441 resultados para Wishes
Resumo:
A new Coastal Rapid Environmental Assessment (CREA) strategy has been developed and successfully applied to the Northern Adriatic Sea. CREA strategy exploits the recent advent of operational oceanography to establish a CREA system based on an operational regional forecasting system and coastal monitoring networks of opportunity. The methodology wishes to initialize a coastal high resolution model, nested within the regional forecasting system, blending the large scale parent model fields with the available coastal observations to generate the requisite field estimates. CREA modeling system consists of a high resolution, O(800m), Adriatic SHELF model (ASHELF) implemented into the Northern Adriatic basin and nested within the Adriatic Forecasting System (AFS) (Oddo et al. 2006). The observational system is composed by the coastal networks established in the framework of ADRICOSM (ADRiatic sea integrated COastal areaS and river basin Managment system) Pilot Project. An assimilation technique exerts a correction of the initial field provided by AFS on the basis of the available observations. The blending of the two data sets has been carried out through a multi-scale optimal interpolation technique developed by Mariano and Brown (1992). Two CREA weekly exercises have been conducted: the first, at the beginning of May (spring experiment); the second in middle August (summer experiment). The weeks have been chosen looking at the availability of all coastal observations in the initialization day and one week later to validate model results, verifying our predictive skills. ASHELF spin up time has been investigated too, through a dedicated experiment, in order to obtain the maximum forecast accuracy within a minimum time. Energetic evaluations show that for the Northern Adriatic Sea and for the forcing applied, a spin-up period of one week allows ASHELF to generate new circulation features enabled by the increased resolution and its total kinetic energy to establish a new dynamical balance. CREA results, evaluated by mean of standard statistics between ASHELF and coastal CTDs, show improvement deriving from the initialization technique and a good model performance in the coastal areas of the Northern Adriatic basin, characterized by a shallow and wide continental shelf subject to substantial freshwater influence from rivers. Results demonstrate the feasibility of our CREA strategy to support coastal zone management and wish an additional establishment of operational coastal monitoring activities to advance it.
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La presente dissertazione si pone come oggetto di analisi la produzione poetica di Robert Kroetsch (1927-2011), scrittore e critico letterario canadese nativo dell’Alberta (Canada), che tra il 1960 e il 2010 ha pubblicato un numero notevole di opere (nove romanzi, più di venti opere poetiche tra componimenti singoli e in raccolta, due volumi di saggi e diverse interviste). In particolare si è scelto di focalizzare l’attenzione sulle ultime tre raccolte di poesia – rispettivamente The Hornbooks of Rita K (2001), The Snowbird Poems (2004) e Too Bad: Sketches Toward a Self-Portrait (2010) – che, se confrontate con la produzione precedente, forniscono prova di alcuni elementi di novità all’interno della prospettiva poetica di Kroetsch. L’ipotesi dalla quale trae origine il presente studio è infatti che, a partire dalla raccolta The Hornbooks of Rita K, Kroetsch abbia imboccato un percorso di evoluzione stilistica che corre in parallelo con la formulazione di una nuova poetica. Nello specifico, si osserva che, negli ultimi dieci anni, da un punto di vista formale i componimenti si frammentano progressivamente, passando da una forma lunga – quella del long poem – a una breve – lo sketch, che risulta più adatta a rappresentare sul piano espressivo una mutata percezione dell’Io poetico. A un simile aspetto si aggiunge poi il fatto che la raffigurazione della propria vicenda umana diventa, con sempre maggiore evidenza, motivo di riflessione su una condizione universale dell’umano e sulla dimensione etica del suo agire.
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In technical design processes in the automotive industry, digital prototypes rapidly gain importance, because they allow for a detection of design errors in early development stages. The technical design process includes the computation of swept volumes for maintainability analysis and clearance checks. The swept volume is very useful, for example, to identify problem areas where a safety distance might not be kept. With the explicit construction of the swept volume an engineer gets evidence on how the shape of components that come too close have to be modified.rnIn this thesis a concept for the approximation of the outer boundary of a swept volume is developed. For safety reasons, it is essential that the approximation is conservative, i.e., that the swept volume is completely enclosed by the approximation. On the other hand, one wishes to approximate the swept volume as precisely as possible. In this work, we will show, that the one-sided Hausdorff distance is the adequate measure for the error of the approximation, when the intended usage is clearance checks, continuous collision detection and maintainability analysis in CAD. We present two implementations that apply the concept and generate a manifold triangle mesh that approximates the outer boundary of a swept volume. Both algorithms are two-phased: a sweeping phase which generates a conservative voxelization of the swept volume, and the actual mesh generation which is based on restricted Delaunay refinement. This approach ensures a high precision of the approximation while respecting conservativeness.rnThe benchmarks for our test are amongst others real world scenarios that come from the automotive industry.rnFurther, we introduce a method to relate parts of an already computed swept volume boundary to those triangles of the generator, that come closest during the sweep. We use this to verify as well as to colorize meshes resulting from our implementations.
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In dieser Arbeit wird das Konzept eines aktiven Pulverinhalators entwickelt. Im Gegensatz zu einem passiven Pulverinhalator ist bei solch einem Gerät die Abgabe und Dispergierung der Arzneistoffformulierung nicht von einem Inhalationsmanöver abhängig, welches von Patient zu Patient variiert. Solch ein System würde folglich die Zuverlässigkeit und Effizienz der inhalativen Therapie verbessern. Mögliche Anwendungen für einen aktiven Pulverinhalator wären vor allem Indikationen, die die Abgabe hoher Dosen erfordern, wie z.B. in der Therapie mit Antibiotika.rnIn einem Designprozess, der alle aus Kundenwünschen ermittelten Konstruktionsanforderungen sammelt und verschiedene Lösungsansätze vergleicht, wird ein mit Treibgas betriebener atemzugsausgelöster, Mehrfach-Dosis Pulverinhalator als aussichtsreichstes Konzept ermittelt. Dieses Konzept wird in Form von eigens konstruierten Labor-Test-Rigs entwickelt und vor allem hinsichtlich Höhe der Dosierung, Dosiergenauigkeit, und Flussratenabhängigkeit evaluiert. In der Spitze können über 16 mg lungengängiger Dosis erreicht werden, bei im Vergleich zu dem eingesetzten passiven Inhalator mindestens nur halb so großer Streuung. Bei niedrigen Flussraten können immer noch bis zu 80 % der erzielten inhalierbaren Dosis von hohen Flussraten erreicht werden und damit die Ergebnisse des passiven Inhalators deutlich übertreffen.rnTeil der Aufgabe war es, dieses treibgasbetriebene Labor-Test-Rig so zu entwickeln, dass es implementierbar in einen atemzugsausgelösten Mehrfachdosis-Pulverinhalator ist. Dieser treibgasbetriebene, atemzugsausgelöste Mehrfachdosis-Pulverinhalator würde die Kundenwünsche und Konstruktionsanforderungen in sehr hohen Maße erfüllen, so dass hier die Möglichkeit besteht einen Inhalator mit sehr hohem Grad an Patienten-Compliance zu verwirklichen. Durch die Verwendung und Neukombination bereits etablierter Technologien und einen akzeptablen Stückkostenpreis besteht die Möglichkeit den Inhalator tatsächlich zu realisieren und zu vermarkten.
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Da es bis dato kein spezifisches Instrument gibt, um die Betreuungsbedürfnisse von Patientinnen im Rahmen der gynäkologischen Krebsfrüherkennungsuntersuchung zu erfassen, war es das Ziel der vorliegenden explorativen Studie, eben jene subjektiven Betreuungsbedürfnisse aufzudecken und sie in ein praxistaugliches und messbares Format zu überführen - den Fragebogen „Betreuungsbedürfnisse – Gynäkologische Krebsfrüherkennungsuntersuchung (BB-G KFU)“. Wir stellten hierzu folgende Hypothesen auf: Es ist möglich (a) Betreuungsbedürfnisse zu explorieren und in reliablen Skalen abzubilden, (b) die Wichtigkeit der Betreuungsbedürfnisse in Form einer Wertigkeitsrangfolge abzubilden, (c) Determinanten der Betreuungsbedürfnisse (Alter, Sozialstatus, Familienstand, Gesundheitsbezogene Kontrollüberzeugungen) zu detektieren. Wir entwickelten einen Fragebogen auf der Basis einer ausführlichen systematischen Literaturrecherche, Leitfadeninterviews mit gynäkologischen Patientinnen sowie einer Befragung von 18 Experten. Dieser Fragebogen beinhaltete 58 Arzt bezogene Betreuungsbedürfnisse-Items, 12 Arzthelferinnen bezogene Betreuungsbedürfnisse-Items und 21 Praxisorganisation und Praxisstruktur bezogene Betreuungsbedürfnisse-Items. Die Probandinnen bewerteten die Wichtigkeit der Erfüllung jedes Items anhand einer fünfstufigen Antwortskala im Likert-Format (1 = nicht wichtig, 5 = sehr wichtig). Zudem wurden soziodemografische Daten sowie gesundheitsbezogene Kontrollüberzeugungen der Probandinnen erhoben. Im Sinne einer multizentrisch angelegten Querschnittstudie wurde der Fragebogen an 1.000 Patientinnen in zehn gynäkologischen Praxen in drei deutschen Bundesländern ausgegeben. Insgesamt erhielten wir 965 ausgefüllte Fragebögen zurück. Mittels deskriptiver Statistiken konnten die soziodemografischen Daten sowie die einzelnen Betreuungsbedürfnisse-Items ausgewertet werden. Zur Entwicklung reliabler Betreuungsbedürfnis-Skalen wurde der Datensatz einer Hauptkomponentenanalyse (PCA mit Varimax-Rotation) unterzogen. Auf diesem Wege konnte ein Erfassungsinstrument (Fragebogen „Betreuungsbedürfnisse – Gynäkologische Krebsfrüherkennungsuntersuchung (BB-G KFU)“) bestehend aus sieben reliablen Betreuungsbedürfnis-Skalen (BB-S) entwickelt werden, welche die psychosozialen Betreuungsbedürfnisse und -wünsche von Patientinnen mit Bezug auf den Gynäkologen (BB-S-A), die Arzthelferin (BB-S-AH) sowie die Praxisstruktur (BB-S-P) abzubilden vermögen: „Bedürfnis nach Information“ (BB-S-A-I), „Bedürfnis nach Respekt und Einfühlungsvermögen im Rahmen der körperlichen Untersuchung“ (BB-S-A-RE), „Bedürfnis nach Zuwendung und Verfügbarkeit“ (BB-S-A-ZV), „Bedürfnis nach Zuwendung und Service“ (BB-S-AH-ZS), „Bedürfnis nach logistischer Unterstützung“ (BB-S-AH-L), „Bedürfnis nach Basisausstattung und Erreichbarkeit“ (BB-S-P-BE) und „Bedürfnis nach Zusatzausstattung“ (BB-S-P-Z). Die durch die drei arztbezogenen Komponenten (bestehend aus 33 Items) aufgeklärte Gesamtvarianz beträgt 40,29%, die der arzthelferinnenbezogenen 2-Komponentenlösung (11 Items) 48,92%, und die Totalvarianz der zwei Dimensionen mit Bezug auf die Praxisstruktur (19 Items) liegt bei 41,68%. Die Reliabilitäten der sieben Skalen sind als akzeptabel bis sehr gut zu bewerten (Cronbachs α = .71 - .89). Anhand der Korrelationen zum KKG (Fragen zu Kontrollüberzeugungen über Krankheit und Gesundheit von Lohaus und Schmitt) konnten erste positive Hinweise auf die Validität des BB-G KFU gefunden werden. Durch den Vergleich der einzelnen Mittelwerte konnte die hierarchische Organisation der Betreuungsbedürfnisse gemäß ihrer Wichtigkeit sichtbar gemacht werden: Die Arbeit zeigt, dass Patientinnen im Rahmen der gynäkologischen KFU der Informationsvermittlung durch den Arzt (BB-S-A-I; M = 1,51; SD = 0,47) wie auch der ärztlichen Zuwendung und Verfügbarkeit (BB-S-A-ZV; M = 1,39; SD = 0,38) in der Wertigkeitsrangfolge einen besonders hohen Platz einräumen. Die Datenanalysen zeigen zudem eine Abhängigkeit der Betreuungsbedürfnisse vom Alter und vom Sozialstatus der Patientinnen, jedoch nicht vom Familienstand und den gesundheitsbezogenen Kontrollüberzeugungen.
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This project studied the phenomenon of street children through various forms of action dealing with them. The target group included 100 children who frequented the Pygmalion and Open House day centres in Bucharest. On the basis of this sample it was possible to establish the main problems of the street children: reasons for appearance, age on the street, origin, family size, attitude towards parents, reasons for street life, consumption of toxic substances, reasons for detention by the police, main health problems, needs and wishes. The work in Bucharest was supplemented by visits elsewhere in Romania and abroad which provided a breadth of understanding and knowledge of the specific profile of street children, of the complexity of their problems and of their prospects. A comparison of the causes of the phenomenon, and study of some projects and intervention programmes both from Romania and abroad provided the basis for a proposed strategy for combatting the problem. The practical activities on the project included continuing counselling and informative and education activities with the children in order to motivate them to change their life. Further mediation was aimed at changing the hostile approach of the public opinion and some people in authority towards these children. The experiments with schooling and professional resocialisation of the street children provided clear evidence of the possibility of reintroducing them into the social framework but this will require systems and mechanisms specially developed to achieve this.
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Consistency within the psychological processes is accepted as a precondition for efficient functioning and good health. Inconsistency in contrast impairs meeting the requirements of environment and therefore impairs the satisfaction of human needs. It is also seen as a stressor and having the potential to increase the vulnerability for mental disorders (Grawe, 1998, 2004). Incongruence is a form of Inconsistency, describing the divergency between the perception of reality and the goals of a person. Discordance as a second form of Inconsistency is the amount of conflict between goals, wishes and motives. According to the Consistency Theory of Grawe, these two forms of Inconsistency together with avoidance goals and satisfaction of human needs play an important role at the emergence and the maintenance of mental disorders, as well as for the wellbeing of humans. This study includes a short overview of the conceptions of Inconsistency in the psychological literature and a metaanalysis about the interrelations between forms of Inconsistency and characteristics of health and disease. The results support mostly the assumptions of Consistency Theory. Almost all forms of Inconsistency are associated with characteristics of subjective wellbeing, health and disease. One has to take into consideration, that most of the results come from correlational studies with only one measuring time. It is therefore not possible to distinguish between cause and effect.
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Within the framework of the Swiss governmental Program of Evaluation of Complementary Medicine (PEK) we assessed the prevalence, use, perceived effectiveness and appreciation of complementary medicine (CAM) in Switzerland, according to published surveys. Materials and Methods: Search was performed through electronic databases, by hand-searching and by contacting experts at universities, hospitals, health insurances, patient organizations and pharmaceutical companies. Results: Surveys were carried out among the general population (40%), physicians (20%), hospitalized patients (30%) and obstetric institutions (5%). The number of publications increased strongly between 1981 and 2004. The mean +/- SD prevalence (use) of CAM is 49 +/- 22% and varies depending on the survey's topic and the population group interviewed. The acceptance, appreciation or demand for CAM among individuals specifically interviewed on CAM is 91 +/- 6%. When asked about favored general improvements in healthcare, 6.5% of the individuals spontaneously mentioned CAM. CAM therapies are considered to be effective by the majority of CAM users and by about 40% of cancer patients using CAM. Approximately 50% of the population stated a preference for hospitals that also provide CAM. 85% of the population wishes the costs for CAM to be covered by the basic health insurance. Conclusion: Approximately half of the Swiss population has used CAM. CAM treatment is considered to be effective by the majority of CAM users. About 50% of the population would prefer hospitals that also provide CAM therapies and the majority of the population wishes the cost for CAM therapies to be covered by basic health insurance.
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Suppose that having established a marginal total effect of a point exposure on a time-to-event outcome, an investigator wishes to decompose this effect into its direct and indirect pathways, also know as natural direct and indirect effects, mediated by a variable known to occur after the exposure and prior to the outcome. This paper proposes a theory of estimation of natural direct and indirect effects in two important semiparametric models for a failure time outcome. The underlying survival model for the marginal total effect and thus for the direct and indirect effects, can either be a marginal structural Cox proportional hazards model, or a marginal structural additive hazards model. The proposed theory delivers new estimators for mediation analysis in each of these models, with appealing robustness properties. Specifically, in order to guarantee ignorability with respect to the exposure and mediator variables, the approach, which is multiply robust, allows the investigator to use several flexible working models to adjust for confounding by a large number of pre-exposure variables. Multiple robustness is appealing because it only requires a subset of working models to be correct for consistency; furthermore, the analyst need not know which subset of working models is in fact correct to report valid inferences. Finally, a novel semiparametric sensitivity analysis technique is developed for each of these models, to assess the impact on inference, of a violation of the assumption of ignorability of the mediator.
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OBJECTIVE: The primary aim of this study was to determine the desires and wishes of pregnant patients vis-à-vis their external genital anatomy after female genital mutilation (FGM) in the context of antenatal care and delivery in a teaching hospital setting in Switzerland. Our secondary aim was to determine whether women with FGM and non-mutilated women have different fetal and maternal outcomes. DESIGN: A retrospective case-control study. SETTING: A teaching hospital. POPULATION: One hundred and twenty-two patients after FGM who gave consent to participate in this study and who delivered in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in the University Hospital of Berne and 110 controls. METHODS: Data for patients' wishes concerning their FGM management, their satisfaction with the postpartum outcome and intrapartum and postpartum maternal and fetal data. As a control group, we used a group of pregnant women without FGM who delivered at the same time and who were matched for maternal age. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Patients' satisfaction after delivery and defibulation after FGM, maternal and fetal delivery data and postpartum outcome measures. RESULTS: Six percent of patients wished to have their FGM defibulated antenatally, 43% requested a defibulation during labour, 34% desired a defibulation during labour only if considered necessary by the medical staff and 17% were unable to express their expectations. There were no differences for FGM patients and controls regarding fetal outcome, maternal blood loss or duration of delivery. FGM patients had significantly more often an emergency Caesarean section and third-degree vaginal tears, and significantly less first-degree and second-degree tears. CONCLUSION: An interdisciplinary approach may support optimal antenatal and intrapartum management and also the prevention of FGM in newborn daughters.
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Adopting the capabilities approach and the terminology that has been respectively developed, we could assume that Amartya Sen’s “capabilities” consist in the actual living that people manage to achieve (“functionings”) as a result of actual free will. Sen’s freedom does not “only [depend on the] mere degree of the presence or absence of coercion or interference (from others)” (Otto and Ziegler 2006) but also on “the range of options a person has in deciding what kind of life to lead” (Dreze and Sen 1995, 10). In his book, Identity and Violence, Sen, without explicitly connecting the capabilities approach with his views on “genuine multiculturalis” (Sen 2007), in fact, introduces this extended conception of freedom in the way we examine identity matters. Since freedom becomes perceptible as the range of options a person has, concerning the kind of life he wishes to live, cultural freedom can be defined through the concept of the multiplicity of belonging. In other words, cultural freedom constitutes itself a capability, which is realized when nothing and no one, not even myself, can tie me down to a kind of cultural rigidity that tends to exclude and marginalize me. This latent connection of “capabilities” with “multiple identities” (Sen 2007) challenges us to search for the contribution Sen’s approach could have in the understanding and confrontation of issues concerning migrants, away from theoretical patterns that overemphasize the cultural otherness as an impediment to inclusion. Besides, Sen himself, without of course focusing exclusively on migrants, has already approached the matter of social exclusion with terms of his capabilities approach (Sen 2000).
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The Dutch “brede school” (BS) development originates in the 1990s and has spread unevenly since: quicker in the primary than secondary educational sector. In 2007, there were about 1000 primary and 350 secondary BS schools and it is the intention of the government as well as the individual municipalities to extend that number and make the BS the dominant school form of the near future. In the primary sector, a BS cooperates with crèche and preschool facilities, besides possible other neighborhood partners. The main targets are, first, to enhance educational opportunities, particularly for children with little (western-) cultural capital, and secondly to increase women’s labor market participation by providing extra familial care for babies and small children. All primary schools are now obliged to provide such care. In the secondary sector, a BS is less neighborhood-orientated than a primary BS because those schools are bigger and more often located in different buildings. As in the primary sector, there are broad and more narrow BS, the first profile cooperating with many non-formal and other partners and facilities and the second with few. On the whole, there is a wide variety of BS schools, with different profiles and objectives, dependent on the needs and wishes of the initiators and the neighborhood. A BS is always the result of initiatives of the respective school and its partners: parents, other neighborhood associations, municipality etc. BS schools are not enforced by the government although the general trend will be that existing school organizations transform into BS. The integration of formal and non-formal education and learning is more advanced in primary than secondary schools. In secondary education, vocational as well as general, there is a clear dominance of formal education; the non-formal curriculum serves mainly two lines and objectives: first, provide attractive leisure activities and second provide compensatory courses and support for under-achievers who are often students with migrant background. In both sectors, primary and secondary, it is the formal school organization with its professionals which determines the character of a BS; there is no full integration of formal and non-formal education resulting in one non-disruptive learning trajectory, nor is there the intention to go in that direction. Non-formal pedagogues are partly professionals, like youth- and social workers, partly volunteers, like parents, partly non-educational partners, like school-police, psycho-medical help or commercial leisure providers. Besides that, the BS is regarded by government educational and social policy as a potential partner and anchor for community development. It is too early to make reliable statements about the effects of the BS movement in the Netherlands concerning the educational opportunities for disadvantaged children and their families, especially those with migrant background, and combat further segregation. Evaluation studies made so far are moderately positive but also point to problems of overly bureaucratized structures and layers, lack of sufficient financial resources and, again, are uncertain about long-term effects.
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Since the UsedSoft ruling of the CJEU in 2012, there has been the distinct feeling that – like the big bang - UsedSoft signals the start of a new beginning. As we enter this brave new world, the Copyright Directive will be read anew: misalignments in the treatment of physical and digital content will be resolved; accessibility and affordability for consumers will be heightened; and lock-in will be reduced as e-exhaustion takes hold. With UsedSoft as a precedent, the Court can do nothing but keep expanding its own ruling. For big bang theorists, it is only a matter of time until the digital first sale meteor strikes non-software downloads also. This paper looks at whether the UsedSoft ruling could indeed be the beginning of a wider doctrine of e-exhaustion, or if it is simply a one-shot comet restrained by provisions of the Computer Program Directive on which it was based. Fighting the latter corner, we have the strict word of the law; in the UsedSoft ruling, the Court appears to willingly bypass the international legal framework of the WCT. As far as expansion goes, the Copyright Directive was conceived specifically to implement the WCT, thus the legislative intent is clear. The Court would not, surely, invoke its modicum of creativity there also... With perhaps undue haste in a digital market of many unknowns, it seems this might well be the case. Provoking the big bang theory of e-exhaustion, the UsedSoft ruling can be read as distinctly purposive, but rather than having copyright norms in mind, the standard for the Court is the same free movement rules that underpin the exhaustion doctrine in the physical world. With an endowed sense of principled equivalence, the Court clearly wishes the tangible and intangible rules to be aligned. Against the backdrop of the European internal market, perhaps few legislative instruments would staunchly stand in its way. With firm objectives in mind, the UsedSoft ruling could be a rather disruptive meteor indeed.
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Children with nonorganic voice disorders (NVDs) are treated mainly using direct voice therapy techniques such as the accent method or glottal attack changes and indirect methods such as vocal hygiene and voice education. However, both approaches tackle only the symptoms and not etiological factors in the family dynamics and therefore often enjoy little success. The aim of the "Bernese Brief Dynamic Intervention" (BBDI) for children with NVD was to extend the effectiveness of pediatric voice therapies with a psychosomatic concept combining short-term play therapy with the child and family dynamic counseling of the parents. This study compares the therapeutic changes in three groups where different procedures were used, before intervention and 1 year afterward: counseling of parents (one to two consultations; n = 24), Brief Dynamic Intervention on the lines of the BBDI (three to five play therapy sessions with the child plus two to four sessions with the parents; n = 20), and traditional voice therapy (n = 22). A Voice Questionnaire for Parents developed by us with 59 questions to be answered on a four-point Likert scale was used to measure the change. According to the parents' assessment, a significant improvement in voice quality was achieved in all three methods. Counseling of parents (A) appears to have led parents to give their child more latitude, for example, they stopped nagging the child or demanding that he/she should behave strictly by the rules. After BBDI (B), the mothers were more responsive to their children's wishes and the children were more relaxed and their speech became livelier. At home, they called out to them less often at a distance, which probably improved parent-child dialog. Traditional voice therapy (C) seems to have had a positive effect on the children's social competence. BBDI seems to have the deepest, widest, and therefore probably the most enduring therapeutic effect on children with NVD.
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The human face is a vital component of our identity and many people undergo medical aesthetics procedures in order to achieve an ideal or desired look. However, communication between physician and patient is fundamental to understand the patient’s wishes and to achieve the desired results. To date, most plastic surgeons rely on either “free hand” 2D drawings on picture printouts or computerized picture morphing. Alternatively, hardware dependent solutions allow facial shapes to be created and planned in 3D, but they are usually expensive or complex to handle. To offer a simple and hardware independent solution, we propose a web-based application that uses 3 standard 2D pictures to create a 3D representation of the patient’s face on which facial aesthetic procedures such as filling, skin clearing or rejuvenation, and rhinoplasty are planned in 3D. The proposed application couples a set of well-established methods together in a novel manner to optimize 3D reconstructions for clinical use. Face reconstructions performed with the application were evaluated by two plastic surgeons and also compared to ground truth data. Results showed the application can provide accurate 3D face representations to be used in clinics (within an average of 2 mm error) in less than 5 min.