13 research outputs found

    Medical students\u27 knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and HPV-associated head and neck cancer

    Get PDF
    On the basis of their training, medical students are considered the best case scenario among university students in knowledge of the human papillomavirus (HPV). We evaluated differences in knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and head and neck cancer (HNC) among medical students. A previously validated questionnaire was completed by 247 medical students at a Midwestern university. Outcomes of interest were knowledge score for HPV and HPV vaccine, and HNC, derived from combining questionnaire items to form HPV knowledge and HNC scores, and analyzed using multivariate linear regression. Mean scores for HPV knowledge were 19.4 out of 26, and 7.2 out of 12 for HNC knowledge. In the final multivariate linear regression model, sex, race, and year of study were independently associated with HPV and HPV vaccine knowledge. Males had significantly lower HPV vaccine knowledge than females (β = -1.53; 95% CI: -2.53, -0.52), as did nonwhite students (β = -1.05; 95% CI: -2.07, -0.03). There was a gradient in HPV vaccine knowledge based on the year of study, highest among fourth year students (β = 6.75; 95% CI: 5.17, 8.33). Results were similar for factors associated with HNC knowledge, except for sex. HNC knowledge similarly increased based on year of study, highest for fourth year students (β = 2.50; 95% CI: 1.72, 3.29). Among medical students, gaps remain in knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and HPV-linked HNC. Male medical students have significantly lower knowledge of HPV. This highlights the need to increase medical student knowledge of HPV and HPV-linked HNC

    Report on the Challenges of Air Transportation Experienced by People with Disabilities

    Get PDF
    Boarding an airplane is difficult for persons with mobility impairments and increases the risk of injury to both passengers and employees. Airplane seats are uncomfortable and lack the necessary support for many individuals with disabilities. Additionally, airplane restrooms can be inaccessible to wheelchair users. Potential solutions for these issues include the use of detachable plane seats or personal wheelchairs on board and an airplane redesign to provide additional restroom space. The number of service and emotional support animals being brought on airplanes have also increased substantially over the past few years. Passengers that travel with their service animals must contend with having to follow different rules for different airlines carriers and not having sufficient space for animals to be safe and comfortable

    Molecular interactions in binary mixtures of non-electrolytes: Molar excess volumes and molar excess enthalpies

    Get PDF
    727-731Molar excess volumes and molar excess enthalpies for various (i+j) binary m-nitrotoluene (i) + benzene, + toluene + o-, +p- and m-xylene (j) mixtures have been determined as a function of composition at 308.15 K. The data have been analysed in terms of graph-theoretical approach which suggests that these mixtures are characterized by interactions between the π-electron cloud of aromatic hydrocarbons and the delocalized π -electron cloud over the nitrogen and the oxygen atoms of the nitro group of m-nitrotoluene

    Cations Bind Only Weakly to Amides in Aqueous Solutions

    No full text
    We investigated salt interactions with butyramide as a simple mimic of cation interactions with protein backbones. The experiments were performed in aqueous metal chloride solutions using two spectroscopic techniques. In the first, which provided information about contact pair formation, the response of the amide I band to the nature and concentration of salt was monitored in bulk aqueous solutions via attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. It was found that molar concentrations of well-hydrated metal cations (Ca<sup>2+</sup>, Mg<sup>2+</sup>, Li<sup>+</sup>) led to the rise of a peak assigned to metal cation-bound amides (1645 cm<sup>–1</sup>) and a decrease in the peak associated with purely water-bound amides (1620 cm<sup>–1</sup>). In a complementary set of experiments, the effect of cation identity and concentration was investigated at the air/butyramide/water interface via vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy. In these studies, metal ion–amide binding led to the ordering of the adjacent water layer. Such experiments were sensitive to the interfacial partitioning of cations in either a contact pair with the amide or as a solvent separated pair. In both experiments, the ordering of the interactions of the cations was: Ca<sup>2+</sup> > Mg<sup>2+</sup> > Li<sup>+</sup> > Na<sup>+</sup> ≈ K<sup>+</sup>. This is a direct cationic Hofmeister series. Even for Ca<sup>2+</sup>, however, the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant of the cation with the amide carbonyl oxygen was no tighter than ∼8.5 M. For Na<sup>+</sup> and K<sup>+</sup>, no evidence was found for any binding. As such, the interactions of metal cations with amides are far weaker than the analogous binding of weakly hydrated anions

    Medical students’ knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and HPV-associated head and neck cancer

    No full text
    On the basis of their training, medical students are considered “the best case scenario” among university students in knowledge of the human papillomavirus (HPV). We evaluated differences in knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and head and neck cancer (HNC) among medical students. A previously validated questionnaire was completed by 247 medical students at a Midwestern university. Outcomes of interest were knowledge score for HPV and HPV vaccine, and HNC, derived from combining questionnaire items to form HPV knowledge and HNC scores, and analyzed using multivariate linear regression. Mean scores for HPV knowledge were 19.4 out of 26, and 7.2 out of 12 for HNC knowledge. In the final multivariate linear regression model, sex, race, and year of study were independently associated with HPV and HPV vaccine knowledge. Males had significantly lower HPV vaccine knowledge than females (β = −1.53; 95% CI: −2.53, −0.52), as did nonwhite students (β = −1.05; 95% CI: −2.07, −0.03). There was a gradient in HPV vaccine knowledge based on the year of study, highest among fourth year students (β = 6.75; 95% CI: 5.17, 8.33). Results were similar for factors associated with HNC knowledge, except for sex. HNC knowledge similarly increased based on year of study, highest for fourth year students (β = 2.50; 95% CI: 1.72, 3.29). Among medical students, gaps remain in knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and HPV-linked HNC. Male medical students have significantly lower knowledge of HPV. This highlights the need to increase medical student knowledge of HPV and HPV-linked HNC
    corecore