920 resultados para Radiation - Safety measures
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Formation of hydrates is one of the major flow assurance problems faced by the oil and gas industry. Hydrates tend to form in natural gas pipelines with the presence of water and favorable temperature and pressure conditions, generally low temperatures and corresponding high pressures. Agglomeration of hydrates can result in blockage of flowlines and equipment, which can be time consuming to remove in subsea equipment and cause safety issues. Natural gas pipelines are more susceptible to burst and explosion owing to hydrate plugging. Therefore, a rigorous risk-assessment related to hydrate formation is required, which assists in preventing hydrate blockage and ensuring equipment integrity. This thesis presents a novel methodology to assess the probability of hydrate formation and presents a risk-based approach to determine the parameters of winterization schemes to avoid hydrate formation in natural gas pipelines operating in Arctic conditions. It also presents a lab-scale multiphase flow loop to study the effects of geometric and hydrodynamic parameters on hydrate formation and discusses the effects of geometric and hydrodynamic parameters on multiphase development length of a pipeline. Therefore, this study substantially contributes to the assessment of probability of hydrate formation and the decision making process of winterization strategies to prevent hydrate formation in Arctic conditions.
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Novel scientific and technological progress require to seek new sources of electricity. Such response is, inter alia, nuclear energy. Nuclear power stations currently produce around a third of the electricity and 14% of the energy consumed in the European Union. A thorough aspect in the use and development of nuclear energy as power source is safety. Nuclear facilities are designed so that the probability of an accident that may affect people and environment was very low. Reasonably, preventive emergency plans take place in the own nuclear facilities in order to mitigate and minimize the consequences, and otherwise another emergency nuclear plans take place outside facilities. Monitoring programs are also conducted in the nearby nuclear facilities, according to the Recommendation reached on 8th June 2000 by the European Commission on the application of Article 36 of the Euratom Treaty for the checking of the levels of radioactivity in the environment, in order to assess the exposure to the whole population. The main objectives of these plans are to check the presence and evolution of radioactive elements and the radiation levels in the environment; to determinate the causes of its increase, if succeed; to estimate the radiological risk to the population; to set corrected measures, if necessary; to ensure legal compliance on the premises and; to verify the suitability of effluent monitoring program to detect radionuclides leaks and transfer to the environment...
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Background and Objectives: Mobility limitations are a prevalent issue in older adult populations, and an important determinant of disability and mortality. Neighborhood conditions are key determinants of mobility and perception of safety may be one such determinant. Women have more mobility limitations than men, a phenomenon known as the gender mobility gap. The objective of this work was to validate a measure of perception of safety, examine the relationship between neighborhood perception of safety and mobility limitations in seniors, and explore if these effects vary by gender. Methods: This study was cross-sectional, using questionnaire data collected from community-dwelling older adults from four sites in Canada, Colombia, and Brazil. The exposure variable was the neighborhood aggregated Perception of Safety (PoS) scale, derived from the Physical and Social Disorder (PSD) scale by Sampson and Raudenbush. Its construct validity was verified using factor analyses and correlation with similar measures. The Mobility Assessment Tool – short form (MAT-sf), a video-based measure validated cross-culturally in the studied populations, was used to assess mobility limitations. Based on theoretical models, covariates were included in the analysis, both at the neighborhood level (SES, social capital, and built environment) and the individual level (age, gender, education, income, chronic illnesses, depression, cognitive function, BMI, and social participation). Multilevel modeling was used in order to account for neighborhood clustering. Gender specific analyses were carried out. SAS and M-plus were used in this study. Results: PoS was validated across all sites. It loaded in a single factor, after excluding two items, with a Cronbach α value of approximately 0.86. Mobility limitations were present in 22.08% of the sample, 16.32% among men and 27.41% among women. Neighborhood perception of safety was significantly associated with mobility limitations when controlling for all covariates, with an OR of 0.84 (CI 95%: 0.73-0.96), indicating lower odds of having mobility limitations as neighborhood perception of safety improves. Gender did not affect this relationship despite women being more likely to have mobility limitations and live in neighborhoods with poor perception of safety. Conclusion: Neighborhood perception of safety affected the prevalence of mobility limitations in older adults in the studied population.
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Background: The phase 3 ALSYMPCA trial enrolled metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer patients with or without baseline opioid use.
Objective: To assess the efficacy and safety of radium-223 dichloride (radium-223) versus placebo in ALSYMPCA patients by baseline opioid use.
Design, setting, and participants: Nine hundred and twenty one patients enrolled at 136 centers globally.
Intervention: Radium-223 (50 kBq/kg, intravenous injection) every 4 wk for six cycles or matching placebo, each plus best standard of care.
Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: Primary endpoint (overall survival [OS]), main secondary efficacy endpoints, and safety were evaluated by baseline opioid use. Additional analyses included time to first opioid use, time to first external beam radiation therapy for bone pain, and safety of concomitant external beam radiation therapy.
Results and limitations: At baseline, 408 (44%) patients had no pain and no analgesic use or mild pain with nonopioid therapy (World Health Organization ladder pain score 0–1 [nonopioid subgroup]), and 513 (56%) had moderate pain with occasional opioids or severe pain with regular daily opioids (World Health Organization ladder pain score 2–3 [opioid subgroup]). Radium-223 significantly prolonged OS versus placebo in nonopioid (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.70; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.52–0.93; p = 0.013) and opioid (HR = 0.68; 95% CI: 0.54–0.86; p = 0.001) subgroups, and significantly reduced risk of symptomatic skeletal events versus placebo, regardless of baseline opioid use (nonopioid subgroup: HR = 0.56, 95% CI: 0.39–0.82, p = 0.002; opioid subgroup: HR = 0.72, 95% CI: 0.53–0.98, p = 0.038). Time to first opioid use for bone pain was significantly delayed with radium-223 versus placebo (HR = 0.62, 95% CI: 0.46–0.85,p = 0.002). Adverse event incidences were similar between opioid subgroups.
Conclusions: Radium-223 versus placebo significantly prolonged OS and reduced symptomatic skeletal event risk with a favorable safety profile in castration-resistant prostate cancer patients with symptomatic bone metastases, regardless of baseline opioid use.
Patient summary: In this ALSYMPCA opioid subgroup analysis, baseline symptom levels did not appear to impact radium-223 dichloride efficacy or safety.
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New methods of nuclear fuel and cladding characterization must be developed and implemented to enhance the safety and reliability of nuclear power plants. One class of such advanced methods is aimed at the characterization of fuel performance by performing minimally intrusive in-core, real time measurements on nuclear fuel on the nanometer scale. Nuclear power plants depend on instrumentation and control systems for monitoring, control and protection. Traditionally, methods for fuel characterization under irradiation are performed using a “cook and look” method. These methods are very expensive and labor-intensive since they require removal, inspection and return of irradiated samples for each measurement. Such fuel cladding inspection methods investigate oxide layer thickness, wear, dimensional changes, ovality, nuclear fuel growth and nuclear fuel defect identification. These methods are also not suitable for all commercial nuclear power applications as they are not always available to the operator when needed. Additionally, such techniques often provide limited data and may exacerbate the phenomena being investigated. This thesis investigates a novel, nanostructured sensor based on a photonic crystal design that is implemented in a nuclear reactor environment. The aim of this work is to produce an in-situ radiation-tolerant sensor capable of measuring the deformation of a nuclear material during nuclear reactor operations. The sensor was fabricated on the surface of nuclear reactor materials (specifically, steel and zirconium based alloys). Charged-particle and mixed-field irradiations were both performed on a newly-developed “pelletron” beamline at Idaho State University's Research and Innovation in Science and Engineering (RISE) complex and at the University of Maryland's 250 kW Training Reactor (MUTR). The sensors were irradiated to 6 different fluences (ranging from 1 to 100 dpa), followed by intensive characterization using focused ion beam (FIB), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to investigate the physical deformation and microstructural changes between different fluence levels, to provide high-resolution information regarding the material performance. Computer modeling (SRIM/TRIM) was employed to simulate damage to the sensor as well as to provide significant information concerning the penetration depth of the ions into the material.
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Hintergrund: Für die Therapie maligner Neubildungen stellt die Strahlentherapie wichtige Behandlungsmöglichkeiten dar, die sich in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten deutlich weiterentwickelt haben. Hierzu gehört unter anderem die stereotaktische Radiochirurgie (SRS), die durch eine einmalige Applikation fokussierter hoher Strahlendosen in einem klar definierten Zeitraum gekennzeichnet ist. Von besonderer Bedeutung ist die SRS für die Behandlung von Hirnmetastasen. Fragestellung: Ziel dieses HTA-Berichts ist die Erstellung einer umfassenden Übersicht der aktuellen Literatur der Behandlung von Hirnmetastasen, um die Radiochirurgie als alleinige Therapie oder in Kombination mit Therapiealternativen bezüglich der medizinischen Wirksamkeit, Sicherheit und Wirtschaftlichkeit sowie ethischer, sozialer und juristischer Aspekte zu vergleichen. Methodik: Relevante Publikationen deutscher und englischer Sprache werden über eine strukturierte Datenbank- sowie mittels Handrecherche zwischen Januar 2002 und August 2007 identifiziert. Die Zielpopulation bilden Patienten mit einer oder mehreren Hirnmetastasen. Eine Beurteilung der methodischen Qualität wird unter Beachtung von Kriterien der evidenzbasierten Medizin (EbM) durchgeführt. Ergebnisse: Von insgesamt 1.495 Treffern erfüllen 15 Studien die medizinischen Einschlusskriterien. Insgesamt ist die Studienqualität stark eingeschränkt und mit Ausnahme von zwei randomisierte kontrollierte Studien (RCT) und zwei Metaanalysen werden ausschließlich historische Kohortenstudien identifiziert. Die Untersuchung relevanter Endpunkte ist uneinheitlich. Qualitativ hochwertige Studien zeigen, dass die Ergänzung der Ganzhirnbestrahlung (WBRT) zur SRS sowie der SRS zur WBRT mit einer verbesserten lokalen Tumorkontrolle und Funktionsfähigkeit einhergeht. Nur im Vergleich zur alleinigen WBRT resultiert die Kombination von SRS und WBRT jedoch bei Patienten mit singulären Hirnmetastasen, RPA-Klasse 1 (RPA = Rekursive Partitionierungsanalyse) und bestimmten Primärtumoren in verbesserter Überlebenszeit. Die Therapiesicherheit zeigt in beiden Fällen keine deutlichen Unterschiede zwischen den Interventionsgruppen. Methodisch weniger hochwertige Studien finden keine eindeutigen Unterschiede zwischen SRS und WBRT, SRS und Neurochirurgie (NC) sowie SRS und hypofraktionierter Strahlentherapie (HCSRT). Die Lebensqualität wird in keiner Studie untersucht. Durch die Datenbankrecherche werden 320 Publikationen für den ökonomischen Bereich identifiziert. Insgesamt werden fünf davon für den vorliegenden Health Technology Assessment (HTA)-Bericht verwendet. Die Qualität der Publikationen ist dabei unterschiedlich. Bezüglich der Wirtschaftlichkeit verschiedener Gerätealternativen ergibt sich, unter der Annahme gleicher Wirksamkeit, eine starke Abhängigkeit von der Anzahl der behandelten Patienten. Im Fall, dass die beiden Gerätealternativen nur für die SRS verwandt werden, liegen Hinweise vor, dass das Gamma Knife kostengünstiger sein kann. Andernfalls ist es sehr wahrscheinlich, dass der flexiblere modifizierte Linearbeschleuniger kostengünstiger ist. Nach einem HTA sind die Gesamtkosten für ein Gamma Knife und einen dedizierten Linearbeschleuniger ungefähr gleich, während ein modifizierter Linearbeschleuniger günstiger ist. Für ethische, juristische und soziale Fragestellungen werden keine relevanten Publikationen identifiziert. Diskussion: Insgesamt sind sowohl die Qualität als auch die Quantität identifizierter Studien stark reduziert. Es zeigt sich jedoch, dass die Prognose von Patienten mit Hirnmetastasen auch unter modernsten therapeutischen Möglichkeiten schlecht ist. Ausreichend starke Evidenz gibt es lediglich für die Untersuchung ergänzender WBRT zur SRS und der ergänzenden SRS zur WBRT. Ein direkter Vergleich von SRS und WBRT, SRS und NC sowie SRS und HCSRT ist hingegen nicht möglich. Die Wirtschaftlichkeit verschiedener Gerätealternativen hängt von der Patientenzahl und den behandelten Indikationen ab. Für ausgelastete dedizierte Systeme, liegen Hinweise vor, dass sie kostengünstiger sein können. Bei flexibler Nutzung scheinen modifizierte Systeme wirtschaftlich vorteilhafter. Diese Aussagen erfolgen unter der nicht gesicherten Annahme gleicher Wirksamkeit der Alternativen. Die Behandlungspräzision der Geräte kann Einfluss auf die Gerätewahl haben. Zu neueren Gerätealternativen wie z. B. dem CyberKnife liegen bisher keine Untersuchungen vor. Aus der wirtschaftlich vorteilhaften hohen Auslastung folgt aber eine begrenzte Geräteanzahl in einem vorgegebenen Gebiet, was evtl. einen gleichberechtigten, wohnortnahen Zugang zu dieser Technik erschwert. Schlussfolgerungen: Die Kombination SRS und WBRT geht mit einer verbesserten lokalen Tumorkontrolle und Funktionsfähigkeit gegenüber der jeweils alleinigen Therapie einher. Nur für Patienten mit singulärer Metastase resultiert dies in Vorteilen der Überlebenszeit. Qualitativ hochwertige Studien sind notwendig um die SRS direkt mit WBRT und NC zu vergleichen. Weiterhin sollte besonders die Lebensqualität in zukünftigen Studien mitberücksichtigt werden. Bei der Art des verwendeten Gerätes zeichnet sich eine deutliche Abhängigkeit der Wirtschaftlichkeit der Geräte von der erreichbaren Auslastung ab. Hohe Patientenzahlen bieten Vorteile für spezialisierte Systeme und bei geringeren Patientenzahlen ist die Flexibilität modifizierter System vorteilhaft. Weitere Studien z. B. zum CyberKnife sind wünschenswert. Insgesamt ist die Studienlage insbesondere für das deutsche Gesundheitssystem sehr mangelhaft.
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The present study tested a nomological net of work engagement that was derived from its extant research. Two of the main work engagement models that have been presented and empirically tested in the literature, the JD-R model and Kahn’s model, were integrated to test the effects that job features and personal characteristics can have on work engagement through the psychological conditions of meaningfulness, safety, and availability. In this study, safety refers to psychological perceptions of safety and not workplace safety behaviors. The job features that were tested in this model included person-job fit, autonomy, co-worker relations, supervisor support, procedural justice, and interactional justice, while the personal characteristics consisted of self-consciousness, self-efficacy, extraversion, and neuroticism. Thirty-four hypotheses and a conceptual model were tested in order to establish the viability of this nomological net of work engagement in which it was expected that meaningfulness would mediate the relationships between job features and work engagement, safety would mediate the relationships that job features and personal characteristics have with work engagement, and availability (physical, emotional, and cognitive resources) would mediate the relationships that personal characteristics have with work engagement. Furthermore, analyses were run in order to determine the factor structure of work engagement, assess whether or not it exhibits differential validity from organizational commitment and job satisfaction, and confirm that it is positively related to the outcome variable of organizational citizenship behavior (OCB). The final sample consisted of 500 workers from an online labor market who responded to a questionnaire composed of measures of all constructs included in this study. Findings show that work engagement is best represented as a three-factor construct, composed of vigor, dedication and absorption. Furthermore, support was found for the distinction of work engagement from the related constructs of organizational commitment and job satisfaction. With regard to the proposed model, meaningfulness proved to be the strongest predictor of work engagement. Results show that it partially mediates the relationships that all job features have with work engagement. Safety proved to be a partial mediator of the relationships that autonomy, co-worker relations, supervisor support, procedural justice, interactional justice, and self-efficacy have with work engagement, and fully mediate the relationship between neuroticism and work engagement. Findings also show that availability partially mediates the positive relationships that extraversion and self-efficacy have with work engagement, and fully mediates the negative relationship that neuroticism has with work engagement. Finally, a positive relationship was found between work engagement and OCB. Research and organizational implications are discussed.
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Thesis (Master, Community Health & Epidemiology) -- Queen's University, 2016-10-02 21:02:07.735
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Introduction: The work environment and Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) practice have changed over the last number of years. A holistic OHS approach has been recommended by the authorities in this field (e.g. World Health Organisation (WHO), European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA) and the International Labour Organisation (ILO)). This involves a unified action engaging elements of the physical and psychosocial workplace with greater focus on prevention and promotion of health and wellbeing. The health and safety practitioner (HSP) has been recognised as one of the main agents for implementation of OHS. Within an organisation they act as a leader of change and a professional who shapes health and safety while safeguarding the wellbeing of individuals at work. Additionally, safety climate (SC) has been developed as an essential concept for OHS of an organisation, its productivity and the wellbeing of its workforce. Scholars and practitioners have recognised the great need for further empirical evidence on the HSP’s role in a changing work environment that increasingly requires the use of preventative measures and the assessment and management of psychosocial work-related risks. This doctoral research brings together the different concepts used in OHS and Public Health including SC, Psychosocial workplace risks, Health Promotion and OHS performance. The associations between these concepts are analysed bearing in mind the WHO Healthy Workplace Framework and three of its main components (physical and psychosocial work environment and health resources). This thesis aims to establish a deeper understanding of the practice and management of OHS in Ireland and the UK, exploring the role of HSPs (employed in diverse sectors of activity) and of SC in the OHS of organisations. Methods: One systematic review and three cross-sectional research studies were performed. The systematic review focussed on the evidence compiled for the association of SC with accidents and injuries at work, clarifying this concept’s definition and its most relevant dimensions. The second article (chapter 3) explored the association of SC with accidents and injuries in a sample of workers (n=367) from a pharmaceutical industry and compared permanent with non-permanent workers. Associations of safety climate with employment status and with self-reported occupational accidents/injuries were studied through logistic regression modelling. The third and fourth papers in this thesis investigated the main tasks performed by HSPs, their perceptions of SC, health climate (HC), psychosocial risk factors and health outcomes as well as work efficacy. Validated questionnaires were applied to a sample of HSPs in Ireland and UK, members of the Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (n=1444). Chi-square analysis and logistic regression were used to assess the association between HSPs work characteristics and their involvement in the management of Psychosocial Risk Factors, Safety Culture and Health Promotion (paper 3). Multiple linear regression analysis was used to determine the association between SC, HC, psychosocial risk factors and health outcomes (general health and mental wellbeing) and self-efficacy. Results: As shown in the systematic review, scientific evidence is unable to establish the widely assumed causal link between SC and accidents and injuries. Nevertheless, the current results suggested that, particularly, the organisational dimensions of SC were associated with accidents and injuries and that SC is linked to health, wellbeing and safety performance in the organisation. According to the present research, contingent workers had lower SC perceptions but showed a lower accident/injury rate than their permanent colleagues. The associations of safety climate with accidents/injuries had opposite directions for the two types of workers as for permanent employees it showed an inverse relationship while for temporary workers, although not significant, a positive association was found. This thesis’ findings showed that HSPs are, to a very small degree, included in activities related to psychosocial risk management and assessment, to a moderate degree, involved in HP activities and, to a large degree, engaged in the management of safety culture in organisations. In the final research study, SC and HC were linked to job demands-control-support (JDCS), health, wellbeing and efficacy. JDCS were also associated with all three outcomes under study. Results also showed the contribution of psychosocial risk factors to the association of SC and HC with all the studied outcomes. These associations had rarely been recorded previously. Discussion & Conclusions: Health and safety climate showed a significant association with health, wellbeing and efficacy - a relationship which affects working conditions and the health and wellbeing of the workforce. This demonstrates the link of both SC and HC with the OHS and the general strength or viability of organisations. A division was noticed between the area of “health” and “safety” in the workplace and in the approach to the physical and psychosocial work environment. These findings highlighted the current challenge in ensuring a holistic and multidisciplinary approach for prevention of hazards and for an integrated OHS management. HSPs have shown to be a pivotal agent in the shaping and development of OHS in organisations. However, as observed in this thesis, the role of these professionals is still far from the recommended involvement in the management of psychosocial risk factors and could have a more complete engagement in other areas of OHS such as health promotion. Additionally, a strong culture of health and safety with supportive management and buy-in from all stakeholders is essential to achieve the ideal unified and prevention-focussed approach to OHS as recommended by the WHO, EU-OSHA and ILO.