509 research outputs found
Moduli of quantum Riemannian geometries on <= 4 points
We classify parallelizable noncommutative manifold structures on finite sets
of small size in the general formalism of framed quantum manifolds and
vielbeins introduced previously. The full moduli space is found for
points, and a restricted moduli space for 4 points. The topological part of the
moduli space is found for points based on the known atlas of regular
graphs. We also discuss aspects of the quantum theory defined by functional
integration.Comment: 34 pages ams-latex, 4 figure
A Study of Crowdsourcing in Undergraduate Entrepreneurship Education
Crowdsourcing is an approach to harness knowledge and support from crowds using online platforms. Its use occurs within businesses and academia. Small businesses especially derive value from crowdsourcing because entrepreneurs have startup costs as well as time challenges to bring services/products to market. Entrepreneurs may also seek innovation and authenticity to differentiate from competitors. Since crowdsourcing offers these benefits, the researchers queried faculty from public and private universities who taught undergraduate classes in entrepreneurship to explore teaching methods utilized as well as specific aspects of crowdsourcing that were included. Researchers analyzed the resulting crowdsourcing gaps as well as crowdsourcing teaching challenges. Based upon their findings, new crowdsourcing learning activities and strategies were developed such that undergraduate entrepreneurship students may further benefit from crowdsourcing
Is it time to combine untargeted antifungal strategies to reach the goal of 'early' effective treatment?
LETTER TO EDITO
Self help groups in a city of Tuscany: Reconstruction of the second generation model of work for professionals and services
This study is part of a more extensive project aimed to investigate the effectiveness of self-help group participation in improving quality of life in mental disease. The study is taking place in the Tuscany Region, in Italy. In the first qualitative step of analysis researchers are interested in describing the specific features of the psychiatric self-help movement in Tuscany, comparing different realities, networks, kind of groups. Therefore, our aim is to collect exhaustive information to describe how self-help system work in different provinces at the present moment. The implementation of groups for psychiatric problems is quite young in Italy. Because of a lack of specific regulation in the directives of the Italian health care system, every local service has implemented groups differently, sometimes enhancing, sometimes dismissing them. Prato, near Florence, is one of the more interesting context for the birth of psychiatric self-help movement in the region: public health services improved groups since early 90âs, it was one of the first self-help reality linked to services in the entire region. Now we are in a âsecond generationâ of professionals, and the original meaning of groups seems to be transformed, sometimes misunderstood. Our objectives of study head us toward an in depth analysis of self-help phenomenon in Prato
Self help groups in a city of Tuscany: Reconstruction of the second generation model of work for professionals and services
This study is part of a more extensive project aimed to investigate the effectiveness of self-help group participation in improving quality of life in mental disease. The study is taking place in the Tuscany Region, in Italy. In the first qualitative step of analysis researchers are interested in describing the specific features of the psychiatric self-help movement in Tuscany, comparing different realities, networks, kind of groups. Therefore, our aim is to collect exhaustive information to describe how self-help system work in different provinces at the present moment. The implementation of groups for psychiatric problems is quite young in Italy. Because of a lack of specific regulation in the directives of the Italian health care system, every local service has implemented groups differently, sometimes enhancing, sometimes dismissing them. Prato, near Florence, is one of the more interesting context for the birth of psychiatric self-help movement in the region: public health services improved groups since early 90âs, it was one of the first self-help reality linked to services in the entire region. Now we are in a âsecond generationâ of professionals, and the original meaning of groups seems to be transformed, sometimes misunderstood. Our objectives of study head us toward an in depth analysis of self-help phenomenon in Prato
Should we continue to use prediction tools to identify patients at risk of Candida spp. infection? If yes, why?
We read with interest the article from Shanin et al. about the Fungal Infection Risk Evaluation (FIRE) study [1] aiming to 'describe the incidence of IFD in UK critical care units and to develop and validate a clinical risk prediction tool to identify non-neutropenic, critically ill adult patients at risk of IFD'. The investigators should be congratulated for the way they collected a huge amount of data from 96 adult intensive care units (ICUs), managed the FIRE database, and developed and validated the risk model. However, they stated that the prediction model would help to identify patients who may benefit from antifungal prophylaxis and that a number of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) demonstrated a beneficial effect of antifungal prophylaxis and/or empiric treatment in terms of incidence of invasive fungal disease (IFD) and mortality. This statement is not supported by available evidence from RCTs. A recent Cochrane Systematic Review including 22 RCTs evaluating prophylaxis, pre-emptive, and empiric antifungal treatment with any antifungal drugs in 2761 non-neutropenic critically ill patients showed no significant effect on mortality (risk ratio (RR) 0.93, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.79 to 1.09) and a significant reduction in the risk of invasive fungal infection (IFI) (RR 0.57, 95 % CI 0.39 to 0.83) [2, 3]. In the subgroup analysis for type of intervention, antifungal prophylaxis was not associated with a significant mortality reduction but with a significant reduction of IFI [4]. This systematic review was the update of the one cited in the manuscript and published in 2006 including 12 RCT and 1606 patients
Opioid use and effectiveness of its prescription at discharge in an acute pain relief and palliative care unit
The aim of this study was to present how opioids
are used in an acute pain relief and palliative care unit
(APRPCU), where many patients with difficult pain conditions
are admitted from GPs, home palliative care programs,
oncology departments, other hospitals or emergency units,
and other regional places. From a consecutive sample of
cancer patients admitted to an APRPCU for a period of
6 months, patients who had been administered opioids were
included in this survey. Basic information was collected as
well as opioid therapy prescribed at admission and, subsequently,
during admission and at time of discharge. Patients
were discharged once stabilization of pain and symptoms
were obtained and the treatment was considered to be optimized.
One week after being discharged, patients or relatives
were contacted by phone to gather information about
the availability of opioids at dosages prescribed at time of
discharge. One hundred eighty six of 231 patients were
specifically admitted for uncontrolled pain, with a mean
pain intensity of 6.8 (SD 2.5). The mean dose of oral
morphine equivalents in patients receiving opioids before
admission was 45 mg/day (range 10â500 mg). One hundred
seventy five patients (75.7 %) were prescribed around the
clock opioids at admission. About one third of patients
changed treatment (opioid or route). Forty two of 175
(24 %), 27/58 (46.5 %), 10/22 (45.4 %), and 2/4 (50 %)
patients were receiving more than 200 mg of oral morphine
equivalents, as maximum dose of the first, second, third, and
fourth opioid prescriptions, respectively. The pattern of
opioids changed, with the highest doses administered with
subsequent line options. The mean final dose of opioids,
expressed as oral morphine equivalents, for all patients was
318 mg/day (SD 798), that is more than six times the doses
of pre-admission opioid doses. One hundred eighty six
patients (80.5 %) were prescribed a breakthrough cancer
pain (BTcP) medication at admission. Sixty five patients
changed their BTcP prescription, and further 27 patients
changed again. Finally, eight patients were prescribed a
fourth BTcP medication. Of 46 patients available for interview,
the majority of them (n=39, 84 %) did not have
problems with their GPs, who facilitated prescription and
availability of opioids at the dosages prescribed at discharge.
For patients with severe distress, APRPCUs may
guarantee a high-level support to optimize pain and symptom
intensities providing intensive approach and resolving
highly distressing situations in a short time by optimizing
the use of opioids
Marketing Ethics: A Study of Significance Within National Professional Associations
Professional associations are expected to maintain a reasonable standard of behavior regarding how they market to their service bases. Prior research indicates that the use of written marketing ethics is not standardized and that business codes of ethics are a potential base for a universal code of marketing ethics from which all professionals could draw. We use document analysis to review several professional associationsâ codes of conduct across several industries and quantify the mention of marketing ethics within each code to identify and explore gaps. The review found that some associationsâ codes had significant representation, and others had a minimal or nonexistent representation of marketing ethics. Our findings also indicate that several external forces may determine the presence of marketing ethics and that such sporadic inclusion of marketing ethics indicates a necessity to develop and implement marketing ethics to protect professional and organizational integrity and market and consumer interests
Ion pairing in model electrolytes: A study via three particle correlation functions
A novel integral equations approach is applied for studying ion pairing in
the restricted primitive model (RPM) electrolyte, i. e., the three point
extension (TPE) to the Ornstein-Zernike integral equations. In the TPE
approach, the three-particle correlation functions are obtained. The TPE results are compared to molecular
dynamics (MD) simulations and other theories. Good agreement between TPE and MD
is observed for a wide range of parameters, particularly where standard
integral equations theories fail, i. e., low salt concentration and high ionic
valence. Our results support the formation of ion pairs and aligned ion
complexes.Comment: 43 pages (including 18 EPS figs) - RevTeX 4 - J. Chem. Phys. (in
press
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