1,351 research outputs found
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Verbal information transfer in real-life: when mothers worry about their child starting school
Verbal information transfer, one of Rachmanâs three pathways to fear, may be one way in which vulnerability for anxiety may be transmitted from parents to children. A community sample of mothers and their preschool-aged children (Nâ=â65) completed observational tasks relating to the child starting school. Mothers were asked to tell their child about social aspects of school; then children completed a brief play assessment involving ambiguous, school-based social scenarios. Mothers completed self-report questionnaires on social anxiety symptoms, general anxiety and depressive symptoms as well as a questionnaire on child anxiety symptoms and indicated whether they were personally worried about their child starting school. There was a significant difference in the information given to children about school between mothers who stated they were worried and those who stated they were not, with mothers who were worried more likely to mention unresolved threat, use at least one anxiety-related word, and show clear/consistent negativity (all psâ<â.01). Significant associations were also found between the emotional tone of mothersâ descriptions of school and childrenâs own representations of school. These findings support the theory that the information mothers give to their child may be influenced by their own concerns regarding their child, and that this verbal information affects child representations
A Place for Me? Older people and the future Northampton town centre
Research conducted by the University of Northampton in partnership with Age UK Northamptonshire, which asks for the views of older people and their experience of using Northampton town centre, was published on Friday 31st January 2020
Faculty Recital: John Warren and Friends
KSU School of Music presents John Warren and Friends featuring Associate Professor of Clarinet, John Warren.https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/musicprograms/1653/thumbnail.jp
Cultivating compassion through compassion circles: learning from experience in mental health care in the NHS
Purpose: This paper aims to discuss the importance of compassion in health care and experiences of Compassion Circles (CCs) in supporting it, placing this into the national policy context of the National Health Service (NHS), whilst focusing on lessons from using the practice in mental health care. Design/methodology/approach: This conceptual paper is a discussion of the context of compassion in health care and a description of model and related concepts of CCs. This paper also discusses lessons from implementation of CCs in mental health care. Findings: CCs were developed from an initial broad concern with the place of compassion and well-being in communities and organisations, particularly in health and social care after a number of scandals about failures of care. Through experience CCs have been refined into a flexible model of supporting staff in mental health care settings. Experience to date suggests they are a valuable method of increasing compassion for self and others, improving relationships between team members and raising issues of organisational support to enable compassionate practice. Research limitations/implications: This paper is a discussion of CCs and their conceptual underpinnings and of insights and lessons from their adoption to date, and more robust evaluation is required. Practical implications: As an emergent area of practice CCs have been seen to present a powerful and practical approach to supporting individual members of staff and teams. Organisations and individuals might wish to join the community of practice that exists around CCs to consider the potential of this intervention in their workplaces and add to the growing body of learning about it. It is worth further investigation to examine the impact of CCs on current concerns with maintaining staff well-being and engagement, and, hence, on stress, absence and the sustainability of work environments over time. Social implications: CCs present a promising means of developing a culture and practice of more compassion in mental health care and other care contexts. Originality/value: CCs have become supported in national NHS guidance and more support to adopt, evaluate and learn from this model is warranted. This paper is a contribution to developing a better understanding of the CCs model, implementation lessons and early insights into impact
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Development and evaluation of a new measure of childrenâs play: the Childrenâs Play Scale (CPS)
Abstract: Background: There is increasing recognition of the importance of childrenâs play from a public health perspective, given the links between play and childrenâs physical and mental health. The present research aimed to develop and evaluate a new parent-report questionnaire that measures the time children spend playing across a range of places and includes a supplement to evaluate how adventurously children play. Methods: The questionnaire was developed with input from a diverse group of parents and experts in childrenâs play. It was designed to yield a range of metrics including time spent playing per year, time spent playing outside, time spent playing in nature and level of adventurous play. The reliability of the questionnaire was then evaluated with 245 parents (149 mothers, 96 fathers) of 154 children aged 5â11 years. All participants completed the measure at time 1. At time 2, an average of 20 days later, 184 parents (111 mothers and 73 fathers) of 99 children completed the measure again. Results: Cross-informant agreement, evaluated using Concordance Correlation Coefficients (CCCs), ranged from 0.36 to 0.51. These fall in the poor to moderate range and are largely comparable to cross-informant agreement on other measures. Test-retest reliability for mothers was good (range 0.67â0.76) for time spent playing metrics. For fathers, test-retest reliability was lower (range 0.39â0.63). For both parents the average level of adventurous play variable had relatively poor test retest reliability (mothers = 0.49, fathers = 0.42). This variable also showed a significant increase from time 1 to time 2. This instability over time may be due to the timing of the research in relation to the Covid-19 lockdown and associated shifts in risk perception. Conclusions: The measure will be of value in future research focusing on the public health benefits and correlates of childrenâs play as well as researchers interested in childrenâs outdoor play and play in nature specifically. The development of the measure in collaboration with parents and experts in childrenâs play is a significant strength. It will be of value for future research to further validate the measure against play diaries or activity monitors
Lung development genes, adult lung function and cognitive traits
Lower lung function is associated with lower cognitive function and an increased risk of dementia. This has not been adequately explained and may partly reflect shared developmental pathways. In UK Biobank participants of European ancestry, we tested the association between lung function measures (forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume in 1 s to forced vital capacity ratio; n = 306 476) and cognitive traits including nine cognitive function test scores (n = 32 321â428 609), all-cause dementia, Alzheimerâs disease and vascular dementia (6805, 2859 and 1544 cases, respectively, and âŒ421 241 controls). In the same population, we derived summary statistics for associations between common genetic variants in 55 lung development genes and lung function measures and cognitive traits using adjusted linear/logistic regression models. Using a hypothesis-driven Bayesian co-localization analysis, we finally investigated the presence of shared genetic signals between lung function measures and cognitive traits at each of these 55 genes. Higher lung function measures were generally associated with higher scores of cognitive function tests as well as lower risk of dementia. The strongest association was between forced vital capacity and vascular dementia (adjusted hazard ratio 0.74 per standard deviation increase, 95% confidence interval 0.67â0.83). Of the 55 genes of interest, we found shared variants in four genes, namely: CSNK2B rs9267531 (forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume in 1 s to forced vital capacity ratio with fluid intelligence and pairs matching), NFATC3 rs548092276 & rs11275011 (forced expiratory volume in 1 s to forced vital capacity ratio with fluid intelligence), PTCH1 rs2297086 & rs539078574 (forced expiratory volume in 1 s to forced vital capacity ratio with reaction time) and KAT8 rs138259061 (forced vital capacity with pairs matching). However, the direction of effects was not in keeping with our hypothesis, i.e. variants associated with lower lung function were associated with better cognitive function or vice versa. We also found distinct variants associated with lung function and cognitive function in KAT8 (forced vital capacity and Alzheimerâs disease) and PTCH1 (forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume in 1 s to forced vital capacity ratio with fluid intelligence and reaction time). The links between CSNK2B and NFATC3 and cognitive traits have not been previously reported by genome-wide association studies. Despite shared genes and variants, our findings do not support the hypothesis that shared developmental signalling pathways explain the association of lower adult lung function with poorer cognitive function
Risk of Psychosis Among Individuals Who Have Presented to Hospital With Self-harm:A Prospective Nationwide Register Study in Sweden
BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESIS: Recent research showed that young people who presented to hospital with self-harm in Finland had a significantly elevated risk of later psychosis. We investigated the prospective relationship between hospital presentation for self-harm and risk of psychosis in an unprecedentedly large national Swedish cohort.STUDY DESIGN: We used inpatient and outpatient healthcare registers to identify all individuals born between 1981 and 1993 who were alive and living in Sweden on their 12th birthday and who presented to hospital one or more times with self-harm. We compared them with a matched cohort, followed up for up to 20 years, and compared the cumulative incidence of psychotic disorders. Furthermore, we examined whether the strength of the relationship between hospital presentation for self-harm and later psychosis changed over time by examining for cohort effects.STUDY RESULTS: In total, 28 908 (2.0%) individuals presented to hospital with self-harm without prior psychosis diagnosis during the follow-up. For individuals who presented to hospital with self-harm, the cumulative incidence of diagnosed psychosis was 20.7% at 20 years follow-up (hazard radioâ
=â
13.9, 95% CI 13.3-14.6, P-value <5â
Ăâ
10-308). There was no evidence of a dilution of the effect over time: while the incidence of hospital self-harm presentation increased, this did not result in an attenuation over time of the strength of the relationship between hospital self-harm presentation and subsequent psychosis.CONCLUSIONS: Individuals who present to hospital with self-harm in their teens and 20s represent an important risk group for psychosis prediction and prevention.</p
Environmental Improvement Potential of textiles (IMPRO Textiles)
Completed in May 2006 by the European Commissionâs Joint Research Centre (JRC), the
Environmental Impact of Products (EIPRO) study was conducted from a life cycle perspective. Whilst textiles was not
identified within the highest areas of impact they did dominate across all impact categories with a contribution of 2â10 % of all consumption.
A study on the Environmental Improvement of Products (IMPRO) for textiles was developed in order to
identify technically and socio-economically feasible means of improving the environmental performance
of textile products. The objectives of the study were to:
- identify the market share and consumption of textile products in the EU-27;
- estimate and compare the potential environmental impacts of textile products and their value chain (life cycle) consumed in the EU-27;
- identify the main environmental improvement options and estimate their potential;
- assess the socioeconomic impacts of the identified options.
The analysis of the possible improvement options suggest that a significant reduction of impacts can
potentially be achieved by targeting consumers. In particular, some of these options would require
small behavioural changes. To achieve such changes it is necessary for consumers to be aware of
these issues, and it is imperative that infrastructural requirements can be met. Promotion of ecolabels, and examples of best practice cases, could be used as tools.
Concerning improvement options related to supply factors, it is more challenging to make an accurate
assessment and comparison of the improvement potential of single actions due to a lack of experience with emerging techniques. Nevertheless, the analysis suggests that significant improvements could be achieved by encouraging practices which can produce less environment impacts, such as the recycling of effluent water.JRC.J.5 - Sustainable Production and Consumptio
STAT3 and HIF1Â signaling drives oncogenic cellular phenotypes in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors
Therapeutic options are limited for neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1)-associated malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST) and clinical trials using drug agents have so far been unsuccessful. This lack of clinical success is likely attributed to high levels of intratumoral molecular heterogeneity and variations in signal transduction within MPNSTs. To better explore the variance of malignant signaling properties within heterogeneous MPNSTs, four MPNST cell lines (ST8814, S462, S1844.1, and S1507.2) were used. The data demonstrate that small-molecule inhibition of the MET proto-oncogene and mTOR had variable outcome when preventing wound healing, cell migration, and invasion, with the S462 cells being highly resistant to both. Of interest, targeted inhibition of the STAT3 transcription factor suppressed wound healing, cell migration, invasion, and tumor formation in all four MPNST lines, which demonstrates that unlike MET and mTOR, STAT3 functions as a common driver of tumorigenesis in NF1-MPNSTs. Of clinical importance, STAT3 knockdown was sufficient to block the expression of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)1α, HIF2α, and VEGF-A in all four MPNST lines. Finally, the data demonstrate that wound healing, cell migration, invasion, and tumor formation through STAT3 are highly dependent on HIF signaling, where knockdown of HIF1α ablated these oncogenic facets of STAT3
Genotype and cytokinin effects on soybean yield and biological nitrogen fixation across soil temperatures
High nitrogen (N) supply is required for highâyielding soybean, but low soil temperatures in either early production systems or cool environments delay nodulation and limit biological nitrogen fixation (BNF). Because cytokinins are key signalling hormones in mediating nodule formation and our initial controlled environment experiment indicated that seed cytokinin treatment increased early BNF and total nodule area, it was used in field trials. Cytokinin was applied (seed or foliar) to two commercial soybean genotypes (DM50I17 and DM40R16) in field trials with early (September and early November) and conventional (late November) sowing dates in Argentina. In the field, DMR50I7 achieved consistent yields across sowing dates because increased BNF compensated for limited soil N uptake in early sowing dates, also leading to 25% higher nitrogen use efficiency (NUE). Surprisingly, soil N uptake was more coldâsensitive than BNF with greater and prolonged N fixation in early sowing, perhaps through delayed nodulation, leading to improved N harvest index. Cytokinin seed treatment increased BNF (26%) in DM40R16 especially in early sowing dates. Although cytokinin improved cold tolerance of BNF, this was not explained by altered nodulation and did not increase yield. Here we show genetic differences in N supply in commercial soybean genotypes and the importance of BNF to maintain yield in early sown soybean
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