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Heat on the Rise: Investigating the Increasingly Hazardous Working Conditions of the Blueberry Industry
The agricultural industry is becoming increasingly hazardous for field workers as temperatures become more extreme. As the demand for labor-intensive fresh produce increases in the United States, more work is demanded of our agricultural laborers, who in turn face increasing rates of exposure to high temperatures. Blueberries are an example of a labor- intensive crop and offer a window into increasing exposure within the agricultural industry. This study examines the changing heat-related impacts on the blueberry industry to determine if agricultural laborers are being exposed to increasingly hazardous conditions. Parameter-elevation Regressions on Independent Slopes Model (PRISM) data, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Cropscape data, and USDA Weekly Shipment data are synthesized to evaluate trends in hot days, blueberry demand, harvest windows, and person days of hazardous heat exposure during harvest. These trends indicate that conditions are becoming increasingly hazardous, as seen in the standard harvest season experiencing increases in days above high temperature thresholds. To account for and protect agricultural laborers from this increasing exposure to hazardous conditions, several mitigation strategies are discussed as possibilities for implementation are explored. Strategies discussed include expansion of worker safety training, implementation of supportive infrastructure, and increased pay scales. While this research quantifies heat-related impacts to agricultural laborers, further investigation is needed about compounding factors of exposure, such as humidity and chemical pesticide use, to make policy recommendations for the agriculture sector.
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Professional practices, training, and funding mechanisms: A survey of pediatric primary care psychologists
The integration of mental health services in primary care settings has expanded rapidly in recent years with psychologists being at the forefront of efforts to promote healthy behaviors, reduce disease, and care for behavioral, emotional, and developmental needs to promote overall health and well-being for children and families (Asarnow, Kolko, Miranda,&Kazak, 2017; Stancin& Perrin, 2014). While there are many psychologists working in pediatric primary care (PPC), little is known about the specific activities that these psychologists engage in, the training they receive, or funding mechanisms that support their work. This study sought to address this gap in the literature through a survey of psychologists working in PPC. An anonymous online survey was disseminated to members of professional organizations and listservs who were identified as having interest in PPC. Psychologists (N-65) currently practicing in PPC completed the survey by reporting on clinical roles and practices, professional training, practice settings, and funding supports in PPC settings. Results indicate that psychologists assume a number of roles in PPC including providing individual and family therapy, conducting screenings for child mental health concerns, and providing consultation to medical colleagues. Many psychologists also provide supervision and offer educational opportunities for those in related fields, such as medicine and social work. Engagement in research activities was identified as a secondary activity. It was reported that a number of clinical activities were not billed for on a regular basis. Additional areas of research will be discussed along with implications for clinical services in PPC.. © 2017 American Psychological Association
Increasing Thiamine Concentrations in Lake Trout Eggs from Lakes Huron and Michigan Coincide with Low Alewife Abundance
Lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in the Laurentian Great Lakes suffer from thiamine deficiency as a result of adult lake trout consuming prey containing thiaminase, a thiamine-degrading enzyme. Sufficiently low egg thiamine concentrations result in direct mortality of or sublethal effects on newly hatched lake trout fry. To determine the prevalence and severity of low thiamine in lake trout eggs, we monitored thiamine concentrations in lake trout eggs from 15 sites in Lakes Huron and Michigan from 2001 to 2009. Lake trout egg thiamine concentrations at most sites in both lakes were initially low and increased over time at 11 of 15 sites, and the proportion of females with egg thiamine concentrations lower than the recommended management objective of 4 nmol/g decreased over time at eight sites. Egg thiamine concentrations at five of six sites in Lakes Huron and Michigan were significantly inversely related to site-specific estimates of mean abundance of alewives Alosa pseudoharengus, and successful natural reproduction of lake trout has been observed in Lake Huron since the alewife population crashed. These results support the hypothesis that low egg thiamine in Great Lakes lake trout is associated with increased alewife abundance and that low alewife abundance may currently be a prerequisite for successful reproduction by lake trout in the Great Lakes
Parallelized and Vectorized Tracking Using Kalman Filters with CMS Detector Geometry and Events
The High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider at CERN will be characterized by
greater pileup of events and higher occupancy, making the track reconstruction
even more computationally demanding. Existing algorithms at the LHC are based
on Kalman filter techniques with proven excellent physics performance under a
variety of conditions. Starting in 2014, we have been developing
Kalman-filter-based methods for track finding and fitting adapted for many-core
SIMD processors that are becoming dominant in high-performance systems.
This paper summarizes the latest extensions to our software that allow it to
run on the realistic CMS-2017 tracker geometry using CMSSW-generated events,
including pileup. The reconstructed tracks can be validated against either the
CMSSW simulation that generated the hits, or the CMSSW reconstruction of the
tracks. In general, the code's computational performance has continued to
improve while the above capabilities were being added. We demonstrate that the
present Kalman filter implementation is able to reconstruct events with
comparable physics performance to CMSSW, while providing generally better
computational performance. Further plans for advancing the software are
discussed
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Synthesis of 3-Farnesyl Salicylic Acid, a Novel Antimicrobial from Piper multiplinervium
Both 3-farnesyl salicylic acid and 3-geranyl salicylic acid were synthesized from 2,6-dibromophenol and showed low levels of antimicrobial activity against E. coli strains
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