82 research outputs found

    Evaluation of fungicides for the management of sclerotinia blight of peanut

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    Three trials were conducted in the Burnett region of southern Queensland, Australia, in the 1993–94 and 1994–95 seasons to determine the efficacy of fluazinam, procymidone, and iprodione for managing sclerotinia blight of peanut. Different combinations of rates, nozzle types, and spraying times were used in each trial. Two or 3 sprays of fluazinam at 0.75 and 1.0 kg a.i./ha, and of procymidone at 0.688 and 0.75 kg a.i./ha, were the most effective combinations that reduced disease incidence and increased yield. Iprodione at rates up to 0.5 kg a.i./ha did not significantly improve the yield compared with unsprayed treatments in any trial. In one trial at Tingoora in 1994–95, pre-infection treatments in which the first spray of fluazinam or procymidone was applied before symptoms appeared were more effective than post-infection treatments in which the first spray was applied soon after symptoms were seen. At J. Bjelke-Petersen Research Station (JBPRS) in 1994–95, a banded spray of procymidone at 0.688 kg a.i./ha using a single flat-fan 8004VB nozzle centred over the row significantly increased yield and reduced disease incidence compared with a spray using 3 hollow-cone nozzles (HB4-70) per row, with 1 nozzle over the row and 1 drop nozzle on each side of the row directed at the bases of the plants. At JBPRS in 1993–94, a band spray of fluazinam at 0.333 kg a.i./120 L.ha, applied with a single flat-fan 80015EVB nozzle immediately after the appearance of symptoms, was as effective in reducing the rate of disease development for 3 weeks, as was a directed application using three 80015EVB nozzles at the same time and concentration, but at 3 times the rate per area (1.0 kg a.i./360 L.ha)

    Addressing inequitable access to hospice care

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    The ‘Lancet Commission on the Value of Death’ proposes radical change and challenges the very core of hospice service provision. Without action, inequalities in access to hospice care will continue to be amplified. The COVID pandemic brought increased needs and demands in the community setting but also provided opportunities for new palliative partnerships and ways of working. Returning to the status quo should not be an option. Rather moving towards a shared vision and purpose, which has the person and their community network at its centre, enables hospices to have a pivotal role and bring about more equitable palliative care

    Co2MnSi:Pt multilayers for giant spin Seebeck devices

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    The spin Seebeck effect (SSE) has been widely studied as a potential mechanism for energy harvesting. However, the efficiency of such devices, utilizing the spin thermoelectric effect in thin film form, has not yet reached a sufficient value to make them economically viable. It is therefore imperative that advances are made to investigate means by which the thermoelectric signal can be enhanced. Multilayers of Co2MnSi and Pt are fabricated and characterized in an attempt to observe enhanced voltages. We report that bilayers of ferromagnetic conductor/normal metal (FM/NM) exhibit a Longitudinal SSE response and that repetitive stacking of such bilayers results in an increased thermoelectric voltage that is highly dependent upon the quality of CMS/Pt and Pt/CMS interfaces

    The impact of Covid-19 pandemic on hospices: a systematic integrated review and synthesis of recommendations for policy and practice

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    Background: The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in the development of numerous recommendations for practice and policy for specialist palliative care provided by hospices in United Kingdom (UK), as hospices were significantly affected by the pandemic and protections put in place. The aim of this review is to identify and synthesise recommendations or implications for policy and practice that have been generated for adult hospice specialist palliative care during the first 24 months of the Covid-19 pandemic. Methods: AMED, BNI, CINAHL, EMBASE, EMCARE, HMIC, Medline, PsycINFO, PubMed databases were searched for peer-reviewed papers, as well as hand searchers for grey literature. Literature relating to hospices and Covid-19 in the UK were included and a thematic synthesis of recommendations for hospice policy and practice was undertaken. Results: 858 articles were identified with 12 meeting the inclusion criteria. Fifty-eight recommendations or implications were identified: 31 for policy, 27 for practice, and 10 covering both. Recommendations were organised under ten themes. There were several recommendations seeking to secure hospice resources to mitigate the short-term impact of the pandemic, as well as those focused on longer-term implications such as core funding. The impact of the pandemic on the quality of hospice care was the focus for numerous recommendations around improving integration of hospice care in the community, provision of bereavement support and better use of Advance Care Plans (ACP). However, there were significant gaps related to carer visitation in hospices, inequities of palliative care, or hospice-at-home services. Conclusion: The Covid-19 pandemic and protections exposed several ongoing policy and practice needs, especially around hospice resources, while generating novel issues for hospices to address. Significant policy gaps remain to be addressed to mitigate the impact of the pandemic on the quality of hospice specialist palliative care

    Adolescents' reactions to participating in ethically sensitive research: A prospective self-report study

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    Background: Conducting psychological research with adolescents is imperative for better understanding, prevention and treatment of mental illness. However there is concern that research addressing topics such as mental illness, substance use and suicidality has potential to distress participants, particularly youth. Method: We administered a questionnaire to 1973 adolescents (13-18 years) at two time points, one year apart. Participants responded to items regarding nonsuicidal self-injury, psychological distress, history of physical and/or sexual abuse, adverse life events, alcohol use, suicidal behaviour, self-efficacy, and coping skills as well as two open-ended questions regarding whether they enjoyed participating in the research and whether participation worried or upset them. Results: Most youth (74 %) enjoyed participation and cited altruistic reasons and a greater self-awareness as reasons. Those reporting being upset by the questionnaire (15 %) reported poorer psychological functioning than their peers. Youth who were upset by their participation at baseline, but who reported enjoying the questionnaire at follow-up reported improved psychosocial functioning over time, while the reverse was true for those who initially enjoyed participation but later reported the questionnaire upset them. Conclusions: Results suggest researchers acknowledge benefits for young people who participate in research, but also be mindful of the potential for distress among the most at risk youth

    Adolescent self-harm in Ghana: a qualitative interview-based study of first-hand accounts

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    Background: Recent prevalence studies suggest that self-harm among adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa is as common as it is in high income countries. However, very few qualitative studies exploring first-person accounts of adolescent self-harm are available from sub-Saharan Africa. We sought to explore the experiences and first-person perspectives of Ghanaian adolescents reporting self-harm - for deeper reflections on the interpretive repertoires available in their cultural context for making sense of self-harm in adolescents. Methods: Guided by a semi-structured interview protocol, we interviewed one-to-one 36 adolescents (24 in-school adolescents and 12 street-connected adolescents) on their experiences of self-harm. We applied experiential thematic analysis to the data. Results: Adolescents’ description of the background to their self-harm identified powerlessness in the family context and unwanted adultification in the family as key factors leading up to self-harm among both in-school and street-connected adolescents. Adolescents’ explanatory accounts identified the contradictory role of adultification as a protective factor against self-harm among street-connected adolescents. Self-harm among in-school adolescents was identified as a means of “enactment of tabooed emotions and contestations”, as a “selfish act and social injury”, as “religious transgression”, while it was also seen as improving social relations. Conclusions: The first-person accounts of adolescents in this study implicate familial relational problems and interpersonal difficulties as proximally leading to self-harm in adolescents. Self-harm in adolescents is interpreted as an understandable response, and as a strong communicative signal in response to powerlessness and family relationship difficulties. These findings need to be taken into consideration in the planning of services in Ghana and are likely to be generalisable to many other countries in sub-Saharan Africa

    Metabolic flux analysis and the NAD(P)H/NAD(P) + ratios in chemostat cultures of Azotobacter vinelandii

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    Azotobacter vinelandii is a bacterium that produces alginate and polyhydroxybutyrate (P3HB); however, the role of NAD(P)H/NAD(P) + ratios on the metabolic fluxes through biosynthesis pathways of these biopolymers remains unknown. The aim of this study was to evaluate the NAD(P)H/NAD(P) + ratios and the metabolic fluxes involved in alginate and P3HB biosynthesis, under oxygen-limiting and non-limiting oxygen conditions. The results reveal that changes in the oxygen availability have an important effect on the metabolic fluxes and intracellular NADPH/NADP + ratio, showing that at the lowest OTR (2.4 mmol L −1 h −1), the flux through the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle decreased 27.6-fold, but the flux through the P3HB biosynthesis increased 6.6-fold in contrast to the cultures without oxygen limitation (OTR = 14.6 mmol L −1 h −1). This was consistent with the increase in the level of transcription of phbB and the P3HB biosynthesis. In addition, under conditions without oxygen limitation, there was an increase in the carbon uptake rate (twofold), as well as in the flux through the pentose phosphate (PP) pathway (4.8-fold), compared to the condition of 2.4 mmol L −1 h −1. At the highest OTR condition, a decrease in the NADPH/NADP + ratio of threefold was observed, probably as a response to the high respiration rate induced by the respiratory protection of the nitrogenase under diazotrophic conditions, correlating with a high expression of the uncoupled respiratory chain genes (ndhII and cydA) and induction of the expression of the genes encoding the nitrogenase complex (nifH). We have demonstrated that changes in oxygen availability affect the internal redox state of the cell and carbon metabolic fluxes. This also has a strong impact on the TCA cycle and PP pathway as well as on alginate and P3HB biosynthetic fluxes

    Management of the major foliar diseases of mungbeans and peanuts in Australia

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    Mungbeans (Vigna radiata and Vigna mungo) and peanuts (Arachis hypogaea) are important summer pulse crops in northern New South Wales and Queensland. Mungbeans are grown as a short season, often opportunistic, crop from northern New South Wales to central Queensland. The bacterial diseases tan spot (caused by Curtobacterium flaccumfaciens pv. flaccumfaciens) and halo blight (Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. phaseolicola) and the fungal disease powdery mildew (caused by Podosphaera fusca) commonly occur at damaging levels on mungbean crops in all regions. Peanuts, traditionally grown as a non‐irrigated crop, are being increasingly grown under irrigation and in the sugarcane farming systems of coastal Queensland. Rust (caused by Puccinia arachidis) and late leaf spot (caused by Mycosphaerella berkeleyi) cause significant yield losses in these areas. Management of the important foliar diseases of mungbeans and peanuts is being achieved through the integration of different strategies, with resistance playing a pivotal role for all of them. Targeted fungicide applications also play a key management role for both peanut diseases and for powdery mildew on mungbeans, while the use of seed with minimal contamination levels is important for the mungbean bacterial diseases. For both pulse crops, new varieties with improved resistance to these important foliar pathogens combined with other practices will improve their management in the future
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