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  • Drosophila fasciola subgroup  (1)
  • TISS-28  (1)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Intensive care medicine 23 (1997), S. 640-644 
    ISSN: 1432-1238
    Keywords: Key words Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System ; Simplified Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System ; TISS-28 ; Intensive care unit ; Nursing workload
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objective: To evaluate the performance of the Simplified Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System on an independent database and determine its relation with the Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System in the quantification of nursing workload in intensive care. Design: Analysis of the database of a multicenter prospective Portuguese study. Setting: 19 intensive care units (ICUs) in Portugal. Patients: Data on 1094 patients consecutively admitted to the ICUs were collected during a period of 3 months. Methods: Collection of the data necessary for the calculation of the Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System (TISS-76) and the Simplified Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System (TISS-28) during the first 24 h in the ICU. Basic demographic statistics and all the variables necessary for the computation of the Simplified Acute Physiology Score II were also collected. Vital status at discharge from the hospital was registered. Regression techniques, Pearson's correlation and paired sample t-test were used. Results are presented as mean ± standard deviation except when stated otherwise. Reliability was evaluated by the use of intraclass correlation coefficients in a 5 % random sample. Measurements and results: After exclusion of all the patients with missing data, 1080 patients were analysed. The overall mean TISS-28 (29.82 ± 10.64) was significantly lower than the mean TISS-76 (31.14 ± 11.95). Both systems showed very significant differences between ICUs (p 〈 0.001). The correlation between the two was good, with TISS-28 explaining 72 % of the variation of TISS-76 (r = 0.85, r 2 = 0.72). The relation between the two systems was TISS-28 = 6.22 + 0.85 TISS-76. In this cohort, reliability of data collection was very high, with intraclass correlation coefficients greater than 0.90 for both systems. Conclusions: TISS-28 was validated on this independent population. The results indicate that TISS-28 can replace TISS-76 for the measurement of the nursing workload in Portuguese ICUs
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Yeast communities ; Cactophilic yeasts ; Drosophila fasciola subgroup
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Yeast communities associated with four species of the Drosophila fasciola subgroup (repleta group) in tropical rain forests were surveyed in an abandoned orchard, and rain forest sites of Rio de Janeiro and Ilha Grande, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Adult flies of Drosophila carolinae, Drosophila coroica, Drosophila fascioloides and Drosophila onca frequently carried Candida colliculosa, Geotrichum sp, Kloeckera apiculata and a Pichia membranaefaciens-like species. The most frequent yeasts in the crop of flies included Candida collicullosa, C. krusei, Pichia kluyveri and a P. membranaefaciens-like species. The physiological abilities and species composition of these yeast communities differed from those of other forest-inhabiting Drosophila. The narrow feeding niches of the fasciola subgroup suggested the use of only part of the substrates available to the flies as food in the forest environment, as noted previously for cactophilic Drosophila serido (mulleri subgroup of the repleta group) in a sand dune ecosystem. The cactophilic yeasts that were isolated have not been previously found in forests. The fasciola subgroup probably used epiphytic cactus substrates as breeding and feeding sites in the forest. The physiological profile of yeasts associated with the fasciola flies was broader than that of yeasts associated with the cactophilic Drosophila serido, suggesting that the fasciola subgroup represents an older lineage from which the South American repleta species evolved.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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