4,968 research outputs found
A Comparison of Hospital Utilization in Urban and Rural Areas of South Carolina
Background: Previous studies have described health care utilization based on insurance status and ethnicity. Few investigations, however, have looked at rural populations in relation to distance in securing health care.
Methods: The 2008 to 2009 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) State Inpatient Database (SID) for South Carolina was used to assess the relationship of living in rural versus urban communities and the demographic variables related to insurance coverage. By use of bivariate and multivariate analyses, patient socio-demographic characteristics were explored for working-aged groups in relation to their income and for payer status (Medicaid or uninsured) relative to those privately insured.
Results: Of hospitalizations, 68.89% were for those living in urban areas, 20.52% in large rural areas, 6.57% small rural areas, and 4.02% in isolated rural areas. Blacks lived predominantly in small rural (53.65%) and isolated rural communities (51.55%). As income decreased, the percentage of hospital admissions increased, from 5.83% for those earning 1 and $39,999.
Conclusions: Hospital admissions may not be entirely dependent on race, income or insurance, but could also be influenced by geographic access. Further, having private insurance, higher incomes, and living in urban areas are positive predictors for better health outcomes
The Military Trial at Rennes: Text and Subtext of the Dreyfus Affair
Discusses the Dreyfus affair and how the outside world viewed France\u27s conduct. This article provides insight into how the trial was conducted and the evidence that was offered
Hybrid vehicle assessment. Phase 1: Petroleum savings analysis
The results of a comprehensive analysis of near term electric hybrid vehicles are presented, with emphasis on their potential to save significant amounts of petroleum on a national scale in the 1990s. Performance requirements and expected annual usage patterns of these vehicles are first modeled. The projected U.S. fleet composition is estimated, and conceptual hybrid vehicle designs are conceived and analyzed for petroleum use when driven in the expected annual patterns. These petroleum consumption estimates are then compared to similar estimates for projected 1990 conventional vehicles having the same performance and driven in the same patterns. Results are presented in the form of three utility functions and comparisons of sevral conceptual designs are made. The Hybrid Vehicle (HV) design and assessment techniques are discussed and a general method is explained for selecting the optimum energy management strategy for any vehicle mission battery combination. Conclusions and recommendations are presented, and development recommendations are identified
Magnetic Color Flavor Locking Phase in High Density QCD
We investigate the effects of an external magnetic field in the gap structure
of a color superconductor with three massless quark flavors. Using an effective
theory with four-fermion interactions, inspired by one-gluon exchange, we show
that the long-range component of the external magnetic field
that penetrates the color-flavor locked (CFL) phase modifies its gap structure,
producing a new phase of lower symmetry. A main outcome of our study is that
the field tends to strengthen the gaps formed by
-charged and -neutral quarks that coupled among
themselves through tree-level vertices. These gaps are enhanced by the
field-dependent density of states of the -charged quarks on the
Fermi surface. Our considerations are relevant for the study of highly
magnetized compact stars.Comment: version to be published in PR
E-Cigarette Use Among Undergraduate Liberal Arts and Health Sciences Students: A Study Protocol
Background: Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) are battery operated devices that deliver nicotine as an inhaled vapor. Use of e-cigarettes has gained in popularity since 2007, and their use is often promoted as a safer alternative to tobacco smoking. A concern among public health experts is whether e-cigarettes can be used as an alternative method for tobacco cessation or whether they lead to nicotine dependence and use of other tobacco products. Several studies have shown a higher prevalence of use of e-cigarettes among young adults between the ages of 18 and 25, but varying results on the association between their use and perceptions of harm. For the present survey, this age group was selected because, in this group, addiction to tobacco and the likelihood for adverse effects would be lower. Thus, for this group, the chances of not starting or consideration for quitting would be higher. The purpose of this study is to investigate the knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about using tobacco products, smoking, and e-cigarettes among undergraduate students on liberal arts and health sciences campuses of a university.
Methods: Participants will be invited via email and directed to a secure website where the survey can be completed anonymously. To assess knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs, the survey will include validated questions based on recommendations by the World Health Organization ((2000) appendix A)).
Anticipated Results: We anticipate that the results will show an improvement in the behavioral aspect among undergraduates at the liberal arts and health sciences campuses. We also expect that results will show an improvement in knowledge among liberal arts students but less improvement in knowledge for health sciences students. Finally, we predict an overall improvement in attitudes about tobacco use and e-cigarette use
Economic analysis of sown stylo and/or grass pastures on red earth and red basalt soils in north Queensland
The Meat & Livestock Australia funded project, ‘Progressing superior tropical grasses and legumes in seasonally-dry
Queensland (B.NBP.0812)’ is developing strategies for selection and establishment of alternative grass and legume
species adapted to diverse soil types and climate zones in north Queensland. The objective of the present study was to
conduct an economic analysis of the preliminary results from project B.NBP.0812
Combined population dynamics and entropy modelling supports patient stratification in chronic myeloid leukemia
Modelling the parameters of multistep carcinogenesis is key for a better understanding of cancer
progression, biomarker identification and the design of individualized therapies. Using chronic
myeloid leukemia (CML) as a paradigm for hierarchical disease evolution we show that combined
population dynamic modelling and CML patient biopsy genomic analysis enables patient stratification
at unprecedented resolution. Linking CD34+ similarity as a disease progression marker to patientderived
gene expression entropy separated established CML progression stages and uncovered
additional heterogeneity within disease stages. Importantly, our patient data informed model enables
quantitative approximation of individual patients’ disease history within chronic phase (CP) and
significantly separates “early” from “late” CP. Our findings provide a novel rationale for personalized
and genome-informed disease progression risk assessment that is independent and complementary to
conventional measures of CML disease burden and prognosis
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