309 research outputs found

    Needs Assessment of Barriers to Cervical Cancer Screening in Vietnamese American Health Care Providers

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    Vietnamese women living in the United States have a cervical cancer incidence rate that is five times that of White women. The low rate of cervical cancer screening among this high-risk population contributes to this disparity. In 2004, the National Cancer Institute collaborated with the Vietnamese American Medical Association to conduct a short needs assessment questionnaire (Pap Test Barriers Questionnaire for Health Care Providers) among its members to assess provider views about cervical cancer, barriers to Pap testing among Vietnamese women living in the United States, and types of patient education materials needed to help motivate Vietnamese women to receive a Pap test. Information from the questionnaire was used to inform development of a brochure and identify additional strategies to enhance outreach to Vietnamese women and providers. Almost all of the respondents (95%) thought that Pap tests were “very important” in the early detection of cervical cancer in Vietnamese women. In addition, knowledge about the importance of Pap tests was identified as the most influential factor for Vietnamese women not seeking a Pap test. Print materials that included both English and Vietnamese translations in the same publication were cited as a preferred communication tool. Further, health education through Vietnamese media was recommended as a primary strategy for reaching women with educational messages. Findings from this needs assessment contributes to a larger formative research effort to build NCI’s cervical cancer education program within its Office of Education and Special Initiatives

    Quantitative assessment of disease resistance by real-time PCR

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    Quantitative assessment of disease resistance by real-time PCR

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    Dissertação de Mestrado Integrado em Arquitectura, apresentada ao Departamento de Arquitectura da Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade de Coimbra, sob a orientação do Prof. Doutor Rui Lobo.O centro histórico de Coimbra, como muitos outros, sofre as consequências do grave problema da desocupação. A gravidade deste problema nota-se ao olhar para o estado de degradação e ruína dos edifícios, mas também, e principalmente, ao percorrer o espaço no período noturno, altura em que o comércio fecha deixando a área totalmente sem vida e consequentemente pouco convidativa e perigosa. A quem cabe a função de animar este espaço? Ao comércio? O prolongar o seu horário de funcionamento ou o manter as luzes das montras acesas durante a noite acarretam custos e alteração de dinâmicas que são dificilmente compensados. Aos turistas? Estes têm um caráter transitório. Então cabe a quem? Tem de caber á população residente na área. Mas, se o espaço está desabitado, quem o vai dinamizar? A reabilitação tem de passar pela criação de condições para que se recupere e desenvolva a função habitacional. Como proliferar a função habitacional em edifícios que não respondem às exigências mínimas de habitabilidade dos dias de hoje? Já lá vai o tempo em que se demolia para construir de novo. Hoje, mais do que nunca, o valor patrimonial do legado arquitetónico é valorizado (e bem!) pois é parte essencial da identidade da cidade e da nossa identidade. Num espaço como o centro histórico a reabilitação da casa corrente deve promover as melhorias das condições de habitabilidade e ao mesmo tempo o seu valor enquanto parte constituinte de um conjunto com identidade própria. A questão fundamental a que esta tese se propõe tentar responder é: ‘Como reabilitar?’The historical center of Coimbra, like many others, suffers from serious problems of emptiness. The severity of this problem is noticed when looking at the state of degradation and ruin of buildings, but also, and especially, at night, when the shops close leaving the area lifeless and consequently uninviting and dangerous. Who has the function of animating this space? The shops? To extend their opening hours or to keep the shop lights lit at night entail costs and changing dynamics that are rarely compensated. The tourists? These have a temporary character. So it’s up to who? It must fit to the resident population in the area. However, if space is uninhabited, who will animate it? Rehabilitation has to go through the creation of conditions to recover and develop the housing function. How can we proliferate housing function in buildings that do not have the minimum habitability requirements of today? Gone are the days of demolishion to build again. Today, more than ever, the asset value of the architectural heritage is considered (and well!) because it is an essential part of the city’s identity. In an area as the historical center the rehabilitation of the ‘current house’ must promote improvements on living conditions and at the same time its value as a constituent part of a set with its own identity. The key question this thesis will try to answer is: ‘How to rehabilitate?

    Impact of Non Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug Administration Pre- or Post-Resistance Training on Bone

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    Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) have been shown to suppress bone formation when administered before, but not if administered after, an acute bout of mechanical load. The effects of giving NSAIDs pre- and post-resistance training over multiple training sessions are not yet well defined. Therefore, the aim of this study was to elucidate the effects of NSAIDs when administered pre and post simulated resistance training (SRT) in a small animal model. We hypothesize that gains in bone mass and increased bone size will be diminished in adult rats given ibuprofen before each training session, but will be enhanced if ibuprofen is given after each exercise bout. Methods: Fifteen 5-month-old virgin female Sprague-Dawley rats completed 9 SRT sessions at 75% peak isometric strength for 4 sets of 5 repetitions; each contraction included 1 sec isometric + 1 sec eccentric contraction. Animals were blocked assigned by body weight to one of three groups: (1) ibuprofen (30mg/kg) before exercise, placebo after (I:P)(n=4), (2) placebo before exercise, ibuprofen after (P:I)(n=5) and (3) placebo before exercise, placebo after (P:P)(n=6). In vivo pQCT scans measured changes in total volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD), cancellous vBMD, and total area at the proximal tibia, and cortical vBMD, cortical bone mineral content (BMC) and total area at midshaft tibia from days -7 and 21. Body weights were measured at days 4, 14 and 21. Results: There were no significant changes in body weight over the course of the study (P:P -2.6%, I:P -2.3% & P:I -3.8%, day 21 vs day 4). Furthermore, there was no significant difference across time in midshaft cortical vBMD, but the P:I group did exhibit a significantly different response in cortical vBMD when normalized to body weight (+5.1%) (p\u3c .05) compared to I:P (-1.4%) and P:P (-0.3%). There were no differences among groups for change in cancellous vBMD, total vBMD and total area at the proximal region, as well as cortical BMC and total area at midshaft tibia. Conclusion: These data are preliminary but suggest that ibuprofen given after exercise may produce additional gains in cortical bone following resistance training; we have no evidence thus far that ibuprofen taken before exercise has any effect. Supported by Huffines Institute of Sports Medicine and Human Performance, Texas A&M University

    Reforming the New York Lieutenant Governor Replacement Process: A Policy Recommendation

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    New York\u27s governor has unilateral power to fill vacancies in the lieutenant governor\u27s office. This unchecked power is undemocratic and risks elevating unqualified officials. In this report, the Fordham Law School Rule of Law Clinic recommends reforming the lieutenant governor replacement process. Building on a recommendation advanced by the New York State Bar Association, the clinic recommends providing the Legislature an opportunity to confirm the governor\u27s nominees. If the Legislature rejects two nominations, the governor could choose a new lieutenant governor from among a group of elected and Senate-confirmed officials.https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/rule_of_law_clinic/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Outer-Sphere Contributions to the Electronic Structure of Type Zero Copper Proteins

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    Bioinorganic canon states that active-site thiolate coordination promotes rapid electron transfer (ET) to and from type 1 copper proteins. In recent work, we have found that copper ET sites in proteins also can be constructed without thiolate ligation (called “type zero” sites). Here we report multifrequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopic data together with density functional theory (DFT) and spectroscopy-oriented configuration interaction (SORCI) calculations for type zero Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin variants. Wild-type (type 1) and type zero copper centers experience virtually identical ligand fields. Moreover, O-donor covalency is enhanced in type zero centers relative that in the C112D (type 2) protein. At the same time, N-donor covalency is reduced in a similar fashion to type 1 centers. QM/MM and SORCI calculations show that the electronic structures of type zero and type 2 are intimately linked to the orientation and coordination mode of the carboxylate ligand, which in turn is influenced by outer-sphere hydrogen bonding

    Data collection and storage in long-term ecological and evolutionary studies : The Mongoose 2000 system

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    Studying ecological and evolutionary processes in the natural world often requires research projects to follow multiple individuals in the wild over many years. These projects have provided significant advances but may also be hampered by needing to accurately and efficiently collect and store multiple streams of the data from multiple individuals concurrently. The increase in the availability and sophistication of portable computers (smartphones and tablets) and the applications that run on them has the potential to address many of these data collection and storage issues. In this paper we describe the challenges faced by one such long-term, individual-based research project: the Banded Mongoose Research Project in Uganda. We describe a system we have developed called Mongoose 2000 that utilises the potential of apps and portable computers to meet these challenges. We discuss the benefits and limitations of employing such a system in a long-term research project. The app and source code for the Mongoose 2000 system are freely available and we detail how it might be used to aid data collection and storage in other long-term individual-based projects.Peer reviewe

    A missed orthopaedic injury following a seizure: a case report

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    Numerous orthopaedic injuries can follow a seizure and are often diagnosed late. This is the first documented case of a missed bilateral anterior shoulder dislocation following a seizure. The possible reasons for the greater incidence of posterior dislocations are examined and why bilateral anterior dislocations following a seizure are so rare. The article discusses the reasons for the delay and highlights potential pitfalls and learning points for junior emergency department doctors

    First Results for Solar Soft X-ray Irradiance Measurements from the Third Generation Miniature X-Ray Solar Spectrometer

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    Three generations of the Miniature X-ray Solar Spectrometer (MinXSS) have flown on small satellites with the goal "to explore the energy distribution of soft X-ray (SXR) emissions from the quiescent Sun, active regions, and during solar flares, and to model the impact on Earth's ionosphere and thermosphere". The primary science instrument is the Amptek X123 X-ray spectrometer that has improved with each generation of the MinXSS experiment. This third generation MinXSS-3 has higher energy resolution and larger effective area than its predecessors and is also known as the Dual-zone Aperture X-ray Solar Spectrometer (DAXSS). It was launched on the INSPIRESat-1 satellite on 2022 February 14, and INSPIRESat-1 has successfully completed its 6-month prime mission. The INSPIRESat-1 is in a dawn-dusk, Sun-Synchronous Orbit (SSO) and therefore has 24-hour coverage of the Sun during most of its mission so far. The rise of Solar Cycle 25 (SC-25) has been observed by DAXSS. This paper introduces the INSPIRESat-1 DAXSS solar SXR observations, and we focus the science results here on a solar occultation experiment and multiple flares on 2022 April 24. One key flare result is that the reduction of elemental abundances is greatest during the flare impulsive phase and thus highlighting the important role of chromospheric evaporation during flares to inject warmer plasma into the coronal loops. Furthermore, these results are suggestive that the amount of chromospheric evaporation is related to flare temperature and intensity.Comment: 43 pages including 19-page Appendix A, 8 figures, 7 table
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