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Institution

University of the Philippines

EducationQuezon City, Philippines
About: University of the Philippines is a education organization based out in Quezon City, Philippines. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 4589 authors who have published 4437 publications receiving 114846 citations. The organization is also known as: UP.


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Book Chapter
14 Dec 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that despite some gains in the provisioning of food, water, and wood, the capacity of ecosystems to continue to provide these services is at risk in several locations; problems with provisioning services include deterioration of water quality, deterioration of agricultural soils, and incapacity of supply to meet demand.
Abstract: The sub-global assessments show that several ecosystem services are in fair to poor condition and declining. Despite some gains in the provisioning of food, water, and wood, the capacity of ecosystems to continue to provide these services is at risk in several locations; problems with provisioning services include deterioration of water quality, deterioration of agricultural soils, and incapacity of supply to meet demand. Some threats affecting regulating services are loss of forest cover, rangeland degradation by overgrazing (particularly in drylands), loss of wetlands to urban development and agriculture, and change in fire frequency. Problems with cultural services include loss of cultural identity and negative impacts from tourism. Biodiversity is decreasing due to the loss of habitats and the reduction of species population sizes. Species declining particularly fast include species with large body size, species occupying high trophic levels, and species that are harvested by humans. In general, the assessments found the condition of water provisioning and biodiversity at global and sub-global scales to be congruent. However, in some cases, the sub-global assessments reported a poorer or better condition than the global findings for that region. Differences were due to the effects of drivers that were not picked up at the global scale, or to fine-scale heterogeneities missed in coarser-scale analyses at the global scale. There were more mismatches for biodiversity than for water provisioning because the concepts and measures of biodiversity were more diverse in the sub-global assessments. Land use change is the most important driver for provisioning, supporting, and regulating services and for biodiversity. Some direct drivers of ecosystem change were also indicators of the condition of the service (for example, harvest pressure is an indicator of biodiversity). Indirect drivers control the patterns of demand for provisioning and cultural services, thus inducing changes in ecosystems. Tourism was found to have a negative impact on biodiversity in the Northern Range, SAfMA, Portugal, and Caribbean Sea assessments. While human controlled drivers play a major role in determining the condition of ecosystem services, local biophysical constraints such as climate and soils also limit the production of ecosystem services. Clear trade-offs exist among ecosystem services. For example, a potential trade-off situation exists at one site in the southeastern part of the Gariep Basin, where biodiversity is totally irreplaceable and protein and caloric production are highly irreplaceable. The sub-global assessments, like the MA global assessment, found that an increase in provisioning services generally occurs at the expense of regulating services, supporting services, and biodiversity, or at the expense of the capacity of ecosystems to provide services to future generations. Trade-offs also occur among provisioning services such as between irrigated agriculture and freshwater provisioning. Trade-offs among ecosystem services can be minimized. The studies of the Tropical Forest Margin assessment in Indonesia and Cameroon showed that a ‘‘middle path’’ of development involving smallholder agroforestry and community forest management for timber and other products is feasible. Such a path could deliver an attractive balance between environmental benefits and equitable economic growth. New approaches were developed to demonstrate, communicate, and discuss these trade-offs with policy-makers. One was the Alternative to Slashand- Burn matrix, where natural forest and alternate land use systems were scored against criteria reflecting the objectives of different interest groups in the Tropical Forest Margins assessment. Another was the use of a decision support tool, the Podium Model, to assess options for cereal-based food security and water availability in the Gariep Basin of southern Africa; this showed that expanding irrigated area alone, at large costs to water provisioning services, is unlikely to improve food security. The sub-global assessments improved understanding of how human well-being depends on ecosystems, in several ways. Examples include inventories of ecosystem services (for example, 64 plant species used to extract biochemical substances were identified in Downstream Mekong); calculations of trade-offs among services (for example, between water conservation and food production in SAfMA); economic valuations of ecosystem services such as tourism, soil protection, run-off regulation, and carbon sequestration (Portugal), and lessons about the importance of cultural landscapes and biodiversity for local livelihoods (Bajo Chirripo´ and India Local). The sub-global assessments used numerous and varied methods to assess the current condition and trends in ecosystem services. These methods included geographic information systems, remote sensing, inventories, indicators, economic valuation, and participatory approaches. Participatory approaches were useful in incorporating both scientific and local knowledge into the assessments. Because the sub-global assessments used different definitions and methods of assessing condition, the findings were not always comparable across assessments. The different approaches used to assess the condition of ecosystem services reflected different interpretations of what is meant by the condition of an ecosystem service. Some assessments emphasized the ecological capacity of the system to provide the service (for example, Portugal) while other assessments emphasized the production and the demand for the service (for example, SAfMA) or equity of access to the service (for example, Sinai). Differing emphases were partially related to the socioeconomic development of the region being assessed: issues of equity and production versus demand were not the main focus of industrial-country assessments (Portugal, Sweden, Norway). Several sub-global assessments applied novel approaches to the assessment of biodiversity. These include measures such as the Biodiversity Intactness Index (SAfMA), the Reef Condition Index (PNG), and the Ecological Integrity Index (Coastal BC). Each of these measures integrated indicators of different aspects of biodiversity condition into a single index, that could then be used to enhance the dialog on biodiversity with policy-makers and the public. There is a need for long-term monitoring of the condition of all types of ecosystem services using comparable indicators. Limited data were available to assess the condition of regulating and supporting services. There is an overwhelming lack of historical data on the state of biodiversity in the sub global assessments. In many locations, sub-global assessments collected data on the condition of ecosystem services for the first time; these data can serve as a baseline for future assessments. The lack of data and the spatial heterogeneity of the condition of ecosystem services led to uncertainty in the assessment of condition and trends of ecosystem services. The development of fine tuned responses to the deteriorating conditions of ecosystem services will require a concerted effort at data collection and analysis at all scales.

36 citations

Posted ContentDOI
05 Jun 2020-medRxiv
TL;DR: The pragmatic approach provides general trends, and highlights the need for universal guidelines for testing and reporting of infections in HCWs, follows that of the general world population.
Abstract: Objectives To estimate COVID-19 infections and deaths in healthcare workers (HCWs) from a global perspective. Design Scoping review. Methods Two parallel searches of academic bibliographic databases and grey literature were undertaken. Governments were also contacted for further information where possible. Due to the time-sensitive nature of the review and the need to report the most up-to-date information for an ever-evolving situation, there were no restrictions on language, information sources utilised, publication status, and types of sources of evidence. The AACODS checklist was used to appraise each source of evidence. Outcome measures Publication characteristics, country-specific data points, COVID-19 specific data, demographics of affected HCWs, and public health measures employed Results A total of 152,888 infections and 1413 deaths were reported. Infections were mainly in women (71.6%) and nurses (38.6%), but deaths were mainly in men (70.8%) and doctors (51.4%). Limited data suggested that general practitioners and mental health nurses were the highest risk specialities for deaths. There were 37.17 deaths reported per 100 infections for healthcare workers aged over 70. Europe had the highest absolute numbers of reported infections (119628) and deaths (712), but the Eastern Mediterranean region had the highest number of reported deaths per 100 infections (5.7). Conclusions HCW COVID-19 infections and deaths follow that of the general world population. The reasons for gender and speciality differences require further exploration, as do the low rates reported from Africa and India. Although physicians working in certain specialities may be considered high-risk due to exposure to oronasal secretions, the risk to other specialities must not be underestimated. Elderly HCWs may require assigning to less risky settings such as telemedicine, or administrative positions. Our pragmatic approach provides general trends, and highlights the need for universal guidelines for testing and reporting of infections in HCWs. Summary Box What is already known on this topic In China, studies documented over 3,300 confirmed cases of infected healthcare workers in early March. In the United States, as high as 19% of patients had been identified as healthcare workers. There are no studies that perform a global examination of COVID-19 infections and deaths in the health workforce. What this study adds To our knowledge, this is the first study assessing the number of healthcare workers who have been infected with or died from COVID-19 globally. The data from our study suggest that although infections were mainly in women and nurses, COVID-19 related deaths were mainly in men and doctors; in addition, our study found that Europe had the highest numbers of infection and death, but the lowest case-fatality-rate, while the Eastern Mediterranean had the highest case-fatality-rate.

36 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most promising stripping system at present is the stripper header developed at Silsoe Research Institute, UK and commercially produced by Shelbourne Reynolds Engineering, Ltd as discussed by the authors, which increases combine capacity by 50-100% at a lower power requirement through the reduced amount of straw passing through the threshing and separating systems of the combine.

36 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the solution, stability character and asymptotic behavior of the rational difference equation xn+1 = αxn−1+βγxnxn −1,n∈ N0, where n is the number of nonzero real numbers such that their solutions are associated with generalized Padovan numbers.
Abstract: Abstract This paper deals with the solution, stability character and asymptotic behavior of the rational difference equation xn+1=αxn−1+βγxnxn−1,n∈N0, $$\\begin{array}{} \\displaystyle x_{n+1}=\\frac{\\alpha x_{n-1}+\\beta}{ \\gamma x_{n}x_{n-1}},\\qquad n \\in \\mathbb{N}_{0}, \\end{array}$$ where ℕ0 = ℕ ∪ {0}, α, β, γ ∈ ℝ+, and the initial conditions x–1 and x0 are non zero real numbers such that their solutions are associated to generalized Padovan numbers. Also, we investigate the two-dimensional case of the this equation given by xn+1=αxn−1+βγynxn−1,yn+1=αyn−1+βγxnyn−1,n∈N0. $$\\begin{array}{} \\displaystyle x_{n+1} = \\frac{\\alpha x_{n-1} + \\beta}{\\gamma y_n x_{n-1}}, \\qquad y_{n+1} = \\frac{\\alpha y_{n-1} +\\beta}{\\gamma x_n y_{n-1}} ,\\qquad n\\in \\mathbb{N}_0. \\end{array}$$

36 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The interspecific hybrid and C. cauliflora plants were resistant to the Australian PRSV-P isolates.
Abstract: Carica papaya, C. cauliflora and interspecific hybrids of these species were screened for resistance to two Australian isolates (338, 445) of papaya ringspot virus-type P (PRSV-P). Plants were manually inoculated with PRSV-P in the glasshouse and the reaction assessed 30 days later by back-inoculation to susceptible Cucurbita pepo and by a plate-trapped antigen-enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (PTA-ELISA). Both parents and interspecific hybrids were also planted adjacent to infected C. papaya and 30 days later tested for PRSV-P by PTA-ELISA. All interspecific hybrid and C. cauliflora plants manually inoculated in the glasshouse or planted in the field failed to become infected, whereas C. papaya plants, in both situations, were infected by PRSV-P. In addition, the surviving interspecific hybrid and C. cauliflora plants tested negative, while all C. papaya plants were positive for PRSV-P in both the back-inoculation and PTA-ELISA tests. Thus, the interspecific hybrid and C. cauliflora plants were resistant to the Australian PRSV-P isolates.

36 citations


Authors

Showing all 4621 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Barry M. Popkin15775190453
Aldo P. Maggioni13494090242
Michael H. Weisman9246039567
Johan Ärnlöv9138690490
Sheila K. West8949933719
Young Ho Kim82252847681
Min Gu7872922238
Mary L. Marazita7743621909
Kathleen J. Green7419314752
Agnes R. Quisumbing7231118433
Thomas M. Brooks7121533724
Rigoberto C. Advincula6540913632
Carl Abelardo T. Antonio6010666867
Rai S. Kookana6028114520
J. Kevin Baird5618512363
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202312
202243
2021312
2020325
2019324
2018247