171 results on '"Palmer, Carol"'
Search Results
152. Lawrence to give keynote lecture at Hood Theological.
- Author
-
Palmer, Carol D.
- Subjects
COLLEGE teachers - Published
- 2017
153. ECO-LITERACY FOR PRIMARY SCHOOLS.
- Author
-
Palmer, Carol
- Subjects
- *
PRIMARY education , *NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Eco-literacy for Primary Schools," by Alan Peacock.
- Published
- 2005
154. Archaeological Landscapes of the Near East.
- Author
-
Palmer, Carol
- Abstract
The article reviews the book "Archaeological Landscapes of the Near East," by T. J. Wilkinson.
- Published
- 2005
155. Trade-offs between seed and leaf size (seed-phytomer-leaf theory): functional glue linking regenerative with life history strategies ... and taxonomy with ecology?
- Author
-
Hodgson, John G., Santini, Bianca A., Marti, Gabriel Montserrat, Pla, Ferran Royo, Jones, Glynis, Bogaard, Amy, Charles, Mike, Font, Xavier, Ater, Mohammed, Taleb, Abdelkader, Poschlod, Peter, Hmimsa, Younes, Palmer, Carol, Wilson, Peter J., Band, Stuart R., Styring, Amy, Diffey, Charlotte, Green, Laura, Nitsch, Erika, and Stroud, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
SEED size , *LEAVES , *PLANT ecology , *PLANT classification , *PLANT nutrients , *PLANT species - Abstract
Background and Aims While the 'worldwide leaf economics spectrum' (Wright IJ, Reich PB, Westoby M, et al. 2004. The worldwide leaf economics spectrum. Nature 428: 821-827) defines mineral nutrient relationships in plants, no unifying functional consensus links size attributes. Here, the focus is upon leaf size, a much-studied plant trait that scales positively with habitat quality and components of plant size. The objective is to show that this wide range of relationships is explicable in terms of a seed-phytomer-leaf (SPL) theoretical model defining leaf size in terms of trade-offs involving the size, growth rate and number of the building blocks (phytomers) of which the young shoot is constructed. Methods Functional data for 2400+ species and English and Spanish vegetation surveys were used to explore interrelationships between leaf area, leaf width, canopy height, seed mass and leaf dry matter content (LDMC). Key Results Leaf area was a consistent function of canopy height, LDMC and seed mass. Additionally, size traits are partially uncoupled. First, broad laminas help confer competitive exclusion while morphologically large leaves can, through dissection, be functionally small. Secondly, leaf size scales positively with plant size but many of the largest-leaved species are of medium height with basally supported leaves. Thirdly, photosynthetic stems may represent a functionally viable alternative to 'small seeds þ large leaves' in disturbed, fertile habitats and 'large seeds+ small leaves' in infertile ones. Conclusions Although key elements defining the juvenile growth phase remain unmeasured, our results broadly support SPL theory in that phytometer and leaf size are a product of the size of the initial shoot meristem = seed mass) and the duration and quality of juvenile growth. These allometrically constrained traits combine to confer ecological specialization on individual species. Equally, they appear conservatively expressed within major taxa. Thus, 'evolutionary canalization' sensu Stebbins (Stebbins GL. 1974. Flowering plants: evolution above the species level. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press) is perhaps associated with both seed and leaf development, and major taxa appear routinely specialized with respect to ecologically important size-related traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
156. The triangular seed mass-leaf area relationship holds for annual plants and is determined by habitat productivity.
- Author
-
Santini, Bianca A., Hodgson, John G., Thompson, Ken, Wilson, Peter J., Band, Stuart R., Jones, Glynis, Charles, Mike, Bogaard, Amy, Palmer, Carol, Rees, Mark, and Kudo, Gaku
- Subjects
- *
ALLOMETRY in plants , *HABITATS , *BIOLOGICAL productivity , *SEEDS , *SOIL productivity , *LEAF area - Abstract
Plant allometries help us to understand resource allocation in plants and provide insight into how communities are structured. For woody species, a triangular allometric relationship between seed size and leaf size occurs in which all combinations are all possible, except for species with big seeds and small leaves (Cornelissen ). This relationship is thought to be a consequence of between-habitat variation in abiotic conditions., In this study, we tested if the triangular relationship between seed mass and leaf area holds for annual species, and if variation in soil productivity and light (measured as Ellenberg indicator values: EIVs) is driving this relationship., We show that the triangular relationship also holds for annuals, which suggests that the allometric combinations between leaf area and seed mass are conserved across life-forms., The triangular relationship was driven by between habitat variation in soil productivity. This means that as soil productivity increases, plants with bigger leaves could have either big or small seeds. However, in low soil productivity habitats, plants are constrained in their options, and plants with small leaves can only have small seeds., A is available for this article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. Changing leaf nitrogen and canopy height quantify processes leading to plant and butterfly diversity loss in agricultural landscapes.
- Author
-
Hodgson, John G., Tallowin, Jerry, Dennis, Roger L. H., Thompson, Ken, Poschlod, Peter, Dhanoa, Mewa S., Charles, Mike, Jones, Glynis, Wilson, Peter, Band, Stuart R., Bogaard, Amy, Palmer, Carol, Carter, Gaylynne, Hynd, Alison, and Adam, Edith
- Subjects
- *
NITROGEN content of plants , *PLANT canopies , *BUTTERFLIES , *INSECT diversity , *AGRICULTURAL landscape management , *CONSERVATION biology - Abstract
We describe a novel method for quantifying ecosystem drivers that potentially compromise the effectiveness of agri-environment schemes. We use three sources of data that for many countries are already in the public domain: governmental agricultural statistics, which provide a quantitative assessment of farming intensity in the 'working landscape', data on threat status and species distribution for plants and butterflies from conservation agencies and similar bodies and functional traits of plant species abstracted from published data bases., Changes in land use alter ecosystem processes which in turn modify both biodiversity and representation of functional types at the landscape scale. We interpret functional shifts to quantify important ecological drivers of floristic and faunal change and their causal land use origins., We illustrate the power of this approach by means of a worked example. We demonstrate that despite conservation policies to counteract them, eutrophication, identified by leaf nitrogen content, and abandonment, correlated with plant canopy height, are still causing biodiversity loss to native higher plants and butterflies in the English countryside., We use our analyses to suggest how conservation policies can be made more effective and discuss how similar approaches could be applied elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. The Identity of the St Bees Lady, Cumbria: An Osteobiographical Approach.
- Author
-
Knüsel, Christopher J, Batt, Catherine M, Cook, Gordon, Montgomery, Janet, Müldner, Gundula, Ogden, Alan R, Palmer, Carol, Stern, Ben, Todd, John, and Wilson, Andrew S
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains , *ARCHAEOLOGY methodology , *IDENTIFICATION of the dead , *HEIRESSES , *MEDIEVAL civilization , *GEOPOLITICS , *MEDIEVAL archaeology , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location , *FOURTEENTH century - Abstract
Using an Osteobiographical approach, this contribution considers the identity of the woman found alongside the St Bees Man, one of the best-preserved archaeological bodies ever discovered. Osteological, isotopic and radiocarbon analyses, combined with the archaeological context of the burial and documented social history, provide the basis for the identification of a late 14th-century heiress whose activities were at the heart of medieval northern English geopolitics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
159. CCAAT/Enhancer-binding Protein β Deletion Reduces Adiposity, Hepatic Steatosis, and Diabetes in Leprddb/db Mice.
- Author
-
Schroeder-Gloeckler, Jill M., Rahmana, Shaikh Mizanoor, Janssen, Rachel C., Liping Qiao, Jianhua Shao, Roper, Michael, Fischer, Stephanie J., Lowe, Erin, Orlicky, David J., McManaman, James L., Palmer, Carol, Gitomer, William L., Wan Huang, O'Doherty, Robert M., Becker, Thomas C., Klemm, Dwight J., Jensen, Dalan R., Pulawa, Leslie K., Eckel, Robert H., and Friedman, Jacob E.
- Subjects
- *
OBESITY , *DIABETES , *CARRIER proteins , *FATTY degeneration , *ADIPOSE tissues , *FATTY liver , *LIVER cells - Abstract
CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein β (C/EBPβ) plays a key role in initiation of adipogenesis in adipose tissue and gluconeogenesis in liver; however, the role of C/EBPβ in hepatic lipogenesis remains undefined. Here we show that C/EBPβ inactivation in Lepdb/db mice attenuates obesity, fatty liver, and diabetes. In addition to impaired adipogenesis, livers from C/EBPβ-/- x Leprdb/db mice had dramatically decreased triglyceride content and reduced lipogenic enzyme activity. C/EBPβ deletion in Leprdb/db mice down-regulated peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ2 (PPARγ2) and stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 and up-regulated PPARα independent of SREBP1c. Conversely, C/EBPβ overexpression in wild-type mice increased PPARγ2 and stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 mRNA and hepatic triglyceride content. In FAO cells, overexpression of the liver inhibiting form of C/EBPβ or C/EBPβ RNA interference attenuated palmitate-induced triglyceride accumulation and reduced PPARγ2 and triglyceride levels in the liver in vivo. Leptin and the anti-diabetic drug metformin acutely down-regulated C/EBPβ expression in hepatocytes, whereas fatty acids up-regulate C/EBPβ expression. These data provide novel evidence linking C/EBPβ expression to lipogenesis and energy balance with important implications for the treatment of obesity and fatty liver disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. Nuclear and Mitochondrial Patterns of Population Structure in North Pacific False Killer Whales (Pseudorca crassidens).
- Author
-
Martien, Karen K., Chivers, Susan J., Baird, Robin W., Archer, Frederick I., Gorgone, Antoinette M., Hancock-Hanser, Brittany L., Mattila, David, McSweeney, Daniel J., Oleson, Erin M., Palmer, Carol, Pease, Victoria L., Robertson, Kelly M., Schorr, Gregory S., Schultz, Mark B., Webster, Daniel L., and Taylor, Barbara L.
- Subjects
- *
KILLER whale , *CETACEAN populations , *POPULATION genetics , *MITOCHONDRIAL pathology , *GENE flow - Abstract
False killer whales (Pseudorca crassidens) are large delphinids typically found in deep water far offshore. However, in the Hawaiian Archipelago, there are 2 resident island-associated populations of false killer whales, one in the waters around the main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) and one in the waters around the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI). We use mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequences and genotypes from 16 nuclear DNA (nucDNA) microsatellite loci from 206 individuals to examine levels of differentiation among the 2 island-associated populations and offshore animals from the central and eastern North Pacific. Both mtDNA and nucDNA exhibit highly significant differentiation between populations, confirming limited gene flow in both sexes. The mtDNA haplotypes exhibit a strong pattern of phylogeographic concordance, with island-associated populations sharing 3 closely related haplotypes not found elsewhere in the Pacific. However, nucDNA data suggest that NWHI animals are at least as differentiated from MHI animals as they are from offshore animals. The patterns of differentiation revealed by the 2 marker types suggest that the island-associated false killer whale populations likely share a common colonization history, but have limited contemporary gene flow. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
161. Seed size, number and strategies in annual plants: a comparative functional analysis and synthesis.
- Author
-
Hodgson JG, Montserrat Marti G, Šerá B, Jones G, Bogaard A, Charles M, Font X, Ater M, Taleb A, Santini BA, Hmimsa Y, Palmer C, Wilson PJ, Band SR, Styring A, Diffey C, Green L, Nitsch E, Stroud E, and Warham G
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Phenotype, Phylogeny, Plants, Seeds
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Plants depend fundamentally on establishment from seed. However, protocols in trait-based ecology currently estimate seed size but not seed number. This can be rectified. For annuals, seed number should simply be a positive function of vegetative biomass and a negative function of seed size., Methods: Using published values of comparative seed number as the 'gold standard' and a large functional database, comparative seed yield and number per plant and per m2 were predicted by multiple regression. Subsequently, ecological variation in each was explored for English and Spanish habitats, newly calculated C-S-R strategies and changed abundance in the British flora., Key Results: As predicted, comparative seed mass yield per plant was consistently a positive function of plant size and competitive ability, and largely independent of seed size. Regressions estimating comparative seed number included, additionally, seed size as a negative function. Relationships differed numerically between regions, habitats and C-S-R strategies. Moreover, some species differed in life history over their geographical range. Comparative seed yield per m2 was positively correlated with FAO crop yield, and increasing British annuals produced numerous seeds. Nevertheless, predicted values must be viewed as comparative rather than absolute: they varied according to the 'gold standard' predictor used. Moreover, regressions estimating comparative seed yield per m2 achieved low precision., Conclusions: For the first time, estimates of comparative seed yield and number for >800 annuals and their predictor equations have been produced and the ecological importance of these regenerative traits has been illustrated. 'Regenerative trait-based ecology' remains in its infancy, with work needed on determinate vs. indeterminate flowering ('bet-hedging'), C-S-R methodologies, phylogeny, comparative seed yield per m2 and changing life history. Nevertheless, this has been a positive start and readers are invited to use estimates for >800 annuals, in the Supplementary data, to help advance 'regenerative trait-based ecology' to the next level., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
162. Reproduction and nutritional stress are risk factors for Hendra virus infection in little red flying foxes (Pteropus scapulatus).
- Author
-
Plowright RK, Field HE, Smith C, Divljan A, Palmer C, Tabor G, Daszak P, and Foley JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral blood, Chiroptera physiology, Communicable Diseases, Emerging epidemiology, Communicable Diseases, Emerging virology, Female, Hendra Virus immunology, Henipavirus Infections epidemiology, Henipavirus Infections virology, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Humans, Lactation, Pregnancy, Pregnancy, Animal, Risk Factors, Zoonoses epidemiology, Zoonoses virology, Chiroptera virology, Hendra Virus pathogenicity, Henipavirus Infections veterinary, Reproduction physiology, Starvation
- Abstract
Hendra virus (HeV) is a lethal paramyxovirus which emerged in humans in 1994. Poor understanding of HeV dynamics in Pteropus spp. (flying fox or fruit bat) reservoir hosts has limited our ability to determine factors driving its emergence. We initiated a longitudinal field study of HeV in little red flying foxes (LRFF; Pteropus scapulatus) and examined individual and population risk factors for infection, to determine probable modes of intraspecific transmission. We also investigated whether seasonal changes in host behaviour, physiology and demography affect host-pathogen dynamics. Data showed that pregnant and lactating females had significantly higher risk of infection, which may explain previously observed temporal associations between HeV outbreaks and flying fox birthing periods. Age-specific seroprevalence curves generated from field data imply that HeV is transmitted horizontally via faeces, urine or saliva. Rapidly declining seroprevalence between two field seasons suggests that immunity wanes faster in LRFF than in other flying fox species, and highlights the potentially critical role of this species in interspecific viral persistence. The highest seroprevalence was observed when animals showed evidence of nutritional stress, suggesting that environmental processes that alter flying fox food sources, such as habitat loss and climate change, may increase HeV infection and transmission. These insights into the ecology of HeV in flying fox populations suggest causal links between anthropogenic environmental change and HeV emergence.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
163. CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein beta deletion reduces adiposity, hepatic steatosis, and diabetes in Lepr(db/db) mice.
- Author
-
Schroeder-Gloeckler JM, Rahman SM, Janssen RC, Qiao L, Shao J, Roper M, Fischer SJ, Lowe E, Orlicky DJ, McManaman JL, Palmer C, Gitomer WL, Huang W, O'Doherty RM, Becker TC, Klemm DJ, Jensen DR, Pulawa LK, Eckel RH, and Friedman JE
- Subjects
- Animals, CCAAT-Enhancer-Binding Protein-beta deficiency, Cell Line, Diabetes Mellitus genetics, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Energy Metabolism drug effects, Energy Metabolism genetics, Fatty Liver genetics, Fatty Liver therapy, Gene Expression Regulation drug effects, Gene Expression Regulation genetics, Hypoglycemic Agents pharmacology, Metformin pharmacology, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Obesity genetics, Obesity therapy, PPAR alpha biosynthesis, PPAR gamma biosynthesis, Palmitates pharmacology, Stearoyl-CoA Desaturase biosynthesis, Sterol Regulatory Element Binding Protein 1 biosynthesis, Triglycerides metabolism, Adiposity drug effects, Adiposity genetics, CCAAT-Enhancer-Binding Protein-beta metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus metabolism, Fatty Liver metabolism, Obesity metabolism
- Abstract
CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein beta (C/EBPbeta) plays a key role in initiation of adipogenesis in adipose tissue and gluconeogenesis in liver; however, the role of C/EBPbeta in hepatic lipogenesis remains undefined. Here we show that C/EBPbeta inactivation in Lepr(db/db) mice attenuates obesity, fatty liver, and diabetes. In addition to impaired adipogenesis, livers from C/EBPbeta(-/-) x Lepr(db/db) mice had dramatically decreased triglyceride content and reduced lipogenic enzyme activity. C/EBPbeta deletion in Lepr(db/db) mice down-regulated peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma2 (PPARgamma2) and stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 and up-regulated PPARalpha independent of SREBP1c. Conversely, C/EBPbeta overexpression in wild-type mice increased PPARgamma2 and stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 mRNA and hepatic triglyceride content. In FAO cells, overexpression of the liver inhibiting form of C/EBPbeta or C/EBPbeta RNA interference attenuated palmitate-induced triglyceride accumulation and reduced PPARgamma2 and triglyceride levels in the liver in vivo. Leptin and the anti-diabetic drug metformin acutely down-regulated C/EBPbeta expression in hepatocytes, whereas fatty acids up-regulate C/EBPbeta expression. These data provide novel evidence linking C/EBPbeta expression to lipogenesis and energy balance with important implications for the treatment of obesity and fatty liver disease.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
164. Genetic diversity of Plasmodium vivax Pvcsp and Pvmsp1 in Guyana, South America.
- Author
-
Bonilla JA, Validum L, Cummings R, and Palmer CJ
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA Primers, DNA, Protozoan analysis, DNA, Protozoan genetics, Genes, Protozoan, Genotype, Guyana epidemiology, Humans, Malaria, Vivax epidemiology, Plasmodium vivax isolation & purification, Genetic Variation genetics, Malaria, Vivax genetics, Plasmodium vivax genetics
- Abstract
Approximately 55% of malaria infections in the Guyana Amazon region are attributed to Plasmodium falciparum while the other 45% are attributed to non-falciparum, mostly Plasmodium vivax. However, little is known about the P. vivax strain types circulating in the region. Using PCR for Plasmodium detection and two genetic markers specific to P. vivax to detect the polymorphic circumsporozoite protein (CSP) and the conserved 19-kDa region of the merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1), we investigated the overall Plasmodium strain distribution and population diversity within P. vivax in isolates collected from the blood of infected individuals in the interior Amazon region of Guyana, South America. Out of a total of 250 samples positive for Plasmodium, P. vivax was detected in 30% (76/250) and P. falciparum was detected in 76% (189/250). Mixed infections containing both P. falciparum and P. vivax constituted 6% (15/250) of the total positive samples. Further analysis of P. vivax strains showed that 92% (56/61) of the P. vivax samples hybridized with a probe specific to type VK210, 39% (24/61) hybridized with a probe specific for type VK247, and 25% (15/61) hybridized with a probe specific for the P. vivax-like CS genotype. DNA sequencing of the 19-kDa C-terminal domain in block 13 of MSP-1 amplified from 61 samples from patients infected with P. vivax demonstrated that this region is highly conserved, and all samples were identical at the nucleotide level to the Belem and Salvador-1 types. No synonymous or nonsynonymous mutations were observed in this region of the gene, indicating that current vaccine-development efforts based on the MSP-1(19) fragment would be applicable in Guyana.
- Published
- 2006
165. Analysis of lactation defects in transgenic mice.
- Author
-
Palmer CA, Neville MC, Anderson SM, and McManaman JL
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Mammary Glands, Animal anatomy & histology, Mammary Glands, Animal growth & development, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Models, Animal, Promoter Regions, Genetic genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Lactation genetics, Mammary Glands, Animal metabolism
- Abstract
Although lactation is the only physiological function of the mammary gland, little is known about the molecular events required for secretory activation and milk production. Genetically altered mice have been used extensively to study mammary gland development during puberty and pregnancy, as well as mammary tumorigenesis. A number of approaches have been used to produce genetic modifications in mammary glands of mice, including transgenic mice utilizing mammary specific promoters, traditional knockout mice, mammary-specific gene deletion, and conditionally-regulated transgenes. The same technologies can be used to study secretory activation and lactation; however only a comparatively small number of studies to date have used these approaches to study these events. In this paper we review the technologies available to make genetically modified mice for the study of secretory activation and lactation as well as specific analytical procedures that can be used to characterize mice with lactation defects.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
166. Exercise as a treatment for depression in elders.
- Author
-
Palmer C
- Subjects
- Aged, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Humans, Quality of Life, Depressive Disorder therapy, Exercise Therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: To describe the use of exercise when treating depression in elders and to discuss the data supporting the relationship between increased physical activity and decreased depression., Data Sources: Extensive review of recent scientific literature, both medical and gerontological in content., Conclusions: Increasing physical activity markedly reduces depressive symptoms and is a safe adjunct or alternative to medication therapy., Implications for Practice: Exercise has numerous physical and psychological benefits to patients. Physical activity should be recommended to all patients of all ages.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. Regulation of milk lipid formation and secretion in the mouse mammary gland.
- Author
-
McManaman JL, Palmer CA, Anderson S, Schwertfeger K, and Neville MC
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic physiology, Humans, Mammary Glands, Human enzymology, Mammary Glands, Human metabolism, Mice, Milk chemistry, Pregnancy, Species Specificity, Xanthine Oxidase metabolism, Lactation metabolism, Lipid Metabolism, Mammary Glands, Animal enzymology, Mammary Glands, Animal metabolism, Milk metabolism
- Abstract
Cytosolic lipid droplets (CLDs), the immediate precursors of milk lipids in lactating animals, undergo cell-specific changes in their formation and intracellular distribution during mammary gland differentiation. Cell biological studies indicate that CLD formation in mammary epithelial cells is regulated in part by AKT-dependent increases in glucose uptake. Proteomic studies show that CLDs from lactating mammary epithelial cells possess a distinct protein composition enriched in molecules involved in their secretion and intracellular transport. CLD secretion is dependent on lactation and requires the purine catabolic enzyme xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR). Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy of XOR in lactating and nonlactating mammary glands and biochemical analysis of secreted CLDs link the secretion process to the formation of a stable tripartite complex between XOR, adipophilin (ADPH), and butyrophilin (Btn). Together these studies provide a molecular and cellular framework for understanding the process of milk lipid formation.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. The nursing shortage: an update for occupational health nurses.
- Author
-
Palmer C
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Attitude of Health Personnel, Career Choice, Forecasting, Humans, Job Satisfaction, Needs Assessment, Nursing Staff education, Nursing Staff psychology, Nursing Staff trends, Personnel Selection, Personnel Turnover, Salaries and Fringe Benefits, United States, Workforce, Nursing Staff supply & distribution, Occupational Health Nursing trends, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling organization & administration
- Abstract
Nursing is about to realize the worst shortage in history at the same time the first baby boomers are increasing the need for health care. A large component of the current and projected nursing shortage is the aging of the RN work force. Several factors contribute to the aging of the work force, including overall decline in nursing as a chosen profession, the increasing age of nursing graduates, and the aging of the existing RN work force. Job dissatisfaction has been a key issue contributing to the crisis related to recruitment and retention of nurses. Inadequate staffing, heavy workloads, flat salaries, and increased use of mandatory overtime are primary issues related to job dissatisfaction. Job dissatisfaction issues are key components of retention of nursing personnel. Occupational health nurses are experts in dealing with issues of ergonomic challenges, workplace violence, mandatory overtime, stress related injuries, and high stress associated with nursing.
- Published
- 2003
169. Transgenic mice expressing recombinant human protein C exhibit defects in lactation and impaired mammary gland development.
- Author
-
Palmer CA, Lubon H, and McManaman JL
- Subjects
- Animals, Epithelial Cells ultrastructure, Female, Homozygote, Humans, Mammary Glands, Animal cytology, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Milk chemistry, Milk metabolism, Phenotype, Protein C adverse effects, Protein C genetics, Recombinant Proteins biosynthesis, Recombinant Proteins genetics, Transgenes, Lactation, Mammary Glands, Animal growth & development, Protein C biosynthesis
- Abstract
To determine if the production of recombinant human protein C (rHPC) could be increased in milk, we created two lines of mice homozygous for the mouse whey acidic protein (WAP)/human protein C (HPC) transgene. Females of both lines had normal growth, activity and fertility, but failed to lactate normally and were unable to raise litters. Histological analyses of mammary glands from lactating homozygous females showed barely distended alveoli filled with dense-staining milk. Epithelial cells within these alveoli had distinct, centrally located nuclei and contained intracellular lipid droplets. Hemizygous animals derived from these lines were able to lactate and raised normal sized litters. Northern blot analysis showed that the 6.4 homozygous (6.4H) line expressed the transgene at higher levels then corresponding hemizygous (6.4) animals, but the 4.2 homozygous (4.2H) line expressed the transgene at lower levels than the 4.2 hemizygous line. The 6.4H line also had increased rHPC levels in the milk as revealed by western blot analysis. The 4.2H, 6.4, and 6.4H lines showed decreased and/or delayed expression of WAP, beta-casein, and alpha-lactalbumin mRNA's compared to wild type animals during lactogenesis. The 4.2 line showed decreased mRNA expression for beta-casein and alpha-lactalbumin, but normal or higher expression of WAP during lactogenesis. Elevated levels of some proteins were detected in the milk of transgenic mice. From these results, it is concluded that expression of rHPC induced a lactational phenotype that involves abnormal morphological, biochemical, and functional differentiation of mammary epithelial cells. However, the induction of this phenotype does not appear to be directly related to the level of rHPC mRNA expression, thus suggesting that the basis of this phenotype may involve secondary, rather than primary, effects of rHPC on mammary gland development.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. Dietary determinants of dental caries and dietary recommendations for preschool children.
- Author
-
Tinanoff N and Palmer CA
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Counseling, Dental Caries microbiology, Dental Caries Susceptibility, Dietary Sucrose adverse effects, Disease Progression, Food, Humans, Infant, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Infant, Newborn, Risk Assessment, Child Nutrition Sciences education, Dental Caries etiology, Diet, Nutrition Policy
- Abstract
Objectives: The purpose of this review, commissioned by the Administration for Children and Families, the Health Resources and Services Administration, the Health Care Financing Administration, and the Department of Agriculture's Food and Nutrition Service, was to update the evidence of the dietary factors that affect dental caries, and subsequently formulate dietary recommendations for preschool children based on principles of cariology., Methods: Literature on the dental caries process, dietary factors affecting dental caries initiation and progression, nutrition education and counseling were reviewed and synthesized. Dietary guidelines for children at various ages were then constructed based on the review., Results: Dental caries in preschool children is due to a combination of factors, including colonization of teeth with cariogenic bacteria, type of foods and frequency of exposure of these foods to the cariogenic bacteria, and susceptible teeth. Caries risk is greatest if sugars are consumed at high frequency and are in a form that is retained in the mouth for long periods. Sucrose is the most cariogenic sugar because it can form glucan that enables firm bacterial adhesion to teeth and limits diffusion of acid and buffers in the plaque. There is emerging interest in the effects of tooth development and its role in the future dental caries risk of the child., Conclusions: Nutrition education and counseling for the purposes of reducing caries in children is aimed at teaching parents the importance of reducing high frequency exposures to obvious and hidden sugars. Guidelines include: avoiding frequent consumption of juice or other sugar containing drinks in bottle or sippy cup; discouraging the behavior of a child sleeping with a bottle; promoting non-cariogenic foods for snacks; fostering eating patterns consistent with Food Guide Pyramid; limiting cariogenic foods to mealtimes; rapidly clearing cariogenic foods from the child's oral cavity either by tooth brushing or by consumption of protective foods; and restricting sugar containing snacks that are slowly eaten (e.g., candy, cough drops, lollipops, suckers). Along with nutritional factors, a comprehensive approach to preventing dental caries in preschool children must include improved general dietary habits, good oral hygiene, appropriate use of fluorides, and access to preventive and restorative dental care.
- Published
- 2003
171. Influence of soil on fecal indicator organisms in a tidally influenced subtropical environment.
- Author
-
Desmarais TR, Solo-Gabriele HM, and Palmer CJ
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Clostridium perfringens isolation & purification, Colony Count, Microbial, Enterococcus isolation & purification, Escherichia coli isolation & purification, Geologic Sediments microbiology, Bacteria isolation & purification, Feces microbiology, Fresh Water microbiology, Soil analysis, Soil Microbiology, Tropical Climate
- Abstract
The potential regrowth of fecal indicator bacteria released into coastal environments in recreational water bodies has been of concern, especially in tropical and subtropical areas where the number of these bacteria can be artificially elevated beyond that from fecal impacts alone. The task of determining the factors that influence indicator bacterial regrowth was addressed though a series of field sampling and laboratory experiments using in situ densities of Escherichia coli, enterococci, and Clostridium perfringens in river water, sediment, and soil. Field sampling efforts included the collection of surface sediments along the cross section of a riverbank, a 20-cm-deep soil core, and additional surface soils from remote locations. In addition to field sampling, two types of laboratory experiments were conducted. The first experiment investigated the survival of bacteria already present in river water with the addition of sterile and unsterile sediment. The second experiment was designed to simulate the wetting and drying effects due to tidal cycles. The results from the sampling study found elevated numbers of E. coli and C. perfringens in surficial sediments along the riverbank near the edge of the water. C. perfringens was found in high numbers in the subsurface samples obtained from the soil core. Results from laboratory experiments revealed a significant amount of regrowth for enterococci and E. coli with the simulation of tides and addition of sterile sediment. Regrowth was not observed for C. perfringens. This study demonstrates the need to further evaluate the characteristics of indicator microbes within tropical and subtropical water systems where natural vegetation, soil embankments, and long-term sediment accumulation are present. In such areas, the use of traditional indicator microbes to regulate recreational uses of a water body may not be appropriate.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.