2 research outputs found
Parents' experiences of having an excessively crying baby and implications for support services
Evidence suggests that around 20% of healthy babies cry for long periods without apparent reason, causing significant distress to parents and a range of adverse outcomes. This study explored parents' experiences of having an excessively crying baby and their suggestions for improved NHS support. Focus groups and interviews with 20 parents identified three key themes: disrupted expectations and experiences of parenthood; stigma and social isolation; seeking support and validation of experience. Parents experienced shock, anxiety and a sense of failure, leading to self-imposed isolation and a reluctance to seek help. Other people's reactions sometimes reinforced their feelings. Parents need more support, including from health professionals, to cope with excessive crying, and recommendations for this support are given
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Final NOMAD results on muon-neutrino ---> tau-neutrino and electron-neutrino ---> tau-neutrino oscillations including a new search for tau-neutrino appearance using hadronic tau decays.
Results from the ?t appearance search in a neutrino beam using the full NOMAD data sample are reported. A new analysis unifies all the hadronic t decays, significantly improving the overall sensitivity of the experiment to oscillations. The “blind analysis” of all topologies yields no evidence for an oscillation signal. In the two-family oscillation scenario, this sets a 90% CL allowed region in the sin22?µt–?m2 plane which includes sin22?µt<3.3×10-4 at large ?m2 and ?m2< 0.7 eV2/c4 at sin22?µt=1. The corresponding contour in the ?e??t oscillation hypothesis results in sin22?et<1.5×10-2 at large ?m2 and ?m2<5.9 eV2/c4 at sin22?et=1. We also derive limits on effective couplings of the t lepton to ?µ or ?e