Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 185
Filter
1.
Int J Nurs Stud ; 129: 104233, 2022 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35349970

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Worse self-care is associated with a higher risk of readmission and mortality in patients with heart failure (HF). Little is known about how the interplay between clinical and psycho-social factors may modulate self-care behaviours in these patients. The aim of our study was to identify clinical, and particularly psycho-social factors associated with worse self-care and assess their interaction inpatients with heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS: We conducted an observational, prospective, cohort study of 1,123 consecutive patients with chronic heart failure. Self-care was assessed with the modified European Heart Failure Self-care Behavior Scale 9-item version (EHFSCBS-9), and both clinical and psycho-social profile of the patients included were also meticulously evaluated. A total of 484 patients (43%) were women, mean age was 72 years, and mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 44.5%. In multivariable analyses combining clinical and psycho-social factors, low social support (OR 3.53, 95% CI [2.13-5.86]; p-value <0.001), absence of caregiver support (OR 2.16, 95% CI [1.34 -3.48]; p-value 0.001) and depressive symptoms (OR 2.40, 95% CI [1.53-3.77]; p-value <0.001) were independent determinants of impaired global self-care. Advanced functional class was associated with better self-care (OR 0.43, 95%CI [0.26-0.70]; p-value 0.001). No other clinical factors remained significantly associated with self-care in these joint models. In discrimination analyses, models containing psycho-social determinants outperformed models only containing heart failure -related (clinical) variables (all p-values<0.001). CONCLUSION: Impairment in self-care behaviour is strongly determined by psycho-social factors. Specifically, low social support, the lack of caregiver support and the presence of depressive symptoms are the main drivers of the risk of impairment of self-care in heart failure patients. Evaluation of self-care and self-care interventions should be complemented by a comprehensive psycho-social assessment in patients with heart failure. ABBREVIATIONS: DAMOCLES, Definition of the neuro-hormonal Activation, Myocardial function, genOmic expressionand CLinical outcomes in hEart failure patients; NYHA, New York Heart Failure Association; GAM, Generalized Additive Model; BMI, Body Mass Index; GDS, GeriatricDepression Scale.


Subject(s)
Heart Failure , Self Efficacy , Aged , Cohort Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Prospective Studies , Stroke Volume , Ventricular Function, Left
2.
Child Care Health Dev ; 44(2): 249-259, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29214658

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Parents of very young children recently diagnosed with developmental disabilities (DD) need to identify environmental barriers to their children's participation and adopt an adaptive orientation to solving these problems. Given the health service disparities for diverse families, parents may benefit from easy to use problem-identification approaches that address environmental barriers stemming from community and policy contexts. This feasibility study evaluated the usability of a health literacy-informed, structured, environment-focused problem-identification approach for parents of young children with DD. METHODS: We used purposeful, convenience sampling to enrol 9 mothers of children ages 1-3 with DD (4 racial/ethnic minorities, 3 high school education, 4 annual household income <$20,000). We developed a structured problem-identification approach guided by a social ecological model featuring home, community, and policy contexts. The approach was applied to 3 short stories during a narrative elicitation interview. Two researchers independently coded parent responses for the type of barrier and solution identified with and without the approach. RESULTS: Parents identified 121 environmental barriers without the approach. When using the approach and prompted to consider home, community, and policy barriers, parents identified an additional 222 environmental barriers; the greatest number of barriers were aligned with International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health-Children and Youth environment Chapter 5 "Services, systems, and policies." Using the approach, parents with a postgraduate education and annual household income >$80,000 identified the most environmental barriers, and parents reporting the lowest annual household incomes identified the fewest environmental barriers. When parents attributed participation challenges to an environmental barrier, ~57% of solutions required parents to interact with individuals at the community or policy level. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that parents with a range of background characteristics can use a structured, environment-focused problem-identification approach. With the approach, parents are more likely to attribute participation challenges to environmental barriers and adopt a problem-solving orientation focused on changes to the community and policy context.


Subject(s)
Developmental Disabilities/rehabilitation , Disabled Children/psychology , Health Literacy , Mothers/psychology , Social Environment , Social Participation , Adult , Child, Preschool , Developmental Disabilities/psychology , Early Intervention, Educational/methods , Feasibility Studies , Female , Health Education/methods , Humans , Infant , Interviews as Topic , Mothers/education , New England , Problem Solving
3.
Waste Manag ; 72: 150-160, 2018 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29174066

ABSTRACT

Understanding and optimization of composting processes can benefit from the use of controlled simulators of various scales. The Agricultural Research Organization Composting Simulator (ARO-CS) was recently built and it is flexibly automated by means of a programmable logic controller (PLC). Temperature, carbon dioxide, oxygen and airflow are monitored and controlled in seven 9-l reactors that are mounted into separate 80-l water baths. The PLC program includes three basic heating modes (pre-determined temperature profile, temperature-feedback ("self-heating"), and carbon dioxide-dependent temperature), three basic aeration modes (airflow dependence on temperature, carbon dioxide, or oxygen) and enables all possible combinations among them. This unique high flexibility provides a robust and valuable research tool to explore a wide range of research questions related to the science and engineering of composting. In this article the logic and flexibility of the control system is presented and demonstrated and its potential applications are discussed.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide , Composting , Oxygen , Soil , Temperature
4.
Allergy ; 70(8): 963-72, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25864712

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cow's milk allergy (CMA) is one of the most commonly reported childhood food problems. Community-based incidence and prevalence estimates vary widely, due to possible misinterpretations of presumed reactions to milk and differences in study design, particularly diagnostic criteria. METHODS: Children from the EuroPrevall birth cohort in 9 European countries with symptoms possibly related to CMA were invited for clinical evaluation including cows' milk-specific IgE antibodies (IgE), skin prick test (SPT) reactivity and double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge. RESULTS: Across Europe, 12 049 children were enrolled, and 9336 (77.5%) were followed up to 2 years of age. CMA was suspected in 358 children and confirmed in 55 resulting in an overall incidence of challenge-proven CMA of 0.54% (95% CI 0.41-0.70). National incidences ranged from 1% (in the Netherlands and UK) to <0.3% (in Lithuania, Germany and Greece). Of all children with CMA, 23.6% had no cow's milk-specific IgE in serum, especially those from UK, the Netherlands, Poland and Italy. Of children with CMA who were re-evaluated one year after diagnosis, 69% (22/32) tolerated cow's milk, including all children with non-IgE-associated CMA and 57% of those children with IgE-associated CMA. CONCLUSIONS: This unique pan-European birth cohort study using the gold standard diagnostic procedure for food allergies confirmed challenge-proven CMA in <1% of children up to age 2. Affected infants without detectable specific antibodies to cow's milk were very likely to tolerate cow's milk one year after diagnosis, whereas only half of those with specific antibodies in serum 'outgrew' their disease so soon.


Subject(s)
Immunoglobulin E/immunology , Milk Hypersensitivity/diagnosis , Milk Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Milk Proteins/adverse effects , Age Distribution , Allergens/immunology , Animals , Cattle , Child , Child, Preschool , Cohort Studies , Double-Blind Method , Europe/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Incidence , Infant , Male , Milk Proteins/immunology , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Distribution , Skin Tests/methods
6.
Pediatr Allergy Immunol ; 23(3): 230-9, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22192443

ABSTRACT

It is unclear why some children develop food allergy. The EuroPrevall birth cohort was established to examine regional differences in the prevalence and risk factors of food allergy in European children using gold-standard diagnostic criteria. The aim of this report was to describe pre-, post-natal and environmental characteristics among the participating countries. In nine countries across four major European climatic regions, mothers and their newborns were enrolled from October 2005 through February 2010. Using standardized questionnaires, we assessed allergic diseases and self-reported food hypersensitivity of parents and siblings, nutrition during pregnancy, nutritional supplements, medications, mode of delivery, socio-demographic data and home environmental exposures. A total of 12,049 babies and their families were recruited. Self-reported adverse reactions to food ever were considerably more common in mothers from Germany (30%), Iceland, United Kingdom, and the Netherlands (all 20-22%) compared with those from Italy (11%), Lithuania, Greece, Poland, and Spain (all 5-8%). Prevalence estimates of parental asthma, allergic rhinitis and eczema were highest in north-west (Iceland, UK), followed by west (Germany, the Netherlands), south (Greece, Italy, Spain) and lowest in central and east Europe (Poland, Lithuania). Over 17% of Spanish and Greek children were exposed to tobacco smoke in utero compared with only 8-11% in other countries. Caesarean section rate was highest in Greece (44%) and lowest in Spain (<3%). We found country-specific differences in antibiotic use, pet ownership, type of flooring and baby's mattress. In the EuroPrevall birth cohort study, the largest study using gold-standard diagnostic criteria for food allergy in children worldwide, we found considerable country-specific baseline differences regarding a wide range of factors that are hypothesized to play a role in the development of food allergy including allergic family history, obstetrical practices, pre- and post-natal environmental exposures.


Subject(s)
Family , Food Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Adult , Allergens/immunology , Cohort Studies , Environmental Exposure , Europe/epidemiology , Female , Food Hypersensitivity/complications , Food Hypersensitivity/immunology , Humans , Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Hypersensitivity/etiology , Hypersensitivity/immunology , Infant, Newborn , Male , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/epidemiology , Pregnancy Complications/immunology , Prevalence , Risk Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires
7.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 84(5 Pt 2): 056323, 2011 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22181514

ABSTRACT

Compound drops comprise two or more immiscible phases, one of which entirely or partially engulfs the others. In this work we consider the thermocapillary-induced motion of partially engulfed compound drops, composed of two phases, in an immiscible fluid. If the capillary number is negligibly small, Ca << 1, the partially engulfed compound drop is composed of three spherical surface segments, intersecting at contact angles that are determined by the three interfacial tensions associated with the three fluid phases that make up the compound drop and the ambient medium. Corrections to the shapes of the undeformable case at Ca = 0 are expected to be of the order Ca. However, as the drop propagates through the nonisothermal fluid, the temperature at the three-phase contact line and, hence, the contact angles, may considerably change, resulting in a dramatic change of the compound drop shape. Moreover, the changes in the interfacial tensions may be so significant that the partially engulfed configuration may become impossible and either two immiscible parts of the compound drop separate or one of them becomes completely engulfed by the other.


Subject(s)
Biophysics/methods , Rheology/methods , Algorithms , Models, Statistical , Motion , Surface Tension , Surface-Active Agents , Temperature
8.
J Fish Biol ; 78(3): 838-47, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21366576

ABSTRACT

Groups of St Peter's fish Sarotherodon galilaeus were trained during 28 days of classical conditioning to respond to an acoustic signal by approaching a feeder. Their ability to retain the acoustically conditioned behaviour was tested after eight different intervals ranging from 12 to 188 days from termination of training. Retention tests comprised 7 consecutive days of retraining and the fish response was compared with that of naive fish. Fish response drastically diminished with time. After 55 days, there was no apparent expression of memory on the first test day but fish response was restored on subsequent retraining days, indicating the existence of latent memory. Six months from the end of training, there was no indication of behavioural retention and the response completely vanished. The study was conducted in the context of sea ranching, with classical conditioning used to gain control over fish location. In light of the present results, it is suggested that periodic reinforcement of the acoustically conditioned behaviour should be used.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Retention, Psychology/physiology , Tilapia/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Cues
9.
Mar Environ Res ; 61(5): 471-93, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16616361

ABSTRACT

Fecal indicator bacteria concentrations measured in the surf zone off Huntington Beach, CA from July 1998-December 2001 were analyzed with respect to their spatial patterns along 23 km of beach, and temporal variability on time scales from hourly to fortnightly. The majority of samples had bacterial concentrations less than, or equal to, the minimum detection limit, but a small percentage exceeded the California recreational water standards. Areas where coliform bacteria exceeded standards were more prevalent north of the Santa Ana River, whereas enterococci exceedances covered a broad area both north and south of the river. Higher concentrations of bacteria were associated with spring tides. No temporal correspondence was found between these bacterial events and either the timing of cold water pulses near shore due to internal tides, or the presence of southerly swell in the surface wave field. All three fecal indicator bacteria exhibited a diel cycle, but enterococci rebounded to high nighttime values almost as soon as the sun went down, whereas coliform levels were highest near the nighttime low tide, which was also the lower low tide.


Subject(s)
Enterobacteriaceae/isolation & purification , Feces/microbiology , Seawater/microbiology , Water Microbiology , Water Pollutants/analysis , Bacterial Physiological Phenomena , Bathing Beaches/standards , California , Colony Count, Microbial/methods , Demography , Enterobacteriaceae/growth & development , Enterobacteriaceae/physiology , Geography , Humans , Public Health , Recreation , Time Factors , Water Movements
10.
Mar Environ Res ; 61(5): 494-510, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16644005

ABSTRACT

Fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) were measured approximately 5 days a week in ankle-depth water at 19 surfzone stations along Huntington Beach and Newport Beach, California, from 1998 to the end of 2003. These sampling periods span the time before and after treated sewage effluent, discharged into the coastal ocean from the local outfall, was disinfected. Bacterial samples were also taken in the vicinity of the outfall during the pre- and post-disinfection periods. Our analysis of the results from both data sets suggest that land-based sources, rather than the local outfall, were the source of the FIB responsible for the frequent closures and postings of local beaches in the summers of 2001 and 2002. Because the annual cycle is the dominant frequency in the fecal and total coliform data sets at most sampling stations, we infer that sources associated with local runoff were responsible for the majority of coliform contamination along wide stretches of the beach. The dominant fortnightly cycle in enterococci at many surfzone sampling stations suggests that the source for these relatively frequent bacteria contamination events in summer is related to the wetting and draining of the land due to the large tidal excursions found during spring tides. Along the most frequently closed section of the beach at stations 3N-15N, the fortnightly cycle is dominant in all FIBs. The strikingly different spatial and spectral patterns found in coliform and in enterococci suggest the presence of different sources, at least for large sections of beach. The presence of a relatively large enterococci fortnightly cycle along the beaches near Newport Harbor indicates that contamination sources similar to those found off Huntington Beach are present, though not at high enough levels to close the Newport beaches.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/isolation & purification , Disinfection , Seawater/microbiology , Water Microbiology , Water Pollutants/analysis , Bacteria/classification , Bathing Beaches/standards , California , Enterobacteriaceae/isolation & purification , Feces/microbiology , Geography , Humans , Time Factors , Water Movements
11.
Gastroenterol Clin Biol ; 25(8-9): 818-22, 2001.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11598544

ABSTRACT

Polycystic liver disease, which is generally part of the autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, is often asymptomatic. We report a case of obstructive jaundice caused by compression of the biliary tract by a large haemorrhagic liver cyst. The patient was a man with sporadic polycystic liver disease without polycystic kidney disease and with normal renal function for his age. Ultrasound combined with cholangio-MRI provided non-invasive confirmation of intracystic bleeding and intrahepatic biliary dilatation. Obstructive jaundice was confirmed by cyst puncture-aspiration which resolved symptoms and normalized biology. The initial treatment of haemorrhagic liver cyst complicating polycystic liver disease must be medical with cyst aspiration-drainage and sclerotherapy to avoid surgery in these fragile patients.


Subject(s)
Cholestasis/diagnosis , Cysts/diagnosis , Hemorrhage/diagnosis , Liver Diseases/diagnosis , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cholestasis/etiology , Cysts/complications , Cysts/surgery , Hemorrhage/complications , Humans , Liver Diseases/complications , Liver Diseases/surgery , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Suction , Ultrasonography
12.
Health Commun ; 13(3): 285-305, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11550852

ABSTRACT

This descriptive study investigated perceptions of a peer-helper, telephone-based, social support intervention for melanoma patients receiving immunotherapy. Participants were 59 male and female Stage 3 or4 melanoma patients (helpees) at a Comprehensive Cancer Center and 29 former patients (helpers). Helpers were matched with helpees about to begin immunotherapy based on the site of the melanoma, age, and, when possible, biological sex. The intervention consisted of 2 required telephone contacts initiated by the helper before the helpee's first and second immunotherapy treatments. The reactions to this social support intervention were assessed using surveys and telephone interviews with both open- and closed-ended questions. Results indicated that (a) helpees became more sensitive and open to available social support in their environment; (b) helpers and helpees thought the intervention was effective; and (c) the telephone, as a medium for providing support, was a satisfactory substitute for face-to-face interaction. Limitations of the study and future directions for telephone-based support programs for melanoma patients are discussed.


Subject(s)
Melanoma/psychology , Peer Group , Skin Neoplasms/psychology , Social Support , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Female , Humans , Immunotherapy/psychology , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Telephone
13.
Cardiovasc Drug Rev ; 19(2): 97-115, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11484065

ABSTRACT

This review presents a comprehensive discussion on the chemistry, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of ifetroban sodium, a new thomboxane A2/prostaglandin H2 receptor antagonist. Thromboxane A2 is an arachidonic acid product, formed by the enzyme cyclooxygenase. In contrast to other cyclooxygenase products, thromboxane A2 has been shown to be involved in vascular contraction and has been implicated in platelet activation. In general, results of clinical studies and animal experiments indicate that hypertension is associated with hyperaggregability of platelets and increased thomboxane A2 levels in blood, urine, and tissues. The precursors to thromboxane A2, prostaglandin G2, and prostaglandin H2, also bind and activate the same receptors. Thus, a receptor antagonist was thought to be an improved strategy for reversing the actions of thromboxane A2/prostaglandin H2, rather than a thromboxane synthesis inhibitor. This review describes new methods for the synthesis and analysis of ifetroban, its tissue distribution, and its actions in a variety of animal models and disease states. We describe studies on the mechanisms of how ifetroban relaxes experimentally contracted isolated vascular tissue, and on the effects of ifetroban on myocardial ischemia, hypertension, stroke, thrombosis, and its effects on platelets. These experiments were conducted on several animal models, including dog, ferret, and rat, as well as on humans. Clinical studies are also described. These investigations show that ifetroban sodium is effective at reversing the effects of thromboxane A2- and prostaglandin H2-mediated processes.


Subject(s)
Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/pharmacology , Oxazoles/pharmacology , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/pharmacology , Prostaglandins H/metabolism , Receptors, Prostaglandin/antagonists & inhibitors , Receptors, Thromboxane/antagonists & inhibitors , Thromboxane A2/metabolism , Animals , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/pharmacokinetics , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/therapeutic use , Humans , Hypertension/prevention & control , Muscle Contraction/drug effects , Muscle, Smooth, Vascular/drug effects , Myocardial Ischemia/prevention & control , Oxazoles/pharmacokinetics , Oxazoles/therapeutic use , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/pharmacokinetics , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Prostaglandin H2 , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Stroke/prevention & control , Thrombosis/prevention & control
14.
Clin Chem ; 47(4): 784-92, 2001 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11274044

ABSTRACT

Alexander Marcet was an authority on urinary calculi and their analysis when few medical practitioners appreciated the usefulness of chemistry in the explanation and treatment of disease. In An Essay on The Chemical History and Medical Treatment of Calculous Disorders, he described the discovery of an xanthine stone. He drew line illustrations of simple chemical apparatus useful for bedside analysis. His microtechnique used drops of solution and pinhead pieces of calculi; reagents were acids and alkalies and the blowpipe in conjunction with a small alcohol lamp. He reported the earliest description of a disorder later named "alcaptonuria". Marcet's work and that of a few others, on the chemical composition of urine and calculi, laid the foundations of our present knowledge. Between 1807 and 1820, his lectures to the medical students at Guy's Hospital were illustrated by experiments. Jane Haldimand Marcet wrote the very popular CONVERSATIONS: on Chemistry (16 editions in Great Britain). Her book dominated elementary chemical instruction during the first half of the 19th century. She followed Lavoisier's scheme of classification and explained chemical reactions in terms of affinity, aggregation, gravitation, and repulsion. Her advocacy that experimentation accompany lecture was new. The availability of serious scientific education in the new women's academies set the stage for increasing women's involvement in science. She also published a series of CONVERSATIONS: The topics were Political Economy, Natural Philosophy, and Vegetable Physiology.


Subject(s)
Chemistry, Clinical/history , Chemistry/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Switzerland , Urinary Calculi/history , Writing/history
15.
Clin Chem ; 46(10): 1705-14, 2000 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11017957

ABSTRACT

This segment of history aims to inform the new, and remind the not-so-new, members of the profession about the relatively recent period that initiated the dominant role played by technological innovation in the modern investigation of disease. The 12 years from 1948 to 1960 were notable for introduction of the Vacutainer tube, electrophoresis, radioimmunoassay, and the AutoAnalyzer. Also appearing during this interval were new organizations, publications, programs, and services that established a firm foundation for the professional status of clinical chemists. It was a golden age.


Subject(s)
Chemistry, Clinical/history , Clinical Chemistry Tests/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Societies, Scientific/history , United States
16.
Health Commun ; 12(1): 23-39, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10938905

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to examine the relations among patients' perceptions of their physicians' communicative behavior during the informed consent interview, the patient's feeling of being confirmed by the physician and satisfied with care delivered by the physician, and the patient's decision to participate in a clinical trial or not. Respondents included 130 cancer patients who were eligible for a clinical trial and who had recently discussed trial participation with their physicians. Results indicated that a linear combination of the variables physician affiliative style, physician dominant or controlling style, patient satisfaction, patient confirmation, patient preference for decision making, patient desire for information, and patient age discriminate between patients who agree to participate in clinical trials and patients who refuse to participate. Physicians' affiliative communicative behaviors and patient satisfaction were clearly important to patients who agreed to participate. Motivations for patients who declined to participate in trials were less clear. Implications for physicians who offer clinical trials to their patients are that specific communication skills may enhance their patients' satisfaction and may help increase enrollment in clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Clinical Trials as Topic , Communication , Patient Participation , Physician-Patient Relations , Chi-Square Distribution , Decision Making , Female , Humans , Informed Consent , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasms/therapy , Patient Satisfaction
17.
Ann Diagn Pathol ; 4(2): 124-33, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10760325

ABSTRACT

Thomas Hodgkin's discovery of a lymph gland disorder is merely one event in a life of unusually varied public activities in the social reform and humanitarian movements of the mid-19th century. He wrote pamphlets on medical care for the working-class poor, public health, housing, sanitation, and the relief of cold, hunger, and unemployment. Hodgkin wrote about the problems arising from urban renewal and suburban development. His contributions to geographic explorations, anthropology, ethnology, and foreign affairs are virtually unknown today. Hodgkin's opposition to slavery and the slave trade involved him in the development of settlements in Africa for freed slaves and disputes with the abolitionists in America. He fought for social justice and human rights for native populations being oppressed by British foreign policy in South Africa and New Zealand. His criticism of the exploitation of Indians by the Hudson's Bay Company's fur trade contributed to a professional conflict in the highly politicized environment of Guy's Hospital and blocked advancement of his medical career. Closer to home he advocated reform of medical education and practice and sponsored adult education programs. As a member of its Senate, he helped in establishing London University, the first nonsectarian institution of higher learning in England. He lectured to working people on the means of preserving and promoting health and advocated prepaid medical care for the working poor. Concerned about unequal distribution of medical care, he opposed medical contracts to the lowest bidder and price-determined government plans for health care. He consistently maintained that the basic problems of the poor were not medical but socioeconomic. Since charity leaves nothing behind in exchange, Hodgkin was certain that greater benefits would result if charitable money was used to provide jobs. He denounced the evils of tobacco, practices of trade unions, and barbarous prize fights. On a trip to Jerusalem with Sir Moses Montefiore in 1866, Hodgkin contracted dysentery and died. He is buried in a protestant cemetery in Jaffa. His epitaph is fitting: "Nothing human was alien to him."


Subject(s)
Medical Oncology/history , Social Welfare/history , England , History, 19th Century , Human Rights/history , Humans , Religion and Medicine
18.
Percept Mot Skills ; 89(2): 459-70, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10597583

ABSTRACT

The present investigation replicates Jackson and McGill's study (1996) and extends it by considering the effects of respondents' own height, weight, and body mass on perceptions of attractiveness. Results, although generally supportive of those found by Jackson and McGill, point to the influence of respondents' own physical characteristics in the process of perceptions of attractiveness: only 1 of Jackson and McGill's 3 (of a possible 19) differences between responses of African- and Euro-American women was corroborated (the importance of silky hair for Euro-American women), whereas a second difference (the importance of round buttocks for African-American women) disappeared when controlling for respondents' weight, height, and body mass. Although differences between the two investigations may be attributed to regional differences in the surveyed students (Michigan and North Carolina), the small effect of one's own weight, height, and body mass in assessing an other-sex person's attractiveness may reflect adherence to norms learned very early in life that are subject to regional variations.


Subject(s)
Attitude , Body Constitution , Esthetics , Black or African American/psychology , Body Height , Body Mass Index , Body Weight , Female , Humans , Male , Obesity/psychology , Random Allocation , Self Concept , Sex Factors , Social Perception , Somatotypes , Stereotyping , White People/psychology
19.
Life Sci ; 65(3): 279-84, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10447213

ABSTRACT

Endothelin-1 (ET-1) is the most potent vasoconstrictor peptide found in nature. Its production is stimulated by thrombin. By inhibiting thrombin we have previously shown that heparin, a highly negatively-charged glycosaminoglycan (GAG), suppresses the production of ET-1 by cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). The purpose of our study is to determine the effect of other GAGs and related compounds on ET-1 production. The GAGs and related compounds used in the study were: chondroitin sulfate A, chondroitin sulfate B, chondroitin sulfate C, fucoidin, low molecular weight dextran sulfate, high molecular weight dextran sulfate, and hyaluronan. HUVEC were incubated for 48 hr with media containing these GAGs and related compounds and with media without GAG as control. ET-1 levels were measured by radioimmunoassay. GAGs and related molecules with higher sulfate content, heparin, chondroitin sulfate B, low and high molecular weight dextran sulfates significantly suppressed ET-1 production by HUVEC. Fucoidin also suppressed ET-1 production despite its lower sulfate content, probably because of its structural similarity to heparin. These compounds may be useful for future in vivo studies.


Subject(s)
Endothelin-1/antagonists & inhibitors , Endothelium, Vascular/metabolism , Glycosaminoglycans/pharmacology , Umbilical Veins/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Endothelin-1/biosynthesis , Endothelium, Vascular/cytology , Endothelium, Vascular/drug effects , Humans , Molecular Weight , Radioimmunoassay , Umbilical Veins/cytology , Umbilical Veins/drug effects
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...