484 research outputs found

    “It Takes a (Healthy) Village to Raise a Child:” A Case for Integrating Public Health and Social Work Research to Eliminate Health Disparities

    Get PDF
    Issue Editor, Heather H. Goltz, introduces Volume 17, Issue 1 of the Journal of Family Strengths

    A Rare Family: Exploring Genetic Literacy in an Online Support Group

    Get PDF
    Healthy People 2020 and the Institute of Medicine (IOM) define health literacy as the “degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions.” Essential components of health literacy include oral and print literacy, numeracy, and cultural and conceptual knowledge; the latter is influenced by sociodemographic factors and cultural understandings and approaches to concepts such as healthcare. Genetic literacy, a form of health literacy, may be defined as the knowledge, skills and attitudes necessary to individual understanding of genetic information, and genetic-based health, behavior, technology and services, making it a vital component of sexual and reproductive decision-making. The current qualitative research study employed holistic-content and narrative analysis of secondary data (electronic or e-mail posts) from an online support group for individuals affected by a genetic disorder in order to to gain additional insights into specific psychosocial and environmental variables that affect individual genetic literacy, related perceptions of genetic risk, and sexual and reproductive decision-making. Findings from the study indicate that online health-related support groups can evolve into a socially-constructed “family” of individuals affected by specific disorders. Within this online family, members find others who can identify with their feelings and experiences. Like biological families of origin, this “familial” context may then exert particularly strong influences on members’ social and health decision-making via co-constructed cultural and conceptual knowledge of the disorder. Further qualitative research needs to be performed to understand the positive and negative impact that participation in a collective consciousness might have on individual genetic literacy necessary for making sensitive decisions such as those involved in sexual and reproductive health. Implications for education and counseling are discussed

    Solitonic spin-liquid state due to the violation of the Lifshitz condition in Fe1+y_{1+y}Te

    Full text link
    A combination of phenomenological analysis and M\"ossbauer spectroscopy experiments on the tetragonal Fe1+y_{1+y}Te system indicates that the magnetic ordering transition in compounds with higher Fe-excess, y≄y\ge 0.11, is unconventional. Experimentally, a liquid-like magnetic precursor with quasi-static spin-order is found from significantly broadened M\"ossbauer spectra at temperatures above the antiferromagnetic transition. The incommensurate spin-density wave (SDW) order in Fe1+y_{1+y}Te is described by a magnetic free energy that violates the weak Lifshitz condition in the Landau theory of second-order transitions. The presence of multiple Lifshitz invariants provides the mechanism to create multidimensional, twisted, and modulated solitonic phases.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Developing Professional Identity and Networks at Conferences

    Get PDF
    Professional conferences play an important role in the development of health behavior researchers. These venues are essential for applying academic coursework and advancing or strengthening skills in professional settings. Attending meetings enables students and early career scholars to interact with researchers and practitioners in the field for the purposes of sharing research findings, discussing practice strategies, and exploring career options through networking opportunities. Conference experiences can be enhanced by proper planning and execution before, during, and after the event. This editorial provides recommendations to junior conference attendees related to a variety of topics including time management, presentation etiquette, networking, locating mentors, and post-meeting follow-up procedures

    Ferromagnetism and superconductivity in P-doped CeFeAsO

    Get PDF
    We report on superconductivity in CeFeAs1-xPxO and the possible coexistence with Ce- ferromagnetism (FM) in a small homogeneity range around x = 30% with ordering temperatures of T_SC = T_C = 4K. The antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering temperature of Fe at this critical concentration is suppressed to T^N_Fe ~ 40K and does not shift to lower temperatures with further increase of the P concentration. Therefore, a quantum-critical-point scenario with T^N_Fe -> 0K which is widely discussed for the iron based superconductors can be excluded for this alloy series. Surprisingly, thermal expansion and X-ray powder diffraction indicate the absence of an orthorhombic distortion despite clear evidence for short range AFM Fe-ordering from muon-spin-rotation measurements. Furthermore, we discovered the formation of a sharp electron spin resonance signal unambiguously connected with the emergence of FM ordering.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, published in Phys. Rev. B (Rapid Communication, Editors suggestion

    Modeling NAPL dissolution from pendular rings in idealized porous media

    Get PDF
    The dissolution rate of nonaqueous phase liquid (NAPL) often governs the remediation time frame at subsurface hazardous waste sites. Most formulations for estimating this rate are empirical and assume that the NAPL is the nonwetting fluid. However, field evidence suggests that some waste sites might be organic wet. Thus, formulations that assume the NAPL is nonwetting may be inappropriate for estimating the rates of NAPL dissolution. An exact solution to the Young‐Laplace equation, assuming NAPL resides as pendular rings around the contact points of porous media idealized as spherical particles in a hexagonal close packing arrangement, is presented in this work to provide a theoretical prediction for NAPL‐water interfacial area. This analytic expression for interfacial area is then coupled with an exact solution to the advection‐diffusion equation in a capillary tube assuming Hagen‐Poiseuille flow to provide a theoretical means of calculating the mass transfer rate coefficient for dissolution at the NAPL‐water interface in an organic‐wet system. A comparison of the predictions from this theoretical model with predictions from empirically derived formulations from the literature for water‐wet systems showed a consistent range of values for the mass transfer rate coefficient, despite the significant differences in model foundations (water wetting versus NAPL wetting, theoretical versus empirical). This finding implies that, under these system conditions, the important parameter is interfacial area, with a lesser role played by NAPL configuration.Key Points:Exact solution to the Young‐Laplace equation for pendular ringsTheoretical determination of the mass transfer rate coefficient under hydrophobic conditionsPredicts similar NAPL dissolution rates for oil‐wet and water‐wet conditionsPeer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145506/1/wrcr21729.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145506/2/wrcr21729_am.pd

    Modeling NAPL Dissolution from Pendular Rings in Idealized Porous Media

    Get PDF
    The dissolution rate of nonaqueous phase liquid (NAPL) often governs the remediation time frame at subsurface hazardous waste sites. Most formulations for estimating this rate are empirical and assume that the NAPL is the nonwetting fluid. However, field evidence suggests that some waste sites might be organic wet. Thus, formulations that assume the NAPL is nonwetting may be inappropriate for estimating the rates of NAPL dissolution. An exact solution to the Young‐Laplace equation, assuming NAPL resides as pendular rings around the contact points of porous media idealized as spherical particles in a hexagonal close packing arrangement, is presented in this work to provide a theoretical prediction for NAPL‐water interfacial area. This analytic expression for interfacial area is then coupled with an exact solution to the advection‐diffusion equation in a capillary tube assuming Hagen‐Poiseuille flow to provide a theoretical means of calculating the mass transfer rate coefficient for dissolution at the NAPL‐water interface in an organic‐wet system. A comparison of the predictions from this theoretical model with predictions from empirically derived formulations from the literature for water‐wet systems showed a consistent range of values for the mass transfer rate coefficient, despite the significant differences in model foundations (water wetting versus NAPL wetting, theoretical versus empirical). This finding implies that, under these system conditions, the important parameter is interfacial area, with a lesser role played by NAPL configuration. Abstract © AGU

    Real-time earthquake hazard assessment in California; the early post-earthquake damage assessment tool and the Caltech-USGS broadcast of earthquakes

    Get PDF
    A real-time earthquake monitoring system which provides source parameters to user groups through a commercial paging service is now in place in California. A GIS-based system to predict and display near real-time damage and casualty estimates is currently being developed by EQE International under contract with the State of California. These new technologies offer immediate tangible benefits to state and local governments, utilities, lifelines and corporations with facilities or operations at risk. This paper will outline the development of these new technologies, identify the contributions they will make to emergency management and explore some directions these innovative systems may take in the future

    Critical Issues: Defining and Debunking Misconceptions in Health, Education, Criminal Justice, and Social Work/Social Services

    Get PDF
    The University of Houston Downtown Committee for the Journal of Family Strengths introduces Volume 18, Issue 1: Critical Issues: Defining and Debunking Misconceptions in Health, Education, Criminal Justice, and Social Work/Social Services
    • 

    corecore