810 research outputs found
An Assessment of Stream Fishing Venues in West Virginia: A Comparison of Anglers along a Spectrum of Access
West Virginia places an emphasis on fishing as a way to increase nature-based tourism. However, heavy fishing pressure on public water and unequal fishing effort at stocking locations can lead to declining catch rates and an increasing number of visitors that experience catch deprivation and dissatisfaction. Controlling access to streams is one approach to dealing with this carrying capacity issue. Both public and private land managers have approached this problem differently using various levels of control. For example, Pipestem State Park managers provided anglers with access to the Bluestone River with few controls via an aerial tramway prior to 2009. In recent years, the park has controlled access by stocking trout at the beginning of the shoulder season (November-April) when the tram is closed, thus limiting access to the river via a strenuous 4 mile hike on steep terrain. At Harman\u27s North Fork Cottages, access is controlled on private land. Only guests that stay in the luxury log cabins are given easy and nearby access to a stocked segment of river. The purpose of this study is to compare the success, satisfaction, and perceived crowding of four stream fishing venues that fall along a spectrum of access from completely open access to closed, invitation only access. A total of 154 adult anglers completed an on-site interview. Indicators of fishing success (e.g., Catch Per Unit Effort) and economic impact of stocking strategies will be compared among the fishing venues. Catch Per Unit Effort values were found to be significantly different from one venue to another, while acceptability of catch was found not to be. The catch rate normative curve developed from this information is included, which shows the preferred and minimally acceptable catch rates for each different fishing venue. Additionally, significant differences were found in the number of anglers observed fishing on the stream by other anglers is reported, as it addresses the issue of perceived crowding and social carrying capacity
Analysis of Iterative Methods for the Linear Boltzmann Transport Equation
In this article we consider the iterative solution of the linear system of
equations arising from the discretisation of the poly-energetic linear
Boltzmann transport equation using a discontinuous Galerkin finite element
approximation in space, angle, and energy. In particular, we develop
preconditioned Richardson iterations which may be understood as generalisations
of source iteration in the mono-energetic setting, and derive computable a
posteriori bounds for the solver error incurred due to inexact linear algebra,
measured in a relevant problem-specific norm. We prove that the convergence of
the resulting schemes and a posteriori solver error estimates are independent
of the discretisation parameters. We also discuss how the poly-energetic
Richardson iteration may be employed as a preconditioner for the generalised
minimal residual (GMRES) method. Furthermore, we show that standard
implementations of GMRES based on minimising the Euclidean norm of the residual
vector can be utilized to yield computable a posteriori solver error estimates
at each iteration, through judicious selections of left- and
right-preconditioners for the original linear system. The effectiveness of
poly-energetic source iteration and preconditioned GMRES, as well as their
respective a posteriori solver error estimates, is demonstrated through
numerical examples arising in the modelling of photon transport.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figure
Can electronic assessment tools improve the process of shared decision-making? A systematic review
Background:
Patient involvement in decision-making plays a prominent role in improving the quality of healthcare. Despite this, shared decision-making is not routinely implemented. However, electronic assessment tools that capture patients’ history, symptoms, opinions and values prior to their medical appointment are used by healthcare professionals during patient consultations to facilitate shared decision-making.
Objective:
To assess the effectiveness of electronic assessment tools to improve the shared decision-making process.
Method:
A systematic review was conducted following PRISMA guidelines. Published literature was searched on MEDLINE, EMBASE and PsycINFO to identify potentially relevant studies. Data were extracted and analysed narratively.
Results:
Seventeen articles, representing 4004 participants, were included in this review. The main findings were significant improvement in patient–provider communication and provider management of patient condition in the intervention group compared to the control group. In contrast, patient–provider satisfaction and time efficiency were assessed by relatively few included studies, and the effects of these outcomes were inconclusive.
Conclusion:
This review found that communication and healthcare professional’s management of a patient’s condition improves because of the use of electronic questionnaires. This is encouraging because the process of shared decision-making is reliant on high-quality communication between healthcare professionals and patients.
Implications:
We found that this intervention is especially important for people with chronic diseases, as they need to establish a long-term relationship with their healthcare provider and agree to a treatment plan that aligns with their values. More rigorous research with validated instruments is required
History: The San and Its Mission
This book is a re-telling of the story of the mission of the Sydney Adventist Hospital - even today still known fondly to many as the San - based on the many stories and vignettes shared by people, and about people, who lived the San\u27s mission, contributing to a hospital that has had an impact on many lives.This is not a chronological and systematic historical narrative, but it uses the motivation and inspiration of individuals and events to illustrate how the mission of the hospital has been fulfilled through its healing and restorative ministry since 1903. It also illustrates how mission inspired individuals, decisions, strategies and the pioneering work that remains the hallmark of the San
Cost-Effectiveness of Treating Hepatitis C in Clients on Opioid Agonist Therapy in Community Pharmacies Compared to Primary Healthcare in Australia
Meeting the World Health Organisation 2030 target of treating 80% of people with hepatitis C virus (HCV) in Australia requires accessible testing and treatment services for at-risk populations. Previous clinical trials, including those in Australia, have demonstrated the efficacy of outreach programmes to community pharmacies offering opioid agonist therapy (OAT). This analysis evaluates the potential cost-effectiveness of introducing an outreach programme in community pharmacies. Using a decision analytic model, we estimated the impact of adding a temporary hepatitis C outreach and treatment programme in community pharmacies to the standard treatment pathway available through general practice. We compared the expected number of tests, diagnoses, cures and costs occurring through the addition of this outreach and treatment programme to those expected through general practice alone over a 12-month time horizon. We examined costs from the perspective of the health system and conducted one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses to assess uncertainty in model parameters and test key assumptions. In the model adding the outreach programme pathway increased the number of tests from 4178 to 8737, the number of diagnoses from 615 to 1285 and the number of cures from 223 to 777 among people on OAT over a 12-month period. Each additional cure achieved through the addition of the outreach programme was estimated to incur 48,964 (AUD 2023) to the health system, with > 85% of these costs attributable to medication and dispensing expenses. The average cost per cure was estimated to be 49,152 through routine care and $49,018 in the outreach programme. Although outreach models of care incur large upfront costs, they can capture otherwise unreached populations and result in comparable or favourable cost per cure, due to higher levels of engagement and lower rates of loss to follow-up
Efficient High-Order Space-Angle-Energy Polytopic Discontinuous Galerkin Finite Element Methods for Linear Boltzmann Transport
We introduce an -version discontinuous Galerkin finite element method
(DGFEM) for the linear Boltzmann transport problem. A key feature of this new
method is that, while offering arbitrary order convergence rates, it may be
implemented in an almost identical form to standard multigroup discrete
ordinates methods, meaning that solutions can be computed efficiently with high
accuracy and in parallel within existing software. This method provides a
unified discretisation of the space, angle, and energy domains of the
underlying integro-differential equation and naturally incorporates both local
mesh and local polynomial degree variation within each of these computational
domains. Moreover, general polytopic elements can be handled by the method,
enabling efficient discretisations of problems posed on complicated spatial
geometries. We study the stability and -version a priori error analysis of
the proposed method, by deriving suitable -approximation estimates together
with a novel inf-sup bound. Numerical experiments highlighting the performance
of the method for both polyenergetic and monoenergetic problems are presented.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figure
Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States
The Sea Level Rise and Coastal Flood Hazard Scenarios and Tools Interagency Task Force, jointly convened by the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) and the National Ocean Council (NOC), began its work in August 2015. The Task Force has focused its efforts on three primary tasks: 1) updating scenarios of global mean sea level (GMSL) rise, 2) integrating the global scenarios with regional factors contributing to sea level change for the entire U.S. coastline, and 3) incorporating these regionally appropriate scenarios within coastal risk management tools and capabilities deployed by individual agencies in support of the needs of specific stakeholder groups and user communities. This technical report focuses on the first two of these tasks and reports on the production of gridded relative sea level (RSL, which includes both ocean-level change and vertical land motion) projections for the United States associated with an updated set of GMSL scenarios. In addition to supporting the longer-term Task Force effort, this new product will be an important input into the USGCRP Sustained Assessment process and upcoming Fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4) due in 2018. This report also serves as a key technical input into the in-progress USGCRP Climate Science Special Report (CSSR)
Quadrature-free polytopic discontinuous Galerkin methods for transport problems
In this article we consider the application of Euler's homogeneous function theorem together with Stokes' theorem to exactly integrate families of polynomial spaces over general polygonal and polyhedral (polytopic) domains in two and three dimensions, respectively. This approach allows for the integrals to be evaluated based on only computing the values of the integrand and its derivatives at the vertices of the polytopic domain, without the need to construct a sub-tessellation of the underlying domain of interest. Here, we present a detailed analysis of the computational complexity of the proposed algorithm and show that this depends on three key factors: the ambient dimension of the underlying polytopic domain; the size of the requested polynomial space to be integrated; and the size of a directed graph related to the polytopic domain. This general approach is then employed to compute the volume integrals arising within the discontinuous Galerkin finite element approximation of the linear transport equation. Numerical experiments are presented which highlight the efficiency of the proposed algorithm when compared to standard quadrature approaches defined on a sub-tessellation of the polytopic elements
Evaluating Coastal Landscape Response to Sea-Level Rise in the Northeastern United States - Approach and Methods
The U.S. Geological Survey is examining effects of future sea-level rise on the coastal landscape from Maine to Virginia by producing spatially explicit, probabilistic predictions using sea-level projections, vertical land movement rates (due to isostacy), elevation data, and land-cover data. Sea-level-rise scenarios used as model inputs are generated by using multiple sources of information, including Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 models following representative concentration pathways 4.5 and 8.5 in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment Report. A Bayesian network is used to develop a predictive coastal response model that integrates the sea-level, elevation, and land-cover data with assigned probabilities that account for interactions with coastal geomorphology as well as the corresponding ecological and societal systems it supports. The effects of sea-level rise are presented as (1) level of landscape submergence and (2) coastal response type characterized as either static (that is, inundation) or dynamic (that is, landform or landscape change). Results are produced at a spatial scale of 30 meters for four decades (the 2020s, 2030s, 2050s, and 2080s). The probabilistic predictions can be applied to landscape management decisions based on sea-level-rise effects as well as on assessments of the prediction uncertainty and need for improved data or fundamental understanding. This report describes the methods used to produce predictions, including information on input datasets; the modeling approach; model outputs; data-quality-control procedures; and information on how to access the data and metadata online
Quadrature-Free Polytopic Discontinuous Galerkin Methods for Transport Problems
In this article we consider the application of Euler’s homogeneous function theorem to- gether with Stokes’ theorem to exactly integrate families of polynomial spaces over general polygonal and polyhedral (polytopic) domains in two and three dimensions, respectively. This approach allows for the integrals to be evaluated based on only computing the values of the integrand and its deriva- tives at the vertices of the polytopic domain, without the need to construct a sub-tessellation of the underlying domain of interest. Here, we present a detailed analysis of the computational complexity of the proposed algorithm and show that this depends on three key factors: the ambient dimension of the underlying polytopic domain; the size of the requested polynomial space to be integrated; and the size of a directed graph related to the polytopic domain. This general approach is then employed to com- pute the volume integrals arising within the discontinuous Galerkin finite element approximation of the linear transport equation. Numerical experiments are presented which highlight the efficiency of the proposed algorithm when compared to standard quadrature approaches defined on a sub-tessellation of the polytopic elements
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