1,599 research outputs found

    Studies on the zoogeography and ecology of palaearctic Coccidae I-III

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    The study of Coccidae has been restricted mainly to description of species and control of those forms which are injurious. Species of which the life-history is well known are very limited even in number. It is only recently that this extremely interesting group of insects has been studied by VayssiĂšre, Balachowsky, and the writer in connection with the problems of zoogeography and ecology. The following pages aim to extend our knowledge in these respects.Peer reviewe

    Mission Neighborhood Health Center: A Case Study of the Department of Health Education and Welfare as a Counterinsurgency Agency

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    In the 1960\u27s, working class communities all over the country, particularly minority inner city neighborhoods, exploded in violent anger. The federal government responded with a pacification or cooling-out program: the War on Poverty. The War on Poverty provided federal funds to bring a few programs into the community, to create a few jobs, and to buy off working class leaders who were a threat to those in power. In the course of this program of counterinsurgency, the War on Poverty took over a slogan of the 1960\u27s, community control, and turned it into its opposite; rather than control by the community, community control came to mean control over the working class majority of the community. One of the War on Poverty\u27s important programs was the neighborhood health center program to provide ambulatory health care to low income people. This program, initially slated to reach 25 million people through 1,000 health centers, was scaled down to 125 centers serving only 1.5 million people. The standard view of the neighborhood health center program holds that its aims were 1) to bring high quality health care to people previously denied such care, 2) to provide employment opportunities and training to neighborhood residents, and 3) to allow community members to participate in the governance of the health centers (Davis and Schoen, 1978). A more realistic view sees the neighborhood health center program as a means to control, rather than to assist, minority working class populations. This paper takes the example of one neighborhood health center, Mission Neighborhood Health Center in San Francisco, to show how federal counterinsurgency works in the 1970\u27s and to expose the class character of community control

    Formation of Giant Planets by Concurrent Accretion of Solids and Gas inside an Anti-Cyclonic Vortex

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    We study the formation of a giant gas planet by the core--accretion gas--capture process, with numerical simulations, under the assumption that the planetary core forms in the center of an anti-cyclonic vortex. The presence of the vortex concentrates particles of centimeter to meter size from the surrounding disk, and speeds up the core formation process. Assuming that a planet of Jupiter mass is forming at 5 AU from the star, the vortex enhancement results in considerably shorter formation times than are found in standard core--accretion gas--capture simulations. Also, formation of a gas giant is possible in a disk with mass comparable to that of the minimum mass solar nebula.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figures, ApJ in pres

    Formation of giant planets around stars with various masses

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    We examine the predictions of the core accretion - gas capture model concerning the efficiency of planet formation around stars with various masses. First, we follow the evolution of gas and solids from the moment when all solids are in the form of small grains to the stage when most of them are in the form of planetesimals. We show that the surface density of the planetesimal swarm tends to be higher around less massive stars. Then, we derive the minimum surface density of the planetesimal swarm required for the formation of a giant planet both in a numerical and in an approximate analytical approach. We combine these results by calculating a set of representative disk models characterized by different masses, sizes, and metallicities, and by estimating their capability of forming giant planets. Our results show that the set of protoplanetary disks capable of giant planet formation is larger for less massive stars. Provided that the distribution of initial disk parameters does not depend too strongly on the mass of the central star, we predict that the percentage of stars with giant planets should increase with decreasing stellar mass. Furthermore, we identify the radial redistribution of solids during the formation of planetesimal swarms as the key element in explaining these effects.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 9 pages, 9 figure

    Space-borne global astrometric surveys: the hunt for extra-solar planets

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    The proposed global astrometry mission {\it GAIA}, recently recommended within the context of ESA's Horizon 2000 Plus long-term scientific program, appears capable of surveying the solar neighborhood within ∌\sim 200 pc for the astrometric signatures of planets around stars down to the magnitude limit of VV=17 mag, which includes late M dwarfs at 100 pc. Realistic end-to-end simulations of the GAIA global astrometric measurements have yielded first quantitative estimates of the sensitivity to planetary perturbations and of the ability to measure their orbital parameters. Single Jupiter-mass planets around normal solar-type stars appear detectable up to 150 pc (V≀V\le 12 mag) with probabilities ≄\ge 50 per cent for orbital periods between ∌\sim2.5 and ∌\sim8 years, and their orbital parameters measured with better than 30 per cent accuracy to about 100 pc. Jupiter-like objects (same mass and period as our giant planet) are found with similar probabilities up to 100 pc.These first experiments indicate that the {\it GAIA} results would constitute an important addition to those which will come from the other ongoing and planned planet-search programs. These data combined would provide a formidable testing ground on which to confront theories of planetary formation and evolution.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, uses mn.sty, accepted by MNRA

    Early and rapid prediction of patency of the infarct-related coronary artery by using left ventricular wall thickness as measured by two-dimensional echocardiography

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    AbstractObjectives. The aim of this study was to determine whether echocardiography can distinguish between persistent coronary occlusion and reperfusion.Background. There are no adequate clinical or noninvasive laboratory markers to accurately predict successful reperfusion in an acute myocardial infarction.Methods. In a closed chest swine model, the effect of reperfusion on myocardial wall thickness was studied by comparing a 150-min total coronary artery occlusion (group 1) with 120 min of occlusion followed by 30 min of reperfusion (group 2) in the area of risk as measured by echocardiography. Wall thickness was measured at baseline and at 90 and 150 min.Results. In group 1 (n = 4), there was no appreciable change in mean wall thickness from 90 min to 150 min of occlusion at either end-diastole or end-systole (0.54 ± 0.02 to 0.52 ± 0.03 cm, 0.55 ± 0.03 to 0.54 ± 0.03 cm, respectively; p = NS). In contrast, in group 2 (n = 6), an increase in mean wall thickness from 0.53 ± 0.02 to 0.97 ± 0.05 cm at end-diastole and from 0.56 ± 0.04 to 1.04 ± 0.07 cm at end-systole was found from 90 min of occlusion to 30 min of reperfusion (p < 0.001). Reperfusion resulted. in an increase in wall thickness of 83 ± 11% at end-diastole and 92 ± 17% at end-systole. In contrast, persistent coronary occlusion showed minimal changes of −3.0 ± 5% at end-diastole and −2.0 ± 6% at end-systole.Conclusions. This study confirms the hypothesis that an increase in wall thickness can accurately distinguish between reperfusion and permanent coronary occlusion

    “All the World’s a Stage” and Each Has a Role to Play: A Collaborative Cross-Unit Metadata Project in Five Acts

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    The COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting shift to working from home proved a boon for digital collections. At Clemson University Libraries the metadata team facilitated a work-from-home project, during which 14 employees across two units described a collection of over 2400 photographs. From the standpoint of both the metadata reviewers and metadata creators, we will provide an overview of the project and workflows, including how training, communication, metadata creation, and quality control were managed remotely. This presentation reflects a balanced cross-unit perspective on what worked well and what could be improved for future virtual collaborative projects

    Beyond inpatient and outpatient care: alternative model for hypertension management

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    Hypertension is a major contributor to worldwide cardiovascular mortality, however, only one-third of patients with hypertension have their blood pressure treated to guideline recommended levels. To improve hypertension control, there may need to be a fundamental shift in care delivery, one that is population-based and simultaneously addresses patient, provider and system barriers. One potential approach is home-based disease management, based on the triad of home monitoring, team care, and patient self-care. Although there may be challenges to achieving the vision of home-based disease management, there are tremendous potential benefits of such an approach for reducing the global burden of cardiovascular disease

    A qualitative study of unmet needs and interactions with primary care among cancer survivors

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    INTRODUCTION: Despite increasing numbers, there is little research investigating the long-term needs of cancer survivors. The aim of this study is to explore the experiences of individuals who have survived at least 5 years following a cancer diagnosis, and to describe perceived unmet needs and interactions with primary care. METHODS: Forty long-term survivors of breast, colorectal and prostate cancer were purposively selected for an in-depth qualitative study. We aimed for a maximum variation sample according to cancer site, gender, time since diagnosis, cancer needs, anxiety and depression. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Transcripts were coded thematically using a grounded theory approach. RESULTS: Analysis of the interview data is presented in four subthemes: the role they perceived for the general practitioner (GP), unmet needs, reasons for not using primary care for needs they perceived as cancer related, and ongoing care for cancer-related issues. The majority of cancer survivors did not see a role for their GP in their long-term care related to their cancer diagnosis as most considered that they did not need active follow-up, but some expressed a need for psychological services and information on possible long-term effects. Cancer survivors cited three main reasons for not using GP services in relation to their cancer diagnosis: GPs were seen as non-experts in cancer; they were perceived as too busy; and a lack of continuity within primary care made it difficult to talk about long-term issues. There was a wide variation in schedules and notification of PSA tests among the prostate cancer survivors. DISCUSSION: The results from this project suggest that some cancer survivors have specific emotional and physical needs that could benefit from input from their primary care team, but not all cancer survivors look to their GP for their long-term cancer-related care. Better information care planning is required from specialists in order to identify those who would benefit mos
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