833 research outputs found
Soil salinity, household wealth and food insecurity in tropical deltas: evidence from south-west coast of Bangladesh
As a creeping process, salinisation represents a significant long-term environmental risk in coastal and deltaic environments. Excess soil salinity may exacerbate existing risks of food insecurity in densely populated tropical deltas, which is likely to have a negative effect on human and ecological sustainability of these regions and beyond. This study focuses on the coastal regions of the Ganges–Brahmaputra delta in Bangladesh, and uses data from the 2010 Household Income and Expenditure Survey and the Soil Resource Development Institute to investigate the effect of soil salinity and wealth on household food security. The outcome variables are two widely used measures of food security: calorie availability and household expenditure on food items. The main explanatory variables tested include indicators of soil salinity and household-level socio-economic characteristics. The results of logistic regression show that in unadjusted models, soil salinisation has a significant negative effect on household food security. However, this impact becomes statistically insignificant when households’ wealth is taken into account. The results further suggest that education and remittance flows, but not gender or working status of the household head, are significant predictors of food insecurity in the study area. The findings indicate the need to focus scholarly and policy attention on reducing wealth inequalities in tropical deltas in the context of the global sustainable deltas initiative and the proposed Sustainable Development Goals.ESPA Deltas projectBelmont Forum DELTAS projectESPA – DFIDESRCNER
Soil salinity, household wealth and food insecurity in tropical deltas: evidence from south-west coast of Bangladesh
As a creeping process, salinisation represents a significant long-term environmental risk in coastal and deltaic environments. Excess soil salinity may exacerbate existing risks of food insecurity in densely populated tropical deltas, which is likely to have a negative effect on human and ecological sustainability of these regions and beyond. This study focuses on the coastal regions of the Ganges–Brahmaputra delta in Bangladesh, and uses data from the 2010 Household Income and Expenditure Survey and the Soil Resource Development Institute to investigate the effect of soil salinity and wealth on household food security. The outcome variables are two widely used measures of food security: calorie availability and household expenditure on food items. The main explanatory variables tested include indicators of soil salinity and household-level socio-economic characteristics. The results of logistic regression show that in unadjusted models, soil salinisation has a significant negative effect on household food security. However, this impact becomes statistically insignificant when households’ wealth is taken into account. The results further suggest that education and remittance flows, but not gender or working status of the household head, are significant predictors of food insecurity in the study area. The findings indicate the need to focus scholarly and policy attention on reducing wealth inequalities in tropical deltas in the context of the global sustainable deltas initiative and the proposed Sustainable Development Goals.ESPA Deltas projectBelmont Forum DELTAS projectESPA – DFIDESRCNER
COVID-19 vaccination perceptions and intentions of maternity care consumers and providers in Australia.
IntroductionVaccination against COVID-19 is a key global public health strategy. Health professionals including midwives and doctors support and influence vaccination uptake by childbearing women. There is currently no evidence regarding the COVID-19 vaccination perceptions and intentions of those who receive or provide maternity care in Australia. The aim of this study was to address this gap in knowledge and explore the perceptions and intentions regarding COVID-19 vaccination from consumers and providers of maternity care in Australia.MethodsA national cross-sectional online study conducted in early 2021 in Australia, a country that has had a very low number of COVID-19 cases and deaths. Recruitment was undertaken through parenting and health professional social media sites and professional college distribution lists. A total of 853 completed responses, from women (n = 326), maternity care providers including doctors (n = 58), midwives (n = 391) and midwifery students (n = 78).FindingsPersonal intention to be vaccinated ranged from 48-89% with doctors most likely and women least likely. Doctors and midwifery students were significantly more likely to recommend the vaccine to pregnant women in their care than midwives (pConclusionThis is the first study to explore the perceptions and intentions regarding COVID-19 vaccination from the perspective of those who receive and provide maternity care in Australia. Findings have utility to support targeted public health messaging for these and other cohorts
Experiences of receiving and providing maternity care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia: A five-cohort cross-sectional comparison.
Introduction
The global COVID-19 pandemic has radically changed the way health care is delivered in many countries around the world. Evidence on the experience of those receiving or providing maternity care is important to guide practice through this challenging time.
Methods
A cross-sectional study was conducted in Australia. Five key stakeholder cohorts were included to explore and compare the experiences of those receiving or providing care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Women, their partners, midwives, medical practitioners and midwifery students who had received or provided maternity care from March 2020 onwards in Australia were recruited via social media and invited to participate in an online survey released between 13th May and 24th June 2020; a total of 3701 completed responses were received.
Findings
While anxiety related to COVID-19 was high among all five cohorts, there were statistically significant differences between the responses from each cohort for most survey items. Women were more likely to indicate concern about their own and family’s health and safety in relation to COVID-19 whereas midwives, doctors and midwifery students were more likely to be concerned about occupational exposure to COVID-19 through working in a health setting than those receiving care through attending these environments. Midwifery students and women’s partners were more likely to respond that they felt isolated because of the changes to the way care was provided. Despite concerns about care received or provided not meeting expectations, most respondents were satisfied with the quality of care provided, although midwives and midwifery students were less likely to agree.
Conclusion
This paper provides a unique exploration and comparison of experiences of receiving and providing maternity care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia. Findings are useful to support further service changes and future service redesign. New evidence provided offers unique insight into key stakeholders’ experiences of the rapid changes to health services
Study of temperature dependent atomic correlations in MgB
We have studied the evolution with temperature of the local as well as the
average crystal structure of MgB using the real-space atomic pair
distribution function (PDF) measured by high resolution neutron powder
diffraction. We have investigated the correlations of the B-B and B-Mg nearest
neighbor pair motion by comparing, in the wide temperature range from T=10 K up
to T=600 K, the mean-square displacements (MSD) of single atoms with the
mean-square relative displacements (MSRD) obtained from the PDF peak
linewidths. The results show that the single atom B and Mg vibrations are
mostly decoupled from each other, with a small predominance of positive (in
phase) correlation factor for both the B-B and B-Mg pairs. The small positive
correlation is almost temperature independent, in contrast with our theoretical
calculations; this can be a direct consequence of the strong decay processes of
the anharmonic phonons
Theory for phonon-induced superconductivity in MgB
We analyze superonductivity in MgB observed below K resulting
from electron-phonon coupling involving a mode at meV and
most importantly the in-plane B-B vibration at
meV. The quasiparticles originating from - and -states couple
strongly to the low-frequency mode and the -vibrations respectively.
Using two-band Eliashberg theory, and , we calculate the gap functions (,
).
Our results provide an explanation of recent tunneling experiments.
We get .Comment: revised version, accepted for publication in PR
Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy in MgB 2
We present extensive Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy (STM/S) measurements at
low temperatures in the multiband superconductor MgB. We find a similar
behavior in single crystalline samples and in single grains, which clearly
shows the partial superconducting density of states of both the and
bands of this material. The superconducting gaps corresponding to both
bands are not single valued. Instead, we find a distribution of superconducting
gaps centered around 1.9mV and 7.5mV, corresponding respectively to each set of
bands. Interband scattering effects, leading to a single gap structure at 4mV
and a smaller critical temperature can be observed in some locations on the
surface. S-S junctions formed by pieces of MgB attached to the tip clearly
show the subharmonic gap structure associated with this type of junctions. We
discuss future developments and possible new effects associated with the
multiband nature of superconductivity in this compound.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Physica
Evidence for High-frequency Phonon Mediated S-wave Superconductivity : 11B-NMR Study of Al-doped MgB2
We report B-NMR study on Al-doped MgB that addresses a possible
mechanism for a high superconducting (SC) transition temperature () of
K in recently discovered MgB. The result of nuclear spin lattice
relaxation rate in the SC state revealed that the size in the SC gap is
not changed by substituting Al for Mg. The reduction on by Al-doping is
shown to be due to the decrease of . According to the McMillan
equation, the experimental relation between and the relative change in
allowed us to estimate a characteristic phonon frequency K and an electron-phonon coupling constant . These
results suggest that the high- superconductivity in MgB is mediated by
the strong electron-phonon coupling with high-frequency phonons.Comment: 6pages, 3figure
Ginzburg-Landau theory of vortices in a multi-gap superconductor
The Ginzburg-Landau functional for a two-gap superconductor is derived within
the weak-coupling BCS model. The two-gap Ginzburg-Landau theory is, then,
applied to investigate various magnetic properties of MgB2 including an upturn
temperature dependence of the transverse upper critical field and a core
structure of an isolated vortex. Orientation of vortex lattice relative to
crystallographic axes is studied for magnetic fields parallel to the c-axis. A
peculiar 30-degree rotation of the vortex lattice with increasing strength of
an applied field observed by neutron scattering is attributed to the multi-gap
nature of superconductivity in MgB2.Comment: 11 page
Pairing symmetry and properties of iron-based high temperature superconductors
Pairing symmetry is important to indentify the pairing mechanism. The
analysis becomes particularly timely and important for the newly discovered
iron-based multi-orbital superconductors. From group theory point of view we
classified all pairing matrices (in the orbital space) that carry irreducible
representations of the system. The quasiparticle gap falls into three
categories: full, nodal and gapless. The nodal-gap states show conventional
Volovik effect even for on-site pairing. The gapless states are odd in orbital
space, have a negative superfluid density and are therefore unstable. In
connection to experiments we proposed possible pairing states and implications
for the pairing mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 1 table, 2 figures, polished versio
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