2,873 research outputs found
Maternal micronutrient status and decreased growth of Zambian infants born during and after the maize price increases resulting from the southern African drought of 2001-2002.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects on maternal micronutrient status and infant growth of the increased maize prices that resulted from the southern African drought of 2001-2002. DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort study. SETTING: A maternal and child health clinic in Lusaka, Zambia. SUBJECTS: Maternal and infant health and nutrition data and maternal plasma were being collected for a study of breast-feeding and postpartum health. Samples and data were analysed according to whether they were collected before (June to December 2001), during (January 2002 to April 2003) or after (May 2003 to January 2004) the period of increased maize price. Season and maternal HIV status were controlled for in analyses. RESULTS: Maize price increases were associated with decreased maternal plasma vitamin A during pregnancy (P = 0.028) and vitamin E postpartum (P = 0.042), with the lowest values among samples collected after May 2003 (vitamin A: 0.96 micromol l(-1), 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.84-1.09, n = 38; vitamin E: 30.8 micromol mmol(-1) triglycerides, 95% CI 27.2-34.8, n = 64) compared with before January 2002 (vitamin A: 1.03 micromol l(-1), 95% CI 0.93-1.12, n = 104; vitamin E: 38.9 micromol mmol(-1) triglycerides, 95% CI 34.5-43.8, n = 47). There were no significant effects of sampling date on maternal weight, haemoglobin or acute-phase proteins and only marginal effects on infant weight. Infant length at 6 and 16 weeks of age decreased progressively throughout the study (P-values for time of data collection were 0.51 at birth, 0.051 at 6 weeks and 0.026 at 16 weeks). CONCLUSIONS: The results show modest effects of the maize price increases on maternal micronutrient status. The most serious consequence of the price increases is likely to be the increased stunting among infants whose mothers experienced high maize prices while pregnant. During periods of food shortages it might be advisable to provide micronutrient supplements even to those who are less food-insecure
Even Between-Lap Pacing Despite High Within-Lap Variation During Mountain Biking
Purpose: Given the paucity of research on pacing strategies during competitive events, this study examined
changes in dynamic high-resolution performance parameters to analyze pacing profiles during a multiple-lap
mountain-bike race over variable terrain. Methods: A global-positioning-system (GPS) unit (Garmin, Edge
305, USA) recorded velocity (m/s), distance (m), elevation (m), and heart rate at 1 Hz from 6 mountain-bike
riders (mean ± SD age = 27.2 ± 5.0 y, stature = 176.8 ± 8.1 cm, mass = 76.3 ± 11.7 kg, VO2max = 55.1 ± 6.0 mL
· kg–1 . min–1) competing in a multilap race. Lap-by-lap (interlap) pacing was analyzed using a 1-way ANOVA
for mean time and mean velocity. Velocity data were averaged every 100 m and plotted against race distance
and elevation to observe the presence of intralap variation. Results: There was no significant difference in lap times (P = .99) or lap velocity (P = .65) across the 5 laps. Within each lap, a high degree of oscillation in velocity was observed, which broadly reflected changes in terrain, but high-resolution data demonstrated additional
nonmonotonic variation not related to terrain. Conclusion: Participants adopted an even pace strategy across
the 5 laps despite rapid adjustments in velocity during each lap. While topographical and technical variations
of the course accounted for some of the variability in velocity, the additional rapid adjustments in velocity
may be associated with dynamic regulation of self-paced exercise
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Peer support for discharge from inpatient to community mental health services: Study protocol clinical trial (SPIRIT Compliant).
INTRODUCTION: In the period shortly after discharge from inpatient to community mental health care, people are at increased risk of self-harm, suicide, and readmission to hospital. Discharge interventions including peer support have shown potential, and there is some evidence that community-based peer support reduces readmissions. However, systematic reviews of peer support in mental health services indicate poor trial quality and a lack of reporting of how peer support is distinctive from other mental health support. This study is designed to establish the clinical and cost effectiveness of a peer worker intervention to support discharge from inpatient to community mental health care, and to address issues of trial quality and clarity of reporting of peer support interventions. METHODS: This protocol describes an individually randomized controlled superiority trial, hypothesizing that people offered a peer worker discharge intervention in addition to usual follow-up care in the community are less likely to be readmitted in the 12 months post discharge than people receiving usual care alone. A total of 590 people will be recruited shortly before discharge from hospital and randomly allocated to care as usual plus the peer worker intervention or care as usual alone. Manualized peer support provided by trained peer workers begins in hospital and continues for 4 months in the community post discharge. Secondary psychosocial outcomes are assessed at 4 months post discharge, and service use and cost outcomes at 12 months post discharge, alongside a mixed methods process evaluation. DISCUSSION: Clearly specified procedures for sequencing participant allocation and for blinding assessors to allocation, plus full reporting of outcomes, should reduce risk of bias in trial findings and contribute to improved quality in the peer support evidence base. The involvement of members of the study team with direct experience of peer support, mental distress, and using mental health services, in coproducing the intervention and designing the trial, ensures that we theorize and clearly describe the peer worker intervention, and evaluate how peer support is related to any change in outcome. This is an important methodological contribution to the evidence base. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was prospectively registered as ISRCTN 10043328 on November 28, 2016
The impact of constructive operating lease capitalisation on key accounting ratios
Current UK lease accounting regulation does not require operating leases to be capitalised in the accounts of lessees, although this is likely to change with the publication of FRS 5. This study conducts a prospective analysis of the effects of such a change. The potential magnitude of the impact of lease capitalisation upon individual users' decisions, market valuations, company cash flows, and managers' behaviour can be indicated by the effect on key accounting ratios, which are employed in decision-making and in financial contracts. The capitalised value of operating leases is estimated using a method similar to that suggested by Imhoff, Lipe and Wright (1991), adapted for the UK accounting and tax environment, and developed to incorporate company-specific assumptions. Results for 1994 for a random sample of 300 listed UK companies show that, on average, the unrecorded long-term liability represented 39% of reported long-term debt, while the unrecorded asset represented 6% of total assets. Capitalisation had a significant impact (at the 1% level) on six of the nine selected ratios (profit margin, return on assets, asset turnover, and three measures of gearing). Moreover, the Spearman rank correlation between each ratio before and after capitalisation revealed that the ranking of companies changed markedly for gearing measures in particular. There were significant inter-industry variations, with the services sector experiencing the greatest impact. An analysis of the impact of capitalisation over the five-year period from 1990 to 1994 showed that capitalisation had the greatest impact during the trough of the recession. Results were shown to be robust with respect to key assumptions of the capitalisation method. These findings contribute to the assessment of the economic consequences of a policy change requiring operating lease capitalisation. Significant changes in the magnitude of key accounting ratios and a major shift in company performance rankings suggest that interested parties' decisions and company cash flows are likely to be affected
A laserball calibration device for the SNO+ scintillator phase
Located 2 km underground in SNOLAB, Sudbury, Canada, SNO+ is a large scale
liquid scintillator experiment that primarily aims to search for neutrinoless
double beta decay. Whilst SNO+ has light and radioactive calibration sources
external to the inner volume, an internally deployed optical source is
necessary for the full characterization of the detector model. A laser diffuser
ball developed for SNO has previously demonstrated to be an effective optical
calibration device for both SNO and SNO+ water phase. Since the introduction of
liquid scintillator for SNO+, the material compatibility, cleanliness, and
radiopurity requirements of any materials in contact with the internal medium
have increased. Improving on the original SNO laserball design, a new laserball
calibration device has been developed for the SNO+ scintillator phase with the
goal of measuring the optical properties of the detector and performing routine
PMT gain and timing calibrations. Simulations have been written to model the
diffusion properties to optimise optical and temporal performance for
calibration. Prototype laserballs have been built and characterised,
demonstrating sub-ns timing resolution and a quasi-isotropic light distributionComment: 21 pages, 16 figure
Chemical modeling of Infrared Dark Clouds: the Role of Surface Chemistry
We simulate the chemistry of infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) with a model in
which the physical conditions are homogeneous and time-independent. The
chemistry is solved as a function of time with three networks: one purely
gas-phase, one that includes accretion and desorption, and one, the complete
gas-grain network, that includes surface chemistry in addition. We compare our
results with observed molecular abundances for two representative IRDCs --
IRDC013.90-1 and IRDC321.73-1 -- using the molecular species NH,
HCN, HNC, HCO, HCN, CH, NH and CS. IRDC013.90-1 is a cold IRDC,
with a temperature below 20 K, while IRDC321.73-1 is somewhat warmer, in the
range 20 - 30 K. We find that the complete gas-grain model fits the data very
well, but that the goodness-of-fit is not sharply peaked at a particular
temperature. Surface processes are important for the explanation of the high
gas-phase abundance of NH in IRDC321.73-1. The general success of the
0-D model in reproducing single-dish observations of our limited sample of 8
species shows that it is probably sufficient for an explanation of this type of
data. To build and justify more complicated models, including spatial
temperature and density structure, contraction, and heating, we require
high-resolution interferometric data.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
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Performance-based building and innovation: Balancing client and industry needs
One reason for the interest in performance-based building is that it is commonly advocated as a powerful way of enhancing innovation performance by articulating building performance outcomes, and by offering relevant procurement actors the discretion to innovate to meet these performance requirements more effectively and/or efficiently. The paper argues that the current approach to performance-based building assumes that relevant actors have the capacity, ability and motivation to innovate from a business perspective. It is proposed that the prevailing conceptualization of PBB is too restrictive and should be broadened explicitly to accommodate the required business logic that must be in place before actors will innovate. The relevant performance-based building and innovation literature is synthesized to support the assertion. The paper concludes with an innovation-focused definition of performance-based building
Distance to the SNR CTB 109/AXP 1E 2259+586 by HI absorption and self-absorption
We suggest a revised distance to the supernova remnant (SNR) G109.1-1.0 (CTB
109) and its associated anomalous X-ray pulsar (AXP) 1E 2259+586 by analyzing
21cm HI-line and 12CO-line spectra of CTB 109, HII region Sh 152, and the
adjacent molecular cloud complex. CTB 109 has been established to be
interacting with a large molecular cloud (recession velocity at v=-55 km s^-1).
The highest radial velocities of absorption features towards CTB 109 (-56 km
s^-1) and Sh 152 (-65 km s^-1) are larger than the recombination line velocity
(-50 km s^-1) of Sh 152 demonstrating the velocity reversal within the Perseus
arm. The molecular cloud has cold HI column density large enough to produce HI
self-absorption (HISA) and HI narrow self-absorption (HINSA) if it was at the
near side of the velocity reversal. Absence of both HISA and HINSA indicates
that the cloud is at the far side of the velocity reversal within the Perseus
Arm, so we obtain a distance for CTB 109 of 4+/-0.8 kpc. The new distance still
leads to a normal explosion energy for CTB 109/AXP 1E 2259+586.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted by MNRAS Letter
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