85 research outputs found
Policy Areas Impinging on Elderly Transportation Mobility: An Explanation with Ontario, Canada as Example
As countries face the challenges posed by rising numbers of older persons, the need to reassess their respective policies to address transport needs in aging societies is increasingly recognized in relation to health and sustainability goals. This paper proposes the examination of six interrelated policy areas affecting elderly mobility in a country or administrative region. A general survey of policy developments in each of these areas could improve current strategies and existing processes in the planning and implementation of mobility services that will be responsive to both elderly and the general population now and in the future. These include: 1) general transport policy framework; 2) travel mode preference; 3) alternative transport infrastructure stock and investments; 4) housing-land-use-transportation linkage; 5) research and technology applications that improve travel mode and environment; and 6) institutional and legal reforms. These policy areas are discussed and given concrete elucidation in the case of Ontario, Canada. Reflections and recommendations for further research and policy action deemed critical in the case region are highlighted.transportation, aging, regional policy, Canada
Telemedicine: Bridging the Gap between Refugee Health and Health Services Accessibility in Hamilton, Ontario
Refugees face considerable challenges upon seeking asylum in Canada, and accessing health care services remains a prominent issue. Recurrent themes in the literature outlining barriers to health-services accessibility include geographic, economic, and cultural barriers. Drawing on the experiences of service providers in Hamilton, Ontario, we explored the efficacy of telemedicine services in bridging the gap between refugee health and health services accessibility. Research methodology included structured interviews with clinicians who provide health-care services to refugees, complemented by a scoping literature review. The results of this exploratory study demonstrate the efficacy of telemedicine in encouraging dialogue and policy change in the greater health-care setting, and its potential to increase access to specialist health-care services.Les réfugiés doivent faire face à des défis considérables lors du processus de demande d’asile au Canada, et l’accès aux services de santé demeure un enjeu important. Parmi les préoccupations qui reviennent fréquemment dans la documentation portant sur l’accessibilité aux services de santé sont les obstacles de nature géographique, économique, et culturelle. En nous basant sur l’expérience vécue des fournisseurs de service établis à Hamilton, en Ontario, nous étudions l’efficacité des services de télémédecine à combler l’écart entre les besoins en matière de santé des réfugiés et l’accessibilité aux services de santé. La méthodologiede recherche comportait des entrevues structurées avec le personnel traitant chargé de fournir des services de santé aux réfugiés, accompagnée d’une revue exploratoire de la documentation sur le sujet. Les résultats de cette étude exploratoire ont démontré l’efficacité de la télémédecine à stimuler le dialogue et le changement en matière de politique dans le contexte général des services de santé, ainsi que sa capacité à accroître l’accès aux services de santé spécialisés
Geographical variations in the correlates of blood donor turnout rates: An investigation of Canadian metropolitan areas
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Like other countries, Canada's population is aging, and the implications of this demographic change need to be better understood from the perspective of blood supply. Analysis of donor data will help to identify systematic patterns of donation and its correlates.</p> <p>Data</p> <p>Geo-coded blood donor and donor clinic data are provided by Canadian Blood Services. Blood donor data is provided for the fiscal year 2006-2007 indicating the total number of donors for each Canadian postal code, excluding the province of Québec. Potential correlates of blood donation are selected based on social and economic characteristics, as well as descriptors of city size and geographical location in the urban hierarchy measures of accessibility, and capacity of donor clinics.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data is aggregated to <it>n </it>= 3,746 census tracts in 40 Census Metropolitan Areas (CMA) across the country. The number of donors per population in a census tract is regressed against the set of potential donation correlates. Autocorrelation is tested for and results adjusted to provide parsimonious models.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A number of factors are found to influence donation across the country, including the proportion of younger residents, English ability, proportion of people with immigrant status, higher education, and a population-based measure of accessibility.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>While a number of correlates of blood donation are observed across Canada, important contextual effects across metropolitan areas are highlighted. The paper concludes by looking at policy options that are aimed toward further understanding donor behaviour.</p
An ecological quantification of the relationships between water, sanitation and infant, child, and maternal mortality
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Water and sanitation access are known to be related to newborn, child, and maternal health. Our study attempts to quantify these relationships globally using country-level data: How much does improving access to water and sanitation influence infant, child, and maternal mortality?</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data for 193 countries were abstracted from global databases (World Bank, WHO, and UNICEF). Linear regression was used for the outcomes of under-five mortality rate and infant mortality rate (IMR). These results are presented as events per 1000 live births. Ordinal logistic regression was used to compute odds ratios for the outcome of maternal mortality ratio (MMR).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Under-five mortality rate decreased by 1.17 (95%CI 1.08-1.26) deaths per 1000, <it>p </it>< 0.001, for every quartile increase in population water access after adjustments for confounders. There was a similar relationship between quartile increase of sanitation access and under-five mortality rate, with a decrease of 1.66 (95%CI 1.11-1.32) deaths per 1000, <it>p </it>< 0.001. Improved water access was also related to IMR, with the IMR decreasing by 1.14 (95%CI 1.05-1.23) deaths per 1000, <it>p </it>< 0.001, with increasing quartile of access to improved water source. The significance of this relationship was retained with quartile improvement in sanitation access, where the decrease in IMR was 1.66 (95%CI 1.11-1.32) deaths per 1000, <it>p </it>< 0.001. The estimated odds ratio that increased quartile of water access was significantly associated with increased quartile of MMR was 0.58 (95%CI 0.39-0.86), <it>p </it>= 0.008. The corresponding odds ratio for sanitation was 0.52 (95%CI 0.32-0.85), <it>p </it>= 0.009, both suggesting that better water and sanitation were associated with decreased MMR.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our analyses suggest that access to water and sanitation independently contribute to child and maternal mortality outcomes. If the world is to seriously address the Millennium Development Goals of reducing child and maternal mortality, then improved water and sanitation accesses are key strategies.</p
Stream denitrification across biomes and its response to anthropogenic nitrate loading
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature 452 (2008): 202-205, doi:10.1038/nature06686.Worldwide, anthropogenic addition of bioavailable nitrogen (N) to the
biosphere is increasing and terrestrial ecosystems are becoming increasingly N
saturated, causing more bioavailable N to enter groundwater and surface waters.
Large-scale N budgets show that an average of about 20-25% of the N added to the
biosphere is exported from rivers to the ocean or inland basins, indicating
substantial sinks for N must exist in the landscape. Streams and rivers may be
important sinks for bioavailable N owing to their hydrologic connections with
terrestrial systems, high rates of biological activity, and streambed sediment
environments that favor microbial denitrification. Here, using data from 15N
tracer experiments replicated across 72 streams and 8 regions representing several
biomes, we show that total biotic uptake and denitrification of nitrate increase with
stream nitrate concentration, but that the efficiency of biotic uptake and
denitrification declines as concentration increases, reducing the proportion of instream
nitrate that is removed from transport. Total uptake of nitrate was related
to ecosystem photosynthesis and denitrification was related to ecosystem
respiration. Additionally, we use a stream network model to demonstrate that
excess nitrate in streams elicits a disproportionate increase in the fraction of nitrate
that is exported to receiving waters and reduces the relative role of small versus
large streams as nitrate sinks.Funding for this research was provided by the National Science
Foundation
Defining functional diversity for lignocellulose degradation in a microbial community using multi-omics studies
Abstract\ud
\ud
Background\ud
Lignocellulose is one of the most abundant forms of fixed carbon in the biosphere. Current industrial approaches to the degradation of lignocellulose employ enzyme mixtures, usually from a single fungal species, which are only effective in hydrolyzing polysaccharides following biomass pre-treatments. While the enzymatic mechanisms of lignocellulose degradation have been characterized in detail in individual microbial species, the microbial communities that efficiently breakdown plant materials in nature are species rich and secrete a myriad of enzymes to perform “community-level” metabolism of lignocellulose. Single-species approaches are, therefore, likely to miss important aspects of lignocellulose degradation that will be central to optimizing commercial processes.\ud
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Results\ud
Here, we investigated the microbial degradation of wheat straw in liquid cultures that had been inoculated with wheat straw compost. Samples taken at selected time points were subjected to multi-omics analysis with the aim of identifying new microbial mechanisms for lignocellulose degradation that could be applied in industrial pre-treatment of feedstocks. Phylogenetic composition of the community, based on sequenced bacterial and eukaryotic ribosomal genes, showed a gradual decrease in complexity and diversity over time due to microbial enrichment. Taxonomic affiliation of bacterial species showed dominance of Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria and high relative abundance of genera Asticcacaulis, Leadbetterella and Truepera. The eukaryotic members of the community were enriched in peritrich ciliates from genus Telotrochidium that thrived in the liquid cultures compared to fungal species that were present in low abundance. A targeted metasecretome approach combined with metatranscriptomics analysis, identified 1127 proteins and showed the presence of numerous carbohydrate-active enzymes extracted from the biomass-bound fractions and from the culture supernatant. This revealed a wide array of hydrolytic cellulases, hemicellulases and carbohydrate-binding modules involved in lignocellulose degradation. The expression of these activities correlated to the changes in the biomass composition observed by FTIR and ssNMR measurements.\ud
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Conclusions\ud
A combination of mass spectrometry-based proteomics coupled with metatranscriptomics has enabled the identification of a large number of lignocellulose degrading enzymes that can now be further explored for the development of improved enzyme cocktails for the treatment of plant-based feedstocks. In addition to the expected carbohydrate-active enzymes, our studies reveal a large number of unknown proteins, some of which may play a crucial role in community-based lignocellulose degradation.This work was funded by Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research\ud
Council (BBSRC) Grants BB/1018492/1, BB/K020358/1 and BB/P027717/1, the\ud
BBSRC Network in Biotechnology and Bioenergy BIOCATNET and São Paulo\ud
Research Foundation (FAPESP) Grant 10/52362-5. ERdA thanks EMBRAPA\ud
Instrumentation São Carlos and Dr. Luiz Alberto Colnago for providing the\ud
NMR facility and CNPq Grant 312852/2014-2. The authors would like to thank\ud
Deborah Rathbone and Susan Heywood from the Biorenewables Develop‑\ud
ment Centre for technical assistance in rRNA amplicon sequencing
Spatial analysis of air pollution and childhood asthma in Hamilton, Canada: comparing exposure methods in sensitive subgroups
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Variations in air pollution exposure within a community may be associated with asthma prevalence. However, studies conducted to date have produced inconsistent results, possibly due to errors in measurement of the exposures.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A standardized asthma survey was administered to children in grades one and eight in Hamilton, Canada, in 1994–95 (N ~1467). Exposure to air pollution was estimated in four ways: (1) distance from roadways; (2) interpolated surfaces for ozone, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter and nitrous oxides from seven to nine governmental monitoring stations; (3) a kriged nitrogen dioxide (NO<sub>2</sub>) surface based on a network of 100 passive NO<sub>2 </sub>monitors; and (4) a land use regression (LUR) model derived from the same monitoring network. Logistic regressions were used to test associations between asthma and air pollution, controlling for variables including neighbourhood income, dwelling value, state of housing, a deprivation index and smoking.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There were no significant associations between any of the exposure estimates and asthma in the whole population, but large effects were detected the subgroup of children without hayfever (predominately in girls). The most robust effects were observed for the association of asthma without hayfever and NO<sub>2</sub>LUR OR = 1.86 (95%CI, 1.59–2.16) in all girls and OR = 2.98 (95%CI, 0.98–9.06) for older girls, over an interquartile range increase and controlling for confounders.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our findings indicate that traffic-related pollutants, such as NO<sub>2</sub>, are associated with asthma without overt evidence of other atopic disorders among female children living in a medium-sized Canadian city. The effects were sensitive to the method of exposure estimation. More refined exposure models produced the most robust associations.</p
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