9 research outputs found

    A Dual Approach to Fostering Under-Prepared Student Success: Focusing on Doing and Becoming

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    A paired course model for under-prepared college students incorporates a dual instructional approach, academic skill building and lifelong learning development, to help students do more academically and become stronger lifelong learners. In a reading support course, students improved their reading skills and applied them directly to the paired content course. They also developed lifelong learning attributes through increased self-knowledge (using the Effective Lifelong Learning Inventory), reflection, and coaching. Students showed significant gains in lifelong learning, an 85% success rate in the paired content course, and a higher retention rate than students outside the project with similar SAT critical reading scores

    Early-onset bacterial infection in Brazilian neonates with respiratory distress: A hospital-based study

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    We investigated infants with respiratory distress within 4 days of birth whose mothers had not received antibiotic prophylaxis to evaluate the frequency and etiology of bacterial infection and associated risk factors. the study was conducted on 261 infants suffering respiratory distress admitted to a Brazilian neonatal intensive care unit, 94 per cent of whom were born prematurely. Gestational and delivery history; bacteriological cultures of blood, cerebrospinal fluid, tracheal aspirates and urine; complete and differential blood counts; a urinary group B streptococcal latex antigen test; and a chest radiograph were analysed. Indications of infection were found in 38.7 per cent and confirmed in 11.9 per cent of the neonates. Gram-positive (70.9 per cent) and Gram-negative bacteria (29.1 per cent) were found in 31 cases of confirmed early bacteremia. Group B Streptococcus was the predominant causative agent (19.4 per cent) in infants exhibiting confirmed infection. Culture-proven infection was more frequent among infants delivered vaginally (adjusted OR = 2.53,p = 0.05) or born to mothers with signs of intra-amniotic infection (adjusted OR = 2.83, p = 0.04). Preventive measures against early bacterial infection in preterm infants from this population are strongly warranted.Univ São Paulo, Fac Med Ribeirao Preto, Dept Pediat, São Paulo, BrazilWeb of Scienc

    Association between male circumcision and women's biomedical health outcomes: a systematic review

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    Background: Male circumcision reduces men's risk of acquiring HIV and some sexually transmitted infections from heterosexual exposure, and is essential for HIV prevention in sub-Saharan Africa. Studies have also investigated associations between male circumcision and risk of acquisition of HIV and sexually transmitted infections in women. We aimed to review all evidence on associations between male circumcision and women's health outcomes to benefit women's health programmes. Methods: In this systematic review we searched for peer-reviewed and grey literature publications reporting associations between male circumcision and women's health outcomes up to April 11, 2016. All biomedical (not psychological or social) outcomes in all study types were included. Searches were not restricted by year of publication, or to sub-Saharan Africa. Publications without primary data and not in English were excluded. We extracted data and assessed evidence on each outcome as high, medium, or low consistency on the basis of agreement between publications; outcomes found in fewer than three publications were indeterminate consistency. Findings: 60 publications were included in our assessment. High-consistency evidence was found for five outcomes, with male circumcision protecting against cervical cancer, cervical dysplasia, herpes simplex virus type 2, chlamydia, and syphilis. Medium-consistency evidence was found for male circumcision protecting against human papillomavirus and low-risk human papillomavirus. Although the evidence shows a protective association with HIV, it was categorised as low consistency, because one trial showed an increased risk to female partners of HIV-infected men resuming sex early after male circumcision. Seven outcomes including HIV had low-consistency evidence and six were indeterminate. Interpretation: Scale-up of male circumcision in sub-Saharan Africa has public health implications for several outcomes in women. Evidence that female partners are at decreased risk of several diseases is highly consistent. Synergies between male circumcision and women's health programmes should be explored. Funding: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Jhpiego

    Warning signals of biodiversity collapse across gradients of tropical forest loss

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    Abstract We evaluate potential warning signals that may aid in identifying the proximity of ecological communities to biodiversity thresholds from habitat loss—often termed “tipping points”—in tropical forests. We used datasets from studies of Neotropical mammal, frog, bird, and insect communities. Our findings provide only limited evidence that an increase in the variance (heteroskedasticity) of biodiversity-related parameters can provide a general warning signal of impending threshold changes in communities, as forest loss increases. However, such an apparent effect was evident for amphibians in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and Amazonian mammal and bird communities, suggesting that impending changes in some species assemblages might be predictable. We consider the potential of such warning signs to help forecast drastic changes in biodiversity

    A biodiversity hotspot losing its top predator: The challenge of jaguar conservation in the Atlantic Forest of South America

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    The jaguar is the top predator of the Atlantic Forest (AF), which is a highly threatened biodiversity hotspot that occurs in Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina. By combining data sets from 14 research groups across the region, we determine the population status of the jaguar and propose a spatial prioritization for conservation actions. About 85% of the jaguar’s habitat in the AF has been lost and only 7% remains in good condition. Jaguars persist in around 2.8% of the region, and live in very low densities in most of the areas. The population of jaguars in the AF is probably lower than 300 individuals scattered in small sub-populations. We identified seven Jaguar Conservation Units (JCUs) and seven potential JCUs, and only three of these areas may have ≥50 individuals. A connectivity analysis shows that most of the JCUs are isolated. Habitat loss and fragmentation were the major causes for jaguar decline, but human induced mortality is the main threat for the remaining population. We classified areas according to their contribution to jaguar conservation and we recommend management actions for each of them. The methodology in this study could be used for conservation planning of other carnivore species

    Bioelectroanalysis of pharmaceutical compounds

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