Friday, May 12, 2023

Study highlights best practices in buffelgrass control

Peer-Reviewed Publication

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Invasive Plant Science and Management 

IMAGE: THE INVASIVE PLANT SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT JOURNAL FOCUSES ON FUNDAMENTAL AND APPLIED RESEARCH ON INVASIVE PLANT BIOLOGY, ECOLOGY, MANAGEMENT AND RESTORATION OF INVADED NON-CROP AREAS AS WELL AS THE MANY OTHER ASPECTS RELEVANT TO INVASIVE SPECIES, INCLUDING EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES, POLICY ISSUES AND CASE STUDY REPORTS. view more 

CREDIT: WEED SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA

WESTMINSTER, Colorado – 9 May, 2023 – Buffelgrass is a highly invasive perennial found in arid regions around the globe. It is known to reduce the biodiversity of native ecosystems and to increase the frequency and intensity of wildfires.

A team of researchers recently took a close look at efforts to control buffelgrass in Arizona’s Saguaro National Park, located in the Sonoran Desert. An article featured in volume 16, issue 1 of the journal Invasive Plant Science and Management describes what that investigation can tell us about effective control strategies. After examining data from 2011 to 2020, the team found:

  • Chemical treatments with glyphosate had greater or equal effectiveness as compared to mechanical removal methods
  • Early detection and treatment of new areas of buffelgrass invasion can increase treatment effectiveness.
  • Treatments are likely to be more effective if spaced at an interval of less than three years.
  • Steep slopes with south-facing aspects may need more frequent treatment since that environment favors buffelgrass growth.
  • If longer treatment gaps are necessary due to a lack of resources, treatments in areas with less favorable environmental conditions for buffelgrass (e.g., north-facing aspect, low topographic slope) can be cautiously discontinued on a temporary basis.

“Most important of all are long-term monitoring and surveillance,” says Yue M. Li, conservation research scientist at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Arizona. “Low levels of buffelgrass can quickly expand by multiple orders of magnitude.”

To learn more, visit the article “Effectiveness of a decade of treatments to reduce invasive buffelgrass (Pennisetum ciliare)” – available at https://doi.org/10.1017/inp.2023.2.

CABBI researchers chart oilcane microbiome

Further exploration may reveal opportunities to leverage plant-microbial interactions, which could increase oil yields for sustainable bioenergy production

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN INSTITUTE FOR SUSTAINABILITY, ENERGY, AND ENVIRONMENT

Oilcane at Illinois Energy Farm 

IMAGE: OILCANE IS A KEY PLAYER IN BIOFUEL PRODUCTION. UNDERSTANDING ITS INTERACTIONS WITH MICROBES MAY HELP RESEARCHERS DEVELOP MANAGEMENT PRACTICES THAT WILL IMPROVE THE CROP'S RESILIENCE AND PRODUCTIVITY. CREDIT: CABBI view more 

CREDIT: CENTER FOR ADVANCED BIOENERGY AND BIOPRODUCTS INNOVATION (CABBI)

In a groundbreaking new collaboration, scientists at the Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation (CABBI) have identified the types of microbes that associate with engineered oilcane. Further exploration of the oilcane microbiome may reveal opportunities to leverage plant-microbial interactions in these feedstocks, which could increase oil yields for sustainable bioenergy production.

In terms of biomass, sugarcane is the world’s most-produced crop, and it’s not hard to see why; it provides the feedstock for 26% of the world’s bioethanol and 80% of global sugar production.

A particular variety of metabolically engineered sugarcane, called oilcane, accumulates 30 to 400 times more energy-dense triacylglycerol (TAG) than wild type sugarcane, which makes it an ideal crop for biofuel production. By studying this feedstock that diverts natural sugars for oil production, researchers can provide sustainable, plant-based fossil fuel alternatives.

One avenue that researchers are looking into for crop improvement is microbiome management. Understanding the interactions between plants and the microorganisms that live on and in them may help us develop agricultural management practices that can increase crop productivity and resilience. While the sugarcane microbiome has been studied, the oilcane microbiome has historically been uncharted territory.

In a collaboration between CABBI’s Sustainability and Feedstock Production themes, researchers explored the differences in microbiome structure between several oilcane accessions and wild-type sugarcane. Iowa State Postdoctoral Researcher Jihoon Yang and Assistant Professor Adina Howe led the project from the Sustainability side, while University of Florida Biological Scientist Baskaran Kannan and Professor Fredy Altpeter were the Feedstock leads.

The study, published in Biotechnology for Biofuels and Bioproducts, examined the microbiomes of four different oilcane accessions (developed by Altpeter’s team at the University of Florida) in comparison to non-modified sugarcane.

The team planted each of these engineered oilcanes and sugarcane in the same soil. Once grown, they sampled the microbes of the leaves, stems, roots, rhizosphere soils, and bulk soil. Using cutting-edge sequencing and bioinformatics tools, the team found that each accession of oilcane had different microbiomes than the non-modified sugarcane.

Interestingly, the greatest differences in microbiome composition were observed in the oilcane accession that most highly expressed the WRI1 transgene. WRI1 is known as the “master-regulator” of lipid biosynthesis and contributes significant changes in the gene expression profile, which impact the plant’s ability to accumulate energy-dense TAG.

This study showed that metabolically engineered oilcane accessions differing in their transgene expression will associate with distinct microbiomes, suggesting that the metabolic differences in oilcane (compared to sugarcane) play a part in determining the composition of the plant’s microbiome.

The researchers postulate that the oilcane’s association with specific microbes in the soil may benefit the plant in some way, as is often the case in other plants. The team hopes to direct further research toward understanding how microbiomes unique to certain oilcane types interact with their host plants.

“Insight in this area could lead to breakthroughs in oilcane management, in which growers could tailor plant-microbe interactions to improve their crop and oil yields,” Howe said.

Added Altpeter: “Additional research may also lead to a tailored microbiome that could boost agronomic performance and yield from metabolically engineered oilcane.”

CABBI co-authors on this study include Thanwalee Sooksa-nguan (Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University), Sofia Cano-Alfanar (Agronomy Department, University of Florida-IFAS), Hui Liu (Biology Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory), John Shanklin (Biology Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory), and Angela Kent (Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).

Harvested stem of oilcane accessions and non-modified sugarcane grown in a greenhouse. 17T, 1565, 1566, 1569, and CP88-1792 represent the different oilcane accessions and wild-type sugarcane, respectively. Photo courtesy of Thanwalee Sooksa-nguan

CREDIT

Thanwalee Sooksa-nguan

Students positive towards AI, but uncertain about what counts as cheating

Reports and Proceedings

CHALMERS UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY

AI survey 

IMAGE: STUDENTS IN SWEDEN ARE POSITIVE TOWARDS AI, BUT UNCERTAIN ABOUT WHAT COUNTS AS CHEATING. view more 

CREDIT: CHALMERS UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY | MIA HALLERÖD PALMGREN

Students in Sweden are positive towards AI tools such as ChatGPT in education, but 62 percent believe that using chatbots during exams is cheating. However, where the boundary for cheating lies is highly unclear. This is shown in a survey from Chalmers University of Technology, which is the first large-scale study in Europe to investigate students' attitudes towards artificial intelligence in higher education.

I am afraid of AI and what it could mean for the future.
Don't worry so much! Keep up with the development and adapt your teaching for the future.
ChatGPT and similar tools will revolutionise how we learn, and we will be able to come up with amazing things.

These are three out of nearly two thousand optional comments from the survey which almost 6,000 students in Sweden recently participated in.

“The students express strong, diverse, and in many cases emotionally charged opinions,” says Hans Malmström, Professor at the Department of Communication and Learning in Science at Chalmers University of technology. He, together with his colleagues Christian Stöhr and Amy Wanyu Ou, conducted the study.

More than a third use ChatGPT regularly

A majority of the respondents believe that chatbots and AI language tools make them more efficient as students and argue that such tools improve their academic writing and overall language skills. Virtually all the responding students are familiar with ChatGPT, the majority use the tool, and 35 percent use the chatbot regularly.

Lack guidance – opposed a ban

Despite their positive attitude towards AI, many students feel anxious and lack clear guidance on how to use AI in the learning environments they are in. It is simply difficult to know where the boundary for cheating lies. 

“Most students have no idea whether their educational institution has any rules or guidelines for using AI responsibly, and that is of course worrying. At the same time, an overwhelming majority is against a ban on AI in educational contexts,” says Hans Malmström.

No replacement for critical thinking

Many students perceive chatbots as a mentor or teacher that they can ask questions or get help from, for example, with explanations of concepts and summaries of ideas. The dominant attitude is that chatbots should be used as an aid, not replace students' own critical thinking. Or as one student put it: “You should be able to do the same things as the AI, but it should help you do it. You should not use a calculator if you don't know what the plus sign on it does”.

Aid in case of disabilities

Another important aspect that emerged in the survey was that AI serves as an effective aid for people with various disabilities. A student with ADD and dyslexia described how they had spent 20 minutes writing down their answer in the survey and then improved it by inputting the text into ChatGPT: “It’s like being color blind and suddenly being able to see all the beautiful colors”.

Giving students a voice

The researchers have now gathered a wealth of important information and compiled the results in an overview report. 

“We hope and believe that the answers from this survey will give students a voice and the results will thus be an important contribution to our collective understanding of AI and learning,” says Christian Stöhr, Associate Professor at the Department of Communication and Learning in Science at Chalmers.
 

More about the study 

“Chatbots and other AI for learning: A survey on use and views among university students in Sweden” was conducted in the following way: The researchers at Chalmers conducted the survey between 5 April and 5 May, 2023. Students at all universities in Sweden could participate. The survey was distributed through social media and targeted efforts from multiple universities and student organisations. In total, the survey was answered by 5,894 students.


Summary of results:

  • 95 percent of students are familiar with ChatGPT, while awareness of other chatbots is very low.
  • 56 percent are positive about using chatbots in their studies; 35 percent use ChatGTP regularly.
  • 60 percent are opposed to a ban on chatbots, and 77 percent are against a ban on other AI tools (such as Grammarly) in education.
  • More than half of the students do not know if their institution has guidelines for how AI can be used in education; one in four explicitly says that their institution lack such regulations.
  • 62 percent believe that using chatbots during examinations is cheating.
  • Students express some concern about AI development, and there is particular concern over the impact of chatbots on future education.


For more information, please contact: 

Hans Malmström, Professor, Department of Communication and Learning in Science, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, mahans@chalmers.se, +46 70 996 62 16 (Language: Swedish, English)

Christian Stöhr, Associate Professor, Department of Communication and Learning in Science, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, christian.stohr@chalmers.se, +46 31 772 24 48 (Language: Swedish, English, German)

Amy Wanyu Ou, Postdoc, Department of Communication and Learning in Science, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, amywa@chalmers.se +46 31 772 50 12 (Language: English, Chinese)

Rooftop solar panels could power one third of US manufacturing sector

Peer-Reviewed Publication

IOP PUBLISHING

Rooftop solar array 

IMAGE: ARRAY OF TIGHTLY-PACKED SOLAR PANELS IN NEAT ROWS STRETCHING INTO THE DISTANCE. view more 

CREDIT: IOP PUBLISHING

  • Rooftop solar arrays have the potential to meet the annual electricity demands of up to 35% of US manufacturing sectors. 

  • On-site sources of renewable energy currently supply less than 0.1% of industrial electricity demand in the US.  

  • The industrial sector accounts for 38% of global energy consumption and 37% of greenhouse gas emissions. 

  • Despite having the potential to cover 13.6% of the national electricity demand, rooftop solar arrays currently account for just 2.2% of the electricity grid mix.  

Mounted on the rooftops of industrial buildings, solar panels could meet the entire electricity demand of up to 35% of US manufacturers. A new study, published in IOP Publishing’s journal Environmental Research: Sustainability and Infrastructure, investigates the feasibility of meeting these electricity demands through on-site solar panel installations for different regions and manufacturing sectors across the United States.  

The study, led by researchers from Northeastern University, uses the US Department of Energy Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey to compare the potential electricity generation of rooftop solar arrays against the electricity demand per unit of floor space for the average manufacturing building. The results show that rooftop solar arrays could completely fulfil the electricity requirement of 5-35% of US manufacturing sectors depending on the season, with companies producing furniture, textiles, and apparels set to benefit most.  

Dr Matthew Eckelman, Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Northeastern University, says: “Currently, less than 0.1% of the electricity required by the manufacturing sector in the US is generated through renewable, on-site sources. This must change if we are going to meet decarbonisation goals, and in many cases rooftop solar panels are now a feasible option for supplying low-carbon energy.” 

Globally, the industrial sector represents a large contributor to energy usage, and associated greenhouse gas and carbon emissions. As such, manufacturing has become an important target for global decarbonization efforts, with many companies switching to lower-carbon energy sources. The new study shows that rooftop solar panels could now be a feasible option for many manufacturing units due to their large, flat rooftops alongside falling prices, improved efficiencies, and flexibility in installation. Seasonally, manufacturing companies across nearly 40% of US locations could fulfil their electricity needs in the spring and summer time with rooftop solar arrays.  

Eckelman concludes, “Greater policy attention on the feasibility and potential benefits of rooftop solar panel arrays will help industries to achieve renewable energy and greenhouse gas emissions goals. Our research provides an indication of the locations and sectors for which rooftop solar arrays could significantly help manufacturing firms to reach these goals.” 

Researchers identify a brain marker indicating future suicide risk

Changing the connectivity in this brain circuit with stimulation or pharmacotherapies could represent new treatments to reduce suicide risk.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BOSTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, May 12, 2023
Contact: Gina DiGravio, 617-358-7838, ginad@bu.edu

Researchers Identify a Brain Marker Indicating Future Suicide Risk

Changing the connectivity in this brain circuit with stimulation or pharmacotherapies could represent new treatments to reduce suicide risk.

(Boston)—Identifying people at high risk for suicide is critical for applying lifesaving interventions and treatments. However, it is very difficult to identify who is at greatest risk and only modest improvements has been made in identifying high risk people over the last 50 years. One novel way to identify people at high risk of suicide is by investigating and identifying brain markers.

VA and BU researchers have found that the functional connectivity between brain networks involved in cognitive control and self-referential thought processing, differed among veterans with a history of suicide attempts - even before they tried to end their life – when compared to those with similar levels of psychiatric symptoms, but without a suicide history.

“Our study provides evidence that this brain connectivity marker may be identifiable before a suicide attempt, suggesting that it could help identify those at risk for suicide. This could also lead to new treatments that target these brain regions and their underlying functions,” explained corresponding author Audreyana Jagger-Rickels, PhD, principal investigator in the National Center for PTSD at the VA Boston Healthcare System and assistant professor of psychiatry at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine.

Participants in this study included post-9/11 veterans who participated in a longitudinal study at VA Boston Translational Research Center for Traumatic Brain Injury and Stress Disorders (TRACTS) that measures brain, cognitive, physical and psychological health. As a part of this study, veterans completed a “resting” functional MRI scan, which measures intrinsic communication between brain regions and networks. From this dataset, they identified a group of veterans who reported a suicide attempt at a one-to-two-year follow-up assessment but who did not report a suicide attempt at any of their previous assessments.

They then identified another group that had equivalent symptoms of depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but did not report a suicide attempt. Having this comparison group allowed the researchers to isolate brain connectivity associated with suicide attempts, rather than other factors like PTSD and depression. They then examined brain connectivity in the suicide attempt group before and after their suicide attempt and compared them to the matched control group. This comparison revealed that brain connectivity between cognitive control and self-referential processing networks was dysregulated in the suicide attempt group. Critically, this brain connectivity signature of suicide risk was present both before and after the attempt, suggesting that this brain marker may be a novel suicide-specific risk factor.

One of the challenges in suicide risk assessment is that it primarily relies on the method of self-reporting. “As a result, interventions to reduce suicide risk are limited to people who feel comfortable enough to disclose (self-report) suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Identifying measures that do not require self-disclosure of suicidal thoughts and behaviors may help us identify people who are overlooked, and may also aid in the development of novel treatments targeting the brain mechanisms underlying suicidal thoughts and behaviors,” said Jagger-Rickels.

The study also indicated that connectivity of the right amygdala, a brain region important for fear learning and trauma, differed between the suicide attempt group and the matched control group, but only after reporting a suicide attempt. “This suggests that there are brain changes that occur after a suicide attempt, which could be related to the stressors surrounding a suicide attempt or due to the trauma of the suicide attempt itself. This would indicate that suicide attempts themselves impact the brain, which could increase future suicide risk,” she added.

These findings appear online in the Journal of Affective Disorders.

This research was supported by the Department of Veteran s Affairs (VA) Translational Research Center for TBI and Stress Disorders (TRACTS), a VA Rehabilitation Research and Development National Network Center for TBI Research (B3001- C) to RM , a Merit Review Award from the VA Clinical Sciences Research and Development (I01CX001653) to ME , a SPiRE Award from VA Rehabilitation Research and Development (I21RX002737) to ME, a T32 post-doctoral training award from the National Institutes of Health (2T32MH01983621) and a Career Development Award from the VA Clinical Sciences Research and Development (IK1CX002541) to AJR.

 

Gender diversity and brain morphology among adolescents


JAMA Network Open

Peer-Reviewed Publication

JAMA NETWORK

About The Study: The findings of this study of 2,165 adolescents from the Netherlands general population suggest that global brain volumetric measures did not differ between adolescents who reported gender diversity and those who did not. However, these findings further suggest that gender diversity in the general population correlates with specific brain morphologic features in the inferior temporal gyrus among youths who are assigned male at birth. Replication of these findings is necessary to elucidate the potential neurobiological basis of gender diversity in the general population. 

Authors: Akhgar Ghassabian, M.D., Ph.D., of the New York University Grossman School of Medicine in New York, is the corresponding author. 

Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ 

(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.13139)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.13139?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=051223

About JAMA Network Open: JAMA Network Open is an online-only open access general medical journal from the JAMA Network. On weekdays, the journal publishes peer-reviewed clinical research and commentary in more than 40 medical and health subject areas. Every article is free online from the day of publication.

Social conformity in pandemics: How our behaviors spread faster than the virus itself

Researchers have produced a model for disease transmission that factors in the effects of social dynamics, specifically, how masking and social distancing are affected by social norms

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

The behaviors and actions of hypersocial species like humans are heavily influenced by the behaviors and actions of those around them. This was evidenced throughout the COVID-19 pandemic; protective measures such as masking and social distancing varied widely as these behaviors were affected by where people were and who they were around, which in turn affected disease prevalence and transmission rates.

Now, researchers from the School of Arts & Science at the University of Pennsylvania and Queen’s University in Canada have produced a theoretical model for disease transmission that factors in the effects of social dynamics, specifically, how non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPI) like masking and social distancing are affected by social norms.

The research, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences, shows that social conformity creates a type of “stickiness” wherein individuals are reluctant to change their NPI usage if it differs from what others are doing.

“Generally, when there’s an infectious disease going around, rational actors are uncomfortable taking risks and will try to avoid getting sick, so naturally you’d think that they’d change their behaviors based on these concerns,” says Erol Akçay, associate professor of biology at Penn. “But it turns out populations, and by extension disease transmission rates, are equally, if not more, affected by social norms.”

The researchers aimed to better understand of how the prioritization of risk and social norms affects the adoption of NPIs during a pandemic.

To achieve this, they developed a model that considers the risk of infection, the cost of NPIs, and the social cost of deviating from NPI-usage norms. The model describes threshold dynamics in the number of individuals needed to support a behavioral change, which creates “tipping points” in the adoption of NPI behaviors where a small change in the disease prevalence can cause a significant shift in population behavior.

“Our model found that small changes in certain factors like the effectiveness of NPIs, transmission rate, and costs of interventions can lead to large changes in rate of disease spread, or attack rate,” Akçay says.

He explains that this is in part due to people being conformist and therefore slow to adopt new behaviors such as mask wearing, until the disease reaches levels so high that the risk perception overrides conformity, when the population tips over. Conformism works the other way, too; the new behavior persists longer in the population than it would if people cared only about their individual risks and costs. This creates distinct infection and NPI behavior waves.

As variables such as the cost or effectiveness of the NPI behavior change, it can create more or fewer waves of change and lead to more or fewer people infected at the end of the epidemic. The researchers found that the attack rate did not increase as smoothly as anticipated; rather, it had a more “sawtooth look” when graphed. These results highlight a complex relationship between social norms and disease spread.

“It increases and then decreases, over and over, and we noticed this trend in other parameters, even the transmission rate,” says first author Bryce Morsky, who started working on this project as a postdoctoral researcher in Akçay’s lab and is now an assistant professor at Florida State University.

The team, which also includes Felicia Magpantay and Troy Day from Queen’s University in Canada, explains that when they ran an epidemiological simulation with no NPI use at the start of the epidemic they had a predictably high attack rate, and eventually, individuals began NPI usage due to fears of infection risk.

The onset of NPI usage, however, comes much later when the parameters for the cost of deviating from social norms are set higher “because if nobody’s masking you don’t want to be the first person,” Akçay says.

“So, increasing this parameter leads to a delay in masking, which drives the first wave of the epidemic much higher than it would have been if individuals were reacting to their risk levels. On the other hand, when we ran the simulation with masking and the case numbers started going down, there was a reluctance to stop masking because nobody wanted to be the first person to stop masking, which we referred to as stickiness.”

Morsky explains that the model was initially motivated by some results from a previous study investigating social norms and their effects as it relates to reciprocity behavior, where conformist behavior can induce boom-and-bust cycles in cooperative communities. Here, conformist behavior makes epidemic waves inherently more distinct than they would have been otherwise, even in the absence of external factors such as seasonal variation in transmission rates.

Akçay says that information on these trends and social dynamics can be useful for policymakers weighing decisions about responding to human behavior. And the researchers want to investigate how the interplay of different populations and socioeconomic backgrounds affects the social behaviors of disease intervention.

Erol Akçay is an associate professor in the University of Pennsylvania School of Arts & Sciences’ Department of Biology.

Bryce Morsky was a postdoc at Penn and is now an assistant professor at Florida State University.

The work was supported by the One Society Network funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation.

Risk of long COVID higher for people living in most deprived areas

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON

New research led by the universities of Southampton and Oxford has found that the risk of long COVID is strongly associated with area-level deprivation, with the odds of having long COVID 46 percent higher for people from the most deprived areas, compared to those in the least deprived areas.

Published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, the study analysed over 200,000 working-age adults and is the first to quantify the association between long COVID and socioeconomic status across a range of occupation sectors.

Analysing data from the Office for National Statistics COVID-19 Infection Survey, the researchers found that females had a higher risk of long COVID, with the risk of long COVID in females in the least deprived areas comparable to that in males in the most deprived areas.

People living in the most deprived areas and working in the healthcare and education sectors had the highest risk of long COVID compared to the least deprived areas. There was no significant association between the risk of long COVID and the most and least deprived areas for people working in the manufacturing and construction sectors.

Lead researcher Dr Nazrul Islam, of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Southampton and Nuffield Department of Population Health at the University of Oxford, said: “Although certain occupational groups, especially frontline and essential workers, have been unequally affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, studies on long COVID and occupation are sparse.

“Our findings are consistent with pre-pandemic research on other health conditions, suggesting that workers with lower socioeconomic status have poorer health outcomes and higher premature mortality than those with higher socioeconomic position but a similar occupation. However, the socioeconomic inequality may vary considerably by occupation groups.”

According to the researchers, the study indicates the need for a diverse range of public health interventions after recovery from COVID-19 across multiple intersecting social dimensions. Future health policy recommendations, they say, should incorporate the multiple dimensions of inequality, such as sex, deprivation and occupation when considering the treatment and management of long COVID.

Dr Islam added: “The inequalities shown in this study show that such an approach can provide more precise identification of risks and be relevant to other diseases and beyond the pandemic.

“These findings will help inform health policy in identifying the most vulnerable sub-groups of populations so that more focused efforts are given, and proportional allocation of resources are implemented, to facilitate the reduction of health inequalities.”

Ends


Notes to editors

  1. Socioeconomic inequalities of long COVID: a retrospective population-based cohort study in the United Kingdom (DOI: 10.1177/01410768231168377) by Sharmin Shabnam, Cameron Razieh, Hajira Dambha-Miller, Tom Yates, Clare Gillies, Yogini V Chudasama, Manish Pareek, Amitava Banerjee, Ichiro Kawachi, Ben Lacey, Eva JA Morris, Martin White, Francesco Zaccardi, Kamlesh Khunti and Nazrul Islam will be published by the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine at 00:05 hrs (UK time) on Thursday 11 May 2023. The link for the full text of the paper when published will be: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/01410768231166377
     
  2. For further information or a copy of the paper please contact:

    Peter Franklin, Media Relations, University of Southampton +44 23 8059 3212 or press@soton.ac.uk

    Rosalind Dewar Media Office, Royal Society of Medicine +44 (0) 1580 764713 M: +44 (0) 7785 182732 media@rsm.ac.uk
     
  3. The Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine (JRSM) is a leading voice in the UK and internationally for medicine and healthcare. Published continuously since 1809, JRSM features scholarly comment and clinical research. JRSM is editorially independent from the Royal Society of Medicine, and its editor is Professor Kamran Abbasi. JRSM is a journal of the Royal Society of Medicine and it is published by SAGE Publishing. Sara Miller McCune founded SAGE Publishing in 1965 to support the dissemination of usable knowledge and educate a global community. SAGE is a leading international provider of innovative, high-quality content publishing more than 1000 journals and over 800 new books each year, spanning a wide range of subject areas. A growing selection of library products includes archives, data, case studies and video. SAGE remains majority owned by our founder and after her lifetime will become owned by a charitable trust that secures the company’s continued independence. Principal offices are located in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore, Washington DC and Melbourne. www.sagepublishing.com
     
  4. The University of Southampton drives original thinking, turns knowledge into action and impact, and creates solutions to the world’s challenges. We are among the top 100 institutions globally (QS World University Rankings 2023). Our academics are leaders in their fields, forging links with high-profile international businesses and organisations, and inspiring a 22,000-strong community of exceptional students, from over 135 countries worldwide. Through our high-quality education, the University helps students on a journey of discovery to realise their potential and join our global network of over 200,000 alumni. www.southampton.ac.uk