752 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-ehi-10.1177_11786302221146020 – Supplemental material for Human Health Risk Assessment due to Heavy Metals in Ground and Surface Water and Association of Diseases With Drinking Water Sources: A Study From Maharashtra, India

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-ehi-10.1177_11786302221146020 for Human Health Risk Assessment due to Heavy Metals in Ground and Surface Water and Association of Diseases With Drinking Water Sources: A Study From Maharashtra, India by Govind Mawari, Naresh Kumar, Sayan Sarkar, Arthur L Frank, Mradul Kumar Daga, Mongjam Meghachandra Singh, Tushar Kant Joshi and Ishwar Singh in Environmental Health Insights</p

    Metabolic risk factors and weight gain in people admitted to a psychiatric intensive care unit

    No full text
    David J. Ash, Cherrie A. Galletly, Tushar Singh, Cassandra A. Burton and Tracy Airhttp://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/506091/description#descriptio

    Studies of wintertime storms over the Tushar Mountains of Utah: final report to Utah Department of Natural Resources

    No full text
    March 6, 1986.Supercooled liquid water flux over the Tushar Mountains was estimated from three hour averages of the radiometer and rawinsonde observations. The amount of liquid water represented by this flux over the two-month project was 17,000 acre feet, or about 45 percent of the total annual runoff in the Beaver River watershed

    Supplementary_Materials – Supplemental material for Childhood maltreatment and its mental health consequences among Indian adolescents with a history of child work

    No full text
    Supplemental material, Supplementary_Materials for Childhood maltreatment and its mental health consequences among Indian adolescents with a history of child work by Rakesh Pandey, Shulka Gupta, Aakanksha Upadhyay, Rajendra Prasad Gupta, Meenakshi Shukla, Ramesh Chandra Mishra, Yogesh Kumar Arya, Tushar Singh, Shanta Niraula, Jennifer Yun Fai Lau and Veena Kumari in Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry</p

    SEDIMENT PREDICTION USING ANN BASED MULTILAYER PERCEPTRON (MLP) METHOD FOR HOSHANGABAD, MADHYA PRADESH

    No full text
    Tushar Rathod1, Vikram Singh2, Mukesh Kumar3, Devi Singh 4, Alex Thomas

    Meeting India’s future water needs: policy options

    Full text link
    River basinsWater shortageWater transferGroundwater irrigationWater productivity

    Estimation of Glycogen Content of Nematodes from Ovis Bharal, Aurangabad Region (M.S.), India

    Full text link
    In the present work, focus has been given to understand the mode of carbohydrate metabolism in parasites. The study of glycogen levels furnish the basic information about substrates and their intermediatory metabolites by which it is possible to get fair idea of metabolic pathway in which energy is derived by the nematode parasites. Department of Zoology, Dr.B.A.M.University Aurangabad (M.S.) India* Corresponding Author, Email:  [email protected] Cite This Article As: Tushar Dhondge, Sujeet Jamdar and Baba Jadhav. 2010. Estimation of Glycogen Content of Nematodes from Ovis Bharal, Aurangabad Region (M.S.), India. J. Exp. Sci. 1(2): 18-19

    Barriers and Enablers to Weight Management Programmes for Working Men: A Qualitative Study

    Full text link
    Gender-sensitised weight management programmes have been developed to encourage more men to access support. Whilst these programmes have proved successful for some groups of men, they are not a panacea, and the views of men who have never attended any form of structured weight management programme remain unknown. The aim of this research was to explore the views of such men towards body weight, health, and weight management programmes. Participants were recruited purposefully at their place of work. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 16 adult men with a BMI > 25 who worked in routine manual occupations and had no previous experience of attending a weight management programme. Interviews were analysed using an inductive thematic analysis approach. Interview findings were developed into five themes: "the indestructible breadwinner,""avoidance of feminine behaviour,""the body conscious man,""being one of the lads,"and "doctor knows best."The findings suggest that these men have high levels of body consciousness, value guidance from GPs, have high levels of agency towards lifestyle choices, and wish to preserve their masculinity. The study identified various factors that help explain low participation in weight management programmes for men and potential ways to improve access. Future interventions should include gender sensitisation of resources and providing men with the opportunity to follow self-directed weight management programmes to increase participation. Individual and population-level interventions to address weight management that includes the perceived and actual needs of men working in routine manual occupations are urgently needed to address health inequalities
    corecore