425 research outputs found

    Participant Recruitment of African American College Students at an Historically Black College and University (HBCU): Challenges and Strategies for Health-Related Research

    Full text link
    Lack of research participation among African Americans is problematic for population relevant health disparity research. The purpose of this paper is to identify and describe challenges and strategies in recruitment of African American college students for health related research being conducted at a small Historically Black College or University (HBCU). Upon completion of a recruitment and retention literature review, study investigators constructed and tested a culturally-specific, direct-appeal protocol to recruit participants. Major barriers to recruitment of African American college students included discrete sources of distrust, lack of understanding of the research process, and logistical concerns. Implementation of a culturally-specific, direct appeal protocol led to a significant improvement in recruitment and retention of student participants. It is imperative that researchers demystify scientific investigation as a first step towards building trust between themselves and target populations, particularly those from traditionally underrepresented groups. Reasons for distrust, a need for trust and trust building strategies are offered here

    Applying Registry Services to Spaceflight Technologies to Aid in the Assignment of Assigned Numbers to Disparate Systems and their Technologies to Further Enable Interoperability

    Get PDF
    To date very little effort has been made to provide interoperability between various space agency projects. To effectively get to the Moon and beyond systems must interoperate. To provide interoperability, standardization and registries of various technologies will be required. These registries will be created as they relate to space flight. With the new NASA Moon/Mars initiative, a requirement to standardize and control the naming conventions of very disparate systems and technologies is emerging. The need to provide numbering to the many processes, schemas, vehicles, robots, space suits and technologies (e.g. versions), to name a few, in the highly complex Constellation initiative is imperative. The number of corporations, developer personnel, system interfaces, people interfaces will require standardization and registries on a scale not currently envisioned. It would only take one exception (stove piped system development) to weaken, if not, destroy interoperability. To start, a standardized registry process must be defined that allows many differing engineers, organizations and operators the ability to easily access disparate registry information across numerous technological and scientific disciplines. Once registries are standardized the need to provide registry support in terms of setup and operations, resolution of conflicts between registries and other issues will need to be addressed. Registries should not be confused with repositories. No end user data is "stored" in a registry nor is it a configuration control system. Once a registry standard is created and approved, the technologies that should be registered must be identified and prioritized. In this paper, we will identify and define a registry process that is compatible with the Constellation initiative and other non related space activities and organizations. We will then identify and define the various technologies that should use a registry to provide interoperability. The first set of technologies will be those that are currently in need of expansion namely the assignment of satellite designations and the process which controls assignments. Second, we will analyze the technologies currently standardized under the Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) banner. Third, we will analyze the current CCSDS working group and Birds of a Feather (BoF) activities to ascertain registry requirements. Lastly, we will identify technologies that are either currently under the auspices of another standards body or technologies that are currently not standardized. For activities one through three, we will provide the analysis by either discipline or technology with rationale, identification and brief description of requirements and precedence. For activity four, we will provide a list of current standards bodies e.g. IETF and a list of potential candidates

    Is the internet the right medium for a 'don't quit campaign'?

    Get PDF
    This paper examines the effectiveness of promoting post-16 education and training via Internet. It examines the differences between those who intend to continue the post-16 schooling and those who do not. The implication of the findings challenges the effectiveness of a 'don't quit campaign' which was to offer support and guidance on the choice of post 16 options. This study found that the campaign has done very little for those who decided not to continue post-16 education. Consequently, disadvantaged young people need constant support and resources to eliminate the disparities between different groups

    Oral carcinoma after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation – a new classification based on a literature review over 30 years

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) have a higher risk of developing secondary solid tumors, in particular squamous cell carcinoma, because of several risk factors, including full-body irradiation (TBI), chemotherapy, and chronic graft versus host disease (GVHD). Based on the review presented here, a classification of oral changes is suggested in order to provide a tool to detect high-risk patients. Methods and Results The literature over the last 30 years was reviewed for development of malignoma of the oral cavity after HSCT. Overall, 64 cases were found. In 16 out of 30 cases, the tongue was the primary location, followed by the salivary gland (10 out of 30); 56.4% appeared in a latency time of 5 to 9 years after HSCT. In 76.6%, GVHD was noticed before the occurrence of oral malignancy. Premalignant changes of the oral mucosa were mucositis, xerostomia, and lichenoid changes, developing into erosive form. CONCLUSION: All physicians involved in the treatment of post-HSCT patients should be aware of the increased risk, even after 5 years from the development of oral malignancy, in particular when oral graft versus host changes are visible. In order to develop evidence management and to detect and offer adequate therapy as early as possible in this patient group, multicenter studies, involving oncologists and head and neck surgeons, should be established

    Lunar Surface Engineering Properties Experiment Definition

    Get PDF
    The objectives of the research under this contract are to define geological and engineering problems associated with lunar exploration that depend on the knowledge of the mechanical properties of soil and rock for solution and to perform critical evaluation of available information relating to the composition, structure, and engineering properties of lunar surface materials.Submitted to : National Aeronautics and Space Administration, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Contract Number NAS 8-21432. Control Number DCN l-8-28-00056(IF)By James K. Mitchell, Richard E. Goodman, William N. Houston, Paul A. WitherspoonLunar soil simulation / W. N. Houston, L. I. Narniq, and J. K. Mitchell -- Friction angle of lunar surface soils estimated from boulder tracks / H. J. Hovland and J. K. Mitchell -- Trafficability of the lunar surface / J. B. Thompson and J. K. Mitchell -- Chemical impregnation techniques as related to lunar engineering applications / T. s. Vinson and J. K. Mitchell -- Failure of a borehole in soil or rock under dilatometer loading and under borehole jack loading / T. K. Van and R. E. Goodman -- Appendix - Detailed description of model studies / K. Drozd, T. K. Van, and R. E. Goodman -- Studies on fluid conductivity of lunar surface materials / D. F. Katz, D. R. Willis, and P. A. Witherspoon.Second quarterly repor

    Observations of Toroidal Coupling for Low-N Alfven Modes in the Tca Tokamak

    Get PDF
    The antenna structure in the TCA tokamak is phased to excite preferentially Alfven waves with known toroidal and poloidal wave numbers. Surprisingly, the loading spectrum includes both discrete and continuum modes with poloidal wave numbers incompatible with the antenna phasing. These additional modes, which are important for our heating experiments, can be attributed to linear mode coupling induced by the toroidicity of the plasma column, when we take into account ion-cyclotron effects

    Особенности терапии атипичного герпеса и ассоциированного с ним рецидивирующего вульвовагинального кандидоза

    Get PDF
    КАНДИДОЗ ВУЛЬВОВАГИНАЛЬНЫЙ /ЛЕК ТЕРВЛАГАЛИЩА БОЛЕЗНИ /ЛЕК ТЕРВУЛЬВЫ БОЛЕЗНИ /ЛЕК ТЕРЖЕНСКИЕ БОЛЕЗНИ /ЛЕК ТЕРПРОТИВОГРИБКОВЫЕ СРЕДСТВАПРОТИВОВИРУСНЫЕ СРЕДСТВАГЕРПЕСВИРУСНЫЕ ИНФЕКЦИИРЕЦИДИВГЕРПЕСВИРУС 1 ЧЕЛОВЕКАГЕРПЕСВИРУС 2 ЧЕЛОВЕК
    corecore