710 research outputs found

    The burden of viral hepatitis C in key subgroups in Belgium: targets for micro-elimination

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    R. Bielen None Declared, S. Salomonsson None Declared, S. Toghanian None Declared, K. Venken None Declared, M. Hiver None Declared, A. Matthys None Declared, G. Hendrickx None Declared, M. Jadoul Consultant for MSD, Speaker Bureau of AbbVie, MSD, F. Nevens None Declared, G. Robaeys None Declared, J. Lazarus Grant/Research support from MS

    The burden of viral hepatitis C in key subgroups in Belgium: targets for micro-elimination

    No full text
    R. Bielen None Declared, S. Salomonsson None Declared, S. Toghanian None Declared, K. Venken None Declared, M. Hiver None Declared, A. Matthys None Declared, G. Hendrickx None Declared, M. Jadoul Consultant for MSD, Speaker Bureau of AbbVie, MSD, F. Nevens None Declared, G. Robaeys None Declared, J. Lazarus Grant/Research support from MS

    Lap time simulation and design optimisation of a brushed DC electric motorcycle for the Isle of Man TT Zero Challenge

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    This works regards the design of an electric motorcycle for the annual Isle of Man TT Zero Challenge. Optimal control theory was used to perform lap time simulation and design optimisation. A bespoked model was developed, featuring 3D road topology, vehicle dynamics and electric power train, composed of a lithium battery pack, brushed DC motors and motor controller. The model runs simulations over the entire or of the Snaefell Mountain Course. The work is validated using experimental data from the BX chassis of the Brunel Racing team, which ran during the 2009 to 2015 TT Zero races. Optimal control is used to improve drive train and power train configurations. Findings demonstrate computational efficiency, good lap time prediction and design optimisation potential, achieving a 2 minutes reduction of the reference lap time through changes in final drive gear ratio, battery pack size and motor configuration

    The effect of irrigated urban agriculture on malaria, schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis in different settings of Côte d'Ivoire

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    Malaria is responsible for more than one million deaths every year, mainly children under the age of five years living in sub-Saharan Africa. At least one billion people harbor one or several of the three main soil-transmitted helminths, namely Ascaris lumbricoides, hookworms and Trichuris trichiura, and about 207 million people are infected with schistosomes. An estimated 70,000 people die each year from amoebiasis, caused by Entamoeba histolytica. Giardiasis, caused by Giardia duodenalis, is responsible for 2.8 million annual infections. Poor rural and urban communities in developing countries bear the highest burden of the above-mentioned diseases. Their causes are multifactorial including lack of access to clean water, improved sanitation and health services, as well as inadequate treatment, protection and prevention. The highest rates of urbanization currently occur in the less developed regions of Africa and Asia, and it is predicted that the majority of the population will be living in small and medium urban centers in the near future. The maintenance of traditional livelihoods, including agriculture, is a typical feature in urban settings across Africa, especially in small towns where population densities and land pressure are lower than in big cities. Urban agriculture contributes to food security and livelihood opportunities for poor urban dwellers. However, the adaptation of disease vectors and intermediate hosts to urban ecosystems has been observed, which might further enhance the negative effects associated with persistent rural lifestyles. For example, the creation of malaria vector breeding sites and contact with contaminated water and soil in areas of irrigated agriculture may increase the transmission of vector-borne, water-related and soil-transmitted parasitic diseases. This PhD focused on the interface of agriculture and human health in two different urban settings of Côte d’Ivoire. The overarching goal was to contribute to a better understanding of the effects of irrigated urban agriculture on the transmission of malaria, schistosomiasis, soil-transmitted helminthiasis and intestinal protozoan infections. The research entailed a considerable amount of fieldwork, carried out between April 2004 and July 2005. In a first step, six zones of irrigated agricultural land use were identified both in Abidjan, the economic capital of Côte d’Ivoire (3.3 million inhabitants), and in the mediumsized town of Man (115,000 inhabitants) in the western part of the country. Next, two standardized mosquito breeding site assessments were conducted in these agricultural zones in the rainy season (September 2004) and in the dry season (February 2005). In each urban setting, a minimum of 120 farming households and additionally 30 non-farming households were randomly selected. Geographic coordinates of houses and the main agricultural plots were recorded. Name, age and sex of all household members were registered. In October 2004, interviews on agricultural land use, farming practices and water storage were conducted with the heads of the farming households. In a cross-sectional survey done in May/June 2005, questionnaires were administered to all households to assess the socioeconomic status, sanitary facilities and common water contact patterns. From each study participant, a finger prick blood sample and a stool sample were collected. Thick and thin blood films were stained with Giemsa and examined for Plasmodium spp. under a light microscopy. The stool samples were prepared based on the Kato-Katz technique and eggs of Schistosoma mansoni, A. lumbricoides, hookworm and T. trichiura were recorded separately. Cysts or trophozoites of intestinal protozoa, including Entamoeba histolytica/E. dispar and G. duodenalis were identified using an ether-formalin concentration method. Risk factors were identified by fitting multivariate non-random and random effects Bayesian regression models integrating spatial correlation of infection. Agricultural land use in Abidjan was characterized by market gardens on lagoon shores and high-yield vegetable production. The vegetable production areas in Abidjan developed as a consequence of land access difficulties in unexploited public and private areas near poor settlements, mainly at lagoon shores. In Man, farming was family- and subsistence-based. Predominant agricultural activities were traditional irrigated rice farming and vegetable production in lowlands and along the Kô River. The typical demographic and socio-economic profile of a vegetable producer in Abidjan is that he is an immigrant from Burkina Faso, illiterate and lacking a professional agricultural training. Malaria and intestinal parasitic infections were most prevalent among the final study cohort of 370 farmers and family members from 121 farming households. We found overall prevalences of T. trichiura, P. falciparum and hookworm of 42.6%, 24.3% and 17.3%, respectively. The parasites were heterogeneously distributed between the six market garden zones. Prior health issues were suppressed by the farmers with the daily livelihood struggle and reported symptoms due to intestinal parasitic infections were of less importance when compared to malaria. In-depth focus group discussions revealed that the working environment was discerned as unhealthy, and waste dumps and human defecation grounds were perceived as main health risks. Farmer communities and their network are indicative for the degree of social coherence and stability in a vegetable production area because these zones are characterized by highly dynamic land use patterns. In the town of Man, Anopheles larvae were present in 50.7% and 42.4% of 369 and 589 examined potential mosquito breeding sites in the rainy and in the dry season, respectively. The most productive habitats were man-made, i.e. agricultural trenches, irrigation wells, and flooded and recently transplanted rice plots. The overall prevalence of P. falciparum infections in the final study cohort of 574 individuals from 112 farming households was 32.1%. Risk factors for P. falciparum in children <15 years of age included living in specific agricultural zones (i.e. traditional irrigated rice plots, mixed crops and a large rice perimeter), proximity to permanent man-made ponds and fish ponds, periodic stays overnight in farm huts and low socio-economic status. The final study cohort for S. mansoni and soil-transmitted helminthiasis comprised 586 individuals from 113 farming households. The overall prevalences of S. mansoni, hookworm, E. histolytica/E. dispar and G. duodenalis were 51.4%, 24.7%, 20.2% and 6.3%, respectively. Members from farming households harbored significantly more often an infection with E. histolytica/E. dispar and G. duodenalis when compared to non-farming households. Predictors for an S. mansoni infection included close proximity to the Kô River, contact with irrigation wells and ponds on the agricultural plots and low educational attainment. Risk factors for hookworm infection comprised living in agricultural zones of traditional smallholder irrigated rice plots and a large rice perimeter, using water from domestic wells and low socio-economic status. Infection prevalences of P. falciparum, S. mansoni and hookworm were spatially highly heterogeneous between the agricultural zones and highest infections occurred in a zone of a large rice perimeter. P. falciparum infection intensity and hookworm infection prevalence were best explained by spatial random effect models. Spatial correlation between farmers’ houses was not significant. The findings of the present work illustrated a clear picture of the interconnections between specific irrigated agricultural land use and agricultural activities, and malaria and intestinal parasitic infections in different urban settings of Côte d’Ivoire. The outcomes lead to an enhanced understanding of their epidemiology in local agro-ecological urban settings and related contextual determinants (i.e. agricultural, behavioural, demographic, socioeconomic and environmental factors) and allows the design of readily adapted prevention and control interventions (e.g. tangible vector control strategies and prevention measures for helminth infections) which actively involve farming communities in the subsequent implementation and control management

    Becoming an Expert, Ambassador or Doing Project Work: Three Paths to Excellence for Students at Artevelde University of Applied Sciences

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    Apart from the regular curricula in higher education, institutions increasingly offer additional initiatives or honours programmes for students to excel. Artevelde UAS wants to provide similar additional learning opportunities, in which the notion of excellence is based on reflection, self-direction and ‘giving back’ to stakeholders. This paper will provide an elaboration of these opportunities, based on three research questions: (1) What project or initiative can be considered as a valid and well-defined form of excelling, (2) How do we formally structure and organize this initiative or project, and (3) How can we evaluate and validate students’ experiences of excelling? Students of (International) Business Management at Artevelde UAS can excel in three different ways: by professionalizing and becoming an expert in a certain topic or area, by becoming an ambassador for one particular 21st century skill that has been put forward and highlighted by Artevelde UAS in its mission (global citizenship, entrepreneurship or sustainability), or by cooperating with professional business partners in order to develop and implement a real-life project.Lievens, B.; Cappelle, K.; Matthys, L. (2020). Becoming an Expert, Ambassador or Doing Project Work: Three Paths to Excellence for Students at Artevelde University of Applied Sciences. En 6th International Conference on Higher Education Advances (HEAd'20). Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. (30-05-2020):985-992. https://doi.org/10.4995/HEAd20.2020.11184OCS98599230-05-202

    Clinical usefulness of the kiddie-disruptive behavior disorder schedule in the diagnosis of DBD and ADHD in preschool children

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    The aim of the present study was to investigate the clinical usefulness of a semi-structured diagnostic parent interview, i.e., the Kiddie-Disruptive Behavior Disorder Schedule (K-DBDS), in preschool children. For Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD), to define symptoms two coding methods were compared, i.e., one based on the threshold "often" and the other based on the frequency of behaviors in combination with the presence of clinical concern. For Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), to define symptoms, two coding methods were compared, i.e., one with and one without consideration of pervasiveness across contexts. Participants were referred preschool children with externalizing behavioral problems (N?=?193; 83% male) and typically developing (TD) children (N?=?58; 71% male). The referred children were given a diagnosis of either ODD/CD (N?=?39), or ADHD (N?=?58) or comorbid ODD/CD+ADHD (N?=?57) or no diagnosis (N?=?39) based on best-estimate diagnosis. Receiver Operating Characteristic curve analyses showed that a cutoff score of four ODD symptoms using "often" as the threshold for frequency of behaviors led to a sensitivity of 87% and a specificity of 93%; the coding method which included the frequency of behaviors yielded a sensitivity of 56% and a specificity of 100%. For ADHD, a clinical cutoff score of five symptoms without the pervasiveness criterion yielded a sensitivity of 83% and a specificity of 98%; when the pervasiveness criterion was included sensitivity was 77% and specificity 98%. In the clinical assessment of ODD and ADHD in preschool children, the K-DBDS may be used with ODD symptom definition based on the threshold "often" and ADHD pervasiveness across contexts not included
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