Update of the risk assessment of inorganic arsenic in food
In: EFSA journal, Band 22, Heft 1
ISSN: 1831-4732
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In: EFSA journal, Band 22, Heft 1
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 22, Heft 1
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 21, Heft 7
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 21, Heft 7
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: Revista de Estudios Brasileños: REB, Band 9, Heft 18, S. 47-62
ISSN: 2386-4540
El presente estudio tiene el objetivo de relatar el proceso de construcción y las acciones del Centro de Desarrollo del Deporte Recreativo y de Ocio de Acre, centrándose en la descripción de los aspectos metodológicos de la investigación "Diagnóstico del deporte y del ocio en estado de Acre". La Rede Cedes permite la iniciación científica de académicos y la cualificación y formación de jóvenes investigadores, incentiva la producción académica y realiza eventos científicos, siendo un importante centro de estudios de políticas del deporte y el ocio de la región. El Diagnóstico del deporte y el ocio fue una investigación que involucró a 674 estudiantes de secundaria en los campus del Instituto Federal do Acre y del Colégio de Aplicação de la Ufac. Destaca por su rigor metodológico durante la planificación, el proceso de preparación del equipo de investigación, la construcción y validación del instrumento de recogida de datos, la creación de la base de datos y el análisis, presentación e interpretación de los resultados. La implantación de la Red Cedes en Acre es un logro para la comunidad local y las ricas experiencias resultantes de los procesos de planificación y ejecución de la investigación representaron un paso importante hacia la producción de conocimiento, útil para el debate y construcción de políticas públicas de deporte y ocio.
In: EFSA journal, Band 21, Heft 1
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 20, Heft 10
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: Environmental sciences Europe: ESEU, Band 34, Heft 1
ISSN: 2190-4715
AbstractThe chemical industry is the leading sector in the EU in terms of added value. However, contaminants pose a major threat and significant costs to the environment and human health. While EU legislation and international conventions aim to reduce this threat, regulators struggle to assess and manage chemical risks, given the vast number of substances involved and the lack of data on exposure and hazards. The European Green Deal sets a 'zero pollution ambition for a toxic free environment' by 2050 and the EU Chemicals Strategy calls for increased monitoring of chemicals in the environment. Monitoring of contaminants in biota can, inter alia: provide regulators with early warning of bioaccumulation problems with chemicals of emerging concern; trigger risk assessment of persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic substances; enable risk assessment of chemical mixtures in biota; enable risk assessment of mixtures; and enable assessment of the effectiveness of risk management measures and of chemicals regulations overall. A number of these purposes are to be addressed under the recently launched European Partnership for Risk Assessment of Chemicals (PARC). Apex predators are of particular value to biomonitoring. Securing sufficient data at European scale implies large-scale, long-term monitoring and a steady supply of large numbers of fresh apex predator tissue samples from across Europe. Natural science collections are very well-placed to supply these. Pan-European monitoring requires effective coordination among field organisations, collections and analytical laboratories for the flow of required specimens, processing and storage of specimens and tissue samples, contaminant analyses delivering pan-European data sets, and provision of specimen and population contextual data. Collections are well-placed to coordinate this. The COST Action European Raptor Biomonitoring Facility provides a well-developed model showing how this can work, integrating a European Raptor Biomonitoring Scheme, Specimen Bank and Sampling Programme. Simultaneously, the EU-funded LIFE APEX has demonstrated a range of regulatory applications using cutting-edge analytical techniques. PARC plans to make best use of such sampling and biomonitoring programmes. Collections are poised to play a critical role in supporting PARC objectives and thereby contribute to delivery of the EU's zero-pollution ambition.
In: EFSA journal, Band 20, Heft 3
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 20, Heft 1
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 19, Heft 7
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 19, Heft 6
ISSN: 1831-4732
BACKGROUND AND AIM: After the first Italian case of Covid-19, the Government imposed the complete closure of all areas involved by the spread of the virus to contain transmissions. There was a massive reorganization of Hospitals, a stop of all elective activities and a convertion of many hospitals in "Covid Centers''. AITOG (Associazione Italiana Traumatologia e Ortopedia Geriatrica) conducted a retrospective study on all proximal femur fractures surgeries that occurred in this period, to find out whether the pandemic and the correlated lockdown somehow changed the incidence of these events. METHODS: 10 Italian orthopedic centers were involved in the study. Considering the geographic location, three groups were created (North, Centre and South). The considered period is the Italian "Phase 1" (February 23rd - May 3rd 2020). RESULTS: the cohort is composed of 412 patients, 116 male and 296 female (mean age 81.1 ± 9.1 years). The same period of 2019 has been used as control group, with 558 patients, 156 male and 402 female (mean age 84.2 ± 8.0 years). In 2020 we counted 323 (78.4%) fractures occurred at home, 61 (14.8%) in retirement houses and 28 (6.8%) in different locations. We mainly treated fractures with intramedullary nails (n.237 57.5%). Among all patients we had 46 (11.1%) Covid-19 positive. The mortality rate within 30 days was of 51 patients (12.4%); 23 of these died because of complications related to Covid-19 while 31 of these were in treatment with anticoagulant/antiaggregant. CONCLUSIONS: AITOG analysis demonstrates a decrease in surgical interventions for proximal femur fractures from 2019 to 2020, a reduction in patients mean age and an increase in trauma occurred in domestic environment. We also registered a consistent difference between the North, Center and South of the Country. (www.actabiomedica.it)
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In: EFSA journal, Band 19, Heft 1
ISSN: 1831-4732
In: EFSA journal, Band 18, Heft 12
ISSN: 1831-4732