3,504 research outputs found
Socio-economic inequalities in physical functioning: a comparative study of English and Greek elderly men
The associations between socio-economic position (SEP) and physical functioning have frequently been investigated but little is known about which measures of SEP are the best to use for older people. This study examined how different SEP indicators related to the physical functioning of men aged 50 or more years in England and Greece. The data derived from Wave 1 of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) and from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). Self-reported physical functioning limitations and mobility difficulties were combined and categorised into ‘no disability’, ‘mild disability’ and ‘severe disability’. The SEP indicators studied were: wealth, educational level and occupational class. The findings indicate that respondents with less wealth, fewer educational qualifications and lower occupational class were more likely to experience mild or severe physical disability than those of high SEP. When all three measures of SEP were adjusted for each other, in both samples wealth maintained a strong association with mild and severe disability, while education was associated with severe disability but only among English men. Occupational class was not strongly associated with physical disability in either case. Hence, among English and Greek older men, wealth was a more important predictor of physical functioning difficulties than either occupational class or education
Electron paramagnetic resonance and photochromism of in diamond
The defect in diamond formed by a vacancy surrounded by three
nearest-neighbor nitrogen atoms and one carbon atom,
, is found in of natural diamonds.
Despite being the earliest electron paramagnetic
resonance spectrum observed in diamond, to date no satisfactory simulation of
the spectrum for an arbitrary magnetic field direction has been produced due to
its complexity. In this work, is identified in
-doped synthetic diamond following irradiation and annealing.
The spin Hamiltonian parameters are revised
and used to refine the parameters for ,
enabling the latter to be accurately simulated and fitted for an arbitrary
magnetic field direction. Study of under
excitation with green light indicates charge transfer between
and . It is argued that this charge
transfer is facilitated by direct ionization of ,
an as-yet unobserved charge state of
Epigenetics of complex traits and diseases
Thousands of genetic and epigenetic variants have been identified for many common diseases including cancer through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS). To advance the complex interpretation of both GWAS and EWAS results, I developed new software tools (FORGE2 and eFORGE) for the analysis and interpretation of GWAS and EWAS data, respectively. Both tools determine the cell type-specific regulatory component of a set of target regions (either GWAS-identified genetic variants or EWAS-identified differentially methylated positions). This is achieved by detecting enrichment of overlap with histone mark peaks or DNase I hypersensitive sites across hundreds of tissues, primary cell types, and cell lines from the ENCODE, Roadmap Epigenomics, and BLUEPRINT projects. Application of both tools to publicly available datasets identified novel disease-relevant cell types for many common diseases, a stem cell-like signature in cancer EWAS, and also demonstrated the ability to detect cell-composition effects for EWAS performed on heterogeneous tissues. To complement these bioinformatics efforts and validate selected variants predicted by FORGE2, eFORGE and additional analyses, I performed conformation capture using 4C-seq to fine-map the 3D context of the genomic regions involved, uncovering novel interactions for autoimmunity-associated variants and IKZF3
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Quantifying the value of ecosystem services: a case study of honeybee pollination in the UK
There is concern that insect pollinators, such as honey bees, are currently declining in abundance, and are under serious threat from environmental changes such as habitat loss and climate change; the use of pesticides in intensive agriculture, and emerging diseases. This paper aims to evaluate how much public support there would be in preventing further decline to maintain the current number of bee colonies in the UK. The contingent valuation method (CVM) was used to obtain the willingness to pay (WTP) for a theoretical pollinator protection policy. Respondents were asked whether they would be WTP to support such a policy and how much would they pay? Results show that the mean WTP to support the bee protection policy was £1.37/week/household. Based on there being 24.9 million households in the UK, this is equivalent to £1.77 billion per year. This total value can show the importance of maintaining the overall pollination service to policy makers. We compare this total with estimates obtained using a simple market valuation of pollination for the UK
Socioeconomic inequalities in physical functioning: A comparative study of English and Greek elderly males
The associations between socio-economic position (SEP) and physical functioning have frequently been investigated but little is known about which measures of SEP are the best to use for older people. This study examined how different SEP indicators related to the physical functioning of men aged 50 or more years in England and Greece. The data derived from Wave 1 of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) and from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). Self-reported physical functioning limitations and mobility difficulties were combined and categorised into ‘no disability’, ‘mild disability’ and ‘severe disability’. The SEP indicators studied were: wealth, educational level and occupational class. The findings indicate that respondents with less wealth, fewer educational qualifications and lower occupational class were more likely to experience mild or severe physical disability than those of high SEP. When all three measures of SEP were adjusted for each other, in both samples wealth maintained a strong association with mild and severe disability, while education was associated with severe disability but only among English men. Occupational class was not strongly associated with physical disability in either case. Hence, among English and Greek older men, wealth was a more important predictor of physical functioning difficulties than either occupational class or education
All-optical hyperpolarization of electron and nuclear spins in diamond
Low thermal polarization of nuclear spins is a primary sensitivity limitation
for nuclear magnetic resonance. Here we demonstrate optically pumped
(microwave-free) nuclear spin polarization of and
in -doped diamond.
polarization enhancements up to above thermal equilibrium are observed
in the paramagnetic system . Nuclear spin polarization is
shown to diffuse to bulk with NMR enhancements of at
room temperature and at , enabling a route to
microwave-free high-sensitivity NMR study of biological samples in ambient
conditions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Gender-specific changes in well-being in older people with coronary heart disease: evidence from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing
Objectives: The objective of this study is to investigate gender-specific trajectories in well-being among older people with coronary heart disease (CHD) and to compare them with those of healthy people.
Method: The study included a sample of 4496 participants from the first three waves of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (2002–2003 to 2006–2007). We measured well-being using quality of life (CASP-19; ‘control’, ‘autonomy’, ‘pleasure’ and ‘self-realization’) and depressive caseness (three or more symptoms on the CESD-8; Centre for Epidemiologic Study Depression scale).
Results: After adjustment, at two– and four–years follow-ups, women had three points higher quality of life than men (p < 0.001). When looking at each quality of life's domain we found that women reported higher scores of autonomy compared to men. The gender difference in the probability of having depressive caseness reduced to 7 percentage points at four-year follow-up from 13 percentage points in the previous occasions. Men's quality of life declined progressively over time by 3 points (p < 0.001) (equivalent to the effect of having diabetes) but no changes in prevalence of depressive caseness were found. Women's quality of life only declined after four-year follow-up by less than 2 points (p < 0.001), while in the same period their probability of reporting depressive caseness reduced by 6 percentage points (p < 0.001).
Conclusion: Women had better quality of life than men in the two and four years following a CHD event, and were not more likely than men to report depressive caseness in the long term. Men's quality of life deteriorated progressively over time, among women it did not deteriorate in the first two years following a CHD event; women had a long-term improvement in depressive caseness
The impact of a local sugar sweetened beverage health promotion and price increase on sales in public leisure centre facilities
BACKGROUND: We aimed to evaluate the impact of a local sugar sweetened beverages (SSB) health promotion and 20p price increase in leisure centre venues and estimate the impact on consumption. METHOD: Monthly cold drinks sales data and attendance at leisure centres across the city of Sheffield were analysed over the period January 2015-July 2017. Interrupted time-series methods were employed to estimate changes in consumption per attendance of SSB and non-SSB cold drinks following the introduction of the SSB policy from August 2016 adjusting for seasonal variation and autocorrelation. SSB price elasticities were estimated with fixed effects log-log models by SSB product type (soda can, soda bottle, soda post mix, energy drinks, juice from concentrate). FINDINGS: We estimated a 31% (95% CI 4%, 59%) reduction in units of SSB sold per attendance in the year since the policy was introduced. We did not observe substitution effects to fruit juice or water but found sales of other artificially sweetened non-SSB products increased by 27% (95% CI 6%, 47%) after the introduction of the tax. Price elasticity analysis identified that a 1% increase in price alongside health promotion leads to a 3.8% (95% CI 3.1% 4.4%) decrease in demand for SSB's. Price elasticity of demand was highest for child friendly and high caffeine energy drinks. INTERPRETATION: Demand for SSB drinks at leisure centre venues is highly responsive to the policy, particularly for child-friendly and high caffeine energy drinks, compared with other SSB tax policy evaluations. The policy also increased purchases of carbonated non-SSB
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