522 resultados para Grimes
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Audit report on the City of Grimes, Iowa for the year ended June 30, 2015
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Tesis (Maestría en Ciencias con Especialidad en Alimentos) UANL, 2010.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Abarema piresii Barneby & Grimes is described from the Brazilian states of Amazonas and Pará. The species is illustrated an tis relationships are discussed. Two kindred species are incidentally transferred from Pithecellobium to Abarema as A. curvicarpa (Irwin) and A. moniliformis (Ducke) Barneby & Grimes.
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Foram inventariadas todas as árvores, lianas e palmeiras com DAP > 10 cm de um hectare (dois transectos paralelos de 500 x 10 m) de floresta densa de terra firme sobre platô de Latossolo, 90 km a nordeste de Manaus (02º35'45" S e 60º12'40" W). A fitofisionomia local é exuberante e homogênea, com grande número de árvores altas e finas. Foram encontrados 670 indivíduos distribuídos em 48 famílias, 133 gêneros e 245 espécies. Do total amostrado, 70% ou 467 indivíduos apresentaram DAP < 22,1 cm. Abarema mataybifolia (Sandw.) Barneby & Grimes, Leonia glycycarpa Ruiz & Pav., Swartzia reticulata Ducke e Aspidosperma oblongum A. DC., foram as únicas espécies a apresentarem valores superiores a 90 cm de DAP. Fabaceae, Sapotaceae e Lecythidaceae constituíram as três famílias com maior riqueza de espécies e maiores índices de valor de importância aos níveis de família e espécie. Os índices de diversidade (H" = 5,1) e de equitabilidade (E" = 0,92), ambos de Shannon-Wiener, indicam que a floresta é bem diversificada, com uma abundância relativamente uniforme das espécies. Nesse ambiente florestal, as espécies não tem distribuição espacial uniforme, porém, quanto menor a distância geográfica entre as subparcelas, maior sua similaridade florística (teste de Mantel, p<0,001).
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This study analyses the area of construction and demolition waste (C & D W) auditing. The production of C&DW has grown year after year since the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) first published a report in 1996 which provided data for C&D W quantities for 1995 (EPA, 1996a). The most recent report produced by the EPA is based on data for 2005 (EPA, 2006). This report estimated that the quantity of C&DW produced for that period to be 14 931 486 tonnes. However, this is a ‘data update’ report containing an update on certain waste statistics so any total provided would not be a true reflection of the waste produced for that period. This illustrates that a more construction site-specific form of data is required. The Department of Building and Civil Engineering in the Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology have carried out two recent research projects (Grimes, 2005; Kelly, 2006) in this area, which have produced waste production indicators based on site-specific data. This involved the design and testing of an original auditing tool based on visual characterisation and the application of conversion factors. One of the main recommendations of these studies was to compare this visual characterisation approach with a photogrammetric sorting methodology. This study investigates the application of photogrammetric sorting on a residential construction site in the Galway region. A visual characterisation study is also carried out on the same project to compare the two methodologies and assess the practical application in a construction site environment. Data collected from the waste management contractor on site was also used to provide further evaluation. From this, a set of waste production indicators for new residential construction was produced: □ 50.8 kg/m2 for new residential construction using data provided by the visual characterisation method and the Landfill Levy conversion factors. □ 43 kg/m2 for new residential construction using data provided by the photogrammetric sorting method and the Landfill Levy conversion factors. □ 23.8 kg/m2 for new residential construction using data provided by Waste Management Contractor (WMC). The acquisition of the data from the waste management contractor was a key element for testing of the information produced by the visual characterisation and photogrammetric sorting methods. The actual weight provided by the waste management contractor shows a significant difference between the quantities provided.
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Research project HR-219 was sponsored by the Iowa Highway Research Board and the Iowa Department of Transportation. The funding authorized from the Primary Road Research Fund was $11,200. The author wishes to express his appreciation to Iowa DOT personnel for their participation in the research. The special features were incorporated into the plans by Road Design personnel. Office of Materials personnel developed the proportions for the flowable mortar. Project inspection was provided by the Creston Resident Engineer and his staff. The excellent cooperation of the contractors contributed to the success of the research. The prime contractor was Irving F. Jensen Company, Inc. of Sioux City, Iowa who retained Reilly Construction Company of Ossian, Iowa and GNA Concrete, Inc. of Grimes, Iowa as subcontractors for the special culvert backfilling.
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Pieces of Iowa’s Past, published by the Iowa State Capitol Tour Guides weekly during the legislative session, features historical facts about Iowa, the Capitol, and the early workings of state government. All historical publications are reproduced here with the actual spelling, punctuation, and grammar retained. January 16, 2013 THIS WEEK: Iowa Senator James Harlan Becomes U.S. Senator BACKGROUND: Fifth Iowa General Assembly The Fifth Iowa General Assembly convened December 4, 1854, and adjourned January 26, 1855, a 54-day session. The Democrats numbered 17 members in the Senate and 31 members in the House. The Whigs held 14 seats in the Senate and 40 seats in the House—a total of 102 members. Iowa’s population at the 1850 census was 192,214. Iowa’s President of the Senate was Maturin Fisher and the Speaker of the House of Representatives was Rueben Noble. During the Fifth General Assembly, Stephen P. Hempstead finished his term as Governor and James W. Grimes was sworn in as Iowa’s third governor.
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BACKGROUND: There is increasing interest in provision of essential surgical care as part of public health policy in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Relatively simple interventions have been shown to prevent death and disability. We reviewed the published literature to examine the cost-effectiveness of simple surgical interventions which could be made available at any district hospital, and compared these to standard public health interventions. METHODS: PubMed and EMBASE were searched using single and combinations of the search terms "disability adjusted life year" (DALY), "quality adjusted life year," "cost-effectiveness," and "surgery." Articles were included if they detailed the cost-effectiveness of a surgical intervention of relevance to a LMIC, which could be made available at any district hospital. Suitable articles with both cost and effectiveness data were identified and, where possible, data were extrapolated to enable comparison across studies. RESULTS: Twenty-seven articles met our inclusion criteria, representing 64 LMIC over 16 years of study. Interventions that were found to be cost-effective included cataract surgery (cost/DALY averted range US$5.06-$106.00), elective inguinal hernia repair (cost/DALY averted range US$12.88-$78.18), male circumcision (cost/DALY averted range US$7.38-$319.29), emergency cesarean section (cost/DALY averted range US$18-$3,462.00), and cleft lip and palate repair (cost/DALY averted range US$15.44-$96.04). A small district hospital with basic surgical services was also found to be highly cost-effective (cost/DALY averted 1 US$0.93), as were larger hospitals offering emergency and trauma surgery (cost/DALY averted US$32.78-$223.00). This compares favorably with other standard public health interventions, such as oral rehydration therapy (US$1,062.00), vitamin A supplementation (US$6.00-$12.00), breast feeding promotion (US$930.00), and highly active anti-retroviral therapy for HIV (US$922.00). CONCLUSIONS: Simple surgical interventions that are life-saving and disability-preventing should be considered as part of public health policy in LMIC. We recommend an investment in surgical care and its integration with other public health measures at the district hospital level, rather than investment in single disease strategies.
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INTRODUCTION: Very little surgical care is performed in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). An estimated two billion people in the world have no access to essential surgical care, and non-surgeons perform much of the surgery in remote and rural areas. Surgical care is as yet not recognized as an integral aspect of primary health care despite its self-demonstrated cost-effectiveness. We aimed to define the parameters of a public health approach to provide surgical care to areas in most need. METHODS: Consensus meetings were held, field experience was collected via targeted interviews, and a literature review on the current state of essential surgical care provision in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) was conducted. Comparisons were made across international recommendations for essential surgical interventions and a consensus-driven list was drawn up according to their relative simplicity, resource requirement, and capacity to provide the highest impact in terms of averted mortality or disability. RESULTS: Essential Surgery consists of basic, low-cost surgical interventions, which save lives and prevent life-long disability or life-threatening complications and may be offered in any district hospital. Fifteen essential surgical interventions were deduced from various recommendations from international surgical bodies. Training in the realm of Essential Surgery is narrow and strict enough to be possible for non-physician clinicians (NPCs). This cadre is already active in many SSA countries in providing the bulk of surgical care. CONCLUSION: A basic package of essential surgical care interventions is imperative to provide structure for scaling up training and building essential health services in remote and rural areas of LMICs. NPCs, a health cadre predominant in SSA, require training, mentoring, and monitoring. The cost of such training is vastly more efficient than the expensive training of a few polyvalent or specialist surgeons, who will not be sufficient in numbers within the next few generations. Moreover, these practitioners are used to working in the districts and are much less prone to gravitate elsewhere. The use of these NPCs performing "Essential Surgery" is a feasible route to deal with the almost total lack of primary surgical care in LMICs.
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Introducción: El aumento de la resistencia bacteriana, el uso inadecuado de antibióticos y las formulaciones empíricas, en infecciones urinarias, obligan a establecer las características epidemiológicas y de resistencia de nuestro medio. Método: Se revisaron todos los urocultivos positivos (RUFC mayor a 100000) solicitados en JAVESALUD entre junio/2011 y marzo/2012 y las historias clínicas correspondientes, con el objeto de realizar análisis descriptivo de variables demográficas, microorganismos aislados y resistencia bacteriana. Posteriormente se identificaron los factores de riesgo que favorecen aparición de multirresistencia en los pacientes mediante una regresión logística binaria. Resultados: Se obtuvieron 204 urocultivos, correspondientes a 120 pacientes. El 87% fueron mujeres (edad promedio 58,9 años). La bacteria más aislada: E. coli (64%). La resistencia antibiótica fue: ampicilina 57,39%, ciprofloxacina 28,9%, nitrofurantoína 9,71% y TMP/SMX 32,47%. La multirresistencia (24,3%) muestra asociación con el antecedente de múltiples tratamientos recibidos (p 0.015) y las infecciones urinarias a repetición (p 0.005). Discusión: La distribución por géneros y la resistencia son similares a lo reportados en la literatura, sin embargo, la frecuencia de infecciones por E. coli resulta menor a lo reportado. Los altos niveles de multirresistencia se encuentran relacionados con el tipo de pacientes manejados en la institución. Los manejos empíricos, con nitrofurantoína se deben limitar a los pacientes que cumplan a cabalidad con los criterios diagnósticos de infección urinaria simple. El urocultivo es fundamental en el manejo de pacientes con infecciones a repetición que hayan recibido múltiples tratamientos y que consulten de manera repetida al servicio de medicina general.
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Introducción: la insuficiencia renal crónica IRC ha aumentado su prevalencia en los últimos años pasando de 44.7 pacientes por millón en 1993 a 538.46 pacientes por millón en 2010, los pacientes quienes reciben terapia de remplazo renal hemodiálisis en Colombia cada vez tienen una mayor sobrevida. El incremento de los pacientes y el incremento de la sobrevida nos enfocan a mejorar la calidad de vida de los años de diálisis. Metodología: se comparó la calidad de vida por medio del SF-36 en 154 pacientes con IRC estadio terminal en manejo con hemodiálisis, 77 pacientes incidentes y 77 pacientes prevalentes, pertenecientes a una unidad renal en Bogotá, Colombia. Resultados: se encontró una disminución de la calidad de vida en los componentes físicos (PCS) y metales (MCS) de los pacientes de hemodiálisis en ambos grupos. En el modelo de regresión logística la incapacidad laboral (p=0.05), el uso de catéter (p= 0,000), el bajo índice de masa corporal (p=0.021), la hipoalbuminemia (p=0,033) y la anemia (p=0,001) fueron factores determinantes en un 78,9% de baja calidad de vida de PCS en los pacientes incidentes con respecto a los prevalentes. En el MCS de los pacientes incidentes vs. Prevalentes se encontró la hipoalbuminemia (p=0.007), la anemia (p=0.001) y el acceso por catéter (p=0.001) como factores determinantes en un 70.6% de bajo MCS Conclusiones: la calidad de vida de los pacientes de diálisis se encuentra afectada con mayor repercusión en el grupo de los pacientes incidentes, se debe mejorar los aspectos nutricionales, hematológicos y de acceso vascular en este grupo.