1,511 research outputs found
Can the Relationship between Doctors and Drug Companies Ever Be a Healthy One?
Emma D'Arcy and Ray Moynihan debate whether doctors and drug companies can form healthy alliances or whether these will always be prone to the corrupting influence of drug company money
Origin of non-exponential relaxation in a crystalline ionic conductor: a multi-dimensional 109Ag NMR study
The origin of the non-exponential relaxation of silver ions in the
crystalline ion conductor Ag7P3S11 is analyzed by comparing appropriate
two-time and three-time 109Ag NMR correlation functions. The non-exponentiality
is due to a rate distribution, i.e., dynamic heterogeneities, rather than to an
intrinsic non-exponentiality. Thus, the data give no evidence for the relevance
of correlated back-and-forth jumps on the timescale of the silver relaxation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Feasibility of single-order parameter description of equilibrium viscous liquid dynamics
Molecular dynamics results for the dynamic Prigogine-Defay ratio are
presented for two glass-forming liquids, thus evaluating the experimentally
relevant quantity for testing whether metastable-equilibrium liquid dynamics to
a good approximation are described by a single parameter. For the Kob-Andersen
binary Lennard-Jones mixture as well as for an asymmetric dumbbell model liquid
a single-parameter description works quite well. This is confirmed by
time-domain results where it is found that energy and pressure fluctuations are
strongly correlated on the alpha-time scale in the NVT ensemble; in the NpT
ensemble energy and volume fluctuations similarly correlate strongly.Comment: Phys. Rev. E, in pres
A Prompt to the Web: The Media and Health Information Seeking Behaviour
UNLABELLED: OBJECTIVE, DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: The objective was to investigate media influence on consumers' health related behaviours. A cross-sectional survey of randomly selected adults (18+ years) residing in the Hunter Region of New South Wales Australia was conducted. The sample was selected using a combination of the white pages and random digit dialling. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The proportions of respondents who recalled seeing or hearing about conditions or treatments in the media over the 12 months prior to interview (August 2009-August 2010) and their subsequent health related behaviour. RESULTS: Although most survey participants reported seeking health information from their doctors, around two-thirds of survey participants (551, 68.8%) recalled hearing, seeing or reading about one or more medical conditions (total = 1097 instances) in the mainstream media over the past 12 months. Almost 40% of respondents (307, 38.4%) stated that they had looked for more information about a condition as a result of hearing about it in the media, and most used the internet (269, 87.4%). More than a quarter of respondents (215, 26.9%) indicated that they had asked their doctor about a condition they had heard about in the media. Around half of those who asked their doctor (109, 50.6%) reported that their inquiry resulted in them receiving treatment, of whom almost half (53, 48.3%) reported being prescribed a medicine. CONCLUSION: The survey results show that consumers become aware of medicines through traditional media and then to learn more often turn to the internet where quality of information may be poor
Complex lithium ion dynamics in simulated LiPO3 glass studied by means of multi-time correlation functions
Molecular dynamics simulations are performed to study the lithium jumps in
LiPO3 glass. In particular, we calculate higher-order correlation functions
that probe the positions of single lithium ions at several times. Three-time
correlation functions show that the non-exponential relaxation of the lithium
ions results from both correlated back-and-forth jumps and the existence of
dynamical heterogeneities, i.e., the presence of a broad distribution of jump
rates. A quantitative analysis yields that the contribution of the dynamical
heterogeneities to the non-exponential depopulation of the lithium sites
increases upon cooling. Further, correlated back-and-forth jumps between
neighboring sites are observed for the fast ions of the distribution, but not
for the slow ions and, hence, the back-jump probability depends on the
dynamical state. Four-time correlation functions indicate that an exchange
between fast and slow ions takes place on the timescale of the jumps
themselves, i.e., the dynamical heterogeneities are short-lived. Hence, sites
featuring fast and slow lithium dynamics, respectively, are intimately mixed.
In addition, a backward correlation beyond the first neighbor shell for highly
mobile ions and the presence of long-range dynamical heterogeneities suggest
that fast ion migration occurs along preferential pathways in the glassy
matrix. In the melt, we find no evidence for correlated back-and-forth motions
and dynamical heterogeneities on the length scale of the next-neighbor
distance.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
Telescoped approach to aryl hydroxymethylation in the synthesis of a key pharmaceutical intermediate
An efficient synthetic approach leading to introduction of the hydroxymethyl group to an aryl moiety via combination of the Bouveault formylation and hydride reduction has been optimized using a rational, mechanistic-based approach. This approach enabled telescoping of the two steps into a single efficient process, readily amenable to scaleup
Temperature development of glassy alpha-relaxation dynamics determined by broadband dielectric spectroscopy
We present the temperature dependence of alpha-relaxation times of 13 glass
formers determined from broadband dielectric spectroscopy, also including data
from aging measurements. The data sets partly cover relaxation-time ranges of
up to 16 decades enabling a critical test of the validity of model predictions.
For this purpose, the data are provided for electronic download. Here we employ
these results to test the applicability of the Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann equation
and a recently proposed new approach that was demonstrated to provide superior
fits of a vast collection of viscosity data.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, final version with minor revisions according to
referee demands. The relaxation time data published in the present work can
be downloaded at http://link.aps.org/supplemental/10.1103/PhysRevE.81.05150
Relaxation in the glass-former acetyl salicylic acid studied by deuteron magnetic resonance and dielectric spectroscopy
Supercooled liquid and glassy acetyl salicylic acid was studied using
dielectric spectroscopy and deuteron relaxometry in a wide temperature range.
The supercooled liquid is characterized by major deviations from thermally
activated behavior. In the glass the secondary relaxation exhibits the typical
features of a Johari-Goldstein process. Via measurements of spin-lattice
relaxation times the selectively deuterated methyl group was used as a
sensitive probe of its local environments. There is a large difference in the
mean activation energy in the glass with respect to that in crystalline acetyl
salicylic acid. This can be understood by taking into account the broad energy
barrier distribution in the glass.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
The Economic Resource Receipt of New Mothers
U.S. federal policies do not provide a universal social safety net of economic support for women during pregnancy or the immediate postpartum period but assume that employment and/or marriage will protect families from poverty. Yet even mothers with considerable human and marital capital may experience disruptions in employment, earnings, and family socioeconomic status postbirth. We use the National Survey of Families and Households to examine the economic resources that mothers with children ages 2 and younger receive postbirth, including employment, spouses, extended family and social network support, and public assistance. Results show that many new mothers receive resources postbirth. Marriage or postbirth employment does not protect new mothers and their families from poverty, but education, race, and the receipt of economic supports from social networks do
The vulnerability of public spaces: challenges for UK hospitals under the 'new' terrorist threat
This article considers the challenges for hospitals in the United Kingdom that arise from the threats of mass-casualty terrorism. Whilst much has been written about the role of health care as a rescuer in terrorist attacks and other mass-casualty crises, little has been written about health care as a victim within a mass-emergency setting. Yet, health care is a key component of any nation's contingency planning and an erosion of its capabilities would have a significant impact on the generation of a wider crisis following a mass-casualty event. This article seeks to highlight the nature of the challenges facing elements of UK health care, with a focus on hospitals both as essential contingency responders under the United Kingdom's civil contingencies legislation and as potential victims of terrorism. It seeks to explore the potential gaps that exist between the task demands facing hospitals and the vulnerabilities that exist within them
- …