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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: u.s. science + future workforce + science  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Troubling Trend: Addressing the Widening Engineering Gap
IndustryWeek - May 11, 2008
Job prospects are healthy for today's science and engineering students. According to US Bureau of Labor Statistics projections, students can expect ...
Massey University Graduation ceremony
Scoop.co.nz (press release), New Zealand - May 11, 2008
He set up a strategy for that industry to improve its quality through science, through testing and by training the workforce. He wanted to create economies ...
'Green' fix urged for Ontario's job blues
Toronto Star,  Canada - May 12, 2008
But a broader strategy that links government policy, private sector innovation, labour know-how and environmental science is needed to turn blue-collar jobs ...
Nuclear power: For and against
Manchester Online, UK -
In particular, Manchester University is now one of the leading research centres for nuclear science, while Cumbria is the home to the HQ for the National ...
IBM Launches Effort to Address Shortage of Hispanic Students in ...
CNNMoney.com - May 5, 2008
... rapidly joining our workforce," said US Senator Robert Menendez. "It is important that they have the option to pursue careers in science, technology, ...IBM

Nature.com (subscription)
Making the grade
Nature.com (subscription), UK - May 1, 2008
International testing that is used to predict the grim future of US science and technology is being vastly misinterpreted, say Hal Salzman and Lindsay ...

Space Ref (press release)
Statement by Frederick Tarantino - Senate Hearing on Reauthorizing ...
Space Ref (press release) - May 7, 2008
Reauthorize the Vision for Space Exploration, in concert with a balanced space science program. US space exploration is awe inspiring to Americans and to ...
"Reauthorizing the Vision for Space Authorization" Space Ref (press release)
Senate Subcommittee on Space, Aeronautics and Related Sciences ... Space Ref (press release)
Statement by George Whitesides - Senate Hearing on Reauthorizing ... Space Ref (press release)
all 21 news articles »
Why you need to plan for innovation today
CIO Asia, Singapore -
It's hardly rocket science. Improving these areas are goals for every company. Yet more often than not, the solutions are focused on the present. ...
Teaching technology for life
BurlingtonFreePress.com, VT - May 12, 2008
Forecasts by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Labor predict more than 500000 nano-related jobs over the next 10 years. ...
Technopark to host two modern training facilities
Hindu, India -
Young graduates from Kerala (the main recruitment pool for global businesses) were "very good in science but not so good in expressing themselves in English ...EPA:SX
Source: Google News

[BOOK] Citizen Science: A Study of People, Expertise and Sustainable Development -
A Irwin - 1995 - books.google.com
... OX14 4RN Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada ... different social groups would
like us to do ... working-class technical education; ? that science is now ...

[BOOK] Between Craft and Science: Technical Work in US Settings
SR Barley, JE Orr - 1997 - books.google.com
... craft and science: technical work in US settings/edited by ... paper) I. Industrial
technicians?United States. ... To be sure, science and engineering have attracted ...

[BOOK] Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?: Thinking from Women's Lives -
SG Harding - 1991 - books.google.com
... It is unimaginable to us that we could want to ... development of a black underclass
in the United States? Conventionalists insist that science get full credit for ...

[CITATION] Present positions and future prospects in management science
MC Jackson - Understanding the Proces of Operational Research?Collected …, 1995

Converging science and technology at the nanoscale: opportunities for education and training -
MC Roco - Nature Biotechnology, 2003 - nature.com
... Foundation, 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA. ... The United States
has initiated a multidisciplinary strategy ... is done in the US via direct or ...

[BOOK] Designs on Nature: Science and Democracy in Europe and the United States
S Jasanoff - 2005 - books.google.com
... in Britain, Germany, the United States, and the ... from historians and sociologists
of science, and still ... Second, whereas US biotechnology policy led Europe's in ...

Time for action: science education for an alternative future -
D Hodson - International Journal of Science Education, 2003 - ingentaconnect.com
... Curriculum Study (BSCS) in the United States, and the ... us and them? mentality that
invariably sees ?us? as the ... SCIENCE EDUCATION FOR AN ALTERNATIVE FUTURE ...

Do We Need More Scientists? -
MS Teitelbaum - Support RAND - rand.org
... Instead, many univer- sities in the United States have been ... scientists in large sectors
of the US economy, such ... One might add that many science and engineering ...

[BOOK] … the Future: New Expectations for Undergraduate Education in Science, Mathematics, Engineering, and …
MD George, S Bragg - 1996 - books.google.com
... SME&T education in the United States and better inform ... in the Next Generation of
US Leadership in ... and professional practitioners in science, mathematics, and ...

[BOOK] The New Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies -
M Gibbons - 1994 - books.google.com
... sciences and what this implies for the future of our ... This was truly great fun and
gave us, first hand ... secre- tary Sue Alexander of the Science Policy Research ...

Source: Google Scholar

Review and critique of NASA's elementary and secondary education programs

Given concerns about the future of the U.S. science and technology work force, federal science agencies are increasingly being looked to as a resource for educating students about science, technology, and engineering, and motivating young people to pursue careers in these fields.

NASA'S ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAM: REVIEW AND CRITIQUE, a new congressionally mandated report from the National Research Council, evaluates whether the K-12 program of NASA's Office of Education effectively gets students interested in science, technology, and engineering and gives them in-depth content knowledge. The report also recommends ways to improve the program.

THE REPORT WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE starting at 10 a.m. EST on Tuesday, Dec. 11. Reporters may obtain copies by contacting the Office of News and Public Information, tel. 202-334-2138 or e-mail news@nas.edu.

 

Living longer with obesity means heavier burden for hospitals

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Living longer with obesity can lead to both longer hospital stays and more avoidable trips to the hospital, according to two new studies from Purdue University.

"Americans are overweight, and there are numerous studies that cite the problems of obesity," said Ken Ferraro, a professor of sociology. "However, as the age at which people become obese continues to get younger, we wanted to know how living longer with obesity affects people.

"These findings could motivate young people to reverse the trend with healthy eating and activity and, if so, they may be able to avoid the consequences of chronic obesity."

Ferraro, along with graduate student Markus Schafer, studied how obesity influences hospitalizations by using 20 years of personal health data based on surveys linked to hospital records of more than 4,000 people ages 25-77. The data, from 1971-1992, was part of a federally funded national health and nutrition survey.

"In an economic sense, we have a major problem on our hands in terms of what we would project for today's overweight children and teenagers," said Ferraro, who is director of Purdue's Center on Aging and the Life Course. "In the past, people's weight peaked during late middle age. As more young people become obese, we may anticipate accumulated health problems by the time they are 40. If they are going to be obese for 30, 40 or 50 years, then the health-care costs associated with their adult medical needs will skyrocket. These findings are more evidence that we need to act now to reverse the obesity trend in our younger people. Although it is hard to project the future from these data, the likely scenarios portend a diabetes epidemic."

The study by Schafer and Ferraro examining the length of hospital stays appears in this month's Journal of Health and Social Behavior.

"Other research evaluating obesity and hospitalization has typically assessed short-term effects only, such as whether obese people are more likely to go to the hospital in the course of a year," said Schafer, who is in his third year of the dual-title doctoral program in sociology and gerontology. "We wanted to broaden the scope and look at people's hospitalization experience over time as well as their weight history. Examining body weight at only one point in their life doesn't paint a complete picture of the problem."

The studies' findings suggest that obesity must be addressed at a younger age because the longer a person lives with the disease, the greater the consequences. More than 60 percent of the American population is considered overweight or obese based on the body mass index, which is a formula determined by height and weight. Obesity can lead to chronic conditions, such as heart disease, hypertension and Type 2 diabetes, that can affect the quality of life or lead to morbidity.

Ferraro and Schafer found these obesity complications often were the reasons people were hospitalized. Once in the hospital, however, these illnesses alone were not sufficient to explain the amount of time people were staying, Ferraro said.

This month's study shows that people who lived longer as obese stayed in the hospital from a half to one day more than people of average weight. Obesity directly leads to longer stays because of more complicated care or surgery and because obesity can make it harder to use traditional clinical health assessments and measurements, Schafer said.

"Many surgical procedures become more difficult with a lot of excess fat," he said.

This study examined 20 years of data for 4,574 people ages 44-71 who experienced a total of 12,380 hospitalizations. Routine admissions for childbirth were excluded, as were nursing home admissions.

"One of the surprising findings is that, as we followed people over consecutive hospitalizations, we found that the length of one stay was related to the length of the next," Schafer said. "It was a spillover effect. For people with long-term obesity, hospitalization wasn't enough to slow down the problems; the problems continued from one hospitalization to the next as reflected by a continuation of longer stays.

"This raises other questions, including whether hospitals are effective in the way they deal with long-term obesity."

The researchers also accounted for the role aging plays.

"There is a tricky relationship between age and the duration of obesity because you really can't have a long duration of obesity unless you are older," Schafer said. "We adjusted our findings for age, and we know it's not just age that is contributing to longer hospital stays. Rather living with obesity for years has its own effect."

The second study, which followed 1,023 subjects who experienced a hospitalization that was considered avoidable, appeared in November's Archives of Internal Medicine, published by the American Medical Association. The authors found that obese individuals, ages 25-64, were almost twice as likely to be hospitalized compared to normal-weight subjects. Obese people have the highest likelihood, about 24 percent, of being hospitalized when it could have been avoided.

Appropriate primary care could have prevented these hospitalizations, Ferraro said. However, those who are overweight or obese may not have sought regular care because of embarrassment or other issues related to their weight. This may suggest the need for primary-care providers to be more sensitive to the specific problems obese patients encounter.

 

This research was funded by the National Institute on Aging.

Writer: Amy Patterson Neubert, (765) 494-9723, apatterson@purdue.edu

Sources: Ken Ferraro, (765) 494-4707, ferraro@purdue.edu

Markus Shafer, (765) 494-1631, mhschafe@purdue.edu

Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu

PHOTO CAPTION:
Purdue graduate student Markus Schafer, from left, and Ken Ferraro, a professor of sociology, studied how living longer with obesity can lead to both longer hospital stays and more avoidable trips to the hospital. The first study shows those who live longer as obese stayed in the hospital from half to one day more than people of average weight, and the second study revealed that obese individuals were more likely to be hospitalized when it could have been avoided. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger)

A publication-quality photo is available at http://news.uns.purdue.edu/images/+2007/ferraro-shafer.jpg

 
 
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