4,124 research outputs found

    Technology and Dating Among Pregnant and Parenting Youth in Residential Foster Care: A Mixed Qualitative Approach Comparing Staff and Adolescent Perspectives

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    The aim of this study was to explore the role of technology in the dating and sexual experiences of pregnant and parenting adolescent girls placed in residential foster care. Interviews with program staff (N = 12; 50% Hispanic) and focus groups with adolescent foster youth (N = 13; 46% Hispanic) were conducted to understand how technologies (e.g., cell phone, texting, and social media) influence youthā€™s dating lives, including how youth navigate conflict with a dating partner in technology spaces and their experiences with cyber abuse. Both staff and youth emphasized technology as providing an outlet from the home and forum through which to meet, interact, and sustain intimate relationships, the latter including the father of (a) child(ren). Youth creatively collaborated to access technology and became involved in each otherā€™s relationships. Staff and youth discussed divergent risk contexts, staff emphasizing the risks posed to children (e.g., taken on online dates) and youth discussing online sexual solicitations, conflict with the child(ren)ā€™s father in public and peer-involved online spaces, and cyber abuse. Helping professionals should be trained on the centrality of technology to youth dating and provide dating health education that includes attention to technology mediums

    Heterogeneity of diabetes outcomes among asians and pacific islanders in the US: the diabetes study of northern california (DISTANCE).

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    ObjectiveEthnic minorities with diabetes typically have lower rates of cardiovascular outcomes and higher rates of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) compared with whites. Diabetes outcomes among Asian and Pacific Islander subgroups have not been disaggregated.Research design and methodsWe performed a prospective cohort study (1996-2006) of patients enrolled in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Diabetes Registry. There were 64,211 diabetic patients, including whites (n = 40,286), blacks (n = 8,668), Latinos (n = 7,763), Filipinos (n = 3,572), Chinese (n = 1,823), Japanese (n = 951), Pacific Islanders (n = 593), and South Asians (n = 555), enrolled in the registry. We calculated incidence rates (means Ā± SD; 7.2 Ā± 3.3 years follow-up) and created Cox proportional hazards models adjusted for age, educational attainment, English proficiency, neighborhood deprivation, BMI, smoking, alcohol use, exercise, medication adherence, type and duration of diabetes, HbA(1c), hypertension, estimated glomerular filtration rate, albuminuria, and LDL cholesterol. Incidence of myocardial infarction (MI), congestive heart failure, stroke, ESRD, and lower-extremity amputation (LEA) were age and sex adjusted.ResultsPacific Islander women had the highest incidence of MI, whereas other ethnicities had significantly lower rates of MI than whites. Most nonwhite groups had higher rates of ESRD than whites. Asians had ~60% lower incidence of LEA compared with whites, African Americans, or Pacific Islanders. Incidence rates in Chinese, Japanese, and Filipinos were similar for most complications. For the three macrovascular complications, Pacific Islanders and South Asians had rates similar to whites.ConclusionsIncidence of complications varied dramatically among the Asian subgroups and highlights the value of a more nuanced ethnic stratification for public health surveillance and etiologic research

    The Small Aircraft Transportation System Higher Volume Operations (SATS HVO) Flight Experiment

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    This paper provides a summary of conclusions from the Small Aircraft Transportation System (SATS) Higher Volume Operations (HVO) Flight Experiment which NASA conducted to determine pilot acceptability of the HVO concept for normal conditions. The SATS HVO concept improves efficiency at non-towered, non-radar airports in Instrument Meteorological Conditions (IMC) while achieving a level of safety equal to today s system. Reported are results from flight experiment data that indicate that the SATS HVO concept is viable. The success of the SATS HVO concept is based on acceptable pilot workload, performance, and subjective criteria when compared to the procedural control operations in use today at non-towered, non-radar controlled airfields in IMC. The HVO Flight Experiment, flown on NASA's Cirrus SR22, used a subset of the HVO Simulation Experiment scenarios and evaluation pilots in order to validate the simulation experiment results. HVO and Baseline (today s system) scenarios flown included: single aircraft arriving for a GPS non-precision approach; aircraft arriving for the approach with multiple traffic aircraft; and aircraft arriving for the approach with multiple traffic aircraft and then conducting a missed approach. Results reveal that all twelve low-time instrument-rated pilots preferred SATS HVO when compared to current procedural separation operations. These pilots also flew the HVO procedures safely and proficiently without additional workload in comparison to today s system (Baseline). Detailed results of pilot flight technical error, and their subjective assessments of workload and situation awareness are presented in this paper

    Putting You First: First-Generation Student Perceptions, Needs, and Engagement at Virginia Commonwealth University

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    You First at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) submitted a Request for Assistance with the need for increased engagement with VCU first-generation (FG) students. To address this request, a doctoral Capstone team conducted problem and context analysis, a literature review, a mixed-methods study analyzing institutional data, a survey of current FG students at VCU, and focus group sessions with FG students at VCU. The goal was to identify FG student perceptions of their FG identities, determine the needs of FG students, and uncover factors that impact FG studentsā€™ engagement with You First. Findings suggested that the underlying cause of minimal engagement with FG students is the lack of awareness of You First services and programs. The Capstone team identified key challenges for FG students and ways for You First to continue to improve its support of FG students. Recommendations focused on increasing awareness of You First, promoting FG student connections, providing more accessible information, formalizing partnerships across the institution, and cultivating inclusivity among FG studentsā€™ families

    Composition of fungal functional guilds explains variance in forest soil nutrient cycling

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    Soil fungi and bacteria are responsible for soil nutrient cycling, including decomposition, mineralization, immobilization, and transfer of nutrients to tree roots, yet the role of soil community composition in controlling forest nutrient cycling is poorly understood. We aimed to test the hypothesis that incorporating microbial community composition into linear models will increase the variation explained in forest soil N and P cycling relative to models including only plant community and abiotic characteristics. To do this, we designed a forested field system in New England in which variation in microbial community composition was crossed with variation in vegetation composition and soil nutrient content. At six forest sites (three suburban and three rural sites), we sampled soil along a transect from the forest edge to interior from four stand types dominated by trees of varying litter quality: pine-dominated, pure hardwood, hardwood with pines in the understory, and mature mixed pine-hardwood. In each soil sample, we measured inorganic and total nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), N and P mineralization rates, and nitrification rates. We also performed high-throughput sequencing of fungal and bacterial rDNA amplicons (16S/ITS) and calculated functional guild abundance for fungi and bacteria in each sample. Excluding microbial factors, N mineralization was best explained in a linear model by pH, soil temperature, soil moisture, % soil organic matter, and the abundance of understory vegetation; nitrification was best explained by pH, the proportion of hardwood litter, the abundance of understory vegetation, and basal area of arbuscular mycorrhizal-associating trees. We found that including the proportion of fungal functional guilds improved linear statistical models explaining variance in rates of N mineralization and nitrification, but not in single point measurements of inorganic N or total P. The proportion of ectomycorrhizal fungi per sample was positively related to N mineralization (p = 7e-05, R2 = 0.128), and including it in the model increased the proportion of variance explained in N mineralization rates by 2.8%. The proportion of saprotrophic fungi per sample was positively related to nitrification (p = 0.001, R2 = 0.083), and including it in the model increased the proportion of variance explained in nitrification rates by 2.0%. These findings suggest that ectomycorrhizal fungi may play a role in N mineralization, while saprotrophs may be more important for nitrification. We are currently building models to explain P mineralization and to improve current models by incorporating bacterial functional guilds.Fil: Vietorisz, Corinne. Boston University; Estados UnidosFil: Policelli, Nahuel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĆ­ficas y TĆ©cnicas. Centro CientĆ­fico TecnolĆ³gico Conicet - Centro Nacional PatagĆ³nico. Instituto PatagĆ³nico para el Estudio de los Ecosistemas Continentales; Argentina. Boston University; Estados UnidosFil: Li, Abigail. Boston University; Estados UnidosFil: Adams, Lindsey. Boston University; Estados UnidosFil: Bhatnagar, Jennifer M.. Boston University; Estados UnidosESA 2023 - Meeting of the Ecological Society of AmericaPortlandEstados UnidosEcological Society of Americ

    When ā€˜Placesā€™ Include Pets: Broadening the Scope of Relational Approaches to Promoting Aging-in-Place

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    Aging-in-place is a well-established concept, but discussions rarely consider that many older adults live with pets. In a ā€˜pet-friendlyā€™ city, we conducted semi-structured interviews to explore perspectives of community-based social support agencies that promote aging-in-place, and those of animal welfare agencies. Applying a relational ecology theoretical framework, we found that pets may contribute to feeling socially- situated, yet may also exacerbate constraints on autonomy experienced by some older adults. Pet-related considerations at times led to discretionary acts of more-than-human solidarity, but also created paradoxical situations for service-providers, impacting their efforts to assist older adults. A shortage of pet-friendly affordable housing emerged as an overarching challenge. Coordination among social support and animal welfare agencies, alongside pet-supportive housing policies, will strengthen efforts to promote aging-in-place in ways that are equitable and inclusive

    A role for NRAGE in NF-ĪŗB activation through the non-canonical BMP pathway

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Previous studies have linked neurotrophin receptor-interacting MAGE protein to the bone morphogenic protein signaling pathway and its effect on p38 mediated apoptosis of neural progenitor cells via the XIAP-Tak1-Tab1 complex. Its effect on NF-ĪŗB has yet to be explored.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Herein we report that NRAGE, via the same XIAP-Tak1-Tab1 complex, is required for the phosphorylation of IKK -Ī±/Ī² and subsequent transcriptional activation of the p65 subunit of NF-ĪŗB. Ablation of endogenous NRAGE by siRNA inhibited NF-ĪŗB pathway activation, while ablation of Tak1 and Tab1 by morpholino inhibited overexpression of NRAGE from activating NF-ĪŗB. Finally, cytokine profiling of an NRAGE over-expressing stable line revealed the expression of macrophage migration inhibitory factor.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Modulation of NRAGE expression revealed novel roles in regulating NF-ĪŗB activity in the non-canonical bone morphogenic protein signaling pathway. The expression of macrophage migration inhibitory factor by bone morphogenic protein -4 reveals novel crosstalk between an immune cytokine and a developmental pathway.</p

    Evaluating Otter Reintroduction Outcomes Using Genetic Spatial Capture-Recapture Modified for Dendritic Networks

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    Monitoring the demographics and genetics of reintroduced populations is critical to evaluating reintroduction success, but species ecology and the landscapes that they inhabit often present challenges for accurate assessments. If suitable habitats are restricted to hierarchical dendritic networks, such as river systems, animal movements are typically constrained and may violate assumptions of methods commonly used to estimate demographic parameters. Using genetic detection data collected via fecal sampling at latrines, we demonstrate applicability of the spatial captureā€“recapture (SCR) network distance function for estimating the size and density of a recently reintroduced North American river otter (Lontra canadensis) population in the Upper Rio Grande River dendritic network in the southwestern United States, and we also evaluated the genetic outcomes of using a small founder group (n = 33 otters) for reintroduction. Estimated population density was 0.23ā€“0.28 otter/km, or 1 otter/3.57ā€“4.35 km, with weak evidence of density increasing with northerly latitude (Ī² = 0.33). Estimated population size was 83ā€“104 total otters in 359 km of riverine dendritic network, which corresponded to average annual exponential population growth of 1.12ā€“1.15/year since reintroduction. Growth was ā‰„40% lower than most reintroduced river otter populations and strong evidence of a founder effect existed 8ā€“10 years post-reintroduction, including 13ā€“21% genetic diversity loss, 84%ā€“87% genetic effective population size decline, and rapid divergence from the source population (FST accumulation = 0.06/generation). Consequently, genetic restoration via translocation of additional otters from other populations may be necessary to mitigate deleterious genetic effects in this small, isolated population. Combined with non-invasive genetic sampling, the SCR network distance approach is likely widely applicable to demogenetic assessments of both reintroduced and established populations of multiple mustelid species that inhabit aquatic dendritic networks, many of which are regionally or globally imperiled and may warrant reintroduction or augmentation efforts

    Characterization of Coal Particles in the Soil of a Former Rail Yard and Urban Brownfield: Liberty State Park, Jersey City (NJ), USA

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    From the 1850\u27s until the 1960\u27s, the Central Railroad of New Jersey was among several major railways shipping anthracite and bituminous coal to the New York City area, transferring coal from railcar to barge at its extensive rail yard and port facility in Jersey City. The 490 ha Liberty State Park was developed on the site after the rail yard closed, but a ca. 100 ha brownfield zone within the park remains off limits to visitors pending future remediation. As part of an environmental forensic and industrial archeological investigation of this zone, the present study characterizes anthracite and bituminous coal particles present in abundance in the soil by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS). A simple pretreatment procedure employing density separation improved the analytical results. This detailed information about the nature of contaminants at the site will help to inform the remediation effort in the public interest
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