15 research outputs found

    Toward a Theory of Child Well-Being

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    Assuring the well-being of children has emerged over the past several decades as an important goal for health and social policymakers. Although the concept of child well-being has been operationalized and measured in different ways by different child-serving entities, there are few unifying theories that could undergird and inform these various conceptual and measurement efforts. In this paper, we attempt to construct a theory of child well-being. We first review the social and policy history of the concept of child well-being, and briefly review its measurement based on these conceptualizations. We then examine three types of theories of well-being extant in philosophy - mental states theories, desire-based theories and needs-based theories - and investigate their suitability to serve as prototypes of a theory of child well-being. We develop a constraint that child well-being is important in and of itself and not merely as a way station to future adult well-being (we call this a non-reduction constraint). Using this constraint, we identify the limitations of each of the three sets of theories to serve as a basis for a theory of child well-being. Based on a developmentalist approach, we then articulate a theory of child well-being that contains two conditions. First, a child's stage-appropriate capacities that equip her for successful adulthood, given her environment; and, second, an engagement with the world in child-appropriate ways. We conclude by reviewing seven implications of this theoretical approach for the measurement of child well-being. Key Words Child well-being, philosophy, social policy, child developmentNoneThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11205-014-0665-

    Gene expression profile of vitamin D3 treated HL60 cells shows an incomplete molecular phenotypic conversion to monocytes

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    By high density oligonucleotide microarrays we have studied the expression profile of proliferating and VD treated HL60 cells and the molecular phenotype of VD monocytes and that of CD14+ peripheral monocytes has been compared. The results indicate that important changes in functional categories of the differentially expressed genes underlie the differentiation transition from myeloblasts to monocytes. This differential gene expression pattern leads to an increased expression of mRNAs involved in surface and external activities since many of the VD induced genes belong to ligand binding, receptors, cell surface antigens, defense/immunity and adhesion molecules functional categories. results also indicate that the molecular phenotypes of monocytes and VD induced cells diverge for a small but significant set of defense related genes. Particularly, class II MHC genes are not expressed in these cells. Furthermore, the high levels of expression of these genes induced by serum treatment of monocytes are decreased by VD

    Virally mediated MafB transduction induces the monocyte commitment of human CD34+ hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells

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    Upregulation of specific transcription factors is a generally accepted mechanism to explain the commitment of hematopoietic stem cells along precise maturation lineages. Based on this premise, transduction of primary hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells with viral vectors containing the investigated transcription factors appears as a suitable experimental model to identify such regulators. Although MafB transcription factor is believed to play a role in the regulation of monocytic commitment, no demonstration is, to date, available supporting this function in normal human hematopoiesis. To address this issue, we retrovirally transduced cord blood CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors with a MafB cDNA. Immunophenotypic and morphological analysis of transduced cells demonstrated the induction of a remarkable monomacrophage differentiation. Microarray analysis confirmed these findings and disclosed the upregulation of macrophage-related transcription factors belonging to the AP-1, MAF, PPAR and MiT families. Altogether our data allow to conclude that MafB is a key regulator of human monocytopoiesis
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