36 research outputs found
Physics Case for the ILC Project: Perspective from Beyond the Standard Model
The International Linear Collider (ILC) has recently proven its technical
maturity with the publication of a Technical Design Report, and there is a
strong interest in Japan to host such a machine. We summarize key aspects of
the Beyond the Standard Model physics case for the ILC in this contribution to
the US High Energy Physics strategy process. On top of the strong guaranteed
physics case in the detailed exploration of the recently discovered Higgs
boson, the top quark and electroweak precision measurements, the ILC will offer
unique opportunities which are complementary to the LHC program of the next
decade. Many of these opportunities have connections to the Cosmic and
Intensity Frontiers, which we comment on in detail. We illustrate the general
picture with examples of how our world could turn out to be and what the ILC
would contribute in these cases, with an emphasis on value-added beyond the
LHC. These comprise examples from Supersymmetry including light Higgsinos, a
comprehensive bottom-up coverage of NLSP-LSP combinations for slepton, squark,
chargino and neutralino NLSP, a stau-coannihilation dark matter scenario and
bilinear R-parity violation as explanation for neutrino masses and mixing, as
well as generic WIMP searches and Little Higgs models as non-SUSY examples.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures. Contributed to Snowmass Community Summer Study
201
Pediatric Refugee Health Care Delivery in the Community Setting: An Educational Workshop for Multidisciplinary Family-Centered Care During Resettlement
Introduction: With 70.8 million people displaced worldwide, there is an increasing need for medical professionals to provide medical care to refugees. Insufficient training on refugee health poses a barrier to effective care delivery.
Methods: This workshop addressed common challenges in providing family-centered pediatric refugee care in community settings as well as barriers related to policy changes. Presentations covered prearrival experiences, medical screening, and trauma-based care. In small groups, participants discussed cases that featured medical, behavioral health, social, and cultural factors impacting the provision of family-centered pediatric care that was culturally respectful and included shared decision-making. After the breakout session, each small group informed the larger group of topics discussed. Facilitators identified themes and reinforced key learning points. At the workshop\u27s conclusion, participants were guided to create their own personalized action plan.
Results: This workshop was presented at two international conferences to more than 47 participants, including clinicians, nurse practitioners, pediatric residents, and medical students. Evaluations were completed by 34 individuals. Participants\u27 overall comfort level with taking care of refugee patients increased from 3.3 to 4.0 (on a 5-point scale, p = .24) during the 3-hour version of the workshop and from 3.8 to 4.0 (p = .43) in the 1-hour version of the workshop. Mean overall ratings of the 3- and 1-hour workshop versions on conference-administered evaluations were 4.8 and 4.2, respectively, on a 5-point scale.
Discussions: This workshop was well received and equipped participants with knowledge, tools, and strategies regarding pediatric refugee health in a community setting
Physics Case for the International Linear Collider
We summarize the physics case for the International Linear Collider (ILC). We
review the key motivations for the ILC presented in the literature, updating
the projected measurement uncertainties for the ILC experiments in accord with
the expected schedule of operation of the accelerator and the results of the
most recent simulation studies.Comment: 37 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables; v2 - updates of reference
Implications of the 750 GeV gamma-gamma Resonance as a Case Study for the International Linear Collider
If the gamma-gamma resonance at 750 GeV suggested by 2015 LHC data turns out
to be a real effect, what are the implications for the physics case and upgrade
path of the International Linear Collider? Whether or not the resonance is
confirmed, this question provides an interesting case study testing the
robustness of the ILC physics case. In this note, we address this question with
two points: (1) Almost all models proposed for the new 750 GeV particle require
additional new particles with electroweak couplings. The key elements of the
500 GeV ILC physics program---precision measurements of the Higgs boson, the
top quark, and 4-fermion interactions---will powerfully discriminate among
these models. This information will be important in conjunction with new LHC
data, or alone, if the new particles accompanying the 750 GeV resonance are
beyond the mass reach of the LHC. (2) Over a longer term, the energy upgrade of
the ILC to 1 TeV already discussed in the ILC TDR will enable experiments in
gamma-gamma and e+e- collisions to directly produce and study the 750 GeV
particle from these unique initial states.Comment: 39 pages, 5 figures, 5 tables; v2: some references adde
Mihoko Tanabe, DO 2020
Philadelphia DO Class of 2020 portrait.https://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/portraits_2020/1233/thumbnail.jp
La salud sexual y reproductiva de los adolescentes en los entornos humanitarios
Las vulnerabilidades particulares de los adolescentes durante épocas de crisis y emergencias se ven exacerbadas por la falta de acceso a los servicios de salud reproductiva. Una mayor atención a las necesidades de los adolescentes – y el uso de enfoques innovadores para conseguir captarlos – puede ayudar a mitigar los impactos que suelen amenazar sus vidas
Tracking humanitarian funding for reproductive health:a systematic analysis of health and protection proposals from 2002-2013
BACKGROUND: The Inter-agency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crises conducted a ten-year global evaluation of reproductive health in humanitarian settings. This paper examines proposals for reproductive health activities under humanitarian health and protection funding mechanisms for 2002-2013, and the level at which these reproductive health proposals were funded. METHODS: The study used English and French health and protection proposal data for 2002-2013, extracted from the Financial Tracking Service (FTS) database managed by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Every project was reviewed for relevance against pre-determined reproductive health definitions for 2002-2008. An in-depth analysis was additionally conducted for 2009-2013 through systematically reviewing proposals via a key word search and subsequently classifying them under designated reproductive health categories. Among the relevant reproductive health proposals, counts and proportions were calculated in Excel based on their reproductive health components, primarily by year. Contributions, requests, and unfunded requests were calculated based on the data provided by FTS. RESULTS: Among the 11,347 health and protection proposals issued from 345 emergencies between 2002 and 2013, 3,912 were relevant to reproductive health (34.5%). The number of proposals containing reproductive health activities increased by an average of 21.9% per year, while the proportion of health and protection sector appeals containing reproductive health activities increased by an average of 10.1% per year. The total funding request over the 12 years amounted to 2.031 billion USD was received. Among reproductive health components for 2009-2013 proposals, maternal newborn health comprised the largest proportion (56.4%), followed by reproductive health-related gender-based violence (45.9%), HIV/sexually transmitted infections (37.5%), general reproductive health (26.2%), and lastly, family planning (14.9%). CONCLUSION: Findings show that more agencies are responding to humanitarian appeals by proposing to implement reproductive health programs and receiving increased aid over the twelve year period. While such developments are welcome, project descriptions show comparatively limited attention and programming for family planning and abortion care in particular
Adolescent sexual and reproductive health in humanitarian settings
Particular vulnerabilities for adolescents during times of crisis and emergency are exacerbated by lack of access to sexual and reproductive health services. Greater attention to adolescents’ needs – and the use of innovative approaches to engage them – can help mitigate often life-threatening impact