8,146 research outputs found
Inorganic Concentrations in the Wood of Eastern Redcedar Grown on Different Sites
Samples of eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana L.) growing on soils derived from five parent materialsârhyolite, dolomite, limestone, sandstone, and chertâwere analyzed for levels of inorganics in sapwood and heartwood. Eighteen elements were detected in sapwood using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Neutron activation analysis was also used to determine concentrations of an additional six elements in heartwood. No difference was found between results obtained by the two analytical methods. Conventional wet chemistry techniques were used to determine nitrogen and sulfur concentrations in some samples
Health Informatics and E-health Curriculum for Clinical Health Profession Degrees
This article is published online with Open Access by IOS Press and distributed under the terms
of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License.The project reported in this paper models a new approach to making health informatics and e-health education widely available to students in a range of Australian clinical health profession degrees. The development of a Masters level subject uses design-based research to apply educational quality assurance practices which are consistent with university qualification frameworks, and with clinical health profession education standards; at the same time it gives recognition to health informatics as a specialised profession in its own right. The paper presents details of (a) design with reference to the Australian Qualifications Framework and CHIA competencies, (b) peer review within a three-university teaching team, (c) external review by experts from the professions, (d) cross-institutional interprofessional online learning, (e) methods for evaluating student learning experiences and outcomes, and (f) mechanisms for making the curriculum openly available to interested parties. The project has sought and found demand among clinical health professionals for formal health informatics and e-health education that is designed for them. It has helped the educators and organisations involved to understand the need for nuanced and complementary health informatics educational offerings in Australian universities. These insights may aid in further efforts to address substantive and systemic challenges that clinical informatics faces in Australia
Runoff and Sediment from Row-crop, Row-crop with Grass Strips, Pasture, and Forest Watersheds
Comparisons of runoff and sediment loss from row-crop with and without riparian buffers, pasture and grass filter strips are limited. Effects of precipitation, landuse and buffer condition on runoff and sediment loss were examined from 1997 to 1999 in eight watersheds with varying proportions of row-crop, pasture, riparian buffers and grass filter strips. Runoff volume and sediment mass from row-crop watersheds were inversely related to the percentage of forest and pasture cover. Forest (n = 2), pasture (n = 3), row-crop (n = 2) and a row-crop watershed with grass filter strips (RC-GFS) had 3âyr mean runoff of 939, 1,560, 3,434 and 1,175 m3 haâ1 yrâ1, respectively. Runoff was greater from all landuses in a year when precipitation was 36% above normal (1998). The largest single runoff event from each watershed accounted for 11 to 25% of its total runoff. Forest, pasture, row-crop and RC-GFS watersheds lost 1,017, 1,241, 3,679 and 2,129 kg haâ1 yrâ1 of sediment, respectively. In 1998, the RC-GFS watershed lost more sediment than row-crop watersheds and had less runoff and sediment loss in years with normal or below normal precipitation. Row-crop watersheds with 55% pasture reduced runoff and sediment loss by 55 and 66%, respectively, compared to row-crop watersheds. During 90% of the runoff events, more soil was lost from row-crop watersheds than pasture or forest watersheds. Results suggest that 3â4 m grass filter strips, maintenance of 55% or more pasture/CRP land within row-crop watersheds and intact riparian buffers significantly reduce runoff and sediment losses from row-crop watersheds.Les Ă©tudes comparant les volumes de ruissellement et les charges sĂ©dimentaires de bassins versants avec cultures en lignes et pĂąturages avec et sans zones tampons et bandes riveraines sont peu nombreuses. Les effets des prĂ©cipitations, de lâoccupation du sol et des conditions des zones tampons sur le ruissellement et les charges sĂ©dimentaires ont Ă©tĂ© analysĂ©s de 1997 Ă 1999 pour huit bassins versants comportant en proportions diverses des cultures en lignes, des pĂąturages, des zones tampons et des bandes riveraines. Il a Ă©tĂ© montrĂ© que les volumes de ruissellement et les charges sĂ©dimentaires pour les bassins versants avec cultures en lignes Ă©taient inversement proportionnels aux pourcentages de forĂȘt et de pĂąturages prĂ©sents sur ces bassins. Les moyennes mesurĂ©es sur trois ans des volumes de ruissellement des bassins versants de type forestier, avec pĂąturages, avec cultures en lignes et avec cultures en lignes et bandes riveraines (RCâGFS) sont de 939, 1 560, 3 434 et 1 175 m3/ha/an respectivement. Les volumes de ruissellement mesurĂ©s pendant une annĂ©e pour toutes les occupations du territoire ont Ă©tĂ© plus grands lorsque les prĂ©cipitations ont Ă©tĂ© supĂ©rieures de 36 % Ă la normale (1998). LâĂ©vĂ©nement gĂ©nĂ©rant le volume de ruissellement le plus important Ă survenir sur chaque bassin versant gĂ©nĂšre Ă lui seul de 11 % Ă 25 % du volume de ruissellement total mesurĂ©. Les charges sĂ©dimentaires pour les bassins versants forestiers, avec pĂąturages, avec cultures en lignes et RCâGFS ont Ă©tĂ© respectivement de 1 017, 1 241, 3 679, et 2 129 kg/ha/an respectivement. En 1998, les charges sĂ©dimentaires des bassins versants RCâGFS ont Ă©tĂ© plus importantes que les bassins avec cultures en lignes alors que les volumes de ruissellement et les charges sĂ©dimentaires sur ces mĂȘmes bassins ont Ă©tĂ© plus petits lors dâannĂ©es avec des prĂ©cipitations Ă©gales ou infĂ©rieures Ă la moyenne. Les bassins avec cultures en lignes et comportant 55 % de pĂąturages permettent une rĂ©duction de lâordre de 55 % des volumes de ruissellement et de 66 % des charges sĂ©dimentaires lorsque comparĂ©s aux bassins avec cultures en lignes. Les charges sĂ©dimentaires mesurĂ©es Ă lâexutoire des bassins avec cultures en lignes ont Ă©tĂ© plus Ă©levĂ©es pour 90 % des Ă©vĂ©nements que celles issues des bassins avec pĂąturages ou forestiers. Les rĂ©sultats de cette Ă©tude montrent que des bandes riveraines de 3 Ă 4 m, le maintien de plus de 55 % du territoire sous forme de pĂąturages/CRP pour des bassins avec cultures en lignes et la prĂ©sence de bandes riveraines permettent de rĂ©duire de façon significative les volumes de ruissellement et les charges sĂ©dimentaires des bassins versants avec cultures en lignes
Understanding cohort differences in appraisals of reconstruction priorities of mental health systems in postconflict Liberia
Objective: This study analyzes the relationship between informantsâ age and their assessment of mental health needs in postconflict society and examines if mental health needs assessment priorities differ depending upon whether or not the informant was exposed to the Liberian civil war.Method: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in March 2009 to obtain data on mental health needs of Liberian children, adolescents and young adults. A total of 171 individuals were interviewed. The data were analyzed using a two- way ANOVA.Results: Elder respondents expressed a preference for young adults to receive services in a church/mosque (F = 4.020, p < .05); for adolescents in volunteer programs (F = 3.987, p < .05) and for children in sports programs (F = 4.396, p < .05). Experiencing conflict did exert some influence on treatment setting preferences. Those who resided outside Liberia during the conflict cited a preference for traditional healers and medical clinics. However, this preference was for the children and young adult age categories. Those who experienced the civil war reported significantly higher preferences for adolescent services to be located in medical clinics, with traditional healers, and in churches/mosques.Conclusion: This study provides additional support for the premise that the utilization of psychiatric services needs to be viewed from the perspective of Liberians and that there are differences in preferences across groups. Our results suggest that service providers and policy makers take into account the age of the patient when deciding where to locate treatment settings for the population.Keywords: Mental Health; Liberia; Treatment Settings; Elders; Needs AssessmentAfrican Journal of Psychiatry âą November 2013, 16(6
Randomised controlled trial of the clinical and cost-effectiveness of a peer delivered self-management intervention to prevent relapse in crisis resolution team users: study protocol
Introduction:
Crisis resolution teams (CRTs) provide assessment and intensive home treatment in a crisis, aiming to offer an alternative for people who would otherwise require a psychiatric inpatient admission. They are available in most areas in England. Despite some evidence for their clinical and cost-effectiveness, recurrent concerns are expressed regarding discontinuity with other services and lack of focus on preventing future relapse and readmission to acute care. Currently evidence on how to prevent readmissions to acute care is limited. Self management interventions, involving supporting service users in recognising and managing signs of their own illness and in actively planning their recovery, have some supporting evidence, but have not been tested as a means of preventing readmission to acute care in people leaving community crisis care. We thus proposed the current study to test the effectiveness of such an intervention. We selected peer support workers as the preferred staff to deliver such an intervention, as they are well-placed to model and encourage active and autonomous recovery from mental health problems.
Methods and analysis:
The CORE (CRT Optimisation and Relapse Prevention) self management trial compares the effectiveness of a peer provided self-management intervention for people leaving CRT care, with treatment as usual supplemented by a booklet on self-management. The planned sample is 440 participants, including 40 participants in an internal pilot. The primary outcome measure is whether participants are readmitted to acute care over 1 year of follow-up following entry to the trial. Secondary outcomes include self-rated recovery at 4 and at 18 months following trial entry, measured using the Questionnaire on the Process of Recovery. Analysis will follow an intention to treatment principle. Random effects logistic regression modelling with adjustment for clustering by peer support worker will be used to test the primary hypothesis
Self-assembly mechanism in colloids: perspectives from Statistical Physics
Motivated by recent experimental findings in chemical synthesis of colloidal
particles, we draw an analogy between self-assembly processes occurring in
biological systems (e.g. protein folding) and a new exciting possibility in the
field of material science. We consider a self-assembly process whose elementary
building blocks are decorated patchy colloids of various types, that
spontaneously drive the system toward a unique and predetermined targeted
macroscopic structure.
To this aim, we discuss a simple theoretical model -- the Kern-Frenkel model
-- describing a fluid of colloidal spherical particles with a pre-defined
number and distribution of solvophobic and solvophilic regions on their
surface. The solvophobic and solvophilic regions are described via a
short-range square-well and a hard-sphere potentials, respectively.
Integral equation and perturbation theories are presented to discuss
structural and thermodynamical properties, with particular emphasis on the
computation of the fluid-fluid (or gas-liquid) transition in the
temperature-density plane.
The model allows the description of both one and two attractive caps, as a
function of the fraction of covered attractive surface, thus interpolating
between a square-well and a hard-sphere fluid, upon changing the coverage.
By comparison with Monte Carlo simulations, we assess the pros and the cons
of both integral equation and perturbation theories in the present context of
patchy colloids, where the computational effort for numerical simulations is
rather demanding.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, Special issue for the SigmaPhi2011 conferenc
New Physics at the LHC. A Les Houches Report: Physics at TeV Colliders 2009 - New Physics Working Group
We present a collection of signatures for physics beyond the standard model
that need to be explored at the LHC. First, are presented various tools
developed to measure new particle masses in scenarios where all decays include
an unobservable particle. Second, various aspects of supersymmetric models are
discussed. Third, some signatures of models of strong electroweak symmetry are
discussed. In the fourth part, a special attention is devoted to high mass
resonances, as the ones appearing in models with warped extra dimensions.
Finally, prospects for models with a hidden sector/valley are presented. Our
report, which includes brief experimental and theoretical reviews as well as
original results, summarizes the activities of the "New Physics" working group
for the "Physics at TeV Colliders" workshop (Les Houches, France, 8-26 June,
2009).Comment: 189 page
Temporal turnover and the maintenance of diversity in ecological assemblages
Temporal variation in species abundances occurs in all ecological communities. Here, we explore the role that this temporal turnover plays in maintaining assemblage diversity. We investigate a three-decade time series of estuarine fishes and show that the abundances of the individual species fluctuate asynchronously around their mean levels. We then use a time-series modelling approach to examine the consequences of different patterns of turnover, by asking how the correlation between the abundance of a species in a given year and its abundance in the previous year influences the structure of the overall assemblage. Classical diversity measures that ignore species identities reveal that the observed assemblage structure will persist under all but the most extreme conditions. However, metrics that track species identities indicate a narrower set of turnover scenarios under which the predicted assemblage resembles the natural one. Our study suggests that species diversity metrics are insensitive to change and that measures that track species ranks may provide better early warning that an assemblage is being perturbed. It also highlights the need to incorporate temporal turnover in investigations of assemblage structure and function
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