136 research outputs found
Sunspots do matter: a simple disproof of Mas-Colell
Mas-Colell conjectured that, for economies admitting a unique deterministic equilibrium, sunspot equilibria that 'matter'' would not exist. I prove an abundance of such equilibria using simple linear algebra.Animal Spirits
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Prostate Cancer Care Before and After Medicare Eligibility.
Prior studies suggest Medicare eligibility confers significant and substantial reductions in mortality and beneficial increases in health service utilization. We compared 13,882 patients diagnosed with prostate cancer at ages 63 to 64 years with 14,774 patients diagnosed at ages 65 to 66 (controls) in 2004 to 2007. Compared with controls, patients diagnosed with prostate cancer before Medicare eligibility had no statistically significant or meaningful differences in cancer stage, time to treatment, or type of treatment
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Lung Cancer Care Before and After Medicare Eligibility.
Uninsured and underinsured near-elderly may not have timely investigation, diagnosis, or care of cancer. Prior studies suggest Medicare eligibility confers significant and substantial reductions in mortality and increases in health service utilization. We compared 2245 patients diagnosed with lung cancer at ages 64.5 to 65 years and 2512 patients aged 65 to 65.5 years, with 2492 patients aged 65.5 to 66 years (controls) in 2000 to 2005. Compared with controls, patients diagnosed with lung cancer before Medicare eligibility had no statistically significant differences in cancer stage, time to treatment, type of treatment, and survival. Study power was sufficient to exclude mortality reductions and health service utilization changes of the magnitude found in prior work, suggesting that typically, appropriate lung cancer care may be sought and delivered regardless of insurance status
Could Data Broker Information Threaten Physician Prescribing and Professional Behavior?
Privacy is threatened by the extent of data collected and sold by consumer data brokers. Physicians, as individual consumers, leave a ‘data trail’ in the offline (e.g. through traditional shopping) and online worlds (e.g. through online purchases and use of social media). Such data could easily and legally be used without a physician’s knowledge or consent to influence prescribing practices or other physician professional behavior. We sought to determine the extent to which such consumer data was available on a sample of more than 3,000 physicians, healthcare faculty and healthcare system staff at one university’s health units. Using just work email addresses for these employees we cheaply and quickly obtained external data on nearly two thirds of employees on demographic characteristics (e.g. income, top 10% national wealth, children at home, married), purchases (e.g. baby products, cooking, sports), behavior (e.g. charitable donor, discount shopper) and interests (e.g. automotive, health and wellness). Consumer data brokers have valuable, cost-effective and detailed information on many healthcare professionals, including data that could be used to segment, target, detail and generally market to physicians in ways that seem under‐appreciated. We call for greater attention to this potential aspect of physician-industry relationships
It's more than just money: The real-world harms from ransomware attacks
As cyber-attacks continue to increase in frequency and sophistication,
organisations must be better prepared to face the reality of an incident. Any
organisational plan that intends to be successful at managing security risks
must clearly understand the harm (i.e., negative impact) and the various
parties affected in the aftermath of an attack. To this end, this article
conducts a novel exploration into the multitude of real-world harms that can
arise from cyber-attacks, with a particular focus on ransomware incidents given
their current prominence. This exploration also leads to the proposal of a new,
robust methodology for modelling harms from such incidents. We draw on
publicly-available case data on high-profile ransomware incidents to examine
the types of harm that emerge at various stages after a ransomware attack and
how harms (e.g., an offline enterprise server) may trigger other negative,
potentially more substantial impacts for stakeholders (e.g., the inability for
a customer to access their social welfare benefits or bank account). Prominent
findings from our analysis include the identification of a notable set of
social/human harms beyond the business itself (and beyond the financial payment
of a ransom) and a complex web of harms that emerge after attacks regardless of
the industry sector. We also observed that deciphering the full extent and
sequence of harms can be a challenging undertaking because of the lack of
complete data available. This paper consequently argues for more transparency
on ransomware harms, as it would lead to a better understanding of the
realities of these incidents to the benefit of organisations and society more
generally.Comment: 17th International Symposium on Human Aspects of Information Security
& Assurance (HAISA 2023
Systematic review on the prevalence, frequency and comparative value of adverse events data in social media
Aim: The aim of this review was to summarize the prevalence, frequency and comparative value of information on the adverse events of healthcare interventions from user comments and videos in social media. Methods: A systematic review of assessments of the prevalence or type of information on adverse events in social media was undertaken. Sixteen databases and two internet search engines were searched in addition to handsearching, reference checking and contacting experts. The results were sifted independently by two researchers. Data extraction and quality assessment were carried out by one researcher and checked by a second. The quality assessment tool was devised in-house and a narrative synthesis of the results followed. Results: From 3064 records, 51 studies met the inclusion criteria. The studies assessed over 174 social media sites with discussion forums (71%) being the most popular. The overall prevalence of adverse events reports in social media varied from 0.2% to 8% of posts. Twenty-nine studies compared the results from searching social media with using other data sources to identify adverse events. There was general agreement that a higher frequency of adverse events was found in social media and that this was particularly true for ‘symptom’ related and ‘mild’ adverse events. Those adverse events that were under-represented in social media were laboratory-based and serious adverse events. Conclusions: Reports of adverse events are identifiable within social media. However, there is considerable heterogeneity in the frequency and type of events reported, and the reliability or validity of the data has not been thoroughly evaluated
Smoke-free legislation and paediatric hospitalisations for acute respiratory tract infections:national quasi-experimental study with unexpected findings and important methodological implications
We investigated whether Scottish implementation of smoke-free legislation was associated with a reduction in unplanned hospitalisations or deaths ('events') due to respiratory tract infections (RTIs) among children. Interrupted time series (ITS). Children aged 0-12 years living in Scotland during 1996-2012. National comprehensive smoke-free legislation (March 2006). Acute RTI events in the Scottish Morbidity Record-01 and/or National Records of Scotland Death Records. 135 134 RTI events were observed over 155 million patient-months. In our prespecified negative binomial regression model accounting for underlying temporal trends, seasonality, sex, age group, region, urbanisation level, socioeconomic status and seven-valent pneumococcal vaccination status, smoke-free legislation was associated with an immediate rise in RTI events (incidence rate ratio (IRR)=1.24, 95% CI 1.20 to 1.28) and an additional gradual increase (IRR=1.05/year, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.06). Given this unanticipated finding, we conducted a number of post hoc exploratory analyses. Among these, automatic break point detection indicated that the rise in RTI events actually preceded the smoke-free law by 16 months. When accounting for this break point, smoke-free legislation was associated with a gradual decrease in acute RTI events: IRR=0.91/year, 95% CI 0.87 to 0.96. Our prespecified ITS approach suggested that implementation of smoke-free legislation in Scotland was associated with an increase in paediatric RTI events. We were concerned that this result, which contradicted published evidence, was spurious. The association was indeed reversed when accounting for an unanticipated antecedent break point in the temporal trend, suggesting that the legislation may in fact be protective. ITS analyses should be subjected to comprehensive robustness checks to assess consistency. [Abstract copyright: © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
Kundenorientierte Angebotsabwicklung in der Investitionsgueter-Industrie: -theoretische und empirische Untersuchung des Zusammenhangs zwischen Wettbewerbsstrategie und Organisationsstruktur -
Bibliography p.: 355-379Available from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-24105 Kiel A 197121 / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekSIGLEDEGerman
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