998 research outputs found
Acceptability of financial incentives to improve health outcomes in UK and US samples
This study was funded as part of a strategic award from the Wellcome Trust Biomedical Ethics Programme (PI Marteau: 086031/Z/08/Z)
Villous Mucinous Cystadenoma of the Appendix in a Postmenopausal Woman
Because a significant number of mucoceles are caused by mucinous cystadenocarcinoma, the authors stress that a general surgeon be consulted in cases of right lower quadrant âdumbbell shapedâ abdominal cysts
"Pay them if it works": discrete choice experiments on the acceptability of financial incentives to change health related behaviour.
The use of financial incentives to change health-related behaviour is often opposed by members of the public. We investigated whether the acceptability of incentives is influenced by their effectiveness, the form the incentive takes, and the particular behaviour targeted. We conducted discrete choice experiments, in 2010 with two samples (n = 81 and n = 101) from a self-selected online panel, and in 2011 with an offline general population sample (n = 450) of UK participants to assess the acceptability of incentive-based treatments for smoking cessation and weight loss. We focused on the extent to which this varied with the type of incentive (cash, vouchers for luxury items, or vouchers for healthy groceries) and its effectiveness (ranging from 5% to 40% compared to a standard treatment with effectiveness fixed at 10%). The acceptability of financial incentives increased with effectiveness. Even a small increase in effectiveness from 10% to 11% increased the proportion favouring incentives from 46% to 55%. Grocery vouchers were more acceptable than cash or vouchers for luxury items (about a 20% difference), and incentives were more acceptable for weight loss than for smoking cessation (60% vs. 40%). The acceptability of financial incentives to change behaviour is not necessarily negative but rather is contingent on their effectiveness, the type of incentive and the target behaviour
Speeding Up Computer Simulations: The Transition Observable Method
A method is presented which allows for a tremendous speed-up of computer
simulations of statistical systems by orders of magnitude. This speed-up is
achieved by means of a new observable, while the algorithm of the simulation
remains unchanged.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures Submitted to Phys.Rev.E (August 1999) Replacement
due to some minor change
Symmetries of microcanonical entropy surfaces
Symmetry properties of the microcanonical entropy surface as a function of
the energy and the order parameter are deduced from the invariance group of the
Hamiltonian of the physical system. The consequences of these symmetries for
the microcanonical order parameter in the high energy and in the low energy
phases are investigated. In particular the breaking of the symmetry of the
microcanonical entropy in the low energy regime is considered. The general
statements are corroborated by investigations of various examples of classical
spin systems.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures include
Microcanonical entropy for small magnetisations
Physical quantities obtained from the microcanonical entropy surfaces of
classical spin systems show typical features of phase transitions already in
finite systems. It is demonstrated that the singular behaviour of the
microcanonically defined order parameter and susceptibility can be understood
from a Taylor expansion of the entropy surface. The general form of the
expansion is determined from the symmetry properties of the microcanonical
entropy function with respect to the order parameter. The general findings are
investigated for the four-state vector Potts model as an example of a classical
spin system.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives to promote adherence to depot antipsychotic medication: economic evaluation of a cluster-randomised controlled trial
Background: Offering a modest financial incentive to people with psychosis can promote adherence to depot antipsychotic medication, but the cost-effectiveness of this approach has not been examined. Methods: Economic evaluation within a pragmatic cluster-randomised controlled trial. 141 patients under the care of 73 teams (clusters) were randomised to intervention or control; 138 patients with diagnoses of schizophrenia, schizo-affective disorder or bipolar disorder participated. Intervention participants received ÂŁ15 per depot injection over 12 months, additional to usual acute, mental and community primary health services. The control group received usual health services. Main outcome measures: incremental cost per 20% increase in adherence to depot antipsychotic medication; incremental cost of âgoodâ adherence (defined as taking at least 95% of the prescribed number of depot medications over the intervention period). Findings: Economic and outcome data for baseline and 12-month follow-up were available for 117 participants. The adjusted difference in adherence between groups was 12.2% (73.4% control vs. 85.6% intervention); the adjusted costs difference was ÂŁ598 (95% CI -ÂŁ4 533, ÂŁ5 730). The extra cost per patient to increase adherence to depot medications by 20% was ÂŁ982 (95% CI -ÂŁ8 020, ÂŁ14 000). The extra cost per patient of achieving 'good' adherence was ÂŁ2 950 (CI -ÂŁ19 400, ÂŁ27 800). Probability of cost-effectiveness exceeded 97.5%at willingness-to-pay values of ÂŁ14 000 for a 20% increase in adherence and ÂŁ27 800 for good adherence. Interpretation: Offering a modest financial incentive to people with psychosis is cost-effective in promoting adherence to depot antipsychotic medication. Direct healthcare costs (including costs of the financial incentive) are unlikely to be increased by this intervention. Trial Registration: ISRCTN.com 7776928
Finite-size behaviour of the microcanonical specific heat
For models which exhibit a continuous phase transition in the thermodynamic
limit a numerical study of small systems reveals a non-monotonic behaviour of
the microcanonical specific heat as a function of the system size. This is in
contrast to a treatment in the canonical ensemble where the maximum of the
specific heat increases monotonically with the size of the system. A
phenomenological theory is developed which permits to describe this peculiar
behaviour of the microcanonical specific heat and allows in principle the
determination of microcanonical critical exponents.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, submitted to J. Phys.
Characterising New Physics Models by Effective Dimensionality of Parameter Space
We show that the dimension of the geometric shape formed by the
phenomenologically valid points inside a multi-dimensional parameter space can
be used to characterise different new physics models and to define a
quantitative measure for the distribution of the points. We explain a simple
algorithm to determine the box-counting dimension from a given set of parameter
points, and illustrate our method with examples from different models that have
recently been studied with respect to precision flavour observables.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
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