3,234 research outputs found
Healthy People/Healthy Economy: Annual Report Card 2014
This fourth annual Healthy People/Healthy Economy Report Card makes the case once again that health and wellness are essential to the future of the Commonwealth. This Report Card outlines more than a dozen complementary policies and practices to improve health and prevent disease, and it is critical that we adopt them.This year, the Report Card intensifies its focus on health at both ends of the lifespan— young children and seniors. Equally important, it stresses the urgent need for action to improve health at the neighborhood and community level in order to enhance lives and meet the Commonwealth's new goals for controlling health care costs.Massachusetts is now focused squarely on the difficult task of controlling its health care spending. With the enactment of Chapter 224 in 2012, the Commonwealth became the third U.S. state, following Maryland and Vermont, to assert control over all public and private health care spending. Under Chapter 224, the Commonwealth aims to keep the rate of increase in total health care spending equal to or less than the state's economic growth rate. This ambitious goal builds upon the state's achievement of the highest rate of health insurance in the country, with about 96 percent of residents covered. While people who live in Massachusetts are already among the healthiest in the United States, there are many areas for improvement, and making those improvements is key to controlling future costs.Let's look at the record.Massachusetts ranks high among the states on most health indicators. One well-regarded national report, America's Health Rankings, rates Massachusetts as the 4th-healthiest state in the country. Yet measures like these mask important and costly problems.For example, even though the Commonwealth is among the states with the lowest levels of overweight, obesity and illnesses related to unhealthy weight, including Type 2 diabetes, the overall national trend has been consistently negative. In Massachusetts: - The percentage of obese people has doubled since 1990, from approximately 10 percent to more than 20 percent.- The number of cases of diabetes skyrocketed 80 percent between 1995 and 2010.- The cost impact of diabetes, which is estimated to be more than 25,000, compared to 4.7 percent of residents earning more than $75,000 per year).- People who have completed high school or college are much more likely to report their health as good compared to those who have not finished school (Only 6 percent of college graduates characterized their health as fair or poor, compared to nearly 35 percent among those who did not finish high school).
Healthy People/Healthy Economy: A Five-Year Review and Five Priorities for the Future
The first Report Card (2011) identified a dozen priorities for decisive action to improve health in Massachusetts. The need to act was summed up in the title of our first report, The Boston Paradox, published in 2007. As we saw it, Massachusetts had "plenty of health care, but not enough health." The Commonwealth ranked high on many measures of health status and health care compared to the rest of the United States. But it was not immune to risks such as rising rates of overweight, obesity and diabetes that threatened to increase the burden of illness on many families, to drive up health-care costs that were already too high, and to sap the economic vitality of the state.So how have we done? Clear signs have emerged that rates of growth in overweight and obesity in the Massachusetts population at large have stayed flat over the last two to three years. Similarly, overweight and obesity have leveled off among youth in several high-risk communities aided by the Commonwealth's Mass in Motion program. We have seen a widespread effort to promote a "culture of health."A real culture of health requires investment of real dollars in priorities that shape our lifelong health. Here there have been encouraging signs as well.In 2011 we documented a "mismatch": increased health care spending by the Commonwealth came at the expense of investment in crucial long-term determinants of health such as education and public health programs. Since then, the Commonwealth's spending on health care and other health-related priorities has come closer into balance.But it is far too early to give ourselves good grades. First, it remains to be seen whether the unhealthy weight gain in Massachusetts has stopped for good. After all, America's obesity crisis has been more than 30 years in the making. In Massachusetts, rates of overweight, obesity and related conditions such as diabetes remain at historically high levels. Disparities in rates and resulting health risks among African-American and Latino residents remain stubbornly high. There is an especially urgent need for addressing what can be termed "ZIP-code disparities," or huge differences in health between affluent communities and low-income, high-risk urban neighborhoods throughout the state.And while Massachusetts adults are among the nation's healthiest, the state's youth consistently fall in the middle of the pack for risks such as overweight and obesity, with especially troubling numbers for the youngest children. These facts do not bode well for our economic future.It likewise remains to be seen whether the Commonwealth's tentative steps toward a better balance can be sustained in state expenditures on both health care and the determinants of health. The growth in health-care spending in Massachusetts has slowed in the last two to three years, but experts are divided on whether this trend will continue. Meanwhile, recent budget increases for public health and other health-related programs have not come close to making up for cuts in real inflation-adjusted spending suffered over the last 15 years.And so as Governor Baker, the Legislature and community leaders reset the state's agenda, we offer one overarching goal and five specific recommendations for further action. The Commonwealth's overarching goal should be to make steady progress toward a culture of health. To make this a reality, Massachusetts officials need to fully embrace the "health in all policies" approach that many experts and health-care leaders see as essential if we are to improve health, avoid unnecessary spending, and sustain our economic vitality. Nearly every government action, from capital planning and construction to the design or reform of programs, represents an opportunity to contribute to better health for all residents
Nurses\u27 Alumnae Association Bulletin - Volume 6 Number 9
Remember the Relief Fund
Welcome! Miss Childs
Financial Report
Calendar of Coming Events
Lest You Forget!
Attention
Review of the Alumnae Association Meetings
Institutional Staff Nurses\u27 Section
Report of Staff Activities - 1947-1948
Private Duty Section
The White Haven Division
Barton Memorial Division
Remember the Relief Fund
Student Nurses\u27 Activities
Jefferson Scores Again
The Clara Melville Scholarship Fund
Interesting Activities of the Nurses\u27 Home Committee of the Women\u27s Board
Exclusive for Nurses
Changes in the Maternity Division
Gray Lady Musical Therapy Service
Memorial Service Honoring Mrs. Bessie Dobson Altemus
The Blood Donor Center
The Hospital Pharmacy
Medical College News
Remember the Relief Fund
Administrative Staff and Faculty of the School of Nursing
Streptomycin
Changes in the Staff at Jefferson Hospital
Care of the Thoracic Surgical Patient
Miscellaneous Items
Marriages
New Arrivals
Deaths
The Bulletin Committee
Attention, Alumnae
New Addresse
Study of Bc --> J/psi pi, etac pi decays with perturbative QCD approach
The Bc --> J/psi pi, etac pi decays are studied with the perturbative QCD
approach. It is found that form factors and branching ratios are sensitive to
the parameters w, v, f_J/psi and f_etac, where w and v are the parameters of
the charmonium wave functions for Coulomb potential and harmonic oscillator
potential, respectively, f_J/psi and f_etac are the decay constants of the
J/psi and etac mesons, respectively. The large branching ratios and the clear
signals of the final states make the Bc --> J/psi pi, etac pi decays to be the
prospective channels for measurements at the hadron collidersComment: 21 pages, revtex
Theoretical Overview: The New Mesons
After commenting on the state of contemporary hadronic physics and
spectroscopy, I highlight four areas where the action is: searching for the
relevant degrees of freedom, mesons with beauty and charm, chiral symmetry and
the D_{sJ} levels, and X(3872) and the lost tribes of charmonium.Comment: 10 pages, uses jpconf.cls; talk at First Meeting of the APS Topical
Group on Hadronic Physic
Detailed SZ study of 19 LoCuSS galaxy clusters: masses and temperatures out to the virial radius
We present 16-GHz AMI SZ observations of 19 clusters with L_X >7x10^37 W
(h50=1) selected from the LoCuS survey (0.142<z<0.295) and of A1758b, in the
FoV of A1758a. We detect 17 clusters with 5-23sigma peak surface brightnesses.
Cluster parameters are obtained using a Bayesian cluster analysis. We fit
isothermal beta-models to our data and assume the clusters are virialized (with
all the kinetic energy in gas internal energy). Our gas temperature, T_AMI, is
derived from AMI SZ data, not from X-ray spectroscopy. Cluster parameters
internal to r500 are derived assuming HSE. We find: (i) Different gNFW
parameterizations yield significantly different parameter degeneracies. (ii)
For h70 = 1, we find the virial radius r200 to be typically 1.6+/-0.1 Mpc and
the total mass M_T(r200) typically to be 2.0-2.5xM_T(r500).(iii) Where we have
found M_T X-ray (X) and weak-lensing (WL) values in the literature, there is
good agreement between WL and AMI estimates (with M_{T,AMI}/M_{T,WL}
=1.2^{+0.2}_{-0.3} and =1.0+/-0.1 for r500 and r200, respectively). In
comparison, most Suzaku/Chandra estimates are higher than for AMI (with
M_{T,X}/M_{T,AMI}=1.7+/-0.2 within r500), particularly for the stronger
mergers.(iv) Comparison of T_AMI to T_X sheds light on high X-ray masses: even
at large r, T_X can substantially exceed T_AMI in mergers. The use of these
higher T_X values will give higher X-ray masses. We stress that large-r T_SZ
and T_X data are scarce and must be increased. (v) Despite the paucity of data,
there is an indication of a relation between merger activity and SZ
ellipticity. (vi) At small radius (but away from any cooling flow) the SZ
signal (and T_AMI) is less sensitive to ICM disturbance than the X-ray signal
(and T_X) and, even at high r, mergers affect n^2-weighted X-ray data more than
n-weighted SZ, implying significant shocking or clumping or both occur even in
the outer parts of mergers.Comment: 45 pages, 33 figures, 13 tables Accepted for publication in MNRA
A Study of Time-Dependent CP-Violating Asymmetries and Flavor Oscillations in Neutral B Decays at the Upsilon(4S)
We present a measurement of time-dependent CP-violating asymmetries in
neutral B meson decays collected with the BABAR detector at the PEP-II
asymmetric-energy B Factory at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. The data
sample consists of 29.7 recorded at the
resonance and 3.9 off-resonance. One of the neutral B mesons,
which are produced in pairs at the , is fully reconstructed in
the CP decay modes , , , () and , or in flavor-eigenstate
modes involving and (). The flavor of the other neutral B meson is tagged at the time of
its decay, mainly with the charge of identified leptons and kaons. The proper
time elapsed between the decays is determined by measuring the distance between
the decay vertices. A maximum-likelihood fit to this flavor eigenstate sample
finds . The value of the asymmetry amplitude is determined from
a simultaneous maximum-likelihood fit to the time-difference distribution of
the flavor-eigenstate sample and about 642 tagged decays in the
CP-eigenstate modes. We find , demonstrating that CP violation exists in the neutral B meson
system. (abridged)Comment: 58 pages, 35 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Measurement of the Branching Fraction for B- --> D0 K*-
We present a measurement of the branching fraction for the decay B- --> D0
K*- using a sample of approximately 86 million BBbar pairs collected by the
BaBar detector from e+e- collisions near the Y(4S) resonance. The D0 is
detected through its decays to K- pi+, K- pi+ pi0 and K- pi+ pi- pi+, and the
K*- through its decay to K0S pi-. We measure the branching fraction to be
B.F.(B- --> D0 K*-)= (6.3 +/- 0.7(stat.) +/- 0.5(syst.)) x 10^{-4}.Comment: 7 pages, 1 postscript figure, submitted to Phys. Rev. D (Rapid
Communications
Measurement of the quasi-elastic axial vector mass in neutrino-oxygen interactions
The weak nucleon axial-vector form factor for quasi-elastic interactions is
determined using neutrino interaction data from the K2K Scintillating Fiber
detector in the neutrino beam at KEK. More than 12,000 events are analyzed, of
which half are charged-current quasi-elastic interactions nu-mu n to mu- p
occurring primarily in oxygen nuclei. We use a relativistic Fermi gas model for
oxygen and assume the form factor is approximately a dipole with one parameter,
the axial vector mass M_A, and fit to the shape of the distribution of the
square of the momentum transfer from the nucleon to the nucleus. Our best fit
result for M_A = 1.20 \pm 0.12 GeV. Furthermore, this analysis includes updated
vector form factors from recent electron scattering experiments and a
discussion of the effects of the nucleon momentum on the shape of the fitted
distributions.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 6 table
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