5,143 research outputs found
Black Hole Deconstruction
A D4-D0 black hole can be deconstructed into a bound state of D0 branes with
a D6-anti-D6 pair containing worldvolume fluxes. The exact spacetime solution
is known and resembles a D0 accretion disk surrounding a D6-anti-D6 core. We
find a scaling limit in which the disk and core drop inside an AdS_2 throat.
Crossing this AdS_2 throat and the D0 accretion disk into the core, we find a
second scaling region describing the D6-anti-D6 pair. It is shown that the
M-theory lift of this region is AdS_3 x S^2. Surprisingly, time translations in
the far asymptotic region reduce to global, rather than Poincare, time
translations in this core AdS_3. We further find that the quantum mechanical
ground state degeneracy reproduces the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy-area law.Comment: 11 page
Exact solutions for supersymmetric stationary black hole composites
Four dimensional N=2 supergravity has regular, stationary, asymptotically
flat BPS solutions with intrinsic angular momentum, describing bound states of
separate extremal black holes with mutually nonlocal charges. Though the
existence and some properties of these solutions were established some time
ago, fully explicit analytic solutions were lacking thus far. In this note, we
fill this gap. We show in general that explicit solutions can be constructed
whenever an explicit formula is known in the theory at hand for the
Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of a single black hole as a function of its charges,
and illustrate this with some simple examples. We also give an example of
moduli-dependent black hole entropy.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
âWarning: allergic to penicillinâ: association between penicillin allergy status in 2.3 million NHS general practice electronic health records, antibiotic prescribing and health outcomes
Background
The prevalence of reported penicillin allergy (PenA) and the impact these records have on health outcomes in the UK general population are unknown. Without such data, justifying and planning enhanced allergy services is challenging.
Objectives
To determine: (i) prevalence of PenA records; (ii) patient characteristics associated with PenA records; and (iii) impact of PenA records on antibiotic prescribing/health outcomes in primary care.
Methods
We carried out cross-sectional/retrospective cohort studies using patient-level data from electronic health records. Cohort study: exact matching across confounders identified as affecting PenA records. Setting: English NHS general practices between 1 April 2013 and 31 March 2014. Participants: 2.3 million adult patients. Outcome measures: prevalence of PenA, antibiotic prescribing, mortality, MRSA infection/colonization and Clostridioides difficile infection.
Results
PenA prevalence was 5.9% (IQRâ=â3.8%â8.2%). PenA records were more common in older people, females and those with a comorbidity, and were affected by GP practice. Antibiotic prescribing varied significantly: penicillins were prescribed less frequently in those with a PenA record [relative risk (RR) â=â0.15], and macrolides (RRâ=â4.03), tetracyclines (RRâ=â1.91) nitrofurantoin (RRâ=â1.09), trimethoprim (RRâ=â1.04), cephalosporins (RRâ=â2.05), quinolones (RRâ=â2.10), clindamycin (RRâ=â5.47) and total number of prescriptions were increased in patients with a PenA record. Risk of re-prescription of a new antibiotic class within 28âdays (RRâ=â1.32), MRSA infection/colonization (RRâ=â1.90) and death during the year subsequent to 1 April 2013 (RRâ=â1.08) increased in those with PenA records.
Conclusions
PenA records are common in the general population and associated with increased/altered antibiotic prescribing and worse health outcomes. We estimate that incorrect PenA records affect 2.7 million people in England. Establishing true PenA status (e.g. oral challenge testing) would allow more people to be prescribed first-line antibiotics, potentially improving health outcomes
The quality case for information technology in healthcare
BACKGROUND: As described in the Institute of Medicine's Crossing the Quality Chasm report, the quality of health care in the U.S. today leaves much to be desired. DISCUSSION: One major opportunity for improving quality relates to increasing the use of information technology, or IT. Health care organizations currently invest less in IT than in any other information-intensive industry, and not surprisingly current systems are relatively primitive, compared with industries such as banking or aviation. Nonetheless, a number of organizations have demonstrated that quality can be substantially improved in a variety of ways if IT use is increased in ways that improve care. Specifically, computerization of processes that are error-prone and computerized decision support may substantially improve both efficiency and quality, as well as dramatically facilitate quality measurement. This report discusses the current levels of IT and quality in health care, how quality improvement and management are currently done, the evidence that more IT might be helpful, a vision of the future, and the barriers to getting there. SUMMARY: This report suggests that there are five key policy domains that need to be addressed: standards, incentives, security and confidentiality, professional involvement, and research, with financial incentives representing the single most important lever
A cluster randomized trial evaluating electronic prescribing in an ambulatory care setting
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Medication errors, adverse drug events and potential adverse drug events are common and serious in terms of the harms and costs that they impose on the health system and those who use it. Errors resulting in preventable adverse drug events have been shown to occur most often at the stages of ordering and administration. This paper describes the protocol for a pragmatic trial of electronic prescribing to reduce prescription error. The trial was designed to overcome the limitations associated with traditional study design.</p> <p>Design</p> <p>This study was designed as a 65-week, cluster randomized, parallel study.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The trial was conducted within ambulatory outpatient clinics in an academic tertiary care centre in Ontario, Canada. The electronic prescribing software for the study is a Canadian electronic prescribing software package which provides physician prescription entry with decision support at the point of care. Using a handheld computer (PDA) the physician selects medications using an error minimising menu-based pick list from a comprehensive drug database, create specific prescription instructions and then transmit the prescription directly and electronically to a participating pharmacy via facsimile or to the physician's printer using local area wireless technology. The unit of allocation and randomization is by 'week', i.e. the system is "on" or "off" according to the randomization scheme and the unit of analysis is the prescription, with adjustment for clustering of patients within practitioners.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>This paper describes the protocol for a pragmatic cluster randomized trial of point-of-care electronic prescribing, which was specifically designed to overcome the limitations associated with traditional study design.</p> <p>Trial Registration</p> <p>This trial has been registered with clinicaltrials.gov (ID: NCT00252395)</p
Update on HER-2 as a target for cancer therapy: The ERBB2 promoter and its exploitation for cancer treatment
Overexpression of the ERBB2 proto-oncogene is associated with amplification of the gene in breast cancer but increased activity of the promoter also plays a significant role. Members of two transcription factor families (AP-2 and Ets) show increased binding to the promoter in over-expressing cells. Consequently, strategies have been devised to target promoter activity, either through the DNA binding sites for these factors, or through another promoter sequence, a polypurine-polypyrimidine repeat structure. The promoter has also been exploited for its tumour-specific activity to direct the accumulation of cytotoxic compounds selectively within cancer cells. Our current understanding of the ERBB2 promoter is reviewed and the status of these therapeutic avenues is discussed
Numerical Algebraic Geometry: A New Perspective on String and Gauge Theories
The interplay rich between algebraic geometry and string and gauge theories
has recently been immensely aided by advances in computational algebra.
However, these symbolic (Gr\"{o}bner) methods are severely limited by
algorithmic issues such as exponential space complexity and being highly
sequential. In this paper, we introduce a novel paradigm of numerical algebraic
geometry which in a plethora of situations overcomes these short-comings. Its
so-called 'embarrassing parallelizability' allows us to solve many problems and
extract physical information which elude the symbolic methods. We describe the
method and then use it to solve various problems arising from physics which
could not be otherwise solved.Comment: 36 page
Voice-selective prediction alterations in nonclinical voice hearers
Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) are a cardinal symptom of psychosis but also occur in 6-13% of the general population. Voice perception is thought to engage an internal forward model that generates predictions, preparing the auditory cortex for upcoming sensory feedback. Impaired processing of sensory feedback in vocalization seems to underlie the experience of AVH in psychosis, but whether this is the case in nonclinical voice hearers remains unclear. The current study used electroencephalography (EEG) to investigate whether and how hallucination predisposition (HP) modulates the internal forward model in response to self-initiated tones and self-voices. Participants varying in HP (based on the Launay-Slade Hallucination Scale) listened to self-generated and externally generated tones or self-voices. HP did not affect responses to self vs. externally generated tones. However, HP altered the processing of the self-generated voice: increased HP was associated with increased pre-stimulus alpha power and increased N1 response to the self-generated voice. HP did not affect the P2 response to voices. These findings confirm that both prediction and comparison of predicted and perceived feedback to a self-generated voice are altered in individuals with AVH predisposition. Specific alterations in the processing of self-generated vocalizations may establish a core feature of the psychosis continuum.The Authors gratefully acknowledge all the participants who collaborated in the study, and particularly Dr. Franziska Knolle for feedback on stimulus generation, Carla Barros for help with scripts for EEG time-frequency analysis, and Dr. Celia Moreira for her advice on mixed linear models. This work was supported by the Portuguese Science National Foundation (FCT; grant numbers PTDC/PSI-PCL/116626/2010, IF/00334/2012, PTDC/MHCPCN/0101/2014) awarded to APP
LOTUS: a low-cost, ultraviolet spectrograph
We describe the design, construction and commissioning of a simple, low-cost long-slit spectrograph
for the Liverpool Telescope. The design is optimized for near-UV and visible wavelengths
and uses all transmitting optics. It exploits the instrument focal plane field curvature to
partially correct axial chromatic aberration. A stepped slit provides narrow (2.5 Ă 95 arcsec)
and wide (5 Ă 25 arcsec) options that are optimized for spectral resolution and flux calibration,
respectively. On sky testing shows a wavelength range of 3200â6300 Ă
with a peak system
throughput (including detector quantum efficiency) of 15 per cent and wavelength dependent
spectral resolution of R = 225â430. By repeated observations of the symbiotic emission line
star AG Peg, we demonstrate the wavelength stability of the system is <2 Ă
rms and is limited
by the positioning of the object in the slit. The spectrograph is now in routine operation monitoring
the activity of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko during its current post-perihelion
apparition
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