506 research outputs found
Longitudinal study of local authority child and family social workers (wave 1) Findings from a 5 year study of local authority child and family social workers in England.
The longitudinal study investigates recruitment, retention and career progression in local authority child and family social work over 5 years. This is the first of 5 reports.
It provides workforce information for employers and policy makers.
Topics covered in this report include:
ā¢entry routes into local authority child and family social work
ā¢current employment and career history
ā¢workplace wellbeing
ā¢management, supervision and working environment
ā¢job satisfaction
ā¢career progression and future career plan
Genomic evidence of pre-invasive clonal expansion, dispersal and progression in bronchial dysplasia
The term āfield cancerizationā is used to describe an epithelial surface that has a propensity to develop cancerous lesions, and in the case of the aerodigestive tract this is often as a result of chronic exposure to carcinogens in cigarette smoke 1, 2. The clinical endpoint is the development of multiple tumours, either simultaneously or sequentially in the same epithelial surface. The mechanisms underlying this process remain unclear; one possible explanation is that the epithelium is colonized by a clonal population of cells that are at increased risk of progression to cancer. We now address this possibility in a short case series, using individual genomic events as molecular biomarkers of clonality. In squamous lung cancer the most common genomic aberration is 3q amplification. We use a digital PCR technique to assess the clonal relationships between multiple biopsies in a longitudinal bronchoscopic study, using amplicon boundaries as markers of clonality. We demonstrate that clonality can readily be defined by these analyses and confirm that field cancerization occurs at a pre-invasive stage and that pre-invasive lesions and subsequent cancers are clonally related. We show that while the amplicon boundaries can be shared between different biopsies, the degree of 3q amplification and the internal structure of the 3q amplicon varies from lesion to lesion. Finally, in this small cohort, the degree of 3q amplification corresponds to clinical progression. Copyright Ā© 2011 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
A superconducting-nanowire 3-terminal electronic device
In existing superconducting electronic systems, Josephson junctions play a
central role in processing and transmitting small-amplitude electrical signals.
However, Josephson-junction-based devices have a number of limitations
including: (1) sensitivity to magnetic fields, (2) limited gain, (3) inability
to drive large impedances, and (4) difficulty in controlling the junction
critical current (which depends sensitively on sub-Angstrom-scale thickness
variation of the tunneling barrier). Here we present a nanowire-based
superconducting electronic device, which we call the nanocryotron (nTron), that
does not rely on Josephson junctions and can be patterned from a single thin
film of superconducting material with conventional electron-beam lithography.
The nTron is a 3-terminal, T-shaped planar device with a gain of ~20 that is
capable of driving impedances of more than 100 k{\Omega}, and operates in
typical ambient magnetic fields at temperatures of 4.2K. The device uses a
localized, Joule-heated hotspot formed in the gate to modulate current flow in
a perpendicular superconducting channel. We have characterized the nTron,
matched it to a theoretical framework, and applied it both as a digital logic
element in a half-adder circuit, and as a digital amplifier for superconducting
nanowire single-photon detectors pulses. The nTron has immediate applications
in classical and quantum communications, photon sensing and astronomy, and its
performance characteristics make it compatible with existing superconducting
technologies. Furthermore, because the hotspot effect occurs in all known
superconductors, we expect the design to be extensible to other materials,
providing a path to digital logic, switching, and amplification in
high-temperature superconductors
BBC Charter Review, BBC Audience Council Northern Ireland Submission to the BBC Trust, December 2015
Developing a digital intervention for cancer survivors: an evidence-, theory- and person-based approach
This paper illustrates a rigorous approach to developing digital interventions using an evidence-, theory- and person-based approach. Intervention planning included a rapid scoping review which identified cancer survivorsā needs, including barriers and facilitators to intervention success. Review evidence (N=49 papers) informed the interventionās Guiding Principles, theory-based behavioural analysis and logic model. The intervention was optimised based on feedback on a prototype intervention through interviews (N=96) with cancer survivors and focus groups with NHS staff and cancer charity workers (N=31). Interviews with cancer survivors highlighted barriers to engagement, such as concerns about physical activity worsening fatigue. Focus groups highlighted concerns about support appointment length and how to support distressed participants. Feedback informed intervention modifications, to maximise acceptability, feasibility and likelihood of behaviour change. Our systematic method for understanding user views enabled us to anticipate and address important barriers to engagement. This methodology may be useful to others developing digital interventions
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