146 results on '"Esteban Calvo"'
Search Results
2. Income inequality and its relationship with loneliness prevalence: A cross-sectional study among older adults in the US and 16 European countries
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Thamara Tapia-Muñoz, Ursula M. Staudinger, Kasim Allel, Andrew Steptoe, Claudia Miranda-Castillo, José T. Medina, and Esteban Calvo
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Backgrounds The prevalence of loneliness increases among older adults, varies across countries, and is related to within-country socioeconomic, psychosocial, and health factors. The 2000–2019 pooled prevalence of loneliness among adults 60 years and older went from 5.2% in Northern Europe to 24% in Eastern Europe, while in the US was 56% in 2012. The relationship between country-level factors and loneliness, however, has been underexplored. Because income inequality shapes material conditions and relative social deprivation and has been related to loneliness in 11 European countries, we expected a relationship between income inequality and loneliness in the US and 16 European countries. Methods We used secondary cross-sectional data for 75,891 adults age 50+ from HRS (US 2014), ELSA (England, 2014), and SHARE (15 European countries, 2013). Loneliness was measured using the R-UCLA three-item scale. We employed hierarchical logistic regressions to analyse whether income inequality (GINI coefficient) was associated with loneliness prevalence. Results The prevalence of loneliness was 25.32% in the US (HRS), 17.55% in England (ELSA) and ranged from 5.12% to 20.15% in European countries (SHARE). Older adults living in countries with higher income inequality were more likely to report loneliness, even after adjusting for the sociodemographic composition of the countries and their Gross Domestic Products per capita (OR: 1.52; 95% CI: 1.17–1.97). Discussion Greater country-level income inequality was associated with higher prevalence of loneliness over and above individual-level sociodemographics. The present study is the first attempt to explore income inequality as a predictor of loneliness prevalence among older adults in the US and 16 European countries. Addressing income distribution and the underlying experience of relative deprivation might be an opportunity to improve older adults’ life expectancy and wellbeing by reducing loneliness prevalence.
- Published
- 2022
3. Social and Individual Subjective Wellbeing and Capabilities in Chile
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Pablo A. González, Francisca Dussaillant, and Esteban Calvo
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social belongingness ,quality of life ,subjective wellbeing ,capabilities ,social wellbeing ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The notion of social belongingness has been applied to different scales, from individual to social processes, and from subjective to objective dimensions. This article seeks to contribute to this multidimensional perspective on belongingness by drawing from the capabilities and subjective wellbeing perspectives. The specific aim is to analyze the relationships between capabilities—including those related to social belongingness—and individual and social subjective wellbeing. The hypotheses are: (H1–H2) There is a relationship between capabilities (measured as evaluation and functioning) and (H1) individual and (H2) social subjective wellbeing; (H3) The set of capabilities associated to individual subjective wellbeing differs from the set correlated to social subjective wellbeing; (H4) The intensity and significance of the correlation between subjective wellbeing and capabilities depends on whether the latter is measured as evaluation or functioning; and (H5) The relationships between capabilities and subjective wellbeing are complex and non-linear. Using a nationally representative survey in Chile, multiple linear (H1–H5) and dose response matching (H1–H5) regressions between capabilities and subjective wellbeing outcomes are estimated, confirming all hypotheses. Subjective evaluations and effective functionings of some capabilities (“basic needs,” “social ties,” “feeling recognized and respected;” “having and deploying a life project”) are consistently correlated with both subjective wellbeing outcomes. Others capabilities are correlated with both subjective wellbeing outcomes only when measured as functionings (contact with nature), do not display a systematic pattern of correlation (“health,” “pleasure,” “participation,” and “human security”) or are not associated with subjective wellbeing (“self-knowledge” and “understanding the world”). When observed, correlations are sizable, non-linear, and consistent across estimation methods. Moreover, capabilities related to social belongingness such as “social ties” and “feeling recognized and respected” are important by themselves but also are positively correlated to both social and individual subjective wellbeing. These findings underscore the need of a multidimensional perspective on the relationships between capabilities and subjective wellbeing, considering both subjective and objective, as well as individual and social aspects that are relevant to belongingness. These findings also have practical and policy implications, and may inform public deliberation processes and policy decisions to develop capabilities, promote subjective wellbeing, and ultimately promote positive belongingness.
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- 2021
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4. Using Low-Resolution Non-Invasive Infrared Sensors to Classify Activities and Falls in Older Adults
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Gastón Márquez, Alejandro Veloz, Jean-Gabriel Minonzio, Claudio Reyes, Esteban Calvo, and Carla Taramasco
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fall ,older adult ,infrared sensor ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
The population is aging worldwide, creating new challenges to the quality of life of older adults and their families. Falls are an increasing, but not inevitable, threat to older adults. Information technologies provide several solutions to address falls, but smart homes and the most available solutions require expensive and invasive infrastructures. In this study, we propose a novel approach to classify and detect falls of older adults in their homes through low-resolution infrared sensors that are affordable, non-intrusive, do not disturb privacy, and are more acceptable to older adults. Using data collected between 2019 and 2020 with the eHomeseniors platform, we determine activity scores of older adults moving across two rooms in a house and represent an older adult fall through skeletonization. We find that our twofold approach effectively detects activity patterns and precisely identifies falls. Our study provides insights to physicians about the daily activities of their older adults and could potentially help them make decisions in case of abnormal behavior.
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- 2022
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5. Design of a Nasal Spray Based on Cardiospermum halicacabum Extract Loaded in Phospholipid Vesicles Enriched with Gelatin or Chondroitin Sulfate
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Eleonora Casula, Maria Manconi, José Antonio Vázquez, Tania Belen Lopez-Mendez, José Luis Pedraz, Esteban Calvo, Antonio Lozano, Marco Zaru, Andreia Ascenso, and Maria Letizia Manca
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Cardiospermum halicacabum ,epithelial cells ,droplet size distribution ,plume angle ,antioxidant activity ,keratinocytes ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
The extract of Cardiospermum halicacabum L. (C. halicacabum) obtained from flower, leaf and vine was loaded into modified phospholipid vesicles aiming at obtaining sprayable, biocompatible and effective nasal spray formulations for the treatment of nasopharyngeal diseases. Penetration enhancer-containing vesicles (PEVs) and hyalurosomes were formulated, and stabilized by adding a commercial gelatin from fish (20 mg/mL) or chondroitin sulfate from catshark cartilages (Scyliorhinus canicula, 20 mg/mL). Cryo-TEM images confirmed the formation of spherical vesicles, while photon correlation spectroscopy analysis disclosed the formation of small and negatively-charged vesicles. PEVs were the smaller vesicles (~100 nm) along with gelatin-hyalurosomes (~120 nm), while chondroitin-PEVs and chondroitin-hyalurosomes were larger (~160 nm). Dispersions prepared with chondroitin sulfate were more homogeneous, as the polydispersity index was ~0.15. The in vitro analysis of the droplet size distribution, average velocity module and spray cone angle suggested a good spray-ability and deposition of formulations in the nasal cavity, as the mean diameter of the droplets was in the range recommended by the Food and Drug Administration for nasal targets. The spray plume analysis confirmed the ability of PEVs, gelatin-PEVs, hyalurosomes and gelatin-hyalurosomes to be atomized in fine droplets homogenously distributed in a full cone plume, with an angle ranging from 25 to 30°. Moreover, vesicles were highly biocompatible and capable of protecting the epithelial cells against oxidative damage, thus preventing the inflammatory state.
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- 2021
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6. Aging and Health Policies in Chile: New Agendas for Research
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Daniela Thumala, Brian K. Kennedy, Esteban Calvo, Christian Gonzalez-Billault, Pedro Zitko, Patricia Lillo, Roque Villagra, Agustín Ibáñez, Rodrigo Assar, Maricarmen Andrade, and Andrea Slachevsky
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health policy ,public health ,chile ,ageism ,healthy aging ,dementia ,social determinants of health ,geroscience ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract—Population aging is among the most important global transformations. Compared to European and North American countries, Chile is among the countries with the fastest growth of life expectancy at birth during recent decades. The aging of Chile's population is related to the improvement of living conditions, but also entails risks that tend to be associated with a rapid economic growth accompanied by large income inequalities and a chronic deficit of basic social benefits. The rapid demographic transition towards an aged population has unfolded in a context of poor development of public policies to tackle the opportunities and needs associated with an aging society. This article provides a brief overview of current Chilean public policy on aging, with a focus on healthy aging as defined by World Health Organization. The discussion addresses core challenges to successfully achieve healthy aging in Chile.
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- 2017
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7. Nasal Spray Formulations Based on Combined Hyalurosomes and Glycerosomes Loading Zingiber officinalis Extract as Green and Natural Strategy for the Treatment of Rhinitis and Rhinosinusitis
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Eleonora Casula, Maria Letizia Manca, Matteo Perra, Jose Luis Pedraz, Tania Belen Lopez-Mendez, Antonio Lozano, Esteban Calvo, Marco Zaru, and Maria Manconi
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Zingiber officinalis ,traditional medicine ,phospholipid vesicles ,antioxidant ,epithelial cells ,nasal spray ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
A total green nanotechnological nasal spray has been manufactured and proposed as an alternative treatment of rhinitis and rhinosinusitis. It was obtained by combining the strengthening effect of liposomes on barrier function, the hydrating and lubricating properties of sodium hyaluronan and the anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities of the extract of Zingiber officinalis. To this purpose, the extract was loaded in special phospholipid vesicles immobilized with hyaluronic acid (hyalurosomes), which were further enriched with glycerol in the water phase. Liposomes and glycerosomes were prepared as well and used as reference. Vesicles were oligolamellar and multicompartment, as confirmed by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) observation, small in size (~140 nm) and negatively charged (~−23 mV). Spray characteristics were evaluated by using the Spraytec® and instant images, from which the plume angle was measured. The range of the droplet size distribution and the narrow spray angle obtained suggest a good nebulization and a possible local deposition in the nasal cavity. In vitro studies performed by using human keratinocytes confirmed the high biocompatibility of vesicles and their ability to effectively counteract oxidative damage on cells induced by hydrogen peroxide. The overall collected data suggest that our vesicles are suitable as nasal spray.
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- 2021
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8. Teenage smoking behaviour following a high-school smoking ban in Chile: interrupted time-series analysis
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Andrea B Feigl, Joshua A Salomon, Goodarz Danaei, Eric L Ding, and Esteban Calvo
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
AbstractObjective To evaluate the effect of a smoking ban in high schools on smoking behaviour among Chilean students.Methods We conducted an interrupted time-series analysis, using repeated cross-sectional data from Chile's school population survey (2000-2011) for high-school students aged 12-18 years and a control group of persons aged 19-24 years. Poisson regression models were used to assess trends in smoking behaviour before and after the policy changes. The outcome measures were self-reported smoking prevalence (any smoking in the past month) and high frequency of smoking (smoking 15 days or more per month).Findings From 2005 to 2011, the prevalence of smoking declined among high-school students by 6.8% per year compared with 3.6% decline per year in the control group. The decline in the target group was 2.9% (95% confidence interval, CI: 0.18 to 5.00) greater. We estimated that 5-6 years after enforcing the law, smoking prevalence among high-school students was 13.7% lower as a result of the ban. The impact of the smoking ban was primarily driven by declines in smoking prevalence among students in grades 8 to 10. The smoking ban did not significantly alter the frequency of smoking.Conclusion The 2005 school smoking ban reduced smoking prevalence among younger high-school students in Chile. Further interventions targeting older individuals and frequent smokers may be needed.
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- 2015
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9. ¿Aceptación o rechazo de la estandarización clínica? Médicos chilenos hablan de las guías clínicas y canastas de prestaciones
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Sebastián Lemp and Esteban Calvo
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Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Este estudio analiza la aceptación de los médicos respecto de la estandarización de la atención clínica que conlleva la reforma de Acceso Universal con Garantías Explícitas (AUGE) y de Garantías Explícitas en Salud (GES) iniciada en el año 2005 en Chile. Se realizaron 18 entrevistas semiestructuradas, en las que se exploran cuatro hipótesis vinculadas al nivel de aceptación de la estandarización y su variación según los años de práctica clínica, el tipo de instrumento (guía clínica o canasta de prestaciones) y la especialidad (médica o quirúrgica). Los resultados sugieren que no existe un rechazo generalizado hacia la estandarización de los procesos clínicos, sino importantes diferencias en el discurso de los médicos. El grado de aceptación depende tanto de los años de experiencia clínica como del tipo de instrumento evaluado. Se discute la implicancia de estos resultados para diseñar e implementar reformas de salud exitosas, que consideren la racionalidad de la profesión médica y su énfasis en la discrecionalidad individual, variabilidad terapéutica y capacidad para adecuarse a las circunstancias particulares de su práctica.
- Published
- 2012
10. Unified Query Optimization in the Fabric Data Warehouse.
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Nicolas Bruno, César A. Galindo-Legaria, Milind Joshi, Esteban Calvo Vargas, Kabita Mahapatra, Sharon Ravindran, Guoheng Chen, Ernesto Cervantes Juárez, and Beysim Sezgin
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- 2024
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11. Inclusion of individuals with autism spectrum disorder in Software Engineering.
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Gastón Márquez, Michelle Pacheco, Hernán Astudillo, Carla Taramasco, and Esteban Calvo
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- 2024
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12. Transtheoretical and transdiagnostic models in the treatment of anxiety
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Esteban Calvo, Flavio, primary
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- 2024
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13. Global Pain and Aging: A Cross-Sectional Study on Age Differences in the Intensity of Chronic Pain Among Middle-Aged and Older Adults in 20 Countries
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Esteban Calvo, Cynthia Córdova, Robin Shura, Kasim Allel, Castillo-Carniglia Alvaro, Katherine M Keyes, Christine Mauro, Pia M Mauro, José T Medina, Thelma Mielenz, Carla Taramasco, and Silvia S Martins
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Clinical Psychology ,Social Psychology ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Gerontology - Abstract
Objectives This study aims to examine age differences in the intensity of chronic pain among middle-aged and older adults, where intensity is measured on a scale differentiating between chronic pain that is often troubling and likely requires intervention versus more endurable sensations. We aim to explore whether individual health and national gross domestic product (GDP) explain these differences as well. Methods Cross-nationally harmonized data from 20 countries on self-reported intensity of chronic pain (0 = no, 1 = mild, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe) in 104,826 individuals aged 50+ observed in 2012–2013. Two-level hierarchical ordinal linear models with individuals nested within countries were used to isolate estimations from heterogeneity explained by methodological differences across single-country studies. Results Overall, mean participant age was 66.9 (SD = 9.9), 56.1% were women, and 41.9% of respondents reported any chronic pain. Chronic pain intensity rose sharply with age in some countries (e.g., Korea and Slovenia), but this association waned or reversed in other countries (e.g., the United States and Denmark). Cross-country variation and age differences in chronic pain were partly explained (85.5% and 35.8%, respectively) by individual-level health (especially arthritis), country-level wealth (as indicated by GDP per capita), and demographics. Discussion Chronic pain intensity is not an inevitable consequence of chronological age, but the consequence of potential selection effects and lower activity levels combined with individual-level health and country-level wealth. Our findings suggest further investigation of health conditions and country affluence settings as potential targets of medical and policy interventions aiming to prevent, reduce, or manage chronic pain among older patients and aging populations.
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- 2022
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14. Societal Adaptation to Aging and Prevalence of Depression Among Older Adults: Evidence From 20 Countries
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ROBIN A. RICHARDSON, KATHERINE M. KEYES, CYNTHIA CHEN, GUAN YUN KENWIN MAUNG, JOHN ROWE, and ESTEBAN CALVO
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Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Published
- 2023
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15. Survival in patients with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia, treated with the Total XV chemotherapy protocol: A Structural Equation Model
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Enmanuel Guerrero, Tamara Otzen, Pablo Monsalve, Carlos Manterola, Lorena Albarracín, and Esteban Calvo
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Background: Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common neoplasm of childhood. Survival depends on a series of risk factors (RF) that have not been jointly assessed. This study aimed to identify a joint predictive model for disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) in patients with ALL treated with the Total XV chemotherapy protocol. Methods: Retrospective cohort study of 1 to 14 years old children, treated in 2006-2020 for ALL with the Total XV chemotherapy protocol in an Ecuadorian cancer center. Bio demographic, clinical, immunophenotype, translocations (t), response to treatment (RTT), DFS and OS were studied. Analyses included descriptive statistics and predictive structural equations, using global adjustments (X , CFI and RMSEA) and path incorporation/elimination (Lagrange and Wald test). Results: Of the 144 children (54.9% male) studied: 27.8% had infiltration of the Central Nervous System (CNS); 43.1% were low risk; 4.2% presented t(9-22), and 95.8% were immunophenotype B. Negative minimal residual disease (MRD) on days 15 and 42 of the induction phase was 43.8% and 77.1 % respectively. Induction mortality was 9%. DFS and OS was 45% and 75.7% at 111 and 144 months, respectively. Patients with CNS infiltration, high risk and positive MRD on days 15 and 42, had lower DFS and OS (p0.05). Adjustment indicators corroborated the results (CFI 0.91 and RMSEA 0.04). Conclusion: CNS infiltration, high risk, and positive MRD are RF, which jointly explain DFS and OS in patients with ALL treated with the Total XV chemotherapy protocol.
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- 2023
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16. Polydrug Use and Co-occurring Substance Use Disorders in a Respondent Driven Sampling of Cocaine Base Paste Users in Santiago, Chile
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Nicolás Rodriguez, Esteban Calvo, Carla F. Olivari, Alvaro Castillo-Carniglia, Jorge Gaete, Paloma Del Villar, and Esteban Pizarro
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Male ,Adult ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Young Adult ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,Cocaine ,Co occurring ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Medicine ,Chile ,Cocaine base ,education ,General Psychology ,Polydrug use ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Polysubstance dependence ,Respondent ,Female ,Substance use ,business ,Demography - Abstract
We characterized substance use patterns and co-occurring substance use disorders among active cocaine base paste (CBP) users in Santiago, Chile using data from respondent-driven sampling (RDS) in three areas of Metropolitan Santiago. Recruitment began with nine seeds, reaching 398 active CBP users (18% women; mean age 37.7 years), defined as persons consuming CBP at least twice per week in the last three months. Population proportions and uncertainty were estimated accounting for individuals' social network and homophily. The median CBP age of initiation was 21 years, and the median number of years using CBP was 7 for women and 15 for men. The median days of use in the past month was 25 days, with a median of 56 doses per week. The proportion of monthly income spent on CBP was 65%. The prevalence of substance use disorders (SUDs) were: 98% for CBP, 67% for alcohol, 60% for marijuana, and 41% for cocaine hydrochloride. Heavy polydrug use patterns and co-occurring SUDs are frequent among active CBP users in the metropolitan area of Santiago. Traditional surveillance strategies may have underestimated polysubstance use and co-occurring SUDs in active CBP users. RDS proved to be a feasible methodology that could be effectively used for substance use surveillance among hard-to-reach populations.
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- 2021
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17. Cogeneration Process Modelling in a Paper Factory
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Delgado, Marta Serrano, Bernad, Esteban Calvo, and Palacín, J. Ignacio García
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- 2013
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18. Older adults’ accounts of the relationships between retirement timing and health: a descriptive qualitative analysis in Chile
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Sebastian Opazo, Robin Shura, and Esteban Calvo
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Health (social science) ,Latin Americans ,Social Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,050401 social sciences methods ,Focus group ,Stratification (mathematics) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Qualitative analysis ,0504 sociology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Demography - Abstract
Retirement timing can have important health implications. Little is known, however, about older adults’ views on this issue and whether they consider it better to retire later, earlier, on time or anytime. This knowledge gap about older adults’ views is particularly true outside North America and Europe. This qualitative study aims to examine older Chileans’ ideas about the relationship between retirement timing and health and to explore gender and class patterns in qualitative themes identified, knowledge which may strengthen quantitative population-based approaches. Framework analysis was conducted on qualitative accounts from a purposive, non-random sample of 40 older Chileans in six focus groups, stratified by gender and class as marked by lifetime occupation. Transcriptions were coded by two independent reviewers (inter-coder reliability = 81%) according to four deductive categories of retirement timing as well as inductive coding of emergent themes. The content and sequence of codes were visually represented in MAXQDA's document portraits and illustrated with descriptive quotes. Results indicate that participants’ views about when to retire in order to maximise health did not highlight retirement age or timing (later, earlier, on time, anytime). Instead, these older Chileans emphasised that the optimal retirement age depends on other conditions, such as employment quality, retirement income and gender. These views were patterned: lower occupational-class participants emphasised income and job hazards, higher-class males emphasised job satisfaction and higher-class females emphasised gendered patterns. Women and lower-class participants were relatively more favourable to earlier retirements than men and higher-class participants. Overall, qualitative analyses of lay perspectives from understudied country contexts complement and extend population-based models focused on timing or retirement age, suggest specific characteristics of retirement transitions that may moderate health consequences, and highlight class and gender differences in views of retirement timing. More research is needed using mixed-methods approaches and leveraging both purposive and random samples.
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- 2020
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19. Trends in marijuana use in two Latin American countries: an age, period and cohort study
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Alvaro Castillo-Carniglia, Ariadne Rivera-Aguirre, Magdalena Cerdá, Esteban Calvo, Rosario Queirolo, and Katherine M. Keyes
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Adult ,Male ,Latin Americans ,Adolescent ,Population ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Poison control ,Context (language use) ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Cohort Effect ,Prevalence ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Chile ,education ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cohort effect ,Cohort ,Uruguay ,Female ,Marijuana Use ,Cannabis ,0305 other medical science ,Demography ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background and aims Uruguay and Chile have the highest levels of marijuana use in Latin America, and have experienced consistent increases during the last two decades. We aim to calculate separate age-period-cohort (APC) effects for past-year marijuana use in Uruguay and Chile, which have similar epidemiologica, and demographic profiles but diverging paths in cannabis regulation. Design APC study in which period and cohort effects were estimated as first derivative deviations from their linear age trend, separately by country and gender. Setting Uruguay and Chile. Participants General population between 15 and 64 years. Measurements Past-year marijuana use from household surveys with five repeated cross-sections between 2001 and 2018 in Uruguay (median n = 4616) and 13 between 1994 and 2018 in Chile (median n = 15 895). Findings Marijuana use prevalence in both countries peaked at 20-24 years of age and increased consistently across calendar years. Period effects were strong and positive, indicating that increases in use were evident across age groups. Relative to 2006 (reference year), Chilean period effects were approximately 48% lower in 1994 and approximately four times higher in 2018; in Uruguay, these effects were approximately 56% lower in 2001 and almost quadrupled in 2018. We observed non-linear cohort effects in Chile and similar patterns in Uruguay for the overall sample and women. In both countries, marijuana use increased for cohorts born between the mid-1970s and early 1990s, even in the context of rising period effects. Prevalence was consistently larger for men, but period increases were stronger in women. Conclusions Age-period-cohort effects on past-year marijuana use appear to have been similar in Chile and Uruguay, decreasing with age and increasing over time at heterogeneous growth rates depending on gender and cohort. Current levels of marijuana use, including age and gender disparities, seem to be associated with recent common historical events in these two countries.
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- 2020
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20. Síndrome de apnea-hipoapnea del sueño en el 2009. ¿Qué hay de nuevo?
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Mañas Baena, E. and Esteban Calvo, R.
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- 2010
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21. Design of a Nasal Spray Based on Cardiospermum halicacabum Extract Loaded in Phospholipid Vesicles Enriched with Gelatin or Chondroitin Sulfate
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Antonio Lozano, Maria Letizia Manca, José Antonio Vázquez, Marco Zaru, Andreia Ascenso, Tania Belen Lopez-Mendez, José Luis Pedraz, Eleonora Casula, Esteban Calvo, and Maria Manconi
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Keratinocytes ,Chemical Phenomena ,cardiospermum halicacabum ,droplet size distribution ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dispersity ,antioxidant activity ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Biocompatible Materials ,Epithelial cells ,Cardiospermum halicacabum ,Gelatin ,Antioxidants ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,QD241-441 ,Sapindaceae ,Drug Discovery ,Droplet size distribution ,Phospholipids ,biology ,Vesicle ,Chondroitin Sulfates ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Molecular Medicine ,plume angle ,keratinocytes ,food.ingredient ,Drug Compounding ,Article ,food ,Dynamic light scattering ,Antioxidant activity ,medicine ,Humans ,Chondroitin sulfate ,Particle Size ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Aerosols ,Chromatography ,Plant Extracts ,fungi ,Organic Chemistry ,epithelial cells ,Nasal Sprays ,Penetration (firestop) ,biology.organism_classification ,Plume angle ,Oxidative Stress ,chemistry ,Nasal spray ,Liposomes - Abstract
18 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables.-- This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, The extract of Cardiospermum halicacabum L. (C. halicacabum) obtained from flower, leaf and vine was loaded into modified phospholipid vesicles aiming at obtaining sprayable, biocompatible and effective nasal spray formulations for the treatment of nasopharyngeal diseases. Penetration enhancer-containing vesicles (PEVs) and hyalurosomes were formulated, and stabilized by adding a commercial gelatin from fish (20 mg/mL) or chondroitin sulfate from catshark cartilages (Scyliorhinus canicula, 20 mg/mL). Cryo-TEM images confirmed the formation of spherical vesicles, while photon correlation spectroscopy analysis disclosed the formation of small and negatively-charged vesicles. PEVs were the smaller vesicles (~100 nm) along with gelatin-hyalurosomes (~120 nm), while chondroitin-PEVs and chondroitin-hyalurosomes were larger (~160 nm). Dispersions prepared with chondroitin sulfate were more homogeneous, as the polydispersity index was ~0.15. The in vitro analysis of the droplet size distribution, average velocity module and spray cone angle suggested a good spray-ability and deposition of formulations in the nasal cavity, as the mean diameter of the droplets was in the range recommended by the Food and Drug Administration for nasal targets. The spray plume analysis confirmed the ability of PEVs, gelatin-PEVs, hyalurosomes and gelatin-hyalurosomes to be atomized in fine droplets homogenously distributed in a full cone plume, with an angle ranging from 25 to 30°. Moreover, vesicles were highly biocompatible and capable of protecting the epithelial cells against oxidative damage, thus preventing the inflammatory state., This work was supported by the PON-RI 2014-2020 research and innovation program, grant number DOT1304004
- Published
- 2021
22. Alcohol Consumption in Later Life and Mortality in the United States: Results from 9 Waves of the Health and Retirement Study
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Caroline Rutherford, Katherine A. Ornstein, Katherine M. Keyes, Linda P. Fried, Matthew P. Fox, Ursula M. Staudinger, and Esteban Calvo
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Consumption (economics) ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Confounding ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Health and Retirement Study ,Toxicology ,National Death Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Observational study ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Body mass index ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Demography - Abstract
BACKGROUND Alcohol consumption in later life has increased in the past decade, and the relationship between alcohol consumption and mortality is controversial. Recent studies suggest little, if any, health benefit to alcohol. Yet most rely on single-time point consumption assessments and minimal confounder adjustments. METHODS We report on 16 years of follow-up from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) cohorts born 1931 to 1941 (N = 7,904, baseline mean age = 61, SD = 3.18). Respondents were queried about drinking frequency/quantity. Mortality was established via exit interviews and confirmed with the national death index. Time-varying confounders included but were not limited to household assets, smoking, body mass index, health/functioning, depression, chronic disease; time-invariant confounders included baseline age, education, sex, and race. RESULTS After adjustment, current abstainers had the highest risk of subsequent mortality, consistent with sick quitters, and moderate (men: HR = 0.74, 95% CI: 0.60 to 0.91; women: HR = 0.82, 95% CI: 0.63 to 1.07) drinking was associated with a lower mortality rate compared with occasional drinking, though smokers and men evidenced less of an inverse association. Quantitative bias analyses indicated that omitted confounders would need to be associated with ~4-fold increases in mortality rates for men and ~9-fold increases for women to change the results. CONCLUSIONS There are consistent associations between moderate/occasional drinking and lower mortality, though residual confounding remains a threat to validity. Continued efforts to conduct large-scale observational studies of alcohol consumption and mortality are needed to characterize the changing patterns of consumption in older age.
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- 2019
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23. The Epidemiology of Violent Deaths in Chile between 2001 and 2018: Prevalence, Trends, and Correlates
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Katjana Wiederkehr, Caroline Mai, José M. Cabezas, Teresita Rocha-Jiménez, Tamara Otzen, Nicolás Montalva, Esteban Calvo, and Alvaro Castillo-Carniglia
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Suicide ,mortality ,violence ,homicide ,suicide ,Chile ,Cause of Death ,Population Surveillance ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Prevalence ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Female ,Homicide - Abstract
Background: Despite its enormous health and social burden, there are limited published studies describing the epidemiology of violent deaths in Chile. We described violent mortality rate trends in Chile between 2001 and 2018, its current spatial distribution and ecological level correlates. Methods: A population-based study using publicly accessible data. We calculated age-adjusted mortality rates per 100,000 persons for sex, age, intention, and mechanism of death. Next, we used linear regression to estimate time trends for sex and intention. We then employed hierarchical Poisson analyses to model the spatial distribution across 345 municipalities and the influence of six ecological level variables. Results: The average rate of violent death in Chile between 2001 and 2018 was 15.9 per 100,000 people, with the majority (70.3%) of these attributed to suicide. Suffocation was the most common mechanism of death for suicide (82.3%) and cut/pierce for homicide (43.1%), followed by firearm (33.2%). Violent deaths are trending downward in Chile across all categories except suicides by women, which have remained stable. Poverty rates and urban population were positively associated with violent mortality rates. Conclusions: Although violence-related deaths seem to be decreasing, disparities across gender, age group, and geographic location may have continuing effects on mortality rates.
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- 2022
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24. Can ultrasonic atomization generate nanometric droplets?
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José Luis Santolaya, Félix Barreras, Santiago Jiménez, Esteban Calvo, and Antonio Lozano
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Materials science ,Composite material ,Ultrasonic atomization - Published
- 2021
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25. A New Path to Address Multimorbidity? Longitudinal Analyses of Retirement Sequences and Chronic Diseases in Old Age
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Ursula M. Staudinger, Ariel Azar, Robin Shura, and Esteban Calvo
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Gerontology ,Employment ,Aging ,Retirement ,Multimorbidity ,Chronic disease ,Work (electrical) ,Noncommunicable disease ,Path (graph theory) ,Chronic Disease ,Trajectory ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Aged - Abstract
Chronic disease and multimorbidity are growing health challenges for aging populations, often coinciding with retirement. We examine late-life predictors of multimorbidity, focusing on the association between retirement sequences and number of chronic diseases. We modeled the number of chronic diseases as a function of six types of previously identified 10-year retirement sequences using Health and Retirement Study (HRS) data for 7,880 Americans observed between ages 60 to 61 and 70 to 71. Our results show that at baseline, the adjusted prevalence of multimorbidity was lowest in sequences characterized by late retirement from full-time work and highest in sequences characterized by early labor-force disengagement. Age increases in multimorbidity varied across retirement sequences, though overall differences in prevalence persisted at age 70 to 71. Earlier life disadvantages did not moderate these associations. Findings suggest further investigation of policies that target health limitations affecting work, promote continued beneficial employment opportunities, and ultimately leverage retirement sequences as a novel path to influence multimorbidity in old age.
- Published
- 2021
26. Nasal Spray Formulations Based on Combined Hyalurosomes and Glycerosomes Loading Zingiber officinalis Extract as Green and Natural Strategy for the Treatment of Rhinitis and Rhinosinusitis
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Marco Zaru, M Perra, Maria Letizia Manca, Esteban Calvo, José Luis Pedraz, Eleonora Casula, Maria Manconi, Tania Belen Lopez-Mendez, Antonio Lozano, Casula, Eleonora, Manca, Maria Letizia, Perra, Matteo, Pedraz Muñoz, José Luís, López-Méndez, Tania Belén, Lozano Fantoba, Antonio, Calvo, Esteban, and Manconi, Maria
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Spray characteristics ,antioxidant ,Biocompatibility ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,droplet size ,RM1-950 ,02 engineering and technology ,nasal spray ,traditional medicine ,Biochemistry ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,phospholipid vesicles ,Hyaluronic acid ,Glycerol ,medicine ,Hydrogen peroxide ,Molecular Biology ,Zingiber officinalis ,Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages ,zingiber officinalis ,spray angle ,Liposome ,Chromatography ,Vesicle ,Cell Biology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,epithelial cells ,chemistry ,Nasal spray ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
8 figures, 3 tables., A total green nanotechnological nasal spray has been manufactured and proposed as an alternative treatment of rhinitis and rhinosinusitis. It was obtained by combining the strengthening effect of liposomes on barrier function, the hydrating and lubricating properties of sodium hyaluronan and the anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities of the extract of Zingiber officinalis. To this purpose, the extract was loaded in special phospholipid vesicles immobilized with hyaluronic acid (hyalurosomes), which were further enriched with glycerol in the water phase. Liposomes and glycerosomes were prepared as well and used as reference. Vesicles were oligolamellar and multicompartment, as confirmed by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) observation, small in size (~140 nm) and negatively charged (~−23 mV). Spray characteristics were evaluated by using the Spraytec® and instant images, from which the plume angle was measured. The range of the droplet size distribution and the narrow spray angle obtained suggest a good nebulization and a possible local deposition in the nasal cavity. In vitro studies performed by using human keratinocytes confirmed the high biocompatibility of vesicles and their ability to effectively counteract oxidative damage on cells induced by hydrogen peroxide. The overall collected data suggest that our vesicles are suitable as nasal spray.
- Published
- 2021
27. Impacto de las recomendaciones del Sistema Español de Farmacovigilancia en la publicación de casos de reacciones adversas a medicamentos
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Esteban Calvo, Carmen, Ibáñez Ruiz, Carmen, Salgueiro Vázquez, Esther, and Manso Rodríguez, Gloria
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- 2008
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28. Cross‐country differences in age trends in alcohol consumption among older adults: a cross‐sectional study of individuals aged 50 years and older in 22 countries
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Esteban Calvo, Ursula M. Staudinger, Kasim Allel, José T Medina, Katherine M. Keyes, and Alvaro Castillo-Carniglia
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Male ,Alcohol Drinking ,Cross-sectional study ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Activities of Daily Living ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Human Development Index ,Aged ,Consumption (economics) ,Cross country ,Heavy drinking ,business.industry ,Alcoholic Beverages ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Standard drink ,Observational study ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Alcohol consumption ,Alcoholic Intoxication ,Demography - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Age-related changes in physiological, metabolic and medication profiles make alcohol consumption likely to be more harmful among older than younger adults. This study aimed to estimate cross-national variation in the quantity and patterns of drinking throughout older age, and to investigate country-level variables explaining cross-national variation in consumption for individuals aged 50 years and older. DESIGN: Cross-sectional observational study using previously harmonized survey data. SETTING: Twenty-two countries surveyed in 2010 or the closest available year. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 106 180 adults aged 50 years and over. MEASUREMENTS: Cross-national variation in age trends were estimated for two outcomes: weekly number of standard drink units (SDUs) and patterns of alcohol consumption (never, ever, occasional, moderate and heavy drinking). Human Development Index and average prices of vodka were used as country-level variables moderating age-related declines in drinking. FINDINGS: Alcohol consumption was negatively associated with age (risk ratio = 0.98; 95% confidence interval = 0.97, 0.99; P-value < 0.001), but there was substantial cross-country variation in the age-related differences in alcohol consumption [likelihood ratio (LR) test P-value < 0.001], even after adjusting for the composition of populations. Countries’ development level and alcohol prices explained 31% of cross-country variability in SDUs (LR test P-value < 0.001) but did not explain cross-country variability in the prevalence of heavy drinkers. CONCLUSIONS: Use and harmful use of alcohol among older adults appears to vary widely across age and countries. This variation can be partly explained both by the country-specific composition of populations and country-level contextual factors such as development level and alcohol prices.
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- 2021
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29. Healthy retirement begins at school: educational differences in the health outcomes of early transitions into retirement
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Ursula M. Staudinger, Esteban Calvo, Kasim Allel, and Ana Sofia Leon
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Gerontology ,Mexican Health and Aging Study ,Health (social science) ,Social Psychology ,Developing country ,Sample (statistics) ,Health outcomes ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,work ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,self-reported health ,030502 gerontology ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Association (psychology) ,education ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,developing countries ,Active ageing ,retirement ,employment ,Propensity score matching ,lifecourse ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,chronic disease ,Panel data - Abstract
The literature on socio-economic variations in the association between retirement timing and health is inconclusive and largely limited to the moderating role of occupation. By selecting the sample case of Mexico where a sizeable number of older adults have no or very little formal education, this study allows the moderating role of education to be tested properly. Drawing on panel data for 2,430 individuals age 50 and over from the Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS) and combining propensity score matching models with fixed-effects regressions, this article investigates differences in the health effects of retirement timing between older adults with varying years of education. Subjective health is measured using a self-reported assessment of respondents’ overall health and physical health as a reverse count of doctor-diagnosed chronic diseases. The results indicate that early transitions into retirement are associated with worse health outcomes, but education fully compensates for the detrimental association with subjective and physical health, while adjusting for baseline health, demographics and socio-economic characteristics. In conclusion, formal education during childhood and adolescence is associated with a long-term protective effect on health. It attenuates negative health consequences of early retirement transitions. Policies and programmes promoting healthy and active ageing would benefit from considering the influence of formal education in shaping older adults’ health after the transition into retirement.
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- 2021
30. Cross-country and historical variation in alcohol consumption among older men and women: Leveraging recently harmonized survey data in 21 countries()
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Ursula M. Staudinger, Katherine A. Ornstein, Esteban Calvo, Katherine M. Keyes, Linda P. Fried, and José T Medina
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Male ,China ,Alcohol Drinking ,Population ,Health Behavior ,Health benefits ,Toxicology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,Consumption (economics) ,education.field_of_study ,Cross country ,Heavy drinking ,Ethanol ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Alcoholism ,England ,Standard drink ,Survey data collection ,Female ,business ,Alcohol consumption ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography - Abstract
Background Alcohol consumption causes greater harm in older than younger adults. As the population ages, understanding cross-country and time-varying drinking patterns of older adults is of critical importance. Available evidence relies primarily on ecological data. Methods We harmonized survey data for 179,881 adults age 50+ observed repeatedly between 1998 and 2016 in 21 countries. Next, we estimated historical variation in consumption across countries (overall and stratified by gender and age group 50−64/65+). Results On average, 51.95 % of older adults consumed any alcohol over the observed period. For 13 countries, the proportion of older adults who drink increased (mean annual increase: 0.76 percent points). Heavy drinking (men drinks/day>3 or binge>5, women drinks/day>2 or binge>4) peaked at 23.54 % for England in 2010 and lifetime abstainers at 69.65 % for China in 2011. Across countries and among drinkers, consumption frequency was 2.57 days/week, the number of standard drink units when drinking was 2.57, and the average number of drinks/day over a week was 1.12. Consumption patterns varied substantially across countries and historical time. Overall probability and frequency of consumption were higher in men than women, with the largest gaps observed in 2011 for China, but gender gaps decreased (even reversed) in the young old and varied across country and time. Conclusions Wide variation in older adults’ alcohol consumption across countries and time suggests that broad scale prevention and intervention efforts can be harnessed for potential population-level health benefits. Further variation by gender and age reflect physiological and social factors simultaneously shaping alcohol consumption.
- Published
- 2020
31. From Snapshots to Movies: The Association Between Retirement Sequences and Aging Trajectories in Limitations to Perform Activities of Daily Living
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Esteban Calvo, Ursula M. Staudinger, Ariel Azar, Andrea Slachevsky, and Ignacio Madero-Cabib
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Employment ,Male ,Gerontology ,Activities of daily living ,Association (object-oriented programming) ,Public Policy ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Policy Making ,Aged ,Community and Home Care ,Retirement ,030505 public health ,Middle Aged ,Work Engagement ,United States ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Needs Assessment - Abstract
Objective: This study analyzes the dynamic association between retirement sequences and activities of daily living (ADLs) trajectories between ages 60 and 70. Method: Retirement sequences previously established for 7,880 older Americans from the Health and Retirement Study were used in hierarchical linear and propensity score full matching models, analyzing their association with ADL trajectories. Results: Sequences of partial retirement from full- or part-time jobs showed higher baseline and slower decline in ADL than sequences characterized by early labor force disengagement. Discussion: The conventional model in which people completely retire from a full-time job at normative ages and the widely promoted new conventional model of late retirement are both associated with better functioning than early labor force disengagement. But unconventional models, where older adults keep partially engaged with the labor force are also significantly associated with better functioning. These findings call attention to more research on potential avenues to simultaneously promote productive engagement and health later in life.
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- 2018
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32. Complementary effect of Zingiber officinalis extract and citral in counteracting non allergic nasal congestion by simultaneous loading in ad hoc formulated phospholipid vesicles
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Marco Zaru, Esteban Calvo, Tania Belen Lopez-Mendez, Antonio Lozano, Sara Fais, Maria Manconi, Maria Letizia Manca, Germano Orrù, José Luis Pedraz, Eleonora Casula, Ines Castangia, Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca, European Commission, Casula, Eleonora, Manconi, Maria, López-Méndez, Tania Belén, Pedraz Muñoz, José Luis, Calvo, Esteban, Lozano Fantoba, Antonio, Castangia, Ines, Orrù, Germano, Fais, Sara, and Manca, Maria Letizia
- Subjects
Nasal cavity ,Acyclic Monoterpenes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Z. officinalis ,Epithelial cells ,Nasal congestion ,medicine.disease_cause ,Citral ,Antioxidants ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,Antioxidant activity ,Phospholipid vesicles ,medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages ,Phospholipids ,Plant Extracts ,Chemistry ,Vesicle ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,General Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nasal spray ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Officinalis ,Biophysics ,Antibacterial activity ,medicine.symptom ,Biotechnology - Abstract
5 figures, 4 tables., Natural nasal spray formulations were prepared by using Zingiber officinalis (Z. officinalis) extract and citral synergically loaded into specifically designed phospholipid vesicles. Phospholipid vesicles were selected according to their stabilizing effect on the nasal mucosal barrier, and their effectiveness was further potentiated by the co-loading of Z. officinalis extract as antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agent, and citral as antibacterial molecule. Cryo-TEM images confirmed the formation of morphologically homogeneous and small vesicles, sized around 100 nm, negatively charged (−44 mV) and highly biocompatible (viability ≥100%) as detected by using epithelial cells. The analysis of size distribution of sprayed droplets, average velocity module and spray cone angle suggested a good aptitude of the vesicles to be nebulized and their effective deposition in the nasal cavity. Moreover, vesicles were effectively capable of inhibiting some nasal pathogenic bacteria (i.e. Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli) and to protect the epithelial cells against oxidative damage. The formulations are natural and safe, and all of them have shown promising technological and biological properties suggesting their possible application in the nasal cavity for the treatment of congestions and non-allergic rhinitis., The authors thank PON-RI 2014–2020 Research and Innovation Program, grant number DOT1304004, for the support. The authors thank for technical and human support provided by TEM measurements carried out in the SGIker Polymer Characterization (UPV/EHU/ ERDF, EU); the NanoBioCel Group of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), in Vitoria-Gasteiz (Spain); the Biomedical Research Networking Center in Bioengineering, Biomaterials and Nanomedicine (CIBER-BBN) of Zaragoza (Spain); the Molecular Biology Service Lab of the University of Cagliari.
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- 2022
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33. Health conditions and unmet needs for assistance to perform activities of daily living among older adults with dementia in Chile
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Esteban Calvo, Andrea Slachevasky, and Yi Zhou
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Male ,Advance care planning ,Gerontology ,Activities of daily living ,Health Status ,Daily life activities ,Instrumental ADL ,Developing country ,Unmet needs ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dementia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Functional ability ,Chile ,Healthcare Disparities ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,business.industry ,Social Support ,Health Status Disparities ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Caregivers ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective This study aims to address gaps in health conditions and unmet needs in daily activities between people with dementia (PWD) and without dementia in a developing country and to identify the variables associated with unmet needs among PWD to guide practitioners and policymakers in dealing with an increased burden of dementia. Methods Nationally representative data on 4655 Chileans age 60 and over were used to compare health conditions and unmet needs in daily life activities between individuals with (N = 455, 9.6%) and without dementia. Regression analysis was conducted to identify the variables associated with unmet needs among PWD. Results Overall, PWD had worse health and needed greater assistance in performing daily activities than people without dementia. Among PWD, being male was associated with more unmet needs, in both activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental ADL. Lower educational level and fewer caregivers were associated with more unmet needs for ADL, while inferior functional ability was associated with more unmet needs for instrumental ADL. Conclusions The results from this study call for action by practitioners and policymakers to foster caregiver training, increase supportive services, and advance care planning for PWD.
- Published
- 2018
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34. Atomization of glycerin with a twin-fluid swirl nozzle
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Antonio Lozano, Javier Alconchel, Esteban Calvo, José Luis Santolaya, Juan A. García, and Félix Barreras
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Materials science ,Break-Up ,Mechanical Engineering ,Nozzle ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,Gear pump ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Volumetric flow rate ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,0103 physical sciences ,Mass flow rate ,Coaxial ,Diffractometer - Abstract
Atomization of liquids with high viscosity is always a challenge, especially when small diameter droplets and high liquid flow rates are simultaneously required. In the present research, the performance of a Venturi–vortex twin-fluid swirl nozzle is examined, attending to its capabilities to generate droplets with diameters below 20 µm when atomizing pure glycerin at room temperature. In this nozzle, air is injected tangentially in a central convergent section, and discharges suctioning the liquid fed to a coaxial chamber, here using a gear pump. The resulting spray is visualized and analyzed. Droplet size distributions are measured with a laser diffractometer. As expected, droplet diameter increases with liquid flow rate, and quickly diminishes when air flow rate is increased. Sauter mean diameters (SMD) below 15 µm can be obtained even when atomizing pure glycerin. However, these values are obtained for relatively low glycerin flow rates (∼5 l/h), and with rather wide distributions. For 10 l/h and an air-to-liquid mass flow rate ratio (ALR) of 13.7 more than 26% of the glycerin volume is atomized in droplets smaller than 20 µm. Liquid ligaments are observed near the nozzle exit, but they tend to break up while moving downstream.
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- 2017
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35. Rural pension reform in China: A critical analysis
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Lianquan Fang, John B. Williamson, and Esteban Calvo
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Rural Population ,China ,Pension ,Economic growth ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,MEDLINE ,General Medicine ,0506 political science ,Pensions ,03 medical and health sciences ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Care Reform ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Rural population - Published
- 2017
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36. Private Pension Systems Built on Precarious Foundations: A Cohort Study of Labor-Force Trajectories in Chile
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Fabio Bertranou, Ignacio Madero-Cabib, Andrés Biehl, Kirsten Sehnbruch, and Esteban Calvo
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Adult ,Employment ,Male ,Health (social science) ,Social Psychology ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pensions ,030502 gerontology ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Chile ,media_common ,Aged ,Pension ,Models, Statistical ,05 social sciences ,Private pension ,Middle Aged ,0506 political science ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Cohort ,Sustainability ,Life course approach ,Demographic economics ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,0305 other medical science ,Cohort study ,Diversity (business) - Abstract
The success of private pension systems to provide old-age security is mainly a function of continuous individual pension contributions linked to formal employment. Using a rich longitudinal dataset from Chile and employing sequence analysis, this study examines the pension contribution histories and formal employment pathways of a cohort of individuals who began their working lives simultaneously to the introduction of the Chilean private pension system in the early 1980s, which pioneered private-oriented pension reforms worldwide. Results show that more than half of the individuals from this cohort developed labor-force trajectories inconsistent with continuous pension contributions and formal employment, which particularly affects women and lower educated people. We conclude that policy and decision makers focused on aging topics should be aware of the increasing diversity and precariousness of labor-force trajectories when evaluating the performance and sustainability of both private and public pension regimes.
- Published
- 2019
37. Coalescence of Water Drops at an Oil–Water Interface Loaded with Microparticles and Surfactants
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Olivier Masbernat, Esteban Calvo, Frédéric Risso, Erik de Malmazet, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - CNRS (FRANCE), Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse - Toulouse INP (FRANCE), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier - UT3 (FRANCE), Universidad Zaragoza (SPAIN), Institut de Mécanique des Fluides de Toulouse - IMFT (Toulouse, France), University of Zaragoza - Universidad de Zaragoza [Zaragoza], Institut de mécanique des fluides de Toulouse (IMFT), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National Polytechnique (Toulouse) (Toulouse INP), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées, Laboratoire de génie chimique [ancien site de Basso-Cambo] (LGC), and Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse - INPT (FRANCE)
- Subjects
Work (thermodynamics) ,Materials science ,General Chemical Engineering ,Surfactants ,Interfaces ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Coalescence ,Microparticles ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,[CHIM.GENI]Chemical Sciences/Chemical engineering ,020401 chemical engineering ,Chemical engineering ,Pulmonary surfactant ,Génie chimique ,Oil water ,[SPI.GPROC]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process Engineering ,Coalescence (chemistry) ,0204 chemical engineering ,0210 nano-technology ,Génie des procédés - Abstract
This work investigates the coalescence of water droplets settled on a water–oil interface in the presence of microparticles and surfactant. The successive stages of the coalescence process, including interstitial film formation, drainage, rupture, and retraction, are analyzed in detail. This leads us to distinguish between contrasted situations depending on the nature of the surfactant and its affinity with the microparticles. Hydrophilic particles have been previously shown to promote coalescence by means of a bridging mechanism. In that case, coalescence is a deterministic process that lasts the time required for the drainage to make the film thickness equal to the size of the particles. However, the present study shows how surfactants can totally change the effect of the particles upon coalescence. When surfactant both stabilizes the water–oil interface and adsorbs onto the particles, the bridging mechanism is inhibited and the coalescence becomes a random process. Since molecular forces between facing film interfaces are not attractive, thermal fluctuations are required to initiate the formation of a hole in the adsorbed surfactant layer. Provided the surfactant concentration in the bulk is large enough to ensure that the interfaces are close to saturation, the coalescence is delayed by a stochastic time interval and the drop coalescence becomes a Poisson process. These results shed a new light on the mechanisms of droplet coalescence in complex industrial applications where surfactant and particles are present, either purposely added or present as uncontrolled contaminants.
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- 2019
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38. Stress and Salivary Telomere Length in the Second Half of Life: A Comparison of Life-course Models
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Ursula M. Staudinger, Pam Factor-Litvak, Esteban Calvo, and Margaret M. Willis
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Male ,Mediation (statistics) ,Structural equation modeling ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Life Change Events ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Stress (linguistics) ,050602 political science & public administration ,Humans ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Child ,Saliva ,Aged ,05 social sciences ,Stressor ,Life events ,Health and Retirement Study ,Telomere ,0506 political science ,Cumulative risk ,050902 family studies ,Life course approach ,Female ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
Background Previous research has explored the relationship between childhood and adulthood stressful life events (SLEs) and adult salivary telomere length (TL), but no research to date has tested different life-course models in which stress in adulthood may fully, partly, or not mediate the relationship between childhood stress and adult TL. Methods To fill this gap, we elaborate over previous work by Puterman et al. (2016) and other standard models that do not account for the temporal order of stressors in childhood and adulthood, by using structural equation modeling (SEM) for a sample of 5754 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) participants to compare the fit of three nested life-course models—social trajectory, early critical period, and cumulative risk. Results Results indicated that the social trajectory model, in which the association between childhood SLEs and TL in later adulthood is fully mediated by adulthood SLEs, fit the data better than the early critical period (no mediation) and cumulative risk (partial mediation) models. Conclusion In the social trajectory model, childhood SLEs are related to TL in later life only through adulthood SLEs. The direct physiological effect of childhood SLEs on TL in later life would be overestimated if adulthood SLEs are overlooked.
- Published
- 2019
39. Dinámica de uso de suelo y sitios prioritarios para la restauración forestal del Corredor Biológico Río Tibás, Costa Rica
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Hannia Vega-Bolaños, Jossy Esteban Calvo-Villalobos, and Tania Bermúdez-Rojas
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Costa Rica ,RESTAURACIÓN ,Heredia ,Coverage ,Intercity ,Forestry ,MULTICRITERIA EVALUTION ,CORREDOR BIOLÓGICO RÍO TIBÁS (SAN JOSÉ) ,Geography ,Cobertura ,Forest cover ,evaluación multicriterio ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,COBERTURA VERDE ,multicriteria evaluation ,EVALUACIÓN ,interurbano ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
An evaluation was conducted on landscape elements (land use, access roads, slopes, and environmental fragility) and trends in the use of soil during the period 2005-2016 in the area proposed for the Biological Corridor Tibas River (CBRT). From these elements and trends, a methodology for the selection of priority sites (SP) was applied for the restoration of plant cover, and a survey to assess the perception and consent of their respective owners was applied. The CBRT has a distribution almost equitable between urban, agricultural and natural use, with an important concentration of forest cover in its high area. However, in 11 years the CBRT has undergone a process of urbanization, up to three times faster than other urban areas in the region, being the agricultural uses the most vulnerable to change. The implementation of the methodology identified 20 priority sites of management; the above-mentioned survey was applied in 10 of them. The 94% of the owners are willing to the restoration, motivated primarily by the conservation of water, biodiversity and landscape. Se evaluaron elementos paisajísticos (uso de suelo, vías de acceso, pendientes y fragilidad ambiental) y tendencias de uso de suelo durante el periodo 2005-2016 en el área propuesta para el Corredor Biológico Río Tibás (CBRT). A partir de ellos, se aplicó una metodología de selección de sitios prioritarios (SP) para la restauración de cobertura vegetal, y se realizó un diagnóstico social para valorar la percepción y anuencia de sus respectivos propietarios. El CBRT posee una distribución casi equitativa entre el uso urbano, agropecuario y natural, con una concentración importante de cobertura boscosa en su zona alta. No obstante, en 11 años ha experimentado un proceso de urbanización hasta tres veces más acelerado que otras zonas de la región, siendo los usos agropecuarios los más vulnerables al cambio. La aplicación de la metodología delimitó 20 SP de manejo, de los cuales,en 10 se realizó el diagnóstico social. El 94 % de los propietarios están anuentes a la restauración, motivados, principalmente, por la conservación del agua, biodiversidad y paisaje. Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas
- Published
- 2019
40. ULTRASONIC ATOMIZATION OF ALKANES AND ALCOHOLS
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Esteban Calvo, Juan A. García, Antonio Lozano, Félix Barreras, Javier Alconchel, and José Luis Santolaya
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Materials science ,General Chemical Engineering ,Analytical chemistry ,Ultrasonic atomization - Published
- 2017
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41. Experimental characterization of the viscous liquid sprays generated by a Venturi-vortex atomizer
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Juan A. García, Félix Barreras, José Luis Santolaya, Antonio Lozano, and Esteban Calvo
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Process Chemistry and Technology ,General Chemical Engineering ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Mechanical engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Mechanics ,Viscous liquid ,01 natural sciences ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Vortex ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Viscosity ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Anemometer ,Venturi effect ,0103 physical sciences ,Mass flow rate ,Coaxial ,Secondary air injection - Abstract
Atomization of high viscosity liquids for industrial processes requires the design of more efficient atomizers. In this work, the operation of an air-assisted atomizer, based on a Venturi-vortex system, was examined atomizing liquids with increasing viscosity. In this atomizer prototype, air was injected tangentially in a central convergent chamber and discharged axially suctioning liquid from a coaxial compartment through an annular slit. This atomizer is characterized by the generation of a high velocity swirling airstream and the use of large internal liquid passages. The resulting sprays were experimentally analyzed by means of a phase-Doppler Anemometer. The droplet diameter and two velocity components were measured at different axial stations and radial locations along the spray. Operating with low liquid flow rates, a good atomization quality was achieved generating sprays with a significant fraction of small droplets. Drops with diameters up to 50 μm were considered, which constitute 99% of the total number of measured droplets. Sauter mean diameters below 30 μm were obtained even when pure glycerine was atomized. Air/liquid mass flow rate ratios above 7.5 were handled. The effects of varying the air injection pressure and the conical chamber geometry were also investigated. A drop of the atomizer efficiency was noted when a shorter convergent chamber was used.
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- 2016
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42. Periodic structure of the dispersed phase in a forced jet and their effects on the particle dispersion
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Ignacio García, Luis Aísa, Esteban Calvo, José Luis Santolaya, and Juan A. García
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Physics ,Jet (fluid) ,Turbulence ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Reynolds number ,Mechanics ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Vortex ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,010309 optics ,Periodic function ,symbols.namesake ,Classical mechanics ,0103 physical sciences ,symbols ,Particle ,Dispersion (chemistry) ,Stokes number - Abstract
This paper presents an experimental study on an acoustically forced particle-laden jet. The acoustic disturbances cause a train of strong periodical vortex due to the selected frequency and its high excitation level. The jet Reynolds number is not small (Re = 11,900) and the particle Stokes number is about one, responding partly to the forcing. The flow was tested using a Phase Doppler Anemometer (PDA). The paper includes measurements of both gas and dispersed phase over the whole forcing cycle. An external post-processing (developed by the authors) carefully corrects the bias inherent to the operation principles of the PDA in all supplied averages (including the phase-averaged values). This post-processing gives also some variables which were defined ad-hoc to characterize the periodic structure of the flow. Such information is never given in the previous literature. This work continues a previous study done by the authors. Measurements detect three axial zones. The strong periodic gas vortices control the flow in the area close to the nozzle exit. They generate highly concentrated clusters of particles as well as tongue-shaped structures of radially ejected particles (or radial streaks). Downstream, the gas vortices vanish and inertia plays a central role in the development of the dispersed phase. The particle clustering ends here. Finally, all periodic motion disappears and flow degenerates into an unforced two-phase jet. Radially, the inertial zone of the particulate phase covers the outermost layers. The influence of the particle size is also discussed. The radial dispersion of particles across certain section is quantified by means of a suitably defined parameter. This dispersion radius was measured at the end of the area disturbed by forcing for both the forced and unforced jet. Thus, the comparison assesses the total effect of forcing on the transversal dispersion. The dispersion of the whole size distribution and of each particle size is quantified. Results show that forcing enhances the dispersion and it is controlled mainly by the periodic streaks while turbulence has a secondary role. The streak shape is accurately computed from the measurements and its extension has been successfully related with the particle's history and it size by means of a suitably defined Stokes number. Finally, this study supplies a set of high quality data useful to validate inherently unsteady numerical models. As stated by other authors, there is a lack of periodic well-characterized experiments for validation purposes which mimic the interaction between the particles and the large scales of turbulence.
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- 2016
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43. Older adults' accounts of the relationships between retirement timing and health: a descriptive qualitative analysis in Chile — ERRATUM
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Robin Shura, Sebastian Opazo, and Esteban Calvo
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Health (social science) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Social Psychology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Published
- 2020
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44. Kinlessness, Loneliness, and End of Life: A Cross-National Comparison of 20 Countries
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Katherine A. Ornstein, Esteban Calvo, Christine A. Mair, Rosario Donoso, and José T Medina
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Gerontology ,Abstracts ,Health (social science) ,Cross national comparison ,Session 5655 (Symposium) ,medicine ,Loneliness ,medicine.symptom ,AcademicSubjects/SOC02600 ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Countries across the globe are experiencing declining rates of fertility and marriage, which present a distinct challenge for older adults’ social integration, well-being, and end-of-life care. However, older adults who are “alone” (e.g., no partner, no child) may not be lonely, and end-of-life risks faced by “kinless” older adults likely vary significantly by country context. Using harmonized, cross-national data from 20 countries (United States (HRS), England (ELSA), and European Union (SHARE)), we examine associations between family structure, loneliness, and end-of-life outcomes. Although “kinless” family structures are associated with greater loneliness in the pooled sample, the percent of “kinless” who report no signs of loneliness ranges from 7% (Greece) to 56% (Denmark). Family structure is associated with various end-of-life outcomes, and these associations vary by country—likely reflecting differences in healthcare structure. We discuss distinctions between “being alone,” “being lonely,” and “being without care” in light of cross-national variation.
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- 2020
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45. Alcohol consumption predicts incidence of depressive episodes across 10 years among older adults in 19 countries
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Esteban Calvo, Kasim Allel, Katherine M. Keyes, Katherine A. Ornstein, and Ursula M. Staudinger
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Aging ,Internationality ,Alcohol Drinking ,business.industry ,Depression ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Hazard ratio ,Poison control ,Binge drinking ,Affect (psychology) ,Occupational safety and health ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,Medicine ,Humans ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Demography - Abstract
Alcohol consumption is increasing in many countries, and excessive alcohol consumption is particularly increasing among older adults. Excessive alcohol consumption causes morbidity and mortality, especially among older adults, including an increased risk of depressive episodes. We review the mechanisms through which alcohol consumption may affect depression, and argue that the effects of alcohol consumption on depressive episodes among older adults are understudied. We harmonized data among older adults (≥50 years) on alcohol consumption, depressive episodes, and an array of risk factors across 10 years and 19 countries (N=57,276). Alcohol consumption was categorized as current or long-term abstainer, occasional, moderate and heavy drinking at an average of 2.3 follow-up time points. Depressive episodes were measured through the CES-D or EURO-D. Multi-level Cox proportional frailty models in which the random effect has a multiplicative relationship to hazard were estimated with controls for co-occurring medical conditions, health behaviors, and demographics. Long-term alcohol abstainers had a higher hazard of depressive episodes (HR=1.14, 95% C.I. 1.08-1.21), as did those reporting occasional (HR=1.16, 95% C.I. 1.10-1.21) and heavy drinking (HR=1.22, 95% C.I. 1.13-1.30), compared with moderate drinking. Hazard ratios were attenuated in frailty models; heavy drinking, however, remained robustly associated in a random-effects model with a frailty component (HR=1.16, 95% C.I. 1.11-1.21). Interactions were observed by gender and smoking status: long-term abstainers, women's, and smokers' (HR for interaction, 1.04, 95% C.I. 1.00-1.07) hazards of depressive episodes increased more than what would be expected based on their multiplicative effects, when compared to moderate drinking, non-smoking men. Excessive alcohol consumption among older adults is a concern not only for physical, but also for mental health. Physician efforts to screen older adults for excessive alcohol use is critical for mental health to remain strong in aging populations.
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- 2019
46. Comparative analysis of aging policy reforms in Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, and Mexico
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Mónica Roqué, Juan Sebastián Amaro, Luis Miguel Gutiérrez Robledo, Esteban Calvo, Elizabeth Caro López, Fernando Morales-Martínez, Maureen Berho, Emiliana Rivera-Meza, Bernardita Canals, and Rosa Kornfeld
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Costa Rica ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Economic growth ,Aging ,Latin Americans ,United Nations ,Health Services for the Aged ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Argentina ,Developing country ,03 medical and health sciences ,030502 gerontology ,Comparative research ,Political science ,Humans ,Chile ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Developing Countries ,Mexico ,Demography ,media_common ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Poverty ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Perspective (graphical) ,Religion and Medicine ,Intervention (law) ,Charities ,Health Care Reform ,Organizational Case Studies ,0305 other medical science ,Gerontology ,Welfare - Abstract
This investigation uses case studies and comparative analysis to review and analyze aging policy in Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, and Mexico and uncovers similarities and relevant trends in the substance of historical and current aging policy across countries. Initial charity-based approaches to poverty and illness have been gradually replaced by a rights-based approach considering broader notions of well-being, and recent reforms emphasize the need for national, intersectoral, evidence-based policy. The results of this study have implications for understanding aging policy in Latin America from a welfare regime and policy makers' perspective, identifying priorities for intervention and informing policy reforms in developing countries worldwide.
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- 2018
47. Financiamiento de la salud mental en Chile: una deuda pendiente
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Paula Errázuriz, Camila Valdés, Paul A. Vöhringer, and Esteban Calvo
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Economic growth ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,MEDLINE ,Public policy ,General Medicine ,Mental health ,Health promotion ,Environmental health ,Economic cost ,Medicine ,Health education ,business ,Health policy - Abstract
In spite of the high prevalence of mental health disorders in Chile, there is a significant financing deficit in this area when compared to the world's average. The financing for mental health has not increased in accordance with the objectives proposed in the 2000 Chilean National Mental Health and Psychiatry Plan, and only three of the six mental health priorities proposed by this plan have secure financial coverage. The National Health Strategy for the Fulfilment of Health Objectives for the decade 2011-2020 acknowledges that mental disorders worsen the quality of life, increase the risk of physical illness, and have a substantial economic cost for the country. Thus, this article focuses on the importance of investing in mental health, the cost of not doing so, and the need for local mental health research. The article discusses how the United States is trying to eliminate the financial discrimination suffered by patients with mental health disorders, and concludes with public policy recommendations for Chile.
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- 2015
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48. Abstract 020: Heartbreaking Careers in Old Age: Retirement Sequences as a Non-Traditional Risk Factor for Cardiovascular Diseases
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Esteban Calvo, Ursula M. Staudinger, Ignacio Madero-Cabib, and Felipe Diaz-Toro
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Gerontology ,Heart disease ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Disease ,Risk factor ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business ,Stroke - Abstract
Background: Traditional factors leave substantial risk for incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) unexplained. Recent literature addressing this limitation identifies non-traditional risk factors, such as depression and clinical biomarkers. This study explored retirement sequences as a new non-traditional risk factor for CVD among older Americans. Methods: Heart disease and stroke incidence were measured for 7,880 Health and Retirement Study participants age 70 and over. Non-parametric survival curves and time-discrete survival models were used to compare the succeeding incidence of CVD across the retirement sequences that individuals followed between ages 60-61 and 70-71. We employed six holistic types of retirement sequences: (i) early for individuals who completely retired at or before age 62; (ii) complete for the conventional normative model of retirement by which people who are working in full-time jobs completely retire at the legally established age; (iii) ambiguous for people out of the labor force who shifted into retirement; (iv) partial for subjects with full-time jobs that claimed partial pension benefits in their early 60s; (v) compact for individuals moving from part-time positions into partial retirement; and (vi) late for individuals with full-time employments until their late 60s. These sequences were measured as longitudinal pathways of labor-force statuses and transitions measured in two-year intervals between the ages 60-61 to 70-71 years. Models were fitted for the whole sample, as well as males and females separately, adjusting for the probability of dying before CVD onset, sociodemographics, traditional risk factors, and clinical characteristics. Results: Out of all participants, 78.1% (6154/7880) reported at least one adverse cardiovascular event after age 70. Individuals following retirement sequences characterized by a progression from full-time jobs to either early retirement (heart disease, HR 3.07 CI95% 2.89-3.26 p Conclusions: Retirement sequences may indeed be regarded as a non-traditional risk factor for CVD in aging populations. Keywords: Retirement-Heart disease-Stroke-Work
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- 2018
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49. Influence of liquid properties on ultrasonic atomization
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Esteban Calvo, Juan A. García, José Luis Santolaya, Félix Barreras, Antonio Lozano, and Javier Alconchel
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Work (thermodynamics) ,Materials science ,Vapor pressure ,Nozzle ,Mechanics ,Signal ,Ultrasonic atomization ,Surface tension ,Amplitude ,Ultrasound ,Piezocramic ,Voltage - Abstract
[EN] Ultrasonic atomization is very convenient because it can generate droplets with diameters of a few microns and with very narrow size distribution. Besides, opposite to twin fluid nozzles, in ultrasonic atomization, droplet generation and transport are decoupled processes. Droplets are ejected from the liquid surface with very low velocities, so driving them is relatively simple. Although this atomization method is now common in some specific applications, for example in household humidifiers, there are still some details about the physics of this process that are not completely understood. Up to date, most of the published results have been limited to experiments with water. However, it has been demonstrated that atomization rates quickly decrease as liquid viscosity increases. This work analyzes the characteristics of ultrasonic atomization of some alternative fluids to determine if there is any influence of other physical properties such as surface tension or vapor pressure. Experiments are performed using a commercial piezoceramic disk with a resonance frequency of 1.65 MHz. The disk is excited with a sinusoidal signal with voltage amplitudes that go up to 60 V. Sprays are visually characterized analyzing instantaneous images and high speed video sequences. Besides atomization rates are calculated by measuring the weight loss in a fixed time., This work has been partially funded by the Secretariat of State for Research of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under project DPI2013-45814-P. Support of the Regiona
- Published
- 2017
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50. RETIREMENT SEQUENCES OF OLDER AMERICANS: MODERATELY DE-STANDARDIZED AND HIGHLY STRATIFIED ACROSS GENDER, CLASS, AND RACE
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Ursula M. Staudinger, Esteban Calvo, and Ignacio Madero-Cabib
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Employment ,Male ,Gerontology ,Aging ,Health (social science) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Class (philosophy) ,Public Policy ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Race (biology) ,Abstracts ,0302 clinical medicine ,Group differences ,030502 gerontology ,0502 economics and business ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,media_common ,Aged ,Retirement ,05 social sciences ,General Medicine ,Health and Retirement Study ,Class (biology) ,United States ,Unemployment ,Life course approach ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Social structure ,050203 business & management ,Panel data ,Demography - Abstract
Purpose of the Study A destandardization of labor-force patterns revolving around retirement has been observed in recent literature. It is unclear, however, to which degree and of which kind. This study looked at sequences rather than individual statuses or transitions and argued that differentiating older Americans’ retirement sequences by type, order, and timing and considering gender, class, and race differences yields a less destandardized picture. Design and Methods Sequence analysis was employed to analyze panel data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) for 7,881 individuals observed 6 consecutive times between ages 60–61 and 70–71. Results As expected, types of retirement sequences were identified that cannot be subsumed under the conventional model of complete retirement from full-time employment around age 65. However, these retirement sequences were not entirely destandardized, as some irreversibility and age-grading persisted. Further, the degree of destandardization varied along gender, class, and race. Unconventional sequences were archetypal for middle-level educated individuals and Blacks. Also, sequences for women and individuals with lower education showed more unemployment and part-time jobs, and less age-grading. Implications A sequence-analytic approach that models group differences uncovers misjudgments about the degree of destandardization of retirement sequences. When a continuous process is represented as individual transitions, the overall pattern of retirement sequences gets lost and appears destandardized. These patterns get further complicated by differences in social structures by gender, class, and race in ways that seem to reproduce advantages that men, more highly educated individuals, and Whites enjoy in numerous areas over the life course.
- Published
- 2017
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