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This article revises the spatial and temporal boundaries of the Casas Grandes tradition associated with northwest Chihuahua, Mexico, based on new data collected in neighboring northeastern Sonora. The Casas Grandes tradition attained its greatest extent during the Medio period (AD 1200–1450/1500) followed by a dramatic demographic and political collapse. Hunter-gatherer groups subsequently occupied most of northwest Chihuahua. Data from the Fronteras Valley, Sonora, presents an alternative scenario, with a clear pattern of cultural continuity from the eleventh century to the colonial period in which sedentary farmers occupied the same landscapes and occasionally the same villages. These observations contribute to our understanding of the spread and subsequent demise of the Casas Grandes tradition in hinterland regions. For the Fronteras Valley, we infer that immigrant groups originally introduced Casas Grandes traditions and that uneven participation in a suite of shared religious beliefs and practices was common to all the hinterlands.
Climate change is a key problem of the 21st century. China, as the largest emitter of greenhouse gases, has committed to stabilize its current emissions and dramatically increase the share of electricity production from non-fossil fuels by 2030. However, this is only a first step: in the longer term, China needs to aggressively strive to reach a goal of zero-emissions. Through detailed discussions of electricity pricing, electric vehicle policies, nuclear energy policies, and renewable energy policies, this book reviews how near-term climate and energy policies can affect long-term decarbonization pathways beyond 2030, building the foundations for decarbonization in advance of its realization. Focusing primarily on the electricity sector in China - the main battleground for decarbonization over the next century – it provides a valuable resource for researchers and policymakers, as well as energy and climate experts.
Mindfulness meditation has become a common method for reducing stress, stress-related psychopathology and some physical symptoms. As mindfulness programs become ubiquitous, concerns have been raised about their unknown potential for harm. We estimate multiple indices of harm following Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) on two primary outcomes: global psychological and physical symptoms. In secondary analyses, we estimate multiple indices of harm on anxiety and depressive symptoms, discomfort in interpersonal relations, paranoid ideation and psychoticism.
Methods
Intent-to-treat analyses with multiple imputations for missing data were used on pre- and post-test data from a large, observational dataset (n = 2155) of community health clinic MBSR classes and from MBSR (n = 156) and waitlist control (n = 118) participants from three randomized controlled trials conducted contemporaneous to community classes in the same city by the same health clinic MBSR teachers. We estimate the change in symptoms, proportion of participants with increased symptoms, proportion of participants reporting greater than a 35% increase in symptoms, and for global psychological symptoms, clinically significant harm.
Results
We find no evidence that MBSR leads to higher rates of harm relative to waitlist control on any primary or secondary outcome. On many indices of harm across multiple outcomes, community MBSR was significantly preventative of harm.
Conclusions
Engagement in MBSR is not predictive of increased rates of harm relative to no treatment. Rather, MBSR may be protective against multiple indices of harm. Research characterizing the relatively small proportion of MBSR participants that experience harm remains important.
Being a current psychiatric in-patient is one of the strongest statistical risk factors for suicide. It is usually assumed that this strong association is not causal but is a result of the combination of the selection of high-risk patients for admission and the imperfect protection from suicide afforded by psychiatric wards. Logically, a third factor, which is causal, might play a role in the association. It has recently been suggested that adverse experiences in psychiatric units such as trauma, stigma and loss of social role might precipitate some in-patient suicides.
Aims
To consider whether there is a causal association between psychiatric hospitalisation and suicide.
Method
We used the framework of Austin Bradford Hill's criteria for assessing causality in epidemiology to consider the possibility that psychiatric hospitalisation might causally contribute to the extent and variation in in-patient suicide rates.
Results
The association between psychiatric hospitalisation and suicide clearly meets five of the nine Hill's criteria (strength of association, consistency, plausibility, coherence and analogy) and partially meets three of the remaining four criteria (gradient of exposure, temporality and experimental evidence).
Conclusions
Admission to hospital itself might play a causal role in a proportion of in-patient suicides. The safety of being in hospital with respect to suicide could be examined with a large-scale randomised controlled trial (RCT). In the absence of an RCT, the possibility of a causal role provides further impetus to calls to make care in the community more available and psychiatric hospitals more acceptable to patients.
There is limited knowledge on vitamin D status of children residing in the Andes and its association with undernutrition. We evaluated the vitamin D status of children residing in a low socio-economic status (SES) setting in the Ecuadorian Andes and assessed the association between vitamin D status, stunting and underweight. We hypothesized that children who were underweight would have lower serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels and lower 25(OH)D levels would be associated with a higher risk of stunting.
Design
We conducted a cross-sectional secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial, the Vitamin A, Zinc and Pneumonia study. Children had serum 25(OH)D concentrations measured. A sensitivity analysis was undertaken to determine a vitamin D cut-off specific for our endpoints. Associations between serum 25(OH)D and underweight (defined as weight-for-age Z-score≤−1) and stunting (defined as height-for-age Z-score≤−2) were assessed using multivariate logistic regression.
Setting
Children residing in five low-SES peri-urban neighbourhoods near Quito, Ecuador.
Subjects
Children (n 516) aged 6–36 months.
Results
Mean serum 25(OH)D concentration was 58·0 (sd 17·7) nmol/l. Sensitivity analysis revealed an undernutrition-specific 25(OH)D cut-off of <42·5 nmol/l; 18·6 % of children had serum 25(OH)D<42·5 nmol/l. Children who were underweight were more likely to have serum 25(OH)D<42·5 nmol/l (adjusted OR (aOR)=2·0; 95 % CI 1·2, 3·3). Children with low serum 25(OH)D levels were more likely to be stunted (aOR=2·8; 95 % CI 1·6, 4·7).
Conclusions
Low serum 25(OH)D levels were more common in underweight and stunted Ecuadorian children.
The aim of this meeting was to obtain a consensus on what constitutes good research practice in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Objectives were to review relevant parameters of trials, such as the patients recruited, the means of assessing PTSD at baseline, and the change in symptomatology in response to treatment, and to reach a consensus on the most appropriate parameters to use in future research. The bases for the discussion were the 1995 National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and the National Center for PTSD consensus on the assessment of PTSD, results of drug treatment trials, and information on the assessment scales used in PTSD research.
Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) are major
contributors to the burden of dementia.
Aims
To describe the prevalence, correlates and course of BPSD in the
population of England and Wales.
Method
The prevalence of 12 symptoms was estimated in 587 participants with
dementia and 2050 participants without dementia as part of a
population-based longitudinal study of ageing. The effect of risk factors
and the factor structure were estimated using 1782 interviews provided by
participants with dementia throughout the study.
Results
Each symptom apart from sleeping problems was more common in the
population with dementia. The co-occurrence of the symptoms was explained
by a four-factor solution, corresponding to psychosis/apathy,
depression/anxiety, irritability/persecution and wandering/sleep
problems. Psychosis occurred more frequently with declining cognition.
Anxiety and depression were more common in younger individuals and in
those with poor self-reported health. Persistence varied between
symptoms.
Conclusions
Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia affect nearly all
people with dementia. Symptoms co-occur, and the symptoms that affected
individuals experience are related to their socio-demographic and
clinical characteristics.
By
Heather Carmichael Olson, Division of Child Psychiatry University of Washington School of Medicine Seattle, WA USA,
Nancy C. Winters, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Oregon Health and Science University USA,
Sally L. Davidson Ward, Division of Pediatric Pulmonology Children's Hospital Los Angeles USA,
Matthew Hodes, Imperial College London St Mary's Campus Norfolk Place London W2 1PGUK
Edited by
Peter Tyrer, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London,Kenneth R. Silk, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
This chapter includes separate sections on treatment for feeding and sleeping disorders. These are disorders that truly do apply to the youngest of patients in child psychiatry, though some eating disorders such as rumination as well as some sleep disorders, such as limit setting sleep disorder and perhaps night terrors can extend into late childhood and perhaps, in rare instances, to adolescence. These are disorders for which behavioural treatments, particularly behavioural treatments such as reinforcement, punishment and graduated extinction, often play key roles in intervention. In both of these groups of disorders, parent training and education are important interventions. While medications can be used in both these disorders, they are certainly not the mainstay of treatment, and because of the young age of the patient population, are rarely used except for a very short time. As in much of child psychiatry, there remains a paucity of methodologically sound trials of the various treatments, though there are randomized controlled studies for both of these conditions that support primarily a behavioural approach.
Introduction
This chapter includes separate sections on treatment for feeding and sleeping disorders. These are two common, yet complex topics important in child psychiatry as the field applies to infants and young children (American Psychiatric Association, 2000; Anders & Eiben, 1997; Linscheid, 2004; Manikam & Perman, 2000; Mindell, 1999; World Health Organization, 1993).
Acetylcholine (ACh) is one of an array of neurotransmitters used by invertebrates and, analogous to vertebrate nervous systems, acetylcholinesterase (AChE) regulates synaptic levels of this transmitter. Similar to other invertebrates, nematodes possess several AChE genes. This is in contrast to vertebrates, which have a single AChE gene, transcripts of which are alternatively spliced to produce different types of the enzyme which vary at their C-termini. Parasitic nematodes have a repertoire of AChE genes which include those encoding neuromuscular AChEs and those genes which code for secreted AChEs. The latter proteins exist as soluble monomers released by the parasite during infection and these AChE are distinct from those enzymes which the nematodes use for synaptic transmission in their neuromuscular system. Thus far, Dictyocaulus viviparus is the only animal-parasitic nematode for which distinct genes that encode both neuromuscular and secreted AChEs have been defined. Here, we describe the isolation and characterization of a cDNA encoding a putative neuromuscular AChE from D. viviparus which contains a tryptophan amphiphilic tetramerization (WAT) domain at its C-terminus analogous to the common ‘tailed’ AChE form found in the neuromuscular systems of vertebrates and in the ACE-1 AChE from Caenorhabditis elegans. This enzyme differs from the previously isolated, D. viviparus neuromuscular AChE (Dv-ACE-2), which is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored variant analogous to vertebrate ‘hydrophobic’ AChE.
Reproducible nanoscale surface lithography have been produced on La00.66Ba0.33MnO3 thin films using Atomic Force Microscopy. Using an anodic oxidation technique, structures were produced using both positive tip bias voltages as well as negative tip voltages. The electric field produced by applying a positive tip bias acts to reduce the region near the surface, whereas negative tip bias causes an oxidation reaction. Using a positive tip bias, stable structures were consistently achieved which demonstrated a linear dependence of height and width on tip voltage and writing speed. Heights ranged from 5 – 50 nm and widths from 400 – 2000 nm. Negative bias voltages produced a rapid oxidation of the surface, resulting in uncontrollable writing. After etching with a 50% HCL solution it was found that controlled writing was possible with negative bias voltages.