11 research outputs found

    Cardiovascular risk management following gestational diabetes and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy: a narrative review

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    Gestational diabetes mellitus and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (gestational hypertension and preeclampsia) are strong independent risk predictors for future cardiovascular disease (CVD) specific to women. Awareness of the relationship between pregnancy-related risk factors and CVD needs improvement among both women and clinicians. Education of patients and their health care providers is urgently needed to ensure preventive measures are implemented across a woman's lifespan to care for the health of women affected by these conditions. Few interventions have been developed or studied which are designed to lower CVD risk in women with pregnancy-related risk factors. Future work should focus on developing interventions that are tailored together with individual communities and integrated within health care systems, ensuring each health care provider's role is clearly outlined to effectively prevent and manage CVD in these high risk women.Simone Marschner, Anushriya Pant, Amanda Henry, Louise J Maple-Brown, Lisa Moran, N Wah Cheung, Clara K Chow, Sarah Zama

    Ensuring planetary survival: the centrality of organic carbon in balancing the multifunctional nature of soils

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    Not only do soils provide 98.7% of the calories consumed by humans, they also provide numerous other functions upon which planetary survivability closely depends. However, our continuously increasing focus on soils for biomass provision (food, fiber, and energy) through intensive agriculture is rapidly degrading soils and diminishing their capacity to deliver other vital functions. These tradeoffs in soil functionality – the increased provision of one function at the expense of other critical planetary functions – are the focus of this review. We examine how land-use change for biomass provision has decreased the ability of soils to regulate the carbon pool and thereby contribute profoundly to climate change, to cycle the nutrients that sustain plant growth and ecosystem health, to protect the soil biodiversity upon which many other functions depend, and to cycle the Earth’s freshwater supplies. We also examine how this decreasing ability of soil to provide these other functions can be halted and reversed. Despite the complexity and the interconnectedness of soil functions, we show that soil organic carbon plays a central role and is a master indicator for soil functioning and that we require a better understanding of the factors controlling the behavior and persistence of C in soils. Given the threats facing humanity and their economies, it is imperative that we recognize that Soil Security is itself an existential challenge and that we need to increase our focus on the multiple functions of soils for long-term human welfare and survivability of the planet

    Cycling of Micronutrients in Terrestrial Ecosystems

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    Responses to Deficiencies in Macronutrients

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