1,233 research outputs found
What to do about poor clinical performance in clinical trials
The performance of individual clinicians is being monitored as never before. Su Mason and colleagues discuss the implications of this for clinical trials and recommend what should happen if during a trial the performance of one clinician or one centre is identified as being particularly poor. Tom Treasure, a surgeon, wants the monitoring to be done fairly and to take account of the complexities of clinical practice; and Heather Goodare, a patient, wants to be told when things go wrong.
The Department of Health in England has issued guidelines for research governance stating that healthcare organisations remain responsible for the quality of all aspects of patients' care whether or not some aspects of the care are part of a research study.1 We discuss how this obligation can be met in multicentre trials, given that data on the performance of clinicians are held by the trial management team, not by the host organisation
A statistical multiresolution approach for face recognition using structural hidden Markov models
This paper introduces a novel methodology that combines the multiresolution feature of the discrete wavelet transform (DWT) with the local interactions of the facial structures expressed through the structural hidden Markov model (SHMM). A range of wavelet filters such as Haar, biorthogonal 9/7, and Coiflet, as well as Gabor, have been implemented in order to search for the best performance. SHMMs perform a thorough probabilistic analysis of any sequential pattern by revealing both its inner and outer structures simultaneously. Unlike traditional HMMs, the SHMMs do not perform the state conditional independence of the visible observation sequence assumption. This is achieved via the concept of local structures introduced by the SHMMs. Therefore, the long-range dependency problem inherent to traditional HMMs has been drastically reduced. SHMMs have not previously been applied to the problem of face identification. The results reported in this application have shown that SHMM outperforms the traditional hidden Markov model with a 73% increase in accuracy
Cost effectiveness of a community based exercise programme in over 65 year olds: cluster randomised trial
OBJECTIVE: To assess the cost effectiveness of a community based exercise programme as a population
wide public health intervention for older adults.
DESIGN: Pragmatic, cluster randomised community intervention trial.
Setting: 12 general practices in Sheffield; four randomly selected as intervention populations, and eight as
control populations.
PARTICIPANTS: All those aged 65 and over in the least active four fifths of the population responding to a
baseline survey. There were 2283 eligible participants from intervention practices and 4137 from control
practices.
INTERVENTION: Eligible subjects were invited to free locally held exercise classes, made available for two
years.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: All cause and exercise related cause specific mortality and hospital service use
at two years, and health status assessed at baseline, one, and two years using the SF-36. A cost utility
analysis was also undertaken.
RESULTS: Twenty six per cent of the eligible intervention practice population attended one or more exercise
sessions. There were no significant differences in mortality rates, survival times, or admissions. After
adjusting for baseline characteristics, patients in intervention practices had a lower decline in health status,
although this reached significance only for the energy dimension and two composite scores (p,0.05). The
incremental average QALY gain of 0.011 per person in the intervention population resulted in an
incremental cost per QALY ratio of J17 174 (95% CI =J8300 to J87 120).
CONCLUSIONS: Despite a low level of adherence to the exercise programme, there were significant gains in
health related quality of life. The programme was more cost effective than many existing medical
interventions, and would be practical for primary care commissioning agencies to implement
Monitoring osteoarthritis: a cross-sectional survey in general practice
<b>Background</b> Despite being a highly prevalent chronic condition managed predominantly in primary care and unlike other chronic conditions, osteoarthritis (OA) care is delivered on an ad hoc basis rather than through routine structured review. Evidence suggests current levels of OA care are suboptimal, but little is known about what general practitioners' (GPs) consider important in OA care, and, thus, the scope to improve inconsistency or poor practice is, at present, limited.<p></p>
<b>Objectives</b> We investigated GPs' views on and practice of monitoring OA. <p></p>
<b>Methods</b> This was a cross-sectional postal survey of 2500 practicing UK GPs randomly selected from the Binley's database. Respondents were asked if monitoring OA patients was important and how monitoring should be undertaken.<p></p>
<b>Results</b> Responses were received from 768 GPs of whom 70.8% were male and 89.5% were principals within their practices. Despite 55.4% (n = 405) indicating monitoring patients with OA was important and 78.3% (n = 596) considering GPs the appropriate professionals to monitor OA, only 15.2% (n = 114) did so routinely, and 45% (n = 337) did not monitor any OA patients at all. In total, 61.4% (n = 463) reported that patients should self-monitor. Respondents favored monitoring physical function, pain, and analgesia use over monitoring measures of BMI, self management plans, and exercise advice.<p></p>
<b>Conclusions</b> The majority of respondents felt that monitoring OA was important, but this was not reflected in their reported current practice. Much of what they favored for monitoring was in line with published guidance, suggesting provision of suboptimal care does not result from lack of knowledge and interventions to improve OA care must address barriers to GPs engaging in optimal care provision
The luminosity function of TDEs from fallback-powered emission: implications for the black hole mass function
Tidal disruption events (TDEs), in which a star is destroyed by the
gravitational field of a supermassive black hole (SMBH), are being observed at
a high rate owing to the advanced state of survey science. One of the
properties of TDEs that is measured with increasing statistical reliability is
the TDE luminosity function, , which is the TDE rate per
luminosity (i.e., how many TDEs are within a given luminosity range). Here we
show that if the luminous emission from a TDE is directly coupled to the rate
of return of tidally destroyed debris to the SMBH, then the TDE luminosity
function is in good agreement with observations and scales as for high luminosities, provided that the SMBH mass function
-- the number of SMBHs () per SMBH
mass () -- is approximately flat in the mass range over which we
observe TDEs. We also show that there is a cutoff in the luminosity function at
low luminosities that is a result of direct captures, and this cutoff has been
tentatively observed. If is flat, which is in
agreement with some observational campaigns, these results suggest that the
fallback rate feeds the accretion rate in TDEs. Contrarily, if
is flat, which has been found theoretically
and is suggested by other observational investigations, then the emission from
TDEs is likely powered by another mechanism. Future observations and more TDE
statistics, provided by the Rubin Observatory/LSST, will provide additional
evidence as to the reality of this tension.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, ApJL accepte
A Hydrogen-Poor Superluminous Supernova with Enhanced Iron-Group Absorption: A New Link Between SLSNe and Broad-Lined Type Ic SNe
We present optical observations of the Type I superluminous supernova
(SLSN-I) SN2017dwh at , which reached
mag at peak. Spectra taken a few days after peak show an unusual and strong
absorption line centered near 3200\AA\ that we identify with Co II, suggesting
a high fraction of synthesized Ni in the ejecta. By month
after peak, SN2017dwh became much redder than other SLSNe-I, instead strongly
resembling broad-lined Type Ic supernovae (Ic-BL SNe) with clear suppression of
the flux redward of \AA, providing further evidence for a large
mass of Fe-group elements. Late-time upper limits indicate a Ni mass of
M, leaving open the possibility that SN2017dwh produced
a Ni mass comparable to SN1998bw ( M). Fitting the
light curve with a combined magnetar and Ni model using ,
we find that the light curve can easily accommodate such masses without
affecting the inferred magnetar parameters. We also find that SN2017dwh
occurred in the least-luminous detected host galaxy to date for a SLSN-I, with
mag and an implied metallicity of .
The spectral properties of SN2017dwh provide new evidence linking SLSNe-I with
Type Ic-BL SNe, and in particular the high Fe-group abundance may be due to
enhanced Ni production or mixing due to asphericity. Finally, we find
that SN2017dwh represents the most extreme end of a correlation between
continuum shape and Co II absorption strength in the near-peak spectra of
SLSNe-I, indicating that Fe-group abundance likely accounts for some of the
variation in their spectral shapes.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to Ap
Outbreak report of investigation and control of an outbreak of Panton-Valentine Leukocidin-positive methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (PVL-MSSA) infection in neonates and mothers
Background In January 2011, there was an outbreak of Panton-Valentine Leukocidin-positive methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (PVL-MSSA) infection in a neonatal unit (NNU). We describe the investigation and control of an outbreak of PVL-MSSA infection in neonates. Setting: Neonatal unit in West London. Methods We performed descriptive and analytical (case-control study) epidemiological investigations. Microbiological investigations including screening of MSSA isolates by PCR for the presence of the luk-PV, mecA and mecC genes and comparison of isolate with Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Control measures were also introduced. Results Sixteen babies were infected/colonised with the outbreak strain. Of these, one baby developed blood stream infection, 12 developed skin pustules and four babies were colonised. Four mothers developed breast abscesses. Eighty-seven babies in the unit were screened and 16 were found to have same PVL-MSSA strain (spa type t005, belonging to MLST clonal complex 22). Multivariate analysis showed gestational age was significantly lower in cases compared to controls (mean gestational age: 31.7 weeks v 35.6 weeks; P = 0.006). Length of stay was significantly greater for cases, with a median of 25 days, compared to only 6 days for controls (P = 0.01). Most (88%) cases were born through caesarean section, compared to less than half of controls. (P = 0.002). No healthcare worker carriers and environmental source was identified. The outbreak was controlled by stopping new admissions to unit and reinforcing infection control precautions. The outbreak lasted for seven weeks. No further cases were reported in the following year. Conclusions Infection control teams have to be vigilant for rising prevalence of particular S. aureus clones in their local community as they may cause outbreaks in vulnerable populations in healthcare settings such as NNUs
Hidden area and mechanical nonlinearities in freestanding graphene
We investigated the effect of out-of-plane crumpling on the mechanical
response of graphene membranes. In our experiments, stress was applied to
graphene membranes using pressurized gas while the strain state was monitored
through two complementary techniques: interferometric profilometry and Raman
spectroscopy. By comparing the data obtained through these two techniques, we
determined the geometric hidden area which quantifies the crumpling strength.
While the devices with hidden area obeyed linear mechanics with
biaxial stiffness N/m, specimens with hidden area in the range
were found to obey an anomalous Hooke's law with an exponent
PS16dtm: A Tidal Disruption Event in a Narrow-line Seyfert 1 Galaxy
[Abridged] We present observations of PS16dtm, a luminous transient that
occurred at the nucleus of a known Narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy hosting a
10 M black hole. The transient was previously claimed to be a Type
IIn SLSN due to its luminosity and hydrogen emission lines. The light curve
shows that PS16dtm brightened by about two magnitudes in ~50 days relative to
the archival host brightness and then exhibited a plateau phase for about 100
days followed by the onset of fading in the UV. During the plateau PS16dtm
showed no color evolution, maintained a blackbody temperature of 1.7 x 10
K, and radiated at approximately of the SMBH. The spectra exhibit
multi-component hydrogen emission lines and strong FeII emission, show little
evolution with time, and closely resemble the spectra of NLS1s while being
distinct from those of Type IIn SNe. Moreover, PS16dtm is undetected in the
X-rays to a limit an order of magnitude below an archival X-ray detection of
its host galaxy. These observations strongly link PS16dtm to activity
associated with the SMBH and are difficult to reconcile with a SN origin or any
known form of AGN variability, and therefore we argue that it is a TDE in which
the accretion of the stellar debris powers the rise in the continuum and
excitation of the pre-existing broad line region, while providing material that
obscures the X-ray emitting region of the pre-existing AGN accretion disk. A
detailed TDE model fit to the light curve indicates that PS16dtm will remain
bright for several years; we further predict that the X-ray emission will
reappear on a similar timescale as the accretion rate declines. Finally, we
place PS16dtm in the context of other TDEs and find that TDEs in AGN galaxies
are an order of magnitude more efficient and reach Eddington luminosities,
likely due to interaction of the stellar debris with the pre-existing accretion
disk.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, Submitted to Ap
An ultraviolet excess in the superluminous supernova Gaia16apd reveals a powerful central engine
Since the discovery of superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) in the last decade,
it has been known that these events exhibit bluer spectral energy distributions
than other supernova subtypes, with significant output in the ultraviolet.
However, the event Gaia16apd seems to outshine even the other SLSNe at
rest-frame wavelengths below \AA. Yan et al (2016) have recently
presented HST UV spectra and attributed the UV flux to low metallicity and
hence reduced line blanketing. Here we present UV and optical light curves over
a longer baseline in time, revealing a rapid decline at UV wavelengths despite
a typical optical evolution. Combining the published UV spectra with our own
optical data, we demonstrate that Gaia16apd has a much hotter continuum than
virtually any SLSN at maximum light, but it cools rapidly thereafter and is
indistinguishable from the others by -15 days after peak. Comparing
the equivalent widths of UV absorption lines with those of other events, we
show that the excess UV continuum is a result of a more powerful central power
source, rather than a lack of UV absorption relative to other SLSNe or an
additional component from interaction with the surrounding medium. These
findings strongly support the central-engine hypothesis for hydrogen-poor
SLSNe. An explosion ejecting M, where
is the opacity in cmg, and forming a magnetar with spin
period ms, and G (lower than other SLSNe with
comparable rise-times) can consistently explain the light curve evolution and
high temperature at peak. The host metallicity, Z, is
comparable to other SLSNe.Comment: Updated to match accepted version (ApJL
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