457 research outputs found

    Happiness and the Human Development Index : the paradox of Australia

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    According to the well-being measure known as the U.N. Human Development Index, Australia now ranks 3rd in the world and higher than all other English-speaking nations. This paper questions that assessment. It reviews work on the economics of happiness, considers implications for policymakers, and explores where Australia lies in international subjective well-being rankings. Using new data on approximately 50,000 randomly sampled individuals from 35 nations, the paper shows that Australians have some of the lowest levels of job satisfaction in the world. Moreover, among the sub-sample of English-speaking nations, where a common language should help subjective measures to be reliable, Australia performs poorly on a range of happiness indicators. The paper discusses this paradox. Our purpose is not to reject HDI methods, but rather to argue that much remains to be understood in this area

    CoPub update: CoPub 5.0 a text mining system to answer biological questions

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    In this article, we present CoPub 5.0, a publicly available text mining system, which uses Medline abstracts to calculate robust statistics for keyword co-occurrences. CoPub was initially developed for the analysis of microarray data, but we broadened the scope by implementing new technology and new thesauri. In CoPub 5.0, we integrated existing CoPub technology with new features, and provided a new advanced interface, which can be used to answer a variety of biological questions. CoPub 5.0 allows searching for keywords of interest and its relations to curated thesauri and provides highlighting and sorting mechanisms, using its statistics, to retrieve the most important abstracts in which the terms co-occur. It also provides a way to search for indirect relations between genes, drugs, pathways and diseases, following an ABC principle, in which A and C have no direct connection but are connected via shared B intermediates. With CoPub 5.0, it is possible to create, annotate and analyze networks using the layout and highlight options of Cytoscape web, allowing for literature based systems biology. Finally, operations of the CoPub 5.0 Web service enable to implement the CoPub technology in bioinformatics workflows. CoPub 5.0 can be accessed through the CoPub portal http://www.copub.org

    interRAI home care quality indicators

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    Abstract Background This paper describe the development of interRAI’s second-generation home care quality indicators (HC-QIs). They are derived from two of interRAI’s widely used community assessments: the Community Health Assessment and the Home Care Assessment. In this work the form in which the quality problem is specified has been refined, the covariate structure updated, and two summary scales introduced. Methods Two data sets were used: at the client and home-care site levels. Client-level data were employed to identify HC-QI covariates. This sample consisted of 335,544 clients from Europe, Canada, and the United States. Program level analyses, where client level data were aggregated at the site level, were also based on the clients from the samples from Europe, Canada, and the United States. There were 1,654 program-based observations – 22% from Europe, 23% from the US, and 55% from Canada. The first task was to identify potential HC-QIs, including both change and prevalence measures. Next, they were reviewed by industry representatives and members of the interRAI network. A two-step process adjustment was followed to identify the most appropriate covariance structure for each HC-QI. Finally, a factor analytic strategy was used to identify HC-QIs that cluster together and thus are candidates for summary scales. Results The set of risk adjusted HC-QIs are multi-dimensional in scope, including measures of function, clinical complexity, social life, distress, and service use. Two factors were identified. The first includes a set of eleven measures that revolve around the absence of decline. This scale talks about functional independence and engagement. The second factor, anchored on nine functional improvement HC-QIs, referenced positively, this scale indicates a return to clinical balance. Conclusions Twenty-three risk-adjusted, HC-QIs are described. Two new summary HC-QI scales, the “Independence Quality Scale” and the “Clinical Balance Quality Scale” are derived. In use at a site, these two scales can provide a macro view of local performance, offering a way for a home care agency to understand its performance. When scales perform less positively, the site then is able to review the HC-QI items that make up the scale, providing a roadmap for areas of greatest concern and in need of targeted interventions.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/112324/1/12877_2013_Article_931.pd

    Cost-effectiveness of the 'Walcheren Integrated Care Model' intervention for community-dwelling frail elderly

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    Background.: An important aim of integrated care for frail elderly is to generate more cost-effective health care. However, empirical research on the cost-effectiveness of integrated care for community-dwelling frail elderly is limited. Objective.: This study reports on the cost-effectiveness of the Walcheren Integrated Care Model (WICM) after 1

    The Emerging Aversion to Inequality: Evidence from Poland 1992-2005

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    This paper provides an illustration of the changing tolerance for inequality in a context of radical political and economic transformation and rapid economic growth. We focus on the Polish experience of transition and explore self-declared attitudes of the citizens. Using monthly representative surveys of the population, realized by the Polish poll institute (CBOS) from 1992 to 2005, we identify a structural break in the relation between income inequality and subjective evaluation of well-being. The downturn in the tolerance for inequality (1997) coincides with the increasing distrust of political elites.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/64387/1/wp919.pd

    Berekenen van kwaliteitsindicatoren voor de thuiszorg: voorbeeld uit het ADHOC project, een vergelijking tussen thuiszorgorganisaties uit 11 Europese landen

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    Doel: Beschrijven en berekenen van thuiszorgkwaliteitsindicatoren aan de hand van gegevens van thuiszorgorganisaties uit elf landen, waaronder Nederland, die deelnamen aan het Europese ‘Aged in Home Care’ (ADHOC) project. Met inachtneming van risicofactoren zijn thuiszorgorganisaties met elkaar vergeleken op kwaliteit van zorg. Methoden: De thuiszorgkwaliteitsindicatoren worden berekend op de wijze zoals die in de Verenigde Staten en Canada is ontwikkeld. De waarden van deze kwaliteitsindicatoren zijn voor elk van de indicatoren op risico gecorrigeerd. Dit is gebaseerd op odds ratios van covariaten die met logistische regressieanalyse op ADHOC worden bepaald. Om de vergelijking van kwaliteitsindicatoren tussen de thuiszorgorganisaties van de landen te vergemakkelijken gebruiken we een methode van percentiel-afkappunten en een aggregaatsom van daaraan gerelateerde scores. Resultaten: Op risicofactoren gecorrigeerde waarden van 22 thuiszorg-kwaliteitsindicatoren lieten grote verschillen zien tussen de elf landen die aan ADHOC deelnamen. De aggregaatsom van kwaliteitsindicatoren liet zien welke landen vermoedelijk de beste of de slechtste thuiszorgkwaliteit hadden. Conclusies: Er zijn kwaliteitsindicatoren beschikbaar voor de thuiszorg waarmee, op basis van gegevens van het RAI voor Thuiszorg, de kwaliteit van zorg tussen thuiszorgorganisaties in en over landen heen kan worden vergeleken. Voorbeelden van dit type indicator zijn: sociaal isolement, ontoereikende pijnbestrijding, beperkter zijn in het zich binnen huis verplaatsen ten opzichte van een eerdere meting

    Rising happiness in nations,1946-2004. A reply to Easterlin

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    ABSTRACT The ‘Easterlin paradox’ holds that economic growth does not add to the quality-of-life and that this appears in the fact that average happiness in nations has not risen in the last few decades. The latest trend data show otherwise. Average happiness has increased slightly in rich nations and considerably in the few poor nations for which data are available. Since longevity has also increased, the average number of happy life years has increased at an unprecedented rate since the 1950s

    Trends in community response and long term outcomes from paediatric cardiac arrest:A retrospective observational study

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    AIM: This study aimed to investigate trends over time in pre-hospital factors for pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (pOHCA) and long-term neurological and neuropsychological outcomes. These have not been described before in large populations.METHODS: Non-traumatic arrest patients, 1 day-17 years old, presented to the Sophia Children's Hospital from January 2002 to December 2020, were eligible for inclusion. Favorable neurological outcome was defined as Pediatric Cerebral Performance Categories (PCPC) 1-2 or no difference with pre-arrest baseline. The trend over time was tested with multivariable logistic and linear regression models with year of event as independent variable.FINDINGS: Over a nineteen-year study period, the annual rate of long-term favorable neurological outcome, assessed at a median 2·5 years follow-up, increased significantly (OR 1·10, 95%-CI 1·03-1·19), adjusted for confounders. Concurrently, annual automated external defibrillator (AED) use and, among adolescents, initial shockable rhythm increased significantly (OR 1·21, 95% CI 1·10-1·33 and OR 1·15, 95% CI 1·02-1·29, respectively), adjusted for confounders. For generalizability purposes, only the total intelligence quotient (IQ) was considered for trend analysis of all tested domains. Total IQ scores and bystander basic life support (BLS) rate did not change significantly over time.INTERPRETATION: Long-term favorable neurological outcome, assessed at a median 2·5 years follow-up, improved significantly over the study period. Total IQ scores did not significantly change over time. Furthermore, AED use (OR 1·21, 95%CI 1.10-1·33) and shockable rhythms among adolescents (OR1·15, 95%CI 1·02-1·29) increased over time.</p

    Literature Mining for the Discovery of Hidden Connections between Drugs, Genes and Diseases

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    The scientific literature represents a rich source for retrieval of knowledge on associations between biomedical concepts such as genes, diseases and cellular processes. A commonly used method to establish relationships between biomedical concepts from literature is co-occurrence. Apart from its use in knowledge retrieval, the co-occurrence method is also well-suited to discover new, hidden relationships between biomedical concepts following a simple ABC-principle, in which A and C have no direct relationship, but are connected via shared B-intermediates. In this paper we describe CoPub Discovery, a tool that mines the literature for new relationships between biomedical concepts. Statistical analysis using ROC curves showed that CoPub Discovery performed well over a wide range of settings and keyword thesauri. We subsequently used CoPub Discovery to search for new relationships between genes, drugs, pathways and diseases. Several of the newly found relationships were validated using independent literature sources. In addition, new predicted relationships between compounds and cell proliferation were validated and confirmed experimentally in an in vitro cell proliferation assay. The results show that CoPub Discovery is able to identify novel associations between genes, drugs, pathways and diseases that have a high probability of being biologically valid. This makes CoPub Discovery a useful tool to unravel the mechanisms behind disease, to find novel drug targets, or to find novel applications for existing drugs
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