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Institution

University of the Philippines

EducationQuezon City, Philippines
About: University of the Philippines is a education organization based out in Quezon City, Philippines. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 4589 authors who have published 4437 publications receiving 114846 citations. The organization is also known as: UP.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present issues in the conservation of the rice terraces and share information on current initiatives to resolve these issues as identified by the Ifugao who are facilitating conservation work.
Abstract: The outstanding natural and cultural value of the Ifugao rice terraces has generated attention and interventions that have directly and indirectly subjected the landscape to social, cultural, economic and environmental pressure. To some extent, they have also altered the perception of the local people on their heritage value and have generated an ambivalent attitude on external impositions, especially when these become an impediment to the fulfilment of their perceived needs. One important factor that has not been considered in past conservation attempts is the people's aversion to foreign restrictions. The Ifugao hierarchy of heritage values is another factor that has not been fully grasped. However, since its endangered listing in 2001, these factors have been taken into account through a conservation approach that puts premium on local wisdom and fostering cooperation among the Ifugao and other stakeholders. The approach is a work in progress, mobilised by a group of a local-based civil society organisation gradually spawning creativity and cooperation among the present generation of Ifugao stakeholders. This article presents issues in the conservation of the rice terraces and shares information on current initiatives to resolve these issues as identified by the Ifugao who are facilitating conservation work. The objective of this article is not to render judgment on failed conservation interventions in the past as a result of recognition, but to inform the outside world about the realities of managing a protected living landscape that also happens to be the enclave of an indigenous community, with the hope of generating improved approaches in the conservation of other sites of similar value.

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nyctalus plancyi is the first mammal species documented to have colonized the main, oceanic body of the Philippines from the north (i.e., Taiwan or mainland China), rather than from the south (Borneo, Sulawesi, or New Guinea).
Abstract: We report the first records of Nyctalus plancyi from the Philippines, on the basis of three specimens taken in high-elevation mossy forest in the Central Cordillera of northern Luzon. We also report three new specimens of Falsistrellus petersi in the same areas, previously a poorly known species within the Philippines, and provide the first genetic data on the phylogenetic position of the genus. Analysis of sequence data from the mitochondrial gene cytochrome b shows ca. 4% divergence of the Philippine N. plancyi from a sample from China. Combined sequence data from cytochrome b and the nuclear gene RAG2 confirm that N. plancyi is related to Pipistrellus. They further show that F. petersi is related to Hypsugo and Vespertilio, and Philetor brachypterus is related to Tylonycteris, with all of these taxa being members of the Vespertilionini, not the Pipistrellini. Nyctalus plancyi is the first mammal species documented to have colonized the main, oceanic body of the Philippines from the north (i.e., Taiwan or mainland China), rather than from the south (Borneo, Sulawesi, or New Guinea).

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mediation effects indicate that individuals with high self-control are more likely to enact healthy intentions and inhibit unhealthy intentions, but findings were restricted to few behaviours.
Abstract: Background: We examined effects of trait self-control, constructs from social cognition theories, and intentions on health behaviours. Trait self-control was expected to predict health behaviour indirectly through theory constructs and intentions. Trait self-control was also predicted to moderate the intention–behaviour relationship. Methods: Proposed effects were tested in six datasets for ten health-related behaviours from studies adopting prospective designs. Participants (N = 3,249) completed measures of constructs from social cognition theories and self-control at an initial time point and self-reported their behaviour at follow-up. Results: Results revealed indirect effects of self-control on behaviour through social cognition constructs and intentions for eight behaviours: eating fruit and vegetables, avoiding fast food, dietary restrictions, binge drinking, physical activity, walking, out-of-school physical activity, and pre-drinking. Self-control moderated the intention–behaviour relationship in four behaviours: dietary restriction, and alcohol-related behaviours. Conclusions: Mediation effects suggest that individuals with high self-control are more likely to hold beliefs and intentions to participate in future health behaviour, and more likely to act. Moderation effects indicate that individuals with high self-control are more likely to enact healthy intentions and inhibit unhealthy intentions, but findings were restricted to few behaviours. Training self-control and managing contingencies that derail goal-directed action may be effective intervention strategies.

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that Asian postmenopausal women at increased risk of osteoporotic fractures showed a greater propensity to remain on raloxifene compared with bisphosphonate and exhibited lower discontinuation rates and higher treatment satisfaction.
Abstract: We evaluated adherence with raloxifene therapy compared with daily bisphosphonate in Asian postmenopausal women at increased risk of osteoporotic fractures. In this 12-month observational study conducted in Asia (Hong Kong, Malaysia, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan), 984 postmenopausal women (aged 55 years or older) were treated with raloxifene 60 mg/day (n = 707; 72%) or daily bisphosphonate (alendronate 10 mg/day; n = 206; 21%, or risedronate 5 mg/day; n = 71; 7%) during their normal course of care. Patients were assessed at baseline, 6, and 12 months. Baseline characteristics (including age, race, education, menopausal status, and baseline fractures) were comparable between the raloxifene and bisphosphonate groups. More women on raloxifene completed the study compared with those on bisphosphonate (50.2% versus 37.5%; P < 0.001). Patients also took raloxifene for a longer period than bisphosphonate (median, 356 versus 348 days; P = 0.011). Compared with those taking bisphosphonate, significantly fewer patients taking raloxifene discontinued the study because of stopping treatment (5.7% versus 10.1%, P = 0.017) or changing treatment (2.8% versus 9.7%, P < 0.001). Inconvenient dosing was reported as a primary reason for discontinuation due to stopping or changing treatment in 19 (6.9%) bisphosphonate patients compared with 0 raloxifene patients. The percentage of patients who had consumed 80% or more of their study medication was similar for raloxifene patients (48–56 weeks; 95.2%) and bisphosphonate patients (48–56 weeks; 93.3%). More raloxifene patients responded that they were satisfied with their medication than bisphosphonate patients at 48–56 weeks (P = 0.002). We concluded that Asian postmenopausal women at increased risk of osteoporotic fractures showed a greater propensity to remain on raloxifene compared with bisphosphonate. The women on raloxifene exhibited lower discontinuation rates and higher treatment satisfaction.

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2007-Copeia
TL;DR: A new species of forest frog from Mt. Malinao, Bicol Peninsula, southern Luzon Island, The Philippines is described, distinguished from congeners by a moderate body size, a distinct color pattern, a unique microhabitat preference, and various spectral and temporal aspects of the advertisement call.
Abstract: We describe a new species of forest frog (genus Platymantis) from Mt. Malinao, Bicol Peninsula, southern Luzon Island, The Philippines. The new species is distinguished from congeners by a moderate body size (28.3–39.1 mm for eight males; 49.8–52.7 in two females), slightly expanded terminal finger and toe disks, a distinct color pattern, a unique microhabitat preference, and various spectral and temporal aspects of the advertisement call. The new species is known only from 950–1160 m above sea level on Mt. Malinao and, as such, accentuates this mountain's unrecognized conservation significance as a minor center of herpetological diversity and endemism on southern Luzon. We compare the new species to all presumably related (phenotypically similar) species of Platymantis from the Philippines and comment on apparent trends in morphological evolution and habitat preference in Philippine members of the genus Platymantis. Current understanding of Platymantis species diversity throughout this topograph...

23 citations


Authors

Showing all 4621 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Barry M. Popkin15775190453
Aldo P. Maggioni13494090242
Michael H. Weisman9246039567
Johan Ärnlöv9138690490
Sheila K. West8949933719
Young Ho Kim82252847681
Min Gu7872922238
Mary L. Marazita7743621909
Kathleen J. Green7419314752
Agnes R. Quisumbing7231118433
Thomas M. Brooks7121533724
Rigoberto C. Advincula6540913632
Carl Abelardo T. Antonio6010666867
Rai S. Kookana6028114520
J. Kevin Baird5618512363
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202312
202243
2021312
2020325
2019324
2018247