80 resultados para Alternative livelihood
Resumo:
Background. No comprehensive systematic review has been published since 1998 about the frequency with which cancer patients use complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). Methods. MEDLINE, AMED, and Embase databases were searched for surveys published until January 2009. Surveys conducted in Australia, Canada, Europe, New Zealand, and the United States with at least 100 adult cancer patients were included. Detailed information on methods and results was independently extracted by 2 reviewers. Methodological quality was assessed using a criteria list developed according to the STROBE guideline. Exploratory random effects metaanalysis and metaregression were applied. Results. Studies from 18 countries (152; >65 000 cancer patients) were included. Heterogeneity of CAM use was high and to some extent explained by differences in survey methods. The combined prevalence for “current use” of CAM across all studies was 40%. The highest was in the United States and the lowest in Italy and the Netherlands. Metaanalysis suggested an increase in CAM use from an estimated 25% in the 1970s and 1980s to more than 32% in the 1990s and to 49% after 2000. Conclusions. The overall prevalence of CAM use found was lower than often claimed. However, there was some evidence that the use has increased considerably over the past years. Therefore, the health care systems ought to implement clear strategies of how to deal with this. To improve the validity and reporting of future surveys, the authors suggest criteria for methodological quality that should be fulfilled and reporting standards that should be required.
Resumo:
Meta-analysis of predictive values is usually discouraged because these values are directly affected by disease prevalence, but sensitivity and specificity sometimes show substantial heterogeneity as well. We propose a bivariate random-effects logitnormal model for the meta-analysis of the positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of diagnostic tests.
Small-scale farming in semi-arid areas: Livelihood dynamics between 1997 and 2010 in Laikipia, Kenya
Resumo:
This study investigates four decades of socio-economic and environmental change in a shifting cultivation landscape in the northern uplands of Laos. Historical changes in land cover and land use were analyzed using a chronological series of remote sensing data. Impacts of landscape change on local livelihoods were investigated in seven villages through interviews with various stakeholders. The study reveals that the complex mosaics of agriculture and forest patches observed in the study area have long constituted key assets for the resilience of local livelihood systems in the face of environmental and socio-economic risks. However, over the past 20 years, a process of segregating agricultural and forest spaces has increased the vulnerability of local land users. This process is a direct outcome of policies aimed at increasing national forest cover, eradicating shifting cultivation and fostering the emergence of more intensive and commercial agricultural practices. We argue that agriculture-forest segregation should be buffered in such a way that a diversity of livelihood opportunities and economic development pathways can be maintained.
Resumo:
Joint hemorrhages are very common in patients with severe hemophilia. Inhibitors in patients with hemophilia are allo-antibodies that neutralize the activity of the clotting factor. After total knee replacement, rare intra-articular bleeding complications might occur that do not respond to clotting factor replacement. We report a 40-year-old male with severe hemophilia A and high responding inhibitors presenting with recurrent knee joint hemorrhage after bilateral knee prosthetic surgery despite adequate clotting factor treatment. There were two episodes of marked postoperative hemarthrosis requiring extensive use of substitution therapy. Eleven days postoperatively, there was further hemorrhage into the right knee. Digital subtraction angiography diagnosed a complicating pseudoaneurysm of the inferior lateral geniculate artery and embolization was successfully performed. Because clotting factor replacement therapy has proved to be excessively expensive and prolonged, especially in patients with inhibitors, we recommend the use of cost-effective early angiographic embolization.
Resumo:
TNFalpha is known to stimulate the development and activity of osteoclasts and of bone resorption. The cytokine was found to mediate bone loss in conjunction with inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis or chronic aseptic inflammation induced by wear particles from implants and was suggested to be a prerequisite for the loss of bone mass under estrogen deficiency. In the present study, the regulation of osteoclastogenesis by TNFalpha was investigated in co-cultures of osteoblasts and bone marrow or spleen cells and in cultures of bone marrow and spleen cells grown with CSF-1 and RANKL. Low concentrations of TNFalpha (1 ng/ml) caused a >90% decrease in the number of osteoclasts in co-cultures, but did not affect the development of osteoclasts from bone marrow cells. In cultures with p55TNFR(-/-) osteoblasts and wt BMC, the inhibitory effect was abrogated and TNFalpha induced an increase in the number of osteoclasts in a dose-dependent manner. Osteoblasts were found to release the inhibitory factor(s) into the culture supernatant after simultaneous treatment with 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) and TNFalpha, this activity, but not its release, being resistant to treatment with anti-TNFalpha antibodies. Dexamethasone blocked the secretion of the TNFalpha-dependent inhibitor by osteoblasts, while stimulating the development of osteoclasts. The data suggest that the effects of TNFalpha on the differentiation of osteoclast lineage cells and on bone metabolism may be more complex than hitherto assumed and that these effects may play a role in vivo during therapies for inflammatory diseases.