Recent phylogenetic studies of the diatoms indicate that members of the order Thalassiosirales occupy an interesting position in the diatom evolutionary tree. Despite their radial morphology and scaly auxospores, they are consistently recovered in molecular analyses as a member of subdivision Bacillariophytina and a sister clade to non-fultoportulate and non-radial lithodesmioids. This study included 46 species from nine traditionally accepted extant genera, and analyzed 43 nuclear small subunit (SSU) rRNA sequences in parallel with a survey of the variation in fultoportula structure. Three possible scenarios leading to the evolution of the fultoportula are discussed in the context of molecular and morphological similarities between the examined Thalassiosirales and their SSU rRNA sister clade Lithodesmiales. We speculate that the fultoportula might be derived by a modification of either a cribrum in an areola (fultoportula within an areola), or structures similar to marginal ridges now seen in lithodesmioids around a cluster of poroids (fultoportula in a tube), or finally, that the central fultoportula may have an origin different from the marginal fultoportulae. Our data confirm that fultoportula-bearing diatoms constitute a natural phylogenetic group. The families Thalassiosiraceae, Skeletonemaceae, and Stephanodiscaceae and the genus Thalassiosira Cleve were unexpectedly found to be paraphyletic. Further, Cyclotella Kutz. and Stephanodiscus Ehr. may not be closely related and some species of these genera are more closely allied to other species of Thalassiosira. The generitype, T. nordenskioeldii, is embedded within a large poorly structured cluster of species that includes several members of Thalassiosira, Planktoniella sol, Minidiscus trioculatus, and two members of Stephanodiscus. An emendment of the order Lithodesmiales and the family Lauderiaceae are proposed.
Globally, women are at increased vulnerability to HIV due to biological, social, structural, and political reasons. Women living with HIV also experience unique issues related to their medical and social healthcare, which makes a clinical care model specific to their needs worthy of exploration. Furthermore, there is a dearth of research specific to women living with HIV. Research for this population has often been narrowly focused on pregnancy-related issues without considering their complex structural inequalities, social roles, and healthcare and biological needs. For these reasons, we have come together, as researchers, clinicians and community members in Canada, to develop the Canadian HIV Women’s Sexual and Reproductive Health Cohort Study (CHIWOS) to investigate the concept of women-centred HIV care (WCHC) and its impact on the overall, HIV, women’s, mental, sexual, and reproductive health outcomes of women living with HIV. Here, we present the CHIWOS cohort profile, which describes the cohort and presents preliminary findings related to perceived WCHC. CHIWOS is a prospective, observational cohort study of women living with HIV in British Columbia (BC), Ontario, and Quebec. Two additional Canadian provinces, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, will join the cohort in 2018. Using community-based research principles, CHIWOS engages women living with HIV throughout the entire research process meeting the requirements of the ‘Greater Involvement of People living with HIV/AIDS’. Study data are collected through an interviewer-administered questionnaire that uses a web-based platform. From August 2013 to May 2015, a total of 1422 women living with HIV in BC, Ontario, and Quebec were enrolled and completed the baseline visit. Follow-up interviews are being conducted at 18-month intervals. Of the 1422 participants at baseline, 356 were from BC (25%), 713 from Ontario (50%), 353 from Quebec (25%). The median age of the participants at baseline was 43 years (range, 16–74). 22% identified as Indigenous, 30% as African, Caribbean or Black, 41% as Caucasian/White, and 7% as other ethnicities. Overall, 83% of women were taking antiretroviral therapy at the time of the baseline interview and of them, 87% reported an undetectable viral load. Of the 1326 women who received HIV medical care in the previous year and responded to corresponding questions, 57% (95% CI: 54%-60%) perceived that the care they received from their primary HIV doctor had been women-centred. There were provincial and age differences among women who indicated that they received WCHC versus not; women from BC or Ontario were more likely to report WCHC compared to participants in Quebec. They were also more likely to be younger. CHIWOS will be an important tool to develop care models specific for women living with HIV. Moreover, CHIWOS is collecting extensive information on socio-demographics, social determinants of health, psychological factors, and sexual and reproductive health and offers an important platform to answer many relevant research questions for an...
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