1,431 research outputs found
Evaluation of a dietary screener: The Mediterranean Eating Pattern for Americans tool
Background: Evidence exists for an association between accordance with a Mediterranean diet pattern and slower rates of cognitive decline. However, an âAmericanizedâ version of the Mediterranean diet screener is needed to assess accordance in the USA. Thus, the Mediterranean Eating Pattern for Americans (MEPA) tool was developed to assess accordance with a Mediterranean-like food pattern when time is limited. The present study aimed to determine whether the MEPA screener captured the key elements of the Mediterranean diet compared to the more comprehensive food frequency questionnaire (FFQ).
Methods: The study comprised a cross-sectional study in which 70 women completed both the VioScreenâą FFQ (Viocare, Princeton, NJ, USA) electronically and the 16-item MEPA screener, either electronically or by telephone, aiming to evaluate the inter-method reliability of the proposed screener. The convenience sample included patients (n = 49) and healthcare providers (n = 21) recruited from a tertiary care medical center.
Results: The overall score from the MEPA screener correlated with corresponding overall MEPA FFQ score (Ï = 0.365, P = 0.002). Agreement between screener items and FFQ items was moderate-to-good for berries (Îș = 0.47, P \u3c 0.001), nuts (Îș = 0.42, P \u3c 0.001), fish (Îș = 0.62, P \u3c 0.001) and alcohol (Îș = 0.64, P \u3c 0.001), whereas those for olive oil (Îș = 0.33, P = 0.001) and green leafy vegetables (Îș = 0.36, P = 0.0021) were fair. Usual intakes of potassium, magnesium, vitamin C, saturated fat, selected carotenoids, folate and fiber derived from the FFQ varied with MEPA screener scores in the anticipated directions.
Conclusions: The MEPA screener captures several components of the Mediterranean style pattern, although further testing of the MEPA screener is indicated
Translating Research Into Practice: Speeding the Adoption of Innovative Health Care Programs
Looks at case studies of four innovative clinical programs to determine key factors influencing the diffusion and adoption of innovations in health care
Perfect imaging: they don't do it with mirrors
Imaging with a spherical mirror in empty space is compared with the case when
the mirror is filled with the medium of Maxwell's fish eye. Exact
time-dependent solutions of Maxwell's equations show that perfect imaging is
not achievable with an electrical ideal mirror on its own, but with Maxwell's
fish eye in the regime when it implements a curved geometry for full
electromagnetic waves
Disclosure of Maternal HIV Status to Children: To Tell or Not To Tell . . . That Is the Question
HIV-infected mothers face the challenging decision of whether to disclose their serostatus to their children. From the perspective of both mother and child, we explored the process of disclosure, providing descriptive information and examining the relationships among disclosure, demographic variables, and child adjustment. Participants were 23 mothers and one of their noninfected children (9 to 16 years of age). Sixty-one percent of mothers disclosed. Consistent with previous research, disclosure was not related to child functioning. However, children sworn to secrecy demonstrated lower social competence and more externalizing problems. Differential disclosure, which occurred in one-third of the families, was associated with higher levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms. Finally, knowing more than mothers had themselves disclosed was related to child maladjustment across multiple domains. Clinical implications and the need for future research are considered
Global Governance Behind Closed Doors : The IMF Boardroom, the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility, and the Intersection of Material Power and Norm Change in Global Politics
Up on the 12th floor of its 19th Street Headquarters, the IMF Board sits in active session for an average of 7 hours per week. Although key matters of policy are decided on in the venue, the rules governing Boardroom interactions remain opaque, resting on an uneasy combination of consensual decision-making and weighted voting. Through a detailed analysis of IMF Board discussions surrounding the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF), this article sheds light on the mechanics of power in this often overlooked venue of global economic governance. By exploring the key issues of default liability and loan conditionality, I demonstrate that whilst the Boardroom is a more active site of contestation than has hitherto been recognized, material power is a prime determinant of both Executive Directorsâ preferences and outcomes reached from discussions. And as the decisions reached form the backbone of the âinstruction sheetâ used by Fund staff to guide their everyday operational decisions, these outcomesâand the processes through which they were reachedâwere factors of primary importance in stabilizing the operational norms at the heart of a controversial phase in the contemporary history of IMF concessional lending
STM observation of electronic wave interference effect in finite-sized graphite with dislocation-network structures
Superperiodic patterns near a step edge were observed by STM on
several-layer-thick graphite sheets on a highly oriented pyrolitic graphite
substrate, where a dislocation network is generated at the interface between
the graphite overlayer and the substrate. Triangular- and rhombic-shaped
periodic patterns whose periodicities are around 100 nm were observed on the
upper terrace near the step edge. In contrast, only outlines of the patterns
similar to those on the upper terrace were observed on the lower terrace. On
the upper terrace, their geometrical patterns gradually disappeared and became
similar to those on the lower terrace without any changes of their periodicity
in increasing a bias voltage. By assuming a periodic scattering potential at
the interface due to dislocations, the varying corrugation amplitudes of the
patterns can be understood as changes in LDOS as a result of the beat of
perturbed and unperturbed waves, i.e. the interference in an overlayer. The
observed changes in the image depending on an overlayer height and a bias
voltage can be explained by the electronic wave interference in the ultra-thin
overlayer distorted under the influence of dislocation-network structures.Comment: 8 pages; 6 figures; Paper which a part of cond-mat/0311068 is
disscussed in detai
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Intensified Positive ArcticâMethane Feedback under IPCC Climate Scenarios in the 21st Century
The positive Arcticâmethane (CH
4
) feedback forms when more CH
4
is released from the Arctic tundra to warm the climate, further stimulating the Arctic to emit CH
4
. This study utilized the CLM-Microbe model to project CH
4
emissions across five distinct Arctic tundra ecosystems on the Alaska North Slope, considering three Shared Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) scenarios using climate data from three climate models from 2016 to 2100. Employing a hyper-resolution of 5 m Ă 5 m within 40,000 m
2
domains accounted for the Arctic tundraâs high spatial heterogeneity; three sites were near UtqiaÄĄvik (US-Beo, US-Bes, and US-Brw), with one each in Atqasuk (US-Atq) and Ivotuk (US-Ivo). Simulated CH
4
emissions substantially increased by a factor of 5.3 to 7.5 under the SSP5â8.5 scenario compared to the SSP1â2.6 and SSP2â4.5 scenarios. The projected CH
4
emissions exhibited a stronger response to rising temperature under the SSP5â8.5 scenario than under the SSP1â2.6 and SSP2â4.5 scenarios, primarily due to strong temperature dependence and the enhanced precipitation-induced expansion of anoxic conditions that promoted methanogenesis. The CH
4
transport via ebullition and plant-mediated transport is projected to increase under all three SSP scenarios, and ebullition dominated CH
4
transport by 2100 across five sites. Projected CH
4
emissions varied in temperature sensitivity, with a Q
10
range of 2.7 to 60.9 under SSP1â2.6, 3.8 to 17.6 under SSP2â4.5, and 5.7 to 17.2 under SSP5â8.5. Compared with the other three sites, US-Atq and US-Ivo were estimated to have greater increases in CH
4
emissions due to warmer temperatures and higher precipitation. The fact that warmer sites and warmer climate scenarios had higher CH
4
emissions suggests an intensified positive ArcticâCH
4
feedback in the 21st century. Microbial physiology and substrate availability dominated the enhanced CH
4
production. The simulated intensified positive feedback underscores the urgent need for a more mechanistic understanding of CH
4
dynamics and the development of strategies to mitigate CH
4
across the Arctic
Complex networks theory for analyzing metabolic networks
One of the main tasks of post-genomic informatics is to systematically
investigate all molecules and their interactions within a living cell so as to
understand how these molecules and the interactions between them relate to the
function of the organism, while networks are appropriate abstract description
of all kinds of interactions. In the past few years, great achievement has been
made in developing theory of complex networks for revealing the organizing
principles that govern the formation and evolution of various complex
biological, technological and social networks. This paper reviews the
accomplishments in constructing genome-based metabolic networks and describes
how the theory of complex networks is applied to analyze metabolic networks.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
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