7,793 research outputs found
Benchmark calculations for elastic fermion-dimer scattering
We present continuum and lattice calculations for elastic scattering between
a fermion and a bound dimer in the shallow binding limit. For the continuum
calculation we use the Skorniakov-Ter-Martirosian (STM) integral equation to
determine the scattering length and effective range parameter to high
precision. For the lattice calculation we use the finite-volume method of
L\"uscher. We take into account topological finite-volume corrections to the
dimer binding energy which depend on the momentum of the dimer. After
subtracting these effects, we find from the lattice calculation kappa a_fd =
1.174(9) and kappa r_fd = -0.029(13). These results agree well with the
continuum values kappa a_fd = 1.17907(1) and kappa r_fd = -0.0383(3) obtained
from the STM equation. We discuss applications to cold atomic Fermi gases,
deuteron-neutron scattering in the spin-quartet channel, and lattice
calculations of scattering for nuclei and hadronic molecules at finite volume.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
A feasibility study of signed consent for the collection of patient identifiable information for a national paediatric clinical audit database
Objectives: To investigate the feasibility of obtaining signed consent
for submission of patient identifiable data to a national clinical
audit database and to identify factors influencing the consent process
and its success.
Design: Feasibility study.
Setting: Seven paediatric intensive care units in England.
Participants: Parents/guardians of patients, or patients aged 12-16
years old, approached consecutively over three months for signed
consent for submission of patient identifiable data to the national
clinical audit database the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network
(PICANet).
Main outcome measures: The numbers and proportions of admissions for
which signed consent was given, refused, or not obtained (form not
returned or form partially completed but not signed), by age, sex,
level of deprivation, ethnicity (South Asian or not), paediatric index
of mortality score, length of hospital stay (days in paediatric
intensive care).
Results: One unit did not start and one did not fully implement the
protocol, so analysis excluded these two units. Consent was obtained
for 182 of 422 admissions (43%) (range by unit 9% to 84%). Most
(101/182; 55%) consents were taken by staff nurses. One refusal (0.2%)
was received. Consent rates were significantly better for children who
were more severely ill on admission and for hospital stays of six days
or more, and significantly poorer for children aged 10-14 years. Long
hospital stays and children aged 10-14 years remained significant in a
stepwise regression model of the factors that were significant in the
univariate model.
Conclusion: Systematically obtaining individual signed consent for
sharing patient identifiable information with an externally located
clinical audit database is difficult. Obtaining such consent is
unlikely to be successful unless additional resources are specifically
allocated to training, staff time, and administrative support
Statistical mechanical aspects of joint source-channel coding
An MN-Gallager Code over Galois fields, , based on the Dynamical Block
Posterior probabilities (DBP) for messages with a given set of autocorrelations
is presented with the following main results: (a) for a binary symmetric
channel the threshold, , is extrapolated for infinite messages using the
scaling relation for the median convergence time, ;
(b) a degradation in the threshold is observed as the correlations are
enhanced; (c) for a given set of autocorrelations the performance is enhanced
as is increased; (d) the efficiency of the DBP joint source-channel coding
is slightly better than the standard gzip compression method; (e) for a given
entropy, the performance of the DBP algorithm is a function of the decay of the
correlation function over large distances.Comment: 6 page
Error-correcting code on a cactus: a solvable model
An exact solution to a family of parity check error-correcting codes is
provided by mapping the problem onto a Husimi cactus. The solution obtained in
the thermodynamic limit recovers the replica symmetric theory results and
provides a very good approximation to finite systems of moderate size. The
probability propagation decoding algorithm emerges naturally from the analysis.
A phase transition between decoding success and failure phases is found to
coincide with an information-theoretic upper bound. The method is employed to
compare Gallager and MN codes.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, with minor correction
Development and Pilot Testing of the Eating4two Mobile Phone App to Monitor Gestational Weight Gain
Background: The number of pregnant women with a body mass index (BMI) of 30kg/m2 or more is increasing, which has important implications for antenatal care. Various resource-intensive interventions have attempted to assist women in managing their weight gain during pregnancy with limited success. A mobile phone app has been proposed as a convenient and cost-effective alternative to face-to-face interventions.
Objective: This paper describes the process of developing and pilot testing the Eating4Two app, which aims to provide women with a simple gestational weight gain (GWG) calculator, general dietary information, and the motivation to achieve a healthy weight gain during pregnancy.
Methods: The project involved the development of app components, including a graphing function that allows the user to record their weight throughout the pregnancy and to receive real-time feedback on weight gain progress and general information on antenatal nutrition. Stakeholder consultation was used to inform development. The app was pilot tested with 10 pregnant women using a mixed method approach via an online survey, 2 focus groups, and 1 individual interview.
Results: The Eating4Two app took 7 months to develop and evaluate. It involved several disciplines--including nutrition and dietetics, midwifery, public health, and information technology--at the University of Canberra. Participants found the Eating4Two app to be a motivational tool but would have liked scales or other markers on the graph that demonstrated exact weight gain. They also liked the nutrition information; however, many felt it should be formatted in a more user friendly way.
Conclusions: The Eating4Two app was viewed by participants in our study as an innovative support system to help motivate healthy behaviors during pregnancy and as a credible resource for accessing nutrition-focused information. The feedback provided by participants will assist with refining the current prototype for use in a clinical intervention trial.Full Tex
On a discrete Davey-Stewartson system
We propose a differential difference equation in and study it by
Hirota's bilinear method. This equation has a singular continuum limit into a
system which admits the reduction to the Davey-Stewartson equation. The
solutions of this discrete DS system are characterized by Casorati and Grammian
determinants. Based on the bilinear form of this discrete DS system, we
construct the bilinear B\"{a}cklund transformation which enables us to obtain
its Lax pair.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
The impact and process of a community-led intervention on reducing environmental inequalities related to physical activity and healthy eating - a pilot study
Background: There is growing recognition that a sedentary lifestyle is being driven, at least in part, by environmental factors that affect individuals’ physical activity choices and health behaviours. In other words, the environments in which we live, and with which we interact, have become ones that encourage lifestyle choices that decrease physical activity and encourage over-consumption of foods. However, evidence from community-led interventions to change local neighbourhood environments to support physical activity and healthy eating is lacking. This article summarises the research protocol developed to evaluate a community-led intervention “My Health Matters” aimed at reducing health inequalities relating to increasing physical activity and healthy eating as defined by community members themselves.
Methods/Design: This study includes three of the most deprived electoral wards in Stoke-on-Trent. In each of these areas, environmental factors including proximity of physical activity spaces, greenspace and leisure facilities, neighbourhood connectivity and walkability, land-use-mix and population density, traffic, safety and crime, and food outlets will be mapped using Geographical Information Systems (GIS). A community postal survey of randomly selected addresses assessing environmental characteristics relating to physical activity, perceived health status, social capital, fruit and vegetable consumption and levels of physical activity will be undertaken (baseline and at 2 year follow-up). Based on baseline findings an intervention will be designed and implemented over a 2 year period that includes the following; use of community participatory research to build effective community partnerships; use of partnership consensus to identify, prioritise and design intervention(s) related to specific health disparities; recruitment of local residents to help with the delivery and sustainability of target intervention(s); and the development of local systems for ongoing monitoring and evaluation of the intervention(s).
Discussion: A community-led and multidisciplinary approach to modifying environmental factors that support and reinforce healthful behaviours may be more successful than focusing on individual behaviour change as this approach does not exclusively rely upon individual will and capacity. Study findings will be collated in 2012 and, if successful in improving levels of physical activity and healthy eating, will help to inform the design of a larger area-based, cluster randomized controlled trial to determine effectiveness
Factors related to discontinued clinic attendance by patients with podoconiosis in southern Ethiopia: a qualitative study
Background
Podoconiosis is a lymphoedema of non-infectious cause which results in long-term ill health in affected individuals. Simple, effective treatment is available in certain parts of Ethiopia, but evidence indicates that not all patients continue collecting treatment supplies from clinic sites once started. We used qualitative techniques to explore factors related to discontinued attendance at outreach clinics of a non-government organization in southern Ethiopia.
Methods
A cross-sectional qualitative study was conducted in four clinic sites through unstructured in-depth interviews, key informant interviews and focus group discussions with the involvement of 88 study subjects.
Results
Discontinuation of clinic visits is common among podoconiosis patients. The reasons were: remoteness from the clinic sites, unrealistic expectation of ‘special’ aid, worry about increasing stigma, illness and misconceptions about treatment.
Conclusions
Several of these factors are remediable through community and individual information and education. Appropriate routes to deliver this information must be identified. Certain factors (such as distance to clinic sites and stigma) require substantial expansion of services or liaison with village-level government health services
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