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Developing a scalable training model in global mental health: pilot study of a video-assisted training Program for Generalist Clinicians in Rural Nepal.
BackgroundIn low- and middle-income countries, mental health training often includes sending few generalist clinicians to specialist-led programs for several weeks. Our objective is to develop and test a video-assisted training model addressing the shortcomings of traditional programs that affect scalability: failing to train all clinicians, disrupting clinical services, and depending on specialists.MethodsWe implemented the program -video lectures and on-site skills training- for all clinicians at a rural Nepali hospital. We used Wilcoxon signed-rank tests to evaluate pre- and post-test change in knowledge (diagnostic criteria, differential diagnosis, and appropriate treatment). We used a series of 'Yes' or 'No' questions to assess attitudes about mental illness, and utilized exact McNemar's test to analyze the proportions of participants who held a specific belief before and after the training. We assessed acceptability and feasibility through key informant interviews and structured feedback.ResultsFor each topic except depression, there was a statistically significant increase (Δ) in median scores on knowledge questionnaires: Acute Stress Reaction (Δ = 20, p = 0.03), Depression (Δ = 11, p = 0.12), Grief (Δ = 40, p < 0.01), Psychosis (Δ = 22, p = 0.01), and post-traumatic stress disorder (Δ = 20, p = 0.01). The training received high ratings; key informants shared examples and views about the training's positive impact and complementary nature of the program's components.ConclusionVideo lectures and on-site skills training can address the limitations of a conventional training model while being acceptable, feasible, and impactful toward improving knowledge and attitudes of the participants
Resources and student achievement – evidence from a Swedish policy reform
This paper utilizes a policy change to estimate the effect of teacher density on student performance. We find that an increase in teacher density has a positive effect on student achievement. The baseline estimate – obtained by using the grade point average as the outcome variable – implies that resource increases corresponding to the class-size reduction in the STAR-experiment (i.e., a reduction of 7 students) improves performance by 2.6 percentile ranks (or 0.08 standard deviations). When we use test score data for men, potentially a more objective measure of student performance, the effect of resources appears to be twice the size of the baseline estimate.Student performance; teacher/student ratio; policy reform; differences-in-differences
Exact 1/N and Optimized Perturbative Evaluation of mu_c for Homogeneous Interacting Bose Gases
In the framework of the O(N) three-dimensional effective scalar field model
for homogeneous dilute weakly interacting Bose gases we use the 1/N expansion
to evaluate, within the large N limit, the parameter r_c which is directly
related to the critical chemical potential mu_c. This quantity enters the
order-a^2 n^{2/3} coefficient contributing to the critical temperature shift
Delta T_c where a represents the s-wave scattering length and n represents the
density. Compared to the recent precise numerical lattice simulation results,
our calculation suggests that the large N approximation performs rather well
even for the physical case N=2. We then calculate the same quantity but using
different forms of the optimized perturbative (variational) method, showing
that these produce excellent results both for the finite N and large-N cases.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. We have performed a refined and extended
numerical analysis to take into account the very recent results of Ref. [15
A Study of the Kazakov-Migdal Model
We study numerically the SU(2) Kazakov-Migdal model of `induced QCD'. In
contrast to our earlier work on the subject we have chosen here {\it not} to
integrate out the gauge fields but to keep them in the Monte Carlo simulation.
This allows us to measure observables associated with the gauge fields and
thereby address the problem of the local symmetry present in the model.
We confirm our previous result that the model has a line of first order phase
transitions terminating in a critical point. The adjoint plaquette has a clear
discontinuity across the phase transition, whereas the plaquette in the
fundamental representation is always zero in accordance with Elitzur's theorem.
The density of small monopoles shows very little variation and is always
large. We also find that the model has extra local U(1) symmetries which do not
exist in the case of the standard adjoint theory. As a result, we are able to
show that two of the angles parameterizing the gauge field completely decouple
from the theory and the continuum limit defined around the critical point can
therefore not be `QCD'.Comment: 11 pages, UTHEP-24
Observing the build-up of the colour-magnitude relation at redshift ~0.8
We analyse the rest-frame (U-V) colour-magnitude relation for 2 clusters at
redshift 0.7 and 0.8, drawn from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey. By comparing
with the population of red galaxies in the Coma cluster, we show that the high
redshift clusters exhibit a deficit of passive faint red galaxies. Our results
show that the red-sequence population cannot be explained in terms of a
monolithic and synchronous formation scenario. A large fraction of faint
passive galaxies in clusters today has moved onto the red sequence relatively
recently as a consequence of the fact that their star formation activity has
come to an end at z<0.8.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Proc. of IAU Colloq. 195: "Outskirts
of Galaxy Clusters: Intense Life in the Suburbs" -- minor typos correcte
Weak lensing mass reconstructions of the ESO Distant Cluster Survey
We present weak lensing mass reconstructions for the 20 high-redshift
clusters i n the ESO Distant Cluster Survey. The weak lensing analysis was
performed on deep, 3-color optical images taken with VLT/FORS2, using a
composite galaxy catalog with separate shape estimators measured in each
passband. We find that the EDisCS sample is composed primarily of clusters that
are less massive than t hose in current X-ray selected samples at similar
redshifts, but that all of the fields are likely to contain massive clusters
rather than superpositions of low mass groups. We find that 7 of the 20 fields
have additional massive structures which are not associated with the clusters
and which can affect the weak lensing mass determination. We compare the mass
measurements of the remaining 13 clusters with luminosity measurements from
cluster galaxies selected using photometric redshifts and find evidence of a
dependence of the cluster mass-to-light ratio with redshift. Finally we
determine the noise level in the shear measurements for the fields as a
function of exposure time and seeing and demonstrate that future ground-based
surveys which plan to perform deep optical imaging for use in weak lensing
measurements must achieve point-spread functions smaller than a median of 0.6"
FWHM.Comment: 35 pages, 24 figures, accepted to A&A, a version with better figure
resolution can be found at http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/ediscs/papers.htm
Convergence of the Optimized Delta Expansion for the Connected Vacuum Amplitude: Zero Dimensions
Recent proofs of the convergence of the linear delta expansion in zero and in
one dimensions have been limited to the analogue of the vacuum generating
functional in field theory. In zero dimensions it was shown that with an
appropriate, -dependent, choice of an optimizing parameter \l, which is an
important feature of the method, the sequence of approximants tends to
with an error proportional to . In the present paper we
establish the convergence of the linear delta expansion for the connected
vacuum function . We show that with the same choice of \l the
corresponding sequence tends to with an error proportional to . The rate of convergence of the latter sequence is governed by
the positions of the zeros of .Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, Imperial/TP/92-93/5
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