Organic aerosol (OA) is a dominant component of PM, and accurate knowledge of its sources is critical for identification of cost-effective measures to reduce PM. For accurate source apportionment of OA, we conducted field measurements of organic tracers at three sites (one urban, one suburban, and one forest) in the Tokyo Metropolitan Area and numerical simulations of forward and receptor models. We estimated the source contributions of OA by calculating three receptor models (positive matrix factorization, chemical mass balance, and secondary organic aerosol (SOA)-tracer method) using the ambient concentrations, source profiles, and production yields of OA tracers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and short-term impact of case study training in family nursing care targeting midlevel nursing professionals. The intervention group participated in four 90-minute case study training sessions over 6 months, while the control group participated in two 90-minute lectures. Using primary outcome variables as evaluation indexes, we measured the participants' total scores on the Family Importance in Nursing Care Scale and 4 subitems 3 times (before, immediately after and 1 month after training) from May 2014 to March 2015 and then conducted 2-way repeated-measure analysis of variance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBreast skin temperature was measured during breastfeeding in 11 mothers on a total of 47 occasions, using a Coretemp CM-210 (Terumo Corp, Tokyo, Japan), to examine the changes of breast skin temperature during the course of breastfeeding. In both breasts, the breast skin temperature was significantly higher than the baseline skin temperature from the beginning of suckling up to 5 minutes after completion of suckling, and the mean breast skin temperature before breastfeeding between 4 days and 8 weeks postpartum was significantly higher than that on the first 1 to 2 days postpartum. These results show that the breast skin temperature increases between the first 1 to 2 days and 4 to 5 days postpartum and that breast skin temperature remains high during suckling and up to 5 minutes after the completion of suckling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF