8,374 research outputs found
Influence of Islam on smoking among Muslims
Smoking prevalence is generally high among Muslims. An awareness of their religious beliefs and rulings might increase the effectiveness of antismoking campaign
We are bitter, but we are better off: Case study of the implementation of an electronic health record system into a mental health hospital in England
In contrast to the acute hospital sector, there have been relatively few implementations of integrated electronic health record (EHR) systems into specialist mental health settings. The National Programme for Information Technology (NPfIT) in England was the most expensive IT-based transformation of public services ever undertaken, which aimed amongst other things, to implement integrated EHR systems into mental health hospitals. This paper describes the arrival, the process of implementation, stakeholders' experiences and the local consequences of the implementation of an EHR system into a mental health hospital
Methodological reflections on the evaluation of the implementation and adoption of national electronic health record systems
Copyright @ 2012, International Journal of Integrated Care (IJIC). This work is licensed under a (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0) Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.Introduction/purpose of presentation: Far-reaching policy commitments to information technology-centered transformations of healthcare systems have now been made in many countries. There is as yet little empirical evidence to justify such decisions, hence the need for rigorous independent evaluation of current implementation efforts. Such evaluations however pose a number of important challenges. This presentation has been designed as a part of a Panel based on our experience of evaluating the National Health Service’s (NHS) implementation of electronic health records (EHR) systems in hospitals throughout England. We discuss the methodological challenges encountered in planning and undertaking an evaluation of a program of this scale and reflect on why and how we adapted our evaluation approach—both conceptually and methodologically—in response to these challenges. Study design/population studied: Critical reflections on a multi-disciplinary and multi-facet independent evaluation of a national program to implement electronic health record systems into 12 ‘early wave’ NHS hospitals in England. Findings: Our initial plan was to employ a mixed methods longitudinal ‘before-during-after’ study design. We however found this unsustainable in the light of fluxes in policy, contractual issues and over-optimistic schedules for EHR deployments. More importantly, this research design failed adequately to address the core of multi-faceted evolving EHRs as understood by key stakeholders and as worked out in their distinct work settings. Thus conventional outcomes-centric evaluations may not easily scale-up when evaluating transformational programs and may indeed prove misleading. New assumptions concerning the implementation process of EHR need to be developed that recognize the constantly changing milieu of policy, product, projects and professions that are inherent to such national implementations. The approaches we subsequently developed substitute the positivist view that EHR initiatives are self-evident and self-contained interventions, which are amenable to traditional quantitative evaluations, to one that focuses on how they are understood by various stakeholders and made to work in specific contexts. These assumptions recast the role of evaluation towards an approach that explores and interprets processes of socio-technical change that surround EHR implementation and adoption as seen by multiple stakeholders. Conclusions and policy implications: There is likely to be an increase in politically-driven national programs of reform of healthcare based on information and communication technologies. Programs on such a scale are inherently complex with extended temporalities and extensive and dynamic sets of stakeholders. They are, in short, different and pose new evaluation challenges that previously formulated evaluation methods for health information systems cannot easily address. This calls for methodological innovation amongst research teams and their supporting bodies. We argue that evaluation of such system-wide transformation programs are likely to demand both breadth and depth of experience within a multidisciplinary research team, constant questioning of what is and what can be evaluated and how, and a particular way of working that emphasizes continuous dialogue and reflexivity. Making this transition is essential to enable evaluations that can usefully inform policy-making. Health policy experts urgently need to reassess the evaluation strategies they employ as they come to address national policies for system-wide transformation based on new electronic health infrastructures
Discrete Symmetries (C,P,T) in Noncommutative Field Theories
In this paper we study the invariance of the noncmmutative gauge theories
under C, P and T transformations. For the noncommutative space (when only the
spatial part of is non-zero) we show that NCQED is Parity invariant.
In addition, we show that under charge conjugation the theory on noncommutative
is transformed to the theory on , so NCQED is a
CP violating theory. The theory remains invariant under time reversal if,
together with proper changes in fields, we also change by .
Hence altogether NCQED is CPT invariant. Moreover we show that the CPT
invariance holds for general noncommutative space-time.Comment: Revtex File, 4 pages, no figures, minor changes from previous verion.
To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Nearing Extremal Intersecting Giants and New Decoupled Sectors in N = 4 SYM
We study near-horizon limits of near-extremal charged black hole solutions to
five-dimensional gauged supergravity carrying two charges, extending
the recent work of Balasubramanian et.al. We show that there are two
near-horizon decoupling limits for the near-extremal black holes, one
corresponding to the near-BPS case and the other for the far from BPS case.
Both of these limits are only defined on the 10d IIB uplift of the 5d black
holes, resulting in a decoupled geometry with a six-dimensional part (conformal
to) a rotating BTZ X . We study various aspects of these decoupling limits
both from the gravity side and the dual field theory side. For the latter we
argue that there should be two different, but equivalent, dual gauge theory
descriptions, one in terms of the 2d CFT's dual to the rotating BTZ and the
other as certain large R-charge sectors of d=4,N =4 U(N) SYM theory. We discuss
new BMN-type sectors of the N=4 SYM in the limit in which the
engineering dimensions scale as (for the near-BPS case) and as
(for the far from BPS case).Comment: 44 pages, references added, minor change
Chaos and isospin symmetry breaking in rotational nuclei
For nuclei with N = Z, the isospin degree of freedom is important and, for
deformed systems, rotational bands of different isospin may be expected at low
excitation energies. We have investigated, in a simple model space, the
influence of the isospin-breaking Coulomb interaction on the degree of
chaoticity of these rotational bands. The statistical measures used rely on an
analysis of level-spacing distributions, which are extremely difficult to
measure experimentally. We show, however, that the overlap intergrals between
states of similar frequency reflect well the degree of chaoticity. This
quantity is closely related to the experimentally more accessible gamma-decay
``spreading width''.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, Elsevie
Tensor model and dynamical generation of commutative nonassociative fuzzy spaces
Rank-three tensor model may be regarded as theory of dynamical fuzzy spaces,
because a fuzzy space is defined by a three-index coefficient of the product
between functions on it, f_a*f_b=C_ab^cf_c. In this paper, this previous
proposal is applied to dynamical generation of commutative nonassociative fuzzy
spaces. It is numerically shown that fuzzy flat torus and fuzzy spheres of
various dimensions are classical solutions of the rank-three tensor model.
Since these solutions are obtained for the same coupling constants of the
tensor model, the cosmological constant and the dimensions are not fundamental
but can be regarded as dynamical quantities. The symmetry of the model under
the general linear transformation can be identified with a fuzzy analog of the
general coordinate transformation symmetry in general relativity. This symmetry
of the tensor model is broken at the classical solutions. This feature may make
the model to be a concrete finite setting for applying the old idea of
obtaining gravity as Nambu-Goldstone fields of the spontaneous breaking of the
local translational symmetry.Comment: Adding discussions on effective geometry, a note added, four
references added, other minor changes, 27 pages, 17 figure
Predictors of programme adherence and weight loss in women in an obesity programme using meal replacements
Objective: To explore predictors of programme adherence and weight loss in patients participating in a weight management programme using meal replacements (MR).Design: One hundred and fifty healthy obese women, age 48.5 years (s.d. = 8.3); weight, 97.6 kg (13.4); body mass index (BMI) 36.5 (3.7), participated in a longitudinal study with a 16-week acute weight loss phase (Phase 1) followed by 1 year of a trial of weight-loss maintenance (Phase 2). Energy intake during Phase 1 totaled 900 kcal (3.7 MJ) a day from a diet including two MR. Energy intake during Phase 2 consisted of either MR or a low-fat diet with a calculated energy deficit of 600 kcal/day (2.5 MJ).Methods: Weight, height and waist circumference were measured and body composition assessed by air plethysmography (Bodpod). Glucose and insulin were measured by standard immunoassays and insulin sensitivity assessed by homeostatic model assessment.Results: At the end of 16 weeks, 114 subjects (76%) completed Phase 1 and achieved a mean weight loss of 8.95 kg (3.38). Adherence to Phase 1 was predicted by weight loss over the first 2 weeks (p < 0.001). Weight loss during Phase 1 was predicted by initial weight and initial systolic blood pressure. Adherence to Phase 2 was not predicted by physiological measures. Weight loss maintenance in Phase 2 (not gaining more than 3% of the weight at start of phase 2) was predicted by cholesterol and triglyceride measured at the start of Phase 2 but otherwise was not predicted by the physiological measures. Initial insulin sensitivity did not predict weight loss in either phase.Conclusion: Participants whose weight loss over the first 2 weeks falls in the bottom third may need additional intervention if they are to continue in this type of programme. A battery of physiological measures at entry to a MR weight loss and maintenance programme explains only a very small proportion of the variation in weight loss
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