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1.
J Am Dent Assoc ; 2024 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38934969

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: People with special health care needs in long-term care settings have difficulty accessing a traditional dental office. The goal of the authors was to assess initial treatment decision concordance between dentists conducting traditional in-person examinations using mobile equipment and additional dentists conducting examinations using asynchronous teledentistry technology. METHODS: Six dentists from Access Dental Care, a North Carolina mobile dentistry nonprofit, saw new patients on-site at 12 participating facilities or asynchronously off-site with electronic dental records, radiographs, and intraoral images, all captured by an on-site dental hygienist. Off-site dentists were masked to other dentists' treatment need decisions; 3 through 5 off-site examinations were conducted for each on-site examination. Demographic and binary treatment need category data were collected. For the 3 most prevalent treatment types needed (surgery, restorative, and new removable denture), the authors calculated the percentage agreement and κ statistics with bootstrapped CIs (1,000 replicates). RESULTS: The 100 enrolled patients included 47 from nursing homes, 45 from Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly, and 8 from group homes for those with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Mean (SD) age was 73.9 (16.5) years. Among dentate participants, the percentage agreement and bootstrapped κ (95% CI) were 87% and 0.74 (0.70 to 0.78) for surgery and 78% and 0.54 (0.50 to 0.58) for restorative needs, respectively, and among dentate and edentulous participants, they were 94% and 0.78 (0.74 to 0.83), respectively, for new removable dentures. CONCLUSIONS: The authors assessed the initial dental treatment decision concordance between on-site dentists conducting in-person examinations with a mobile oral health care delivery model and off-site dentists conducting examinations with asynchronous dentistry. Concordance was substantial for surgery and removable denture treatment decisions and moderate for restorative needs. Patient characteristics and facility type were not significant factors in the levels of examiner agreement. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS: This evidence supports teledentistry use for patients with special health care needs and could help improve their access to oral health care.

2.
ERJ Open Res ; 10(1)2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38259806

ABSTRACT

Background: The introduction of community infection control measures during the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with a reduction in acute exacerbations of lung disease. We aimed to understand the acceptability of continued use of infection control measures among people with chronic lung disease and to understand the barriers and facilitators of use. Methods: Australian adults with chronic lung disease were invited to an online survey (last quarter of 2021) to specify infection control measures they would continue themselves post-pandemic and those they perceived should be adopted by the community. A subset of survey participants were interviewed (first quarter of 2022) with coded transcripts deductively mapped to the COM-B model and Theoretical Domains Framework. Results: 193 people (COPD 84, bronchiectasis 41, interstitial lung disease 35, asthma 33) completed the survey. Physical distancing indoors (83%), handwashing (77%), and avoidance of busy places (71%) or unwell family and friends (77%) were measures most likely to be continued. Policies for the wider community that received most support were those during the influenza season including hand sanitiser being widely available (84%), wearing of face coverings by healthcare professionals (67%) and wearing of face coverings by the general population on public transport (66%). Barriers to use of infection control measures were related to physical skills, knowledge, environmental context and resources, social influences, emotion, beliefs about capabilities and beliefs about consequences. Conclusions: Adults with chronic lung diseases in Australia are supportive of physical distancing indoors, hand hygiene, and avoidance of busy places or unwell family and friends as long-term infection control measures.

3.
Ecol Evol ; 10(18): 9920-9931, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33005354

ABSTRACT

Adaptive variation among plant populations must be known for effective conservation and restoration of imperiled species and predicting their responses to a changing climate. Common-garden experiments, in which plants sourced from geographically distant populations are grown together such that genetic differences may be expressed, have provided much insight on adaptive variation. Common-garden experiments also form the foundation for climate-based seed-transfer guidelines. However, the spatial scale at which population differentiation occurs is rarely addressed, leaving a critical information gap for parameterizing seed-transfer guidelines and assessing species' climate vulnerability. We asked whether adaptation was evident among populations of a foundational perennial within a single "empirical" seed-transfer zone (based on previous common-garden findings evaluating very distant populations) but different "provisional" seed zones (groupings of areas of similar climate and are not parameterized from common-garden data). Seedlings from three populations originating from similar conditions within an intermediate elevation were planted into gardens nearby at the same elevation, or 250-450 m higher or lower in elevation and 0.4-25 km away. Substantial variation was observed between gardens in survival (ranging 2%-99%), foliar crown volume (7.8-22.6 dm3), and reproductive effort (0%-65%), but not among the three transplanted populations. The between garden variation was inversely related to climatic differences between the gardens and seed-source populations, specifically the site differences in maximum-minimum annual temperatures. Results suggest that substantial site-specificity in adaptation can occur at finer scales than is accounted for in empirical seed-transfer guidance when the guidance is derived from broadscale common-garden studies. Being within the same empirical seed zone, geographic unit, and even within 10 km distance may not qualify as "local" in the context of seed transfer. Moving forward, designing common-garden experiments so that they allow for testing the scale of adaptation will help in translating the resulting seed-transfer guidance to restoration projects.

4.
Mycorrhiza ; 26(6): 595-608, 2016 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27075898

ABSTRACT

In arid environments, the propagule density of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) may limit the extent of the plant-AMF symbiosis. Inoculation of seedlings with AMF could alleviate this problem, but the success of this practice largely depends on the ability of the inoculum to multiply and colonize the growing root system after transplanting. These phenomena were investigated in Artemisia tridentata ssp. wyomingensis (Wyoming big sagebrush) seedlings inoculated with native AMF. Seedlings were first grown in a greenhouse in soil without AMF (non-inoculated seedlings) or with AMF (inoculated seedlings). In spring and fall, 3-month-old seedlings were transplanted outdoors to 24-L pots containing soil from a sagebrush habitat (spring and fall mesocosm experiments) or to a recently burned sagebrush habitat (spring and fall field experiments). Five or 8 months after transplanting, colonization was about twofold higher in inoculated than non-inoculated seedlings, except for the spring field experiment. In the mesocosm experiments, inoculation increased survival during the summer by 24 % (p = 0.011). In the field experiments, increased AMF colonization was associated with increases in survival during cold and dry periods; 1 year after transplanting, survival of inoculated seedlings was 27 % higher than that of non-inoculated ones (p < 0.001). To investigate possible mechanisms by which AMF increased survival, we analyzed water use efficiency (WUE) based on foliar (13)C/(12)C isotope ratios (δ (13)C). A positive correlation between AMF colonization and δ (13)C values was observed in the spring mesocosm experiment. In contrast, inoculation did not affect the δ (13)C values of fall transplanted seedlings that were collected the subsequent spring. The effectiveness of AMF inoculation on enhancing colonization and reducing seedling mortality varied among the different experiments, but average effects were estimated by meta-analyses. Several months after transplanting, average AMF colonization was in proportion 84 % higher in inoculated than non-inoculated seedlings (p = 0.0042), while the average risk of seedling mortality was 42 % lower in inoculated than non-inoculated seedlings (p = 0.047). These results indicate that inoculation can increase AMF colonization over the background levels occurring in the soil, leading to higher rates of survival.


Subject(s)
Artemisia/microbiology , Mycorrhizae/physiology , Plant Roots/microbiology , Seedlings/microbiology , Artemisia/growth & development , Seasons , Seedlings/growth & development , Water
5.
J Pers ; 84(2): 225-36, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25417739

ABSTRACT

Three different methods (a standardized scale, an observer-based Q-sort, and content coding of narratives) were used to study the continuity of authoritarianism longitudinally in emerging and young adults. Authoritarianism was assessed in a Canadian sample (N = 92) of men and women at ages 19 and 32 with Altemeyer's (1996) Right-Wing Authoritarianism (RWA) Scale. In addition, components of the authoritarian personality were assessed at age 26 through Q-sort observer methods (Block, 2008) and at age 32 through content coding of life stories. Age 19 authoritarianism predicted the Q-sort and life story measures of authoritarianism. Two hierarchical regression analyses showed that the Q-sort and life story measures of authoritarianism also predicted the RWA scale at age 32 beyond educational level and parental status, and even after the inclusion of age 19 RWA. Differences and similarities in the pattern of correlates for the Q-sort and life story measures are discussed, including the overall lack of results for authoritarian aggression. Content in narratives may be the result of emerging adult authoritarianism and may serve to maintain levels of authoritarianism in young adulthood.


Subject(s)
Aggression/psychology , Authoritarianism , Personality , Adult , Canada , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Personality Assessment , Young Adult
6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 51(73): 13890-3, 2015 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26221636

ABSTRACT

A low-valent trinuclear iron complex with an unusual linear Fe(I)-Fe(II)-Fe(I) unit is presented. It is accessed in a rational approach using a salt metathesis reaction between a new anionic Fe(I) containing heterocycle and FeCl2. Its electronic structure was studied by single crystal XRD analysis, EPR and Mössbauer spectroscopy, and magnetic susceptibility measurements.

7.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 51(11): 2099-102, 2015 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25535725

ABSTRACT

Developing biomimetic complexes that model the active site of [NiFe] hydrogenase enzymes in order to catalyze the activation of H2 is a topic of major interest. A functional [NiFe] hydrogenase model complex has recently been described by Ogo et al. (Science, 2013, 339, 682-683). Here, we report a Mössbauer and computational investigation of this model complex. This study affords deeper understanding of the electronic structure, the reactivity and the mechanism of H2 activation by this complex.

8.
J Soc Psychol ; 154(6): 480-90, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25280165

ABSTRACT

Intolerance of ambiguity and cognitive rigidity are unifying aspects of authoritarianism as defined by Adorno, Frenkel-Brunswik, Levinson, and Sanford (1982/1950), who hypothesized that authoritarians view the world in absolute terms (e.g., good or evil). Past studies have documented the relationship between authoritarianism and intolerance of ambiguity and rigidity. Frenkel-Brunswik (1949) hypothesized that this desire for absolutism was rooted in perceptual processes. We present a study with three samples that directly tests the relationship between right wing authoritarianism (RWA) and the processing of ideologically neutral but ambiguous visual stimuli. As hypothesized, in all three samples we found that RWA was related to the slower processing of visual information that required participants to recategorize objects. In a fourth sample, RWA was unrelated to speed of processing visual information that did not require recategorization. Overall, results suggest a relationship between RWA and rigidity in categorization.


Subject(s)
Authoritarianism , Concept Formation , Culture , Discrimination, Psychological , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Perceptual Distortion , Uncertainty , Adolescent , Female , Humans , Male , Personality Assessment , Reaction Time , Recognition, Psychology , Young Adult
9.
J Vet Diagn Invest ; 24(2): 397-404, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22379057

ABSTRACT

In 2008, a northwest Texas feedlot underwent an outbreak of Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) causing high morbidity and mortality involving 2 lots of calves (lots A and B). Severe mucosal surface lesions were observed grossly in the oral cavity, larynx, and esophagus. Mucosal lesions varied from small (1-3 mm) infrequent mucosal ulcerations to large (5 mm to 1 cm) and coalescing ulcerations. Necrotic debris was present in ulcerations of some mortalities with some having plaque-like debris, but other mortalities presented more proliferative lesions. A calf persistently infected with BVDV arrived with one lot and the isolated virus was genotyped as BVDV-1b. Identical BVDV-1b strains were isolated from 2 other mortalities. A BVDV-2a genotype was also isolated in this outbreak. This genotype was identical to all BVDV-2a strains isolated in both lots. Serum samples were collected from exposed and unexposed animals and tested for antibodies for multiple viral pathogens. Seropositivity ranged from zero percent for calicivirus to 100% positive to Pseudocowpox virusx. At the end of the feeding period, the morbidity and mortality for the 2 lots involved was 76.2% and 30.8%, respectively, for lot A, and 49.0% and 5.6%, respectively, for lot B. Differential diagnoses included vesicular stomatitis viruses, Bovine papular stomatitis virus, and Foot-and-mouth disease virus. Based on the present case, acute BVDV should be considered when mucosal lesions are observed grossly.


Subject(s)
Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/virology , Carrier State/veterinary , Diarrhea Virus 1, Bovine Viral/isolation & purification , Diarrhea Virus 2, Bovine Viral/isolation & purification , Animals , Antibodies, Viral/blood , Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/epidemiology , Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/pathology , Carrier State/epidemiology , Carrier State/pathology , Carrier State/virology , Cattle , Diarrhea Virus 1, Bovine Viral/genetics , Diarrhea Virus 2, Bovine Viral/genetics , Female , Histocytochemistry/veterinary , Male , Phylogeny , RNA, Viral/chemistry , RNA, Viral/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Texas/epidemiology
10.
J Pers ; 78(6): 1595-600, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21039525

ABSTRACT

This special issue of Journal of Personality brings together 10 original articles addressing the intersection of personality and politics. Articles build on classic traditions in political psychology by presenting both idiographic and nomothetic work on the motivational, cognitive, ideological, attitudinal, and identity correlates of many different aspects of political behavior. This work is used to understand political activism and leadership as well as everyday political behavior. We hope this collection of articles will inspire our readers to explore new investigations in personality and political psychology.


Subject(s)
Leadership , Personality , Politics , Power, Psychological , Cognition , Communication , Humans , Social Behavior , Social Change , Social Identification , Social Responsibility
11.
J Pers ; 78(6): 1801-26, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21039532

ABSTRACT

The political correlates of the authoritarian personality have been well established by researchers, but important linkages to other major constructs in psychology need fuller elaboration. We present new data and review old data from our laboratories that show the myriad ways in which authoritarianism is implicated in the important domain of gender roles. We show that women and men high in authoritarianism live in rigidly gendered worlds where male and female roles are narrowly defined, attractiveness is based on traditional conceptions of masculinity and femininity, and conventional sexual mores are prescribed. As a construct, authoritarianism is not just relevant for understanding people's politics, but it also affects the most personal of domains--romantic partnerships, lifestyle goals, and basic attitudes about male and female relationships.


Subject(s)
Authoritarianism , Gender Identity , Personality , Social Dominance , Social Perception , Social Values , Cultural Characteristics , Dominance-Subordination , Female , Humans , Identification, Psychological , Male , Prejudice , Stereotyping
12.
Can J Vet Res ; 73(2): 117-24, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19436580

ABSTRACT

Several tests for Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) were applied to samples collected monthly from December 20, 2005, through November 27, 2006 (day 0 to day 342) from 12 persistently infected (PI) cattle with BVDV subtypes found in US cattle: BVDV-1a, BVDV-1b, and BVDV-2a. The samples included clotted blood for serum, nasal swabs, and fresh and formalin-fixed ear notches. The tests were as follows: titration of infectious virus in serum and nasal swabs; antigen-capture (AC) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), or ACE, on serum, nasal swabs, and fresh ear notches; gel-based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing of serum, nasal swabs, and fresh ear notches; immunohistochemical (IHC) testing of formalin-fixed ear notches; and serologic testing for BVDV antibodies in serum. Of the 12 animals starting the study, 3 died with mucosal disease. The ACE and IHC tests on ear notches had positive results throughout the study, as did the ACE and PCR tests on serum. There was detectable virus in nasal swabs from all the cattle throughout the study except for a few samples that were toxic to cell cultures. The serum had a virus titer > or = log(10) 1.60 in all samples from all the cattle except for 3 collections from 1 animal. Although there were several equivocal results, the PCR test most often had positive results. The BVDV antibodies were due to vaccination or exposure to heterologous strains and did not appear to interfere with any BVDV test. These findings illustrate that PI cattle may be identified by several tests, but differentiation of PI cattle from cattle with acute BVDV infection requires additional testing, especially of blood samples and nasal swabs positive on initial testing. Also, calves PI with BVDV are continual shedders of infectious virus, as shown by the infectivity of nasal swabs over the 11-mo study.


Subject(s)
Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/diagnosis , Carrier State/veterinary , Diarrhea Viruses, Bovine Viral/isolation & purification , Animals , Antibodies, Viral/analysis , Blood/virology , Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/virology , Carrier State/diagnosis , Carrier State/virology , Cattle , Diarrhea Viruses, Bovine Viral/genetics , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/veterinary , Immunohistochemistry/veterinary , Nasal Mucosa/virology , RNA, Viral/chemistry , RNA, Viral/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Skin/virology , Time Factors
13.
Am J Vet Res ; 70(1): 73-85, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19119951

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate economic effects and health and performance of the general cattle population after exposure to cattle persistently infected (PI) with bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) in a feedlot. ANIMALS: 21,743 high-risk calves from the southeastern United States. PROCEDURES: PI status was determined by use of an antigen-capture ELISA (ACE) and confirmed by use of a second ACE, reverse transcriptase-PCR assay of sera, immunohistochemical analysis, and virus isolation from sera. Groups with various amounts of exposure to BVDV PI cattle were used. After being placed in the feedlot, identified PI cattle were removed from 1 section, but PI cattle remained in another section of the feedlot. Exposure groups for cattle lots arriving without PI animals were determined by spatial association to cattle lots, with PI animals remaining or removed from the lot. RESULTS: 15,348 cattle maintained their exposure group. Performance outcomes improved slightly among the 5 exposure groups as the risk for exposure to BVDV PI cattle decreased. Health outcomes had an association with exposure risk that depended on the exposure group. Comparing cattle lots with direct exposure with those without direct exposure revealed significant improvements in all performance outcomes and in first relapse percentage and mortality percentage in the health outcomes. Economic analysis revealed that fatalities accounted for losses of $5.26/animal and performance losses were $88.26/animal. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This study provided evidence that exposure of the general population of feedlot cattle to BVDV PI animals resulted in substantial costs attributable to negative effects on performance and increased fatalities.


Subject(s)
Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/economics , Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/epidemiology , Carrier State/veterinary , Diarrhea Viruses, Bovine Viral/growth & development , Animal Husbandry/economics , Animal Husbandry/methods , Animals , Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/transmission , Bovine Virus Diarrhea-Mucosal Disease/virology , Carrier State/economics , Carrier State/virology , Cattle , Southeastern United States/epidemiology
14.
Psychol Aging ; 22(3): 411-9, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17874943

ABSTRACT

Generativity and authoritarianism assessed at age 52 were correlated with criterion variables assessed at age 62 in a sample of well-educated women (N = 81). Results indicated that generativity predicted positive personality characteristics, satisfaction with marriage and motherhood, and successful aging. By contrast, although authoritarianism is linked in the literature to endorsing traditional gender roles, authoritarianism was uncorrelated in the current study with happiness about marriage and was negatively related to perceptions of motherhood. Furthermore, authoritarianism was correlated with neuroticism later in life. These data suggest that midlife authoritarianism may be problematic as women transition from their 50s to their 60s. Midlife generativity, in contrast, seems to offer one path to life satisfaction.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Authoritarianism , Gender Identity , Marriage/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Aged , Creativity , Family/psychology , Female , Health Surveys , Humans , Individuality , Longitudinal Studies , Middle Aged , Parenting/psychology , Personal Satisfaction , Personality , United States
15.
J Soc Psychol ; 146(4): 443-61, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16894703

ABSTRACT

Psychologists know a lot about the political and ideological correlates of people scoring high on authoritarianism. However, psychologists have less knowledge about such people's everyday pursuits. In the present study, the authors examined authoritarian interest in film, live events, music, and reading. A predictable pattern of correlates emerged. For example, authoritarians enjoyed activities in which physical conflict was prominent, whereas authoritarians tended not to like entertainment that offered introspection. In general, the present results were consistent across 2 samples (N = 120, N = 90). Although men and women had significantly different preferences on over 0.5 of the leisure pursuits (e.g., men enjoyed action films more than did women), there were no significant gender differences in the magnitudes of correlates with authoritarianism. In general, leisure interests appeared to be partly manifestations or expressions of authoritarian tendencies.


Subject(s)
Authoritarianism , Leisure Activities/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Motion Pictures , Music , Politics , Sex Factors , United States
16.
J Pers ; 74(3): 847-69, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16684255

ABSTRACT

Generativity scores were assessed in parents and correlated with offspring outcomes. The offspring were participants in a longitudinal study spanning their first and senior years of college. Generativity of parents was positively related to offspring agreeableness and conscientiousness. Parental generativity was also related to offspring scores on future time orientation and positive affect. In addition, generative parents seemed to model their political interests to offspring, and that modeling was related to children's higher scores on generativity and greater interest in politics. Parental generativity was also related to offspring religiosity. Most of these relationships remained significant after controlling for offspring scores on generativity. Generativity of parents appears to be related to successful offspring outcomes.


Subject(s)
Intergenerational Relations , Parent-Child Relations , Parenting , Parents , Social Adjustment , Social Values , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Surveys and Questionnaires
17.
J Bone Joint Surg Am ; 88(4): 762-70, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16595466

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Transplantation of fresh osteochondral allografts stored at hypothermia into knee cartilage defects is a common procedure; however, the length of time that allografts can be stored prior to transplantation is controversial and has been determined, in part, by the results of vital stain uptake by chondrocytes. This study was performed to further define the limits of allograft storage. METHODS: Articular cartilage from six cadavers was stored for up to fifty-one days in tissue-culture media, and histologic sections were evaluated histomorphometrically to quantify the loss of chondrocytes. Samples of the cartilage were also placed into tissue culture to assess cell growth. Animal studies were performed in parallel on sixteen adult baboons with osteochondral allografts transplanted into the medial femoral condyle. Prior to transplantation, all allografts were stored in RPMI-1640 with 10% fetal calf serum at 4 degrees to 6 degrees C for up to eighty-five days. The transplants were graded on their gross and histological appearance, as well as their histochemical properties. RESULTS: Many of the human samples stored at hypothermia in culture media for up to forty days retained some recognizable chondrocytes, but morphometry showed a gradual, significant decrease in the number of chondrocytes after nine days (p = 0.001). In addition, the cell outgrowth occurred from all specimens stored for up to fifteen days but not in samples stored for longer than thirty-four days. In animal studies, transplanted allograft cartilage that had been stored for less than eighteen days looked smooth and glistening, but grafts stored for over twenty-one days were pale, pitted, fragmented, or yellow, and chondrocytes were absent. CONCLUSIONS: Time-dependent loss of chondrocytes in articular cartilage stored at hypothermia, especially in specimens stored for longer than fifteen to twenty days, was observed in this study. Cartilage allografts transplanted into nonhuman primates after twenty-one days of storage underwent more severe degenerative changes than allografts that had been stored for less than twenty-one days. These findings suggest caution when transplanting cartilage stored at hypothermia for over twenty days.


Subject(s)
Cartilage, Articular/transplantation , Refrigeration , Tissue Preservation/methods , Adult , Animals , Cadaver , Cartilage, Articular/pathology , Cold Temperature , Female , Humans , Male , Papio hamadryas , Time Factors
18.
Psychol Aging ; 17(1): 161-8, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11931283

ABSTRACT

Items from the California Adult Q-Sort (CAQ) were used to assess psychosocial generativity (E. H. Erikson, 1950) in a sample of educated women at midlife. CAQ scores measured at age 43 demonstrated convergent validity with an inventory measure of generativity assessed at age 53. According to other longitudinal analyses, women who attained a generative stance at age 43 reported greater investment 10 years later in intergenerational roles (e.g., daughter, mother) but not nonintergenerational ones (e.g., friend, sister). Generative women also reported less subjective burden in caring for aging parents and more knowledge about community elder care programs. Further evidence suggests that participants felt embedded in a reciprocal caregiving network in which they themselves were the recipients of care.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Caregivers/psychology , Gender Identity , Intergenerational Relations , Q-Sort , Adult , Aged , Cost of Illness , Female , Frail Elderly/psychology , Humans , Middle Aged , Motivation , Personal Satisfaction
20.
Inorg Chem ; 40(26): 6656-65, 2001 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11735476

ABSTRACT

Reactions of the LCr(III) unit with an in situ prepared M(PyA)(3)(n-) ion, where L represents 1,4,7-trimethyl-1,4,7-triazacyclononane and PyA(-) is the monoanion of pyridine-2-aldoxime, yield heterodinuclear complexes of general formula [LCr(III)(PyA)(3)M](2+/3+) as perchlorate salts, where M = Cr(II) (1), Mn(II) (2), low-spin Fe(II) (3), Ni(II) (4), Cu(II) (5), Zn(II) (6), and low-spin Co(III) (7). These compounds contain three oximato anions as bridging ligands. The hexadentate ligand with the identical donor atoms, tris(2-aldoximato-6-pyridyl)phosphine, P(PyA)(3), has been employed to prepare a second Cr(III)Ni(II) species 8, whose magnetic properties differ significantly from those of 4. Complexes 1-8 have been characterized on the basis of elemental analysis, mass spectrometry, IR, UV-vis, Mössbauer, and EPR spectroscopies, and variable-temperature (2-295 K) magnetic susceptibility measurements. They are isostructural in the sense that they all contain a terminal Cr(III) ion in a distorted octahedral environment, CrN(3)O(3), and a second six-coordinated metal ion M in a mostly trigonal prismatic MN(6) geometry. The crystal structures of the perchlorate salts of 2-5, 7, and 8 have been determined by X-ray crystallography at 100 K. The structures consist of mixed-metal Cr(III)M(II) and Cr(III)Co(III) complexes with a geometry in which two pseudooctahedral polyhedra are joined by three oximato (=N-O(-)) groups, with an intramolecular Cr.M(Co) distance in the range of 3.4-3.7 A. The cyclic voltammograms of the complexes reveal ligand oxidation and reduction processes, and in addition, metal-centered oxidation processes have been observed. X-band EPR spectroscopy has been used to establish the electronic ground state of the heterodinuclear complexes. Analysis of the susceptibility data indicates the presence of weak exchange interactions, both ferro- and antiferromagnetic, between the paramagnetic centers. A qualitative rationale on the basis of the Goodenough-Kanamori rules is provided for the difference in magnetic behaviors.

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