590 research outputs found

    Il piano di comunicazione. Un progetto per l’Università di Sassari

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    Il Piano di Comunicazione è un obbligo di legge per le Pubbliche Amministrazioni (Legge 150/2000), tra cui le Università. Strumento organizzativo che consente di ottimizzare le proprie risorse per raggiungere gli obiettivi strategici e operativi di comunicazione. L’obiettivo di questo saggio è verificare l'applicabilità di una metodologia, oramai consolidata nell’ambito della pianificazione della comunicazione, alle istituzioni universitarie, le quali sentono sempre più la necessità di avvalersi della comunicazione per mostrare i propri risultati scientifici e rendere noti i propri centri di eccellenza

    SCUOLA

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    sj-pdf-1-dst-10.1177_19322968211043112 – Supplemental material for Sensor Augmented Pump Therapy is Safe and Effective in Very Low Birth Weight Newborns Affected by Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus, with Poor Subcutaneous Tissue: Replacement of the Insulin Pump Infusion Set on the Arm, a Video Case Report

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-dst-10.1177_19322968211043112 for Sensor Augmented Pump Therapy is Safe and Effective in Very Low Birth Weight Newborns Affected by Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus, with Poor Subcutaneous Tissue: Replacement of the Insulin Pump Infusion Set on the Arm, a Video Case Report by Angela Zanfardino, Mauro Carpentieri, Alessia Piscopo, Stefano Curto, Emanuele Miraglia del Giudice, Alessia Inverardi, Mario Diplomatico, Sabino Moschella, Ferdinando Spagnuolo, Elisabetta Caredda, Paolo Montaldo and Dario Iafusco in Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology</p

    Hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia in neonatal encephalopathy: a systematic review and meta-analysis

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    Importance Although hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia represent the most common metabolic problem in neonates, there is still uncertainty regarding the effects of glucose homeostasis on the neurological outcomes of infants with neonatal encephalopathy (NE). Objective To systematically investigate the association between neonatal hypo and hyperglycaemia with adverse outcome in children who suffered from NE. Study selection We searched Pubmed, Embase, and Web of Science databases to identify studies which reported prespecified outcomes and compared infants with NE who had been exposed to neonatal hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia with infants not exposed. Data analysis We assessed the risk of bias (ROBINS-I), quality of evidence (GRADE) for each of the studies. REVMAN was used for meta-analysis (inverse variance, fixed effects). Main outcome Death or neurodevelopmental outcomes at 18 months of age or later. Results Eighty-two studies were screened, 28 reviewed in full, and 12 included. Children who were exposed to neonatal hypoglycaemia had higher odds of neurodevelopmental impairment or death (6 studies, 685 infants; 40.6 vs. 25.4%; OR= 2.17, 95%CI=1.46– 3.25; p=0.0001). Neonatal exposure to hyperglycaemia was associated with death or neurodisability at 18 months or later (7 studies, 807 infants; 46.1 vs. 28.0%; OR=3.07, 95%CI=2.17– 4.35; p<0.00001). These findings were confirmed in the subgroup analysis, which included only the infants who underwent therapeutic hypothermia. Conclusions These data suggest that neonatal hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia may be associated with the neurodevelopmental outcome later on in infants with NE. Further studies with long-term follow-up are needed to optimise the metabolic management of these highrisk infants

    Correction to: Size‐Dependent Enforcement, Tax Evasion and Dimensional Trap

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    The article “Size‐Dependent Enforcement, Tax Evasion and Dimensional Trap”, written by Raffaella Coppier, Elisabetta Michetti and Luisa Scaccia, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal on 05 July 2023 without open access. With the author(s)’ decision to opt for Open Choice the copyright of the article changed on 24 February 2024 to © The Author(s) 2024 and the article is forthwith distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made

    Elisabetta I come Cinzia: Una regina e il suo oceano

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    The defeat of the Spanish Armada in the Channel in 1588 turned ‘a weak and feeble woman’ into one of the most relevant characters of late 16th-century European history: Elizabeth I, the Tudor Queen, was considered a semi-divine creature whom the myth, by comparing her to Moon goddesses like Diana and Cinthia, had made known as Semper Eadem. The identification of the queen with Cinthia became more and more evident after the events occurred in 1588, when she was hailed as the moon goddess par excellence in a series of texts written by her contemporaries. It was in that period, the last decades of the 16th century, that Sir Walter Ralegh, courtier, poet and seaman, wrote The Poems to Cynthia: a collection of short poems where Elizabeth I, the lady of the seas, is addressed as his beloved. The role of Elizabeth as Cinthia is evident above all in Ralegh’s Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia, an unfinished poem where the author, desperate for being in disgrace, appeals to her clemency and addresses her as the empress of the ocean.La sconfitta della flotta spagnola nelle acque della Manica nel 1588 trasformò una donna sola e fragile in una delle figure più rilevanti della storia europea di fine XVI secolo: Elisabetta I Tudor divenne per i suoi sudditi una creatura semidivina che il mito, accostandola alle divinità lunari Diana e Cinzia, avrebbe consegnato alla Storia come Semper Eadem. Pur essendo evidente già nei primi tempi del suo regno, l’identificazione della sovrana con Cinzia, la dea che governa i mari e i corsi d’acqua, si fa ancora più evidente dopo il 1588, quando si assiste ad una fioritura di testi che esaltano Elisabetta I come la dea lunare per eccellenza. Sempre in quegli anni di fine XVI secolo, Sir Walter Ralegh compone The Poems to Cynthia: letterato, cortigiano e uomo di mare, Ralegh dedicherà il suo amore ad Elisabetta come Cinzia, signora dei mari. Il legame tra Elisabetta e l’oceano è soprattutto evidente in Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia, un poemetto incompiuto in cui il poeta, caduto in disgrazia, riunisce sotto il nome di Cinzia, la donna e la regina, l’amante e la dea, trasformando così Elisabetta in dea e imperatrice dei mari

    Elisabetta I come Cinzia. Una regina e il suo oceano.

    No full text
    La sconfitta della flotta spagnola nelle acque della Manica nel 1588 trasformò una donna sola e fragile in una delle figure più rilevanti della storia europea di fine XVI secolo: Elisabetta I Tudor divenne per i suoi sudditi una creatura semidivina che il mito, accostandola alle divinità lunari Diana e Cinzia, avrebbe consegnato alla Storia come Semper Eadem. Pur essendo evidente già nei primi tempi del suo regno, l’identificazione della sovrana con Cinzia, la dea che governa i mari e i corsi d’acqua, si fa ancora più evidente dopo il 1588, quando si assiste ad una fioritura di testi che esaltano Elisabetta I come la dea lunare per eccellenza. Sempre in quegli anni di fine XVI secolo, Sir Walter Raleigh compone ‘The Poems to Cynthia’: letterato, cortigiano e uomo di mare, Raleigh dedicherà il suo amore ad Elisabetta come Cinzia, signora dei mari. Il legame tra Elisabetta e l’oceano è soprattutto evidente in ‘Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia’, un poemetto incompiuto in cui il poeta, caduto in disgrazia, riunisce sotto il nome di Cinzia, la donna e la regina, l’amante e la dea, trasformando così Elisabetta in dea e imperatrice dei mari.The defeat of the Spanish Armada in the Channel in 1588 turned ‘a weak and feeble woman’ into one of the most relevant characters of late 16th-century European history: Elizabeth I, the Tudor Queen, was considered a semi-divine creature whom the myth, by comparing her to Moon goddesses like Diana and Cinthia, had made known as Semper Eadem. The identification of the queen with Cinthia became more and more evident after the events occurred in 1588, when she was hailed as the moon goddess par excellence in a series of texts written by her contemporaries. It was in that period, the last decades of the 16th century, that Sir Walter Raleigh, courtier, poet and seaman, wrote ‘The Poems to Cynthia’: a collection of short poems where Elizabeth I, the lady of the seas, is addressed as his beloved. The role of Elizabeth as Cinthia is evident above all in Raleigh’s ‘Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia’, an unfinished poem where the author, desperate for being in disgrace, appeals to her clemency and addresses her as the empress of the ocean
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