1,486 research outputs found

    Supporting depressed mothers at home: Their views on an innovative relationship-based intervention

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    This study explored the responses of a group of 111 mothers who experienced distress and/or depression in the early months after childbirth and who received an innovative home visiting service until their child's first birthday. The current study reports a thematic content analysis of the qualitative questionnaire responses returned by the mothers after completing the intervention. The mothers valued the home visiting program for its capacity to increase their parenting confidence and to enhance their bond to their infants. They attributed this to the reassurance provided by the program and the skills and qualities of the home visitors. Their responses complement the benefits identified in quantitative analysis of the program and demonstrate its impact from participants' viewpoint. © eContent Management Pty Ltd

    Characterisation of Self-locking High-contraction Electro-ribbon Actuators*

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    Working in partnership with vulnerable families: The experience of child and family health practitioners

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    Family circumstances in infancy are persistent and powerful determinants of children's physical and mental health, influencing inequalities that trace from childhood through to adulthood. While the social factors that perpetuate patterns of inequality are more complex than can be addressed through single interventions, child and family health (CFH) services represent crucial sites where trajectories of inequality can be disrupted. In particular, approaches that foster opportunities for practitionerparent engagement that challenge traditional hierarchical health care practice, such as the Family Partnership Model (FPM), are recommended as ways of addressing disadvantage. Little is known about how practitioners implement models of working in partnership with families and, consequently, there is a gap in understanding how best to develop and sustain these new CFH practices. This paper reports a research project that investigated the experiences of 25 health professionals working within a FPM framework with vulnerable families. Through discussion of four key themes redefining expertise, changing practices, establishing new relationships with parents and the complexities of partnership practice the paper offers first-hand accounts of reframing practices that recognise the needs, skills and expertise of parents and thus contribute to empowerment of families. © 2011 La Trobe University

    Reflecting on Fifty Years of Progress for Women in Science

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    Like young women today, 50 years ago I too assumed that gender discrimination in science was a thing of the past. Girls who grew up in America in the Sputnik era, as I did, were encouraged to become scientists. By 1964, when I graduated from college with a major in biology, I thought it entirely possible I’d win a Nobel prize. Why not? Dorothy Hodgkin won one that year. At Harvard, my professors had strongly encouraged me to go to graduate school. When I finished my postdoc in 1973, I was actively recruited to the MIT faculty. What were those feminists complaining about

    Unaltered V̇O2 kinetics despite greater muscle oxygenation during heavy-intensity two-legged knee extension versus cycle exercise in humans

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    Relative perfusion of active muscles is greater during knee extension ergometry (KE) than cycle ergometry (CE). This provides the opportunity to investigate the effects of increased O₂ delivery (Q̇O₂) on deoxygenation heterogeneity among quadriceps muscles and pulmonary V̇O₂ kinetics. Using time-resolved near-infrared spectroscopy, we hypothesized that compared with CE the superficial vastus lateralis (VL), superficial rectus femoris and deep VL in KE would have 1) a smaller amplitude of the exercise-induced increase in deoxy[Hb+Mb] (related to the balance between V̇O₂ and Q̇O₂); 2) a greater amplitude of total[Hb+Mb] (related to the diffusive O₂ conductance); 3) a greater homogeneity of regional muscle deoxy[Hb+Mb]; and 4) no difference in pulmonary V̇O₂ kinetics. Eight participants performed square-wave KE and CE exercise from 20 W to heavy work rates. Deoxy[Hb+Mb] amplitude was less for all muscle regions in KE (P<0.05: superficial, KE 17-24 vs. CE 19-40; deep, KE 19 vs. CE 26 μM). Further, the amplitude of total[Hb+Mb] was greater for KE than CE at all muscle sites (P<0.05: superficial, KE 7-21 vs. CE 1-16; deep, KE 11 vs. CE -3 μM). Although the amplitude and heterogeneity of deoxy[Hb+Mb] was significantly lower in KE than CE during the first minute of exercise, the pulmonary V̇O₂ kinetics was not different for KE and CE. These data show that the microvascular Q̇O₂ to V̇O₂ ratio, and thus tissue oxygenation, was greater in KE than CE. This suggests that pulmonary and muscle V̇O₂ kinetics in young healthy humans are not limited by Q̇O₂ during heavy-intensity cycling

    Liquid-amplified zipping actuators for micro-air vehicles with transmission-free flapping

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    Prenatal maternal effects appear to be insensitive to experimental or natural environmental variation:Environmental effects on egg traits

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    In many birds, hatching asynchrony is a common phenomenon, primarily driven by patterns of incubation behaviour. However, experimental results in blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) have shown that asynchrony is reduced by intrinsic properties of later eggs that accelerate prenatal development. These intrinsic differences between early and late eggs could be driven by changes in resource availability to females, which are then passively passed onto the egg. Alternatively, it may be due to an anticipatory maternal effect, wherein some signal or resource is actively placed within the egg, which is beneficial to those eggs laid late within the clutch. In order to distinguish between these hypotheses we designed a supplementary feeding experiment, wherein females were provided with food at certain times during the laying phase. This had no discernible effect on development rate, or other egg characteristics, consistent with anticipatory maternal effects. Using a larger dataset we also tested whether natural environmental variation (weather) during egg formation affected maternal investment in eggs. Similarly, egg characteristics were found to be relatively insensitive to the environmental variation, supporting the experimental results.</p
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