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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 20 papers out of 2,647 papers

Financial-ratio analysis and medical school management.

  • S R Eastaugh‎
  • Journal of medical education‎
  • 1980‎

The value of a uniform program of financial assistance to medical education and research is questioned. Medical schools have an uneven ability to compensate for declining federal capitation and research grants. Financial-ratio analysis and cluster analysis are utilized to suggest four adaptive responses to future financial pressures. The four potential avenues of response involve reducing faculty size, expanding faculty involvement in medical practice plans, raising tuition, and in some cases increasing state-government support. Medical schools will also have to strive for better financial management if the 88 institutions revealed to be in poor financial health are to survive.


The Financial Impact of an Inpatient Diabetes Management Service.

  • Waqas Zia Haque‎ et al.
  • Current diabetes reports‎
  • 2021‎

Diabetes is a leading metabolic disorder with a substantial cost burden, especially in inpatient settings. The complexity of inpatient glycemic management has led to the emergence of inpatient diabetes management service (IDMS), a multidisciplinary team approach to glycemic management.


Financial logistics models based on systematic approach improving management solutions.

  • Sergey Evgenievich Barykin‎ et al.
  • F1000Research‎
  • 2022‎

Background: Some firms with good growth opportunities and additional funds could have difficulties accessing external finance. One possible way to enhance their financial inclusion could be an exciting approach to planning the money reserve collected on a firm's account. Methods: This article aims to disclose the introduction of financial logistics as the new theoretical field of management science. The authors present, in this paper, the key findings on the development of logistical models of an optimum money reserve calculation taking into account digital transformation and industry 4.0 technologies and optimization methods. Results: The monetary reserve models are analogies of models of storekeeping in supply chains. The specific area of the theoretical research of logistics is shown in this paper, which could be disclosed as the subject of financial logistics as a science. The authors consider the term "Financial Logistics" based on logistics theory and money demand. Conclusions: Authors suggest the methodology of studying the nature of both financial and material flows of resources by comparing the relevant formulas. From the researchers' points of view, financial logistics could be defined as the theory of managing the cash flows based on the logistical models for calculating a corporation's cash reserve. The authors find it interesting to expand the conditions for calculating financial flows since the uncertainty of external market conditions always influences actual commercial activity.


Patient financial incentives to improve asthma management: a systematic review.

  • Jasmine Hine‎ et al.
  • BMJ open‎
  • 2023‎

The objectives of this systematic review are to identify studies that assess the effectiveness of patient-directed financial incentive interventions to improve asthma management behaviours, determine overall effectiveness of financial incentives, identify design characteristics of effective interventions and assess the impact on longer-term outcomes in the context of asthma.


Financial management of large, multi-center trials in a challenging funding milieu.

  • Olivia Lovegreen‎ et al.
  • Trials‎
  • 2018‎

Randomized clinical trials that have public health implications but no or low potential for commercial gain are predominantly funded by governmental (e.g., National Institutes of Health (NIH)) and not-for-profit organizations. Our objective was to develop an alternative clinical trial site funding model for judicious allocation of declining public research funds.


Working capital management impacts on small-scale coffee wet mills' financial performance in eastern Kenya.

  • Dancan O Othuon‎ et al.
  • Heliyon‎
  • 2021‎

The manufacturing sector is critical in the realization of the economic pillar of the Kenyan Vision 2030. Over the last decade, the sector has experienced declining growth, mainly attributed to the agro-processing industry's poor financial performance. The Kenyan government has initiated stringent financial reforms across agro-based sectors, including coffee processing firms, to improve performance and increase farmers' returns. However, limited studies have investigated the impacts of working capital management (WCM) on small-scale coffee wet mills' financial performance. We assessed the effect of working capital management on financial performance in small-scale coffee wet mills. We collected the data from 41 small-scale coffee wet mills in Embu County, Eastern Kenya. We adopted a multivariate regression analysis approach on panel data (2014-2018) to analyze working capital management's impact on small-scale coffee wet mills' financial performance. Our findings showed that the current ratio and average payment period negatively affected the return on small-scale coffee wet mills' assets. Thus, the wet mill processors could lower their payables period and current ratio to improve return on assets. The study revealed that the firm's Size and age also had a positive and negative effect, respectively, on return on assets of small-scale coffee wet mills. Both average payment period and current ratio had a positive effect on return to farmers. We conclude that working capital management, that is, average payment period and current ratio, negatively influences ROA while positively influencing farmers. Therefore, the management of the coffee wet mills should increase the current ratio and lengthen the average payment period to enhance return payable to farmers.


The impact of financial incentives on the implementation of asthma or diabetes self-management: A systematic review.

  • Tracy Jackson‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2017‎

Financial incentives are utilised in healthcare systems in a number of countries to improve quality of care delivered to patients by rewarding practices or practitioners for achieving set targets.


Financial Management Reforms in the Health Sector: A Comparative Study Between Cash-based and Accrual-based Accounting Systems.

  • Masoud Abolhallaje‎ et al.
  • Iranian Red Crescent medical journal‎
  • 2014‎

Financial management and accounting reform in the public sectors was started in 2000. Moving from cash-based to accrual-based is considered as the key component of these reforms and adjustments in the public sector. Performing this reform in the health system is a part of a bigger reform under the new public management.


Impact of Radiotherapy on Psychological, Financial, and Sexual Aspects in Postmastectomy Carcinoma Breast Patients: A Prospective Study and Management.

  • Neelam Sharma‎ et al.
  • Asia-Pacific journal of oncology nursing‎
  • 2017‎

The aim of this study was to assess the impact of radiotherapy (RT) on psychological, financial, and sexual aspects in postmastectomy carcinoma breast patients affecting their quality of life (QOL) before, during, and after RT with a strong emphasis on their management and rehabilitation aspects.


Financial Management Behavior Among Young Adults: The Role of Need for Cognitive Closure in a Three-Wave Moderated Mediation Model.

  • Gabriela Topa‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in psychology‎
  • 2018‎

This three-wave study aims to explore whether the impact of investment literacy on the financial management behavior is mediated by investment advice use and moderated by the need for cognitive closure. A total number of 272 financially independent adults, under 40 years, completed questionnaires at three different times with 3-month intervals. The results reveal that employees with more investment advice use and characterized by high need for cognitive closure show a higher level of financial management behavior, in relation to both the urgency (seizing) of getting knowledge and the permanence (freezing) of such knowledge. The present study contributes to better understand how and when investment literacy drives well-informed and responsible financial behavior. According to these results, interventions to improve financial behavior should focus on the combination of investment advice use and metacognitive strategies used by individuals to make financial decisions.


Analysis of Financial Management in public Emergency Medical Services sector: Case study of the Department of Emergency Medical Services, Uganda.

  • Peter Kavuma‎ et al.
  • African journal of emergency medicine : Revue africaine de la medecine d'urgence‎
  • 2020‎

The purpose of the study was to critically analyse financial management of the public Emergency Medical Services (EMS) sector with specific focus on the financing methods for public EMS.


The hyperbolic geometry of financial networks.

  • Martin Keller-Ressel‎ et al.
  • Scientific reports‎
  • 2021‎

Based on data from the European banking stress tests of 2014, 2016 and the transparency exercise of 2018 we construct networks of European banks and demonstrate that the latent geometry of these financial networks can be well-represented by geometry of negative curvature, i.e., by hyperbolic geometry. Using two different hyperbolic embedding methods, hydra+ and Mercator, this allows us to connect the network structure to the popularity-vs-similarity model of Papdopoulos et al., which is based on the Poincaré disc model of hyperbolic geometry. We show that the latent dimensions of 'popularity' and 'similarity' in this model are strongly associated to systemic importance and to geographic subdivisions of the banking system, independent of the embedding method that is used. In a longitudinal analysis over the time span from 2014 to 2018 we find that the systemic importance of individual banks has remained rather stable, while the peripheral community structure exhibits more (but still moderate) variability. Based on our analysis we argue that embeddings into hyperbolic geometry can be used to monitor structural change in financial networks and are able to distinguish between changes in systemic relevance and other (peripheral) structural changes.


Are Ethiopian diabetic patients protected from financial hardship?

  • Gebeyehu Tsega‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2021‎

Globally, diabetes mellitus exerts an economic burden on patients and their families. However, the economic burden of diabetes mellitus and its associated factors were not well studied in Ethiopia. Therefore, the aim of this study is to assess the economic burden of diabetes mellitus and its associated factors among diabetic patients in public hospitals of Bahir Dar city administration, Ethiopia.


A systematic review of the evidence of how hospitals capture financial benefits of process improvement and the impact on hospital financial performance.

  • Jane Evans‎ et al.
  • BMC health services research‎
  • 2023‎

Governments, funders and hospital managers around the world are looking for ways to address the continual growth in expenditure by reducing the level of waste in the healthcare delivery system and improving the value of care provided to patients. Process improvement methods are applied to increase high value care, reduce low value care and remove waste from care processes. The purpose of this study is to review the literature to identify the methods used by hospitals to measure and capture financial benefits from PI initiatives to identify best practice. The review also pursues the way hospitals collate these benefits at the enterprise level to achieve improved financial performance.


Reporting of Financial and Non-financial Conflicts of Interest in Systematic Reviews on Health Policy and Systems Research: A Cross Sectional Survey.

  • Lama Bou-Karroum‎ et al.
  • International journal of health policy and management‎
  • 2018‎

Systematic reviews are increasingly used to inform health policy-making. The conflicts of interest (COI) of the authors of systematic reviews may bias their results and influence their conclusions. This may in turn lead to misguided public policies and systems level decisions. In order to mitigate the adverse impact of COI, scientific journals require authors to disclose their COIs. The objective of this study was to assess the frequency and different types of COI that authors of systematic reviews on health policy and systems research (HSPR) report.


Financial Literacy in Orthopaedic Surgery Residents: A COERG Survey.

  • Ryan J Cone‎ et al.
  • Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Global research & reviews‎
  • 2022‎

Financial literacy is the individual ability and skill to make informed decisions in the management of resources within the financial marketplace to yield a lifetime of financial well-being. Residents across several subspecialties have demonstrated low levels of financial literacy, and it is thought that more financial education is needed during residency training. The purpose of this study is to perform a comprehensive evaluation on financial literacy and financial attitudes of orthopaedic surgery residents. The authors hypothesize that orthopaedic residents will have low levels of financial literacy and financial satisfaction.


Epidemiology and Financial Burden of Adult Chronic Hypoparathyroidism.

  • Sigridur Bjornsdottir‎ et al.
  • Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research‎
  • 2022‎

Chronic hypoparathyroidism is characterized by low serum calcium, increased serum phosphorus, and inappropriately low or decreased serum parathyroid hormone. This rare disorder is associated with a variety of complications. The prevalence, incidence, mortality, financial burden, and epidemiology of complications of this disorder are not well understood. This narrative review summarizes current information on the epidemiology and complications of chronic hypoparathyroidism. The reported prevalence of chronic hypoparathyroidism ranges from 6.4-37/100,000, and the incidence is reported to be 0.8-2.3/100,000/year. Mortality is not increased in studies from Denmark or South Korea but was increased in studies from Scotland and Sweden. The financial burden of this disorder is substantial because of increased health care resource utilization in two studies but not well quantitated. Recognized complications include hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, kidney stones, and chronic kidney disease; low bone turnover and possibly upper extremity fractures; cardiac and vascular calcifications; basal ganglia calcifications, cataracts, infections, neuropsychiatric complications, and difficulties with pregnancy. This review concludes that chronic hypoparathyroidism is a rare disorder associated with significant morbidity that may not increase overall mortality but is associated with a substantial financial burden. © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR).


Money Walks: Implicit Mobility Behavior and Financial Well-Being.

  • Vivek Kumar Singh‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2015‎

Traditional financial decision systems (e.g. credit) had to rely on explicit individual traits like age, gender, job type, and marital status, while being oblivious to spatio-temporal mobility or the habits of the individual involved. Emerging trends in geo-aware and mobile payment systems, and the resulting "big data," present an opportunity to study human consumption patterns across space and time. Taking inspiration from animal behavior studies that have reported significant interconnections between animal spatio-temporal "foraging" behavior and their life outcomes, we analyzed a corpus of hundreds of thousands of human economic transactions and found that financial outcomes for individuals are intricately linked with their spatio-temporal traits like exploration, engagement, and elasticity. Such features yield models that are 30% to 49% better at predicting future financial difficulties than the comparable demographic models.


Leverage points in the financial sector for seafood sustainability.

  • Jean-Baptiste Jouffray‎ et al.
  • Science advances‎
  • 2019‎

Can finance contribute to seafood sustainability? This is an increasingly relevant question given the projected growth of seafood markets and the magnitude of social and environmental challenges associated with seafood production. As more capital enters the seafood industry, it becomes crucial that investments steer the sector toward improved sustainability, as opposed to fueling unsustainable working conditions and overexploitation of resources. Using a mixed-methods approach, we map where different financial mechanisms are most salient along a seafood firm's development trajectory and identify three leverage points that can redirect capital toward more sustainable practices: loan covenants, stock exchange listing rules, and shareholder activism. We argue that seafood sustainability requirements need to be integrated into traditional financial services and propose key research avenues for academic, policy, and practice communities. While our study focuses on the role of finance in seafood sustainability, the insights developed are also of high relevance to other extractive industries.


Assessing systemic risk in financial markets using dynamic topic networks.

  • Mike K P So‎ et al.
  • Scientific reports‎
  • 2022‎

Systemic risk in financial markets refers to the breakdown of a financial system due to global events, catastrophes, or extreme incidents, leading to huge financial instability and losses. This study proposes a dynamic topic network (DTN) approach that combines topic modelling and network analysis to assess systemic risk in financial markets. We make use of Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) to semantically analyse news articles, and the extracted topics then serve as input to construct topic similarity networks over time. Our results indicate how connected the topics are so that we can correlate any abnormal behaviours with volatility in the financial markets. With the 2015-2016 stock market selloff and COVID-19 as use cases, our results also suggest that the proposed DTN approach can provide an indication of (a) abnormal movement in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and (b) when the market would gradually begin to recover from such an event. From a practical risk management point of view, this analysis can be carried out on a daily basis when new data come in so that we can make use of the calculated metrics to predict real-time systemic risk in financial markets.


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