383 research outputs found

    Utilization of Behavioral Health Services Among the Latino Population

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    Limited research exists examining the effectiveness of an integrated primary care model of behavioral health service delivery among the Latino population. This descriptive pilot study addresses this gap in the literature by exploring the mechanisms that influence whether Latino integrated primary care patients who receive a Warm Hand-Off (WHO) will or will not pursue further Behavioral Health Services (BHS). Participants were recruited from Clinica Tepeyac, an integrated primary care clinic located in Denver, Colorado. Results showed that the majority of participants engaged in BHS at the suggestion of their medical provider, as opposed to initiating BHS involvement by their own accord. Additionally, participants overwhelmingly indicated that having a behavioral health provider (BHP) that was Latino/a was somewhat important to very important. Future research should focus on more rigorous approaches to exploring ways to facilitate transition from WHOs to further BHS participation for patients that identify as Latino within an integrated primary care setting

    Depression of early phase of HTLV-I infection in vitro mediated by human beta-interferon.

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    Natural human interferon beta (beta-IFN) was tested during the early phase of in vitro infection with HTLV-I virus of human cord blood mononuclear cells (CBL), to evaluate whether its antiviral and immunomodulating effects might prevent spreading of infection in the host. beta-IFN was found to reduce HTLV-I transmission and integration in CBL cultures. Moreover, beta-IFN had no effect in preventing virus transmission and integration in K562 and a very limited effect in HL60 and Molt-4 human tumour lines, suggesting a cell-type specific mode of action. beta-IFN induced a 'priming' response on CBL, since overnight pretreatment of recipient cells or one single treatment at the onset of the coculture were almost equally effective in protecting against HTLV-I infection. During the early days post infection (p.i.), IFN-treated CBL showed a pattern of phenotypic markers that was closer to that of non-infected CBL. In contrast, untreated CBL exposed to HTLV-I showed a percent increase of Tac+, M3+ and Leu 11+ subpopulations. Cell-mediated immune responses of CBL were depressed after coculturing with HTLV-I producer MT-2 cells. beta-IFN was able to boost the cell-mediated cytotoxicity of fresh and infected CBL against both K562 and MT-2 target cells. Leukocyte blastogenesis in mixed lymphocyte/tumour cell cultures, evaluated in terms of 3H-thymidine incorporation during the first week p.i., was also enhanced by IFN when macrophages and lymphocytes were reconstituted at an optimal 1:20 ratio. It is conceivable that this overall enhancement of the immune response induced by beta-IFN could contribute to reduce HTLV-I infection in vitro

    Dual stage resistive transition of MgB2 evidenced by noise analysis

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    The resistive transition of polycrystalline superconducting MgB2 films is studied by means of an extensive set of stationary noise measurements, going from the very beginning of the transition to its final point, where the normal state is reached, either with and without magnetic field. The experimental results, taken at low current density and close to the critical temperature Tc, show very clearly the existence of two different dissipative processes at the different stages of the transition. An extended analysis proves that, at the beginning of the transition, when the resistance is below ten percent of normal value, the specimen is in a mixed state and dissipation is produced by fluxoid creation and motion. At higher temperature the specimen is in an intermediate state, constituted by a structure of interleaved superconducting and resistive domains. Such a situation occurs in type II superconductor when the transition temperature is very near to Tc and the critical field Hc for fluxoid penetration tends to zero. It is found that in the intermediate state, the power spectrum of the relative resistance fluctuations, is independent of the average resistance value and is unaffected by the magnetic field. As shown in the paper, this means that the noise is generated by density fluctuation of the normal electron gas in the resistive domains, while the contribution of the superconducting ones is negligible. The reduced noise amplitude does not depend on the steepness of the transition curve, thus adding further evidence to the above interpretation. The noise is thus related to the film impurities and can be investigated when the specimen is in the normal state, even at room temperature. The occurrence of a different dissipative process at low resistance is clearly evidenced by the experimental results, which show that the amplitude of the reduced power spectrum of the noise depends on magnetic field and resistance. These results are consistent with the assumption of fluxoid noise as shown by the model for the calculation of the noise developed in the manuscrip

    Federated data bases for the development of an operational monitoring and forecasting system of the ocean: the THREDDS Dataset Merger

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    During the last decade, operational monitoring and forecasting systems have been developed in all the European seas. The exchange of data and products and the development of services for a wide community of users pose some fundamental issues, whose solution has become a priority in integrated and GMES referring projects, such as the MERSEA European project. These projects aim to develop a European system for operational monitoring and forecasting on global and regional scales of ocean physics, bio-chemistry and ecosystems. GMES system and its operational projects need to federate resources and expertise coming from diverse organizations working on different Earth Sciences fields (e.g. satellite data processing, in situ observing systems, data management, ocean and ecosystem modeling, etc.). Therefore, it is required a Marine Information Management (MIM) system capable of facilitating the regular real-time exchange of high quality information, data and products. Moreover, MIM system must provide appropriate information for a wide range of external users both in real-time and delayed mode. </p><p style=&quot;line-height: 20px;&quot;> In this paper an architecture based on the OPeNDAP/THREDDS technology is proposed as a solution for these operational systems. In this context, a catalog merging solution is introduced for the MIM system, which results in the design and development of the THREDDS Dataset Merger (TDM): a set of services meant to merge THREDDS Dataset Inventory Catalogs, so to achieve a unique catalog service for a whole database federation. TDM service merges distributed and autonomous THREDDS catalogs in order to work out a virtual merged catalog. The TDM service was extended in order to provide automatic catalogs synchronization. This service allows extending the pull-based TDM paradigm to support push-based applications. Some security issues are also considered

    CDI/THREDDS interoperability in the SeaDataNet framework

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    Abstract. SeaDataNet is an EU funded project aiming to create and operate a pan-European, marine data infrastructure for managing the large and diverse datasets (i.e. temperature, salinity current, sea level, chemical, physical and biological properties) collected by the oceanographic fleets and the new automatic observation systems. In order to make the SeaDataNet system compliant with the INSPIRE Implementing Rules for discovery service, an ISO 19139 encoding of the SeaDataNet Common Data Index (CDI) metadata model was defined. Moreover, the problem of heterogeneous data sources has been addressed. In fact, a widely used system of SeaDataNet partners and oceanographic-marine community is THREDDS/OPeNDAP; this raises up the problem of federating into SeaDataNet framework THREDDS/OPeNDAP systems as well. In this paper we describe an interoperability framework to access resources (i.e. data and services) that are available through CDI and THREDDS/OPeNDAP services. The proposed solution implements a common catalog interface to discover and access the two heterogeneous resources in a common way. This catalog service is fully distributed and implements international standards as far as geospatial information discovery and query are concerned. The developed solution is called GI-cat and was experimented in the framework of the SeaDataNet European project

    Advanced e-Infrastructures for civil protection applications : the CYCLOPS project

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    During the full cycle of the emergency management, Civil Protection operative procedures involve many actors belonging to several institutions (civil protection agencies, public administrations, research centers, etc.) playing different roles (decision-makers, data and service providers, emergency squads, etc.). In this context the sharing of information is a vital requirement to make correct and effective decisions. Therefore a European-wide technologi- cal infrastructure providing a distributed and coordinated access to different kinds of resources (data, information, services, expertise, etc.) could enhance existing Civil Protection applications and even enable new ones. Such European Civil Protection e-Infrastructure should be designed taking into account the specific requirements of Civil Protection applications and the state-of-the-art in the scientific and technological disciplines which could make the emergency management more effective. In the recent years Grid technologies have reached a mature state providing a platform for secure and coordinated resource sharing between the participants collected in the so-called Virtual Organizations. Moreover the Earth and Space Sciences Informatics provide the conceptual tools for modeling the geospatial information shared in Civil Protection applications during its entire lifecycle. Therefore a European Civil Protection e-infrastructure might be based on a Grid platform enhanced with Earth Sciences services. In the context of the 6th Framework Programme the EU co-funded Project CYCLOPS (CYber-infrastructure for CiviL protection Operative ProcedureS), ended in December 2008, has addressed the problem of defining the re- quirements and identifying the research strategies and innovation guidelines towards an advanced e-Infrastructure for Civil Protection. Starting from the requirement analysis CYCLOPS has proposed an architectural framework for a European Civil Protection e-Infrastructure. This architectural framework has been evaluated through the development of prototypes of two operative applications used by the Italian Civil Protection for Wild Fires Risk Assessment (RISICO) and by the French Civil Protection for Flash Flood Risk Management (SPC-GD). The results of these studies and proof-of-concepts have been used as the basis for the definition of research and innovation strategies aiming to the detailed design and implementation of the infrastructure. In particular the main research themes and topics to be addressed have been identified and detailed. Finally the obstacles to the innovation required for the adoption of this infrastructure and possible strategies to overcome them have been discussed

    Lattice calculation of the DsD_{s} meson radiative form factors over the full kinematical range

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    We compute the structure-dependent axial and vector form factors for the radiative leptonic decays Ds→ℓνℓγD_s\to \ell\nu_\ell\gamma, where ℓ\ell is a charged lepton, as functions of the energy of the photon in the rest frame of the DsD_s meson. The computation is performed using gauge-field configurations with 2+1+1 sea-quark flavours generated by the European Twisted Mass Collaboration and the results have been extrapolated to the continuum limit. For the vector form factor we observe a very significant partial cancellation between the contributions from the emission of the photon from the strange quark and that from the charm quark. The results for the form factors are used to test the reliability of various Anz\"atze based on single-pole dominance and its extensions, and we present a simple parametrization of the form factors which fits our data very well and which can be used in future phenomenological analyses. Using the form factors we compute the differential decay rate and the branching ratio for the process Ds→eνeγD_s\to e\nu_e\gamma as a function of the lower cut-off on the photon energy. With a cut-off of 10 MeV for example, we find a branching ratio of Br(Eγ>10 MeV)=4.4(3)×10−6(E_\gamma>10\,\mathrm{MeV})=4.4(3)\times 10^{-6} which, unlike some model calculations, is consistent with the upper bound from the BESIII experiment Br(Eγ>10 MeV)<1.3×10−4(E_\gamma>10\,\mathrm{MeV})<1.3\times 10^{-4} at 90% confidence level. Even for photon energies as low as 10 MeV, the decay Ds→eνeγD_s\to e\nu_e\gamma is dominated by the structure-dependent contribution to the amplitude (unlike the decays with ℓ=μ\ell=\mu or τ\tau), confirming its value in searches for hypothetical new physics as well as in determining the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) parameters at O(αem)O(\alpha_\mathrm{em}), where αem\alpha_{\mathrm{em}} is the fine-structure constant.Comment: 31 pages, 14 figure
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