63 research outputs found

    Need for Advancing Underrepresented Minorities in the Health Sciences and Medicine

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    This manuscript introduces the abstracts from the Stanford Coordinating Center

    The Consequences of Dropping Out of High School: Joblessness and Jailing for High School Dropouts and the High Cost for Taxpayers

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    Dropping out of high school is correlated with lower employment prospects, teen and young adult pregnancy, and incarceration, according to this research paper's data analysis. Breaking down these outcomes by variables such as race, age, gender, and family income, it becomes clear that the problems are most severe among men and African-Americans. Lastly, the researchers present the economic costs to society of this phenomenon

    The Importance of Scientific Mentoring Programs for Underrepresented Youth

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    This article introduces the work that was done through the Coordinating Center at Standford University

    Mass Economy: The Labor Supply and Our Economic Future

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    Presents findings on the current health of the state's labor force and provides policy options for attracting and retaining workers, particularly older workers and immigrants

    Getting to the Finish Line: College Enrollment and Graduation

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    Presents data from a longitudinal study of the Boston public school system's class of 2000 -- how many had enrolled in college, had graduated, and remained enrolled as of 2007, by gender, race/ethnicity, and types of college and high school attended

    Edge-resolved transient imaging: performance analyses, optimizations, and simulations

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    Edge-resolved transient imaging (ERTI) is a method for non-line-of-sight imaging that combines the use of direct time of flight for measuring distances with the azimuthal angular resolution afforded by a vertical edge occluder. Recently conceived and demonstrated for the first time, no performance analyses or optimizations of ERTI have appeared in published papers. This paper explains how the difficulty of detection of hidden scene objects with ERTI depends on a variety of parameters, including illumination power, acquisition time, ambient light, visible-side reflectivity, hidden-side reflectivity, target range, and target azimuthal angular position. Based on this analysis, optimization of the acquisition process is introduced whereby the illumination dwell times are varied to counteract decreasing signal-to-noise ratio at deeper angles into the hidden volume. Inaccuracy caused by a coaxial approximation is also analyzed and simulated.Accepted manuscrip

    Health care professionals' views on discussing sexual wellbeing with patients who have had a stroke: A qualitative study

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    OBJECTIVES: To examine the experiences of health care professionals discussing sexual wellbeing with patients who have had a stroke. DESIGN: In-depth qualitative interview study with purposive sampling and thematic analysis. PARTICIPANTS: 30 health care professionals purposively recruited to include different roles and settings along the stroke patient pathway in secondary and primary care. SETTING: Two hospitals and three general practices in the West Midlands, UK. RESULTS: Sexual wellbeing was a topic that participants did not raise with patients and was infrequently raised by patients. Barriers to raising discussion were on four levels: structural, health care professional, patient, and professional-patient interface. Barriers within these levels included: sexual wellbeing not present within hospital stroke policy; the perception that sexual wellbeing was not within participants' role; participants' concern that raising the issue could cause harm to the patient; and the views that discussion would be inappropriate with older people or unimportant to women. Resources exist to aid discussion but many participants were unaware of them, and most of those that were, did not use them routinely. CONCLUSIONS: Participants lacked motivation, ownership, and the confidence and skills to raise sexual wellbeing routinely after stroke. Similar findings have been reported in cancer care and other taboo subjects such as incontinence potentially resulting in a sub-optimal experience for patients. Normalisation of the inclusion of sensitive topics in discussions post-stroke does not seem to need significant structural intervention and simple changes such as information provision and legitimisation through consideration of the issue in standard care policies may be all that is required. The experiences recounted by professionals in this study suggest that such changes are needed now
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