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Consecutive Steps (consecutive + step)
Selected AbstractsBarriers and facilitators to the utilization of adult mental health services by Australia's Indigenous people: Seeking a way forwardINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, Issue 2 2010Anton Neville Isaacs ABSTRACT Mental disorders are the second leading cause of disease burden among Australia's Indigenous people after cardiovascular disease. Yet Indigenous people do not access mental health services in proportion to their need. This paper explores the barriers and facilitators for Indigenous people seeking mental health services in Australia and identifies key elements in the development and maintenance of partnerships for improved service delivery and future research. The process of seeking help for mental illness has been conceptualized as four consecutive steps starting from recognizing that there is a problem to actually contacting the mental health service. We have attempted to explore the factors affecting each of these stages. While people in the general population experience barriers across all four stages of the process of seeking treatment for a mental disorder, there are many more barriers for Indigenous people at the stage of actually contacting a mental health service. These include a history of racism and discrimination and resultant lack of trust in mainstream services, misunderstandings due to cultural and language differences, and inadequate measures to reduce the stigma associated with mental illness. Further research is required to understand the mental health literacy of Indigenous people, their different perceptions of mental health and well-being, issues around stigma, and the natural history of mental illness among Indigenous people who do not access any form of professional help. Collaborations between mainstream mental health services and Aboriginal organizations have been promoted as a way to conduct research into developing appropriate services for Indigenous people. [source] Heterogeneous Palladium Catalysts for a New One-Pot Chemical Route in the Synthesis of Fragrances Based on the Heck ReactionADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 11-12 2007Maria Jose Climent Abstract The one-pot synthesis of the fragrance 4-(p -methoxyphenyl)butan-2-one, with raspberry scent, has been carried out using palladium on different supports such as magnesium oxide (MgO), hydrotalcite, hydroxyapatite (HA), aluminium oxide (,-Al2O3) and titanium dioxide (TiO2). The first pathway consists of a Heck coupling between 4-methoxyiodoanisole and methyl vinyl ketone followed by hydrogenation. Palladium supported on titanium dioxide showed the best performance for carrying out both consecutive steps giving 4-(p -methoxyphenyl)butan-2-one with high yields and selectivity. The Pd-TiO2 catalyst is more active than a homogeneous palladium complex that is well accepted in the literature as being highly active for performing Heck reactions. [source] A PM3/d specific reaction parameterization for iron atom in the hydrogen abstraction catalyzed by soybean lipoxygenase-1JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2007Ismael Tejero Abstract This paper reports a specific reaction parameter (SRP) PM3/d model for iron that can reproduce the DFT/MM results of the hydrogen abstraction reaction from the C11 position of linoleic acid by the Soybean lipoxygenase-1 enzyme. A suite of nonlinear optimization methods is outlined for semiempirical parameter development based on integrated evolutionary (genetic) and direction set minimization algorithms. The PM3/d-SRP Fe parameters are derived along three consecutive steps. The final parameterization step includes the effect of the whole enzyme in order to get a better quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical description. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2007 [source] Hydrolysis of oxaliplatin,evaluation of the acid dissociation constant for the oxalato monodentate complexJOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, Issue 2 2003Elin Jerremalm Abstract Alkaline hydrolysis of the platinum anticancer drug oxaliplatin gives the oxalato monodentate complex and the dihydrated oxaliplatin complex in two consecutive steps. The acid dissociation constant for the oxalato monodentate intermediate was determined by a kinetic approach. The pKa value was estimated as 7.23. The monodentate intermediate is assumed to rapidly react with endogenous compounds, resulting in a continuous conversion of oxaliplatin via the monodentate form. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmaceutical Association J Pharm Sci 92:436,438, 2003 [source] Fundamental analysis of stocks by two-stage DEAMANAGERIAL AND DECISION ECONOMICS, Issue 5 2004Cristina Abad Fundamental analysis of stocks links financial data to firm value in two consecutive steps: a predictive information link tying current financial data to future earnings, and a valuation link tying future earnings to firm value. At each step, a large number of causal factors have to be factored into the evaluation. To effect these calculations, we propose a new two-stage multi-criteria procedure, drawing on the techniques of data envelopment analysis. At each stage, a piecewise linear efficiency frontier is fitted to the observed data. The procedure is illustrated by a numerical example, analyzing some 30 stocks in the Spanish manufacturing industry in the years 1991,1996. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] X-ray characterization of epi-Ge/Pr2O3/Si(111) layer stacks by pole figures and reciprocal space mappingPHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (A) APPLICATIONS AND MATERIALS SCIENCE, Issue 8 2009Peter Zaumseil Abstract An epi-Ge/Pr2O3/Si(111) layer structure prepared by consecutive steps of epitaxial deposition and annealing is used to demonstrate the possibility of a complex characterization by combination of different X-ray diffraction techniques. Especially pole figure measurements, reciprocal space mapping (RSM) and high resolution (HR) ,/2, scans at selected inclined netplanes were successfully used to determine the in-plane lattice orientation of the layers relative to the substrate, the strain state of all layers and the structural perfection of the epi-Ge film. It was found that the major part of the epi-Ge layer has the same type A stacking orientation as the Si substrate, but about 0.6% is of type B. The Pr2O3 buffer layer exhibits type B only. The strain state of oxide and epi-Ge was determined, and a small difference in the lattice constant of type A and B epi-Ge was found. Microtwins lying in inclined {111} planes were unambiguously identified by pole figure measurements as the dominating structural defects in the epi-Ge layer. They cause a characteristic scattering pattern in reciprocal space maps. The proposed combination of X-ray techniques allows a relatively fast, integral and non-destructive analysis of heteroepitaxial semiconductor oxide semiconductor structures. [source] Brassinosteroid biosynthesis and inactivationPHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM, Issue 4 2006Sunghwa Choe The term brassinosteroids (BRs) refers to the growth-promoting plant steroidal hormones. Various developmental programs including but not limited to cell elongation, stress tolerance, and skoto-/photo-morphogenesis are controlled by subnanomolar concentrations of BRs. Accordingly, BR mutants that are defective in BR biosynthetic or signaling pathways usually display dwarfism. Characterization of numerous BR dwarf mutants isolated from Arabidopsis, pea, tomato, and rice greatly contributed to our understanding of BR biology. Recently, an enzyme that mediates the final step in the BR biosynthetic pathways has been characterized by two different groups. The brassinolide synthases (Cytochrome P450s 85A2 and 85A3) are multifunctional enzymes that catalyze the last three consecutive steps in BR biosynthetic pathways, namely, C-6 hydroxylation, dehydrogenation, and Baeyer-Villiger type oxidation. In addition, many of the previously unknown steps have been genetically characterized. This review aims to summarize the knowledge that has been developed during the last 2,3 years in this field of BR biosynthesis and inactivation research. [source] Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of bifunctional ,-glutamylcysteine synthetase,glutatione synthetase from Streptococcus agalactiaeACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION F (ELECTRONIC), Issue 7 2009Yasunori Nakashima ,-Glutamylcysteine synthetase,glutathione synthetase (,GCS-GS) is a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes two consecutive steps of ATP-dependent peptide formation in glutathione biosynthesis. Streptococcus agalactiae,GCS-GS is a target for the development of potential therapeutic agents. ,GCS-GS was crystallized using the sitting-drop vapour-diffusion method. The crystals grew to dimensions of 0.3 × 0.2 × 0.2,mm under reducing conditions with 5,mM TCEP. X-ray data were collected to 2.8,Å resolution from a tetragonal crystal that belonged to space group I41. [source] |