Institution
University of York
Education•York, York, United Kingdom•
About: University of York is a education organization based out in York, York, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 22089 authors who have published 56925 publications receiving 2458285 citations. The organization is also known as: York University & Ebor..
Topics: Population, Health care, Context (language use), Randomized controlled trial, Cost effectiveness
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The body of evidence was insufficient to make recommendations either in favour of or against OHSMSs, due to the heterogeneity of the methods employed and the OHS MSs studied in the original studies; the small number of studies; their generally weak methodological quality; and the lack of generalizability of many of the studies.
489 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors report efficient and fast filtration of organic solutions through Graphene oxide (GO) laminates containing smooth two-dimensional (2D) capillaries made from large (10 to 20) flakes.
Abstract: Highly laminar graphene oxide flakes (10 to 20 μm in diameter) are fabricated. Reducing flake thickness to 10 nm enables water and organic solvent permeation, enabling the flakes to act as a highly effective organic solvent membrane. Graphene oxide (GO) membranes continue to attract intense interest due to their unique molecular sieving properties combined with fast permeation1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. However, their use is limited to aqueous solutions because GO membranes appear impermeable to organic solvents1, a phenomenon not yet fully understood. Here, we report efficient and fast filtration of organic solutions through GO laminates containing smooth two-dimensional (2D) capillaries made from large (10–20 μm) flakes. Without modification of sieving characteristics, these membranes can be made exceptionally thin, down to ∼10 nm, which translates into fast water and organic solvent permeation. We attribute organic solvent permeation and sieving properties to randomly distributed pinholes interconnected by short graphene channels with a width of 1 nm. With increasing membrane thickness, organic solvent permeation rates decay exponentially but water continues to permeate quickly, in agreement with previous reports1,2,3,4. The potential of ultrathin GO laminates for organic solvent nanofiltration is demonstrated by showing >99.9% rejection of small molecular weight organic dyes dissolved in methanol. Our work significantly expands possibilities for the use of GO membranes in purification and filtration technologies.
487 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the existence of traveling wave front solutions of reaction-diffusion systems with delay is investigated and a monotone iteration scheme is established for the corresponding wave system.
Abstract: This paper deals with the existence of traveling wave front solutions of reaction-diffusion systems with delay. A monotone iteration scheme is established for the corresponding wave system. If the reaction term satisfies the so-called quasimonotonicity condition, it is shown that the iteration converges to a solution of the wave system, provided that the initial function for the iteration is chosen to be an upper solution and is from the profile set. For systems with certain nonquasimonotone reaction terms, a convergence result is also obtained by further restricting the initial functions of the iteration and using a non-standard ordering of the profile set. Applications are made to the delayed Fishery–KPP equation with a nonmonotone delayed reaction term and to the delayed system of the Belousov–Zhabotinskii reaction model.
487 citations
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TL;DR: Understanding the levels and trends of the leading causes of death and disability among children and adolescents is critical to guide investment and inform policies and give guidance to policy makers in countries where more attention is needed.
Abstract: Importance The literature focuses on mortality among children younger than 5 years. Comparable information on nonfatal health outcomes among these children and the fatal and nonfatal burden of diseases and injuries among older children and adolescents is scarce. Objective To determine levels and trends in the fatal and nonfatal burden of diseases and injuries among younger children (aged Evidence Review Data from vital registration, verbal autopsy studies, maternal and child death surveillance, and other sources covering 14 244 site-years (ie, years of cause of death data by geography) from 1980 through 2013 were used to estimate cause-specific mortality. Data from 35 620 epidemiological sources were used to estimate the prevalence of the diseases and sequelae in the GBD 2013 study. Cause-specific mortality for most causes was estimated using the Cause of Death Ensemble Model strategy. For some infectious diseases (eg, HIV infection/AIDS, measles, hepatitis B) where the disease process is complex or the cause of death data were insufficient or unavailable, we used natural history models. For most nonfatal health outcomes, DisMod-MR 2.0, a Bayesian metaregression tool, was used to meta-analyze the epidemiological data to generate prevalence estimates. Findings Of the 7.7 (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 7.4-8.1) million deaths among children and adolescents globally in 2013, 6.28 million occurred among younger children, 0.48 million among older children, and 0.97 million among adolescents. In 2013, the leading causes of death were lower respiratory tract infections among younger children (905 059 deaths; 95% UI, 810 304-998 125), diarrheal diseases among older children (38 325 deaths; 95% UI, 30 365-47 678), and road injuries among adolescents (115 186 deaths; 95% UI, 105 185-124 870). Iron deficiency anemia was the leading cause of years lived with disability among children and adolescents, affecting 619 (95% UI, 618-621) million in 2013. Large between-country variations exist in mortality from leading causes among children and adolescents. Countries with rapid declines in all-cause mortality between 1990 and 2013 also experienced large declines in most leading causes of death, whereas countries with the slowest declines had stagnant or increasing trends in the leading causes of death. In 2013, Nigeria had a 12% global share of deaths from lower respiratory tract infections and a 38% global share of deaths from malaria. India had 33% of the world’s deaths from neonatal encephalopathy. Half of the world’s diarrheal deaths among children and adolescents occurred in just 5 countries: India, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Ethiopia. Conclusions and Relevance Understanding the levels and trends of the leading causes of death and disability among children and adolescents is critical to guide investment and inform policies. Monitoring these trends over time is also key to understanding where interventions are having an impact. Proven interventions exist to prevent or treat the leading causes of unnecessary death and disability among children and adolescents. The findings presented here show that these are underused and give guidance to policy makers in countries where more attention is needed.
486 citations
01 Jan 1992
486 citations
Authors
Showing all 22432 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Cyrus Cooper | 204 | 1869 | 206782 |
Eric R. Kandel | 184 | 603 | 113560 |
Ian J. Deary | 166 | 1795 | 114161 |
Elio Riboli | 158 | 1136 | 110499 |
Claude Bouchard | 153 | 1076 | 115307 |
Robert Plomin | 151 | 1104 | 88588 |
Kevin J. Gaston | 150 | 750 | 85635 |
John R. Hodges | 149 | 812 | 82709 |
Myrna M. Weissman | 149 | 772 | 108259 |
Jeffrey A. Lieberman | 145 | 706 | 85306 |
Howard L. Weiner | 144 | 1047 | 91424 |
Dan J. Stein | 142 | 1727 | 132718 |
Jedd D. Wolchok | 140 | 713 | 123336 |
Bernard Henrissat | 139 | 593 | 100002 |
Joseph E. LeDoux | 139 | 478 | 91500 |