1,513 research outputs found
Perceptions of Healthcare, Health Status, and Discrimination Among African-American Veterans
The Institute of Medicine identified access to healthcare and race-based discrimination as important barriers to quality healthcare that contributes to health disparities. This study (1) describes African-American veterans’ perceptions of healthcare services and perceived discrimination in healthcare and (2) investigates the relationship between perceived discrimination and patient perceptions of care, satisfaction with healthcare, and health status. A convenience sample of 141 African-American veterans in Boston completed surveys from May to June 2006.
Respondents reported an average of 16 lifetime experiences of discrimination and over half recalled a situation when they experienced discrimination in healthcare. Modest ratings of perceived quality of care, and satisfaction with healthcare reflect areas for improvement. Perceived healthcare discrimination was negatively and significantly associated with satisfaction (p\u3c0.001), perceived quality of care (p\u3c0.01), and physical functioning (p\u3c0.05). Policies eliminating discrimination in healthcare are needed to improve patient satisfaction, quality of care, and health outcomes of African- American veterans
Positive Cosmological Constant and Quantum Theory
We argue that quantum theory should proceed not from a spacetime background
but from a Lie algebra, which is treated as a symmetry algebra. Then the fact
that the cosmological constant is positive means not that the spacetime
background is curved but that the de Sitter (dS) algebra as the symmetry
algebra is more relevant than the Poincare or anti de Sitter ones. The physical
interpretation of irreducible representations (IRs) of the dS algebra is
considerably different from that for the other two algebras. One IR of the dS
algebra splits into independent IRs for a particle and its antiparticle only
when Poincare approximation works with a high accuracy. Only in this case
additive quantum numbers such as electric, baryon and lepton charges are
conserved, while at early stages of the Universe they could not be conserved.
Another property of IRs of the dS algebra is that only fermions can be
elementary and there can be no neutral elementary particles. The cosmological
repulsion is a simple kinematical consequence of dS symmetry on quantum level
when quasiclassical approximation is valid. Therefore the cosmological constant
problem does not exist and there is no need to involve dark energy or other
fields for explaining this phenomenon (in agreement with a similar conclusion
by Bianchi and Rovelli).Comment: 44 pages, Latex, no figures. A revised version published in Symmetry,
Special Issue: Quantum Symmetr
Introduction to a Quantum Theory over a Galois Field
We consider a quantum theory based on a Galois field. In this approach
infinities cannot exist, the cosmological constant problem does not arise, and
one irreducible representation (IR) of the symmetry algebra splits into
independent IRs describing a particle an its antiparticle only in the
approximation when de Sitter energies are much less than the characteristic of
the field. As a consequence, the very notions of particles and antiparticles
are only approximate and such additive quantum numbers as the electric, baryon
and lepton charges are conserved only in this approximation. There can be no
neutral elementary particles and the spin-statistics theorem can be treated
simply as a requirement that standard quantum theory should be based on complex
numbers.Comment: 43 pages, Latex, 1 figur
Dual Theories: ‘Same But Different’ or ‘Different But Same’?
I argue that, under the glitz, dual theories are examples of theoretically equivalent descriptions of the same underlying physical content: I distinguish them from cases of genuine underdetermination on the grounds that there is no real incompatibility involved between the descriptions. The incompatibility is at the level of unphysical structure. I argue that dual pairs are in fact very strongly analogous to gauge- related solutions even for dual pairs that look the most radically distinct, such as AdS/CFT
Dual Theories: ‘Same But Different’ or ‘Different But Same’?
I argue that, under the glitz, dual theories are examples of theoretically equivalent descriptions of the same underlying physical content: I distinguish them from cases of genuine underdetermination on the grounds that there is no real incompatibility involved between the descriptions. The incompatibility is at the level of unphysical structure. I argue that dual pairs are in fact very strongly analogous to gauge- related solutions even for dual pairs that look the most radically distinct, such as AdS/CFT
Public Health
Public health involves the application of a wide variety of scientific and non-scientific disciplines to the very practical problems of improving population health and preventing disease. Public health has received surprisingly little attention from philosophers of science. In this chapter we consider some neglected but important philosophical aspects of the science of public health
Industry's Role in Pollution Abatement
Talk by Robert N. Rickles, Director of Pollution Abatement for Celanese Corporatio
Time in quantum gravity
Quantum gravity--the marriage of quantum physics with general relativity--is
bound to contain deep and important lessons for the nature of physical time.
Some of these lessons shall be canvassed here, particularly as they arise from
quantum general relativity and string theory and related approaches. Of
particular interest is the question of which of the intuitive aspects of time
will turn out to be fundamental, and which 'emergent' in some sense.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figur
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