105 research outputs found
Searches for the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle at LEP2 when R-parity is violated
Searches for the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle (LSP) are performed under the assumption that R-parity is violated via a single dominant LLEbar, LQDbar or UbarDbarDbar coupling. Data collected by the ALEPH detector at LEP with centre-of-mass energies from 189GeV to 208GeV and a total integrated luminosity of 628pb^{-1} are used. Searches for direct and indirect decays of pair produced neutralinos and charginos are carried out. In the absence of signal, parameter space of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model is constrained and limits on the mass of the LSP are obtained. Constraints from the Z width measurement, slepton, squark and Higgs searches are also used to exclude parameter space. The lower mass limits for direct decays at 95% confidence on the LSP are 60.2GeV/c^2, 42.3GeV/c^2 and 25.9GeV/c^2 for LLEbar, LQDbar and UbarDbarDbar coupling respectively. The lower mass limits for indirect decays at 95% confidence on the LSP are 58.7GeV^2, 44.2GeV^2 and 42.2GeV^2 for LLEbar, LQDbar and UbarDbarDbar coupling respectively. The limits are valid for all values of \mu, tan\beta, m_{0} and M_{2}
Using Double Tagging to measure the Performance of the Same Side Kaon Tagger in Data
This note describes a method for the measurement of the wrong-tag fraction of the Same Side Kaon tagger, in data using the Double Tagging procedure. The importance of such a measurement is explained and the method of Double Tagging described. This measurement was carried out using samples from reconstructed and decays. The impact of background in both decay channels on the measurement of was also studied. A general way of handling tagger correlations is presented. Finally, the Double Tagging measurement and the correlation investigation are performed on the present Monte Carlo data and the results presented. Results show that with 2fb-1 of data, the Double Tagging procedure can be used to measure the SS Kaon wrong-tag fraction to a statistical accuracy of 3.6% and 1.2% for the and channels respectively
Prevalence of overweight and obesity among students in private and public secondary schools in a peri-urban Nigerian town
Aims: To investigate the prevalence of overweight and obesity among secondary school students in Ekpoma.Study design: Cross sectional studyPlace and duration of the study: Private and public secondary schools in Ekpoma Edo state; from May to October,2011.Methodology: This is a school based analytical cross-sectional study of a sample of 417 students drawn from 4secondary schools in Ekpoma using the multistage sampling technique. Semi-structured interviewer-administeredquestionnaires were used to obtain qualitative information from the respondents; the weight of each respondent wasmeasured using a bathroom scale and the Body Mass Index (BMI) calculated and classified based on the AmericanMedical Association classification. The results obtained for students in private schools where then compared withthose of their peers in public secondary schools.Results: The prevalence of overweight and obesity was found to be 8.6% and 1% respectively; the mean BMI was19.6±2.6. More (67.5%) of those found to be overweight and obese were students in private schools (95% CI = 1.03-4.39 OR=2.11; ?2= 4.85). Similarly, 11.59% and 1.45% of students in private schools were overweight and obeserespectively compared to 5.71% and 0.95% for those in public schools. Majority (68%) of respondents had poorknowledge of the risk factors for and problems associated with being overweight or obese. Students in the uppersocial class are more likely to be overweight/obese compared to their peers in the lower social class((X 2HM = 10.35;P <.01; common odds ratio = 3)CONCLUSION: Over nutrition and under nutrition are both occurring in adolescents in a predominantly ruralsetting which suggests that Policy makers and health professionals need to implement strategies that will preventover nutrition side by side current efforts to curb under- nutrition. Reactivation of the school health program inNigeria is considered a helpful initial step
Market Sanitation: A Case Study of Oregbeni Market Benin - City Edo State, Nigeria
Poor market sanitation is an intractable problem in Nigeria and has contributed to the spread of infectious diseases and environmental degradation. This study was undertaken to determine the awareness and practice of solid waste management in market places among market users. It involved 180 store owners and customers recruited from Oregbeni market in Benin City, Nigeria. They were administered questionnaires while an in depth interview was conducted with the waste managers in the market. Checklist was used to carry out observation of the market place sanitation status. The data obtained was then analyzed and compared using SPSS. The results showed that a high proportion of respondents were aware of improper waste management (133; 62.8%) and agreed (174; 96.7%) that it is associated with many risks. Despite this high level of awareness, the practice of open dumping of waste was prevalent (108; 60.0%). Interestingly, 96.1% expressed willingness to pay for an improved waste disposal system while 55.6% rated the existing system as poor. Our findings suggest therefore that there is an urgent needs to improve waste collection, and disposal at market places.Keywords: Market sanitation, Solid Waste Management, Health hazards, Environmental degradation
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Effectiveness of online training in improving primary care doctorsâ competency in brief tobacco interventions: A cluster-randomized controlled trial of WHO modules in Delta State, Nigeria
Background
The World Health Organization (WHO) strongly recommends that brief tobacco interventions should be routinely offered in primary care. However, medical doctors do not consistently and effectively intervene during their encounters with cigarette smokers. There is a paucity of studies assessing the effect of training on the tobacco intervention competency of primary care doctors in Nigeria.
Aim
To evaluate the effectiveness of online training in improving competency in brief tobacco interventions among primary care doctors in Delta State, Nigeria.
Methods
A cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted among eligible doctors working in government-owned facilities. The 22 eligible Local Government Areas (LGAs) served as clusters. The intervention group received a WHO six-hour online course on brief tobacco cessation intervention, delivered via Zoom. The control group received no intervention. A structured questionnaire was sent to participants via WhatsApp before and six months after the training. The primary outcome variables were scores for knowledge, attitude, self-efficacy, and practice. Differences in change of scores between intervention and control groups were assessed with t-test. To adjust for clustering, these inter-group differences were further analyzed using linear mixed-effects regression modeling with study condition modeled as a fixed effect, and LGA of practice entered as a random effect.
Results
The intervention group had a significantly higher mean of change in scores for knowledge (effect size 0.344) and confidence (effect size 0.52).
Conclusion
The study shows that training, even online, positively affects clinician competency in brief tobacco intervention. This is important for primary care systems in developing countries. Mandatory in-service training and promotion of the WHO modules are recommended
Absolute mass lower limit for the lightest neutralino of the MSSM from data at up to 209 GeV
Charginos and neutralinos are searched for in the data collected by the ALEPH experiment at LEP for centre-of-mass energies up to 209 GeV. The negative result of these searches is combined with those from searches for sleptons and Higgs bosons to derive an absolute lower limit of 43.1 GeV/c(2) on the mass of the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP), assumed to be the,lightest neutralino. This limit is obtained in the framework of the MSSM with R-parity conservation and with gaugino and sfermion mass unification at the GUT scale and assuming no mixing in the stau sector. The LSP limit degrades only slightly to 42.4 GeV/c(2) if stau mixing is considered. Within the more constrained framework of minimal supergravity, the limit is 50 GeV/c(2)
Constraints on anomalous QGC's in interactions from 183 to 209 GeV
The acoplanar photon pairs produced in the reaction e(+) e(-) - â vvyy are analysed in the 700 pb(-1) of data collected by the ALEPH detector at centre-of-mass energies between 183 and 209 GeV. No deviation from the Standard Model predictions is seen in any of the distributions examined. The resulting 95% C.L. limits set on anomalous QGCs, a(0)(Z), a(c)(Z), a(0)(W) and a(c)(W), are -0.012 lt a(0)(Z)/Lambda(2) lt +0.019 GeV-2, -0.041 lt a(c)(Z)/Lambda(2) lt +0.044 GeV-2, -0.060 lt a(0)(W)/Lambda(2) lt +0.055 GeV-2, -0.099 lt a(c)(W)/Lambda(2) lt +0.093 GeV-2, where Lambda is the energy scale of the new physics responsible for the anomalous couplings
Limit on the LSP mass in RPV SUSY scenario
Setting a limit on the LSP mass under the assumption that R-parity is violated via a single dominant LLEbar coupling is performed carrying out a global scan of parameter space. Data collected by the ALEPH detector at LEP with centre-of-mass energies from 189GeV to 209GeV is used. Constraints from the Z-width measurement and Higgs searches are used to initially exclude as much of the parameter space as possible. Results from searches for the direct decays of pair produced neutralinos(and charginos)into 4Leptons+missing energy are mainly used. The mass limit is mass(lightest neutralino) > 34.5GeV at 95% confidence limit and is valid for all mu-tanb-m0-m2
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