34 research outputs found

    Lessons learned from operating a pre-commercialisation field-testing platform for innovative non-sewered sanitation in Durban, South Africa

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    The Engineering Field Testing Platform (EFTP) was designed to provide an opportunity for technology  developers (TDs) to test non-sewered sanitation prototypes in the eThekwini Municipal Area (Durban), South Africa. Between 2017 and 2020, 15 sanitation systems were tested in informal settlements, peri-urban households, and other ā€˜real worldā€™ settings. This paper illustrates the lessons learned from establishing and managing this testing platform. Costs and timelines for testing are dependent on several factors, including the aims of testing, the development stage of the prototype, whether testing takes place in a community or household setting and if a testing site is shared between prototypes. Timelines were routinely underestimated, particularly for community engagement and commissioning of prototypes to reach steady-state operation. Personnel accounted for more than half of the EFTPā€™s costs. The presence of the municipality as a platform partner was vital to the success of testing, both for gaining political support and for enabling access to testing sites. It is noted that working in communities, with test sites in public spaces, requires technical and social sensitivity to context. It was important to ensure testing supported future municipal decision-making on service provision, as well as longer-term development within communities. The high number of stakeholders, locally and internationally, raised management challenges common to any large project. However, the EFTP added value to TDs, the eThekwini Municipality, and communities requiring improved sanitation services; this was amplified through the platform approach

    Microbial evaluation of the viscous heater for commercial applications in faecal sludge treatment

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    Risk of infection from human pathogens by contact with untreated faecal sludge (FS) poses a threat to worker health. The aim of this study was to assess the commercial potential of a 1000 L h-1 viscous heater (VH) to minimise this risk as a component of a black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) production pipeline. Changes in source material properties during sludge processing, temperature stability and microbial treatment efficacy were evaluated. Inactivation of heterotrophic bacteria in FS treated in the VH was measured at 60 ā„ƒ and 80 ā„ƒ. Approximately 1ā€‘ to 3-log inactivation was observed, independent of residence time. Maintaining temperature stability proved difficult with variable sludge viscosity and manual control of flow rate and engine power. Adding operational controls based on effluent temperature would compensate for variable sludge properties. Preparing FS for treatment in the VH proved challenging due to the small particle size required and the large quantity of detritus present

    An overview of ethical frameworks in public health: can they be supportive in the evaluation of programs to prevent overweight?

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    Background. The prevention of overweight sometimes raises complex ethical questions. Ethical public health frameworks may be helpful in evaluating programs or policy for overweight prevention. We give an overview of the purpose, form and contents of such public health frameworks and investigate to which extent they are useful for evaluating programs to prevent overweight and/or obesity. Methods. Our search for frameworks consisted of three steps. Firstly, we asked experts in the field of ethics and public health for the frameworks they were aware of. Secondly, we performed a search in Pubmed. Thirdly, we checked literature references in the articles on frameworks we found. In total, we thus found six ethical frameworks. We assessed the area on which the available ethical frameworks focus, the users they target at, the type of policy or intervention they propose to address, and their aim. Further, we looked at their structure and content, that is, tools for guiding the analytic process, the main ethical principles or values, possible criteria for dealing with ethical conflicts, and the concrete policy issues they are applied to. Results. All frameworks aim to support public health professionals or policymakers. Most of them provide a set of values or principles that serve as a standard for evaluating policy. Most frameworks articulate both the positive ethical foundations for public health and ethical constraints or concerns. Some frameworks offer analytic tools for guiding the evaluative process. Procedural guidelines and concrete criteria for solving important ethical conflicts in the particular area of the prevention of overweight or obesity are mostly lacking. Conclusions. Public health ethical frameworks may be supportive in the evaluation of overweight prevention programs or policy, but seem to lack practical guidance to address ethical conflicts in this particular area

    Activity profiles of elite wheelchair rugby players during competition

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    To quantify the activity profiles of elite wheelchair rugby and establish classification-specific arbitrary speed zones. Additionally, indicators of fatigue during full matches were explored. Methods: Seventy-five elite wheelchair rugby players from eleven national teams were monitored using a radio-frequency based, indoor tracking system across two international tournaments. Players who participated in complete quarters (n = 75) and full matches (n = 25) were included and grouped by their International Wheelchair Rugby Federation functional classification: group I (0-0.5), II (1.0-1.5), III (2.0-2.5) and IV (3.0-3.5). Results: During a typical quarter, significant increases in total distance (m), relative distance (mĀ·minĖ‰Ā¹), and mean speed (mĀ·sĖ‰Ā¹) were associated with an increase in classification group (P < 0.001), with the exception of group III and IV. However, group IV players achieved significantly higher peak speeds (3.82 Ā± 0.31 mĀ·sĖ‰Ā¹) than groups I (2.99 Ā± 0.28 mĀ·sĖ‰Ā¹), II (3.44 Ā± 0.26 mĀ·sĖ‰Ā¹) and III (3.67 Ā± 0.32 mĀ·sĖ‰Ā¹). Groups I and II differed significantly in match intensity during very low/low speed zones and the number of high-intensity activities in comparison with groups III and IV (P < 0.001). Full match analysis revealed that activity profiles did not differ significantly between quarters. Conclusions: Notable differences in the volume of activity were displayed across the functional classification groups. However, the specific on-court requirements of defensive (I and II) and offensive (III and IV) match roles appeared to influence the intensity of match activities and consequently training prescription should be structured accordingly

    A useful savagery: The invention of violence in nineteenth-century England

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    ā€˜A Useful Savagery: The Invention of Violence in Nineteenth-Century Englandā€™ considers a particular configuration of attitudes toward violence that emerged in the early decades of the nineteenth century. As part of a longer-term process of emerging ā€˜sensibilities,ā€™ violence was, seemingly paradoxically, ā€˜inventedā€™ as a social issue while concurrently relocated in the ā€˜civilisedā€™ imagination as an anti-social feature mainly of ā€˜savageā€™ working-class life. The dominant way this discourse evolved was through the creation of a narrative that defined ā€˜civilisationā€™ in opposition to the presumed ā€˜savageryā€™ of the working classes. Although the refined classes were often distanced from the physical experience of violence, concern with violence and brutality became significant parts of social commentary aimed at a middle-class readership. While stridently redefining themselves in opposition to ā€˜brutality,ā€™ one of the purposes of this literature was to create a new middle class and justify the expansion of state power. By the closing decades of the nineteenth century, as the working classes adopted tenets of Victorian respectability, a proliferating number of social and psychological ā€˜othersā€™ were identified against which ā€˜civilisedā€™ thought could define itself

    The ā€˜Great Decarcerationā€™: Historical Trends and Future Possibilities

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    During the 19th Century, hundreds of thousands of people were caught up in what Foucault famously referred to as the ā€˜great confinementā€™, or ā€˜great incarcerationā€™, spanning reformatories, prisons, asylums, and more. Levels of institutional incarceration increased dramatically across many parts of Europe and the wider world through the expansion of provision for those defined as socially marginal, deviant, or destitute. While this trend has been the focus of many historical studies, much less attention has been paid to the dynamics of ā€˜the great decarcerationā€™ that followed for much of the earlyā€ to midā€20th Century. This article opens with an overview of these early decarceration trends in the English adult and youth justice systems and suggests why these came to an end from the 1940s onwards. It then explores parallels with marked decarceration trends today, notably in youth justice, and suggests how these might be expedited, extended, and protected

    Public confidence in the police: a time-series analysis

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    Empirical analyses of the causes of public confidence in policing have been based almost entirely on cross-sectional survey data, with a consequent focus on between-group differences in levels of confidence at a single point in time. Our aim here is to introduce a time dimension to this area of investigation. Employing repeated cross-sectional survey data from the British Crime Survey, we apply time-series regression methods to show how confidence in policing changes over time for the aggregate population. Counter to cross-sectional findings, time series analyses reveal that confidence in the police is not related to aggregate worry about crime and perceptions of social cohesion, nor informal social control, but only to perceptions of crime and the property crime rate

    The effect of resistance training on functional capacity in middle-aged to elderly individuals with peripheral artery disease: a meta-analysis

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    Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is an ischemic disease of the lower limbs, caused by atherosclerotic plaques, leading to impairments in functional capacity and reduced quality of life. This meta-analysis aimed to assess the effect of 12-week and 24-week resistance training (RT) interventions on 6-minute walking distance (6WMD) and initial claudication distance (ICD) measured during a 6-minute walk test (6MWT). A meta-analysis was conducted in accordance with PRISMA guidelines, with an electronic search conducted using the online database of PUBMED. Methodological quality of all included studies was completed using a modified version of the Newcastle Ottawa Scale (NOS). The effect sizes (ES) of 6MWD and ICD were calculated, with the 12-week and 24-week interventions analysed separately. An initial literature search yielded 1973 results that were consequently reduced to 7 studies to be included in the final meta-analysis. The pooled effect size for 6MWD for 12-week and 24-week interventions was ES = 0.189 [95% CI= -0.074 to 0.451] P = 0.159 and ES = 0.298 [95% CI = -0.036 to 0.631] P = 0.080 respectively. For ICD, ES = 0.498 [95% CI = 0.000 to 0.995] P = 0.050 and ES = 1.106 [95% CI = 0.120 to 0.428] P = 0.001 respectively. Short-term RT interventions have a positive effect on functional capacity in middle-aged to elderly individuals with PAD. There was a greater effect on ICD compared to 6MWD, with 24-week interventions showing larger effects for both measures. Improvements in functional capacity in such populations confers significant potential for positive health outcomes
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