3,713 research outputs found
Fisher Global Internship Program
STEP Category: InternshipsMy STEP Signature Project was a two-month long internship in London, England. I was the digital marketing intern for the London School of International Communication.The Ohio State University Second-year Transformational Experience Program (STEP)Academic Major: Financ
Use of mechanical patient lifts decreased musculoskeletal symptoms and injuries among health care workers
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of mechanical patient lifts in reducing musculoskeletal symptoms, injuries, lost workday injuries, and workers' compensation costs in workers at a community hospital. Design: Pre-post intervention study. Setting: Three nursing units of a small community hospital. Patients or subjects: Nursing personnel. Interventions: Mechanical patient lifts were made available and nursing staff trained in their use between August 2000 and January 2001. Main outcome measures: Workers completed symptom surveys at baseline and six months after lift training. Pre-intervention and post-intervention rates of injuries and lost workday injuries using Occupational Safety and Health Administration logs of the three study units, from the period July 1999 through March 2003 were analyzed. Injuries potentially related to lifting patients were included in the analyses. Using workers' compensation data from the same time period, the compensation paid (484 per FTE pre-intervention and $151 per FTE post-intervention. Conclusion: Reductions were observed in injury rates, lost workday injury rates, workers' compensation costs, and musculoskeletal symptoms after deployment of mechanical patient lifts. Strengths of this study include the community hospital setting and the inclusion of a variety of different outcomes. Limitations include the pre-post study design and the small sample size
Padilla\u27s Broken Promise: Pennsylvania Case Study
In 2010, the Supreme Court held in Padilla v. Kentucky that criminal defense attorneys have a constitutional obligation to advise noncitizen clients of the immigration consequences of a guilty plea in criminal court proceedings. Though it has been over a decade since the decision, little research has been done regarding Padilla’s implementation by defense counsel on a statewide level. This Article provides findings from a case study on Padilla advising in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania is unique because its state courts have interpreted Padilla narrowly and permit immigration advisals that would be deemed constitutionally deficient in other jurisdictions. Pennsylvania also does not have a state-funded public defense system, which means standards for indigent representation vary by county. Interviews with public defenders and prosecutors in Pennsylvania reveal significant variation in the scope of advice provided to noncitizens in criminal court proceedings and the willingness of district attorney offices to consider immigration status during plea negotiations. Each Pennsylvania county has an individual method of identifying noncitizen clients, analyzing immigration consequences, warning clients of these adverse consequences, and negotiating with district attorneys. The scope of advice provided to noncitizens and counsel’s understanding of their Padilla obligations vary considerably in both content and scope. Counties suffer from Pennsylvania’s systemic failure to provide adequate funding to public defense offices to ensure that they can effectively comply with Padilla—a problem that is especially salient in a state with limited postconviction remedies for those who receive deficient advice. Based on these findings, this Article offers various policy recommendations that would improve the criminal defense representation of noncitizens in Pennsylvania. While these findings and recommendations are specific to Pennsylvania, they are relevant to nationwide research on Padilla’s impact and what can be done to promote immigration-conscious criminal defense advocacy
Shuttle flight pressure instrumentation: Experience and lessons for the future
Flight data obtained from the Space Transportation System orbiter entries are processed and analyzed to assess the accuracy and performance of the Development Flight Instrumentation (DFI) pressure measurement system. Selected pressure measurements are compared with available wind tunnel and computational data and are further used to perform air data analyses using the Shuttle Entry Air Data System (SEADS) computation technique. The results are compared to air data from other sources. These comparisons isolate and demonstrate the effects of the various limitations of the DFI pressure measurement system. The effects of these limitations on orbiter performance analyses are addressed, and instrumentation modifications are recommended to improve the accuracy of similar fight data systems in the future
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Isotopic and genetic methods reveal the role of the gut microbiome in mammalian host essential amino acid metabolism.
Intestinal microbiota perform many functions for their host, but among the most important is their role in metabolism, especially the conversion of recalcitrant biomass that the host is unable to digest into bioavailable compounds. Most studies have focused on the assistance gut microbiota provide in the metabolism of carbohydrates, however, their role in host amino acid metabolism is poorly understood. We conducted an experiment on Mus musculus using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and carbon isotope analysis of essential amino acids (AAESS) to quantify the community composition of gut microbiota and the contribution of carbohydrate carbon used by the gut microbiome to synthesize AAESS that are assimilated by mice to build skeletal muscle tissue. The relative abundances of Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes inversely varied as a function of dietary macromolecular content, with Firmicutes dominating when mice were fed low-protein diets that contained the highest proportions of simple carbohydrates (sucrose). Mixing models estimated that the microbial contribution of AAESS to mouse muscle varied from less than 5% (threonine, lysine, and phenylalanine) to approximately 60% (valine) across diet treatments, with the Firmicute-dominated microbiome associated with the greatest contribution. Our results show that intestinal microbes can provide a significant source of the AAESS their host uses to synthesize structural tissues. The role that gut microbiota play in the amino acid metabolism of animals that consume protein-deficient diets is likely a significant but under-recognized aspect of foraging ecology and physiology
Analysis of the dust evolution in the circumstellar disks of TTauri stars
We present a compositional analysis of 8-13um spectra of 32 young stellar
objects (YSOs). Our sample consists of 5 intermediate-mass stars and 27
low-mass stars. While the spectra and first scientific results have already
been published by Przygodda et al. (2003) and Kessler-Silacci et al. (2004) we
perform a more detailed analysis of the 10um silicate feature. In our analysis
we assume that this emission feature can be represented by a linear
superposition of the wavelength-dependent opacity
describing the optical properties of silicate grains with different chemical
composition, structure, and grain size. The determination of an adequate
fitting equation is another goal of this study. Using a restricted number of
fitting parameters we investigate which silicate species are necessary for the
compositional fitting. Particles with radii of 0.1um- and 1.5um consisting of
amorphous olivine and pyroxene, forsterite, enstatite, and quartz have been
considered. Only compact, homogeneous dust grains have been used in the
presented fitting procedures. In this context we show that acceptable fitting
results can also be achieved if emission properties of porous silicate grains
are considered instead. Although some previous studies give reasons for the
similarity between the dust in circumstellar disks of TTauri stars and Herbig
Ae/Be stars, a quantitative comparison has been missing, so far. Therefore, we
conclude with a discussion of the results of a 10um spectroscopic survey of van
Boekel et al. (2005) who focus on Herbig Ae/Be stars, the higher mass
counterparts of T Tauri stars and draw comparisons to this and other studies.
We find that the results of our study of T Tauri systems partly agree with
previous studies of Herbig Ae/Be stars.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Rate of change in abdominal aortic aneurysm diameter after endovascular repair
AbstractObjective: Untreated abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) enlarge at a mean rate of 3.9 mm/y with great individual variability. We sought to determine the effect of endovascular repair on the rate of change in aneurysm size. Methods: There were 110 patients who underwent endovascular AAA repair at Stanford University Medical Center and who were followed up for 1 to 30 months (mean, 10 months) with serial contrast-infused helical computed tomography (CT). Maximal aneurysm diameter was determined using two independent methods: (1) measured manually, from cross-sectional computed tomography (XSCT) angiograms and (2) calculated from quantitative three-dimensional computed tomography (3DCT) data as orthonormal diameter. Results: Maximal cross-sectional aneurysm diameter measured by hand (XSCT) and calculated as orthonormal values (3DCT) correlated closely (r = 0.915; P <.001). The XSCT-measured diameter was larger by 2.3 ± 3.75 mm (P <.001), and the 95% CI for SE of the bias was 1.85 to 2.75 mm. Preoperative aneurysm diameter (XSCT 59.1 ± 8.4 mm; 3DCT 58.1 ± 9.3 mm) did not differ significantly from the initial postoperative diameter. Considering all patients, XSCT diameter decreased at a rate of 0.34 ± 0.69 mm/mo, and 3DCT diameter decreased at a rate of 0.28 ± 0.79 mm/mo. Aneurysms in patients without endoleaks had a higher rate of decrease, an XSCT diameter by 0.50 ± 0.74 mm/mo, and 3DCT diameter by 0.46 ± 0.84 mm/mo. In these patients, mean absolute decrease in diameter at 6 months was 3.4 ± 4.5 mm (XSCT) and 3.3 ± 5.9 mm (3DCT) and at 12 months, 5.9 ± 5.7 mm (XSCT) and 5.4 ± 5.7 mm (3DCT). Aneurysms in patients with persistent endoleaks did not change in mean XSCT diameter, and 3DCT diameter increased by 0.12 ± 0.52 mm/mo (not significant). Aneurysm diameter remained within 4 mm of original size in 68% (3DCT) to 71% (XSCT) of patients. In one patient, aneurysm diameter increased (XSCT and 3DCT) more than 5 mm. Four patients who had a new onset endoleak had a much higher expansion rate than those with a chronic endoleak (P <.05). Conclusions: The rate of decrease in aneurysm size (annualized 3.4-4.1 mm/y) after endovascular repair of AAA approximates the reported expansion rate in untreated aneurysms. However, individual aneurysm behavior is unpredictable, and the presence of an endoleak is unreliable in predicting changes in diameter. New onset endoleaks are associated with an enlargement rate greater than that of untreated aneurysms. (J Vasc Surg 2000;32:108-15.
Laser cooling of a trapped two-component Fermi gas
The collective Raman cooling of a trapped two-component Fermi gas is
analyzed. We develop the quantum master equation that describes the collisions
and the laser cooling, in the festina lente regime, where the heating due to
photon reabsorption can be neglected. The numerical results based on Monte
Carlo simulations show, that three-dimensional temperatures of the order of
0.008 T_F can be achieved. We analyze the heating related to the background
losses, and conclude that our laser-cooling scheme can maintain the temperature
of the gas without significant additional losses. Finally we derive an analytic
expression for the temperature of a trapped Fermi gas heated by background
collisions, that agrees very well with the data obtained from the numerical
simulation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Laser Cooling of Trapped Fermi Gases deeply below the Fermi Temperature
We study the collective Raman cooling of a polarized trapped Fermi gas in the
Festina Lente regime, when the heating effects associated with photon
reabsorptions are suppressed. We predict that by adjusting the spontaneous
Raman emission rates and using appropriately designed anharmonic traps,
temperatures of the order of 2.7% of the Fermi temperature can be achieved in
3D.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; final versio
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