1,451 research outputs found

    Using mHealth to improve health care delivery in India: A qualitative examination of the perspectives of community health workers and beneficiaries.

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    BACKGROUND:mHealth technologies are proliferating globally to address quality and timeliness of health care delivery by Community Health Workers (CHWs). This study aimed to examine CHW and beneficiaries' perceptions of a new mHealth intervention (Common Application Software [CAS] for CHWs in India. The objectives of the study were to seek perspectives of CHWs and beneficiaries on the uptake of CAS, changes in CHW-beneficiary interactions since the introduction of CAS and potential barriers faced by CHWs in use of CAS. Further, important contextual factors related to CHW-beneficiary interface and dynamics that may have a bearing on CAS have been described. METHODS:A qualitative study was conducted in two states of India (Bihar and Madhya Pradesh) from March-April 2018 with CHWs (n = 32) and beneficiaries (n = 55). All interviews were conducted and recorded in Hindi, transcribed and translated into English, and coded and thematically analysed using Dedoose. FINDINGS:The mHealth intervention was acceptable to the CHWs who felt that CAS improved their status in the communities where they worked. Beneficiaries' views were a mix of positive and negative perceptions. The divergent views between CHWs and beneficiaries surrounding the use and impact of CAS highlight an underlying mistrust, socio-cultural barriers in engagement, and technological barriers in implementation. All these contextual factors can influence the perception and uptake of CAS. CONCLUSIONS:mHealth interventions targeting CHWs and beneficiaries have the potential to improve performance of CHWs, reduce barriers to information and potentially change the behaviors of beneficiaries. While technology is an enabler for CHWs to improve their service delivery, it does not necessarily help overcome social and cultural barriers that impede CHW-beneficiary interactions to bring about improvements in knowledge and health behaviors. Future interventions for CHWs including mHealth interventions should examine contextual factors along with the acceptability, accessibility, and usability by beneficiaries and community members

    Chain-Length-Dependent Termination in Radical Polymerization of Acrylates

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    The technique of SP PLP EPR, which is single-pulse pulsed-laser polymerization (SP PLP) in conjunction with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, is used to carry out a detailed investigation of secondary (chain-end) radical termination of acrylates. Measurements are performed on methyl acrylate, n-butyl acrylate and dodecyl acrylate in bulk and in toluene solution at –40 °C. The reason for the low temperature is to avoid formation of mid-chain radicals, a complicating factor that has imparted ambiguity to the results of previous studies of this nature. Consistent with these previous studies, composite-model behavior for chain-length-dependent termination rate coefficients, kt i,i, is found in this work. However, lower and more reasonable values of α s, the exponent for variation of kt i,i at short chain lengths, are found in the present study. Most likely this is because of the absence of mid-chain radicals, thereby validating the methodology of this work. Family-type termination behavior is observed, with the following average parameter values adequately describing all results, regardless of acrylate or the presence of toluene: α s = 0.79, α l = 0.21 (long chains) and ic ≈ 30 (crossover chain length). All indications are that these values carry over to termination of acrylate chain-end radicals at higher, more practical temperatures. Further, these values largely make sense in terms of what is understood about the physical meaning of the parameters. Variation of the rate coefficient for termination between monomeric radicals, kt 1,1, is found to be well described by the simple Smoluchowski and Stokes-Einstein equations. This allows easy prediction of kt 1,1 for different alkyl acrylates, solvent and temperature. Through all this the unrivalled power of SP PLP EPR for measuring and understanding (chain-length-dependent) termination rate coefficients shines through

    Description of a new approach for great auricular and auriculotemporal nerve blocks: A cadaveric study in foxes and dogs

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    Otitis externa is a painful condition that may require surgical intervention in dogs. A balanced analgesia protocol should combine systemic analgesic agents and local anaesthesia techniques. The aim of the study was to find anatomical landmarks for the great auricular and the auriculotemporal nerves that transmit nociceptive information from the ear pinna and to develop the optimal technique for a nerve block. The study consisted of two phases. In phase I, one fox cadaver was used for dissection and anatomical localization of the auricular nerves to derive landmarks for needle insertion. Eight fox cadavers were subsequently used to evaluate the accuracy of the technique by injecting methylene blue bilaterally. In phase II findings from phase I were applied in four Beagle canine cadavers. A block was deemed successful if more than 0.6 cm of the nerve's length was stained. Successful great auricular nerve block was achieved by inserting the needle superficially along the wing of the atlas with the needle pointing towards the jugular groove. For the auriculotemporal nerve block the needle was inserted perpendicular to the skin at the caudal lateral border of the zygomatic arch, close to the temporal process. The overall success rate was 24 out of 24 (100%) and 22 out of 24 (91%) for the great auricular and the auriculotemporal nerves, respectively, while the facial nerve was stained on three occasions. Our results suggest that it is feasible to achieve a block of the auricular nerves, based on anatomical landmarks, without concurrently affecting the facial nerv

    Crossover Scales at the Critical Points of Fluids with Electrostatic Interactions

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    Criticality in a fluid of dielectric constant D that exhibits Ising-type behavior is studied as additional electrostatic (i.e., ionic) interactions are turned on. An exploratory perturbative calculation is performed for small ionicity as measured by the ratio of the electrostatic energy to the strength of the short-range nonionic (i.e., van der Waals) interactions in the uncharged fluid. With the aid of distinct transformations for the short-range and for the Coulombic interactions, an effective Hamiltonian with coefficients depending on the ionicity is derived at the Debye-Hueckel limiting-law level for a fully symmetric model. The crossover between classical (mean-field) and Ising behavior is then estimated using a Ginzburg criterion. This indicates that the reduced crossover temperature depends only weakly on the ionicity (and on the range of the nonionic potentials); however, the trends do correlate with the, much stronger, dependence observed experimentally.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figure; submitted to J. Chem. Phy

    Stochastic Lag Time in Nucleated Linear Self-Assembly

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    Protein aggregation is of great importance in biology, e.g., in amyloid fibrillation. The aggregation processes that occur at the cellular scale must be highly stochastic in nature because of the statistical number fluctuations that arise on account of the small system size at the cellular scale. We study the nucleated reversible self-assembly of monomeric building blocks into polymer-like aggregates using the method of kinetic Monte Carlo. Kinetic Monte Carlo, being inherently stochastic, allows us to study the impact of fluctuations on the polymerisation reactions. One of the most important characteristic features in this kind of problem is the existence of a lag phase before self-assembly takes off, which is what we focus attention on. We study the associated lag time as a function of the system size and kinetic pathway. We find that the leading order stochastic contribution to the lag time before polymerisation commences is inversely proportional to the system volume for large-enough system size for all nine reaction pathways tested. Finite-size corrections to this do depend on the kinetic pathway

    Synthesis of fluorinated alkoxyamines and alkoxyamine-initiated nitroxide-mediated precipitation polymerizations of styrene in supercritical carbon dioxide

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    TIPNO (2,2,5-trimethyl-4-phenyl-3-azahexane-3-nitroxide)-alkoxyamine was found to give reasonably controlled/living nitroxide-mediated (NMP) precipitation polymerizations of styrene in supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO(2)). In contrast under the same conditions, the analogous SG1 (N-tert-butyl-N-(1-diethylphosphono-2,2-dimethylpropyl)nitroxide)-alkoxyamine gave higher rates of polymerization and inferior controlled/living character. The circumvention of the requirement for excess free (nitroxide](0) allowed the study of nitroxide partitioning effects in scCO(2) for three newly synthesized fluorinated alkoxyamines. Two alkoxyamines dissociated into scCO(2)-philic fluorinated TIPNO-nitroxide derivatives, while another contains a similar sized fluorinated "foot". Despite the increased steric bulk about the N-O bond for the novel fluorinated alkoxyamines, all polymerizations proceeded at a similar rate and level of control to the TIPNO system in solution (toluene). PREDICI simulations for the styrene/TIPNO system are used to support extensive partitioning effects observed in scCO(2) for the fluorinated alkoxyamines.Irish Research Council (formerly IRCSET) IUPAC Transnational Call in Polymer Chemistry to F.Aldabbagh. National Science Foundation (NSF CHE-1057927, USA) to R. Braslau.peer-reviewe
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