4 resultados para Access and Benefit Sharing
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
Después que muchos Estados se enriquecieran tanto intelectual como económicamente de la explotación o apropiación ilegal de la biodiversidad andina de la cual los miembros de la CAN eran país de origen, surge la necesidad de proteger la riqueza de la región, razón por la cual nace la Decisión 391 en 1996 sobre un Régimen Común de Acceso a Recursos genéticos. De esta manera los países miembros de la CAN se convirtieron en los primeros con un mecanismo de control para el acceso a los recursos genéticos y partición equitativa de los beneficios; buscando con ello sentar bases para la creación de conocimientos sobre el tema, el desarrollo de capacidades científicas y tecnológicas, y la promoción del uso sostenible de los recursos. Sin embargo por razones de carácter nacional la implementación del mismo no ha progresado, generando que los casos de biopiratería aumenten e incluso sean difíciles de prevenir. Siendo este un tema de gran relevancia para Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Perú y Venezuela, esta monografía examinará en las siguientes páginas la reglamentación nacional para comprender a mayor profundidad los defectos y/o cualidades de las decisiones tomadas por los Estados para la aplicación de la Decisión 391, y así mismo evidenciará las razones por las cuales la implementación de la Decisión no ha tenido éxito total sobre el control de la biopiratería, entre ellas la falta de reglamentación, la especificación de roles, la concientización ciudadana e incluso información al público en general.
Resumo:
Background: Multi-drug resistance and severe/ complicated cases are the emerging phenotypes of vivax malaria, which may deteriorate current anti-malarial control measures. The emergence of these phenotypes could be associated with either of the two Plasmodium vivax lineages. The two lineages had been categorized as Old World and New World, based on geographical sub-division and genetic and phenotypical markers. This study revisited the lineage hypothesis of P. vivax by typing the distribution of lineages among global isolates and evaluated their genetic relatedness using a panel of new mini-satellite markers. Methods: 18S SSU rRNA S-type gene was amplified from 420 Plasmodium vivax field isolates collected from different geographical regions of India, Thailand and Colombia as well as four strains each of P. vivax originating from Nicaragua, Panama, Thailand (Pak Chang), and Vietnam (ONG). A mini-satellite marker panel was then developed to understand the population genetic parameters and tested on a sample subset of both lineages. Results: 18S SSU rRNA S-type gene typing revealed the distribution of both lineages (Old World and New World) in all geographical regions. However, distribution of Plasmodium vivax lineages was highly variable in every geographical region. The lack of geographical sub-division between lineages suggests that both lineages are globally distributed. Ten mini-satellites were scanned from the P. vivax genome sequence; these tandem repeats were located in eight of the chromosomes. Mini-satellites revealed substantial allelic diversity (7-21, AE = 14.6 +/- 2.0) and heterozygosity (He = 0.697-0.924, AE = 0.857 +/- 0.033) per locus. Mini-satellite comparison between the two lineages revealed high but similar pattern of genetic diversity, allele frequency, and high degree of allele sharing. A Neighbour-Joining phylogenetic tree derived from genetic distance data obtained from ten mini-satellites also placed both lineages together in every cluster. Conclusions: The global lineage distribution, lack of genetic distance, similar pattern of genetic diversity, and allele sharing strongly suggested that both lineages are a single species and thus new emerging phenotypes associated with vivax malaria could not be clearly classified as belonging to a particular lineage on basis of their geographical origin.
Resumo:
We set-up a two-sided market framework to model competition between a Prefered Provider Organization (PPO) and a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO). Both health plans compete to attract policyholderson one side and providers on the other side. The PPO, which is characterized by a higher diversity of providers, attracts riskier policyholders. Our two-sided framework allows to examine the consequences of this risk segmentation on the providers’ side, especially in terms of remuneration. The outcome of competition mainly depends on two effects: a demand effect, influenced by the value put by policyholders on providers access and an adverse selection effect, captured by the characteristics of the health risk distribution. If the adverse selection effect is too strong, the HMO gets a higher profit in equilibrium. On the contrary, if the demand effect dominates, the PPO profit is higher in spite of the unfavorable risk segmentation. We believe that our model, by highlighting the two-sided market structure of the health plans’ competition, provides new insights to understand the increase in the PPOs’ market share observed during the last decade in the US.
Resumo:
In the context of economic growth and recovering socio-economic conditions, many Latin American countries have implemented deep educational reforms since the beginning of the century. This paper aims to analyse whether these changes have promoted equality of educational opportunities in the region. Both the access and knowledge and skills dimensions are evaluated for six important countries, deepening the analysis for Argentina, Brazil and Colombia, in order to better understand the trends observed. Results point to reasonable progress in access, but reflect an unsatisfactory evolution of the level and distribution of knowledge and skills as reflected by PISA test scores.