3 resultados para National Geodetic Survey (U.S.).
em Scielo Saúde Pública - SP
Resumo:
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) method allows the distributions of usual intake of nutrients and foods to be estimated. This method can be used in complex surveys. However, the user must perform additional calculations, such as balanced repeated replication (BRR), in order to obtain standard errors and confidence intervals for the percentiles and mean from the distribution of usual intake. The objective is to highlight adaptations of the NCI method using data from the National Dietary Survey. The application of the NCI method was exemplified analyzing the total energy (kcal) and fruit (g) intake, comparing estimations of mean and standard deviation that were based on the complex design of the Brazilian survey with those assuming simple random sample. Although means point estimates were similar, estimates of standard error using the complex design increased by up to 60% compared to simple random sample. Thus, for valid estimates of food and energy intake for the population, all of the sampling characteristics of the surveys should be taken into account because when these characteristics are neglected, statistical analysis may produce underestimated standard errors that would compromise the results and the conclusions of the survey.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: To estimate hospitalization rates for pneumococcal disease based on the Brazilian Hospital Information System (SIH). METHODS: Descriptive study based on the Hospital Information System of Brazilian National Health System data from January 2004 to December 2006: number of hospitalizations and deaths for pneumococcal meningitis, pneumococcal sepsis, pneumococcal pneumonia and Streptococcus pneumoniae as the cause of diseases reported in Brazil. Data from the 2003 Brazilian National Household Survey were used to estimate events in the private sector. Pneumococcal meningitis cases and deaths reported to the Notifiable Diseases Information System during the study period were also analyzed. RESULTS: Pneumococcal disease accounted for 34,217 hospitalizations in the Brazilian National Health System (0.1% of all hospitalizations in the public sector). Pneumococcal pneumonia accounted for 64.8% of these hospitalizations. The age distribution of the estimated hospitalization rates for pneumococcal disease showed a "U"-shape curve with the highest rates seen in children under one (110 to 136.9 per 100,000 children annually). The highest hospital case-fatality rates were seen among the elderly, and for sepsis and meningitis. CONCLUSIONS: PD is a major public health problem in Brazil. The analysis based on the SIH can provide an important input to pneumococcal disease surveillance and the impact assessment of immunization programs.
Resumo:
A descoberta de novas drogas (produtos naturais e substâncias sintéticas) com atividade antineoplástica vem sendo dificultada devido ao teste de laboratório "in vitro". Optou-se, então por usar para triagem dessas drogas antitumorais a cultura de cálula humana neoplástica cultivada de modo contÃnuo: a linhagem de célula Hela derivada por Gey de uma carcinoma uterino humano. Foi utilizada uma cultura de célula estacionária, diluÃda 0-20 mcg/ml (conteúdo proteico celular, segundo técnica de Oyama e Eagle) em meio basal de Eagle com 10% de soro de vitelo, acrescido de penicilina 100 unidades/ml, estreptomicina 100 mcg/ml e fungizon 5 mcg/ml. A essa cultura adicionou-se o material a ser testado em doses compreendidas entre 0,001 mcg/ml a 100 mcg/ml. Após 72 horas, os resultados foram analisados para determinar-se a DI 50 (dose que inibe 50% do crescimento celular comparado ao controle). O numero de experimentos foram constantes para uma mesma droga. Foram testados 18 substâncias sintéticas e 16 produtos naturais. Consideraram-se ativas as amostras com DI 50≤40 mcg/ml para produtos naturais e com DI 50≤8 mcg/ml para substâncias sintéticas devido a menor sensibilidade da referida linhagem celular em relação a KB (derivada de carcinoma epidermóide de nasofaringe humana) cultura utilizada pelo National Cancer Institute (U.S.A) para objetivos similares ao proposto no presente trabalho.