8,421 research outputs found
What About Mom? The Forgotten Beneficiary of the Medicaid Expansions
This paper contributes to evidence regarding the effectiveness of the Medicaid expansions by focusing on a key beneficiary - the mother - who has previously been overlooked. Using the Natality Detail Files for 1989-96, we estimate the relationship between Medicaid eligibility and maternal health outcomes for several treatment groups and a control group. Potential biases caused by improved reporting are addressed by using a 'straw man' maternal complication not preventable with prenatal care. Our results suggest that increased Medicaid eligibility lead to fewer preventable maternal complications among women most likely to have benefited from the Medicaid expansions.Maternal health; Medicaid; Prenatal care
Phase behavior of hard spheres confined between parallel hard plates: Manipulation of colloidal crystal structures by confinement
We study the phase behavior of hard spheres confined between two parallel
hard plates using extensive computer simulations. We determine the full
equilibrium phase diagram for arbitrary densities and plate separations from
one to five hard-sphere diameters using free energy calculations. We find a
first-order fluid-solid transition, which corresponds to either capillary
freezing or melting depending on the plate separation. The coexisting solid
phase consists of crystalline layers with either triangular or square symmetry.
Increasing the plate separation, we find a sequence of crystal structures from
n triangular to (n+1) square to (n+1) triangular, where n is the number of
crystal layers, in agreement with experiments on colloids. At high densities,
the transition between square to triangular phases are intervened by
intermediate structures, e.g., prism, buckled, and rhombic phases.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens.
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The effect of introducing a financial incentive to promote application of fluoride varnish in dental practice in Scotland:a natural experiment
Background:
Financial incentives are often used to influence professional practice, yet the factors which influence their effectiveness and their behavioural mechanisms are not fully understood. In keeping with clinical guidelines, Childsmile (Scotland’s oral health improvement programme) advocates twice yearly fluoride varnish application (FVA) for children in dental practice. To support implementation Childsmile offered dental practitioners a fee-per-item payment for varnishing 2–5-year-olds’ teeth through a pilot. In October 2011 payment was extended to all dental practitioners. This paper compares FVA pre- and post-roll-out and explores the financial incentive’s behavioural mechanisms.
Methods:
A natural experimental approach using a longitudinal cohort of dental practitioners (n = 1090) compared FVA pre- (time 1) and post- (time 2) financial incentive. Responses from practitioners who did not work in a Childsmile pilot practice when considering their 2–5-year-old patients (novel incentive group) were compared with all other responses (continuous incentive group). The Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) was used to measure change in behavioural mechanisms associated with the incentive. Analysis of covariance was used to investigate FVA rates and associated behavioural mechanisms in the two groups.
Results:
At time 2, 709 74%, of eligible responders, were followed up. In general, FVA rates increased over time for both groups; however, the novel incentive group experienced a greater increase (β [95% CI] = 0.82 [0.72 to 0.92]) than the continuous incentive group. Despite this, only 33% of practitioners reported ‘always’ varnishing increased risk 2–5-year-olds’ teeth following introduction of the financial incentive, 19% for standard risk children. Domain scores at time 2 (adjusting for time 1) increased more for the novel incentive group (compared to the continuous incentive group) for five domains: knowledge, social/professional role and identity, beliefs about consequences, social influences and emotion.
Conclusions:
In this large, prospective, population-wide study, a financial incentive moderately increased FVA in dental practice. Novel longitudinal use of a validated theoretical framework to understand behavioural mechanisms suggested that financial incentives operate through complex inter-linked belief systems. While financial incentives are useful in narrowing the gap between clinical guidelines and FVA, multiple intervention approaches are required
Effective role of unpolarized nonvalence partons in Drell-Yan single spin asymmetries
We perform numerical simulations of the Sivers effect from single spin
asymmetries in Drell-Yan processes on transversely polarized protons. We
consider colliding antiprotons and pions at different kinematic conditions of
interest for the future planned experiments. We conventionally name "framework
I" the results obtained when properly accounting for the various flavor
dependent polarized valence contributions in the numerator of the asymmetry,
and for the unpolarized nonvalence contribution in its denominator. We name
"framework II" the results obtained when taking a suitable flavor average of
the valence contributions and neglecting the nonvalence ones. We compare the
two methods, also with respect to the input parametrization of the Sivers
function which is extracted from data with approximations sometimes
intermediate between frameworks I and II. Deviations between the two approaches
are found to be small except for dilepton masses below 3 GeV. The Sivers effect
is used as a test case; the arguments can be generalized to other interesting
azimuthal asymmetries in Drell-Yan processes, such as the Boer-Mulders effect.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures in eps forma
Determination of the exponent gamma for SAWs on the two-dimensional Manhattan lattice
We present a high-statistics Monte Carlo determination of the exponent gamma
for self-avoiding walks on a Manhattan lattice in two dimensions. A
conservative estimate is \gamma \gtapprox 1.3425(3), in agreement with the
universal value 43/32 on regular lattices, but in conflict with predictions
from conformal field theory and with a recent estimate from exact enumerations.
We find strong corrections to scaling that seem to indicate the presence of a
non-analytic exponent Delta < 1. If we assume Delta = 11/16 we find gamma =
1.3436(3), where the error is purely statistical.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX2e, 4 figure
Factors associated with quality of services for marginalized groups with mental health problems in 14 European countries
This research was financially supported by DG-Sanco (contract: 800197; 2007-2010). The authors would like to thank all of the professionals and services who participated in the PROMO assessment of services.
A PhD grant from Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia–Portugal (SFRH/BD/66388/2009) to the first author is acknowledged
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