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1.
West J Emerg Med ; 22(3): 667-671, 2021 May 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34125044

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with "low-risk" acute coronary syndrome (ACS) symptoms can be discharged with outpatient follow-up. However, follow-up compliance is low for unknown nonclinical reasons. We hypothesized that a patient's social factors, health literacy, self-perceived risk, and trust in the emergency physician may impact follow-up compliance. METHODS: This was a prospective study of a convenience sample of discharged ED patients presenting with chest pain and given a follow-up appointment prior to departing the ED. Patients were asked about social and demographic factors and to estimate their own risk for heart disease; they also completed the Short Assessment of Health Literacy-English (SAHL-E) and the Trust in Physician Scale (TiPS). RESULTS: We enrolled146 patients with a follow-up rate of 36.3%. Patients who had a low self-perceived heart disease risk (10% or less) were significantly less likely to attend follow-up than those with a higher perceived risk (23% vs 44%, P = 0.01). Other factors did not significantly predict follow-up rates. CONCLUSION: In an urban county ED, in patients who were deemed low risk for ACS and discharged, only self-perception of risk was associated with compliance with a follow-up appointment.


Subject(s)
Health Literacy , Patient Compliance/psychology , Self Concept , Social Determinants of Health , Chest Pain/diagnosis , Emergency Service, Hospital , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Compliance/statistics & numerical data , Prospective Studies , Risk Assessment , Surveys and Questionnaires , Trust
2.
IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell ; 33(9): 1860-76, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21358003

ABSTRACT

Precisely localizing in an image a set of feature points that form a shape of an object, such as car or face, is called alignment. Previous shape alignment methods attempted to fit a whole shape model to the observed data, based on the assumption of Gaussian observation noise and the associated regularization process. However, such an approach, though able to deal with Gaussian noise in feature detection, turns out not to be robust or precise because it is vulnerable to gross feature detection errors or outliers resulting from partial occlusions or spurious features from the background or neighboring objects. We address this problem by adopting a randomized hypothesis-and-test approach. First, a Bayesian inference algorithm is developed to generate a shape-and-pose hypothesis of the object from a partial shape or a subset of feature points. For alignment, a large number of hypotheses are generated by randomly sampling subsets of feature points, and then evaluated to find the one that minimizes the shape prediction error. This method of randomized subset-based matching can effectively handle outliers and recover the correct object shape. We apply this approach on a challenging data set of over 5,000 different-posed car images, spanning a wide variety of car types, lighting, background scenes, and partial occlusions. Experimental results demonstrate favorable improvements over previous methods on both accuracy and robustness.


Subject(s)
Automobiles/classification , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Models, Theoretical , Algorithms , Bayes Theorem
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