2,584 research outputs found

    Breaking the Cycle of Defeat for \u27Deadbroke\u27 Noncustodial Parents Through Advocacy on Child Support Issues

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    The child support system is not serving low-income families well. Custodial parents are not receiving the child support they need. Enforcement of child support for lowincome parents receiving welfare primarily benefits the state because the payments are owed to the government. Low-income noncustodial parents face unrealistically high child support orders and large arrearages take so much of their wages that they cannot support themselves. They go to jail-often recurrently-because they cannot meet their obligations and thereby lose the opportunity to keep a job. Their driver\u27s licenses are suspended because they have not paid their support. To evade this punitive cycle, they seek below-ground employment, avoiding garnishment, but increasing their own financial uncertainty and the potential for exploitation by unscrupulous employers and providing even less support to their families. Fathers, mothers, and children are caught in a vicious cycle where the goal of providing for families and children is thwarted by child support policies and practices that boomerang when applied to low-income people. In 2000, the Maryland Legal Aid Bureau launched a project to tackle barriers to employment and economic stability caused by unmanageable child support problems of noncustodial parents. The initial reaction to the idea of representing dads who were not paying child support was greeted with alarm. Tenacious advocates for custodial parents and children in our program feared that scarce resources would be misdirected into advocacy against Legal Aid\u27s traditional client base-custodial single mothers struggling against daunting odds to raise their children. However, those fears quickly subsided as project advocates developed successful strategies to address barriers to sustained employment and economic stability caused by child support problems and policies. This article highlights recurrent legal issues that clients encountered and the project\u27s advocacy responses. The article seeks to demonstrate why representing deadbroke noncustodial parents is important antipoverty advocacy that benefits fathers, mothers, children, and their communities

    Predictive Value of the Functional Movement Screen as it Relates to Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury

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    Introduction: Anterior cruciate ligament injuries occur over 200,000 times annually in the United States alone (Brophy, et al. 2009). This injury strains the healthcare system and affects the players, teams, parents, and the organization they are a part of. There have been, however, clinically researched risk factors that predispose athletes to ACL injury (Gignac, et al. 2015; Laible, et al. 2014). As a result, there is a clinical need for an effective screening tool to identify those athletes at risk for ACL injury. The Functional Movement Screen has been shown to be an effective screening tool for detecting athletes who are at a greater risk for generalized injury, but its predictive value has never been tested for specific injury rates (Kiesel, et al. 2007; Chorba, et al. 2010; Kiesel, et al. 2015; Letafatkar, et al. 2014). Methods: We performed a prospective study on 20 freshman participants who were athletes on a NCAA Division II varsity soccer, basketball, or volleyball team. Results: The results of the study to this point include one menā€™s soccer athlete with a torn ACL and an FMS score of 19, leading us to believe that no correlation exists between FMS score and incidence of ACL injury at this time. The purpose of this study was to determine if FMS can be an effective tool for predicting risk of ACL injury in athletes

    Examining adherence to activity monitoring devices to improve physical activity in adults with cardiovascular disease: A systematic review

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    Background Activity monitoring devices are currently being used to facilitate and monitor physical activity. No prior review has examined adherence to the use of activity monitoring devices amongst adults with cardiovascular disease. Methods Literature from June 2012 to October 2017 was evaluated to examine the extent of adherence to any activity monitoring device used to collect objective physical activity data. Randomized control trials comparing usual care against the use of an activity monitoring device, in a community intervention for adults from any cardiovascular diagnostic group, were included. A systematic search of databases and clinical trials registers was conducted using Joanna Briggs Institute methodology. Results Of 10 eligible studies, two studies reported pedometer use and eight accelerometer use. Six studies addressed the primary outcome. Mean adherence was 59.1% (range 39.6% to 85.7%) at last follow-up. Studies lacked equal representation by gender (28.6% female) and age (range 42 to 82 years). Conclusion This review indicates that current research on activity monitoring devices may be overstated due to the variability in adherence. Results showed that physical activity tracking in women and in young adults have been understudied

    Azimuthal seismic anisotropy of 70-ma Pacific-plate upper mantle.

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    Author Posting. Ā© American Geophysical Union, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth 124(2), (2019):1889-1909, doi:10.1029/2018JB016451.Plate formation and evolution processes are predicted to generate upper mantle seismic anisotropy and negative vertical velocity gradients in oceanic lithosphere. However, predictions for upper mantle seismic velocity structure do not fully agree with the results of seismic experiments. The strength of anisotropy observed in the upper mantle varies widely. Further, many refraction studies observe a fast direction of anisotropy rotated several degrees with respect to the paleospreading direction, suggesting that upper mantle anisotropy records processes other than 2ā€D corner flow and plateā€driven shear near midā€ocean ridges. We measure 6.0 Ā± 0.3% anisotropy at the Moho in 70ā€Ma lithosphere in the central Pacific with a fast direction parallel to paleospreading, consistent with mineral alignment by 2ā€D mantle flow near a midā€ocean ridge. We also find an increase in the strength of anisotropy with depth, with vertical velocity gradients estimated at 0.02 km/s/km in the fast direction and 0 km/s/km in the slow direction. The increase in anisotropy with depth can be explained by mechanisms for producing anisotropy other than intrinsic effects from mineral fabric, such as aligned cracks or other structures. This measurement of seismic anisotropy and gradients reflects the effects of both plate formation and evolution processes on seismic velocity structure in mature oceanic lithosphere, and can serve as a reference for future studies to investigate the processes involved in lithospheric formation and evolution.We thank the Captain and crew of the R/V Marcus G. Langseth and the engineers and technicians from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, who provided the instruments through the National Science Foundation's Ocean Bottom Seismograph Instrument Pool (OBSIP). The professionalism and expertise of these individuals were key to the success of this experiment. We also thank Donna Blackman, Tom Brocher, Philip Skemer, and an anonymous reviewer for their thoughtful comments which greatly improved this paper. The OBS data described here are archived at the IRIS Data Management Center (http://www.iris.edu) under network code ZA 2011ā€“2013. The travel time picks are archived in the Marineā€Geo Digital Library (http://www.marineā€geo.org/library/) with the DOI 10.1594/IEDA/324643. This work was supported by NSF grant OCEā€0928663 to D. Lizarralde, J. Collins, and R. Evans; NSF grant OCEā€0927172 to G. Hirth; NSF grant OCEā€0928270 to J. Gaherty; and an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship to H. Mark.2019-07-2

    Building a Framework of Metadata Change to Support Knowledge Management

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    Article defining ways that metadata records might change (addition, deletion, or modification) and describing a study to evaluate multiple versions of selected records in the UNT Libraries' Digital Collections to observe the types and frequency of various changes

    Accuracy of wearable physical activity trackers in people with Parkinson's disease

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    Introduction: The purpose of this study was to determine the accuracy of the Fitbit Charge HR (TM) and Garmin vivosmart (R) HR in measuring steps and reflecting intensity of activity in people with Parkinson's disease (PD).Methods: Thirty-three people with mild-moderate PD performed six, two-minute indoor walks at their self-selected walking pace, and at target cadences of 60, 80, 100, 120 and 140 beats/min. A 500 m outdoor walk with terrain challenges was also performed. Step count was recorded by the two wrist-worn activity trackers (Fitbit Charge HR (TM) and Garmin vivosmart (R) HR) and compared to an accelerometer (ActivPAL3 (TM)). Intensity was recorded by a portable breath-by-breath gas analyser (VO2), heart rate and Borg scale.Results: Both commercial activity trackers had low error ( 0.68; p = 80steps/min. The Fitbit had higher error was less consistent for all target cadences >= 80steps/min. Cadence measured by the Fitbit and Garmin weakly reflected increases in heart rate (ICCs 0.27-0.28; p 0.05).Conclusion: The Garmin device was more accurate at reflecting step count across a broader range of walking cadences than the Fitbit, but neither strongly reflected intensity of activity. While not intended to replace research grade devices, these wrist-worn devices may be a clinically useful adjunct to exercise therapy to increase physical activity in people with PD

    The Role of Carbonate Factories and Sea Water Chemistry on Basin-Wide Ramp to High-Relief Carbonate Platform Evolution: Triassic, Nanpanjiang Basin, South China

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    The end-Permian extinction and its aftermath altered carbonate factories globally for millions of years, but its impact on platform geometries remains poorly understood. Here, the evolution in architecture and composition of two exceptionally exposed platforms in the Nanpanjiang Basin are constrained and compared with geochemical proxies to evaluate controls on platform geometries. Geochemical proxies indicate elevated siliciclastic and nutrient fluxes in the basal Triassic, at the Induanā€”Olenekian boundary and in the uppermost Olenekian. Cerium/Ce* shifts from high Ce/Ce* values and a lack of Ce anomaly indicating anoxia during the Lower Triassic to a negative Ce anomaly indicating oxygenation in the latest Olenekian and Anisian. Uranium and Mo depletion represents widespread anoxia in the world\u27s oceans in the Early Triassic with progressive oxygenation in the Anisian. Carbonate factories shifted from skeletal in the Late Permian to abiotic and microbial in the Early Triassic before returning to skeletal systems in the Middle Triassic, Anisian coincident with declining anoxia. Margin facies shifted to oolitic grainstone in the Early Triassic with development of giant ooids and extensive marine cements. Anisian margins, in contrast, are boundstone with a diverse skeletal component. The shift in platform architecture from ramp to steep, high-relief, flat-topped profiles is decoupled from carbonate compositions having occurred in the Olenekian prior to the onset of basin oxygenation and biotic stabilisation of the margins. A basin-wide synchronous shift from ramp to high-relief platforms points to a combination of high subsidence rate and basin starvation coupled with high rates of abiotic and microbial carbonate accumulation and marine cement stabilisation of oolitic margins as the primary causes for margin up-building. High sea water carbonate saturation resulting from a lack of skeletal sinks for precipitation, and basin anoxia promoting an expanded depth of carbonate supersaturation, probably contributed to marine cement stabilisation of margins that stimulated the shift from ramp to high-relief platform architecture

    Diet Significantly Influences the Immunopathology and Severity of Kidney Injury in Male C57Bl/6J Mice in a Model Dependent Manner

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    Diet is a leading causative risk factor for morbidity and mortality worldwide, yet it is rarely considered in the design of preclinical animal studies. Several of the nutritional inadequacies reported in Americans have been shown to be detrimental to kidney health; however, the mechanisms responsible are unclear and have been largely attributed to the development of diabetes or hypertension. Here, we set out to determine whether diet influences the susceptibility to kidney injury in male C57Bl/6 mice. Mice were fed a standard chow diet, a commercially available ā€œWesternā€ diet (WD), or a novel Americanized diet (AD) for 12 weeks prior to the induction of kidney injury using the folic acid nephropathy (FAN) or unilateral renal ischemia reperfusion injury (uIRI) models. In FAN, the mice that were fed the WD and AD had worse histological evidence of tissue injury and greater renal expression of genes associated with nephrotoxicity and monocyte infiltration as compared to mice fed chow. Mice fed the AD developed more severe renal hypertrophy following FAN, and gene expression data suggest the mechanism for FAN differed among the diets. Meanwhile, mice fed the WD had the greatest circulating interleukin-6 concentrations. In uIRI, no difference was observed in renal tissue injury between the diets; however, mice fed the WD and AD displayed evidence of suppressed inflammatory response. Taken together, our data support the hypothesis that diet directly impacts the severity and pathophysiology of kidney disease and is a critical experimental variable that needs to be considered in mechanistic preclinical animal studies

    Loot box purchasing is linked to problem gambling in adolescents when controlling for monetary gambling participation

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    BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Purchasing loot boxes in digital games is akin to gambling as it involves risking money for a chance-based reward of uncertain value. Research has linked buying loot boxes to problem gambling amongst adolescents, but has not examined co-occurring gambling participation. This study examined links between loot box purchasing and problem gambling amongst adolescents while controlling for monetary gambling participation. METHODS: Two survey samples of Australians aged 12ā€“17 years were recruited through advertisements (n = 843) and online panels (n = 826). They included n = 421 and n = 128 adolescents, respectively, who met criteria for problem gambling. RESULTS: Past-month loot box purchasing was significantly related to gambling problems in bivariate analyses. When including age, gender and past-month monetary gambling, loot box purchases were still associated with at-risk and problem gambling in both samples. As expected, these other predictors attenuated the predictive value of recent loot box purchases in relation to gambling problems. The odds-ratios, nevertheless, were still in the predicted direction and remained significant. When controlling for monetary gambling, age and gender, recent loot box purchasing increased the odds of problem gambling 3.7 to 6.0 times, and at-risk gambling 2.8 to 4.3 times. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: While causal relationships between loot box purchasing and problem gambling remain unclear, the results indicate that loot boxes disproportionately attract adolescents experiencing gambling problems, adding to the financial stress already caused by gambling. Consumer protection measures, youth and parental education, and age restrictions on loot box games are needed to protect young people
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