1,931 research outputs found
How do caregivers know when to take their child for immunizations?
BACKGROUND: Childhood vaccinations help reduce and eliminate many causes of morbidity and mortality among children. The objective of this study was to compare 4:3:1:3:3 (4+ doses of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and pertussis vaccine, 3+ doses of poliovirus vaccine, 1+ doses of measles-containing vaccine, 3+ doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, and 3+ doses of hepatitis B vaccine) coverage among children whose caregivers learned by different methods when their child's most recent immunization was needed. METHODS: Between July 2001 and December 2002, a portion of households receiving the National Immunization Survey were asked how they knew when to take the child in for his/her most recent immunization. Responses were post-coded into several categories: 'Doctor/nurse reminder at previous immunization visit', 'Shot card/record', 'Reminder/recall', and 'Other'. Respondents could give more than one answer. Children who did not receive any vaccines, had †1 visits for vaccinations, or whose caregiver did not provide an answer to the question were excluded from analyses. Chi-square analyses were used to compare 4:3:1:3:3 coverage among 19â35 month old children. RESULTS: Children whose caregivers indicated that a doctor/nurse told them at a previous immunization visit when to return for the next immunization had significantly greater 4:3:1:3:3 coverage than those who did not choose the response (77.2% vs. 70.1%, p < 0.01). However, no significant difference in coverage was found between households that did/did not indicate that reminder/recalls (71.0% vs. 75.5%, p = 0.24) helped them remember when to take their child for their most recent immunization visit; only borderline significance was found between those that did/did not choose shot cards (70.6% vs. 76.2%, p = 0.07). CONCLUSION: A doctor or nurse's reminder during an immunization visit of the next scheduled immunization visit effectively encourages caregivers to bring children in for immunizations, providing an inexpensive and easy way to effectively increase immunization coverage
Collision Avoidance for Airport Traffic Simulation Evaluation
A Collision Avoidance for Airport Traffic (CAAT) concept for the airport Terminal Maneuvering Area (TMA) was evaluated in a simulation study at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Langley Research Center. CAAT is being designed to enhance surface situation awareness and provide cockpit alerts of potential conflicts during runway, taxi, and low altitude air-to-air operations. The purpose of the study was to evaluate pilot reaction to conflict events in the TMA near the airport, different alert timings for various scenarios, alerting display concepts, and directive alerting concepts. This paper gives an overview of the conflict detection and resolution (CD&R) concept, simulation study, and test result
Characterization and mapping of retr04, retr05 and retr06 broad-spectrum resistances to Turnip mosaic virus in Brassica juncea, and the development of robust methods for utilizing recalcitrant genotyping data
Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) induces disease in susceptible hosts, notably impacting cultivation of important crop species of the Brassica genus. Few effective plant viral disease management strategies exist with the majority of current approaches aiming to mitigate the virus indirectly through control of aphid vector species. Multiple sources of genetic resistance to TuMV have been identified previously, although the majority are strain-specific and have not been exploited commercially. Here, two Brassica juncea lines (TWBJ14 and TWBJ20) with resistance against important TuMV isolates (UK 1, vVIR24, CDN 1, and GBR 6) representing the most prevalent pathotypes of TuMV (1, 3, 4, and 4, respectively) and known to overcome other sources of resistance, have been identified and characterized. Genetic inheritance of both resistances was determined to be based on a recessive two-gene model. Using both single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array and genotyping by sequencing (GBS) methods, quantitative trait loci (QTL) analyses were performed using first backcross (BC1) genetic mapping populations segregating for TuMV resistance. Pairs of statistically significant TuMV resistance-associated QTLs with additive interactive effects were identified on chromosomes A03 and A06 for both TWBJ14 and TWBJ20 material. Complementation testing between these B. juncea lines indicated that one resistance-linked locus was shared. Following established resistance gene nomenclature for recessive TuMV resistance genes, these new resistance-associated loci have been termed retr04 (chromosome A06, TWBJ14, and TWBJ20), retr05 (A03, TWBJ14), and retr06 (A03, TWBJ20). Genotyping by sequencing data investigated in parallel to robust SNP array data was highly suboptimal, with informative data not established for key BC1 parental samples. This necessitated careful consideration and the development of new methods for processing compromised data. Using reductive screening of potential markers according to allelic variation and the recombination observed across BC1 samples genotyped, compromised GBS data was rendered functional with near-equivalent QTL outputs to the SNP array data. The reductive screening strategy employed here offers an alternative to methods relying upon imputation or artificial correction of genotypic data and may prove effective for similar biparental QTL mapping studies
Effect of three diets on the gametogenic development and fatty acid profile of Paracentrotus lividus (Lamark, 1816) gonads
Original articleIn this study, the effects of three diets were investigated to enhance Paracentrotus
lividus production for commercial purposes. P. lividus were fed ad libitum for 80 days
with: diet Aâfresh Codium tomentosum Stackhouse, 1797; diet Bâformulated using
a jellified mix of macroalgae and vegetables, including C. tomentosum (20%), Coralina
sp. Linnaeus, 1758 (17%), cabbage Brassica oleracea var. capitata Linnaeus, 1753
(30%), carrot Daucus carota Linnaeus, 1753 (30%) and agar (3%) as a gelling agent.
Diet C consisted of maize Zea mays Linnaeus, 1753 (56%) and New Zealand spinach
Tetragonia tetragonoides (Pallas, 1781) Kuntze, 1891 (44%). Their effects on the gonadal
and somatic growths, gonadosomatic index (GI) and gametogenesis were evaluated,
as well as on the total lipid content and fatty acid composition of sea urchin's
gonads. Diet A provided high values of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). Gonads of sea
urchins fed with diet A were found mostly in growth and maturation stages of gametogenesis
and showed the lowest lipid content. Sea urchins fed with diet B presented
their gonads in the reabsorption stage and had the highest values of omegaâ3 polyunsaturated
fatty acids (PUFAs). Sea urchins fed with diet C were in the early stages
of gametogenesis and had the highest values of lipid content, plus omegaâ6 PUFAs.
Once as an ingredient in a balanced mix with vegetables, C. tomentosum can be a
key factor to the development of new promising highâquality and lowâcost feed for
P. lividus roe enhancementinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Failing boys and moral panics: perspectives on the underachievement debate
The paper re-examines the underachievement debate from the perspective of the âdiscourse of derisionâ that surrounds much writing in this area. It considers the contradictions and inconsistencies which underpin much of the discourse â from a reinterpretation of examination scores, to the conflation of the concepts of âunderâ and âlowâ achievement and finally to the lack of consensus on a means of defining and measuring the term underachievement. In doing so, this paper suggests a more innovative approach for understanding, re-evaluating and perhaps rejecting the notion of underachievement
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Radiation-Driven Shock and Debris Propagation Down a Partitioned Pipe
Two experiments have been performed to measure the effects of pulsed radiation loads on the front of small tubular structures, using as an energy source the X-ray fluence produced by a Z-pinch at the Sandia National Laboratories Z Facility. The project had two major goals: to establish the feasibility of using the Z machine to study the phenomenology associated with debris generation and propagation down tubular structures with partitions; and to use the resultant experimental data to validate numerical hydrocodes (shock physics codes) so that we have confidence in their use in analyzing these types of situations. Two tubular aluminum structures (5 and 10 cm long and 1 cm inside diameter) were prepared, with aluminum partitions located at the front, halfway down the pipe, and at the rear. Interferometry (VISARS) provided multiple velocity histories for all of the partitions. In both experiments, the first barrier, which was exposed directly to the x-ray fluence, was launched into the pipe at a velocity of {approximately}2 km/s, accelerating to give a mean velocity of approximately 2.6 km/s. Loss of plate integrity is inferred from the dispersed launch of the second partition at approx. 1 km/s. Wall shocks propagating at 4.5 km/s were inferred, although strain gage measurements did not succeed. Post-test metallography showed evidence of melting and partial vaporization of the plates, and turbulent mixing with material from the walls. Calculations qualitatively agree with the observed results, but slightly overpredict debris velocity, possibly due to overestimates of total energy fluence. An application for this work is the study of techniques for line-of-sight shock and debris mitigation on high-power pulse-power facilities such as Z and its follow-on machines
3-D ionization structure (in stereoscopic view) of Planetary Nebulae: the case of NGC 1501
Long-slit echellograms of the high excitation planetary nebula NGC1501,
reduced according to the methodology developed by Sabbadin et al. (2000a, b),
allowed us to obtain the ``true'' distribution of the ionized gas in the eight
nebular slices covered by the spectroscopic slit. A 3-D rendering procedure is
described and applied, which assembles the tomographic maps and rebuilds the
spatial structure. The images of NGC 1501, as seen in 12 directions separated
by 15 deg, form a series of stereoscopic pairs giving surprising 3-D views in
as many directions. The main nebula consists of an almost oblate ellipsoid of
moderate ellipticity (a=44 arcsec, a/b=1.02, a/c=1.11), brighter in the
equatorial belt, deformed by several bumps, and embedded in a quite
homogeneous, inwards extended cocoon. Some reliability tests are applied to the
rebuilt nebula; the radial matter profile, the small scale density fluctuations
and the 2-D (morphology) - 3-D (structure) correlation are presented and
analysed. The wide applications of the 3-D reconstruction to the morphology,
physical conditions, ionization parameters and evolutionary status of expanding
nebulae in general (planetary nebulae, nova and supernova remnants, shells
around Population I Wolf-Rayet stars, nebulae ejected by symbiotic stars,
bubbles surrounding early spectral type main sequence stars etc.) are
introduced.Comment: 12 pages + 11 (gif) figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. A
postscript file with figs. can be retrieved at
http://panoramix.pd.astro.it/~sabbadi
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