213 resultados para Serviço social com a familia - Ribeirão Preto (SP)
Resumo:
Este trabalho teve como objetivo comparar aspectos das trocas gasosas e das relações hídricas foliares da cultivar Fx 3864 e da cultivar RRIM 600, já estabelecida em larga escala no pólo produtor de borracha de São José do Rio Preto, SP. As cultivares foram mantidas em condições de campo, onde foram realizadas medidas das trocas gasosas e do potencial osmótico e hídrico, durante dois meses, dentro dos períodos chuvoso e seco, nos anos de 2001 e 2002. Valores integralizados das trocas gasosas foliares mostraram que, entre os períodos chuvoso e seco, ocorreu um decréscimo da taxa fotossintética de 32% e 22%, da transpiração de 44% e 38% e da condutância estomática de 29% e 17% para RRIM 600 e Fx 3864, respectivamente. Durante o período seco os valores médios de potencial osmótico decresceram 41% para RRIM 600, e 36% para Fx 3864. Os resultados sugerem que o desempenho da cultivar Fx 3864 foi equivalente à de RRIM 600 durante a fase jovem estudada.
Resumo:
The association between early life factors and body mass index (BMI) in adulthood has been demonstrated in developed countries. The aim of the present study was to assess the influence of early life factors (birth weight, gestational age, maternal smoking, and social class) on BMI in young adulthood with adjustment for adult socioeconomic position. A cohort study was carried out in 1978/79 with 6827 mother-child pairs from Ribeirão Preto city, located in the most developed economic area of the country. Biological, economic and social variables and newborn anthropometric measurements were obtained shortly after delivery. In 1996, 1189 males from this cohort, 34.3% of the original male population, were submitted to anthropometric measurements and were asked about their current schooling on the occasion of army recruitment. A multiple linear regression model was applied to determine variables associated with BMI. Mean BMI was 22.7 (95%CI = 22.5-23.0). After adjustment, BMI was 1.22 kg/m² higher among infants born with high birth weight (³4000 g), 1.21 kg/m² higher among individuals of low social class at birth and 0.69 kg/m² higher among individuals whose mothers smoked during pregnancy (P < 0.05). The association between social class at birth and BMI remained statistically significant (P < 0.05) even after adjustment for adult schooling. These findings suggest that early life social influences on BMI were more important and were not reversed by late socioeconomic position. Therefore, prevention of overweight and obesity should focus not only on changes in adult life styles but also on factors such as high birth weight.
Resumo:
Few studies have described factors associated with infant and adolescent mortality since birth. We report here mortality during a 20-year period in a birth cohort from Ribeirão Preto in order to identify birth variables that influenced mortality among infants and children between 10 and 19 years of age, the main causes of death, and the influence of social inequality at birth on death. Mothers were interviewed shortly after delivery. Social, biological and demographic information was collected, and mortality up to 19 years of age was investigated in registry systems. Of the 6748 liveborn singletons born in the municipality from 1978 to 1979, 343 died before or when 19 years of age were completed. Most of the cohort mortality (74.9%) occurred during the first year of life and 19.6% occurred from 10 to 19 years. Mortality was higher among boys. Preterm birth (hazard ratio, HR = 7.94) and low birth weight (HR = 10.15) were strongly associated with infant mortality. Other risk factors for infant mortality were: maternal age ³35 years (HR = 1.74), unskilled manual occupation of family head (HR = 2.47), and for adolescent mortality: unskilled manual occupation of family head (HR = 9.98) and male sex (HR = 6.58). "Perinatal conditions" were the main causes of deaths among infants and "external causes" among adolescents, especially boys. Socioeconomic factors at birth, represented by occupation, influenced adolescent mortality due to external causes, which was higher among boys (7:1). The influence of social inequality at birth on death, measured by occupation, was greater in adolescence than in infancy.