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1.
Behav Sci (Basel) ; 12(2)2022 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35200278

ABSTRACT

Increased digitisation of day-to-day activities was occurring prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic only accelerated the virtual shift, making web accessibility an urgent issue, especially for marginalised populations. Despite decades of work to develop, refine, and implement web accessibility standards, people with cognitive disabilities regularly experience many barriers to web accessibility. To inform ongoing work to improve web accessibility for people with cognitive disabilities, a systematic review was conducted. The main question guiding this review is: what are the state-of-the-art of interventions that support web accessibility for citizens, 9 years of age and up, living with cognitive impairment? A set of 50 search strings were entered into three academic databases: SCOPUS, ProQuest, and Web of Science. Systematic screening procedures narrowed the search returns to a total of 45 included papers. A data analysis revealed themes associated with the lived experiences of people with cognitive disabilities, tools for improving web accessibility, and methodological best practices for involving people with cognitive disabilities in research. These findings have immediate implications for ongoing research and the development of meaningful solutions to the problem of web accessibility for people with cognitive disabilities.

2.
Addiction ; 102(11): 1782-90, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17784900

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: We report on an exploratory qualitative study investigating drug injectors' narratives of vein damage and groin (femoral vein) injection associated with the injection of crack-heroin speedball. METHODS: We undertook 44 in-depth qualitative interviews among injectors of crack-heroin speedball in Bristol and London, England, in 2006. FINDINGS: The data suggest an emerging culture of crack-based speedball injection. Injectors' narratives link speedball injection with shifts towards groin injection articulated as an acceptable risk, and not merely as a last resort in the face of increased vein deterioration associated with speedball. Accounts of vein damage linked to speedball emphasize 'missed hits' related to the local anaesthetic action of crack, the excess use of citric in the preparation of speedball injections and 'flushing' when making a hit. We find that groin injection persists despite an awareness of health risks and medical complications. CONCLUSIONS: We emphasize an urgent need for reviewing harm reduction in relation to vein care in the context of shifts to crack-based speedball injection, and the use of the femoral vein, among UK injectors. There is an additional need for interventions to promote safer groin and speedball injecting as well as to prevent transitions toward groin and crack injection.


Subject(s)
Cocaine-Related Disorders/complications , Crack Cocaine , Heroin Dependence/complications , Substance Abuse, Intravenous/complications , Veins/injuries , Adult , Cocaine-Related Disorders/rehabilitation , Female , Femoral Vein , Groin/blood supply , Harm Reduction , Heroin Dependence/rehabilitation , Humans , London , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , Substance Abuse, Intravenous/rehabilitation
3.
Addiction ; 101(10): 1384-93, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16968336

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: One key structural dimension in the distribution of drug-related harm associated with injecting drug use is the injecting environment. Epidemiological evidence associates elevated blood-borne viral risk with injecting in 'public' and 'semipublic' environments. Yet the quality of evidence on public injecting and related viral risk is variable, and is lacking in many countries such as the United Kingdom. AIM: This commentary considers the micro-injecting environment as a critical dimension of risk, exploring the need for 'safer injecting environment interventions'. METHODS: We draw upon published research evidence and qualitative case examples. RESULTS: We note the limits in epidemiological evidence on public injecting and emphasize the need for ethnographic research to determine the 'social relations' of how drug users and risk practices interact with injecting environments. We identify three main forms of 'safer environment intervention': purpose-built drug consumption rooms; interventions within existing spatial relations; and spatial programming and urban design. While drug consumption rooms find evidence-based support, they are not a panacea. We emphasize the potential of interventions embedded within existing spatial and social relations. These include low-cost pragmatic interventions enhancing facilities and safety at public and semipublic injecting sites and, primarily, peer-based interventions, including peer-supervised injecting sites. We caution against spatial programming and urban design interventions which can cause the displacement of socially marginalized populations and the redistribution of harm. CONCLUSIONS: Public health interventions in the addictions field have in the past focused upon individual behavioural change at the cost of social interventions and environmental change. We wish to focus greater attention on reducing risks related to public injecting and encourage greater debate on 'safer environment interventions' in harm reduction.


Subject(s)
Harm Reduction , Social Problems/prevention & control , Substance Abuse, Intravenous/prevention & control , Environment , Humans , Risk Factors , Safety , United Kingdom
4.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ; 68(3): 397-404, 2005 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15660217

ABSTRACT

A study was conducted on the drying of Penicillium bilaiae, a fungal micro-organism used to promote soil-bound phosphorous uptake in several crop species, such as wheat, canola and pulse crops. A wet pellet formed from a mixture of the inoculant and a starch-based carrier was air-dried to the appropriate water activity to extend the shelf-life of the viable fungal conidia. Convective air-drying was examined as a low-energy alternative to the more expensive freeze-drying technology that is currently in use. Experiments were conducted to measure the loss of conidia viability during drying in a fixed-bed, thin-layer convective dryer. The dryer air inlet temperature and relative humidity were controlled in experiments to determine the effect of thermal and dessicative stresses on conidial viability. The measured survivor fraction was determined to be dependent on solids temperature, moisture content and drying rate. Thermal stresses became significant for process temperatures above 30 degrees C, while the survivor fraction fell sharply below a dry basis moisture ratio of 30%. Slower drying kinetics associated with high inlet air relative humidity were found to significantly improve the recovery of viable conidia. By minimising environmental stresses, survivor fractions of up to 75% could be achieved, but this result fell dramatically with the introduction of more severe conditions. A general linear statistical model is used to quantify experimental error and the significance level of each factor.


Subject(s)
Desiccation , Penicillium/physiology , Air , Penicillium/growth & development , Penicillium/metabolism , Phosphorus/metabolism , Temperature , Time Factors , Water
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