33,559 research outputs found

    Posttraumatic Stress Symptomatology in Aging Combat Veterans: The Direct and Buffering Effects of Stress and Social Support

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    AbstractThe literature has reported that some older veterans are still distressed by memories of traumatic experiences decades after wartime military service. Recent research has suggested that posttraumatic stress symptoms may appear or reappear during late life in survivors of past trauma and that stress associated with age-related changes may intensify this phenomenon. This dissertation research examined the relationship between past combat exposure and posttraumatic stress symptomatology in community-dwelling veterans of World War II and the Korean War. The risk factor of perceived stress and the protective factor of perceived social support were examined for their potential to exacerbate or mitigate this relationship. The study also investigated the effect of past combat exposure and the role of the moderating variables on health-related quality of life. A secondary aim of the research was to assess the direct effect of perceived stress and perceived social support on the outcome variables.The results indicated that past combat exposure was positively associated with experiencing posttraumatic stress symptoms in World War II and Korean War veterans. Perceived stress was found to significantly exacerbate this relationship. Direct effect relationships were found between perceived stress and both posttraumatic stress symptomatology and health-related quality of life. The mean number of posttraumatic stress symptoms experienced by participants at the symptomatic level was five. The most frequent symptom experienced was sleep disturbance, the second was becoming upset at reminders of the traumatic experience. Increased levels of posttraumatic stress symptoms were found in veterans who were not married, living in an urban area, and diagnosed with depression

    Increase in HIV sexual risk behaviour in homosexual men in Scotland, 1996–2002: prevention failure?

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    <b>Objective</b>: To investigate trends in homosexual men’s sexual risk behaviour for HIV infection in Scotland. <b>Methods</b>: Cross sectional surveys in 1996, 1999, and 2002 were carried out in "gay" bars in Glasgow and Edinburgh, Scotland. 6508 men—2276 (79% response rate) in 1996, 2498 (78%) in 1999, and 1734 (62%) in 2002. <b>Results</b>: In 1996, 10.7% of men surveyed and in 1999, 11.2% reported unprotected anal intercourse (UAI) with casual partners, compared with 18.6% in 2002 (p<0.001). There was also a significant increase in men reporting that they "knew" their casual partners’ HIV status, despite no increase in HIV testing among men who reported UAI with casual partners. In 2002, increases in UAI with more than one partner, in UAI with casual partners and in reporting seroconcordance remained significant after adjusting for confounding factors including HIV testing status and demographic characteristics. <b>Conclusions</b>: High risk sexual behaviour among homosexual men in Scotland increased between 1999 and 2002. Men showed increased confidence of shared antibody status, despite no increase in HIV testing, or evidence of discussion of HIV status. Explanations for this must include consideration of a cultural shift in the perception of HIV and "prevention failure" on the part of governments and health agencies

    The relation between cholesterol and haemorrhagic or ischaemic stroke in the Renfrew/Paisley study

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    Studies have found little association between cholesterol and overall stroke risk, but this could be attributable to different relations for haemorrhagic and ischaemic stroke. Stroke mortality data from prospective studies cannot usually be divided into stroke subtypes. We have therefore analysed stroke based on hospital admissions, obtained by computerised linkage with acute hospital discharges in Scotland for a large prospective cohort study

    The Financial Position of Pennsylvania's Public Sector: Past, Present, and Future

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    This report is the third of three reports that address the fiscal conditions of other states, explores the factors that explain the conditions, and the likely future trends. FRC Report 15

    The Distribution of Revenues From State-Collected Consumer Taxes

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    VĂ€rdegrundsarbetet i förskolan dĂ€r genus och likabehandling stĂ„r i fokus Ă€r ett Ă€mne som skall arbetas aktivt med och det var detta som var grunden i underökning. Undersökningen utgick ifrĂ„n tvĂ„ frĂ„gor som handlade om pedagogernas kompetens i genusvetenskap samt vilka genuspedagogiska strategier som de anvĂ€nde i arbetet med barnen. För att undersöka detta sĂ„ valde jag att anvĂ€nda mig av en halvstrukturerad enkĂ€t dĂ€r de flesta frĂ„gorna var av öppen karaktĂ€r för att kunna fĂ„nga vad pedagogernas kunskap om de olika genusvetenskapliga begreppen. De slutna frĂ„gorna fĂ„ngade vilka genuspedagogiska strategier som pedagogerna anvĂ€nde i sitt arbete med barnen. 40 enkĂ€ter delades ut till pedagogerna i ett rektorsomrĂ„de. FrĂ„n resultatdelen kunde det utlĂ€sas att det var mĂ„nga olika definitioner pĂ„ de genusvetenskapliga begreppen och att flertalet av pedagogerna inte hade samma syn som forskningen kring om det beror pĂ„ det sociala eller det biologiska nĂ€r barnen positionerar sig som pojkar eller flickor. Resultatet visade ocksĂ„ att endast ett fĂ„tal pedagogerna anvĂ€nder sig av det komplicerande och normkritiska arbetssĂ€ttet med barnen och att lite fler Ă€n hĂ€lften tycker att de har tillrĂ€ckligt med kunskap för att arbeta med genus. Slutsatser som kunde dras frĂ„n resultaten frĂ„n enkĂ€ten Ă€r att pedagogernas kompetenser i de genusvetenskapliga begreppen Ă€r pĂ„ olika nivĂ„ och att de varierar vĂ€ldigt mycket. DĂ€rför drog jag den slutsatsen att det Ă€r dĂ€rför som det komplicerande och normkritiska arbetet inte anvĂ€nds i arbetet med genus i förskolan. ÄndĂ„ sĂ„ ansĂ„g flertalet av de pedagoger som inte arbetade med det komplicerande och normkritiska arbetet att de Ă€ndĂ„ hade tillrĂ€ckligt med kunskap i genus. Kompetens i ett Ă€mne gör att det Ă€r möjligt att ta ut svĂ€ngarna, att verkligen se hur barnen gör genus i barngruppen och att ifrĂ„gasĂ€tta normer i samhĂ€llet tillsammans med barnen

    After 50 years and 200 papers, what can the Midspan cohort studies tell us about our mortality?

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    Objective: To distil the main findings from published papers on mortality in three cohorts involving over 27,000 adults, recruited in Scotland between 1965 and 1976 and followed up ever since. Method: We read and summarized 48 peer-reviewed papers about all-cause and cause-specific mortality in these cohorts, published between 1978 and 2013. Results: Mortality rates were substantially higher among cigarette smokers in all social classes and both genders. Exposure to second-hand smoke was also damaging. Exposure to higher levels of black smoke pollution was associated with higher mortality. After smoking, diminished lung function was the risk factor most strongly related to higher mortality, even among never-smokers. On average, female mortality rates were much lower than male but the same risk factors were predictors of mortality. Mortality rates were highest among men whose paternal, own first and most recent jobs were manual. Specific causes of death were associated with different life stages. Upward and downward social mobility conferred intermediate mortality rates. Low childhood cognitive ability was strongly associated with low social class in adulthood and higher mortality before age 65 years. There was no evidence that daily stress contributed to higher mortality among people in lower social positions. Men in manual occupations with fathers in manual occupations, who smoked and drank >14 units of alcohol a week had cardiovascular disease mortality rates 4.5 times higher than non-manual men with non-manual fathers, who neither smoked nor drank >14 units. Men who were obese and drank >14 units of alcohol per day had a mortality rate due to liver disease 19 times that of normal or underweight non-drinkers. Among women who never smoked, mortality rates were highest in severely obese women in the lowest occupational classes. Conclusion: These studies highlight the cumulative effect of adverse exposures throughout life, the complex interplay between social circumstances, culture and individual capabilities, and the damaging effects of smoking, air pollution, alcohol and obesity
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