21 results on '"Day, S."'
Search Results
2. GASTRIC HYPERSECRETION AND HISTAMINE LEVELS IN LIVER, STOMACH, DUODENUM, AND BLOOD FOLLOWING PORTACAVAL SHUNT IN RATS.
- Author
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DAY SB, SKORYNA SC, WEBSTER DR, and MACLEAN LD
- Subjects
- Blood Chemical Analysis, Duodenum, Gastric Juice, Guinea Pigs, Histamine, Liver physiology, Peptic Ulcer, Portacaval Shunt, Surgical, Rats, Research, Stomach
- Published
- 1963
3. TISSUE AND BLOOD HISTAMINE LEVELS AFTER PORTACAVAL SHUNT.
- Author
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DAY SB, SZETLE AM, SKORYNA SC, WEBSTER DR, and MACLEAN LD
- Subjects
- Blood Chemical Analysis, Duodenum, Gastrins, Histamine, Liver, Metabolism, Portacaval Shunt, Surgical, Rats, Research, Stomach
- Published
- 1963
4. The effects of cancer research participation on patient experience: a mixed-methods analysis.
- Author
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McGrath‐Lone, L., Ward, H., Schoenborn, C., and Day, S.
- Subjects
INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SURVEYS ,TUMORS ,VOLUNTEER service ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,HUMAN research subjects ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Patient-reported benefits of research participation have been described by study participants; however, many studies have small sample sizes or are limited to patient groups with poor prognoses. The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of research participation on patient experience using survey responses from a large, national sample of cancer patients ( N = 66 462) and interviews with breast cancer patients attending a London trust. Multivariate logistic regression was used to investigate associations between taking part in research and positive patient experience. Based on our analysis, patients who participated in research were more likely to rate their overall care and treatment as 'very good/excellent' ( OR
adj :1.64, 95% CI: 1.53-1.76, P < 0.001) and to describe positive patient experiences, such as better access to non-standard care, better interactions with staff and being treated as an individual. However, findings from our interviews indicated that there was no common understanding of what constitutes cancer research and no clear delineation between research participation and standard care, from the patient perspective. Further work to explore how participation positively influences patient experience would be useful to develop strategies to improve care and treatment for all patients regardless of whether or not they choose, or have the opportunity, to take part in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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5. Environmental Testing of Iron-Based Amorphous Alloys.
- Author
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REBAK, RAUL B., DAY, S. DANIEL, LIAN, TIANGAN, HAILEY, PHILLIP D., and FARMER, JOSEPH C.
- Subjects
IRON compounds ,ALLOYS ,AMORPHOUS substances ,CORROSION & anti-corrosives ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Iron (Fe)-based amorphous alloys possess enhanced hardness and are highly resistant to corrosion, which make them desirable for wear applications in corrosive environments. It was of interest to examine the behavior of amorphous alloys during anodic polarization in concentrated salt solutions and in the salt-fog testing. Results from the testing of one amorphous material (SAM2X5) both in ribbon form and as an applied coating are reported here. Cyclic polarization tests were performed on SAM2X5 ribbon as well as on other nuclear engineering materials. SAM2X5 showed the highest resistance to localized corrosion in 5 M CaCl
2 solution at 105 °C. Salt fog tests of 316L SS and alloy 22 coupons coated with amorphous SAM2X5 powder showed resistance to rusting. Partial devitrification may be responsible for isolated pinpoint rust spots in some coatings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Risky business: health and safety in the sex industry over a 9 year period.
- Author
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Ward, H, Day, S, and Weber, J
- Subjects
PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,VIRUS disease transmission ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,CHLAMYDIA infections ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONDOMS ,GONORRHEA ,HOMICIDE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,SEX work ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,SYPHILIS ,VIRUS diseases ,EVALUATION research ,DISEASE prevalence ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objectives: To assess whether a previously established low sexually transmitted infection/HIV risk in prostitutes in London has been sustained, and to measure other occupational risks, including mortality.Design: 9 year prospective study in west London.Subjects: 402 prostitutes recruited from 1985 to 1991, 320 were followed up for 675 person years to 1994.Main Outcome Measures: Condom use in commercial and non-commercial sex; viral and bacterial sexually transmitted infection at initial and follow up visits; death.Results: Condom use increased significantly from 1986 to 1993 and protected the majority of commercial sexual contacts. Baseline prevalence: HIV 1.3%, hepatitis C 6.7%, hepatitis B 6.6%, syphilis 2.3%, HTLV-I/II 0.4%, gonorrhoea 3.0%, chlamydia 8.2%, genital herpes 16.8%. Incidence (per 100 person years): HIV 0.2, hepatitis C 0.3, gonorrhoea 5.6, chlamydia 12.6, genital herpes 6.5. Viral infections were associated with injecting drug use and non-British nationality; bacterial infections were associated with numbers of non-commercial partners but not with sexual contacts at work. Four women died during the course of the study; two had AIDS, two were murdered. This mortality of 5.93 per 1000 person years was 12 times the expected rate for women of a similar age.Conclusions: This study shows that it is possible to have a larger number of sexual partners and remain free from sexually transmitted infections provided that condoms are used consistently: there has been a sustained increase in condom use in the sex industry. None the less, prostitutes are at increased risk of sexually transmitted infections, primarily through non-commercial sexual partnerships. Infectious diseases are only one of the risks facing prostitutes, as illustrated by the mortality from violence as well as from HIV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1999
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7. Partner notification for gonorrhoea: a comparative study with a provincial and a metropolitan UK clinic.
- Author
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Bell, G, Ward, H, Day, S, Ghani, A C, Goan, U, Claydon, E, and Kinghorn, G R
- Subjects
GONORRHEA prevention ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,COMMUNITY health services ,COMPARATIVE studies ,GONORRHEA ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL referrals ,MENTAL health surveys ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,URBAN health ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,EVALUATION research ,CONTACT tracing ,SEXUAL partners - Abstract
Objective: To compare partner notification practice and outcomes at a provincial and a metropolitan clinic.Design: Prospective study, following standardisation of partner notification policy.Settings: Sheffield Department of Genitourinary Medicine, Royal Hallamshire Hospital and Jefferiss Wing Centre for Sexual Health, St Mary's Hospital, London.Subjects: Consecutive patients with culture positive gonorrhoea between October 1994 and March 1996 who were interviewed by a health adviser.Results: In Sheffield, 235 cases reported 659 outstanding contacts, of whom 129 (20%) were subsequently screened, and 65 (50%) had gonorrhoea. At St Mary's 510 cases reported 2176 outstanding contacts, of whom 98 (5%) were known to have been screened, and 53 (54%) had gonorrhoea. Patient or provider referral agreements appeared more productive in Sheffield, where 60% resulted in contact attendance, compared with 13% at St Mary's. Provider referral was used more frequently in Sheffield, for 44% of referrals, compared with 1% at St Mary's. Multivariate analysis showed that partner notification was less effective for casual and short term (< 7 days) partnerships in both centres, and for homosexual men at St Mary's.Conclusion: Partner notification outcomes were better in the provincial setting where contact attendance could be recorded more reliably and provider referral was used more extensively. The high proportion of contacts who remained untraced in both settings indicates the need for complementary screening and prevention initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1998
8. Diagnosis of motor neuron disease by neurologists: a study in three countries.
- Author
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Li, T M, Swash, M, Alberman, E, and Day, S J
- Subjects
MOTOR neuron diseases ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NEUROLOGY ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Ninety four neurologists in the United Kingdom, China, and West Germany responded to two structured questionnaires. The first assessed the diagnostic weighting assigned to a number of symptoms, signs, and clinical investigations ascertained from classical descriptions and case notes of patients with motor neuron disease (MND). The second tested the likelihood and consistency of diagnosis in a series of case summaries representing the clinical data of 10 patients with clinically and pathologically documented motor neuron disease. There was a wide measure of agreement concerning the common clinical features of the disease, especially regarding fasciculation of the tongue, fasciculation associated with weakness seen in more than one limb, and dysphagia. In the case summaries, however, there was clear variation in the ranked likelihood of the diagnosis of MND and in the consistency of diagnostic behaviour in the different groups of neurologists. These findings support the need for internationally agreed criteria in the diagnosis of MND. Any such criteria will need to be tested against a standardised data set to establish their validity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
9. Scales for rating motor impairment in Parkinson's disease: studies of reliability and convergent validity.
- Author
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Henderson, L, Kennard, C, Crawford, T J, Day, S, Everitt, B S, Goodrich, S, Jones, F, and Park, D M
- Subjects
DRUG therapy for Parkinson's disease ,PARKINSON'S disease diagnosis ,DOPA ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NEUROLOGIC examination ,RESEARCH ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,EVALUATION research ,RESEARCH bias - Abstract
Study 1 examined the reliability of the ratings assigned to the performance of five sign-and-symptom items drawn from tests of motor impairment in Parkinson's disease. Patients with Parkinson's disease of varying severity performed gait, rising from chair, and hand function items. Video recordings of these performances were rated by a large sample of experienced and inexperienced neurologists and by psychology undergraduates, using a four point scale. Inter-rater reliability was moderately high, being higher for gait than hand function items. Clinical experience proved to have no systematic effect on ratings or their reliability. The idiosyncrasy of particular performances was a major source of unreliable ratings. Study 2 examined the intercorrelation of several standard rating scales, comprised of sign-and-symptom items as well as activities of daily living. The correlation between scales was high, ranging from 0.70 to 0.83, despite considerable differences in item composition. Inter-item correlations showed that the internal cohesion of the tests was high, especially for the self-care scale. Regression analysis showed that the relationship between the scales could be efficiently captured by a small selection of test items, allowing the construction of a much briefer test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
10. Residents' perception of evaluation procedures used by their training program.
- Author
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Day, Susan, Grosso, Louis, Norcini, John, Blank, Linda, Swanson, David, Horne, Muriel, Day, S C, Grosso, L J, Norcini, J J Jr, Blank, L L, Swanson, D B, and Horne, M H
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CLINICAL competence ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERNAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL personnel ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Objective: To determine the methods of evaluation used routinely by training programs and to obtain information concerning the frequencies with which various evaluation methods were used.Design: Survey of residents who had recently completed internal medicine training.Participants: 5,693 respondents who completed residencies in 1987 and 1988 and were registered as first-time takers for the 1988 Certifying Examination in Internal Medicine. This constituted a 76% response rate.Main Results: Virtually all residents were aware that routine evaluations were submitted on inpatient rotations, but were more uncertain about the evaluation process in the outpatient setting and the methods used to assess their humanistic qualities. Most residents had undergone a Clinical Evaluation Exercise (CEX); residents' clinical skills were less likely to be evaluated by direct observation of history or physical examination skills. Resident responses were aggregated within training programs to determine the pattern of evaluation across programs. The majority of programs used Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) certification, medical record audit, and the national In-Training Examination to assess most of their residents. Performance-based tests were used selectively by a third or more of the programs. Breast and pelvic examination skills and ability to perform sigmoidoscopy were thought not to be adequately assessed by the majority of residents in almost half of the programs.Conclusions: While most residents are receiving routine evaluation, including a CEX, increased efforts to educate residents about their evaluation system, to strengthen evaluation in the outpatient setting, and to evaluate certain procedural skills are recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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11. Integrating residency training in geriatrics into existing outpatient curricula.
- Author
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Lavizzo-Mourey, Risa, Beck, Laurence, Diserens, Deborah, Day, Susan, Johnson, Jerry, Forciea, Mary, Sims, Richard, Lavizzo-Mourey, R, Beck, L H, Diserens, D, Day, S, Johnson, J, Forciea, M A, and Sims, R V
- Subjects
OUTPATIENT medical care ,CLINICAL competence ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CURRICULUM ,GERIATRICS ,INTERNAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL school faculty ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
In recent years, the need for increasing the geriatrics component of residency training has been repeatedly addressed; however, there are still many programs that have been unable to meet this need. While alternative sites, such as geriatric evaluation units and nursing homes, may be the ideal sites to teach some aspects of geriatrics, this article argues that the ambulatory care program, required in all residency programs, is the appropriate setting for teaching many of the core skills needed to care for most older adults. Teaching geriatrics in the ambulatory setting, which eliminates the strategic and financial obstacles of developing non-hospital-based sites, can be accomplished with relatively modest additional resources. This article describes the methods used to integrate geriatrics into the ambulatory care component of one internal medicine residency program and the necessary faculty resources as well as the documentation, via chart audit, of the interns' compliance with recommended practice patterns in five categories. With the exception of vaccination status, interns documented 18% or less of possible pieces of information for their patients. While this assessment showed statistically significant improvement in interns' care of older patients after the program intervention, the overall level of performance was still low, underscoring the need for the integration of geriatrics principles in the ambulatory curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
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- View/download PDF
12. A controlled trial to improve delivery of preventive care: physician or patient reminders?
- Author
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Turner, Barbara, Day, Susan, Borenstein, Bette, Turner, B J, Day, S C, and Borenstein, B
- Subjects
OUTPATIENT medical care ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH promotion ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL appointments ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PREVENTIVE health services ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: To improve the delivery of preventive care in a medical clinic, a controlled trial was conducted of two interventions that were expected to influence delivery of preventive services differently, depending on level of initiative required of the physician or patient to complete a service.Design: A prospective, controlled trial of five-months' duration.Setting: A university hospital-based, general medical clinic.Participants: Thirty-nine junior and senior medical residents who saw patients in stable clinic teams throughout the study.Intervention: A computerized reminder system for physicians and a patient questionnaire and educational hand-out on preventive care.Measurements and Main Results: Delivery of five of six audited preventive services improved significantly after the interventions were introduced. The computerized reminder alone increased completion rates of services that relied primarily on physician initiative; the questionnaire alone increased completion rate of the service that depended more on patient compliance as well as on some physician-dependent services. Both interventions used together were slightly less effective in improving performance of physician-dependent services than the computerized reminder used alone.Conclusions: These interventions can improve the delivery of preventive care but they differ in their impacts on physician and patient behaviors. Overall, the computer reminder was the more effective intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1989
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13. Gender differences in the clinical competence of residents in internal medicine.
- Author
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Day, Susan, Norcini, John, Shea, Judy, Benson, John, Day, S C, Norcini, J J, Shea, J A, and Benson, J A Jr
- Subjects
CLINICAL competence ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERNAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,SEX distribution ,CERTIFICATION ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: To study the differences between cognitive and noncognitive skills of men and those of women entering internal medicine.Design: Comparison of program directors' ratings of overall clinical competence and its specific components and pass rates for men and women taking the Certifying Examinations in Internal Medicine in 1984-1987.Participants: 14,340 U.S. and Canadian graduates taking the Certifying Examinations of the American Board of Internal Medicine for the first time in 1984-1987.Measurements/results: Average program directors' ratings of overall competence were 6.70-6.78 for men and 6.60-6.71 for women. The greatest differences in ratings of specific components of competence were in the areas of medical knowledge and procedural skills, where men were rated higher than women, and humanistic qualities, where women were rated higher than men. Pass rates were stable over the four years of the study, and ranged from 85 to 86% for men and from 79 to 81% for women. Men consistently performed slightly better than women regardless of the type of residency or quality of medical school attended.Conclusions: Small but consistent differences were found in the performances of men and those of women completing training in Internal Medicine as measured by program directors' ratings and ABIM Certifying Examination performances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
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14. Sexual histories, partnerships and networks associated with the transmission of gonorrhoea.
- Author
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Day, S., Ward, H., Ghani, A., Bell, G., Goan, U., Parker, M., Claydon, E., Ison, C., Kinghorn, G., and Weber, J.
- Subjects
SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,PATIENTS ,GONORRHEA ,MEN ,SEX workers ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONDOMS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,CONTACT tracing ,SEXUAL partners ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
We aimed to describe and compare sexual links among people with gonorrhoea, by studying patients in 2 UK departments of genitourinary medicine. Interviews were completed for 510 and 235 cases in London and Sheffield respectively. There was a greater proportion of cases in men, homosexual men, non-white and non-British people and fewer female sex workers in London. Total networks of 1738 people in London and 570 people in Sheffield were described. Large linked heterosexual networks identified in Sheffield were associated with local contact, including men with higher numbers of sexual partners. Condom use for vaginal sex was reported for 11% of heterosexual partnerships in Sheffield, and 27% in London, with little difference between regular and casual partners. It was more difficult to define networks in London due to a high proportion of relatively anonymous contacts. These difficulties suggest that research and interventions may profitably focus upon venues for meeting partners as well as partner notification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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15. Certification in internal medicine: 1989-1992.
- Author
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Norcini, John, Kimball, Harry, Grosso, Louis, Day, Susan, Baranowski, Rebecca, Horne, Muriel, Norcini, J J, Kimball, H R, Grosso, L J, Day, S C, Baranowski, R A, and Horne, M W
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,DEMOGRAPHY ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,INTERNAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,CERTIFICATION ,EVALUATION research ,ACQUISITION of data ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Objective: To determine whether changes in the demographic/educational mix of those entering internal medicine from 1986 to 1989 were associated with differences among them at the time of certification.Participants: Included in the study were all candidates for the 1989 to 1992 American Board of Internal Medicine certifying examinations in internal medicine.Measurements: Demographic information and medical school, residency training, and examination experience were available for each candidate. Data defining quality, size, and number of subspecialties were available for internal medicine training programs.Results: From 1990 to 1992, the total number of men and women candidates increased as did the numbers of foreign-citizen non-U.S. medical school graduates and osteopathic medical school graduates; the number of U.S. medical school graduates remained nearly constant and the number of U.S.-citizen graduates of non-U.S. medical schools declined. The pass rates for all groups of first-time examination takers decreased, while the ratings of program directors remained relatively constant. Program quality, size, and number of subspecialty programs had modest positive relationships with examination performance.Conclusions: Changes in the characteristics of those entering internal medicine from 1986 to 1989 were associated with declines in performance at the time of certification. These declines occurred in all content areas of the test and were apparent regardless of program quality. These data identify some of the challenges internal medicine faces in the years ahead. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1994
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16. The relevance to clinical practice of the certifying examination in internal medicine.
- Author
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Norcini, John, Day, Susan, Grosso, Louis, Langdon, Lynn, Kimball, Harry, Popp, Richard, Goldfinger, Stephen, Norcini, J J, Day, S C, Grosso, L J, Langdon, L O, Kimball, H R, Popp, R L, and Goldfinger, S E
- Subjects
CLINICAL competence ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,INTERNAL medicine ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,CERTIFICATION ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: To determine the relevance of the initial certifying examination to the practice of internal medicine and the suitability of items used in initial certification for recertification.Design: Using a matrix-sampling approach, items from the 1991 Certifying Examination were assigned to two sets of judges: directors of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) and practicing general internists. Each judge rated the relevance of items on a five-point scale.Participants: 54 current or former directors of the ABIM and 72 practicing general internists; practitioners were nominated by directors and their ratings were included if they spent > 80% of their time in direct patient care.Results: The directors' mean rating of all 576 items was 3.98 (SD = 0.62); the practitioners' mean rating was 4.11 (SD = 0.82). The directors assigned to 27 items ratings of less than 3 and the practitioners assigned to 42 items ratings of less than 3; seven of these items received low ratings from both groups. There were differences in the two groups' ratings of the relevance of various medical content categories, but the mean rating of core items was higher than that of noncore items and the mean rating of items testing clinical judgment was higher than that of items testing knowledge or synthesis.Conclusions: These findings suggest that the initial certifying examination is relevant to clinical practice and that many of the examination items are suitable for use in recertification. Differences in perception appear to exist between practitioners and directors, and the use of practitioner ratings is likely to be a routine part of judging the suitability of items for Board examinations in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1993
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17. A longitudinal description of patterns of certification in internal medicine and the subspecialties.
- Author
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Shea, Judy, Norcini, John, Day, Susan, Benson, John, Shea, J A, Norcini, J J, Day, S C, and Benson, J A Jr
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERNAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICINE ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,RESEARCH ,TIME ,CERTIFICATION ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: To document the timings, frequencies, and outcomes of attempts at certification in internal medicine and the internal medicine subspecialties in the years following residency training for two cohorts of residents.Design: Residents who had completed residency training and had been admitted to an American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) certifying examination in 1982 or 1983 were tracked through the ABIM database for five years.Participants: A total of 10,568 residents were studied. Of the cohort, 79% were men, 21% were women, 79% were graduates of U.S./Canadian medical schools (USMGs), and 21% were graduates of foreign medical schools (FMGs).Main Results: Ultimately, 85% of the residents achieved certification in internal medicine. Cumulative pass rates were 87% for men, 81% for women, 92% for USMGs, and 60% for FMGs; rates increased minimally after the second attempt. Most (87%) residents first attempted the internal medicine examination in the year in which training had been completed. Delaying the first examination was associated with lower pass rates. Half of the candidates who had passed the internal medicine examination attempted subspecialty certification. Over all nine subspecialty examinations, the two-cycle cumulative pass rate was 87%. Higher percentages of FMGs than of any other subgroup attempted subspecialty certification.Conclusions: The detailed description extends the body of knowledge about certification in internal medicine and the nine internal medicine subspecialties. Questions are raised, such as why some candidates delay the first internal medicine examination and why some residents never seek certification. Future research could explore these issues as well as explanations for the observed differences in pass rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
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18. Declining prevalence of STI in the London sex industry, 1985 to 2002.
- Author
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Ward, H., Day, S., Green, A ., Cooper, K., and Weber, J.
- Subjects
- *
SEX industry , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *UROLOGICAL emergencies , *CONTRACEPTIVES industry , *SEX workers , *MASSAGE parlors , *EPIDEMIOLOGY of sexually transmitted diseases , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *RESEARCH bias , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Objectives: To describe major changes in the London sex industry between 1985 and 2002 and assess the implications for sexually transmitted infection (STI) risk.Method: A descriptive study comparing women who first attended a sex work clinic between 1996 and 2002 and those first attending from 1985 to 1992; a nested case-control study. 1050 female sex workers took part. The setting was a specialist clinical service for sex workers based in a London genitourinary medicine (GUM) clinic, and fieldwork in west London. The main outcome measures were reported condom use and prevalent STI.Results: Over the period of the study there was a significant increase in the proportion of sex workers not born in the United Kingdom (from 25% to 63%, p < 0.001), and women entered sex work at an older age (median 24 years compared with 20 years, p < 0.001). Condom use increased (with the exception of oral sex). There was a significant decline in the proportion of participants reporting a previous STI (32% compared with 80%, p < 0.001) and the prevalence of acute STI declined from 25% to 8% (p < 0.001). Acute STI was associated with younger age, younger age at first sex work, being new to sex work, and inconsistent condom use. In a multivariate analysis unprotected sex with clients was the only significant risk.Conclusion: Major restructuring of the sex industry, including the shift to a primarily migrant workforce, has been associated with a steep decline in acute STI, undermining popular assumptions that migrant sex workers are central to the ongoing STI epidemic. We attribute the decline in acute STI to an increase in safer sex. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2004
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19. Methods of preparing for the Certifying Examination in internal medicine and their efficacy.
- Author
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Day, Susan, Grosso, Louis, Norcini, John, Day, S C, Grosso, L J, and Norcini, J J
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,INTERNAL medicine ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,CERTIFICATION ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Candidates for the 1991 Certifying Examination were asked how they prepared for the examination. There were 2,780 respondents (32% of the eligible candidates). The responding candidates used a mean of 5.2 study methods and gave higher educational value ratings to methods used most frequently. Regression analyses showed no independent contribution of study method or effort to explaining the variance in score for first-time takers, and a 2% contribution for repeat takers. Program director ratings were the most important predictors of score for first-time takers and previous examination score for repeat takers. Intensive study is likely to produce at most a small improvement in performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Trends in medical knowledge as assessed by the certifying examination in internal medicine.
- Author
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Norcini, J J, Maihoff, N A, Day, S C, and Benson, J A Jr
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,INTERNAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,CERTIFICATION ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
The past decade has seen less competition for medical school positions accompanied by the declining interest of medical students in internal medicine. At the same time, the number of first postgraduate-year positions in internal medicine residencies has increased, as has the number of first-year residents who take those positions. The purpose of this study was to examine trends in the medical knowledge of internal medicine residents during the past 6 years. Comparison of performance on the items common to pairs of the certifying examinations of the American Board of Internal Medicine from 1983 to 1988 revealed that the scores of candidates in the reference group have declined, but not dramatically. This trend has occurred among candidates from the top residency programs as well as all other residency programs, and it is present in candidates of all levels of overall clinical competence. Continuing declines in this area could ultimately affect patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Health issues associated with increasing use of "crack" cocaine among female sex workers in London.
- Author
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Ward, H, Pallecaros, A, Green, A, and Day, S
- Subjects
ABORTION statistics ,EPIDEMIOLOGY of sexually transmitted diseases ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH status indicators ,HEPATITIS C ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,UNWANTED pregnancy ,RESEARCH ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Objectives: To document changes in "crack" cocaine use in the sex industry in London, and to assess health risks associated with the drug.Design: Two serial cross sectional surveys.Subjects: Sex workers interviewed in 1989-9 and 1995-6.Main Outcome Measures: Self reported use of crack cocaine; clinical history of sexually transmitted infection and pregnancy, clinical outcomes.Results: The proportion of women reporting crack use increased significantly from 22/193 (11%) in 1989-91 to 48/143 (34%) in 1995-6. Women in all the main prostitution sectors reported crack use. Crack users had been working in prostitution for longer, were more likely to have worked on the streets, to inject drugs, and to have a partner who injected. Crack use was associated with termination of pregnancy and with hepatitis C infection. The association with hepatitis C was partially explained by confounding with injecting drug use.Conclusions: Crack use is more common and less problematic than clinical presentation suggests. Use has increased over the past decade, and is associated with hepatitis C infection and termination of pregnancy. It is possible that crack use facilitates hepatitis C transmission due to oral lesions from smoking. Crack use can be difficult to identify because of the stigma of being labelled a "crack whore," therefore information on crack might usefully be integrated into general health promotion material on drugs and safer sex. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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