703 research outputs found
National evaluation of the neighbourhood nurseries: integrated report
Report description: The NNI was launched in 2001 to provide high quality childcare in the most disadvantaged neighbourhoods of England, to help parents into employment, reduce child poverty and boost children’s development. By 2005 45,000 new childcare places had been created in approximately 1,400 neighbourhood nurseries.
This report brings together the findings of the four individual strands of the National Evaluation of Neighbourhood Nurseries Initiative as shown above and makes a number of recommendations.
The report shows the rationale for the government’s strategy in targeting disadvantaged neighbourhoods and in focusing on high quality childcare to provide the link between raising parental employment and income and improving children’s life chances
Acetylcholine induces fibrogenic effects via M2/M3 ACh receptors in NASH and in primary human hepatic stellate cells
BACKGROUND:
The parasympathetic nervous system (PNS), via neurotransmitter Acetylcholine (ACh), modulates fibrogenesis in animal models. However, the role of ACh in human hepatic fibrogenesis is unclear.
AIMS:
We aimed to determine the fibrogenic responses of human hepatic stellate cells (hHSC) to ACh and the relevance of the PNS in hepatic fibrosis in patients with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH).
METHODS:
Primary hHSC were analysed for synthesis of endogenous ACh and acetylcholinesterase (AChE), and gene expression of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChR). Cell proliferation and fibrogenic markers were analysed in hHSC exposed to ACh, Atropine (Atrop), Mecamylamine (Mec), methoctramine and 4-Diphenylacetoxy-N-methylpiperidine methiodide (4-DAMP). MAChR expression was analysed in human NASH scored for fibrosis.
RESULTS:
We observed that hHSC synthesise ACh and AChE, and express ChAT and M1-M5 mAChR. We also show that M2 was increased during NASH progression, while both M2 and M3 were found upregulated in activated hHSC. Furthermore, endogenous ACh is required for hHSC basal growth. Exogenous ACh resulted in hHSC hyperproliferation via mAChR and PI-3 K and MEK signalling pathways, as well as increased fibrogenic markers.
CONCLUSION:
We show that ACh regulates hHSC activation via M2 and M3 mAChR involving the PI-3 K and MEK pathways in vitro. Finally, we provide evidence that the PNS may be involved in human NASH fibrosis
Metaverse for service industries: Future applications, opportunities, challenges and research directions
Although the metaverse is still in the early stages of development and implementation, it has the potential to revolutionize the way how businesses can interact with customers through both the virtual and real world. In particular, service industries are already exploring the opportunity to utilize the metaverse to provide more immersive, interactive and engaging customer experiences. However, the holistic overview of the future applications, opportunities, and challenges of a metaverse in the context of service industries from academic and expert perspectives is limited. By employing a multi-perspective approach, this study looks into these unexplored aspects of the metaverse in the context of service industries through informed and multifaceted narratives by leading academics and experts from cross-disciplinary backgrounds from media and communication, education, hospitality, financial services, retail, tourism and healthcare. The main opportunities identified include the development of new experiences, the introduction of novel inter-world interactions, and new business-consumer relations within the metaverse. The key challenges covered include current technological boundaries, limitations of the experiences in the metaverse, health issues, and data privacy, security, and legal issues. The paper concludes with formulating future research agendas and presenting contributions to literature and implications for practice.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Marketing technology for adoption by small business
The adoption of technology for marketing is essential for the survival of small businesses and yet little is understood about owner-manager practice in this area. This paper aims to address that gap through a qualitative study of 24 owner-managed small businesses operating in the visitor economy. It found that there was a strong appetite for the adoption of technology for marketing and a clear recognition of its opportunities particularly related to how it could create a stronger market orientation and more agile marketing, adhering to the principles of effectual reasoning. However, the ability to take advantage of these opportunities was constrained by a lack of knowledge and in particular an inability to measure the return on investment. While the wider implications of the study are limited by the niche sample, a planning model for the adoption of technology for marketing is presented which can be tested through future research
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