986 resultados para Birth-death Processes
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This release from the Office for National Statistics contains a reference table providing Healthy Life Expectancy (HLE) and Life Expectancy (LE) at birth for national deciles of area deprivation in England. It also provides two measures of inequality, the range and Slope Index of Inequality (SII), for the period 2010-12.Key findingsMales in the most deprived areas have a life expectancy 9.1 years shorter (when measured by the range) than males in the least deprived areas; they also spend a smaller proportion of their shorter lives in ‘Good’ health (70.8% compared to 85.0%).Females in the most deprived areas have a life expectancy 6.8 years shorter (when measured by the range) than females in the least deprived areas; they also expect to spend 17.2% less of their life in ‘Good’ health (66.1% compared to 83.2%).Males in the most advantaged areas can expect to live 19.4 years longer in ‘Good’ health than those in the least advantaged areas as measured by the Slope Index of Inequality (SII). For females this was 19.8 years.Read the release here.��
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Nitric oxide (NO) plays an important role in mediating many aspects of inflammatory responses. NO is an effector molecule of cellular injury, and can act as an anti-oxidant. It can modulate the release of various inflammatory mediators from a wide range of cells participating in inflammatory responses (e.g., leukocytes, macrophages, mast cells, endothelial cells, and platelets). It can modulate blood flow, adhesion of leukocytes to the vascular endothelium and the activity of numerous enzymes, all of which can have an impact on inflammatory responses. In recent years, NO-releasing drugs have been developed, usually as derivatives of other drugs, which exhibit very powerful anti-inflammatory effects.
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The ubiquitous free radical, nitric oxide (NO), plays an important role in many biological processes including the regulation of the inflammatory response. Alterations in NO synthesis by endogenous systems likely influence inflammatory processes occurring in a wide range of diseases including many in the cardiovascular system (e.g. atherosclerosis). Progression of inflammatory conditions depends not only upon the recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells but also upon their subsequent removal from the inflammatory milieu. Apoptosis, or programmed cell death, is a fundamental process regulating inflammatory cell survival and is critically involved in ensuring the successful resolution of an inflammatory response. Apoptosis results in shutdown of secretory pathways and renders effete, but potentially highly histotoxic, cells instantly recognisable for non-inflammatory clearance by phagocytes (e.g., macrophages). However, dysregulation of apoptosis and phagocytic clearance mechanisms can have drastic consequences for development and resolution of inflammatory processes. In this review we highlight the complexities of NO-mediated regulation of inflammatory cell apoptosis and clearance by phagocytes and discuss the molecular mechanisms controlling these NO mediated effects. We believe that manipulation of pathways involving NO may have previously unrecognised therapeutic potential for limiting or resolving inflammatory and cardiovascular disease.
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This poster highlights the fact that smoking while pregnant increases the risk of low birth weight, premature birth, stillbirth and cot death, and directs women to the Smokers' Helpline.
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The findings in this report are based on stillbirths and neonatal deaths with a date of birth between 1 January 2008 and 31 December 2008 notified to AWPS/CMACE and reported to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). For maternity provider rates, denominators are based on live births reported to AWPS/CMACE by hospitals. For country rates, denominators are based on live births reported to ONS and NISRA-GRO.Perinatal mortality rates for 2008 are assigned to a geographical area. Country specific findings are derived using maternal postcode of residence. Findings for maternity providers within Northern Ireland are derived using the place of death, and any deaths at home are allocated to the maternity provider that provided the care at the time of death.
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The findings in this report are based on stillbirths and neonatal deaths with a date of birth between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2009 notified to CMACE and reported to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). For Trust rates, denominators are based on live births reported to CMACE by hospitals. For Strategic Health Authority (SHA) and country rates, denominators are based on live births reported to ONS and Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA).Perinatal mortality rates for 2009 are assigned to a geographical area and are derived using maternal postcode of residence. Findings for Trusts are derived using the place of death, and any deaths at home are allocated to the Trusts that provided the care at the time of death.
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Improving the health and wellbeing of the elderly is the theme of the fourth Director of Public Health annual report, launched on 12 June 2013. Northern Ireland's elderly population is growing and older people are living longer than ever before, which emphasises the importance of providing health and social care that allows them to live a productive life.This report highlights the many areas of public health work aimed at giving elderly people in Northern Ireland the best opportunity to live active and healthy lives in a safe and secure environment. An in-depth overview also provides statistics on many aspects of life as an elderly person here - life expectancy, mortality, mental wellbeing, lifestyle, social determinants of health etc. Further, more detailed, data is included in an accompanying report available�as a separate document.��The core tables for 2011, also available to download below, include information such as estimated home population figures and projections, birth rates, fertility rates, death rates, information on mortality, life expectancy, immunisation rates and screening uptake rates.The presentation slides from key speakers from the launch event on 12 June 2013 and all parallel sessions are also appended below.�Please note:�The PHA cannot be held responsible for any breach of copyright that may exist within individual presentations.Anyone wishing to get a copy of the presentation by Ron McDowell�in the 'Identifying those at risk' category should contact him directly at mcdowell-R3@email.ulster.ac.uk
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L'ARN Polymérase III (Pol III) transcrit un ensemble de petits ARN non traduits impliqués dans des processus cellulaires tels que la biosynthèse des protéines, la maturation des ARNs ou le contrôle transcriptionnel. De ce fait, la Pol III joue un rôle important dans la régulation de la croissance et la prolifération cellulaire. L'initiation de la transcription par la Pol III nécessite l'interaction entre des facteurs de transcription et le complexe de la Pol III lui-même. Un sous- complexe de la Pol III, composé de 3 sous-unités, HsRPC3, HsRPC6 et HsRPC7 sert d'intermédiaire dans cette interaction. Dans cette étude, nous avons caractérisé une nouvelle sous-unité de la Pol III, HsRPC7-Like, homologue à HsRPC7. Nous avons montré que ces deux homologues se trouvent spécifiquement chez les vertébrés. Ils proviennent d'un ancêtre commun qui, après duplication il y a 600 millions d'années, a donné naissance à ces deux paralogues. Dans les cellules humaines, deux formes de Pol III coexistent : l'une contientt HsRPC7, l'autre HsRPC7-Like. Nous avons localisé, à l'échelle du génome entier, la présence de ces deux formes de Pol III dans des cellules humaines et dans le foie de souris. Les deux sous-unités ont démontré des caractéristiques identiques, suggérant qu'elles possèdent des fonctions similaires. Cependant, nous avons analysé les motifs d'expression des gènes codant pour RPC7 et RPC7-Like dans des lignées cellulaires dans des conditions variées telles que la concentration de sérum et la densité cellulaire, ainsi que les motifs d'expression dans le foie de souris et des cellules d'hépatocarcinome de souris. Nos résultats suggèrent que l'expression de ces deux sous-untiés varie en fonction de l'activité de prolifération de la cellule. - RNA polymerase III (Pol III) transcribes a set of genes coding for short untranslated RNAs involved in essential cellular processes as for example protein biosynthesis, RNA maturation, and transcriptional control. Thereby Pol III plays an important role in regulating cell growth and proliferation. Initiation of Pol III transcription requires interactions between transcription factors and the Pol III core complex. A Pol III sub-complex composed of three subunits, HsRPC3, HsRPC6, and HsRPC7 mediates this interaction. In this study, we have characterized a new Pol III subunit, HsRPC7-Like, an homologue of HsRPC7. We have shown that these two homologues are specific to vertebrates and originate from an ancestor gene that duplicated 600 mio years ago to give birth to two paralogues. In human cells, two forms of Pol III coexist, one containing HsRPC7 and the other HsRPC7-Like. We have localized, genome-wide, these two Pol III forms in human cells and mouse liver. Both subunits were found on all types of Pol III genes, suggesting that they share similar function. However, we analysed the expression patterns of the RPC7 and RPC7-Like coding genes under various conditions of serum concentration and cell density in different cell lines, as well as expression patterns in mouse liver and mouse hepatocarcinoma cells. Our results suggest that the expression of these two subunits varies with the proliferation rate of the cell.
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This is the sixth Director of Public Health Annual Report, detailing the main public health challenges in Northern Ireland. It also provides information on the wide variety of work undertaken by the PHA and its partners during 2014 to improve the health and social wellbeing of the population. Each year, the report focuses on an overarching area, which this year is ‘Adults aged 18–64 years’. The report structure reflects the main areas of public health action: improving health and reducing inequalities; improving health through early detection; improving health through high quality services; improving health through research; protecting health. For ease of reference, the sections are colour coded. On page 94, the report also lists core tables for 2013 relating to key statistical data on, among others, population, birth and death rates, mortality by cause, life expectancy, immunisation and screening. The PDF document of the Core tables is available below. In addition to the core tables, a specific set of tables relating to various aspects of adults aged 18–64 years are published alongside this report.
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This book provides information on caring for children up to five years old and contact details for useful organisations. It is available to new parents resident in Northern Ireland through primary care services (antenatal clinics, GPs or health visitors).
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Official certificates of stillbirth and infant death are analysed in the birth cohort of 1979-81. Congenital malformations account for approx. 40% of infant mortality. Cantonal differences in malformation rates are not explained by different incidence of such malformations only, but also by differences in lethality. Incidence of Anencephaly is examined in detail.
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Although the general trend for delaying childbearing is generally viewed as causing infertility, its consequences on the interpregnancy interval have been unknown. A study of birth records for Swiss married women from 1969 to 2006 revealed that the woman's age at first birth has increased from 25.0 to 30.1 years, whereas calculated theoretical interpregnancy intervals after the first and second child decreased from 23.2 to 13 and from 22.4 to 7.9 months, respectively.