599 research outputs found
Perceived survival expectations and young adult outcomes
Anticipation of an early death may be a marker of negative health trajectories. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the impact of perceived chances of living to age 35 (perceived survival expectations, PSE) on socioeconomic status and risk behaviors in young adulthood (age 24-32). The secondary aim was to examine predictors of PSE and change in PSE. These aims were met through analyses of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) initiated in 1994-95 among 20,745 adolescents in grades 7-12 with follow-up interviews in 1996 (Wave II), 2001-2002 (Wave III) and 2008 (Wave IV; ages 24-32). At Wave I, one in seven adolescents reported that their chance of living to age 35 was 50-50 or worse. Older adolescents reported lower PSE than their younger-aged peers. Among the foreign-born, increasing time in the U.S. was related to higher PSE. Most respondents reported high or higher PSE at Wave III compared to Wave I. High neighborhood poverty rate, low parental education, black race and perceptions that the neighborhood was unsafe were related to low PSE at Waves I and III. Low Waves I and III PSE predicted lower education attainment and personal earnings at Wave IV controlling for confounding factors like previous family socioeconomic status, sociodemographic characteristics, and depressive symptoms. Low PSE also predicted an increased risk of suicidal ideation and suicide attempt in young adulthood controlling for depressive symptoms and history of suicide among family members and friends. Low PSE additionally predicted smoking at least a pack a day; consuming more than the recommended daily limits for moderate drinking; and using illicit substances other than marijuana at least weekly controlling for previous substance use and depressive symptoms. PSE can be utilized to identify at-risk youth. Its assessment can be incorporated into discussions with youth about their expectations for their future and prospects for education and employment. Because beliefs about the future are informed by evaluations of present conditions, the promotion of positive future orientations necessitates investment in resources that promote youth development, security and health
Evaluating the Ability to Achieve Efficiency in Providing Services of the Freight Forwarding Firms in Viet Nam
In recent years, Vietnam freight forwarding industry is growing and contributing significantly to the national GDP. However, the efficiency in providing service delivery at the domestic firms is not high to compete with multinational companies that are strong potential and finance. There have been many studies on freight forwarding, but mainly qualitative research and other studies are in-depth analysis logistics. This research presents the factors that affect efficiency in providing services. This research has been used factor analysis method and binary regression model (Binary Logistics) and identified 4 factors that affect the efficiency in providing service of freight forwarding firms: (1) Resources of business (2) Outcomes (3) The quality of staffs (4) The relationship between enterprises and their customers, and outcomes is the factor provided the highest positive correlation to the ability to achieve efficiency in providing services of freight forwarding firms.Binary Logistic model showed the probability of business efficiency is 72.5%. Thus, at the level of resources to provide services is 3.35, the outcome is 3.66, quality of the staffs is 3.59 and the relationship with customers is 3.40, shows that enterprises operate efficiently. Value prediction accuracy of the model is 93.3%
Pregnant Questions: The Importance of Pragmatic Awareness in Maternal Health Question Answering
Questions posed by information-seeking users often contain implicit false or
potentially harmful assumptions. In a high-risk domain such as maternal and
infant health, a question-answering system must recognize these pragmatic
constraints and go beyond simply answering user questions, examining them in
context to respond helpfully. To achieve this, we study assumptions and
implications, or pragmatic inferences, made when mothers ask questions about
pregnancy and infant care by collecting a dataset of 2,727 inferences from 500
questions across three diverse sources. We study how health experts naturally
address these inferences when writing answers, and illustrate that informing
existing QA pipelines with pragmatic inferences produces responses that are
more complete, mitigating the propagation of harmful beliefs.Comment: Accepted to NAACL 202
Acetaldehyde-Mediated Neurotoxicity: Relevance to Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
Ethanol-induced neuro-developmental abnormalities are associated with impaired insulin and IGF signaling, and increased oxidative stress in CNS neurons. We examined the roles of ethanol and its principal toxic metabolite, acetaldehyde, as mediators of impaired insulin/IGF signaling and oxidative injury in immature cerebellar neurons. Cultures were exposed to 3.5 mM acetaldehyde or 50 mM ethanol ± 4-methylpyrazole (4-MP), an inhibitor of ethanol metabolism, and viability, mitochondrial function, oxidative stress, DNA damage, and insulin responsiveness were measured 48 hours later. Acetaldehyde or ethanol increased neuronal death and levels of 8-OHdG and 4-HNE, and reduced mitochondrial function. Ethanol inhibited insulin responsiveness, whereas acetaldehyde did not. 4-MP abated ethanol-induced oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction, but failed to restore insulin responsiveness. Furthermore, alcohol and aldehyde metabolizing enzyme genes were inhibited by prenatal ethanol exposure; this effect was mediated by acetaldehyde and not ethanol + 4MP. These findings suggest that brain insulin resistance in prenatal alcohol exposure is caused by direct effects of ethanol, whereas oxidative stress induced neuronal injury is likely mediated by ethanol and its toxic metabolites. Moreover, the adverse effects of prenatal ethanol exposure on brain development may be exacerbated by down-regulation of genes needed for metabolism and detoxification of alcohol in the brain
Cross-national comparison of socioeconomic inequalities in obesity in the United States and Canada
Introduction: Prior cross-national studies of socioeconomic inequalities in obesity have only compared summary indices of inequality but not specific, policy-relevant dimensions of inequality: (a) shape of the socioeconomic gradient in obesity, (b) magnitude of differentials in obesity across socioeconomic levels and, (c) level of obesity at any given socioeconomic level. We use unique data on two highly comparable societies – U.S. and Canada - to contrast each of these inequality dimensions. Methods: Data came from the 2002/2003 Joint Canada/U.S. Survey of Health. We calculated adjusted prevalence ratios (APRs) for obesity (compared to normal weight) by income quintile and education group separately for both nations and, between Canadians and Americans in the same income or education group. Results: In the U.S., every socioeconomic group except the college educated had significant excess prevalence of obesity. By contrast in Canada, only those with less than high school were worse off, suggesting that the shape of the socioeconomic gradient differs in the two countries. U.S. differentials between socioeconomic levels were also larger than in Canada (e.g., PR quintile 1 compared to quintile 5 was 1.82 in the U.S. [95 % CI: 1.52-2.19] but 1.45 in Canada [95 % CI: 1.10-1.91]). At the lower end of the socioeconomic gradient, obesity was more prevalent in the U.S. than in Canada. Conclusions: Our results suggest there is variation between U.S. and Canada in different dimensions of socioeconomic inequalities in obesity. Future research should examine a broader set of nations and test whether specific policies or environmental exposures can explain these differences
Solidarity and Strife After the Atlanta Spa Shootings: A Mixed Methods Study Characterizing Twitter Discussions by Qualitative Analysis and Machine Learning
Background: On March 16, 2021, a white man shot and killed eight victims, six of whom were Asian women at Atlanta-area spa and massage parlors. The aims of the study were to: (1) qualitatively summarize themes of tweets related to race, ethnicity, and racism immediately following the Atlanta spa shootings, and (2) examine temporal trends in expressions hate speech and solidarity before and after the Atlanta spa shootings using a new methodology for hate speech analysis.
Methods: A random 1% sample of publicly available tweets was collected from January to April 2021. The analytic sample included 708,933 tweets using race-related keywords. This sample was analyzed for hate speech using a newly developed method for combining faceted item response theory with deep learning to measure a continuum of hate speech, from solidarity race-related speech to use of violent, racist language. A qualitative content analysis was conducted on random samples of 1,000 tweets referencing Asians before the Atlanta spa shootings from January to March 15, 2021 and 2,000 tweets referencing Asians after the shooting from March 17 to 28 to capture the immediate reactions and discussions following the shootings.
Results: Qualitative themes that emerged included solidarity (4% before the shootings vs. 17% after), condemnation of the shootings (9% after), racism (10% before vs. 18% after), role of racist language during the pandemic (2 vs. 6%), intersectional vulnerabilities (4 vs. 6%), relationship between Asian and Black struggles against racism (5 vs. 7%), and discussions not related (74 vs. 37%). The quantitative hate speech model showed a decrease in the proportion of tweets referencing Asians that expressed racism (from 1.4% 7 days prior to the event from to 1.0% in the 3 days after). The percent of tweets referencing Asians that expressed solidarity speech increased by 20% (from 22.7 to 27.2% during the same time period) (p \u3c 0.001) and returned to its earlier rate within about 2 weeks.
Discussion: Our analysis highlights some complexities of discrimination and the importance of nuanced evaluation of online speech. Findings suggest the importance of tracking hate and solidarity speech. By understanding the conversations emerging from social media, we may learn about possible ways to produce solidarity promoting messages and dampen hate messages
Light with a self-torque: extreme-ultraviolet beams with time-varying orbital angular momentum
Twisted light fields carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) provide powerful
capabilities for applications in optical communications, microscopy, quantum
optics and microparticle rotation. Here we introduce and experimentally
validate a new class of light beams, whose unique property is associated with a
temporal OAM variation along a pulse: the self-torque of light. Self-torque is
a phenomenon that can arise from matter-field interactions in electrodynamics
and general relativity, but to date, there has been no optical analog. In
particular, the self-torque of light is an inherent property, which is
distinguished from the mechanical torque exerted by OAM beams when interacting
with physical systems. We demonstrate that self-torqued beams in the
extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) naturally arise as a necessary consequence of angular
momentum conservation in non-perturbative high-order harmonic generation when
driven by time-delayed pulses with different OAM. In addition, the
time-dependent OAM naturally induces an azimuthal frequency chirp, which
provides a signature for monitoring the self-torque of high-harmonic EUV beams.
Such self-torqued EUV beams can serve as unique tools for imaging magnetic and
topological excitations, for launching selective excitation of quantum matter,
and for manipulating molecules and nanostructures on unprecedented time and
length scales.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Leveraging 13 million responses to the U.S. COVID-19 Trends and Impact Survey to examine vaccine hesitancy, vaccination, and mask wearing, January 2021-February 2022
The urgency of the COVID-19 pandemic called upon the joint efforts from the scientific and private sectors to work together to track vaccine acceptance and prevention behaviors. Our study utilized individual responses to the Delphi Group at Carnegie Mellon University U.S. COVID-19 Trends and Impact Survey, in partnership with Facebook. We retrieved survey data from January 2021 to February 2022 (n = 13,426,245) to examine contextual and individual-level predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, vaccination, and mask wearing in the United States. Adjusted logistic regression models were developed to examine individual and ZIP code predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and vaccination status. Given the COVID-19 vaccine was rolled out in phases in the U.S. we conducted analyses stratified by time, January 2021-May 2021 (Time 1) and June 2021-February 2022 (Time 2). In January 2021 only 9% of U.S. Facebook respondents reported receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, and 45% were vaccine hesitant. By February 2022, 80% of U.S. Facebook respondents were vaccinated and only 18% were vaccine hesitant. Individuals who were older, held higher educational degrees, worked in white collar jobs, wore a mask most or all the time, and identified as white and Asian had higher COVID-19 vaccination rates and lower vaccine hesitancy across Time 1 and Time 2. Essential workers and blue-collar occupations had lower COVID vaccinations and higher vaccine hesitancy. By Time 2, all adults were eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, but blacks and multiracial individuals had lower vaccination and higher vaccine hesitancy compared to whites. Those 55 years and older and females had higher odds of wearing masks most or all the time. Protective service, construction, and installation and repair occupations had lower odds of wearing masks. ZIP Code level percentage of the population with a bachelors’ which was associated with mask wearing, higher vaccination, and lower vaccine hesitancy. Associations found in earlier phases of the pandemic were generally found to also be present later in the pandemic, indicating stability in inequities. Additionally, inequities in these important outcomes suggests more work is needed to bridge gaps to ensure that the burden of COVID-19 risk does not disproportionately fall upon subgroups of the population.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-14286-
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