786 research outputs found

    Teacher Perceptions of Small High Schools

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    This research brief uses data from the School District of Philadelphia teacher survey to assess teacher perceptions of small and large neighborhood high schools

    The ship in the sky

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    The skyā€™s grumbling. Layers of gray grinding above me the way teeth grind, angry and wanting, all nap long. Two boom-clap bangs and my eyes snap open to clouds thick as clay, metal-sheet lightening and thunder thumping close and heavy as fists. I grab the stone floor and Iā€™m watching and listening, listening and watching and Iā€™m hearing yelling and itā€™s my own heart yelling, and I realize this ainā€™t dreaming. This ainā€™t dreaming. I ease myself near the rock ledge, hanging there like a loose tooth when the ground rips apart, it clear splits thirty feet in front of me right through the Joneses' veggie patch. My gut leaps to my throat. Would be an awesome sight if it werenā€™t so terrifying. Air and water and fire and earth dancing into one, blasting the ground inches from the Jonesesā€™ farmhouse splitting their flagpole, my eardrums just about splitting in the roar. I clasp on tight. Next thing, my legs are falling from my body, or my bodyā€™s falling from the rock and weā€™re sinking together, sliding down. Then silence. Earth shattering silence. A venomous pause. Nothing moves, not even my lungs. I grab at the ledge hanging, waiting, watching. Come on Bill. Get out of the house. Get the Missus and get the fuck out. The elements are hovering, brewing a soup so thick and dark a rich thick and dark soup. Triple decker boom and Iā€™m rolling to the spine of the rock as it tilts and digs its feet in, crushing or protecting, as the sky breaks open with rain belting down. I crank my head towards the farmhouse and itā€™s sinking. Come on Bill and Betty. As the sky belts the earth belts my skull belts on the back of that blasted crushing protecting rock, the ground sinking further under the weight from above and rock falling, consciousness too, and then Iā€™m dreaming of everything

    The Role of Ī²-synuclein in the Pathological Mechanisms of Dementia with Lewy Bodies

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    Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative dementia following Alzheimerā€™s disease (AD). DLB neuropathology is characterised by Lewy bodies (LBs) and Lewy neurites (LNs) resulting from the modification and aggregation of Ī±-synuclein. The presence of small pre-synaptic accumulations of Ī±-synuclein lead to structural synaptic alterations that may precede neuronal demise. Family member Ī²-synuclein does not readily aggregate and has been shown to prevent Ī±-synuclein aggregation in vitro and in vivo and regional changes in Ī²-synuclein levels has been observed in the brains of DLB patients. Ī±-synuclein pathology is found in the limbic and cortical regions of the DLB brain producing fluctuating cognitive impairment, visual hallucinations and extrapyramidal motor disturbances. In order to examine whether regional changes in Ī²-synuclein influence the course of DLB, examination of protein levels of Ī±-synuclein and Ī²-synuclein in the frontal cortex, occipital cortex and hippocampus of patients with DLB and age-matched controls was performed. Evidence is provided here for a neuronal increase of Ī²-synuclein within the frontal cortex and a decrease in occipital cortex of DLB patients, both regions see similar levels of oligomeric Ī±-synuclein. Further examination of key pre-synaptic SNARE proteins reveal an increase of VAMP2 in the frontal cortex and a decrease of VAMP2 and SNAP25 in the occipital cortex. Autophagy markers LC3-II and p62 were also increased in the frontal cortex where an increase in Ī²-synuclein was identified in DLB brains and in vitro overexpression of Ī²-synuclein attenuates the autophagy flux. Collectively, this data suggests that Ī²-synuclein changes in the DLB cortex are regionally distinct and the possibility that Ī²-synuclein may exacerbate neuronal dysfunction by influencing protein degradation pathways, cannot be excluded. This data highlights the possibility of a dual role for Ī²-synuclein that may be both protective and antagonistic, advocating caution when considering the use of Ī²-synuclein as a potential therapeutic.BRACE, Northcott Devon Medical Foundation and University of Plymout

    Know thy enemy and know yourself ā€“ the role of operational data in managing the mines and booby trap threat in vietnam, 1965ā€“73

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    Victim operated explosive devices (VOEDs) such as mines and booby traps, have been an enduring problem since their large-scale use started in the 1940s. While the overall problem is often known about in general terms, the real complexion of the problem was not necessarily fully appreciated. Eventually the need to understand the problem and the response to it was partially identified and acted upon in Vietnam through the collection and analysis of operational data. This did not solve the problem of mines and booby traps, but it did offer a means to better manage the threat

    Operational data for the risk management of victim operated explosive devices in humanitarian mine action: a practitionerā€™s perspective

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    Since Mine Action's inception at the end of the 1980s, operators have collected limited data on the Victim Operated Explosive Devices (VOEDs) they clear. This includes not only data on the explosive ordnance itself but data on how they were found, where they were found and how they were processed and ultimately destroyed. In a context where detection of mines, boobytraps and certain Victim Operated Improvised Explosive Devices (VOIEDs) is an ongoing humanitarian and military challenge, significantly expanded operational data collection provides an achievable way to facilitate enhanced operational risk management. Risk decisions inherent in the clearance of VOEDs are better if made on the basis of extensive operational data. In the absence of a technological solution to detect and positively discriminate VOEDs from false positive indications, the collection of operational data offers the best prospect for ā€œmanagingā€ if not ā€œsolvingā€ the problem

    The importance of identified cause-of-death information being available for public health surveillance, actions and research

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    An amendment to the South African Births and Deaths Registration Act has compromised efforts to strengthen local mortality surveillance to provide statistics for small areas and enable data linkage to provide information for public health actions. Internationally it has been recognised that a careful balance needs to be kept between protecting individual patient confidentiality and enabling effective public health intelligence to guide patient care and service delivery and prevent harmful exposures. This article describes the public health benefits of a local mortality surveillance system in the Western Cape Province, South Africa (SA), as well as its potential for improving the quality of vital statistics data with integration into the national civil registration and vital statistics system. It also identifies other important uses for identifiable cause-of-death data in SA that have been compromised by this legislation

    Are interventions to reduce the impact of arsenic contamination of groundwater on human health in developing countries effective? A systematic review

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    BackgroundWithin developing countries, groundwater provides an alternative drinking source to polluted surface water. However, the presence of arsenic in some groundwater sources has resulted in chronic worldwide poisoning. The aim of this review was to determine the effectiveness of field-based technologies for the removal of arsenic from groundwater in developing countries.MethodsA structured search strategy was conducted in a range of databases. Titles, abstracts and full texts were screened using pre-defined inclusion criteria. Included studies were quality appraised prior to data extraction. The primary outcome was the percentage of effluent water samples meeting WHO guidelines for arsenic concentrations (ā‰¤0.01 mg/L). Secondary outcomes included: (a) arsenic concentrations in effluent water samples meeting the national guideline limit (ā‰¤0.05 mg/L), (b) arsenic concentrations in human tissue, and (c) knowledge and attitudes related to the interventions.ResultsFifty-one reports, evaluating 50 different technologies, were included. Sixty-seven percent (nā€‰=ā€‰34) of studies were conducted in Bangladesh. Fifty of the included reports were appraised as ā€˜weakā€™, with one ā€˜strongā€™ report of a randomised-controlled trial.In summary, the effectiveness of the oxidation and filtration interventions is poor, while the evidence for coagulation, co-precipitation and filtration, subterranean and membrane and electrolytic methods is mixed. Evidence regarding adsorption and zero valent iron interventions is more persuasive with most results suggesting good evidence of effectiveness (i.e. ā‰„95% of samples with arsenic concentrations ā‰¤0.01 mg/L). In particular, activated alumina and sono/three-kolshi/gagri/pitcher filters have ā‰„95% of samples meeting national guidelines. Disappointingly, only one study reports excellent evidence of effectiveness: BRAC (2000) for activated alumina (i.e. ā‰„95% of samples with arsenic concentrations ā‰¤0.01 mg/L).The success of each technology was highly dependent on context, especially their acceptability to users, a sense of ownership and expectations of womenā€™s roles in society.ConclusionsMost studies were poorly conducted and reported. Consequently, although some technologies met national guidelines, the evidence-base for decision-making regarding arsenic mitigation technologies at household- and community-level is weak. To improve this situation, primary research needs to be commissioned with adequate sample sizes, testing the impact of key contextual factors, using valid tools for analysis, and meeting standards for completeness of reporting

    The detection problem: an eight-decade challenge: the difficulty of practically detecting and discriminating mines, booby traps, and victim operated improvised explosive devices

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    Ā© The AuthorsReliably detecting and discriminating mines, booby traps, and victim operated improvised explosive devices remains a stubborn problem for both humanitarian demining organizations and the military. Since mines were widely used during the Second World War, much effort has been expended on the detection problem, with limited success. The aim of being able to positively identify a device first time remains elusive since the scientific challenge of positively identifying different substances in the ground is formidable. This article critically examines the detection problem and suggests that in the continued absence of a ā€˜silver bulletā€™ technological solution, the best means currently available to manage the risk of concealed explosive devices is the systematic collection and analysis of relevant operational data from the field

    Protocol for studying cough frequency in people with pulmonary tuberculosis.

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    INTRODUCTION: Cough is a key symptom of tuberculosis (TB) as well as the main cause of transmission. However, a recent literature review found that cough frequency (number of coughs per hour) in patients with TB has only been studied once, in 1969. The main aim of this study is to describe cough frequency patterns before and after the start of TB treatment and to determine baseline factors that affect cough frequency in these patients. Secondarily, we will evaluate the correlation between cough frequency and TB microbiological resolution. METHODS: This study will select participants with culture confirmed TB from 2 tertiary hospitals in Lima, Peru. We estimated that a sample size of 107 patients was sufficient to detect clinically significant changes in cough frequency. Participants will initially be evaluated through questionnaires, radiology, microscopic observation drug susceptibility broth TB-culture, auramine smear microscopy and cough recordings. This cohort will be followed for the initial 60ā€…days of anti-TB treatment, and throughout the study several microbiological samples as well as 24ā€…h recordings will be collected. We will describe the variability of cough episodes and determine its association with baseline laboratory parameters of pulmonary TB. In addition, we will analyse the reduction of cough frequency in predicting TB cure, adjusted for potential confounders. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval has been obtained from the ethics committees at each participating hospital in Lima, Peru, AsociaciĆ³n BenĆ©fica PRISMA in Lima, Peru, the Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia in Lima, Peru and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, USA. We aim to publish and disseminate our findings in peer-reviewed journals. We also expect to create and maintain an online repository for TB cough sounds as well as the statistical analysis employed

    Sustainability of locally driven centres for those affected by dementia: a protocol for the get real with meeting centres realist evaluation

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    INTRODUCTION: Improving support for people with early to moderate dementia to live at home in their communities is a global public health goal. Community adult social care is not robust in many parts of the UK, however, with the pandemic increasing pressure on services for this population. Community-led interventions can play a key role in supporting people postdiagnosis, helping delay decline, but many interventions struggle to sustain beyond 1-2 years. Meeting Centres (MCs) are one such intervention, which many UK community groups find attractive and achievable. However, it is not understood how these communities can ensure they are putting in place strategies that will help them sustain in the longer term, beyond start-up phase. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This realist evaluation aims to understand the factors affecting sustainability of MCs in rural areas and learn lessons from MCs that have sustained beyond 3ā€‰years. Data will be collected using mixed methods: interviews and group discussions with stakeholders involved at every level in three case study locations in England and Wales, analysed with Soft Systems modelling; a Discrete Choice Experiment exploring what people across the UK value and are willing to pay for MCs, analysed with regression modelling. All data will be synthesised using a Realist logic of analysis to build a theoretical model of how, why, for whom, in what contexts and to what extent MCs can be successfully implemented for the long term. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: As participants may lack capacity for informed consent, favourable ethical opinion was received from a Health Research Authority research ethics committee. Resulting recommendations will be of interest to stakeholders including those commissioning, planning, running, supporting or attending MCs, as well as policy-makers and healthcare professionals. Knowledge will be shared with emerging MCs to help accelerate scale up of this intervention
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