according to animal studies, but they have not yet been measured in human urine as metabolites of folpet, only PA as a metabolite of phthalates. The objective of this study was thus to develop a reliable gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (GC-MS) method to quantify the sum of PI, PAA, and PA ring-metabolites of folpet in human urine. Briefly, the method consisted of adding p-methylhippuric acid as an internal standard, performing an acid hydrolysis at 100 °C to convert ring-metabolites into PA, purifying samples by ethyl acetate extraction, and derivatizing with N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoro acetamide prior to GC-MS analysis. The method had a detection limit of 60.2 nmol/L (10 ng/mL); it was found to be accurate (mean recovery, 97%), precise (inter- and intra-day percentage relative standard deviations <13%), and with a good linearity (R (2) > 0.98). Validation was conducted using unexposed peoples urine spiked at concentrations ranging from 4.0 to 16.1 μmol/L, along with urine samples of volunteers dosed with folpet, and of exposed workers. The method proved to be (1) suitable and accurate to determine the kinetic profile of PA equivalents in the urine of volunteers orally and dermally administered folpet and (2) relevant for the biomonitoring of exposure in workers.
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We present the first steps in the validation of an observational tool for father-mother-infant interactions: the FAAS (Family Alliance Assessment Scales). Family-level variables are acknowledged as unique contributors to the understanding of the socio-affective development of the child, yet producing reliable assessments of family-level interactions poses a methodological challenge. There is, therefore, a clear need for a validated and clinically relevant tool. This validation study has been carried out on three samples: one non-referred sample, of families taking part in a study on the transition to parenthood (normative sample; n = 30), one referred for medically assisted procreation (infertility sample; n = 30) and one referred for a psychiatric condition in one parent (clinical sample; n = 15). Results show that the FAAS scales have (1) good inter-rater reliability and (2) good validity, as assessed through known-group validity by comparing the three samples and through concurrent validity by checking family interactions against parents' self-reported marital satisfaction.
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Context: Both biallelic and monoallelic mutations in PROK2 or PROKR2 have been found in Kallmann syndrome (KS). Objective: The objective of the study was to compare the phenotypes of KS patients harboring monoallelic and biallelic mutations in these genes. Design and Patients: We studied clinical and endocrine features that reflect the functioning of the pituitary-gonadal axis, and the nonreproductive phenotype, in 55 adult KS patients (42 men and 13 women), of whom 41 had monoallelic mutations and 14 biallelic mutations in PROK2 or PROKR2. Results: Biallelic mutations were associated with more frequent cryptorchidism (70% vs. 34%, P < 0.05) and microphallus (90% vs. 28%, P < 0.001) and lower mean testicular volume (1.2 +/- 0.4 vs. 4.5 +/- 6.0 ml; P < 0.01) in male patients. Likewise, the testosterone level as well as the basal FSH level and peak LH level under GnRH-stimulation were lower in males with biallelic mutations (0.2 +/- 0.1 vs. 0.7 +/- 0.8 ng/ml; P = 0.05, 0.3 +/- 0.1 vs. 1.8 +/- 3.0 IU/liter; P < 0.05, and 0.8 +/- 0.8 vs. 5.2 +/- 5.5 IU/liter; P < 0.05, respectively). Nonreproductive, nonolfactory anomalies were rare in both sexes and were never found in patients with biallelic mutations. The mean body mass index of the patients (23.9 +/- 4.2 kg/m(2) in males and 26.3 +/- 6.6 kg/m(2) in females) did not differ significantly from that of gender-, age-, and treatment-matched KS individuals who did not carry a mutation in PROK2 or PROKR2. Finally, circadian cortisol levels evaluated in five patients, including one with biallelic PROKR2 mutations, were normal in all cases. Conclusion: Male patients carrying biallelic mutations in PROK2 or PROKR2 have a less variable and on average a more severe reproductive phenotype than patients carrying monoallelic mutations in these genes. Nonreproductive, nonolfactory clinical anomalies associated with KS seem to be restricted to patients with monoallelic mutations.
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A human in vivo toxicokinetic model was built to allow a better understanding of the toxicokinetics of folpet fungicide and its key ring biomarkers of exposure: phthalimide (PI), phthalamic acid (PAA) and phthalic acid (PA). Both PI and the sum of ring metabolites, expressed as PA equivalents (PAeq), may be used as biomarkers of exposure. The conceptual representation of the model was based on the analysis of the time course of these biomarkers in volunteers orally and dermally exposed to folpet. In the model, compartments were also used to represent the body burden of folpet and experimentally relevant PI, PAA and PA ring metabolites in blood and in key tissues as well as in excreta, hence urinary and feces. The time evolution of these biomarkers in each compartment of the model was then mathematically described by a system of coupled differential equations. The mathematical parameters of the model were then determined from best fits to the time courses of PI and PAeq in blood and urine of five volunteers administered orally 1 mg kg(-1) and dermally 10 mg kg(-1) of folpet. In the case of oral administration, the mean elimination half-life of PI from blood (through feces, urine or metabolism) was found to be 39.9 h as compared with 28.0 h for PAeq. In the case of a dermal application, mean elimination half-life of PI and PAeq was estimated to be 34.3 and 29.3 h, respectively. The average final fractions of administered dose recovered in urine as PI over the 0-96 h period were 0.030 and 0.002%, for oral and dermal exposure, respectively. Corresponding values for PAeq were 24.5 and 1.83%, respectively. Finally, the average clearance rate of PI from blood calculated from the oral and dermal data was 0.09 ± 0.03 and 0.13 ± 0.05 ml h(-1) while the volume of distribution was 4.30 ± 1.12 and 6.05 ± 2.22 l, respectively. It was not possible to obtain the corresponding values from PAeq data owing to the lack of blood time course data.