96 research outputs found
Inappropriate hospital admission and length of inpatient stay: patients with long term neurological conditions
Introduction
Studies have shown that a proportion of patients admitted to hospital do not require the intensity of services they provide. Also, the admission of patients can be for an inappropriate duration.
Methods
Three studies were conducted. The first study was a record review to determine the appropriateness of patient admissions and inpatient stays. The second examined the wider causes of inappropriate admissions/inpatient stays as perceived by clinicians, and identified interventions to reduce such admissions/stays. Data were collected using focus groups. The final study explored barriers to service use from the perspectives of clinicians and patients. Data were collected from clinicians via an online questionnaire and from both clinicians and patients using semi structured in-depth interviews.
Results
Of 119 patients, 32 were admitted inappropriately and 83 were admitted for an inappropriate duration. Risk factors for an inappropriate admission included living in the community compared to a nursing/residential home, and for an inappropriate length of stay included the number of presenting complaints, number of long term neurological conditions and whether the participant lived alone in their own home or with others. In the second study, the limited knowledge and a lack of health and social care resources in the community, were perceived as causes of inappropriate admission/lengths of stay. Interventions to prevent inappropriate admissions/lengths of stay included: sub-acute care facilities and patient held summaries of specialist consultations, among others. The final study found that the main barriers to use of services were out of hour's access and unfamiliarity of clinicians with local service provision.
Conclusions
The causes of inappropriate admissions/lengths of stay related, in main, to communication problems and accessibility of services. Interventions to improve transference of information and knowledge regarding long term condition management and service provision may be warranted
Inappropriate hospital admission and length of inpatient stay: patients with long term neurological conditions
Introduction
Studies have shown that a proportion of patients admitted to hospital do not require the intensity of services they provide. Also, the admission of patients can be for an inappropriate duration.
Methods
Three studies were conducted. The first study was a record review to determine the appropriateness of patient admissions and inpatient stays. The second examined the wider causes of inappropriate admissions/inpatient stays as perceived by clinicians, and identified interventions to reduce such admissions/stays. Data were collected using focus groups. The final study explored barriers to service use from the perspectives of clinicians and patients. Data were collected from clinicians via an online questionnaire and from both clinicians and patients using semi structured in-depth interviews.
Results
Of 119 patients, 32 were admitted inappropriately and 83 were admitted for an inappropriate duration. Risk factors for an inappropriate admission included living in the community compared to a nursing/residential home, and for an inappropriate length of stay included the number of presenting complaints, number of long term neurological conditions and whether the participant lived alone in their own home or with others. In the second study, the limited knowledge and a lack of health and social care resources in the community, were perceived as causes of inappropriate admission/lengths of stay. Interventions to prevent inappropriate admissions/lengths of stay included: sub-acute care facilities and patient held summaries of specialist consultations, among others. The final study found that the main barriers to use of services were out of hour's access and unfamiliarity of clinicians with local service provision.
Conclusions
The causes of inappropriate admissions/lengths of stay related, in main, to communication problems and accessibility of services. Interventions to improve transference of information and knowledge regarding long term condition management and service provision may be warranted
Measurement of inclusive charged current interactions on carbon in a few-GeV neutrino beam
The SciBooNE Collaboration reports a measurement of inclusive charged current
interactions of muon neutrinos on carbon with an average energy of 0.8 GeV
using the Fermilab Booster Neutrino Beam. We compare our measurement with two
neutrino interaction simulations: NEUT and NUANCE. The charged current
interaction rates (product of flux and cross section) are extracted by fitting
the muon kinematics, with a precision of 6-15% for the energy dependent and 3%
for the energy integrated analyses. We also extract CC inclusive interaction
cross sections from the observed rates, with a precision of 10-30% for the
energy dependent and 8% for the energy integrated analyses. This is the first
measurement of the CC inclusive cross section on carbon around 1 GeV. These
results can be used to convert previous SciBooNE cross section ratio
measurements to absolute cross section values.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures. Accepted by Phys. Rev. D. Minor revisions to
match the accepted versio
Search for Charged Current Coherent Pion Production on Carbon in a Few-GeV Neutrino Beam
The SciBooNE Collaboration has performed a search for charged current
coherent pion production from muon neutrinos scattering on carbon, \nu_\mu
^{12}C \to \mu^- ^{12}C \pi^+, with two distinct data samples. No evidence for
coherent pion production is observed. We set 90% confidence level upper limits
on the cross section ratio of charged current coherent pion production to the
total charged current cross section at 0.67\times 10^{-2} at mean neutrino
energy 1.1 GeV and 1.36\times 10^{-2} at mean neutrino energy 2.2 GeV.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, Minor revisions to match version accepted for
publication in Physical Review
Improving Photoelectron Counting and Particle Identification in Scintillation Detectors with Bayesian Techniques
Many current and future dark matter and neutrino detectors are designed to
measure scintillation light with a large array of photomultiplier tubes (PMTs).
The energy resolution and particle identification capabilities of these
detectors depend in part on the ability to accurately identify individual
photoelectrons in PMT waveforms despite large variability in pulse amplitudes
and pulse pileup. We describe a Bayesian technique that can identify the times
of individual photoelectrons in a sampled PMT waveform without deconvolution,
even when pileup is present. To demonstrate the technique, we apply it to the
general problem of particle identification in single-phase liquid argon dark
matter detectors. Using the output of the Bayesian photoelectron counting
algorithm described in this paper, we construct several test statistics for
rejection of backgrounds for dark matter searches in argon. Compared to simpler
methods based on either observed charge or peak finding, the photoelectron
counting technique improves both energy resolution and particle identification
of low energy events in calibration data from the DEAP-1 detector and
simulation of the larger MiniCLEAN dark matter detector.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figure
An improved measurement of muon antineutrino disappearance in MINOS
We report an improved measurement of muon anti-neutrino disappearance over a
distance of 735km using the MINOS detectors and the Fermilab Main Injector
neutrino beam in a muon anti-neutrino enhanced configuration. From a total
exposure of 2.95e20 protons on target, of which 42% have not been previously
analyzed, we make the most precise measurement of the anti-neutrino
"atmospheric" delta-m squared = 2.62 +0.31/-0.28 (stat.) +/- 0.09 (syst.) and
constrain the anti-neutrino atmospheric mixing angle >0.75 (90%CL). These
values are in agreement with those measured for muon neutrinos, removing the
tension reported previously.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. In submission to Phys.Rev.Let
Recommended from our members
Improved Search for Muon-Neutrino to Electron-Neutrino Oscillations in MINOS
We report the results of a search for ν_e appearance in a ν_μ beam in the MINOS long-baseline neutrino experiment. With an improved analysis and an increased exposure of 8.2×10^(20) protons on the NuMI target at Fermilab, we find 2sin^2(θ_(23))sin^2(2θ_(13))<0.12(0.20) at 90% confidence
level for δ=0 and the normal (inverted) neutrino mass hierarchy, with a best-fit of 2sin^2(θ_(23))sin^2(2θ_(13))=0.041^(+0.047)_(-0.031)(0.079^(+0.071)_(-0.053).
The θ_(13)= 0 hypothesis is disfavored by the MINOS data
at the 89% confidence level
Recommended from our members
Search for the disappearance of muon antineutrinos in the NuMI neutrino beam
We report constraints on antineutrino oscillation parameters that were obtained by using the two MINOS detectors to measure the 7% muon antineutrino component of the NuMI neutrino beam. In the Far Detector, we select 130 events in the charged-current muon antineutrino sample, compared to a prediction of 136.4 ± 11.7(stat)^(+10.2)_(-8.9)(syst) events under the assumption │Δm^2│ = 2.32 X 10^(-3) eV^2, sin^2(2θ) = 1.0
- …