Laser-assisted uvulopalatoplasty (LAUP) is an outpatient staged surgical procedure for the treatment of snoring. Each patient undergoes a series of procedures with the end point being patient and bed partner satisfaction in most cases. The purpose of this study was to objectively evaluate the frequency, pattern, and volume of snoring in patients prior to and following each LAUP procedure. A sonographic device, SNAP, which records oronasal respiration, was used to assess patients at home. A digital analysis of the frequency, pattern, and volume was then performed. Twenty-seven patients have been completely evaluated with this recording device. The findings demonstrate that the LAUP procedure alters the snoring sound. The maximum, average, and velum-like respiratory noise loudness all showed a statistically significant decrease when comparing the preoperative snoring to the final recording after treatment was completed. In addition, the fundamental frequency of the snoring increased significantly after each LAUP procedure. No change was seen in the snoring index following treatment. These objective results correlated well with the subjective responses of the patients and their bed partners. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the LAUP procedure alters snoring in a favorable manner by both objective data and subjective accounts.
This paper reviews extant evidence and offers a conceptual framework for the investigation of complex dynamics among human population growth, environmental degradation, poverty, and climate change. The paper introduces theories relating to population growth, environmental degradation, the impact on human well-being, and potential relations with climate change. Poverty is discussed in detail as both a contributing factor to and consequence of population growth and environmental change. The empirical literature on land cover change and environmental change in coastal and marine resources and potential relations with climate change are examined. Despite notable limitations to current knowledge on links among population growth, ecosystems, climate, and poverty, implications for further research and policy application are rich.
Historically, Guatemalans have suffered high rates of poverty and malnutrition while nearly ten percent of their population resides abroad. Many Guatemalan parents use economic migration, mainly international migration to the United States, as a means to improve the human capital prospects of their children. However, as this investigation shows, the timing of migration events in relation to left-behind children’s ages has important, often negative and likely permanent, repercussions on the physical development of their children. To illustrate these dynamics, this investigation uses an instrumental variables framework to disentangle the countervailing effects of Guatemalan fathers’ absences due to migration from concomitant remittances on left-behind children’s growth outcomes. Based on national-level data collected in 2000, the investigation reveals that the international migration of a father in the previous year is correlated with a 22.1% lower length/height-for-age z-score for the average left-behind child aged ≤ 3. In contrast, the receipt of remittance income has no influence on the physical stature of a child, which may indicate that migrant fathers with young children are not able to achieve economic success soon enough during their ventures abroad to fully ameliorate the harmful effects caused by their absences.
International migration impacts origin regions in many ways. As examples, remittances from distant migrants may alter consumption patterns within sending communities, while exposure to different cultural norms may alter other behaviors. This paper combines these insights to offer a unique lens on migration’s environmental impact. From an environmental perspective, we ask the following question: is the likely rise in consumption brought about by remittances counterbalanced by a reduction in fertility in migrant households following exposure to lower fertility cultures? Based on ethnographic case studies in two western highland Guatemalan communities, we argue that the near-term rise in consumption due to remittances is not counterbalanced by rapid decline in migrant household fertility. However, over time, the environmental cost of consumption may be mitigated at the community level through diffusion of contraception and family planning norms yielding lower family size.
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