Our study aimed to develop and validate a real-time crowding composite scale for pediatric emergency department (PED). The study took place in one teaching PED for 2 months. The outcome was the perception of crowding evaluated by triage nurses and pediatricians on a 10-level Likert scale. Triage nurses evaluated crowding at each moment of a child's admission and pediatrician at each moment of a child's discharge. The outcome was the hourly mean of all evaluations of crowding (hourly crowding perception). For analysis, originally, we only selected hours during which more than 2 nurses and more than 2 pediatricians evaluated crowding and, moreover, during which evaluations were the most consensual. As predictors, we used hourly means of 10 objective crowding indicators previously selected as consensual in a published French national Delphi study and collected automatically in our software system. The model (SOTU-PED) was developed over a 1-month data set using a backward multivariable linear regression model. Then, we applied the SOTU-PED model on a 1-month validation data set. During the study period, 7341 children were admitted in the PED. The outcome was available for 1352/1392 hours, among which 639 were included in the analysis as "consensual hours." Five indicators were included in the final model, the SOTU-PED (R2 = 0.718). On the validation data set, the correlation between the outcome (perception of crowding) and the SOTU-PED was 0.824. To predict crowded hours (hourly crowding perception >5), the area under the curve was 0.957 (0.933-0.980). The positive and negative likelihood ratios were 8.16 (3.82-17.43) and 0.153 (0.111-0.223), respectively. Using a simple model, it is possible to estimate in real time how crowded a PED is.
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Ther Adv Reprod Health
December 2024
Desai Sethi Urology Institute, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, 1150 NW 14th Street, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Background: Reproductive health technology has evolved significantly since the introduction of in vitro fertilization in 1978, enhancing the possibility of conceiving children at later stages in life. Despite these advancements, there remains a critical gap in fertility knowledge among young adults, as demonstrated by recent studies. This gap is compounded by the growing influence of social media on health information, where misinformation can distort public understanding of fertility-related issues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuccessful identification of domestic minor sex trafficking (DMST) remains challenging. Laypersons could play a significant role in identifying victims, but only if laypersons recognize trafficking situations as such and do not incorrectly attribute responsibility to victims. In the current study, we examined laypersons' perceptions of situations highly suggestive of DMST.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vis
December 2024
Department of Neurosciences, Psychology, Drug Research and Child Health, University of Florence, Firenze, Italy.
Crowding is the inability to recognize an object in clutter, classically considered a fundamental low-level bottleneck to object recognition. Recently, however, it has been suggested that crowding, like predictive phenomena such as serial dependence, may result from optimizing strategies that exploit redundancies in natural scenes. This notion leads to several testable predictions, such as crowding being greater for nonsalient targets and, counterintuitively, that flanker interference should be associated with higher precision in judgements, leading to a lower overall error rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerception
December 2024
Palacký University Olomouc, Czech Republic.
For unfamiliar faces, deciding whether two photographs depict the same person or not can be difficult. One way to substantially improve accuracy is to defer to the 'wisdom of crowds' by aggregating responses across multiple individuals. However, there are several methods available for doing this.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomacromolecules
December 2024
Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Texas at Austin, 107 W. Dean Keeton Rd., Austin, Texas 78712, United States.
Macromolecular crowding agents, such as poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), are often used to mimic cellular cytoplasm in protein assembly studies. Despite the perception that crowding agents have an inert nature, we demonstrate and quantitatively explore the diverse effects of PEG on the phase separation and maturation of protein condensates. We use two model proteins, the FG domain of Nup98 and bovine serum albumin (BSA), which represent an intrinsically disordered protein and a protein with a well-established secondary structure, respectively.
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