1,047 research outputs found
The experience of family carers attending a joint reminiscence group with people with dementia: A thematic analysis
Reminiscence therapy has the potential to improve quality of life for people with dementia. In recent years reminiscence groups have extended to include family members, but carers' experience of attending joint sessions is undocumented. This qualitative study explored the experience of 18 family carers attending 'Remembering Yesterday Caring Today' groups. Semi-structured interviews were transcribed and subjected to thematic analysis. Five themes were identified: experiencing carer support; shared experience; expectations (met and unmet), carer perspectives of the person with dementia's experience; and learning and comparing. Family carers' experiences varied, with some experiencing the intervention as entirely positive whereas others had more mixed feelings. Negative aspects included the lack of respite from their relative, the lack of emphasis on their own needs, and experiencing additional stress and guilt through not being able to implement newly acquired skills. These findings may explain the failure of a recent trial of joint reminiscence groups to replicate previous findings of positive benefit. More targeted research within subgroups of carers is required to justify the continued use of joint reminiscence groups in dementia care
Experimental constraints on a dark matter origin for the DAMA annual modulation effect
A claim for evidence of dark matter interactions in the DAMA experiment has
been recently reinforced. We employ a new type of germanium detector to
conclusively rule out a standard isothermal galactic halo of Weakly Interacting
Massive Particles (WIMPs) as the explanation for the annual modulation effect
leading to the claim. Bounds are similarly imposed on a suggestion that dark
pseudoscalars mightlead to the effect. We describe the sensitivity to light
dark matter particles achievable with our device, in particular to
Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Model candidates.Comment: v4: introduces recent results from arXiv:0807.3279 and
arXiv:0807.2926. Sensitivity to pseudoscalars is revised in light of the
first. Discussion on the subject adde
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Standard Measures are Inadequate to Monitor Pediatric Adherence in a Resource-Limited Setting
This study aims to compare the use and cost of objective and subjective measures of adherence to pediatric antiretroviral treatment in a primary care facility in South Africa. In a 1-month longitudinal study of 53 caregiver-child dyads, pharmacy refill (PR), measurement of returned syrups (RS), caregiver self-report (3DR) and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) were compared to Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMS). Adherence was 100% for both VAS and 3DR; by PR and RS 100% and 103%, respectively. MEMS showed that 92% of prescribed doses were administered, but only 66% of these within the correct 12-hourly interval. None of the four measures correlated significantly with MEMS. MEMS data suggest that timing of doses is often more deviant from prescribed than expected and should be better addressed when monitoring adherence. Of all, MEMS was by far the most expensive measure. Alternative, cheaper electronic devices need to be more accessible in resource-limited settings
Development of a low-level Ar-37 calibration standard
Argon-37 is an environmental signature of an underground nuclear explosion.
Producing and quantifying low-level Ar-37 standards is an important step in the
development of sensitive field measurement instruments. This paper describes
progress at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in developing a process to
generate and quantify low-level Ar-37 standards, which can be used to calibrate
sensitive field systems at activities consistent with soil background levels.
This paper presents a discussion of the measurement analysis, along with
assumptions and uncertainty estimates.Comment: Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Radionuclide
Metrology and its Applications 8-11 June 2015, Vienna, Austri
Multi-level Dynamical Systems: Connecting the Ruelle Response Theory and the Mori-Zwanzig Approach
In this paper we consider the problem of deriving approximate autonomous
dynamics for a number of variables of a dynamical system, which are weakly
coupled to the remaining variables. In a previous paper we have used the Ruelle
response theory on such a weakly coupled system to construct a surrogate
dynamics, such that the expectation value of any observable agrees, up to
second order in the coupling strength, to its expectation evaluated on the full
dynamics. We show here that such surrogate dynamics agree up to second order to
an expansion of the Mori-Zwanzig projected dynamics. This implies that the
parametrizations of unresolved processes suited for prediction and for the
representation of long term statistical properties are closely related, if one
takes into account, in addition to the widely adopted stochastic forcing, the
often neglected memory effects.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
Model Error and Predictability over Different Timescales in the Lorenz '96 Systems
Prediction problems have been described by Lorenz as falling into two categories. Problems which depend on the initial condition, such as short to medium range weather forecasting, are described as ‘predictions of the first kind’, while problems that depend on boundary rather than initial con-ditions, such as in many cases the longer term climatology, are referred to as predictions of the second kind. Both kinds of prediction will be af-fected by error in the model equations used to approximate the true sys-tem. In this paper, we examine predictability over different time scales for the medium-dimensional Lorenz ’96 systems. Models are constructed for the purposes of optimising both short-range prediction and climatological behavior, and studied over a range of forcings for which they show peri-odic, quasi-periodic, or chaotic behavior. It is shown that, for the models discussed here, there is a link between short and long-range predictability, which holds independently of the effects of chaos. The role of stochas-tic terms is considered, and the possible implications for atmospheric or oceanographic modelling are discussed. 2
Results from a Search for Light-Mass Dark Matter with a P-type Point Contact Germanium Detector
We report on several features present in the energy spectrum from an ultra
low-noise germanium detector operated at 2,100 m.w.e. By implementing a new
technique able to reject surface events, a number of cosmogenic peaks can be
observed for the first time. We discuss several possible causes for an
irreducible excess of bulk-like events below 3 keVee, including a dark matter
candidate common to the DAMA/LIBRA annual modulation effect, the hint of a
signal in CDMS, and phenomenological predictions. Improved constraints are
placed on a cosmological origin for the DAMA/LIBRA effect.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. v2: submitted version. Minimal changes in
wording, one reference adde
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