166 research outputs found

    Negotiating motherhood: practices and discourses

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    Processes of transition to motherhood have been devoted a great deal of attention, resulting in a consistent range of research and literature. Globally, and considering the different directions and motivations of theses studies, the consequential body of research basically points out the complex and diverse character of this personal experience, whether focused in a more quantitative approach intended to isolate the variables influencing the psychosocial adjustment to this transition (Glade, Bean & Vira, 2005), or oriented towards a qualitative exploration of the individual experience of these women (see Nelson, 2003, for a review). Nevertheless the knowledge that the transition to motherhood constitutes a highly challenging task that presents several emotional, affective and social nuances, the cultural view of this life event seems to continue emphasizing the element of self-fulfilment of the feminine nature that motherhood experiences also carries. Several authors have highlighted the fact that motherhood, more than a mere biological event, constitutes a social phenomenon, loaded with inherited cultural and ideological images and lay theories that influence the experiences of any new mother (Johnston & Swanson, 2006; Letherby, 1994; SĂ©von, 2005; Woollett, 1991). At the realm of social discourses, seemingly a traditional idealized view of motherhood as a source of significant personal fulfilment and enjoyment of intense positive emotions prevails (Leal, 2005; SolĂ© & Parella, 2004). This narrow vision of motherhood also carries a set of believes and stereotypes around what is socially and culturally accepted, in contemporaneous western societies, as an adequate practice of “mothering”, which are largely sustained by the myth of motherhood as a universal need and “natural” choice of women and by the expectation of a full-time mothering (Johnston & Swanson, 2006; Fursman, 2002; SolĂ© & Parella, 2004; Oakley, 1984). In other words, it is expected that all women long for motherhood and that they become almost exclusively devoted to their children, being present to love, educate, stimulate and care for them (Fursman, 2002). Thus, the word “motherhood”, understood as a discursive construct with deep socio-cultural roots, also involves a set of behavioural and attitudinal prescriptions necessary to what is understood as a “good” mother and which, by opposition, exclude other behaviours and attitudes that become connected with a “bad” mother (SolĂ© & Parella, 2004). Thus, these social and cultural d1iscourses around the notion of an intensive motherhood, that is presented as the major priority in women’s lives, is extensively based in the invention of the “good” motherhood, which has strong implications in the way women live this event and reassess their life projects, limiting the possibilities of their identities and discursive practices (Breheny & Stephens, 2007)

    The moderating role of self-care behaviors in personal care aides of older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic

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    The COVID-19 pandemic has brought new challenges and work changes for formal caregivers such as personal care aides with an impact on their quality of life (QoL). This cross-sectional study aims to analyze the relationships and contribution of sociodemographic and psychological variables towards QoL including the moderating role of self-care. This study included 127 formal caregivers from Portugal who were assessed on depression, anxiety and stress (DASS-21); professional self-care (SCAP); quality of life (SF-12); COVID-19 traumatic stress (COVID-19TSC) and preventive COVID-19 infection behaviors (PCOVID-19 IBS). Professional self-care was positively associated with QoL and also moderated the relationship between distress and QoL (p < 0.001). According to results, nursing homes should provide formal caregivers, such as personal care aides, with the professional support they need in order to promote their QoL and prevent burnout.This study was conducted at the Psychology Research Centre (PSI/01662), School of Psychology, University of Minho, supported by the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) through the Portuguese State Budget (Ref.: UIDB/PSI/01662/2020

    Use of a biphasic perfusion process based on mild hypothermia for recombinant glucocerebrosidase (GBA) production

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    The main goal of this study was to develop an innovative CHO-based process for the production of glucocerebrosidase (GBA), an enzyme used for the replacement therapy of Type 1 Gaucher disease. The focus of the present study was on the development of a perfusion process, combining strategies that are commonly used for process optimization: temperature reduction, and supplementation of the culture medium with productivity enhancers, such as short chain fatty acids. The effects of mild hypothermic conditions combined with valeric acid supplementation were first studied in batch shake flasks for two clones (CHO-GBA-36K and CHO-GBA-65P), developed previously using as host the cell lines CHO.K1 (ATCC CCL-61) and CHO.PRO5 (a glycosylation mutant developed by Stanley et al. Cell 6:121, 1975), respectively. A DOE approach was used (Table 1) to select the most promising cultivation conditions to be further applied to a perfusion process. The best performance regarding both cell growth and GBA production was obtained for the CHO-GBA-65P clone under condition [1], at 31ÂșC with no valeric acid (Table 1). Under this condition, CHO-GBA-65P achieved a maximum qP of 58.4 mU/106 cells/d, which is 4.2 fold higher than qP at the control condition [2] and 2.7 fold higher than the maximum qP obtained for the CHO-GBA-36K clone, which was achieved at 31ÂșC with 2 mM valeric acid supplementation (condition [3]). Please click Additional Files below to see the full abstract

    Mini-review and discussion of a potential standardization

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    Gonçalves, G., Andriolo, U., Gonçalves, L. M. S., Sobral, P., & Bessa, F. (2022). Beach litter survey by drones: Mini-review and discussion of a potential standardization. Environmental Pollution, 315(15 December), 1-8. [120370]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120370The abundance of beach litter has been increasing globally during the last decades, and it is an issue of global concern. A new survey strategy, based on uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAV, aka drones), has been recently adopted to improve the monitoring of beach macro-litter items abundance and distribution. This work identified and analysed the 15 studies that used drone for beach litter surveys on an operational basis. The analysis of technical parameters for drone flight deployment revealed that flight altitude varied between 5 and 40 m. The analysis of final assessments showed that, through manual and/or automated items detection on images, most of studies provided litter bulk characteristics (type, material and size), along with litter distribution maps. The potential standardization of drone-based litter survey would allow a comparison among surveys, however it seems difficult to propose a standard set of flight parameters, given the wide variety of coastal environments, the different devices available, and the diverse objectives of drone-based litter surveys. On the other hand, in our view, a set of common outcomes can be proposed, based on the grid mapping process, which can be easily generated following the procedure indicated in the paper. This work sets the ground for the development of a standardized protocol for drone litter data collection, analysis and assessments. This would allow the provision of broad scale comparative studies to support coastal management at both national and international scales.publishersversionpublishe

    Cu- and Za-soil anomalies in the NE border of the South Portuguese Zone (Iberian Variscides, Portugal). Identified by multifractal and geostatistical analysis

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    Extensive Cu- and Zn-soil geochemical data in the Albernoa/Entradas–S. Domingos region (NE border of the Iberian Pyrite Belt, South Portuguese Zone) were examined to separate anomalies from background using the concentration–area fractal model. Distribution patterns of Cu and Zn concentrations in soil are primarily influenced by bedrock. The regional threshold values of Cu- and Zn-soil contents over metasedimentary sequences are 20–25 and 20–60 ppm, respectively, becoming 30–50 and 20–90 ppm, respectively, when metavolcanic rocks are present. The first-order threshold values for Cu are 80–90 ppm in soils over metasediments and 70–80 ppm in soils over sequences bearing metavolcanics. For Zn, the first-order threshold values are 40–80 and 90–100 ppm in soils over metasediments and metavolcanic rocks, respectively. Metasediments and metavolcanics comprising significant sulphide disseminations are outlined by Cu- and Zn-soil values above 100 and 300 ppm in soil, respectively. On the basis of these results, Alvares and Albernoa/Entradas areas emerge as the first priority targets for exploration. The observed non-coincidence of Cu- and Zn-soil anomalies in soil in the area could reflect difference in element dispersion during weathering, they mostly indicate distinct metal sources related to the original composition of different rock types or to chemical changes developed during Variscan deformation/re-crystallization path. The established regional baseline data can be used as reference for environmental studies

    Geochemistry of stream sediments southwards of the SW Variscan suture in Portugal (Guadiana and Chança river basins) : insights into element anomalies of variable origin and intensity

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    Stream sediment samples were collected in the Trindade–Chança region at 1034 sites for mineral exploration purposes during 1996–97. Concentrations of Cu, Zn, Pb, Co, Cr and Ni are high enough in most sample sites to allow data assessment by multi-element anomaly definition and threshold computation using the area concentration multifractal model technique. The regional threshold values are 20, 45, 30 and 15 ppm for Cu, Zn, Pb and Co respectively. Anomalies for Cu, Zn, Pb, Co, Cr and Ni are delimited by first order local threshold values at 40, 94, 70, 21, 37 and 42 ppm. The main anomalies are clustered to the east-southeast of the surveyed region and reflect mixed contributions from a variety of sources, namely different volcanic units with local contributions from pelite rocks, contamination from old (abandoned) mining activities and hydrothermal mineralisation controlled by different fault zones

    Photolytic release at different wavelengths of tetrapeptide AAPV from a pyrenylmethyl conjugate

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    Comunicação em painel no 2nd Symposium on Medicinal Chemistry, Braga, Portugal, 8 Maio 2015The present work describes the photolysis of ester conjugate NH2-Ala-Ala-Pro-Val-Pym, with Pym being the pyrenylmethylene group, at different wavelengths of irradiation in different solvents and simulated physiological environment. The photolysis of the ester conjugate and the release of the free tetrapeptide was monitored by HPLC with UV detection, with collection of kinetic data.Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e Tecnologia(FCT, Portugal) for financial support to the NMR portuguese network (PTNMR, Bruker Avance III 400-Univ. Minho), FCT and FEDER (European Fund for Regional Development)-COMPETE -QREN-EU for financial support to Research Centre of Chemistry, CQ/UM [PEst -C/QUI/UI0686/2013 (FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-037302)]info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    A photolabile prodrug of tetrapeptide AAPV bearing 7-methoxycoumarin at the C-terminal

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    Comunicação em painel QS30 no livro de resumos do XX Encontro Luso-Galego de QuĂ­micathe present work describes the evaluation as a photolabile prodrug of a fluorescent conjugate of the tetrapeptide AAPV labeled at the C-terminus with 7-methoxycoumarin. This conjugate was submitted to photocleavage studies at different wavelengths of irradiation in different solvents and simulated physiological environment in order to study the release of the peptide. The photolysis process was monitored by HPLC with UV detection and 1H NMR, with collection of kinetic data.Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e a Tecnologia (FCT

    Genomic Analysis of Prophages from Klebsiella pneumoniae Clinical Isolates

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    Klebsiella pneumoniae is an increasing threat to public health and represents one of the most concerning pathogens involved in life-threatening infections. The resistant and virulence determinants are coded by mobile genetic elements which can easily spread between bacteria populations and co-evolve with its genomic host. In this study, we present the full genomic sequences, insertion sites and phylogenetic analysis of 150 prophages found in 40 K. pneumoniae clinical isolates obtained from an outbreak in a Portuguese hospital. All strains harbored at least one prophage and we identified 104 intact prophages (69.3%). The prophage size ranges from 29.7 to 50.6 kbp, coding between 32 and 78 putative genes. The prophage GC content is 51.2%, lower than the average GC content of 57.1% in K. pneumoniae. Complete prophages were classified into three families in the order Caudolovirales: Myoviridae (59.6%), Siphoviridae (38.5%) and Podoviridae (1.9%). In addition, an alignment and phylogenetic analysis revealed nine distinct clusters. Evidence of recombination was detected within the genome of some prophages but, in most cases, proteins involved in viral structure, transcription, replication and regulation (lysogenic/lysis) were maintained. These results support the knowledge that prophages are diverse and widely disseminated in K. pneumoniae genomes, contributing to the evolution of this species and conferring additional phenotypes. Moreover, we identified K. pneumoniae prophages in a set of endolysin genes, which were found to code for proteins with lysozyme activity, cleaving the ÎČ-1,4 linkages between N-acetylmuramic acid and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine residues in the peptidoglycan network and thus representing genes with the potential for lysin phage therapy.F.F.V. is funded by Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e a Tecnologia (FCT) through an Assistant Researcher grant CEECIND/03023/2017, and a project grant (PTDC/BTM-SAL/28978/2017) that supported this work. The work is partially supported by National funds from FCT, projects UIDB/04138/2020 and UIDP/04138/2020.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Recycling of textile bleaching effluents for dyeing using immobilized catalase

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    Catalase was immobilized on alumina carrier and crosslinked with glutaraldehyde. Storing stability, temperature and pH profiles of enzyme activity were studied in a column reactor with recirculation and in a batch stirred-tank reactor. The immobilized enzyme retained 44% of its activity at pH 11, 30 °C and 90% at 80 °C, pH 7. The half-life time of the immobilized catalase was increased to 2 h at pH 12, and 60 °C. Acceptable results were achieved when the residual water from the washing process of H2O2-bleached fabrics was treated with the immobilized enzyme and then reused for dyeing
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