8,449 research outputs found
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS TO ADDRESS THE ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENTS FACING TOBACCO FARMERS AND RURAL COMMUNITIES
This paper discusses the context within which educational programs tailored to tobacco producers and related rural communities have developed. Discussion is expanded by examining current program approaches employed by various organizations. Many of these organizations have a manual stake in helping producers in tobacco communities develop their management capacity. A range of initiatives aimed at facilitating economic adjustment is compared, including the major issues addressed and expected outcomes. Many of the initiatives have made useful contributions; however, gaps and limitations remain. These are considered as future educational efforts and issues are discussed.educational programs, tobacco producers, Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Generalized wordlength patterns and strength
Xu and Wu (2001) defined the \emph{generalized wordlength pattern} of an arbitrary fractional factorial design (or orthogonal array) on
factors. They gave a coding-theoretic proof of the property that the design
has strength if and only if . The quantities are
defined in terms of characters of cyclic groups, and so one might seek a direct
character-theoretic proof of this result. We give such a proof, in which the
specific group structure (such as cyclicity) plays essentially no role.
Nonabelian groups can be used if the counting function of the design satisfies
one assumption, as illustrated by a couple of examples
Scedosporium prolificans Septic Arthritis
Scedosporium prolificans is an emerging fungal pathogen that can cause significant morbidity, and even mortality, in both immunocompromised and immunocompetent patients. Approximately 10% of patients affected by this rare fungal pathogen present with septic osteomyelitis or arthritis. Overall, the rate of mortality is close to 50%, and several patients with orthopedic infections have required amputations.1 Our patient is a 59-year-old woman, with a history of rheumatoid arthritis requiring immunosuppressants, who presented with a 5-month history of right wrist pain and swelling. She described an oscillating course of swelling, erythema, and pain involving the dorsal aspect of her wrist that did not show sustained response to antibiotics or a radiocarpal joint steroid injection given by other providers. On initial examination, she was afebrile with dorsal wrist swelling. There was no erythema, but wrist mobility was limited. She had tenderness throughout the wrist, but no fluctuance or drainage. All initial laboratory work was normal. Right wrist X-ray showed severe osteopenia with some mild evidence of cortical erosion. Despite the normal laboratory values, her presenting findings of swelling, radiographic erosions, and immunocompromised state prompted concern for atypical septic arthritis. The patient subsequently underwent wrist exploration for tissue and culture harvest. In addition to extensive wrist synovectomy, the proximal pole of the scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum, capitate, hamate, and metacarpal bases all showed evidence of necrosis that required debridement. One week later, her fluid aspirate and bone cultures unexpectedly grew an unidentified fungal species, and she was taken back to the operating room for further debridement and placement of a voriconazole-impregnated cement spacer. The culture grew pan-resistant Scedosporium prolificans, and based on recommendations from Rheumatology and Infectious Disease, the patient was started on a 6-week course of intravenous micafungin, and immunosuppressive medications were stopped. She returned to the operating room for debridement and serial treatments with polyhexamethylene biguanide (PHMB) irrigation until intraoperative tissue cultures showed no growth. PHMB is an antiseptic medication that has been described as a local adjunct to the treatment of resistant fungal infections.2–4 After successful eradication of her infection, she underwent wrist reconstruction and fusion with a double-barrel free fibula osteocutaneous flap. She is now 18 months out from her reconstruction, has healed uneventfully, and has a functional, painless upper extremity
Ab initio calculations of the hydrogen bond
Recent x-ray Compton scattering experiments in ice have provided useful
information about the quantum nature of the interaction between HO
monomers. The hydrogen bond is characterized by a certain amount of charge
transfer which could be determined in a Compton experiment. We use ab-initio
simulations to investigate the hydrogen bond in HO structures by
calculating the Compton profile and related quantities in three different
systems, namely the water dimer, a cluster containing 12 water molecules and
the ice crystal. We show how to extract estimates of the charge transfer from
the Compton profiles.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Participants’ preferred choice of practitioner for orofacial symptoms
BACKGROUND: Patients seeking treatment from general
medical practitioners (GP) may be unaware or ill-informed
that dentists are the more appropriate professionals to
manage their orofacial symptoms, being able to diagnose
and treat, or, if deemed necessary, appropriately refer.
AIMS: To: (1) determine from a group of patients (n =
37) their initial preference of health care provider, when
seeking treatment for orofacial symptoms (2) establish
their awareness of the appropriate proficiency of the
dentist, and, (3) determine the referral pathway before
patients attended the Tygerberg Oral Medicine Clinic.
METHODS: A cross sectional study design; quantitative
data was collected by a modified previously published
Bell-questionnaire with closed-ended questions.
RESULTS: 53.8% of patients preferred a dentist to attend
to a mouth or jaw problem and 46.1%, a GP. When clinical
scenarios were posed, all directly related to the scope of
practice of the dental practitioner, it was of concern that
47.3% chose the GP and 52.67% chose the dentist.
CONCLUSION: Patients initially chose the GP for many
orofacial diseases, although they indicated at the Oral
Medicine clinic that the dentist had the most relevant
knowledge. Participants did not associate some of the
orofacial symptoms with the training of dentists
Qualitative Criterion for Interception in a Pursuit/Evasion Game
A qualitative account is given of a differential pursuit/evasion game. A
criterion for the existence of an intercept solution is obtained using future
cones that contain all attainable trajectories of target or interceptor
originating from an initial position. A sufficient and necessary conditon that
an opportunity to intercept always exist is that, after some initial time, the
future cone of the target be contained within the future cone of the
interceptor. The sufficient condition may be regarded as a kind of Nash
equillibrium.Comment: 8 pages; revsions and corrigend
Report of a workshop on participatory approaches in agricultural extension, Dedza, Malawi, November 2012
Resonant Inelastic X-Ray Scattering from Valence Excitations in Insulating Copper-Oxides
We report resonant inelastic x-ray measurements of insulating LaCuO
and SrCuOCl taken with the incident energy tuned near the Cu K
absorption edge. We show that the spectra are well described in a shakeup
picture in 3rd order perturbation theory which exhibits both incoming and
outgoing resonances, and demonstrate how to extract a spectral function from
the raw data. We conclude by showing {\bf q}-dependent measurements of the
charge transfer gap.Comment: minor notational changes, discussion of anderson impurity model
fixed, references added; accepted by PR
Knowledge Cartography for Controversies: The Iraq Debate
In analysing controversies and debates—which would include reviewing a literature in order to plan research, or assessing intelligence to formulate policy—there is no one worldview which can be mapped, for instance as a single, coherent concept map. The cartographic challenge is to show which facts are agreed and contested, and the different kinds of narrative links that use facts as evidence to define the nature of the problem, what to do about it, and why. We will use the debate around the invasion of Iraq to demonstrate the methodology of using a knowledge mapping tool to extract key ideas from source materials, in order to classify and connect them within and across a set of perspectives of interest to the analyst. We reflect on the value that this approach adds, and how it relates to other argument mapping approaches
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