19,957 research outputs found
Implementation of the Crisis Resolution Team model in adult mental health settings: a systematic review.
Crisis Resolution Teams (CRTs) aim to offer an alternative to hospital admission during mental health crises, providing rapid assessment, home treatment, and facilitation of early discharge from hospital. CRTs were implemented nationally in England following the NHS Plan of 2000. Single centre studies suggest CRTs can reduce hospital admissions and increase service users' satisfaction: however, there is also evidence that model implementation and outcomes vary considerably. Evidence on crucial characteristics of effective CRTs is needed to allow team functioning to be optimised. This review aims to establish what evidence, if any, is available regarding the characteristics of effective and acceptable CRTs
Climate Ready Estuaries - COAST in Action: 2012 Projects from Maine and New Hampshire
In summer 2011 the US EPA’s Climate Ready Estuaries program awarded funds to the Casco Bay Estuary Partnership (CBEP) in Portland, Maine, and the Piscataqua Region Estuaries Partnership (PREP) in coastal New Hampshire, to further develop and use COAST (COastal Adaptation to Sea level rise Tool) in their sea level rise adaptation planning processes. The New England Environmental Finance Center worked with municipal staff, elected officials, and other stakeholders to select specific locations, vulnerable assets, and adaptation actions to model using COAST. The EFC then collected the appropriate base data layers, ran the COAST simulations, and provided visual, numeric, and presentation-based products in support of the planning processes underway in both locations. These products helped galvanize support for the adaptation planning efforts. Through facilitated meetings they also led to stakeholders identifying specific action steps and begin to determine how to implement them
Carrier dynamics in ion-implanted GaAs studied by simulation and observation of terahertz emission
We have studied terahertz (THz) emission from arsenic-ion implanted GaAs both
experimentally and using a three-dimensional carrier dynamics simulation. A
uniform density of vacancies was formed over the optical absorption depth of
bulk GaAs samples by performing multi-energy implantations of arsenic ions (1
and 2.4MeV) and subsequent thermal annealing. In a series of THz emission
experiments the frequency of peak THz power was found to increase significantly
from 1.4 to 2.2THz when the ion implantation dose was increased from 10^13 to
10^16 cm-3. We used a semi-classical Monte-Carlo simulation of ultra-fast
carrier dynamics to reproduce and explain these results. The effect of the
ion-induced damage was included in the simulation by considering carrier
scattering at neutral and charged impurities, as well as carrier trapping at
defect sites. Higher vacancy concentrations and shorter carrier trapping times
both contributed to shorter simulated THz pulses, the latter being more
important over experimentally realistic parameter ranges.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Modern Under-Keel Clearance Management
This paper provides an overview of recent technological developments that have improved the ability to manage under-keel clearance (UKC) in ports. The inaccurate determination of the UKC of large-draft ships entering or leaving depthlimited ports can have serious safety, economic, and environmental consequences. A ship's master can manage his ship's UKC by: (1 ) taking actions that affect the ship's dynamic draft (such as changing the ship's speed) and (2) scheduling his ship's transit of the planned route to ensure that there will be sufficient water level for safe passage when the ship reaches locations with controlling depths. To do this, however, he must have accurate real-time and forecast environmental information along his route, as well as a validated method of predicting his ship's motion (and thus dynamic draft) for various situations. At a minimum, this information must include accurate charted depths and underwater hazards, water levels, and ship-specific channel-specific prediction formulas for dynamic draft (based on ship speed, static draft, and water depth). The dynamic draft calculation may also require information on currents, water density, and waves, swell, and/or seiching. Recently developed systems that can provide the necessary information for UKC management include: nowcast/forecast oceanographic model systems (a necessary step beyond real-time oceanographic systems); on-the-fly GPS systems to provide accurate ship motion data for calibrating dynamic-draft prediction systems; modern hydrographic measurement systems (such as shallowwater multibeam and side-scan sonar systems); and modern electronic nautical chart systems (and their supporting rapid update services). This paper includes discussion of what further improvements to these systems are needed to make effective UKC management a reality
Affine interval exchange transformations with flips and wandering intervals
There exist uniquely ergodic affine interval exchange transformations of
[0,1] with flips having wandering intervals and such that the support of the
invariant measure is a Cantor set.Comment: 7 page
The Preventing Australian Football Injuries with Exercise (PAFIX) Study: a group randomised controlled trial
Background: Knee injuries are a major injury concern for Australian Football players and participants of many other sports worldwide. There is increasing evidence from laboratory and biomechanically focused studies about the likely benefit of targeted exercise programmes to prevent knee injuries. However, there have been few international studies that have evaluated the effectiveness of such programmes in the real-world context of community sport that have combined epidemiological, behavioural and biomechanical approaches. Objective: To implement a fully piloted and tested exercise training intervention to reduce the number of football-related knee injuries. In so doing, to evaluate the intervention's effectiveness in the real-world context of community football and to determine if the underlying neural and biomechanical training adaptations are associated with decreased risk of injury. Setting: Adult players from community-level Australian Football clubs in two Australian states over the 2007-08 playing seasons. Methods: A group-clustered randomised controlled trial with teams of players randomly allocated to either a coach-delivered targeted exercise programme or usual behaviour (control). Epidemiological component: field- based injury surveillance and monitoring of training/game exposures. Behavioural component: evaluation of player and coach attitudes, knowledge, behaviours and com- pliance, both before and after the intervention is implemented. Biomechanical component: biomechanical, game mobility and neuromuscular parameters assessed to determine the fundamental effect of training on these factors and injury risk. Outcome measures: The rate and severity of injury in the intervention group compared with the control group. Changes, if any, in behavioural components. Process evaluation: coach delivery factors and likely sustainability
Preparing encoded states in an oscillator
Recently a scheme has been proposed for constructing quantum error-correcting
codes that embed a finite-dimensional code space in the infinite-dimensional
Hilbert space of a system described by continuous quantum variables. One of the
difficult steps in this scheme is the preparation of the encoded states. We
show how these states can be generated by coupling a continuous quantum
variable to a single qubit. An ion trap quantum computer provides a natural
setting for a continuous system coupled to a qubit. We discuss how encoded
states may be generated in an ion trap.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, RevTe
Gate induced g-factor control and dimensional transition for donors in multi-valley semiconductors
The dependence of the g-factors of semiconductor donors on applied electric
and magnetic fields is of immense importance in spin based quantum computation
and in semiconductor spintronics. The donor g-factor Stark shift is sensitive
to the orientation of the electric and magnetic fields and strongly influenced
by the band-structure and spin-orbit interactions of the host. Using a
multimillion atom tight-binding framework the spin-orbit Stark parameters are
computed for donors in multi-valley semiconductors, silicon and germanium.
Comparison with limited experimental data shows good agreement for a donor in
silicon. Results for gate induced transition from 3D to 2D wave function
confinement show that the corresponding g-factor shift in Si is experimentally
observable.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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