10,074 research outputs found
Technical efficiency in primary health care: does quality matter?
The accuracy required in the measurement of output is an issue that has as yet still not been satisfactorily addressed in empirical research on efficiency in primary health care. We exploit information retrieved from a newly constructed database (APEX06) for the Spanish region of Extremadura. The richness of our dataset allows us to consider original synthetic measures of output that take into account both the quantity and the quality of services provided by 85 primary care centres (PCCs) in 2006. We provide evidence that neglecting the issue of properly accounting for the quality of health services can lead to misleading results. Our main finding is that adjusting output for quality influences efficiency analysis in three senses. First, inefficiency now explains relatively more of the deviation from the potential output. Second, the average technical efficiency in the sector is lower, while its dispersion among PCCs is significantly higher. And third, the efficiency ranking of the PCCs is also affected.Primary Health Care; Stochastic Frontier Analysis; Technical Efficiency; Quality
Supercritical super-Brownian motion with a general branching mechanism and travelling waves
We consider the classical problem of existence, uniqueness and asymptotics of
monotone solutions to the travelling wave equation associated to the parabolic
semi-group equation of a super-Brownian motion with a general branching
mechanism. Whilst we are strongly guided by the probabilistic reasoning of
Kyprianou (2004) for branching Brownian motion, the current paper offers a
number of new insights. Our analysis incorporates the role of Seneta-Heyde
norming which, in the current setting, draws on classical work of Grey (1974).
We give a pathwise explanation of Evans' immortal particle picture (the spine
decomposition) which uses the Dynkin-Kuznetsov N-measure as a key ingredient.
Moreover, in the spirit of Neveu's stopping lines we make repeated use of
Dynkin's exit measures. Additional complications arise from the general nature
of the branching mechanism. As a consequence of the analysis we also offer an
exact X(log X)^2 moment dichotomy for the almost sure convergence of the
so-called derivative martingale at its critical parameter to a non-trivial
limit. This differs to the case of branching Brownian motion and branching
random walk where a moment `gap' appears in the necessary and sufficient
conditions.Comment: 34 page
Magnetization Process of High Anisotropy Copt Nanosized Dots
The magnetization reversal process of the CoPt dot was investigated in this paper. It was observed that the magnetization reversal of the dot was initiated by the rotation process of a nucleus with the volume of (17 nm)/sup 3/
The Use of Parametric and Non Parametric Frontier Methods to Measure the Productive Efficiency in the Industrial Sector. A Comparative Study
Parametric frontier models and non-parametric methods have monopolised the recent literature on productive efficiency measurement. Empirical applications have usually dealt with either one or the other group of techniques. This paper applies a range of both types of approaches to an industrial organisation setup. The joint use can improve the accuracy of both, although some methodological difficulties can arise. The robustness of different methods in ranking productive units allows us to make an comparative analysis of them. Empirical results concern productive and market demand structure, returns-to-scale, and productive inefficiency sources. The techniques are illustrated using data from the US electric power industry.Productive efficiency; parametric frontiers; DEA; industrial sector
Comparative in vitro evaluation of contact activity of fluralaner, spinosad, phoxim, propoxur, permethrin and deltamethrin against the northern fowl mite, Ornithonyssus sylviarum.
BackgroundNorthern fowl mites (Ornithonyssus sylviarum) are obligate hematophagous ectoparasites of both feral birds and poultry, particularly chicken layers and breeders. They complete their entire life-cycle on infested birds while feeding on blood. Infestations of O. sylviarum are difficult to control and resistance to some chemical classes of acaricides is a growing concern. The contact susceptibility of O. sylviarum to a new active ingredient, fluralaner, was evaluated, as well as other compounds representative of the main chemical classes commonly used to control poultry mite infestations in Europe and the USA.MethodsSix acaricides (fluralaner, spinosad, phoxim, propoxur, permethrin, deltamethrin) were dissolved and serially diluted in butanol:olive oil (1:1) to obtain test solutions used for impregnation of filter paper packets. A carrier-only control was included. Thirty adult northern fowl mites, freshly collected from untreated host chickens, were inserted into each packet for continuous compound exposure. Mite mortality was assessed after incubation of the test packets for 48 h at 75% relative humidity and a temperature of 22 °C.ResultsAdult mite LC50 /LC99 values were 2.95/8.09 ppm for fluralaner, 1587/3123 ppm for spinosad, 420/750 ppm for phoxim and 86/181 ppm for propoxur. Permethrin and deltamethrin LC values could not be calculated due to lack of mortality observed even at 1000 ppm.ConclusionsNorthern fowl mites were highly sensitive to fluralaner after contact exposure. They were moderately sensitive to phoxim and propoxur, and less sensitive to spinosad. Furthermore, the tested mite population appeared to be resistant to the pyrethroids, permethrin and deltamethrin, despite not being exposed to acaricides for at least 10 years
Exploring DCO as a tracer of thermal inversion in the disk around the Herbig Ae star HD163296
We aim to reproduce the DCO emission in the disk around HD163296 using a
simple 2D chemical model for the formation of DCO through the cold
deuteration channel and a parametric treatment of the warm deuteration channel.
We use data from ALMA in band 6 to obtain a resolved spectral imaging data cube
of the DCO =3--2 line in HD163296 with a synthesized beam of
0."53 0."42. We adopt a physical structure of the disk from the
literature that reproduces the spectral energy distribution. We then apply a
simplified chemical network for the formation of DCO that uses the physical
structure of the disk as parameters along with a CO abundance profile, a
constant HD abundance and a constant ionization rate. Finally, from the
resulting DCO abundances, we calculate the non-LTE emission using the 3D
radiative transfer code LIME. The observed DCO emission is reproduced by a
model with cold deuteration producing abundances up to .
Warm deuteration, at a constant abundance of , becomes
fully effective below 32 K and tapers off at higher temperatures, reproducing
the lack of DCO inside 90 AU. Throughout the DCO emitting zone a CO
abundance of is found, with 99\% of it frozen out below
19 K. At radii where both cold and warm deuteration are active, warm
deuteration contributes up to 20\% of DCO, consistent with detailed
chemical models. The decrease of DCO at large radii is attributed to a
temperature inversion at 250 AU, which raises temperatures above values where
cold deuteration operates. Increased photodesorption may also limit the radial
extent of DCO. The corresponding return of the DCO layer to the
midplane, together with a radially increasing ionization fraction, reproduces
the local DCO emission maximum at 260 AU.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted 7th July 201
Un tiempo y un lugar para marcar diferencias
SEFAC celebra este año en mayo el VI Congreso Nacional de Farmacéuticos Comunitarios (www.congresosefac2014.org) con el reto de continuar creciendo y demostrar con hechos la importancia que tiene la labor del farmacéutico para mejorar el funcionamiento del sistema sanitario. El lugar escogido para la cita es Málaga, donde todos los que defendemos el valor asistencial de la farmacia comunitaria tenemos una cita imprescindible, pues se esperan más de mil asistentes procedentes de toda España e incluso de otros países
Anomalous Hall-effect measurement study on Co/Pt nanosized dot
Dot arrays made of polycrystalline Co/Pt multilayer with an average grain size of 20 nm are fabricated by using a laser interference lithography and their magnetic properties are examined by detecting anomalous Hall effect. It is revealed that the ratio of dots which have stable single domain state increases from 35% to 85% while the dot diameter decreased from 200 to 120 nm. The energy barrier height of magnetization reversal is estimated as 4.0 10-12 erg from sweep rate dependence of the coercivity. The energy corresponds to the switching volume comparable with the volume of a physical grain in the multilayer film
Investigating the transformations of polyoxoanions using mass spectrometry and molecular dynamics
The reactions of [γ-SiW10O36]8– represent one of the most important synthetic gateways into a vast array of polyoxotungstate chemistry. Herein, we set about exploring the transformation of the lacunary polyoxoanion [β2-SiW11O39]8– into [γ-SiW10O36]8– using high-resolution electrospray mass spectrometry, density functional theory, and molecular dynamics. We show that the reaction proceeds through an unexpected {SiW9} precursor capable of undertaking a direct β → γ isomerization via a rotational transformation. The remarkably low-energy transition state of this transformation could be identified through theoretical calculations. Moreover, we explore the significant role of the countercations for the first time in such studies. This combination of experimental and the theoretical studies can now be used to understand the complex chemical transformations of oxoanions, leading to the design of reactivity by structural control
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