747 research outputs found
What Gets Measured in Reentry Research? A Scoping Review on Community Reentry From Jail and Prison for Persons With Mental Illnesses
Research on reentry for individuals with mental illnesses leaving jails and prisons lacks outcome specificity and standardization needed to advance knowledge about the efficacy and effectiveness of interventions. This scoping review aims to provide clarity about reentry outcomes by: (a) ascertaining what outcomes are a focus in reentry research, (b) explicating how outcomes are defined, and (c) identifying commonalities or gaps in outcomes reported. A search of multiple databases yielded 415 articles for potential inclusion. After independent document review by two of the authors, 61 articles were included in the review. Recidivism was the most used construct, accounting for 58% of total outcomes and 95% of criminal legal outcomes. Behavioral health indicators were reported the second most frequently and other outcomes were rarely reported. Increasing the specificity of commonly used concepts while also expanding the breadth of outcomes considered is needed to build an evidence base this area of research
Community Participation Among Individuals with Serious Mental Illnesses Leaving Jail
Studies have found that higher levels of community participation are associated with a number of positive outcomes such as increased recovery and quality of life. People with serious mental illnesses (SMI) leaving jail face a number of barriers that limit their ability to participate in community activities. In this paper we examine whether the combined experience of mental illness and recent discharge from jail furthers the community isolation that is already experienced by individuals with serious mental illnesses. This analysis found that people with SMI recently released from jail had significantly lower levels of community participation in terms of overall number of community participation days and activities, number of time spent in activities individuals identified as important, and on measures of sufficiency related to the time spent engaged in these activities. Community participation is a key component of community re-integration for people with SMI leaving jail. The results of this study show that services for people with SMI leaving jail need to include interventions that foster engagement in community based activities
Diversity Climate Survey Results: Changing Institutional Culture
Purpose: To gather and analyze data at two points in time on perceptions of institutional values connected to a wide range of diversity issues. This study gauges student, faculty, and staff views on institutional support of diversity with results guiding future inclusion and training efforts within the organization.
Presented at the AAMC (Association of American Colleges) Annual Meeting, RIME (Research in Medical Education) Program, November 2008
Women's sleep position during pregnancy in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review.
Background
Approximately 2.6 million babies are stillborn each year globally, of which 98% occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). A 2019 individual participant data meta-analysis of 6 studies from high-income countries found that maternal supine going-to-sleep position increased the risk of stillbirth. It is not clear whether this impact would be the same in LMICs, and the normal sleep behaviour of pregnant women in LMICs is not well understood.
Objective
Determine the prevalence of different sleeping positions among pregnant women in LMICs, and what (if any) positions were associated with stillbirth using a systematic review.
Search strategy
We systematically searched the databases Medline, Embase, Emcare, CINAHL and Global Index Medicus for relevant studies, with no date or language restrictions on 4 April 2020. Reference lists of included studies were also screened.
Selection criteria
Observational studies of maternal sleep position during pregnancy in LMICs
Data collection and analysis
Recovered citations were screened and eligible studies were included for extraction. These steps were performed by two independent reviewers. Risk of bias was assessed using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale.
Main results
A total of 3480 citations were screened but only two studies met the inclusion criteria. The studies were conducted in Ghana and India and reported on different maternal sleep positions: supine and left lateral. In Ghana, a prevalence of 9.7% for supine sleeping position amongst 220 women was found. The primary outcome could not be extracted from the Indian study as sleep position information was only reported for women who had a stillbirth (100 of the 300 participants).
Conclusion
There is limited information on maternal sleeping position in LMICs. Since sleep position may be a modifiable risk factor for stillbirth, there is a need for further research to understand the sleep practices and behaviours of pregnant women in LMICs
DNA-protein pi-interactions in nature: abundance, structure, composition and strength of contacts between aromatic amino acids and DNA neucleobases or deoxyribose sugar
Sherpa Romeo green journal, open accessFour hundred twenty-eight high-resolution DNA–
protein complexes were chosen for a bioinformatics
study. Although 164 crystal structures (38% of those
searched) contained no interactions, 574 discrete pi-
contacts between the aromatic amino acids and the
DNA nucleobases or deoxyribose were identified using
strict criteria, including visual inspection. The
abundance and structure of the interactions were determined
by unequivocally classifying the contacts
as either pi–pi stacking, Pi–pi T-shaped or sugar–
pi contacts. Three hundred forty-four nucleobase–
amino acid pi–pi contacts (60% of all interactions
identified) were identified in 175 of the crystal structures
searched. Unprecedented in the literature, 230
DNA–protein sugar–pi contacts (40% of all interactions
identified) were identified in 137 crystal structures,
which involve C–H···pi and/or lone–pair···pi interactions,
contain any amino acid and can be classified
according to sugar atoms involved. Both pi–pi
and sugar–pi interactions display a range of relative
monomer orientations and therefore interaction energies
(up to –50 (–70) kJ mol−1 for neutral (charged)
interactions as determined using quantum chemical
calculations). In general, DNA–protein pi-interactions
are more prevalent than perhaps currently accepted
and the role of such interactions in many biological
processes may yet to be uncovered.Ye
Acquire information about neutrino parameters by detecting supernova neutrinos
We consider the supernova shock effects, the Mikheyev-Smirnov-Wolfenstein
(MSW) effects, the collective effects, and the Earth matter effects in the
detection of type II supernova neutrinos on the Earth. It is found that the
event number of supernova neutrinos depends on the neutrino mass hierarchy, the
neutrino mixing angle , and neutrino masses. Therefore, we propose
possible methods to identify the mass hierarchy and acquire information about
and neutrino masses by detecting supernova neutrinos. We apply
these methods to some current neutrino experiments.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figure
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