14,153 research outputs found

    The Effects of Patient Characteristics on Clinician’s Adherence to Preventive Practice Guidelines

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    ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: The existence of health disparities confirms that not all patients, regardless of differences in patient demographics, are provided quality healthcare (Agency of Health Care Research and Quality, 2003). Moreover, research suggests that health disparities may be present due to the inadequate delivery of medical services (S. Haist, J. Wilson, M. Lineberry, & C. Griffith, 2007; Van Ryn, Burgess, Malat, & Griffin, 2006). The differences in the delivery of care and services to ethnic minorities and those of low socioeconomic status warrant examining the role healthcare providers play in the causation of these health disparities (Smedley, Stith, & Nelson, 2003). OBJECTIVE: The purpose of the study is to identify differences in routine screening practices of Physician Assistants and determine if such differences are associated with patients’ race and socioeconomic status. DESIGN: One hundred and twelve (N = 112) practicing Physician Assistants (N = 142) in Kentucky were surveyed and randomly assigned to receive one of four clinical vignettes. The likelihood of offering different routine screening recommendations was examined based on patient race and socioeconomic status. MAIN MEASURES: We investigated the mean differences of selected preventative care recommendation options for vignette patients as a function of patient race and socioeconomic status. KEY RESULTS: A multivariate analysis revealed that the race of a patient had a statistically significant multivariate effect on differences in screening recommendation, (p =.017) for hypertension (HTN), p=.017, immunization, p=.002. Univariate analysis showed statistically significant differences, with the African American patient were significantly less likely to receive screening for hypertension (HTN), (M = 3.42), 95% CI [3.24, 3.59], or immunizations (M = 2.45), 95% CI [2.21, 2.69] when compared to Caucasian women (M = 3.71, 2.98), 95% CIs [3.55, 3.88], [2.76, 3.23], respectively. CONCULSION: The findings suggest that the race of the patient in the vignette influenced the likelihood of receiving screening recommendations. The findings show that care delivered by Physician Assistants (PAs), are a possible source of healthcare disparities between patients from racial/ethnic minority backgrounds and their Caucasian counterparts. Keywords: disparities, health education, race & ethnicity, socioeconomic, preventive car

    Scintillator-based ion beam profiler for diagnosing laser-accelerated ion beams

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    Next generation intense, short-pulse laser facilities require new high repetition rate diagnostics for the detection of ionizing radiation. We have designed a new scintillator-based ion beam profiler capable of measuring the ion beam transverse profile for a number of discrete energy ranges. The optical response and emission characteristics of four common plastic scintillators has been investigated for a range of proton energies and fluxes. The scintillator light output (for 1 MeV > Ep < 28 MeV) was found to have a non-linear scaling with proton energy but a linear response to incident flux. Initial measurements with a prototype diagnostic have been successful, although further calibration work is required to characterize the total system response and limitations under the high flux, short pulse duration conditions of a typical high intensity laser-plasma interaction

    Estimating the Impacts of Storage Dry Matter Losses on Switchgrass Production

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    This poster estimates dry matter losses as a function of harvest method, storage treatment, and time in storage. We then calculate the cost to store switchgrass bales under alternate harvest method and storage treatment scenarios; and determine the breakeven harvest method and storage treatment as a function of biomass price and time in storage.Biomass, bioenergy crops, function form, sustainable systems, Farm Management, Production Economics, Q10, Q42,

    Alternative derivation of the relativistic contribution to perihelic precession

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    An alternative derivation of the first-order relativistic contribution to perihelic precession is presented. Orbital motion in the Schwarzschild geometry is considered in the Keplerian limit, and the orbit equation is derived for approximately elliptical motion. The method of solution makes use of coordinate transformations and the correspondence principle, rather than the standard perturbative approach. The form of the resulting orbit equation is similar to that derived from Newtonian mechanics and includes first-order corrections to Kepler's orbits due to general relativity. The associated relativistic contribution to perihelic precession agrees with established first-order results. The reduced radius for the circular orbit is in agreement to first-order with that calculated from the Schwarzschild effective potential. The method of solution is understandable by undergraduate students.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in the American Journal of Physic

    ATLAS solar pointing operations

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    The ATLAS-series of Spacelab missions are comprised of a diverse group of scientific instruments including instruments for studying the sun and how the sun's energy changes across an eleven-year solar cycle. The ATLAS solar instruments are located on one or more pallets in the Orbiter payload bay and use the Orbiter as a pointing platform for their examinations of the sun. One of the ATLAS instruments contained a sun sensor which allowed scientists and engineers on the ground to see the pointing error of the sun with respect to the instrument and correct for the error based upon the information coming from the ATLAS 1 and ATLAS 2 missions with particular attention given to identifying the sources of pointing discrepancies of the solar instruments and to describe the crew and ground controller procedures that were developed to correct for these discrepancies. The Orbiter pointing behavior from the ATLAS 1 and ATLAS 2 flights presented in this paper can be applied to future flights which use the Orbiter as a pointing platform
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