2,245 research outputs found

    Spatial Effects of the Social Marketing of Insecticide-Treated Nets on Malaria Morbidity.

    Get PDF
    Randomized controlled trials have shown that insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) have an impact on both malaria morbidity and mortality. Uniformly high coverage of ITNs characterized these trials and this resulted in some protection of nearby non-users of ITNs. We have now assessed the coverage, distribution pattern and resultant spatial effects in one village in Tanzania where ITNs were distributed in a social marketing programme. The prevalence of parasitaemia, mild anaemia (Hb <11 g/dl) and moderate/severe anaemia (Hb <8 g/dl) in children under five was assessed cross-sectionally. Data on ownership of ITNs were collected and inhabitants' houses were mapped. One year after the start of the social marketing programme, 52% of the children were using a net which had been treated at least once. The ITNs were rather homogeneously distributed throughout the village at an average density of about 118 ITNs per thousand population. There was no evidence of a pattern in the distribution of parasitaemia and anaemia cases, but children living in areas of moderately high ITN coverage were about half as likely to have moderate/severe anaemia (OR 0.5, 95% CI: 0.2, 0.9) and had lower prevalence of splenomegaly, irrespective of their net use. No protective effects of coverage were found for prevalence of mild anaemia nor for parasitaemia. The use of untreated nets had neither coverage nor short distance effects. More efforts should be made to ensure high coverage in ITNs programmes to achieve maximum benefit

    Incidence of Trypanosoma cruzi infection in two Guatemalan communities.

    No full text
    The prevalence of human infection by Trypanosoma cruzi was assessed using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in a serological survey in 1998 of 2 rural communities (SMH and PS) in Guatemala. In SMH (Department of Zacapa), where Rhodnius prolixus was the principal vector, the seroprevalence amongst 373 people tested was 38.8%. In PS (Department of Santa Rosa), where the main vector was Triatoma dimidiata, 8.9% of the 428 people tested were seropositive. The overall prevalence of seropositivity was higher in females than in males in both SMH (40% vs 36%) and PS (11.9% vs 4.9%), although this difference was significant only in PS. Historical seroconversion rates, estimated retrospectively by fitting a transmission model to the age-prevalence curves, were 3.8% per year in SMH and 0.5% per year in PS. There was some indication of a recent reduction in incidence in both villages. In PS, but not in SMH, both the observed prevalence and the estimated incidence rates were significantly higher in females than in males

    Molecular ferroelectric contributions to anomalous hysteresis in hybrid perovskite solar cells

    Get PDF
    We report a model describing the molecular orientation disorder in CH3NH3PbI3, solving a classical Hamiltonian parametrised with electronic structure calculations, with the nature of the motions informed by ab-initio molecular dynamics. We investigate the temperature and static electric field dependence of the equilibrium ferroelectric (molecular) domain structure and resulting polarisability. A rich domain structure of twinned molecular dipoles is observed, strongly varying as a function of temperature and applied electric field. We propose that the internal electrical fields associated with microscopic polarisation domains contribute to hysteretic anomalies in the current--voltage response of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells due to variations in electron-hole recombination in the bulk.Comment: 10 pages; 4 figures, 2 SI figure

    Thickness dependent Curie temperatures of ferromagnetic Heisenberg films

    Full text link
    We develop a procedure for calculating the magnetic properties of a ferromagnetic Heisenberg film with single-ion anisotropy which is valid for arbitrary spin and film thickness. Applied to sc(100) and fcc(100) films with spin S=7/2 the theory yields the layer dependent magnetizations and Curie temperatures of films of various thicknesses making it possible to investigate magnetic properties of films at the interesting 2D-3D transition.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, accepted (Solid State Commun.

    Tobacco Subsidies: An Economic Perspective

    Get PDF

    The Farm Crisis: A Statistical Look at a Perpetual Problem

    Get PDF

    Surface reconstruction and ferroelectricity in PbTiO3_3 thin films

    Full text link
    Surface and ferroelectric properties of PbTiO3_3 thin films are investigated using an interatomic potential approach with parameters computed from first-principles calculations. We show that a model developed for the bulk describes properly the surface properties of PbTiO3_3. In particular, the antiferrodistortive surface reconstruction, recently observed from X-ray scattering, is correctly reproduced as a result of the change in the balance of long-range Coulombic and short-range interactions at the surface. The effects of the surface reconstruction on the ferroelectric properties of ultrathin films are investigated. Under the imposed open-circuit electrical boundary conditions, the model gives a critical thickness for ferroelectricity of 4 unit cells. The surface layer, which forms the antiferrodistortive reconstruction, participates in the ferroelectricity. A decrease in the tetragonality of the films leads to the stabilization of a phase with non-vanishing in-plane polarization. A peculiar effect of the surface reconstruction on the in-plane polarization profile is found.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
    corecore