2,121 research outputs found
Integrating Students into Interdisciplinary Health and Health Disparities Research Teams
Major initiatives by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as well as the World Health Organization have produced a large and compelling body of evidence on how to reduce health disparities, which entails having a clear understanding of how social factors shape health and healthcare outcomes. Specifically, there is a need for healthcare professionals to understand social determinants of health (e.g., low socioeconomic status, lack of health insurance, and poor education) and how these lead to disparities in health for people of minority racial and ethnic groups. Little is known about how students are developed as health disparities researchers or how their research experiences impact their views about addressing social determinants of health as a career goal. The purpose of this paper is to describe how health and human sciences students were integrated into three minority HIV prevention and testing projects using the lifelong learning for health professionals (LLHP) principles and activities framework, which entails a focus on: (a) education, (b) community, and (c) organization in the planning, development, implementation, and evaluation of interdisciplinary research
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Activism, Advertising, and Far-Right Media: The Case of Sleeping Giants
This study examines the international activist movement known as Sleeping Giants, a social-media âcampaign to make bigotry and sexism less profitableâ (Sleeping Giants, n.d.). The campaign originated in the US with an anonymous Twitter account that enlisted followers in encouraging brands to pull their online advertising from Breitbart News. The campaign achieved dramatic success and rapidly spread to regions outside the US, with other anonymously run and loosely allied chapters emerging in 15 different nations (as well as a regional chapter for the EU). Many of these were initially created to take on Breitbart advertisers in their home countries, but in a number of cases they subsequently turned their attention to disrupting financial support for other far-right news media inâor impactingâtheir home countries. Based on interviews with leaders of eight Sleeping Giants chapters, as well as the related UK-based Stop Funding Hate campaign, this study examines the Sleeping Giants campaign with respect to its continuity with media activism of previous eras, while also seeking to understand its potential as one of the first high-profile activist campaigns to grapple with the impacts of programmatic advertising on the news ecosystem. In particular, we consider how the campaignâs interventions speak to the larger debate around the normative relationship between advertising and the performance of the news ecosystem
Polarized distribution of HCO3- transport in human normal and cystic fibrosis nasal epithelia
The polarized distribution of HCO3â transport was investigated in human nasal epithelial cells from normal and cystic fibrosis (CF) tissues. To test for HCO3â transport via conductive versus electroneutral Clâ/HCO3â exchange (anion exchange, AE) pathways, nasal cells were loaded with the pH probe 2âČ,7âČ-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein and mounted in a bilateral perfusion chamber. In normal, but not CF, epithelia, replacing mucosal Clâ with gluconate caused intracellular pH (pHi) to increase, and the initial rates (ÎpH minâ1) of this increase were modestly augmented (âŒ26 %) when normal cells were pretreated with forskolin (10 ÎŒm). Recovery from this alkaline shift was dependent on mucosal Clâ, was insensitive to the AE inhibitor 4,4âČ-diisothiocyanatodihydrostilbene-2,2âČ-disulfonic acid (H2DIDS; 1.5 mm), but was sensitive to the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) channel inhibitor diphenylamine-2-carboxylate (DPC; 100 ÎŒm). In contrast, removal of serosal Clâ caused pHi to alkalinize in both normal and CF epithelia. Recovery from this alkaline challenge was dependent on serosal Clâ and blocked by H2DIDS. Additional studies showed that serosally applied Ba2+ (5.0 mm) in normal, but not CF, cells induced influx of HCO3â across the apical membrane that was reversibly blocked by mucosal DPC. In a final series of studies, normal and CF cells acutely alkaline loaded by replacing bilateral Krebs bicarbonate Ringer (KBR) with Hepes-buffered Ringer solution exhibited basolateral, but not apical, recovery from an alkaline challenge that was dependent on Clâ, independent of Na+ and blocked by H2DIDS. We conclude that: (1) normal, but not CF, nasal epithelia have a constitutively active DPC-sensitive HCO3â influx/efflux pathway across the apical membrane of cells, consistent with the movement of HCO3â via CFTR; and (2) both normal and CF nasal epithelia have Na+-independent, H2DIDS-sensitive AE at their basolateral domain
Fetal tracheolaryngeal airway obstruction: prenatal evaluation by sonography and MRI
We reviewed the sonographic and MRI findings of tracheolaryngeal obstruction in the fetus. Conditions that can cause tracheolaryngeal obstruction include extrinsic causes such as lymphatic malformation, cervical teratoma and vascular rings and intrinsic causes such as congenital high airway obstruction syndrome (CHAOS). Accurate distinction of these conditions by sonography or MRI can help facilitate parental counseling and management, including the decision to utilize the ex utero intrapartum treatment (EXIT) procedure
Effects of intervention upon precompetition state anxiety in elite junior tennis players: The relevance of the matching hypothesis
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Terry, P., Coakley, L., & Karageorghis, C. Effects of intervention upon precompetition state anxiety in elite junior tennis players: the relevance of the matching hypothesis. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1995, 81, 287-296. © Perceptual and Motor Skills 1995The matching hypothesis proposes that interventions for anxiety should be matched to the modality in which anxiety is experienced. This study investigated the relevance of the matching hypothesis for anxiety interventions in tennis. Elite junior tennis players (N = 100; Age: M = 13.9 yr., SD = 1.8 yr.) completed the Competitive State Anxiety Inventory-2 before and after one of four randomly assigned intervention strategies approximately one hour prior to competition at a National Junior Championship. A two-factor multivariate analysis of variance (group x time) with repeated measures on the time factor gave no significant main effect by group but indicated significant reductions in somatic anxiety and cognitive anxiety and a significant increase in self-confidence following intervention. A significant group by time interaction emerged for self-confidence. The results question the need to match intervention strategy to the mode of anxiety experienced
Precipitation of the ordered α2 phase in a near-α titanium alloy
Precipitate evolution in a near-α alloy was studied using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and correlative atom probe tomography (APT) after ageing at 550-700 for times up to 28 days. It is found that precipitation occurs much faster and is more prolific in samples heat treated at higher temperatures. Particles were spherical after ageing at 550 °C, while after ageing at 700 °C they become ellipsoids with the major axis lying close to the [0001] direction. At longer ageing times, the α2 precipitates were found to contain greater amounts of Sn + Si, indicating that Sn and Si are stronger Ti3(Al,Sn,Si) formers than Al
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