1,222 research outputs found

    Usefulness of an Expanded Health Belief Model With Added Constructs (Self-Efficacy And Ecological System Measures) in Modeling Compliance With Healthy Lifestyle Recommendations in Women With a Recent History of Gestational Diabetes

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    Problem Statement: Gestational diabetes (GDM) has been reported to affect as many as 18% of all pregnancies in the U.S. This diagnosis is costly and presents health risks to both baby and mother. The main risk to the mother with a history of GDM is her increased risk for diabetes which has been estimated at 35% to 60% in the following 10 to 20 years; more recent studies report a 7 to 8 times occurrence in the following 3 to 6 years. It is recommended that lifestyle efforts of eating healthfully and exercise can reduce this risk Methods: Subjects (n=153) from a diabetes in pregnancy clinic with a recent history of GDM completed a mailed 115-question survey (10 completed by phone). Questions assessed diet and exercise behavior, health beliefs, self-efficacy, environmental support, diabetes-related variables, and socio-demographics. Five multivariate logistic regression models were used to test the utility of the Health Belief Model with added constructs in predicting diet and exercise behavior. The models consisted of varying combinations of health beliefs, self-efficacy and environmental factors. Results: Healthy eating was analyzed in four models, but none were significant. High calorie food/beverage intake was analyzed in four models, all were significant (p \u3c .01). Exercising ≥ 30 min three days or more weekly was analyzed in five models, all were significant (p \u3c .01). Exercising to a sweat three days or more weekly was analyzed in five models and all were significant (p \u3c .01); the two models assessing health beliefs, self-efficacy, and environmental support showed the most strength of prediction of all the models studied. Benefits exceed barriers and self-efficacy showed the highest prediction across all the models studied. Conclusions: By utilizing an Expanded Health Belief Model with the added constructs, self-efficacy and diabetes-related (family history of diabetes, diagnosed with diabetes) and specific ecological/environmental (social/community support) cues to action, we were able to improve prediction of compliance with healthy lifestyle recommendations in women with a recent history of GDM

    Techniques for Establishing Educational Programs Through the African American Faith Community

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    In 1996, University of Nevada Cooperative Extension began to explore reaching the African American population through the faith community. The goal was to address the disproportionately high incidence of chronic disease in that population. Many meetings and discussions followed with clergy and their staff, which resulted in shared desire and concern for the health of their congregation. Through these experiences specific techniques are offered for effectively establishing educational programs for the African American community. This effort led to the development and implementation of other health and nutrition programs targeted to address life-threatening issues associated with the African American community

    Force calculation in electromagnetic devices

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    In this paper the authors show how the Maxwell stress tensor can be used, in practice, in order to determine local magnetic forces distribution in an electromagnetic system. An experimental set-up has been designed in view of comparing the theoretical results with the measurements

    Geographical trends in research: a preliminary analysis on authors' affiliations

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    In the last decade, research literature reached an enormous volume with an unprecedented current annual increase of 1.5 million new publications. As research gets ever more global and new countries and institutions, either from academia or corporate environment, start to contribute with their share, it is important to monitor this complex scenario and understand its dynamics. We present a study on a conference proceedings dataset extracted from Springer Nature Scigraph that illustrates insightful geographical trends and highlights the unbalanced growth of competitive research institutions worldwide. Results emerged from our micro and macro analysis show that the distributions among countries of institutions and papers follow a power law, and thus very few countries keep producing most of the papers accepted by high-tier conferences. In addition, we found that the annual and overall turnover rate of the top 5, 10 and 25 countries is extremely low, suggesting a very static landscape in which new entries struggle to emerge. Finally, we highlight the presence of an increasing gap between the number of institutions initiating and overseeing research endeavours (i.e. first and last authors' affiliations) and the total number of institutions participating in research. As a consequence of our analysis, the paper also discusses our experience in working with affiliations: an utterly simple matter at first glance, that is instead revealed to be a complex research and technical challenge yet far from being solved

    Do Montana\u27s Sixmile Creek Cobbles Have Nevada Origins? Evidence for Headwaters of the Miocene Bell River Basin

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    The Miocene Sixmile Creek Formation in Montana contains distinctive river cobbles of coarse-grained sandstone and conglomerate that include small grains of black chert, but the source of these cobbles has not been confirmed. The Paleozoic Diamond Peak Formation of Nevada may be one possible source of these cobbles. It is widespread in central Nevada\u27s mountains but is unlike any bedrock formations found in Montana. If cobbles in the Sixmile Creek Formation were derived from central Nevada, the Miocene river that carried them would have had to have crossed the present positions of the Snake River Plain and the Idaho-Montana Continental Divide. The purpose of our study is to test the hypothesis by examining particularly distinctive cobbles along the proposed Miocene river path. We compared cobbles collected from the Sixmile Creek Formation at locations from Nevada to Great Falls, Montana, and compared these to each other and to samples collected from proposed source rocks at Pequot Summit, Nevada. We measured the percentage of black chert grains in each rock sample, as well as the shapes and size ranges of the chert grains. Our results support the hypothesis of a great Miocene river that flowed through Montana from headwaters as far south as central Nevada (Sears, 2014). This would have been possible in the Miocene because tectonics had not yet formed the Snake River Plain and modern Continental Divide. The river implied by this model would have been a tributary to the pre-ice age Bell River basin of Canada, which rivaled the modern Amazon River basin in scale. This research could lead to new understanding of the paleotopography and paleofluvial systems of the western interior of North America

    Integrability of a conducting elastic rod in a magnetic field

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    We consider the equilibrium equations for a conducting elastic rod placed in a uniform magnetic field, motivated by the problem of electrodynamic space tethers. When expressed in body coordinates the equations are found to sit in a hierarchy of non-canonical Hamiltonian systems involving an increasing number of vector fields. These systems, which include the classical Euler and Kirchhoff rods, are shown to be completely integrable in the case of a transversely isotropic rod; they are in fact generated by a Lax pair. For the magnetic rod this gives a physical interpretation to a previously proposed abstract nine-dimensional integrable system. We use the conserved quantities to reduce the equations to a four-dimensional canonical Hamiltonian system, allowing the geometry of the phase space to be investigated through Poincar\'e sections. In the special case where the force in the rod is aligned with the magnetic field the system turns out to be superintegrable, meaning that the phase space breaks down completely into periodic orbits, corresponding to straight twisted rods.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur

    Geostatistical Characterization of the Spatial Distribution of Adult Corn Rootworm (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) Emergence

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    Geostatistical methods were used to characterize spatial variability in western ( Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte) and northern ( Diabrotica barberi Smith & Lawrence) corn rootworm adult emergence patterns. Semivariograms were calculated for adult emergence density of corn rootworm populations in fields of continuous corn and rotated (corn/soybean) corn. Adult emergence densities were generally greater for northern corn rootworms than for western corn rootworms. The spatial structures of the adult rootworm emergence were aggregated as described by spherical spatial models for western corn rootworm and exponential models for northern corn rootworm. Range of spatial dependence varied from 180 to 550 m for western corn rootworm and 172 to 281 m for northern corn rootworm. Semivariograrn models were used to produce contour density maps of adult populations in the fields, based on grid sampling of actual emerging adult populations

    Diversity and Dominant Species of Ground Beetle Assemblages (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in Crop Rotation and Chemical Input Systems for the Northern Great Plains

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    Dominant carabid species present in crops and crop rotation sequences commonly used in the northern Great Plains were assessed as an initial step toward the management of carabids as natural control agents. Ground beetle populations were determined by pitfall trapping in 4 crop rotation treatments maintained under high, managed, and low levels of chemical fertilizer and pesticide inputs. Diversity and species richness among crops, rotations, and input levels were compared using 3 indices—the Shannon-Weaver Index, relative diversity, and the Hierarchical Richness Index (HRI). Four carabid species, Cyclotrachelus altemans (Casey), Poecilvs lucublandus Say, Harpalns pensylvanicus (DeGeer), and Bembidion quadrimaculatum L., comprising ≈80% of the total collected, were considered dominant species. When carabid abundance data were grouped by crop, C. altemans was the dominant species in corn and alfalfa and P. lucublandus was dominant in wheat. In soybean plots, C. altemans and P. lucublandus were equally abundant. The relative abundance of H. pensylvanicus was highest in the low-input plots. High values of HRI for carabid diversity and species richness in the managed plots suggested that reduced chemical inputs encouraged greater abundance and diversity of beneficial carabids than were found in the high-input plots without the loss of yield seen in the low-input plots

    Diversity and Dominant Species of Ground Beetle Assemblages (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in Crop Rotation and Chemical Input Systems for the Northern Great Plains

    Get PDF
    Dominant carabid species present in crops and crop rotation sequences commonly used in the northern Great Plains were assessed as an initial step toward the management of carabids as natural control agents. Ground beetle populations were determined by pitfall trapping in 4 crop rotation treatments maintained under high, managed, and low levels of chemical fertilizer and pesticide inputs. Diversity and species richness among crops, rotations, and input levels were compared using 3 indices—the Shannon-Weaver Index, relative diversity, and the Hierarchical Richness Index (HRI). Four carabid species, Cyclotrachelus altemans (Casey), Poecilvs lucublandus Say, Harpalns pensylvanicus (DeGeer), and Bembidion quadrimaculatum L., comprising ≈80% of the total collected, were considered dominant species. When carabid abundance data were grouped by crop, C. altemans was the dominant species in corn and alfalfa and P. lucublandus was dominant in wheat. In soybean plots, C. altemans and P. lucublandus were equally abundant. The relative abundance of H. pensylvanicus was highest in the low-input plots. High values of HRI for carabid diversity and species richness in the managed plots suggested that reduced chemical inputs encouraged greater abundance and diversity of beneficial carabids than were found in the high-input plots without the loss of yield seen in the low-input plots
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