Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Public Health ; 136: 48-56, 2016 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27178132

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Point of sale (POS) displays are one of the most important forms of tobacco marketing still permitted in many countries. Reliable methods for measuring exposure to such displays are needed in order to assess their potential impact, particularly on smoking attitudes and uptake among young people. In this study we use a novel method for evaluating POS exposure based on young people's use of retail outlets and recall of tobacco displays and observational data on the characteristics of displays. STUDY DESIGN: Observational audit of retail outlets (n = 96) and school-based pupil survey (n = 1482) in four Scottish communities reflecting different levels of social deprivation and urbanisation, conducted in 2013 before legislation to remove POS displays was implemented in supermarkets. METHODS: Measures were taken of: visibility and placement of tobacco displays; internal and external advertising; display unit size, branding and design; visibility of pack warnings; proximity of tobacco products to products of potential interest to children and young people; pupils' self-reported frequency of visiting retail outlets; and pupils' recall of tobacco displays. Variation in POS exposure across social and demographic groups was assessed. RESULTS: Displays were highly visible within outlets and, in over half the stores, from the public footway outside. Tobacco products were displayed in close proximity to products of interest to children (e.g. confectionery, in 70% of stores). Eighty percent of pupils recalled seeing tobacco displays, with those from deprived areas more likely to recall displays in small shops. When confectioners, tobacconists and newsagents (CTNs) and grocery/convenience stores (two of the outlet types most often visited by young people) were examined separately, average tobacco display unit sizes were significantly larger in those outlets in more deprived areas. CONCLUSIONS: POS displays remain a key vector in most countries for advertising tobacco products, and it is important to develop robust measures of exposure. The data reported in this paper provide a baseline measure for evaluating the efficacy of legislation prohibiting such displays.


Subject(s)
Marketing/legislation & jurisprudence , Marketing/statistics & numerical data , Smoking/psychology , Tobacco Products , Adolescent , Attitude , Commerce/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Recall , Scotland , Surveys and Questionnaires , Tobacco Products/economics
2.
J Public Health (Oxf) ; 37(4): 563-72, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25174040

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Selective migration may influence the association between physical environments and health. This analysis assessed whether residential mobility concentrates people with poor health in neighbourhoods of the UK with disadvantaged physical environments. METHODS: Data were from the British Household Panel Survey. Moves were over 1 year between adjacent survey waves, pooled over 10 pairs of waves, 1996-2006. Health outcomes were self-reported poor general health and mental health problems. Neighbourhood physical environment was defined using the Multiple Environmental Deprivation Index (MEDIx) for wards. Logistic regression analysis compared risk of poor health in MEDIx categories before and after moves. Analyses were stratified by age groups 18-29, 30-44, 45-59 and 60+ years and adjusted for age, sex, marital status, household type, housing tenure, education and social class. RESULTS: The pooled data contained 122 570 observations. 8.5% moved between survey waves but just 3.0% changed their MEDIx category. In all age groups odds ratios for poor general and mental health were not significantly increased in the most environmentally deprived neighbourhoods following moves. CONCLUSIONS: Over a 1-year time period residential moves between environments with different levels of multiple physical deprivation were rare and did not significantly raise rates of poor health in the most deprived areas.


Subject(s)
Health Status , Mental Health , Population Dynamics , Transients and Migrants , Vulnerable Populations , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
3.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 219(2): 194-6, 2001 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11469574

ABSTRACT

A 4-month-old sexually intact female Siberian Husky was examined because of diarrhea and 4 flesh-colored annulated helminths that were recovered from the dog's feces. Infection with Macracanthorhynchus ingens was diagnosed on the basis of morphologic features of the adult parasites and ova. Spindle-shaped eggs (mean length, 91 microm; mean width; 54 microm) were obtained from the body cavity of a gravid female specimen. The dog was treated empirically with epsiprantel (5.5 mg/kg [2.5 mg/lb] of body weight) and ivermectin (250 to 500 microg/kg [114 to 227 microg/lb]), and the diarrhea resolved. Infection with this parasite has been reported in raccoons from the same geographic area. Macracanthorhynchus ingens is typically a parasite of raccoons, wolves, badgers, foxes, skunks, mink, and moles; transmission from wildlife to dogs may occur via ingestion of infected intermediate hosts (millipedes).


Subject(s)
Acanthocephala/isolation & purification , Dog Diseases/parasitology , Helminthiasis, Animal/diagnosis , Animals , Dog Diseases/diagnosis , Dog Diseases/transmission , Dogs , Feces/parasitology , Female , Helminthiasis, Animal/parasitology , Helminthiasis, Animal/transmission
4.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 187(9): 951-2, 1985 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3932273

ABSTRACT

A natural infection of Acanthamoeba castellani, a free-living ameba, was determined to be the cause of acute, hemorrhagic, necrotizing amebic meningoencephalitis in a dog. This case is unique because previous reports of infection by the Acanthamoeba spp in dogs have not indicated its presence in the brain. Naturally developing meningoencephalitis by Acanthamoeba spp in the dog may have a pathogenesis similar to that of human beings. The ameba in this case also was observed in the lungs and kidneys, which are believed to be the primary sites of lesions in human beings that develop amebic meningoencephalitis from Acanthamoeba spp.


Subject(s)
Amebiasis/veterinary , Dog Diseases/etiology , Meningoencephalitis/veterinary , Amebiasis/etiology , Amebiasis/immunology , Amebiasis/pathology , Animals , Brain/pathology , Dog Diseases/immunology , Dog Diseases/pathology , Dogs , Female , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Humans , Immunodiffusion , Meningoencephalitis/etiology , Meningoencephalitis/immunology , Meningoencephalitis/pathology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...