5,992 research outputs found
A qualitative study of work-life balance amongst specialist orthodontists in the United Kingdom
Objective: To identify factors affecting work-life balance amongst male and female orthodontists in the United Kingdom. Design: A qualitative interview-based study with a cross-sectional design. Subjects: Specialist orthodontists working in specialist practice and the hospital service in the United Kingdom were selected by purposive sampling. Methods: In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with eighteen orthodontic specialists. Interview transcripts were analysed using Framework Analysis. Results: Four main themes pertaining to work-life balance in orthodontics were identified: work factors affecting work-life balance, life factors affecting worklife balance, perception and effects of work-life balance and suggestions for managing work-life balance within the profession. Conclusions: There was substantial variation in the work-life balance of the orthodontists interviewed in this study; however the majority reported high levels of career satisfaction despite difficulties maintaining a good work-life balance. Whilst there were some clear distinctions in the factors affecting work-life balance between the hospital environment and specialist practice (including additional professional commitments and teaching/training related issues), there were also a number of similarities. These included, the lack of flexibility in the working day, managing patient expectations, taking time off work at short notice and the ability to work part-time
Evaluation of the orthodontic component of the hypodontia care pathway
INTRODUCTION: This study evaluated patientsâ experiences of the Hypodontia Care Pathway at a large teaching hospital at key stages: specifically patient expectations/experience following the diagnosis of hypodontia and then patient satisfaction with the orthodontic care received and the outcome at the end of active orthodontic treatment. METHODOLOGY: In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with twenty hypodontia patients following completion of orthodontic treatment but prior to any planned prosthodontic treatment commencing. Interviews were analysed qualitatively, using a framework approach. RESULTS: The framework analysis identified four main themes: perceptions of treatment, impact of the original malocclusion and the treatment process, the care team and communication. The themes were then further divided into subthemes. DISCUSSION: There was a large amount of positive feedback and the importance of the patient-clinician relationship was evident throughout. Where negative feedback was provided it mainly related to communication and areas were identified where change could take place in the future. CONCLUSIONS: Positive feedback was received and the importance of patient-clinician rapport was highlighted in all interviews. The main areas for improvement related to the importance of ensuring optimum communication, particularly with a cohort of patients who are often undergoing complex multidisciplinary treatment. Recommendations for the service have been made
Host Selection of the giant willow aphid (Tuberolachnus salignus)
The giant willow aphid [Tuberolachnus salignus (Gmelin)] has recently become noteworthy as a potential pest species due to the increased uptake of willow, its host-plant, for use in growing biomass for energy production. In this paper we describe host selection studies of T. salignus on short rotation coppice (SRC) willow varieties in laboratory bioassays and field experiments. In laboratory olfactometry tests, T. salignus was significantly attracted to certain SRC willow varieties, but not to others. Field trials during 2007 and 2008 showed that T. salignus infestation levels varied significantly on different SRC willow varieties and that levels are highest on the varieties to which they are most strongly attracted in the laboratory bioassays
Julian of Norwich and her children today: Editions, translations and versions of her revelations
The viability of such concepts as "authorial intention," "the original text," "critical edition" and, above all, "scholarly editorial objectivity" is not what it was, and a study of the textual progeny of the revelations of Julian of Norwich--editions, versions, translations and selections--does little to rehabilitate them. Rather it tends to support the view that a history of reading is indeed a history of misreading or, more positively, that texts can have an organic life of their own that allows them to reproduce and evolve quite independently of their author. Julian's texts have had a more robustly continuous life than those of any other Middle English mystic. Their history--in manuscript and print, in editions more or less approximating Middle English and in translations more or less approaching Modern English--is virtually unbroken since the fifteenth century. But on this perilous journey, many and strange are the clutches into which she and her textual progeny have fallen
Clastic polygonal networks around Lyot crater, Mars: Possible formation mechanisms from morphometric analysis
Polygonal networks of patterned ground are a common feature in cold-climate environments. They can form through the thermal contraction of ice-cemented sediment (i.e. formed from fractures), or the freezing and thawing of ground ice (i.e. formed by patterns of clasts, or ground deformation). The characteristics of these landforms provide information about environmental conditions. Analogous polygonal forms have been observed on Mars leading to inferences about environmental conditions. We have identified clastic polygonal features located around Lyot crater, Mars (50°N, 30°E). These polygons are unusually large ( > 100 m diameter) compared to terrestrial clastic polygons, and contain very large clasts, some of which are up to 15 metres in diameter. The polygons are distributed in a wide arc around the eastern side of Lyot crater, at a consistent distance from the crater rim. Using high-resolution imaging data, we digitised these features to extract morphological information. These data are compared to existing terrestrial and Martian polygon data to look for similarities and differences and to inform hypotheses concerning possible formation mechanisms. Our results show the clastic polygons do not have any morphometric features that indicate they are similar to terrestrial sorted, clastic polygons formed by freeze-thaw processes. They are too large, do not show the expected variation in form with slope, and have clasts that do not scale in size with polygon diameter. However, the clastic networks are similar in network morphology to thermal contraction cracks, and there is a potential direct Martian analogue in a sub-type of thermal contraction polygons located in Utopia Planitia. Based upon our observations, we reject the hypothesis that polygons located around Lyot formed as freeze-thaw polygons and instead an alternative mechanism is put forward: they result from the infilling of earlier thermal contraction cracks by wind-blown material, which then became compressed and/or cemented resulting in a resistant fill. Erosion then leads to preservation of these polygons in positive relief, while later weathering results in the fracturing of the fill material to form angular clasts. These results suggest that there was an extensive area of ice-rich terrain, the extent of which is linked to ejecta from Lyot crater
Atoms in Flight and the Remarkable Connections between Atomic and Hadronic Physics
Atomic physics and hadron physics are both based on Yang Mills gauge theory;
in fact, quantum electrodynamics can be regarded as the zero-color limit of
quantum chromodynamics. I review a number of areas where the techniques of
atomic physics provide important insight into the theory of hadrons in QCD. For
example, the Dirac-Coulomb equation, which predicts the spectroscopy and
structure of hydrogenic atoms, has an analog in hadron physics in the form of
light-front relativistic equations of motion which give a remarkable first
approximation to the spectroscopy, dynamics, and structure of light hadrons.
The renormalization scale for the running coupling, which is unambiguously set
in QED, leads to a method for setting the renormalization scale in QCD. The
production of atoms in flight provides a method for computing the formation of
hadrons at the amplitude level. Conversely, many techniques which have been
developed for hadron physics, such as scaling laws, evolution equations, and
light-front quantization have equal utility for atomic physics, especially in
the relativistic domain. I also present a new perspective for understanding the
contributions to the cosmological constant from QED and QCD.Comment: Presented at EXA2011, the International Conference on Exotic Atoms
and Related Topics, Vienna, September 5-9, 201
Oxidation of Iron under Physiologically Relevant Conditions in Biological Fluids from Healthy and Alzheimer's Disease Subjects
Ferroxidase activity has been reported to be altered in various biological fluids in neurodegenerative disease, but the sources contributing to the altered activity are uncertain. Here we assay fractions of serum and cerebrospinal fluid with a newly validated triplex ferroxidase assay. Our data indicate that while ceruloplasmin, a multicopper ferroxidase, is the predominant source of serum activity, activity in CSF predominantly derives from a <10 kDa component, specifically from polyanions such as citrate and phosphate. We confirm that in human biological samples, ceruloplasmin activity in serum is decreased in Alzheimer's disease, but in CSF a reduction of activity in Alzheimer's disease originates from the polyanion component
NNLO corrections to top-pair production at hadron colliders: the all-fermionic scattering channels
This is a second paper in our ongoing calculation of the
next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) QCD correction to the total inclusive
top-pair production cross-section at hadron colliders. In this paper we
calculate the reaction which was not considered
in our previous work on due to its phenomenologically
negligible size. We also calculate all remaining fermion-pair-initiated
partonic channels and that contribute to top-pair
production starting from NNLO. The contributions of these reactions to the
total cross-section for top-pair production at the Tevatron and LHC are small,
at the permil level. The most interesting feature of these reactions is their
characteristic logarithmic rise in the high energy limit. We compute the
constant term in the leading power behavior in this limit, and achieve
precision that is an order of magnitude better than the precision of a recent
theoretical prediction for this constant. All four partonic reactions computed
in this paper are included in our numerical program Top++. The calculation of
the NNLO corrections to the two remaining partonic reactions,
and , is ongoing.Comment: 1+16 pages; 3 figure
Survey of the rate of PSA testing in general practice
The use of prostate specific antigen (PSA) test could have a large impact on the incidence of prostate cancer in the UK. Over a period of 1 year (1999), 3.5% out of 160â015 men aged > 45 on a GP database, who had no previous record of prostate cancer, had a PSA test. Of the tested men, 21.3% had a PSA > 4âng/ml. Future data need to distinguish between men with and without symptoms. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co
Gauge links for transverse momentum dependent correlators at tree-level
In this paper we discuss the incorporation of gauge links in hadronic matrix
elements that describe the soft hadronic physics in high energy scattering
processes. In this description the matrix elements appear in soft correlators
and they contain non-local combinations of quark and gluon fields. In our
description we go beyond the collinear approach in which case also the
dependence on transverse momenta of partons is taken into consideration. The
non-locality in the transverse direction leads to a complex gauge link
structure for the full process, in which color is entangled, even at
tree-level. We show that at tree-level in a 1-parton unintegrated (1PU)
situation, in which only the transverse momentum of one of the initial state
hadrons is relevant, one can get a factorized expression involving transverse
momentum dependent (TMD) distribution functions. We point out problems at the
level of two initial state hadrons, even for relatively simple processes such
as Drell-Yan scattering.Comment: 25 pages, corrected typos and updated reference
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