876 research outputs found
Cross-sectional and longitudinal risk of physical impairment in a cohort of postmenopausal women who experience physical and verbal abuse.
BackgroundExposure to interpersonal violence, namely verbal and physical abuse, is a highly prevalent threat to women's health and well-being. Among older, post-menopausal women, several researchers have characterized a possible bi-directional relationship of abuse exposure and diminished physical functioning. However, studies that prospectively examine the relationship between interpersonal abuse exposure and physical functioning across multiple years of observation are lacking. To address this literature gap, we prospectively evaluate the association between abuse exposure and physical functioning in a large, national cohort of post-menopausal women across 12 years of follow-up observation.MethodsMultivariable logistic regression was used to measure the adjusted association between experiencing abuse and physical function score at baseline in 154,902 Women's Health Initiative (WHI) participants. Multilevel modeling, where the trajectories of decline in physical function were modeled as a function of time-varying abuse exposure, was used to evaluate the contribution of abuse to trajectories of physical function scores over time.ResultAbuse was prevalent among WHI participants, with 11 % of our study population reporting baseline exposure. Verbal abuse was the most commonly reported abuse type (10 %), followed by combined physical and verbal abuse (1 %), followed by physical abuse in the absence of verbal abuse (0.2 %). Abuse exposure (all types) was associated with diminished physical functioning, with women exposed to combined physical and verbal abuse presenting baseline physical functioning scores consistent with non-abused women 20 years senior. Results did not reveal a differential rate of decline over time in physical functioning based on abuse exposure.ConclusionsTaken together, our findings suggest a need for increased awareness of the prevalence of abuse exposure among postmenopausal women; they also underscore the importance of clinician's vigilance in their efforts toward the prevention, early detection and effective intervention with abuse exposure, including verbal abuse exposure, in post-menopausal women. Given our findings related to abuse exposure and women's diminished physical functioning at WHI baseline, our work illuminates a need for further study, particularly the investigation of this association in younger, pre-menopausal women so that the temporal ordering if this relationship may be better understood
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On the Epidemiology of Influenza: Reply to Radonovich et al
On the epidemiology of influenza: reply to Radonovich LJ, Martinello RA, Hodgson M, Milton DK, Nardell EA. Influenza and ultraviolet germicidal irradiation. Virol J. 2008, 5:14
Altered Calcium Homeostasis Does Not Explain the Contractile Deficit of Diabetic Cardiomyopathy
OBJECTIVEβThis study examines the extent to which the contractile deficit of diabetic cardiomyopathy is due to altered Ca2+ homeostasis
Thermally Induced Fluctuations Below the Onset of Rayleigh-B\'enard Convection
We report quantitative experimental results for the intensity of
noise-induced fluctuations below the critical temperature difference for Rayleigh-B\'enard convection. The structure factor of the fluctuating
convection rolls is consistent with the expected rotational invariance of the
system. In agreement with predictions based on stochastic hydrodynamic
equations, the fluctuation intensity is found to be proportional to
where . The
noise power necessary to explain the measurements agrees with the prediction
for thermal noise. (WAC95-1)Comment: 13 pages of text and 4 Figures in a tar-compressed and uuencoded file
(using uufiles package). Detailed instructions of unpacking are include
Boundary Limitation of Wavenumbers in Taylor-Vortex Flow
We report experimental results for a boundary-mediated wavenumber-adjustment
mechanism and for a boundary-limited wavenumber-band of Taylor-vortex flow
(TVF). The system consists of fluid contained between two concentric cylinders
with the inner one rotating at an angular frequency . As observed
previously, the Eckhaus instability (a bulk instability) is observed and limits
the stable wavenumber band when the system is terminated axially by two rigid,
non-rotating plates. The band width is then of order at small
() and agrees well with
calculations based on the equations of motion over a wide -range.
When the cylinder axis is vertical and the upper liquid surface is free (i.e.
an air-liquid interface), vortices can be generated or expelled at the free
surface because there the phase of the structure is only weakly pinned. The
band of wavenumbers over which Taylor-vortex flow exists is then more narrow
than the stable band limited by the Eckhaus instability. At small
the boundary-mediated band-width is linear in . These results are
qualitatively consistent with theoretical predictions, but to our knowledge a
quantitative calculation for TVF with a free surface does not exist.Comment: 8 pages incl. 9 eps figures bitmap version of Fig
Shortcomings of Vitamin D-Based Model Simulations of Seasonal Influenza
Seasonal variation in serum concentration of the vitamin D metabolite 25(OH)
vitamin D [25(OH)D], which contributes to host immune function, has
been hypothesized to be the underlying source of observed influenza seasonality
in temperate regions. The objective of this study was to determine whether
observed 25(OH)D levels could be used to simulate observed influenza infection
rates. Data of mean and variance in 25(OH)D serum levels by month were obtained
from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study and used to parameterize an
individual-based model of influenza transmission dynamics in two regions of the
United States. Simulations were compared with observed daily influenza excess
mortality data. Best-fitting simulations could reproduce the observed seasonal
cycle of influenza; however, these best-fit simulations were shown to be highly
sensitive to stochastic processes within the model and were unable consistently
to reproduce observed seasonal patterns. In this respect the simulations with
the vitamin D forced model were inferior to similar modeling efforts using
absolute humidity and the school calendar as seasonal forcing variables. These
model results indicate it is unlikely that seasonal variations in vitamin D
levels principally determine the seasonality of influenza in temperate
regions
The value of carbon sequestration and storage in coastal habitats
Coastal margin habitats are globally significant in terms of their capacity to sequester and store carbon, but their continuing decline, due to environmental change and human land use decisions, is reducing their capacity to provide this ecosystem service. In this paper the UK is used as a case study area to develop methodologies to quantify and value the ecosystem service of blue carbon sequestration and storage in coastal margin habitats. Changes in UK coastal habitat area between 1900 and 2060 are documented, the long term stocks of carbon stored by these habitats are calculated, and the capacity of these habitats to sequester CO2 is detailed. Changes in value of the carbon sequestration service of coastal habitats are then projected for 2000β2060 under two scenarios, the maintenance of the current state of the habitat and the continuation of current trends of habitat loss. If coastal habitats are maintained at their current extent, their sequestration capacity over the period 2000β2060 is valued to be in the region of Β£1 billion UK sterling (3.5% discount rate). However, if current trends of habitat loss continue, the capacity of the coastal habitats both to sequester and store CO2 will be significantly reduced, with a reduction in value of around Β£0.25 billion UK sterling (2000β2060; 3.5% discount rate). If loss-trends due to sea level rise or land reclamation worsen, this loss in value will be greater. This case study provides valuable site specific information, but also highlights global issues regarding the quantification and valuation of carbon sequestration and storage. Whilst our ability to value ecosystem services is improving, considerable uncertainty remains. If such ecosystem valuations are to be incorporated with confidence into national and global policy and legislative frameworks, it is necessary to address this uncertainty. Recommendations to achieve this are outlined
Olive phenology as a sensitive indicator of future climatic warming in the Mediterranean
Experimental and modelling work suggests a strong dependence of olive flowering date on spring temperatures. Since airborne pollen concentrations reflect the flowering phenology of olive populations within a radius of 50 km, they may be a sensitive regional indicator of climatic warming. We assessed this potential sensitivity with phenology models fitted to flowering dates inferred from maximum airborne pollen data. Of four models tested, a thermal time model gave the best fit for Montpellier, France, and was the most effective at the regional scale, providing reasonable predictions for 10 sites in the western Mediterranean. This model was forced with replicated future temperature simulations for the western Mediterranean from a coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation model (GCM). The GCM temperatures rose by 4Β·5 Β°C between 1990 and 2099 with a 1% per year increase in greenhouse gases, and modelled flowering date advanced at a rate of 6Β·2 d per Β°C. The results indicated that this long-term regional trend in phenology might be statistically significant as early as 2030, but with marked spatial variation in magnitude, with the calculated flowering date between the 1990s and 2030s advancing by 3β23 d. Future monitoring of airborne olive pollen may therefore provide an early biological indicator of climatic warming in the Mediterranean
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