20 results match your criteria: "University of Central America[Affiliation]"

This article examines the landscape of Science, Technology, and Innovation policies in Central America, focusing on Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. These nations face significant challenges in leveraging STI for sustainable development, including financial constraints and limited resources. Additionally, Central America struggles with systemic issues such as corruption, violence, and high levels of emigration, further complicating efforts to advance STI.

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are facultative denitrifying anaerobes capable of using one-carbon compounds as a sole carbon source. sp. G-191 was enriched from Cedar Swamp, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, using a selective medium for methanol-utilizing bacteria.

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(dbSNP: ) is the most frequent and most-studied variant in negative myeloproliferative neoplasms and in the gene. The present study aimed to molecularly characterize variants in the complete coding region of the gene in patients with negative chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms. The study included 97 patients with negative myeloproliferative neoplasms, including polycythemia vera (n=38), essential thrombocythemia (n=55), and myelofibrosis (n=04).

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Aquatic macroinvertebrates are widely used as indicators for water quality assessment around the world. Modern strategies for environmental assessment implement molecular analysis to delimitate species of aquatic macroinvertebrates. Delimitation methods have been established to determine boundaries between species units using sequencing data from DNA barcodes and serve as first exploratory tools for taxonomic revisions.

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Objective: To assess the prevalence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) in selected health clinics in the three largest urban areas in Nicaragua, where data regarding coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) testing, morbidity and mortality is severely limited.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study, participants were tested for SARS-CoV-2 RNA by loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), and were tested for antibodies using immunoassays. A questionnaire recorded subjects' COVID-19-associated symptoms and risk factors.

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Intimate partner violence (IPV) among women in Latin America, including Honduras, is serious. To help IPV victims, a community-based educational program has been implemented. This study aims to examine the impact of IPV training among teachers and health care professionals ( = 160) on increases in IPV knowledge, attitudes, and self-efficacy when dealing with IPV victims using a pretest and posttest design.

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First report on prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infection among health-care workers in Nicaragua.

PLoS One

February 2021

Center for Discovery and Innovation in Parasitic Diseases, Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States of America.

The Nicaraguan COVID-19 situation is exceptional for Central America. The government restricts testing and testing supplies, and the true extent of the coronavirus crisis remains unknown. Dozens of deaths have been reported among health-care workers.

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COVID-19 in the Americas and the erosion of human rights for the poor.

PLoS Negl Trop Dis

December 2020

Texas Children's Center for Vaccine Development, Departments of Pediatrics and Molecular Virology & Microbiology, National School of Tropical Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America.

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Water Resources of Nicaragua and COVID-19: Between panic and apathy?

Braz J Biol

September 2020

Honorary Member of the Academy of Science of Nicaragua, Managua, Nicaragua.

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Digital health development and use has been expansive and operationalized in a variety of settings and modalities around the world, including in low- and middle-income countries. Mobile applications have been developed for a variety of health professionals and frontline health workers including physicians, midwives, nurses, and community health workers. However, there are no published studies on the development and use of digital health related to human rights fieldwork and to our knowledge no mobile health platforms exist specifically for use by frontline health workers to forensically and clinically document sexual violence.

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Critical Uncertainties and Gaps in the Environmental- and Social-Impact Assessment of the Proposed Interoceanic Canal through Nicaragua.

Bioscience

August 2016

Jorge A. Huete-Pérez Manuel Ortega-Hegg Katherine Vammen, Julio C. Miranda, Sergio Espinoza-Corriols, Adolfo Acevedo, María L. Acosta, Jaime Incer-Barquero, Jean Michel Maes, Salvador Montenegro-Guillén, and Pedro J. J. Alvarez are all affiliated with the Academy of Sciences of Nicaragua, in Managua, Nicaragua. JAH-P, MO-H, and KV are also affiliated with the University of Central America, in Managua, Nicaragua, as is Juan P. Gómez. JCM is also affiliated with CH2M Hill, in San Jose, California. MLA is also with the Center for Legal Assistance to Indigenous Peoples (CALPI), in Managua, Nicaragua. JI-B is also with the Nicaraguan Foundation for Sustainable Development, Fondo Natura, in Managua. JMM is also affiliated with the Entomology Museum, in León, Nicaragua. PJJA and Mason B. Tomson are with the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Rice University, in Houston, Texas. Gerald R. Urquhart is with the Lyman Briggs College and Department of Fisheries and Wildlife at Michigan State University, in East Lansing. Alan P. Covich is affiliated with the Odum School of Ecology at the University of Georgia, in Atlanta. Bruce E. Rittmann is with the Swette Center for Environmental Biotechnology at Arizona State University, in Tempe. Michael T. Brett is affiliated with the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Washington, in Seattle. Michael Hanemann is with the Department of Economics at Arizona State University, in Tempe. Andreas Härer and Axel Meyer are affiliated with the Laboratory for Zoology and Evolutionary Biology in the Department of Biology at the University of Konstanz, in Germany. Frank J. Joyce is with the Tropical Biology and Conservation Program and the Education Abroad Program at the University of California, in Goleta. J. Wesley Lauer is affiliated with the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and W. Lindsay Whitlow with the Department of Biology at Seattle University, in Washington. Jerald L. Schnoor is affiliated with the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Iowa, in Iowa City.

The proposed interoceanic canal will connect the Caribbean Sea with the Pacific Ocean, traversing Lake Nicaragua, the major freshwater reservoir in Central America. If completed, the canal would be the largest infrastructure-related excavation project on Earth. In November 2015, the Nicaraguan government approved an environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) for the canal.

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Objective: We examined the relationship between American Indian men's attitudes toward pregnancy prevention, STI/HIV prevention, and sexual risk behavior. Attention was given to: (1) attitudes and intentions to use condoms and sexual risk behavior; (2) STI/HIV prevention characteristics and sexual risk behavior; (3) attitudes toward abstinence and monogamy and sexual risk behavior; and (4) decision-making in relationships and sexual risk behavior.

Study Design: Our sample included 120 heterosexual American Indian men aged 18 to 24 living on a reservation.

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Seeking economic growth and job creation to tackle the nation's extreme poverty, the Nicaraguan government awarded a concession to build an interoceanic canal and associated projects to a recently formed Hong Kong based company with no track record or related expertise. This concession was awarded without a bidding process and in advance of any feasibility, socio-economic or environmental impact assessments; construction has begun without this information. The 278 km long interoceanic canal project may result in significant environmental and social impairments.

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We measured total mercury concentrations in water and fish of Lake Managua and Lake Apoyo. Water mercury concentrations were 10-fold higher in Lake Managua than in Lake Apoyo, although differences in mercury concentration in the most common native fish were not significant. One-fourth of the commercially fished tilapia in Lake Managua exceeded maximum recommended mercury levels for consumption among pregnant women and other at-risk groups, although bioavailability to fishes was lower than in previously studied sites in Brazil and Western Maryland.

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