918 research outputs found

    Prevalence, Reasons for Use, and Risk Perception of Electronic Cigarettes among Post-Acute Coronary Syndrome Smokers

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    Purpose—The use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) has risen dramatically in recent years. However, there is currently no published data on use of e-cigarettes among cardiac patients. The current study reports on the prevalence, reasons for use, and perceived risks of e-cigarettes among post-Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) patients. The relationship between e-cigarette use and post- ACS tobacco smoking cessation is also explored. Methods—Participants were drawn from a randomized trial of smoking cessation treatments following hospitalization for ACS. The current study focuses on 49 participants that completed e- cigarette questions at 24 weeks post-ACS. Results—51.0% of participants reported ever use of an e-cigarette and 26.5% reported using an e-cigarette at some time during the 24 weeks post-ACS. Ever use and post-ACS use were both significantly associated with lower rates of abstinence from tobacco cigarettes. Participants perceived e-cigarettes as less harmful to cardiac health than tobacco use and Chantix, and similarly harmful as nicotine replacement therapy. Participant perceived likelihood of experiencing a heart attack in the next year was 34.6% if they were to regularly use e-cigarettes only, significantly lower than perceived risk of recurrence if they were to regularly smoke only tobacco cigarettes (56.2%) and significantly higher than perceived risk of recurrence if they were to use no nicotine (15.2%). Conclusions—A significant minority of patients are using e-cigarettes post-ACS. Providers should be prepared to discuss potential discrepancies between patient beliefs about the safety of e- cigarettes and the current state of the science

    Student Recital

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    Behavioral activation for smoking cessation and mood management following a cardiac event: results of a pilot randomized controlled trial

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    Background: Smoking cessation following hospitalization for Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) significantly reduces subsequent mortality. Depressed mood is a major barrier to cessation post-ACS. Although existing counseling treatments address smoking and depression independently in ACS patients, no integrated treatment addresses both. We developed an integrated treatment combining gold standard cessation counseling with behavioral activation-based mood management; Behavioral Activation Treatment for Cardiac Smokers (BAT-CS). The purpose of this pilot randomized controlled trial was to test feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of BAT-CS vs. Standard of Care (SC). Methods: Participants were recruited during hospitalization for ACS and were randomly assigned to BAT-CS or SC. The nicotine patch was offered in both conditions. Smoking, mood, and stress outcomes were collected at end-of-treatment and 24-week follow-up. Results: Fifty-nine participants (28 BAT-CS, 31 SC) were recruited over 42 weeks, and assessment completion was above 80% in both conditions. Treatment acceptability and fidelity were high. At 24 week follow-up adjusted odds ratios favoring BAT-CS were 1.27 (95% CI: 0.41–3.93) for 7-day point prevalence abstinence and 1.27 (95% CI: 0.42–3.82) for continuous abstinence. Time to first smoking lapse was significantly longer in BAT-CS (62.4 vs. 31.8 days, p = 0.03). At 24-weeks, effect sizes for mood and stress outcomes ranged from η2 of.07–.11, with significant between treatment effects for positive affect, negative affect, and stress. Conclusions: The design of this study proved feasible and acceptable. Results provide preliminary evidence that combining behavioral activation with standard smoking cessation counseling could be efficacious for this high risk population. A larger trial with longer follow-up is warranted. Trial registration: NCT01964898. First received by clinicaltrials.gov October 15, 2013

    EXTRACTION OF VIRTUAL ACCELERATION DATA FROM MOTION CAPTURE

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    Wearable inertial sensors, such as accelerometers, have recently proven to be very effective tools for studying the biomechanical performance of athletes in many sports, as they are lightweight, relatively unobtrusive, and in many cases can be worn outside the laboratory during both training and competitive conditions. In using such devices, it is important that the sensors are placed in the correct position to capture the desired data, and finding this position can involve considerable time and effort. By utilising 3-D imagery, an efficient method for calculating virtual acceleration data for multiple sensor positions is proposed, which will allow researchers to quickly obtain large amounts of data for testing without the need for extensive field trials. Verification undertaken using actual inertial sensors show the accuracy and usefulness of this approach

    On the atomic structure of cocaine in solution

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    Cocaine is an amphiphilic drug which has the ability to cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB). Here, a combination of neutron diffraction and computation has been used to investigate the atomic scale structure of cocaine in aqueous solutions. Both the observed conformation and hydration of cocaine appear to contribute to its ability to cross hydrophobic layers afforded by the BBB, as the average conformation yields a structure which might allow cocaine to shield its hydrophilic regions from a lipophilic environment. Specifically, the carbonyl oxygens and amine group on cocaine, on average, form ~5 bonds with the water molecules in the surrounding solvent, and the top 30% of water molecules within 4 Å of cocaine are localized in the cavity formed by an internal hydrogen bond within the cocaine molecule. This water mediated internal hydrogen bonding suggests a mechanism of interaction between cocaine and the BBB that negates the need for deprotonation prior to interaction with the lipophilic portions of this barrier. This finding also has important implications for understanding how neurologically active molecules are able to interact with both the blood stream and BBB and emphasizes the use of structural measurements in solution in order to understand important biological function.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Predictive Technologies for Strategic House Fire Management

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    House fires pose a threat to life and property in every society, such that laws, organisations and work systems have been established to protect communities. Motivated by statistics published annually by the Australian Productivity Commission (2021) showing little variation in lives lost, injuries or costs associated with house fires, this research demonstrates that large repositories of publicly available information about house fire incidents can be used to create predictive decision tools that could lower the impact of house fires on society. Interpreted through an activity theory lens, this research demonstrates how data mining can identify common features in public datasets and be used to create predictive models to identify future instances of house fires. The research proposes that this information be used by government, firefighting organisations, insurers, not for profits and the public to better prepare when house fires are more likely to occur

    Recognition and property in Hegel and the early Marx

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    The article attempts to show, first, that for Hegel the role of property is to enable persons both to objectify their freedom and to properly express their recognition of each other as free, and second, that the Marx of 1844 uses fundamentally similar ideas in his exposition of communist society. For him the role of ‘true property’ is to enable individuals both to objectify their essential human powers and their individuality, and to express their recognition of each other as fellow human beings with needs, or their ‘human recognition’. Marx further uses these ideas to condemn the society of private property and market exchange as characterised by ‘estranged’ forms of property and recognition. He therefore uses a structure of ideas which Hegel had used to justify the institutions of private property and market exchange in order to condemn those same institutions. It is concluded that Marx’s adoption from Hegel of the idea that property as the means of self-objectification and of expressed recognition, leaves his vision of communism open to the charge that in it, just as in market society, the relations between human beings are mediated by things

    Concert recording 2014-04-27a

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    [Track 01]. Opening from Glassworks / Philip Glass -- [Track 02]. Beneath the canopy for flute and percussion. The forest beckons / Philip Parker -- [Track 03]. Beneath the canopy for flute and percussion. Rivers gently flowing / Philip Parker -- [Track 04]. Beneath the canopy for flute and percussion. Exotic birds of paradise / Philip Parker -- [Track 05]. Beneath the canopy for flute and percussion. Twilight calmness ; Song of the orchid / Philip Parker -- [Track 06]. Beneath the canopy for flute and percussion. Python dance / Philip Parker -- [Track 07]. Sculpture in wood / Rudiger Pawassar -- [Track 08]. Fear cage / Kirk J. Gay -- [Track 09]. Concerto for marimba and strings. Tempo souple / Emmanuel Sejourne

    Comment on "Local accumulation times for source, diffusion, and degradation models in two and three dimensions" [J. Chem. Phys. 138, 104121 (2013)]

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    In a recent paper, Gordon, Muratov, and Shvartsman studied a partial differential equation (PDE) model describing radially symmetric diffusion and degradation in two and three dimensions. They paid particular attention to the local accumulation time (LAT), also known in the literature as the mean action time, which is a spatially dependent timescale that can be used to provide an estimate of the time required for the transient solution to effectively reach steady state. They presented exact results for three-dimensional applications and gave approximate results for the two-dimensional analogue. Here we make two generalizations of Gordon, Muratov, and Shvartsman’s work: (i) we present an exact expression for the LAT in any dimension and (ii) we present an exact expression for the variance of the distribution. The variance provides useful information regarding the spread about the mean that is not captured by the LAT. We conclude by describing further extensions of the model that were not considered by Gordon,Muratov, and Shvartsman. We have found that exact expressions for the LAT can also be derived for these important extensions..
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