Health literacy, a more complex concept than knowledge, is a required capacity to obtain, understand, integrate and act on health information [1], in order to enhance individual and community health, which is defined by different levels, according to the autonomy and personal capacitation in decision making [2]. Medium levels of Health literacy in an adolescent population were found in a study conducted in 2013/2014, being higher in sexual and reproductive health and lower in substance use. It was also noticed that the higher levels of health literacy were in the area adolescents refer to have receipt more health information. The health literacy competence with higher scores was communication skills, and the lower scores were in the capacity to analyze factors that influence health. Higher levels were also found in younger teenagers, but in a higher school level, confirming the importance of health education in these age and development stage. Adolescents seek more information in health professionals and parents, being friends more valued as a source information in older adolescents, which enhance the importance of peer education mainly in older adolescents [3]. As a set of competences based on knowledge, health literacy should be developed through education interventions, encompassing the cultural and social context of individuals, since the society, culture and education system where the individual is inserted can define the way the development and enforcement of the health literacy competences [4]. The valued sources of information should be taken into account, as well as needs of information in some topics referred by adolescents in an efficient health education. Schizophrenia is a serious and chronic mental illness which has a profound effect on the health and well-being related with the well-known nature of psychotic symptoms. The exercise has the potential to improve the life of people with schizophrenia improving physical health and alleviating psychiatric symptoms. However, most people with schizophrenia remains sedentary and lack of access to exercise programs are barriers to achieve health benefits. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of exercise on I) the type of intervention in mental health, II) in salivary levels of alpha-amylase and cortisol and serum levels of S100B and BDNF, and on III) the quality of life and selfperception of the physical domain of people with schizophrenia. The sample consisted of 31 females in long-term institutions in the Casa de Saúde Rainha Santa Isabel, with age between 25 and 63, and with diagnosis of schizophrenia according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR). Physical fitness was assessed by the six-minute walk distance test (6MWD). Biological variables were determined by ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay). Psychological variables were assessed using SF-36, PSPP-SCV, RSES and SWLS tests. Walking exercise has a positive impact on physical fitness (6MWD -p = 0.001) and physical components of the psychological test...
Elastoviscoplastic materials present a transition from a gel-like to a liquidlike state induced by shearing: While the first is primarily elastic, the second is predominantly viscous. The point that characterizes this transition is usually known as the yield point, which is associated to critical quantities such as yield stress and/or yield strain. Another characteristic of elastoviscoplastic materials is the transition from linear to nonlinear viscoelasticity. In the current work, a commercial hair gel, which is an elastoviscoplastic material, was tested in two rotational rheometers in order to evaluate these two transition points. Stress oscillatory amplitude sweeps at different frequencies were performed and a Fourier-Transform analysis was applied to the results in order to determine the linear viscoelastic limit. The linear viscoelastic limit stresses and strains at different frequencies were then compared to quantities that are usually associated to the yield point: The extrapolated zero-shear-rate stress obtained from the equilibrium flow curve, the minimum stress required to start up flows in creep experiments, the stress overshoot reached in constant shear rate experiments and the G′-and-G″ crossover stress determined through oscillatory amplitude sweeps. The results showed that the stresses and strains obtained as the linear viscoelastic limits were smaller than the critical quantities associated to the yield point for all evaluated cases. Although the critical quantities depend on the experimental condition, the linear viscoelastic limit strain was remarkably constant. Additionally, the linear viscoelastic limit strain was found to be in the same order of magnitude of the strain that characterizes the onset of plastic behavior in recovery experiments. This suggests that the beginning of the transition from a completely structured state of elastoviscoplastic materials to an unstructured state might be associated to the threshold of nonlinear viscoelasticity.
One of the major problems in waxy crude oil production and transportation is oil gelation that takes place within pipelines as a result of wax crystallization at low temperatures. In such cases, the pressure needed to restart the oil flow in subsea pipelines can be much larger than the usual steady-state pressure, as the temperature in such environment can be as low as 4°C. The literature has shown that not only the temperature itself but also the fluid shear and thermal histories have significant influence on the yield stress of waxy crude oils. This paper investigates the effect of the initial cooling temperature on the waxy crude oil viscosity, gelation temperature, and yield stress. In order to accomplish that, rheological tests were carried out under static and dynamic cooling conditions. The results show that there is a critical range for the initial cooling temperature that provides maximum values for viscosity, gelation temperature, and yield stress. In other words, the highest values of those properties are observed when the cooling started within this temperature range. The effect of a thermal pretreatment usually used to remove light ends was also investigated. In spite of not changing the initial temperature critical range, the yield stress was slightly affected by the thermal treatment. It is worth noting that the yield stress varies from approximately zero to hundreds after dynamic cooling or to thousands after static cooling within the tested range of the initial cooling temperatures.
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