incomplete assessments
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Author(s):  
Omar Rezk Alshaer ◽  
Abdullah Obaid Binobaid ◽  
Yousef Hussain Alharthi ◽  
Abdulaziz Ashwa Alrashdi ◽  
Muath Saleh Alrashed ◽  
...  

Many etiologies have been proposed to predispose neutropenic fever, and infections have been reported in less than one-third of the reported cases. However, etiologies might have a significant impact on the prognostic, and can even lead to mortality. In this literature review, the aim to discuss the different microbiological etiologies of neutropenic fever, and the management approaches of such conditions, including the proper assessment and evaluation of patients. Additionally, the goal of this literature review to discuss the appropriate treatment and prophylaxis measures based on the assessment results. Many bacterial pathogens could be isolated from patients suffering from neutropenic fever, including both the gram-positive and negative organisms, such as pseudomonas aeruginosa, E. coli, Klebsiella spp, actinobacteria spp, in addition to many other bacteria such as staph. Nevertheless, Aureus was commonly isolated from the infected patients, and it has been reported with increased morbidity and mortality rates. Assessment of the severity of the condition and identification of the microbiological activity can significantly lead to enhance management of the infected patients. Detailed information about the etiology and management are provided within the main text of this study. Further efforts are needed to increase awareness related to the hazards of the inadequate and incomplete assessments of patients with neutropenic fever, which might lead to delayed or inadequate management and worsened prognosis.


Heritage ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 641-663
Author(s):  
Patricia Aelbrecht

Since the 1960s, post-war modernist heritage has been largely criticised and victimised by the public opinion because of its material failures and elitist social projects. Despite these critiques, post-war modernist heritage is being reassessed, revalued and in some places successfully rehabilitated. There is a growing recognition that most of the critiques have often been the result of subjective and biased value and taste judgments or incomplete assessments that took into account neither urban design nor the users’ experiences. This paper aims to contribute to these reassessments of post-war modernist urban heritage legacies. To do so, it places the user’s social experiences and uses, and the urban design at the centre of the analysis, by using a combination of ethnographic methods and urban design analysis and focusing on the public spaces of South Bank Centre in London, the UK’s largest and most iconic and contested post-war modernist ensemble with a long history of conservation and regeneration projects. Taken together, the findings demonstrate the importance of including the users’ social experiences and uses in the conservation and regeneration agendas if we want to achieve more objective and inclusive assessments.


2021 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 491-506
Author(s):  
Ao Shen ◽  
Shuling Peng ◽  
Gaofei Liu

The probabilistic linguistic term sets (PLTSs) are widely used in decision-making, due to its convenience of evaluation, and allowances of probability information. However, there are still some cases where it is not convenient to give an evaluation using the PLTS gramma. Sometimes the evaluators can only give a comparative relationship between alternatives, sometimes evaluators may have difficulty understanding all the alternatives and cannot give a complete assessment. Therefore, we propose a method to transform the comparative linguistic expressions (CLEs) into PLTSs, and the comparison objects of CLEs are alternatives evaluated by PLTSs. And the probability distribution has been adjusted to make the transformation more in line with common sense. Then, a method to correct the deviation is proposed, allowing alternatives to be compared in the case of incomplete assessment. Combining the above two methods, we propose a decision-making method when both CLEs and incomplete assessments coexist. With the study in this paper, the limitations of PLTS-based evaluation and decision-making are reduced and the flexibility of using PLTS is improved.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Jung ◽  
Pedram Rowhani ◽  
Jörn P. W. Scharlemann

AbstractAbrupt land change, such as deforestation or agricultural intensification, is a key driver of biodiversity change. Following abrupt land change, local biodiversity often continues to be influenced through biotic lag effects. However, current understanding of how terrestrial biodiversity is impacted by past abrupt land changes is incomplete. Here we show that abrupt land change in the past continues to influence present species assemblages globally. We combine geographically and taxonomically broad data on local biodiversity with quantitative estimates of abrupt land change detected within time series of satellite imagery from 1982 to 2015. Species richness and abundance were 4.2% and 2% lower, respectively, and assemblage composition was altered at sites with an abrupt land change compared to unchanged sites, although impacts differed among taxonomic groups. Biodiversity recovered to levels comparable to unchanged sites after >10 years. Ignoring delayed impacts of abrupt land changes likely results in incomplete assessments of biodiversity change.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-215
Author(s):  
Thomas Barker

AbstractColonial subjects caught up supporting colonialism have often been seen as either engaging in an encounter of ambivalence or seen as traitors in post-independence nationalist historiography. Rather than following this established binary of possible subject positions, this article considers the unique biography of a filmmaker known in Indonesia as Dr Huyung. Prior work on Dr Huyung has either considered the pre and post 1945 stages of his life in isolation thus making incomplete assessments of his life and contributions. By bringing these two periods into conversation, a complete biography enables a more complex idea of colonial subjectivity to emerge. Huyung's life provides an alternative history of colonialism and an entry point in which to interrogate the limits and opportunities available in Asia of the 1930s to 1950s.This article traces the life of Dr Huyung from his birth in Korea as Hoe Yong, his life under Japanese occupation when he became Hinatsu Eitaro and moved to Japan to study film, to Indonesia as a Japanese propaganda officer, and finally to a new identity as Dr Huyung in independent Indonesia. As a trans-national subject operating across multiple subject positions – including colonial subject, colonial agent, and supporter of independence – this article challenges how subjectivity is thought about under colonialism and the historiography of national cinema in Indonesia, and contributes to understand his role in helping define and shape arts and culture in post-colonial Indonesia.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. e0123760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dirk Vanneste ◽  
Johanna De Almeida Mello ◽  
Jean Macq ◽  
Chantal Van Audenhove ◽  
Anja Declercq

2008 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 811-837 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Baillie ◽  
Leif Azzopardi ◽  
Ian Ruthven

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