Institution
Hofstra University
Education•Hempstead, New York, United States•
About: Hofstra University is a education organization based out in Hempstead, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 6341 authors who have published 11896 publications receiving 268028 citations.
Topics: Population, Medicine, Health care, Poison control, Cancer
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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20 Apr 2020TL;DR: Examining how USMLE step 1 cutoff scores may exclude self‐reported URiM from the residency interview process across various specialties finds that underrepresented minorities in medicine (URiM) are found to have lower USMle scores than their White counterparts.
Abstract: Background and Aims United States Medical Licensing Exam (USMLE) scores are the single, most objective criteria for admission into residency programs in the country. Underrepresented minorities in medicine (URiM) are found to have lower USMLE scores compared to their White counterparts. The objective of this study is to examine how USMLE step 1 cutoff scores may exclude self-reported URiM from the residency interview process across various specialties. Methods This was a retrospective cross-sectional study of 10 541 applicants to different residency programs at Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell Health between May 2014 and May 2015. We identified Blacks and Hispanics as URiM. The primary outcome is the percentage of applicants with USMLE step 1 score above different ranges of cutoff score, from 205 to 235 in five-point increments, by race/ethnicity and by URiM status. Secondary outcome is percentages of URiM vs non-URiM above and below mean USMLE step 1 scores by different specialties (internal medicine, obstetrics/gynecology, pediatrics, and psychiatry). Results The study sample included 2707 White, 722 Black, 805 Hispanic, 5006 Asian, and 562 Other Race/Ethnicity applicants. Overall, 50.2% were male, 21.3% URiM, 7.4% had limited English proficiency, 67.6% attended international medical schools, and 2.4% are Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society (AOA) members. The mean (±SD) USMLE step 1 score was significantly greater among non-URiM applicants as compared to URiM applicants (223.7 ± 19.4 vs 216.1 ± 18.4, P < .01, two-sample t-test). Non-URiM applicants were younger, and the percentage of male and AOA applicants was greater among non-URiM applicants as compared to URiM applicants (50.5% vs 47.7%, P = .02, Chi-Square test; 2.9% vs 1.2%, P < .01, Chi-Square test, respectively). Conclusion Using a USMLE step 1 cutoff score as an initial filter for applicant recruitment and selection could jeopardize the benefits of a diverse residency program. Practical implications are discussed.
73 citations
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TL;DR: It was demonstrated that this high stability over time was not due to subjects' recalling and repeating previous responses, and it was shown that alpha considerably underestimated the test-retest reliability, contrary to assumptions of classical psychometrics.
Abstract: Controversy over the TAT's reliability may stem largely from the mis-application of traditional psychometric measures, which are inappropriate to this test. The TAT is implicitly based on a multiple regression model, for which coefficient alpha is not appropriate. Also, test-retest correlations may be adversely affected by the standard instructions to write a "creative" story. In a test-retest study, 47 high school students retook the TAT after a year with instructions designed to break the implicit set to produce a new and different story from that previously written. The test-retest correlations were r = .48 (need for affiliation) and .56 (need for intimacy), or approximately the same as those for, e.g., the MMPI, 16PF, and CPI, It was demonstrated that this high stability over time was not due to subjects' recalling and repeating previous responses. Finally, it was shown that alpha considerably underestimated the test-retest reliability, contrary to assumptions of classical psychometrics.
73 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a regression analysis performed on National Center for Charitable Statistics "digitized data" from 2001 to 2003 found mixed evidence of economically significant associations between donations and other revenue streams; regressions without these controls support different conclusions.
Abstract: Several econometric issues arise in using nonprofit data. After controlling for unduly influential observations and heteroskedasticity, regression analysis performed on National Center for Charitable Statistics “digitized data” from 2001 to 2003 found mixed evidence of economically significant associations between donations and other revenue streams; regressions without these controls support different conclusions. Testing does indicate that government support sends greater quality signals than program support or investment income.
73 citations
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TL;DR: The authors examined the effects of total exposure duration and interrupted versus continuous exposure on flooding for public speaking anxiety, and concluded that continuous exposure was clearly superior to interrupted exposure, with anxiety first increasing then decreasing.
73 citations
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TL;DR: This “post-sepsis syndrome” has been the subject of active preclinical and clinical research providing new mechanistic insights and approaches linked to survivor well-being, and important aspects of these research efforts and goals of care are reviewed.
Abstract: The sequelae of sepsis were once thought to be independent of sepsis itself and assumed to be either comorbid to sick patients or complications of critical illness. Recent studies have reported consistent patterns of functional disabilities in sepsis survivors that can last from months to years after symptoms of active sepsis had resolved. Post-sepsis syndrome is an emerging pathological entity that has garnered significant interest amongst clinicians and researchers over the last two decades. It is marked by a significantly increased risk of death and a poor health-related quality of life associated with a constellation of long-term effects that persist following the patient’s bout with sepsis. These include neurocognitive impairment, functional disability, psychological deficits, and worsening medical conditions. This “post-sepsis syndrome” has been the subject of active preclinical and clinical research providing new mechanistic insights and approaches linked to survivor well-being. Here we review important aspects of these research efforts and goals of care for patients who survive sepsis.
73 citations
Authors
Showing all 6443 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kevin J. Tracey | 138 | 561 | 82791 |
David B. Allison | 129 | 836 | 69697 |
John M. Kane | 125 | 752 | 60886 |
Peter K. Gregersen | 124 | 451 | 60278 |
Daniel E. Singer | 123 | 445 | 64998 |
Kenneth L. Davis | 113 | 622 | 61120 |
Michael L. Blute | 112 | 527 | 45296 |
David B. Tanner | 110 | 611 | 72025 |
Bertram Pitt | 107 | 754 | 78458 |
John D. Reveille | 102 | 519 | 38105 |
Christoph U. Correll | 100 | 755 | 37523 |
Robert G. Maki | 100 | 416 | 39234 |
Louis R. Kavoussi | 95 | 544 | 31830 |
Howard Leventhal | 89 | 268 | 29144 |
Allan H. Young | 89 | 700 | 47369 |