412 research outputs found
Struggling to a monumental triumph : Re-assessing the final stages of the smallpox eradication program in India, 1960-1980
The global smallpox program is generally presented as the brainchild of a handful of actors from the WHO headquarters in Geneva and at the agency's regional offices. This article attempts to present a more complex description of the drive to eradicate smallpox. Based on the example of India, a major focus of the campaign, it is argued that historians and public health officials should recognize the varying roles played by a much wider range of participants. Highlighting the significance of both Indian and international field officials, the author shows how bureaucrats and politicians at different levels of administration and society managed to strengthen—yet sometimes weaken—important program components. Centrally dictated strategies developed at WHO offices in Geneva and New Delhi, often in association with Indian federal authorities, were reinterpreted by many actors and sometimes changed beyond recognition
Multifaceted contributions : health workers and smallpox eradication in India
Smallpox eradication in South Asia was a result of the efforts of many grades of health-workers. Working from within the confines of international organisations and government structures, the role of the field officials, who were of various nationalities and also drawn from the cities and rural enclaves of the countries in these regions, was crucial to the development and deployment of policies. However, the role of these personnel is often downplayed in official histories and academic histories, which highlight instead the roles played by a handful of senior officials within the World Health Organization and the federal governments in the sub-continent. This article attempts to provide a more rounded assessment of the complex situation in the field. In this regard, an effort is made to underline the great usefulness of the operational flexibility displayed by field officers, wherein lessons learnt in the field were made an integral part of deploying local campaigns; careful engagement with the communities being targeted, as well as the employment of short term workers from amongst them, was an important feature of this work
Three Possible Origins for the Gas Layer on GJ 1214b
We present an analysis of the bulk composition of the MEarth transiting super
Earth exoplanet GJ 1214b using planet interior structure models. We consider
three possible origins for the gas layer on GJ 1214b: direct accretion of gas
from the protoplanetary nebula, sublimation of ices, and outgassing from rocky
material. Armed only with measurements of the planet mass (M_p=6.55+/-0.98
M_{earth}), radius (R_p=2.678+/-0.13 R_{earth}), and stellar irradiation level,
our main conclusion is that we cannot infer a unique composition. A diverse
range of planet interiors fits the measured planet properties. Nonetheless, GJ
1214b's relatively low average density (rho_p=1870+/-400 kg m^{-3}) means that
it almost certainly has a significant gas component. Our second major
conclusion is that under most conditions we consider GJ 1214b would not have
liquid water. Even if the outer envelope is predominantly sublimated water ice,
the envelope will likely consist of a super-fluid layer sandwiched between
vapor above and plasma (electrically conductive fluid) below at greater depths.
In our models, a low intrinsic planet luminosity (<~2TW) is needed for a water
envelope on GJ 1214b to pass through the liquid phase.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, published in Ap
Examples of Studies on Electrophoretic Deposition Process of Functional Thin Films
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Stacking, correlations and electronic dispersion in the photoexcited state of 1T-TaS<sub>2</sub>
Here we perform angle and time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy on the commensurate Charge Density Wave phase of 1T-TaS2. Data with different probe pulse polarization are employed to map the dispersion of electronic states below or above the chemical potential. The experimental results are compared to Density-Functional Theory calculations with a self-consistent evaluation of the coulomb repulsion. Both out-of-plane dimerization and electronic correlations must be included in order to obtain good agreement with the experimental data. Upon Photoexcitation, the fluctuations of CDW order erase the band dispersion near to the chemical potential and halve the charge gap size. This transient phase sets within half a period of the coherent lattice motion and is likely favored by strong electronic correlations
Sex-Biased Control of Inflammation and Metabolism by a Mitochondrial Nod-Like Receptor.
Mitochondria regulate steroid hormone synthesis, and in turn sex hormones regulate mitochondrial function for maintaining cellular homeostasis and controlling inflammation. This crosstalk can explain sex differences observed in several pathologies such as in metabolic or inflammatory disorders. Nod-like receptor X1 (NLRX1) is a mitochondria-associated innate receptor that could modulate metabolic functions and attenuates inflammatory responses. Here, we showed that in an infectious model with the human protozoan parasite, Leishmania guyanensis, NLRX1 attenuated inflammation in females but not in male mice. Analysis of infected female and male bone marrow derived macrophages showed both sex- and genotype-specific differences in both inflammatory and metabolic profiles with increased type I interferon production, mitochondrial respiration, and glycolytic rate in Nlrx1-deficient female BMDMs in comparison to wild-type cells, while no differences were observed between males. Transcriptomics of female and male BMDMs revealed an altered steroid hormone signaling in Nlrx1-deficient cells, and a "masculinization" of Nlrx1-deficient female BMDMs. Thus, our findings suggest that NLRX1 prevents uncontrolled inflammation and metabolism in females and therefore may contribute to the sex differences observed in infectious and inflammatory diseases
Ba4Ru3O10.2(OH)1.8 : a new member of the layered hexagonal perovskite family crystallised from water
A new barium ruthenium oxyhydroxide Ba4Ru3O10.2(OH)1.8 crystallises under hydrothermal conditions at 200 °C: powder neutron diffraction data show it adopts an 8H hexagonal perovskite structure with a new stacking sequence, while high resolution electron microscopy reveals regions of ordered layers of vacant Ru sites, and magnetometry shows antiferromagnetism with TN = 200(5) K
Alkali extraction of archaeological and geological charcoal: evidence for diagenetic degradation and formation of humic acids
Charcoal forms a crucial source of archaeological and palaeoenvironmental data, providing a record of cultural activities, past climatic conditions and a means of chronological control via radiocarbon (<sup>14</sup>C) dating. Key to this is the perceived resistance of charcoal to post-depositional alteration, however recent research has highlighted the possibility for alteration and degradation of charcoal in the environment. An important aspect of such diagenesis is the potential for addition of exogenous 'humic acids' (HAs), to affect the accuracy of archaeological and palaeoenvironmental reconstructions based upon chemical analyses of HA-containing charcoal. However the release of significant quantities of HA from apparently pristine charcoals raises the question whether some HA could be derived via diagenetic alteration of charcoal itself. Here we address this question through comparison of freshly produced charcoal with samples from archaeological and geological sites exposed to environmental conditions for millennia using elemental (C/H/O) and isotopic (δ<sup>13</sup>C) measurements, Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) and proton Liquid-State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (<sup>1</sup>H NMR). The results of analyses show that the presence of highly carboxylated and aromatic alkali-extractable HA in charcoal from depositional environments can often be attributable to the effects of post-depositional processes, and that these substances can represent the products of post-depositional diagenetic alteration in charcoal
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