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Swain Dahlgaard posted an update 2 days, 17 hours ago
The COVID-19 pandemic has had considerable behavioral health implications globally. One subgroup that may be of particular concern is U.S. veterans, who are susceptible to mental health and substance use concerns. The current study aimed to investigate changes in alcohol use and binge drinking before and during the first year of the pandemic among U.S. veterans, and how pre-pandemic mental health disorders, namely posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and COVID-19-related factors like loneliness, negative reactions to COVID-19, and economic hardship influenced alcohol use trends.
1230 veterans were recruited in February 2020 as part of a larger survey study on veteran health behaviors. Veterans were asked to complete follow-up assessments throughout the pandemic at 6, 9, and 12- months.
Overall, veterans reported a significant decrease in alcohol use (IRR=0.98) and binge drinking (IRR=0.11) However, women, racial/ethnic minority veterans, and those with pre-existing PTSD exhibited smaller decreases in alcohol use and binge drinking and overall higher rates of use compared to men, White veterans, and those without PTSD. Both economic hardship and negative reactions to COVID-19 were associated with greater alcohol and binge drinking whereas loneliness showed a negative association with alcohol use and binge drinking.
Veterans reported decreases in alcohol use and binge drinking throughout the pandemic, with heterogeneity in these outcomes noted for higher risk groups. Special research and clinical attention should be given to the behavioral health care needs of veterans in the post-pandemic period.
Veterans reported decreases in alcohol use and binge drinking throughout the pandemic, with heterogeneity in these outcomes noted for higher risk groups. Special research and clinical attention should be given to the behavioral health care needs of veterans in the post-pandemic period.Uranium in environmental water is usually at trace or ultra-trace levels with high concentrations of background ions so that the detection of uranium often couples with pretreatment processes to lower the detection limit, and improve the selectivity and accuracy of instruments. A simple, green, effective and efficient anion exchange pretreatment method was proposed to favor the determination of low-level uranium in natural environmental water samples. To determine the applicability and obtain the optimum operating parameters, the effects of coprecipitation, pH, contact time, uranium concentration, background ions, eluent and the flow speed on the uranium recovery were investigated. The experimental results showed that the proper addition of saturated Na2CO3 solution for pH adjustment did not lead to uranium loss in natural water samples, and the optimum pH value for adsorption was determined from 6 to 8. The adsorption speed was improved a lot with the employment of a novel silica-supported anion exchange resin, which also showed good linear dependence in the concentration range from less then 0.5 μg/L to 1000 μg/L with high tolerance limits towards common background ions. The optimum eluent was determined as 1 M HNO3, and the optimum flow speeds for adsorption and desorption were about 4.0 and 1.0 mL/min, respectively. Based on these results, a pretreatment process was finally established, which realized the quantitative recovery of uranium from six different natural water samples with the chemical yields exceeding 95% and the enrichment factors about 100 times.Pu distribution coefficient Kd variation was experimentally determined and examined in natural soil samples considering the type of soil, particle size, pH, the concentration of macroelements and organic matter content. This research was carried out with sand, silty sand, peat, clayey sand and clayey loam samples by applying 236Pu tracer in flow-through column tests. Due to relatively short contact time of 0.5-40 h the tests are considered as have not reached equilibrium state and represent the fast-moving contaminants retardation processes closer to field conditions. Every soil sample was fractionated into two particle size fractions ≤0.25 mm and 0.25 ÷ 0.5 mm. Analysis revealed that Kd of Pu is higher for the smaller soil particle fraction (≤0.25 mm). The experimental study with 1.6, 4, 6 and 9 pH tracer solution revealed a tendency of elevated Kd when 4 pH and 6 pH solutions were applied, but obtained Kd values were not correlated with initial soil pH due to high buffering capacity of soils. This study shows a very significant influence (r = 0.98) of organic matter content on the Pu distribution coefficient. The Kd of Pu for the fine fraction of peat soil with high organic matter content (67%) reached maximum values of 6597 L/kg and 6200 L/kg when tracer solution was applied of pH = 4 and pH = 6, respectively. In comparison, the minimum Kd value of 3.9 L/kg was obtained for the coarse silty sand fraction with the lowest organic matter content of 1.3% at tracer pH = 1.6. A statistically reliable high correlations of r = 0.95 and 0.94 were also observed between Kd and specific soil elements Mg and Pb content in soils, respectively. find more The content of Fe in soils was significantly correlated (r = 0.67) with the Kd values of plutonium as well. However, the organic matter content in soils appeared to be the governing factor determining good correlations and causing the highest Kd of Pu values.People diagnosed with schizophrenia and other psychoses demonstrate impaired neuropsychological performance. Their unaffected siblings exhibit mild impairments relative to unrelated controls, suggesting genetic and shared environmental risk for psychosis account for some portion of cognitive impairments observed in cases. However, most sibling studies were conducted early in illness course. Studying cases and unaffected siblings later in life is valuable because diagnostic misclassification is common early in illness, possibly leading to spurious conclusions. This study compared neuropsychological performance of individuals with psychotic disorders (schizophrenia and other psychoses), their unaffected siblings, and controls. Assessments were conducted 20 years after case enrollment in the Suffolk County Mental Health Project, when siblings and controls were added to the protocol. Results showed individuals with schizophrenia and other psychoses performed worse than their matched siblings across domains. Relative to controls, siblings of participants with schizophrenia showed mild deficits in executive function and processing speed, while no significant differences were observed between siblings of those with other psychoses and controls.