60 research outputs found

    Extratropical forcing and tropical rainfall distribution: energetics framework and ocean Ekman advection

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    Intense tropical rainfall occurs in a narrow belt near the equator, called the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ). In the past decade, the atmospheric energy budget has been used to explain changes in the zonal-mean ITCZ position. The energetics framework provides a mechanism for extratropics-to-tropics teleconnections, which have been postulated from paleoclimate records. In atmosphere models coupled with a motionless slab ocean, the ITCZ shifts toward the warmed hemisphere in order for the Hadley circulation to transport energy toward the colder hemisphere. However, recent studies using fully coupled models show that tropical rainfall can be rather insensitive to extratropical forcing when ocean dynamics is included. Here, we explore the effect of meridional Ekman heat advection while neglecting the upwelling effect on the ITCZ response to prescribed extratropical thermal forcing. The tropical component of Ekman advection is a negative feedback that partially compensates the prescribed forcing, whereas the extratropical component is a positive feedback that amplifies the prescribed forcing. Overall, the tropical negative feedback dominates over the extratropical positive feedback. Thus, including Ekman advection reduces the need for atmospheric energy transport, dampening the ITCZ response. We propose to build a hierarchy of ocean models to systematically explore the full dynamical response of the coupled climate system

    Perceptions of Mailed HPV Self-testing Among Women at Higher Risk for Cervical Cancer

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    OBJECTIVE: Whether human papillomavirus (HPV) self-testing can expand access to cervical cancer screening will depend on making the test accessible and acceptable to higher-risk women. To evaluate a novel delivery mode, we mailed HPV self-test kits to low-income, under-screened women and assessed their perceptions of self-testing and cervical cancer prevention. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a telephone survey of 199 women in North Carolina. Eligibility criteria included not having had a Pap test in 4 years and reporting 1 or more indicators of economic hardship, such as being uninsured. RESULTS: Over half (55%) of women in the diverse sample were non-Hispanic black, and almost three-quarters (74%) reported annual household incomes of 20,000orless.TrustinHPVselftestingwasmoderatetohigh,withalmostallwomen(9820,000 or less. Trust in HPV self-testing was moderate to high, with almost all women (98%) agreeing the mailed test was safe. A few women (6%) preferred HPV self-testing to Pap testing for protecting health, but most (75%) had no preference. Trust in or preference for mailed self-testing did not vary by race or income. However, compared to white women, black women had lower HPV-related knowledge (OR=0.46, 95% CI, 0.23–0.92) and perceived lower cervical cancer risk in the absence of screening (OR=0.44, 95% CI, 0.22–0.86). We found similar patterns of disparities for women with very low (<10,000) versus relatively higher incomes. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that, across racial and economic subgroups, under-screened women generally trust HPV self-tests delivered by mail. To succeed, programs for HPV self-testing must overcome disparities in knowledge and perceptions related to cervical cancer screening
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