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Flood- and Weather-Damaged Homes and Mental Health: An Analysis Using England's Mental Health Survey
There is increasing evidence that exposure to weather-related hazards like storms and floods adversely affects mental health. However, evidence of treated and untreated mental disorders based on diagnostic criteria for the general population is limited. We analysed the Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey, a large probability sample survey of adults in England (n = 7525), that provides the only national data on the prevalence of mental disorders assessed to diagnostic criteria. The most recent survey (2014–2015) asked participants if they had experienced damage to their home (due to wind, rain, snow or flood) in the six months prior to interview, a period that included months of unprecedented population exposure to flooding, particularly in Southern England. One in twenty (4.5%) reported living in a storm- or flood-damaged home in the previous six months. Social advantage (home ownership, higher household income) increased the odds of exposure to storm or flood damage. Exposure predicted having a common mental disorder over and above the effects of other known predictors of poor mental health. With climate change increasing the frequency and severity of storms and flooding, improving community resilience and disaster preparedness is a priority. Evidence on the mental health of exposed populations is key to building this capacity
A Data Exchange Standard for Optical (Visible/IR) Interferometry
This paper describes the OI Exchange Format, a standard for exchanging
calibrated data from optical (visible/infrared) stellar interferometers. The
standard is based on the Flexible Image Transport System (FITS), and supports
storage of the optical interferometric observables including squared visibility
and closure phase -- data products not included in radio interferometry
standards such as UV-FITS. The format has already gained the support of most
currently-operating optical interferometer projects, including COAST, NPOI,
IOTA, CHARA, VLTI, PTI, and the Keck Interferometer, and is endorsed by the IAU
Working Group on Optical Interferometry. Software is available for reading,
writing and merging OI Exchange Format files.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur
Probing Fine-Scale Ionospheric Structure with the Very Large Array Radio Telescope
High resolution (~1 arcminute) astronomical imaging at low frequency (below
150 MHz) has only recently become practical with the development of new
calibration algorithms for removing ionospheric distortions. In addition to
opening a new window in observational astronomy, the process of calibrating the
ionospheric distortions also probes ionospheric structure in an unprecedented
way. Here we explore one aspect of this new type of ionospheric measurement,
the differential refraction of celestial source pairs as a function of their
angular separation. This measurement probes variations in the spatial gradient
of the line-of-sight total electron content (TEC) to 0.001 TECU/km accuracy
over spatial scales of under 10 km to over 100 km. We use data from the VLA
Low-frequency Sky Survey (VLSS; Cohen et al. 2007, AJ 134, 1245), a nearly
complete 74 MHz survey of the entire sky visible to the Very Large Array (VLA)
telescope in Socorro, New Mexico. These data comprise over 500 hours of
observations, all calibrated in a standard way. While ionospheric spatial
structure varies greatly from one observation to the next, when analyzed over
hundreds of hours, statistical patterns become apparent. We present a detailed
characterization of how the median differential refraction depends on source
pair separation, elevation and time of day. We find that elevation effects are
large, but geometrically predictable and can be "removed" analytically using a
"thin-shell" model of the ionosphere. We find significantly greater ionospheric
spatial variations during the day than at night. These diurnal variations
appear to affect the larger angular scales to a greater degree indicating that
they come from disturbances on relatively larger spatial scales (100s of km,
rather than 10s of km).Comment: Accepted for publication by The Astronomical Journa
Submillimeter satellite radiometer first semiannual engineering progress report
Development of 560 GHz fourth harmonic mixer and 140 GHz third harmonic generator for use in radiomete
Surface roughness and thermal conductivity of semiconductor nanowires: going below the Casimir limit
By explicitly considering surface roughness at the atomic level, we
quantitatively show that the thermal conductivity of Si nanowires can be lower
than Casimir's classical limit. However, this violation only occurs for deep
surface degradation. For shallow surface roughness, the Casimir formula is
shown to yield a good approximation to the phonon mean free paths and
conductivity, even for nanowire diameters as thin as 2.22 nm. Our exact
treatment of roughness scattering is in stark contrast with a previously
proposed perturbative approach, which is found to overpredict scattering rates
by an order of magnitude. The obtained results suggest that a complete
theoretical understanding of some previously published experimental results is
still lacking.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
A window into a public programme for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV: evidence from a prospective clinical trial
Objectives. To evaluate efficacy of the antenatal, intrapartum and postnatal antiretroviral components of a public service prevention of mother-to-child (PMTCT) programme in infants.Design. Analysis of prospectively collected screening data of demographic and MTCT-related interventions and HIV infection status of infants identified through HIV-specific DNA polymerase chain reaction.Setting. Tygerberg Children’s Hospital, Western Cape, South Africa.Subjects. HIV-infected women and their infants identified through participation in a public service PMTCT programme were referred for possible participation in a prospective study of isoniazid prophylaxis.Interventions. Key components of the programme include voluntary counselling and testing, administration of zidovudine to the mother from between 28 and 34 weeks’ gestation and to the newborn infant for the firstweek, single-dose nevirapine to the mother in labour and to the newborn shortly after birth, and free formula for 6 months.Main outcome measures. Number and percentage of HIV-infected infants and extent of exposure to antenatal, intrapartum and postnatal antiretrovirals.Results. Of 656 infants with a median age of 12.6 weeks, screened between 1 April 2005 through May 2006, 39 were HIV-infected, giving a transmission rate of 5.9% (95% confidence interval (CI) 4.4 - 8.0%). Antenatal prophylaxis was significantly associated with reduced transmission (odds ratio (OR) 0.43 (95% CI 0.21 - 0.94)) as opposed to intrapartum and postpartum components (p=0.85 and p=0.84, respectively). In multivariable analysis the antenatal component remained significant (OR=0.40 (95% CI 0.19 - 0.90)).Conclusions. The antenatal phase is the most important antiretroviral component of the PMTCT programme, allowing most opportunity for intervention
Patches in a side-by-side configuration: a description of the flow and deposition fields
In the last few decades, a lot of research attention has been paid to flow-vegetation interactions. Starting with the description of the flow field around uniform macrophyte stands, research has evolved more recently to the description of flow fields around individual, distinct patches. However, in the field, vegetation patches almost never occur in isolation. As such, patches will influence each other during their development and interacting, complex flow fields can be expected.
In this study, two emergent patches of the same diameter (D = 22 cm) and a solid volume fraction of 10% were placed in a side-by-side configuration in a lab flume. The patches were built as an array of wooden cylinders, and the distance between the patches (gap width Delta) was varied between Delta = 0 and 14 cm. Flow measurements were performed by a 3D Vectrino Velocimeter (Nortek AS) at mid-depth of the flow. Deposition experiments of suspended solids were performed for selected gap widths.
Directly behind each patch, the wake evolved in a manner identical to that of a single, isolated patch. On the centerline between the patches, the maximum velocity U-max was found to be independent of the gap width Delta. However, the length over which this maximum velocity persists, the potential core L-j, increased linearly as the gap width increased. After the merging of the wakes, the centerline velocity reaches a minimum value U-min. The minimum centerline velocity decreased in magnitude as the gap width decreased. The velocity pattern within the wake is reflected in the deposition patterns. An erosion zone occurs on the centerline between the patches, where the velocity is elevated. Deposition occurs in the low velocity zones directly behind each patch and also downstream of the patches, along the centerline between the patches at the point of local velocity minimum. This downstream deposition zone, a result of the interaction of neighbouring patch wakes, may facilitate the establishment of new vegetation, which may eventually inhibit flow between the upstream patches and facilitate patch merger
Juxtaposition of Spin Freezing and Long Range Order in a Series of Geometrically Frustrated Antiferromagnetic Gadolinium Garnets
Specific heat measurements in zero magnetic field are presented on a
homologous series of geometrically frustrated, antiferromagnetic, Heisenberg
garnet systems. Measurements of Gd3Ga5O12, grown with isotopically pure Gd,
agree well with previous results on samples with naturally abundant Gd, showing
no ordering features. In contrast, samples of Gd3Te2Li3O12 and Gd3Al5O12 are
found to exhibit clear ordering transitions at 243 mK and 175 mK respectively.
The effects of low level disorder are studied through dilution of Gd3+ with
non-magnetic Y3+ in Gd3Te2Li3O12. A thorough structural characterization, using
X-ray diffraction, is performed on all of the samples studied. We discuss
possible explanations for such diverse behavior in very similar systems.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review
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