scholarly journals AB148. Transfer-time dependent mortality analysis of odontoid fractures: a retrospective review

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. AB148-AB148
Author(s):  
Jake Michael McDonnell ◽  
Daniel Patrick Ahern ◽  
Enda Kelly ◽  
Joseph Butler
2003 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. S146 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.P. McCullough ◽  
R. Bustami ◽  
S. Murray ◽  
T.M. Egan ◽  
R.M. Merion

2007 ◽  
Vol 1 (S1) ◽  
pp. S14-S24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathaniel Hupert ◽  
Eric Hollingsworth ◽  
Wei Xiong

ABSTRACTPurpose: To examine the relationship between overtriage and critical mortality after a mass casualty incident (MCI) using a simulation model of trauma system response.Methods: We created a discrete event simulation model of trauma system management of MCIs involving individual patient triage and treatment. Model variables include triage performance, treatment capability, treatment time, and time-dependent mortality of critically injured patients. We model triage as a variable selection process applied to a hypothetical population of critically and noncritically injured patients. Treatment capability is represented by staffed emergency department trauma bays with associated staffed operating rooms that are recycled after each use. We estimated critical and noncritical patient treatment times and time-dependent mortality rates from the trauma literature.Results: In this simulation model, overtriage, the proportion of noncritical patients among all of those labeled as critical, has a positive, negative, or variable association with critical mortality depending on its etiology (ie, related to changes in triage sensitivity or to changes in the prevalence and total number of critical patients). In all of the modeled scenarios, the ratio of critical patients to treatment capability has a greater impact on critical mortality than overtriage level or time-dependent mortality assumption.Conclusions: Increasing overtriage may have positive, negative, or mixed effects on critical mortality in this trauma system simulation model. These results, which contrast with prior analyses describing a positive linear relationship between overtriage and mortality, highlight the need for alternative metrics to describe trauma system response after MCIs. We explore using the relative number of critical patients to available and staffed treatment units, or the critical surge to capability ratio, which exhibits a consistent and nonlinear association with critical mortality in this model. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2007;1(Suppl 1):S14–S24)


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurette Mhlanga ◽  
Grebe Eduard ◽  
Alex Welte

Abstract BackgroundMany surveys have attempted to estimate HIV incidence from cross-sectional data which includes ascertainment of ‘recent infection’, but the inevitable age and time structure of this data has never been systematically explored – no doubt partly because statistical precision in such estimates is often insufficient to allow for satisfactory disaggregation. Given the non-trivial age structure of HIV incidence and prevalence, and the enormous investments that have been made in such data sets, it is important to understand effective ways to extract valid age structure from these precious data sets. MethodsUsing a comprehensive demographic/epidemiological simulation platform developed for this, and some wider, purposes (documented in more detail separately) we simulated a complex ‘South Africa inspired’ HIV epidemic, with explicitly specified 1) age/time dependent incidence, 2) age/time dependent mortality for uninfected individuals, and 3) age/time/time-since-infection dependent mortality for infected individuals. In this simulated world, we conducted cross-sectional surveys at various times, and applied variants of the recent infection based incidence estimation methodology of Kassanjee et al. We analysed in considerable detail how to smooth, and average over, the age structure in these surveys to produce the incidence estimates, paying attention to the fundamental trade-off between bias and statistical error.ResultsWe summarise our detailed observations about incidence estimates, generated by various age smoothing or age disaggregation procedures, into a straightforward fully specified ‘one size fits most’ algorithm for processing the survey data into age-specific incidence estimates: 1) generalised linear regression to turn observations into ‘prevalence’ of ‘infection’ and ‘recent infection’ (logit, and complementary log log, link functions, respectively; fitting coefficients of up to cubic terms in age/time); 2) a ‘moving window’ data inclusion recipe which handles each age/time point of interest separately; 3) post hoc age averaging of resulting pseudo continuously fitted incidence; 4) bootstrapping as a generic variance/significance estimation procedure.ConclusionsAs far as we are aware, this is the first analysis of several fine details of how age structure in cross-sectional surveys interacts with recency-based incidence estimation. Our proposed default estimation procedure generates incidence estimates with negligible bias and near-optimal precision, and can be readily applied to complex survey data sets by any group in possession of such data. Our code is available, in part freely through the R computing platform, and in part upon request.


Structures ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 3196-3205
Author(s):  
Hu Cheng ◽  
Dong-Sheng Wang ◽  
Hong-Nan Li ◽  
Xin-Chi Yan ◽  
She Yu

2003 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. S147 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.M Merion ◽  
K.P McCullough ◽  
S Murray ◽  
R Bustami ◽  
F.L Grover

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Yanan Li

This paper examines the optimal annuitization, investment, and consumption strategies of an individual facing a time-dependent mortality rate in the tax-deferred annuity model and considers both the case when the rate of buying annuities is unrestricted and the case when it is restricted. At the beginning, by using the dynamic programming principle, we obtain the corresponding HJB equation. Since the existence of the tax and the time-dependence of the value function make the corresponding HJB equation hard to solve, firstly, we analyze the problem in a simpler case and use some numerical methods to get the solution and some of its useful properties. Then, by using the obtained properties and Kuhn–Tucker conditions, we discuss the problem in general cases and get the value functions and the optimal annuitization strategies, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (07) ◽  
pp. 741-749
Author(s):  
Karl Sohlberg ◽  
Gloria Bazargan

Numerical solution of the time-dependent Schrödinger equation is combined with a statistical procedure for analyzing the time-dependent probability density to look for signatures of quantum phase interference in charge transfer across two donor–bridge–acceptor molecules. The results show a strong dependence of transfer time on relative phase in an initially localized state. Additionally, the transfer time shows a stronger dependence on molecular symmetry for asymmetric initial localizations than symmetric initial localizations.


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