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  • Book
    Thomas Wetter ; with contributions by George Demiris, Amanda K. Hall, Andrea Hartzler, Jina Huh, Georgios Raptis and Lisa M. Vizer.
    Contents:
    Part I. Introducing the Domain and Levels of Service
    1. Character of domain and organization of book
    2. Economy 1: immanent mismatch between demand and supply of health care workforce
    3. Level 0: searching-finding-trusting-acting-risking one's life?
    4. Level 1: enhancing the provider- client relation through IT
    5. Level 2: services without in-person contact between provider and client
    6. Level 3: patient power on the web: the multifaceted role of personal health wisdom
    7. Distinctive features of services conveyed through mobile apps
    Part II. Building Safety Nets Around the Active Client
    8. Dimensions of patient risks and requirements for patient safety
    9. Services for all stages of the metabolic syndrome and its consequences
    10. Basic services reach out towards under-served populations
    11. Smart homes: empowering the patient till the end
    12. Partial solutions for patient safety
    Part III. Additional Methodology
    13. Privacy and data protection: mission impossible?
    14. The patient-centered electronic health record and patient portals
    15. Scrutinized proof of effectiveness or cost effectiveness regarding patient reported outcomes
    16. Economy 2: economic subsistence of services when research funding ends
    17. Towards future consumer health informatics adapted health care legislation
    Trademarks
    Nomenclature
    General index
    Index of services.
    Digital Access
    Provider
    Version
    Springer
    Ovid
  • Article
    Jarritt PH, Ell PJ, Myers MJ, Brown NJ, Deacon JM.
    J Nucl Med. 1979 Apr;20(4):319-27.
    Physical and clinical data on a new emission transverse-section scanner are given. Comparative data from an earlier tomoscanner and a rotating gamma-camera system yield the following information for the three imagers. Resolution at the center of the field is 9 mm for this tomoscanner, 18 mm for the earlier tomoscanner, and 11 mm for the rotating camera; sensitivity (cps/muCi-ml) 36K, 15.4K, 1.9K; crystal area (cm2) 3096, 619, 490, respectively. The quantification of images is discussed. Clinical emission section scans of the brain, liver, chest and skull are presented and discussed. Forty brain scans were analyzed in conjunction with x-ray transmission tomography. No false positives were found. From a total of 15 lesions seen by the CT x-ray scanner, 14 were detected by the emission tomographic scanner, 12 by standard gamma-camera imaging. One false negative case (cyst) was seen by the transmission x-ray scanner but not by the emission scanner.
    Digital Access Access Options