70 research outputs found

    Appeals to evidence for the resolution of wicked problems: the origins and mechanisms of evidentiary bias

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    Wicked policy problems are often said to be characterized by their ‘intractability’, whereby appeals to evidence are unable to provide policy resolution. Advocates for ‘Evidence Based Policy’ (EBP) often lament these situations as representing the misuse of evidence for strategic ends, while critical policy studies authors counter that policy decisions are fundamentally about competing values, with the (blind) embrace of technical evidence depoliticizing political decisions. This paper aims to help resolve these conflicts and, in doing so, consider how to address this particular feature of problem wickedness. Specifically the paper delineates two forms of evidentiary bias that drive intractability, each of which is reflected by contrasting positions in the EBP debates: ‘technical bias’ - referring to invalid uses of evidence; and ‘issue bias’ - referring to how pieces of evidence direct policy agendas to particular concerns. Drawing on the fields of policy studies and cognitive psychology, the paper explores the ways in which competing interests and values manifest in these forms of bias, and shape evidence utilization through different mechanisms. The paper presents a conceptual framework reflecting on how the nature of policy problems in terms of their complexity, contestation, and polarization can help identify the potential origins and mechanisms of evidentiary bias leading to intractability in some wicked policy debates. The discussion reflects on whether being better informed about such mechanisms permit future work that may lead to strategies to mitigate or overcome such intractability in the future

    A Highly Automated Computational Method for Modeling of Intracranial Aneurysm Hemodynamics

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    Intracranial aneurysms manifest in a vast variety of morphologies and their growth and rupture risk are subject to patient-specific conditions that are coupled with complex, non-linear effects of hemodynamics. Thus, studies that attempt to understand and correlate rupture risk to aneurysm morphology have to incorporate hemodynamics, and at the same time, address a large enough sample size so as to produce reliable statistical correlations. In order to perform accurate hemodynamic simulations for a large number of aneurysm cases, automated methods to convert medical imaging data to simulation-ready configuration with minimal (or no) human intervention are required. In the present study, we develop a highly-automated method based on the immersed boundary method framework to construct computational models from medical imaging data which is the key idea is the direct use of voxelized contrast information from the 3D angiograms to construct a level-set based computational “mask” for the hemodynamic simulation. Appropriate boundary conditions are provided to the mask and the dynamics of blood flow inside the vessels and aneurysm is simulated by solving the Navier-Stokes equations on the Cartesian grid using the sharp-interface immersed boundary method. The present method does not require body conformal surface/volume mesh generation or other intervention for model clean-up. The viability of the proposed method is demonstrated for a number of distinct aneurysms derived from actual, patient-specific data

    Case Report – Successful Thrombectomy After Critical Resuscitation Following a Cardiac Arrest

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    Sparse evidence exists to support a delayed attempt at thrombectomy after a periprocedural cardiac arrest or acute medical decompensation. This case highlights the presentation of a 23‐year‐old woman with dilated cardiomyopathy, who initially presented with a left middle cerebral artery stroke syndrome, but who had a cardiac arrest in the angiogram suite prior to the procedure starting. After aggressive resuscitation in the critical care unit, repeat imaging showed a persistent perfusion deficit in the left middle cerebral artery territory and she successfully underwent a thrombectomy. The case highlights that critical care efforts, even after a severe initial presentation, and significant resuscitative efforts in the intensive care unit setting, can still lead to a successful thrombectomy, and that eligibility for thrombectomy can be reassessed as the patient stabilizes
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