5,746 research outputs found

    "No One Asked Me": Latinos' Experiences With Massachusetts Health Care Reform

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    Presents lessons from low-income Latinos' experience of the 2006 Massachusetts healthcare reform, with a focus on their understanding of the individual mandate, the role of community groups in the enrollment process, and the affordability of coverage

    Coulomb interactions of massless Dirac fermions in graphene; pair-distribution functions and exchange-driven spin-polarized phases

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    The quasi-2D electrons in graphene behave as massless fermions obeying a Dirac-Weyl equation in the low-energy regime near the two Fermi points. The stability of spin-polarized phases (SPP) in graphene is considered. The exchange energy is evaluated from the analytic pair-distribution functions, and the correlation energies are estimated via a closely similar four-component 2D electron fluid which has been investigated previously. SPPs appear for sufficiently high doping, when the exchange energy alone is considered. However, the inclusion of correlations is found to {\it suppress} the spin-phase transition in ideal graphene.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Revte

    Chronic Kidney Disease of Unknown aetiology (CKDu) and multiple-ion interactions in drinking water

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    Recent experimental work on the nephrotoxicity of contaminants in drinking water using laboratory mice, motivated by the need to understand the origin of chronic kidney disease of unknown aetiology is examined within our understanding of the hydration of ions and proteins. Qualitative considerations based on Hofmeister-type action of these ions, as well as quantitative electrochemical models for the Gibbs free-energy change for ion-pair formation are used to explain why Cd2+^{2+} in the presence of Fβˆ’^- and water hardness due to Mg2+^{2+} ions (but not Ca2+^{2+}) can be expected to be more nephrotoxic, while AsO33βˆ’_3^{3-} in the presence of Fβˆ’^- and hardness may be expected to be less nephrotoxic. The analysis is applied to a variety of ionic species typically found in water to predict their likely combined electro-chemical action. These results clarify the origins of chronic kidney disease in the north-central province of Sri Lanka. The conclusion is further strengthened by a study of the dietary load of Cd and As, where the dietary loads are found to be safe, especially when the mitigating effects of micronutrient ionic forms of Zn and Se, as well as corrections for bio-availability are taken in to account. The resulting aetiological picture supports the views that Fβˆ’^-, Cd2+^{2+} (to a lesser extent), and Mg2+^{2+} ions found in stagnant household well water act together with enhanced toxicity, becoming the most likely causative factor of the disease. Similar incidence of CKDu found in other tropical climates may have similar geological origins.Comment: 14 pages, one figur
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