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1

Liddell, Savannah S., Rosalyn Marar, Ronald S. Go, Caleb C. Bentz, Jonas Paludo, and Richard C. Godby. "Call Me Maybe: An Analysis of Hematology Fellowship Home-Call Burden, Perceptions, and Attitudes." Blood 144, Supplement 1 (2024): 5204. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2024-206131.

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Introduction: Traditional home-call, or the practice of holding a pager at home overnight to manage questions regarding patient care and direct patient calls, is a common component of hematology fellowship. Depending on the institution and training program, the frequency and expectations of home-call may vary. Home-call in fellowship is often performed overnight between two days of work without a “post-call” day to recover. As a field, medicine has entered the digital era, accompanied by changes in patient interactions and expectations involving after-hours calls. Little is known about modern non-digital interactions with patients such as after-hours calls in hematology practices and their effects on trainees. This project aims to evaluate the home-call pager burden and subjective experience in fellows. Methods: We analyzed Hematology Pager (HP) data from 7/1/19 - 4/14/23. The HPs for Mayo Clinic Rochester are covered by hematology fellows, including the weekend and after hours (6PM - 7AM) pagers. Those of interest were the Consults Pager (CP; covers new inpatient consults if discussion initiated outside of electronic order) and the Outpatient Pager (OP; covers direct patient calls as well as critical result communications for weekends and after-hours). The frequency of home-call varies based on each rotation but can require home-call up to 3-4 times per week with the expectation to occasionally present to the hospital overnight in the setting of a hematologic emergency. An optional survey was distributed to the fellowship in May 2024 with the intent to support trainee wellness and assess perceptions and attitudes toward the home-call experience. We allowed for free-text responses and used a 5-point Likert scale for structured responses. Results: The CP received a total of 5,304 pages during the analyzed period for a mean of 3.8 pages per day. Of those, 975 pages (18%) occurred after-hours and 1,250 (24%) during weekends. The OP received a total of 3,964 pages during the analyzed period, definitionally during weekends and/or after-hours, for a mean of 2.9 pages per day. The OP had the highest relative activity on weekends, which ranged from 1-18 calls per day. The survey captured 19/33 (58%) hematology/oncology fellows, which were comprised of 58% males and 42% females representing all levels of training with 42% PGY4s, 26% PGY5s, and 32% PGY6s. Over 85% felt that holding the HP was not an educational experience and that they did not learn about hematology while managing it. Moreover, 85% of respondents felt that they did not help patients get time-sensitive care when holding the HP. Only 5% felt that the majority of care provided through the HP required a Medical Degree and 32% agreed that the majority of calls were due to an acute clinical status change warranting immediate medical attention. If immediate medical attention was possibly required, 95% of fellows reported a recommendation of evaluation in the nearest emergency room. Over 85% of fellows felt that the HP affected other individuals (e.g., significant other) in their households. No respondents (0%) agreed that they could maintain their exercise schedule while holding the HP and only 16% reported no effect on their social life. Nearly all fellows reported not feeling well rested after a home call shift, regardless of whether the level of pager activity was low (≤2 calls), average (3-5 calls), or high (≥6 calls). Up to 95% of fellows reported feeling anxiety when holding the pagers. The free responses outlined concerns about sleep deprivation from call multiple times per week, the impact of home-call on learning, and the desire for a process that triaged patient calls at night that did not require physician resource utilization. Conclusions: Home-call is a long-standing tradition that gives hospital teams and patients access to specialty care after standard business hours. However, home-call can impact wellness, contribute to fatigue, and affect learning. To our knowledge, this is the first analysis evaluating call pager volumes and hematology fellows' perceptions and attitudes toward the home-call experience. Hematology is a dynamic field that requires empathy, critical thinking, and physician wellness to provide the best possible care to patients. In the digital era, the current structure of this long-standing tradition may warrant reevaluation and optimization to prioritize a system beneficial for both patient care and physician wellness.
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Ly, Theresa, Cameron S. Korb-Wells, Daniel Sumpton, Robert R. Russo, and Les Barnsley. "Nature and Impact of Interruptions on Clinical Workflow of Medical Residents in the Inpatient Setting." Journal of Graduate Medical Education 5, no. 2 (2013): 232–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.4300/jgme-d-12-00040.1.

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Abstract Background Medical officers (trainees) in their first to third postgraduate years (PGY-1–3s) work in complex, busy environments, performing tasks that require concentration and application of learned skills. There are frequently competing demands, and being paged is among the most common. Objective We quantified and described the effect of interruptions that paging created on the clinical workflow of PGY-1–3s during ward duties. Methods This prospective study was conducted at 2 teaching hospitals in Sydney, Australia. Medical students were recruited as observers to log interruptions of PGY-1–3s' workflow arising from pages from other members of the hospital team. Results Forty-two pairs consisting of a PGY-1–3 trainee and an observer were recruited, with 24 proceeding to data collection. Nursing was the most frequent source of pages (47%); other medical staff accounted for 16% of pages, allied health for 12%, and others for 24% (with pharmacy the most common). Pages commonly involved direct patient care (46%), followed by medication issues (21%). Tasks interrupted by pages encompassed direct patient care (37%), indirect patient care (15%), and documentation (12%). Only 27% of pages were assessed as appropriate and urgent, while 58% were considered appropriate but not urgent, and 16% were not appropriate. Only 38% of pages were judged to be clinically more important than the task they interrupted. Conclusions Pages frequently interrupted direct patient care activities for PGY-1–3 trainees, and a significant proportion of pages were identified as either not requiring immediate attention or not appropriate, resulting in potentially avoidable interruptions to clinical workflow. Alternate means of alerting trainees to nonurgent tasks may reduce interruptions and facilitate patient care.
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Revji, Date Ganesh, Darvesh Raviraj Narsing, and Mayuri Dendge. "Accelerated Mobile Pages AMP." International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development Volume-2, Issue-5 (2018): 338–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.31142/ijtsrd15821.

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Fisher, Renae, Rajbir Chaggar, Anthony Zenger, Susan Hamilton, and William Carter. "Getting on the Same Page: A Quality Improvement Project to Enhance Nurse-to-Resident Communications and Reduce Overnight Sleep Interruptions." Journal of Graduate Medical Education 14, no. 3 (2022): 311–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.4300/jgme-d-21-00846.1.

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ABSTRACT Background Many residency programs utilize “home call” residents who answer hospital communications and place orders from home. Often, residents are required to live nearby and arrive in-person if needed. Residents work normal daytime work hours while on home call, which can last several nights. This disrupts sleep and creates the potential for increased resident fatigue and patient safety issues. Objective To implement and evaluate a novel program to reduce non-urgent overnight pages from nurses to home call physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R) residents between 11 pm and 6 am. Methods At an inpatient acute rehabilitation unit in a tertiary care university teaching hospital, we implemented a 2-step prospective quality improvement study with interventions derived from nurse-physician meetings implemented 9 months apart in 2018 and 2019. The first intervention was a centralized nightly handoff sheet. The second intervention was to display suggested PRN medication lists in resident workrooms. The primary outcome measure was the percentage of nights with non-urgent pages between 11 pm and 6 am. Tracking urgent pages and 7-10 am emergent pages were used as balancing measures. Results A total of 1835 text-based nursing pages (366 pre- and 1469 post-intervention) were received and categorized by content, urgency, and timing over a 17-month period. Post-intervention, there was a stable 25% decrease in nighttime non-urgent pages. The most common hour to be paged shifted from 11 pm to 8 pm. Pain, constipation, insomnia, and nausea were the most common complaints overnight. Conclusions By characterizing and studying nighttime pages, residents collaborated with nighttime nursing staff through structured meetings to reduce non-urgent nighttime pages for more than 1 year.
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Fargen, Kyle M., Timothy O'Connor, Steven Raymond, Justin M. Sporrer, and William A. Friedman. "An Observational Study of Hospital Paging Practices and Workflow Interruption Among On-Call Junior Neurological Surgery Residents." Journal of Graduate Medical Education 4, no. 4 (2012): 467–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.4300/jgme-d-11-00306.1.

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Abstract Background Previous studies suggest that nonurgent pages comprise a substantial portion of the pages received by residents while on duty. We evaluated the number, type, and urgency of pages received and the task being performed at the time of paging by on-call junior neurosurgery residents at a large teaching hospital, with the aim of providing insight into mechanisms that can be developed to improve paging patterns and ultimately reduce physician distractions due to nonurgent communications. Methods For eight 12-hour call sessions, a medical student shadowed the on-call junior neurosurgery resident and recorded all pages received and the time, paging number and location, priority of the page (nonurgent, urgent, or emergency), and the activity the resident performed when the page was received. During one 5-hour session, a recorder measured the amount of time spent returning pages. Results During the study period, 439 communications were recorded (mean of 54.9 per 12-hour session; range, 33–75). Communications occurred at a rate of every 13 minutes and ranged from every 34 minutes to every 8.7 minutes. Paging remained frequent even during the hours when on-call residents are most likely to sleep (2–5 am), with an average of 4 communications per hour. The time to return pages ranged from 15 to 174 seconds (mean, 79.7 seconds). Most pages were nonurgent (68.3%) and occurred during patient care activities (65%). Conclusions Paging communications were frequent. Most pages were nonurgent and were received during important patient care activities. This suggests that a viable solution must address the work context of the individual being paged and the individual initiating the page to ensure that urgent communications are properly prioritized and attended to.
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Huang, Jian, and Cong Yu. "Prioritization of Domain-Specific Web Information Extraction." Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence 24, no. 1 (2010): 1327–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v24i1.7500.

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It is often desirable to extract structured information from raw web pages for better information browsing, query answering, and pattern mining. many such Information Extraction (IE) technologies are costly and applying them at the web-scale is impractical. In this paper, we propose a novel prioritization approach where candidate pages from the corpus are ordered according to their expected contribution to the extraction results and those with higher estimated potential are extracted earlier. Systems employing this approach can stop the extraction process at any time when the resource gets scarce (i.e., not all pages in the corpus can be processed), without worrying about wasting extraction effort on unimportant pages. More specifically, we define a novel notion to measure the value of extraction results and design various mechanisms for estimating a candidate page’s contribution to this value. We further design and build the Extraction Prioritization (EP) system with efficient scoring and scheduling algorithms, and experimentally demonstrate that EP significantly outperforms the naive approach and is more flexible than the classifier approach.
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M, VASUKI. "Using Machine Learning in Web Page Categorization for Search Engine optimization." INTERANTIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH IN ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT 08, no. 05 (2024): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.55041/ijsrem34167.

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This research introduces an innovative approach to classifying websites based on their compliance with SEO standards. By merging expert insights with machine learning algorithms, the study develops classifiers capable of accurately sorting web pages into three categories. These classifiers pinpoint key factors that impact the level of page optimization. The training phase entails experts manually labeling data. Experimental findings underscore the efficacy of machine learning in gauging a web page's adherence to SEO guidelines. This method holds significance as it automates the identification of pages needing optimization to enhance search engine rankings. Moreover, the research sheds light on the optimal arrangement of ranking variables utilized by search engines, reinforcing previous research. Additionally, the establishment of a new dataset comprising manually annotated web pages proves invaluable for future research initiatives. KEYWORDS: Machine learning, on-page optimization, classification, SEO optimization, Search engine optimization.
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ملكاوي, أسماء حسين. "عروض مختصرة". الفكر الإسلامي المعاصر (إسلامية المعرفة سابقا) 17, № 66 (2011): 203–193. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/citj.v17i66.2617.

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 القرآن والمتغيرات الاجتماعية والتاريخية، محمد أبو القاسم حاج حمد، بيروت: دار الساقي للطباعة والنشر، 2011م، 141 صفحة.
 حوار حول: الإسلام هو القرآن وحده، محمد توفيق صدقي،رشيد رضا، طه البشري، جمع وتحقيق: هشام عبد العزيز، الرياض: جداول للطباعة والنشر والتوزيع، 2011م، 308 صفحة.
 نحو نظرية قرآنية، محمد سلمان غانم، بيروت: دار الفارابي، 2011م، 504 صفحة.
 الجدلية التاريخية في القرآن الكريم، عبد الله عيسى لحيلح، بيروت: منشورات زين الحقوقية، 2011م، 608 صفحة.
 الله والإنسان في القرآن: علم دلالة الرؤية القرآنية للعالم، توشيهيكو إيزوتسو، ترجمة وتقديم: هلال محمد الجهاد، لبنان: المنظمة العربية للترجمة، 2007م، 387 صفحة.
 الرحمانيةديموقراطية القرآن، محمد سلمان غانم، بيروت: دار الفارابي، 2008م، 246 صفحة.
 الانتماء الحضاري والهوية الثقافية في ضوء عروبة القرآن أو الإسلام العربي، معالم في طريق الوحدة والتعايش والاعتدال لتدبّر القرآن وفهمه بلسان عربي مبين، علاء الدين المدرس، العراق: دار الرقيم، 2008م، 191 صفحة.
 The Impact of the Qur'anic Verses on Mass Communication Practices: A Case Study, Aliy Abdulwahid Adebisi, Germany- LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing, 2011, 72 pages.
 The Dream in Islam: From Qur'anic Tradition to Jihadist Inspiration, Iain R. Edgar, Berghahn Books, 2011, 172 pages.
 Qur'anic Hermeneutics: Al-Tabrisi and the Craft of Commentary (Routledge Studies in the Qur'an), Bruce Fudge, UK- Routledge; 1 edition, 2011, 176 pages.
 Communication Strategies in the Qur'an: A Multidisciplinary Approach, Christian Tamas, Germany- LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing, 2011, 252 pages.
 Al-Ghazali and the Qur'an: One Book, Many Meanings (Culture and Civilization in the Middle East), Martin Whittingham, UK- Routledge; Reprint edition, 2011, 154 pages.
 Beyond The Quran, Responding to Islam’s Claim on Bible Prophecies. James Paul-Magidi, Longwood, FL- Xulon Press, 2011, 464 pages.
 In Search of Our Origins: How the Quran Can Help in Scientific Research, Jamshed Akhtar, Seattle, WA- CreateSpace, 2010, 164 pagesز
 Sounds of Qur'anic Recitation in Egypt: A Phonetic Analysis, Mohammed R. Elashiry See search results for this auAre you an author? Learn about Author Central (Author), Bruce Ingham (Foreword), New York- Edwin Mellen Pr, 2009, 352 pages.
 Textual Criticism and Qur'an Manuscripts, Keith E. Small, Lanham, MD.: Lexington Books, 2011, 244 pages.
 Life, The Universe & The Quran, Dr Saddique, Bloomington, IN.: AuthorHouse, 2011, 156 pages.
 Women, War & Hypocrites: Studying the Qur'an, Robert A Campbell, Sydney: Cape Breton University Press, 2010, 244 pages.
 
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Choudhary, Laxmi. "Artificial Intelligence-Based Approaches for Enhanced Web Personalization: Transforming User Experience and Adaptive Web Interactions." International Journal on Recent and Innovation Trends in Computing and Communication 9, no. 1 (2021): 23–34. https://doi.org/10.17762/ijritcc.v9i1.11223.

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Web usage mining is essential for getting user behavior out of Weblogs and customizing business Websites. This work aims to discover these hidden weblog rules by implementing the Apriori Prefix Tree (PT) algorithm on the PSNBC data set. The most important task is to predict the next page based on the user's web activity. The performance of the generated rules was measured with the help of fundamental factors including lift, confidence and support. The findings show that confidence does not vary across the pages but that lift and support correlate highly with the page's significance. Most visited web pages such as News, Front Page, On-air News, Sports and BBS received higher traffic than commonly visited pages like Travel, PSN-News and PSN-Sports. From these findings, it becomes evident that there is potential in web usage mining in consequent log analysis from servers in yielding insightful knowledge for analysis of user conduct and generating personalization content.
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Khalil, Nida, Saniah Rehan, Abeer Javed Syed, Khalid Mahboob, Fayyaz Ali та Fatima Waseem. "Optimizing the Efficiency of Web Mining through Comparative Web Ranking Algorithms". VFAST Transactions on Software Engineering 11, № 4 (2023): 105–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.21015/vtse.v11i4.1667.

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Millions of web pages carrying massive amounts of data make up the World Wide Web. Real-time data has been generated on a wide scale on the websites. However, not every piece of data is relevant to the user. While scouring the web for information, a user may come upon a web page that contains irrelevant or incomplete information. As a response, search engines can alleviate this issue by displaying the most relevant pages. Two web page ranking algorithms are proposed in this study along with the Dijkstra algorithm; the PageRank algorithm and the Weighted PageRank algorithm. The algorithms are used to evaluate a web page's importance or relevancy within a network, such as the Internet. PageRank evaluates a page's value based on the quantity and quality of links leading to it. It is commonly utilized by nearly all search engines around the world to rank web pages in order of relevance. This algorithm is used by Google, the most widespread Internet search engine. In the process of Web mining, page rank is quite weighty. The most important component of marketing is online use mining, which investigates how people browse and operate a business on a company's website. The study presents two proposed models that try to optimize web links and improve search engine results relevancy for users.
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Oldfield, F. "PAGES Open Science Meeting: Putting PAGES together." PAGES news 5, no. 3 (1997): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.22498/pages.5.3.12.

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Bell, Marvin. "Pages." Antioch Review 45, no. 1 (1987): 22. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4611672.

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Thiher, Allen, and Jean Sulivan. "Pages." World Literature Today 71, no. 4 (1997): 756. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40153316.

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Bishop, Michael, and Janine Mitaud. "Pages." World Literature Today 67, no. 2 (1993): 334. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40149106.

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Bourad, Aïcha. "Des pages « éco » aux pages « société »." Études rurales, no. 198 (December 1, 2016): 133–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/etudesrurales.11312.

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Kiefer, Thorsten. "Future PAGES." PAGES news 13, no. 1 (2005): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.22498/pages.13.1.2.

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Tungsheng, Liu. "PAGES in China." PAGES news 13, no. 2 (2005): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.22498/pages.13.2.2.

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Alverson, Keith. "PAGES–CLIVAR Intersection." PAGES news 6, no. 2 (1998): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.22498/pages.6.2.9a.

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Oldfield, Frank. "Editorial: PAGES Synthesis." PAGES news 7, no. 1 (1999): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.22498/pages.7.1.1.

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Oldfield, Frank. "LUCC–PAGES–DIS." PAGES news 7, no. 2 (1999): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.22498/pages.7.2.8.

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Bobo, Lawrence D. "CRIME, URBAN POVERTY, AND SOCIAL SCIENCE." Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race 6, no. 2 (2009): 273–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1742058x0999021x.

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Todd R. Clear, Imprisoning Communities: How Mass Incarceration Makes Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Worse. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. 255 pages, ISBN: 978-0-19-538720-9. Paper, $21.95.Sudhir Venkatesh, Gang Leader for a Day: A Rogue Sociologist Takes to the Streets. New York: Penguin Press, 2008. 303 pages, ISBN: 978-1-59420-150-9. Cloth, $25.95.In recent years, sociologists have conducted enormously important research on the intersection of urban poverty, crime, and the racial divide. Quantitative stratification sociologist Bruce Western provides a meticulous tracing of the emergence of mass incarceration, tracking its steady development and identifying how and why—both economically and politically—this trend has fallen so heavily on low-income Black communities (Western 2006). Quantitative stratification sociologist Devah Pager carries out remarkably innovative and compelling field experiments showing the terrible toll incarceration takes on the employment prospects and, therefore, the greater life chances of former felons, particularly those who are Black (Pager 2007). And the combined efforts of quantitative criminologist Chris Uggen and quantitative political sociologist Jeff Manza reveal the extraordinary distortion of our local and national politics that results from the practice of felon disfranchisement (Manza and Uggen, 2006).
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Rose, Joel S., Brett H. Waibel, and Paul J. Schenarts. "Resident Perceptions of the Impact of Paging on Intraoperative Education." American Surgeon 78, no. 6 (2012): 642–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000313481207800615.

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Our purpose was to evaluate the impact of paging on perceptions of intraoperative learning. Intraoperative logs of pager interruptions were kept by surgical residents at a university hospital over a 30-day period. The postgraduate year, number of pages, category of caller, reason for call, and level of urgency were recorded during each operation. At the conclusion of each operation, residents also completed a two-item survey with responses on a 5-point scale (1 = strongly disagree to 5 = strongly agree), querying if interruptions negatively impacted the intraoperative experience and if a message taken by a third party was effective in limiting interruptions. Logs were completed for 124 of 204 operations. Fifty-five per cent of operations were interrupted at least once with 49 per cent interrupted two to five times and 6 per cent were interrupted six or more times. Junior residents had 69 per cent of their operations interrupted compared with 39 per cent of senior residents ( P = 0.001). Ninety-two per cent of pages were nonurgent. Residents did not perceive pager interruptions negatively impacted their educational experience (mean 2.3) but were neutral with respect if messages taken by a third party decreased interruptions (mean 3.8). Although our hypothesis was that pager interruptions were frequent and disrupt resident education, our data demonstrate the opposite.
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Liu, Hong Shen, and Peng Fei Wang. "Analysis of Web Pages Based the Changed Information and its’ Application in the Search Engine for one Web Site." Applied Mechanics and Materials 303-306 (February 2013): 2311–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.303-306.2311.

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The structures and contents of researching search engines are presented and the core technology is the analysis technology of web pages. The characteristic of analyzing web pages in one website is studied, relations between the web pages web crawler gained at two times are able to be obtained and the changed information among them are found easily. A new method of analyzing web pages in one website is introduced and the method analyzes web pages with the changed information of web pages. The result of applying the method shows that the new method is effective in the analysis of web pages.
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Dr.N.Ramakrishnan and R.PrasithaIndhumathy Mrs. "EDUCATIONAL PAGES IN FACEBOOK - A STUDY." International Journal of Research - Granthaalayah 5, no. 7SE (2017): 7–11. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.840174.

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Facebook Pages are a great resource for educational technology professionals to find companies, thought leaders, groups and organizations to share ideas and experiences with peers while expanding industry knowledge and increasing connections. Like most Facebook users, many educators use Facebook to connect with friends new and old, but the Internet's most popular site can also be a great learning and teaching tool. There are many Facebook pages that have been created as a resource to collect, share, and disseminate information about education and education technologies. In this study an attempt has been made to know about various educational pages in Facebook. The study has taken one day survey of total no. of likes and followers for educational pages in Facebook. The educational pages are identified by the Researcher based on her explorative knowledge on the field by random browsing in the Facebook. The collected data gives us an idea about teachers who use Facebook for educational purposes. This study will motivate other teachers also to browse Facebook for enhancement of their teaching and learning skills. The modern social media could be best used for maximizing teacher’s personality, creative thoughts, innovative ideas and teaching competency.
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Andres, Erica, Savannah Liddell, Rosalyn Marar, et al. "The hidden toll: Defining impacts of home call on oncology fellows." Journal of Clinical Oncology 43, no. 16_suppl (2025): 9021. https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2025.43.16_suppl.9021.

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9021 Background: Home call is an expected trainee responsibility in many hematology-oncology (HO) training programs although the specific duties and frequency vary. Home call is associated with sleep deprivation and burnout . The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) outlines that home call should not prevent adequate rest or personal time and that the clinical time spent must be counted toward duty hours. However, little is known about the educational value or impact of home call. We sought to analyze the volume, perceived value, and effects of oncology home call on HO fellows. Methods: We completed a review of the pager log of the outpatient/after hours oncology pager (OP) at a single 2059 bed tertiary medical center from 1/1/23-12/31/24. The HO fellow carries the OP afterhours and on weekends except for 7am-12pm on Saturday/Sunday. The pager receives all consult calls from the emergency department and inpatient teams requesting verbal communication (in addition to the electronic order), critical results, and outpatient patient calls on matters related to oncology (hematology not included). Patient calls are not triaged and are routed through the hospital operator directly to the OP. Overnight home call is maximum 3 times per week without a post call day. An optional survey was distributed to fellows in May 2024 to assess fellows’ experiences with the OP using a 5-point Likert scale and free response. Results: There were 80,672 and 87,605 oncology patient visits in 2023 and 2024 respectively at the analyzed institution. The OP received a total of 7,239 pages over the analyzed period. Fellows received a mean of 5.8 pages per weeknight call shift and 8.8 pages per weekend call shift. The survey response rate was 19/33 (42%) HO fellows. Respondents were 58% male and included first (42%), second (26%), and third year (32%) fellows. 89% of respondents reported that most pages overnight were from outpatients and 0 respondents felt that answering patient calls required a physician. Most fellows (79%) did not report educational value from holding the OP and 63% of fellows felt that holding the OP negatively impacted their performance at work the next day. For nights that received more than 3 calls, 95% fellows reported feeling not well rested. In addition, a majority of negative impact on their wellness including anxiety and inability to exercise or socialize when holding the OP. Conclusions: The results from our single-institution study indicate that home call could represent a major opportunity to improve the wellness of trainees without negatively impacting their education. More research is needed to understand what the primary contributors are for the negative experiences and perceptions while developing sustainable systems and approaches for efficiently handling oncology pager traffic.
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Rajendra, Marriboyina, and S. Suresh Babu. "Template Detection Technique From Assorted Web Pages." International Journal of Scientific Research 2, no. 9 (2012): 148–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.15373/22778179/sep2013/54.

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Fang, Yi Qiu, Zhi Chao Song, and Jun Wei Ge. "Cloud Computing-Oriented Virtual Machine Live Migration Mechanism." Applied Mechanics and Materials 513-517 (February 2014): 1731–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.513-517.1731.

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In the process of memory pre-copy, aiming at the characteristic which the dirty pages may be re-transmitted, dirty pages based on the probability prediction pre-copy mechanism is proposed, which aims to reduce the data transmission and total migration time. The mechanism uses temporal locality principle, on the pages before transmission, probability prediction for memory page, give priority to transmission of dirty pages prediction probability low memory pages, avoiding high dirty pages resend. Simulation results show that: the mechanism can reduce the amount of data transmission, reducing downtime and total migration time.
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SARR, Serigne Omar. "TABLE OF CONTENTS." International Journal of Pharmaceutical Physico-chemical and Nutritional Analysis 2, no. 1 (2024): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.61585/ucad-ijppna-v2i100.

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Editorial board, Reading/scientific committee, Pages I-II. Authors guidelines, Pages III-IV. Editorial by Prof. Serigne Omar SARR (Editor-In-Chief), Page 2. Original papers Dermane et al. Antioxidant and antimicrobial activities of Momordica charantia L. leaves. Pages 03-08. Sekede et al. In vitro antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and ex vivo nephroprotective activities of Chenopodium ambrosioides. Pages 09-15. Ndiaye et al. Validation d’une méthode d’identification et de dosage de l’oxytetracycline dans des médicaments à usage vétérinaire par CLHP-DAD. Pages 16-21. Mbaye et al. Etude physicochimique de miels des régions du Sud du Sénégal (la Casamance). Pages 22-26. Dia et al. Etude de la qualité d’échantillons de lait en poudre vendus à Dakar (Sénégal) : recherche d’amidon et détermination des teneurs en matières grasses et minéraux. Pages 27-33. Sy et al. Formation professionnelle continue obligatoire des pharmaciens : enquête auprès des pharmaciens d’officine du Sénégal et proposition d’un modèle. Pages 40-47. Faye et al. Evaluation of mineral content and antioxidant activity of Detarium senegalense leaves extracts. Pages 48-54. Ndiaye et al. Accessibilité et qualité de l’eau dans la commune de Mboro (Sénégal) : étude exploratoire. Pages 55-64. Letter to the Editor Oliver et al. Bridging the gap: strengthening testing capabilities of national medicines quality control laboratories in West Africa. Pages 34-39.
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Lee, Jimin, Tejas Desai, Jennifer Horwitz, et al. "34 Improving workflow efficiency by implementing priority indication in paging communication." Paediatrics & Child Health 26, Supplement_1 (2021): e25-e26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pch/pxab061.027.

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Abstract Primary Subject area Hospital Paediatrics Background Paging is an important method of communication in hospitals but can also interrupt clinical care unnecessarily. These interruptions decrease workflow efficiency and negatively affect patient care. Objectives The goal of this project was to decrease clinical care interruptions from non-urgent pages to pediatric residents by implementing a priority indication system that was: (1) consistently used (90% pages with a priority level indicated); (2) clearly defined (80% concordance in the priority levels between senders and recipients); and (3) satisfying to end users (80% rating the paging system as satisfied). Design/Methods The Plan-Do-Study-Act method of quality improvement was used. The study was conducted at an academic children’s hospital, where numeric paging occurs through a switchboard operator. Three priority levels (1 being most urgent) with a respective expected callback time (5-15, 15-30, 60+ minutes) were determined through a pilot study and stakeholder consensus. A priority level was selected by the page sender and displayed beside a callback number. Process measures were indication of priority levels and concordance of priority levels between senders and recipients. Outcome measures were reduced interruptions to clinical care from non-urgent pages and user satisfaction. Balancing measures included patient safety incidents. Run charts, surveys, and page logs were used to track the impact of interventions. Results In the first two months, 1325 out of 2208 (60%) pages had a priority level indicated. In the subsequent two months after providing feedback to users, the proportion increased to 1822 out of 2410 (76%). Subsequent bimonthly indication rates have ranged between 74% and 83%. Among pages with a priority level indicated over 16 months (n=13,934), 26% were assigned priority 1, 62% priority 2, and 11% priority 3. There was a 74% concordance in priority levels between senders and recipients. 26% of pages were received while a resident was directly interacting with a patient. Fewer residents felt that their workflow was being frequently interrupted by non-urgent pages (from 65% to 39%). End user satisfaction improved. There were no patient safety incidents. Conclusion Using existing infrastructure, we implemented a paging priority indication system that decreased interruptions to clinical care. Residents reported improved workflow efficiency, and end users expressed improved satisfaction with paging communication. The gap in the perception of urgency between senders and recipients will need to be further evaluated. While a priority level indication is particularly pertinent to hospitals using numeric pagers, a standardized indication of priority levels can also be beneficial in hospitals using an alternative communication system.
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Liu, Chien Hung, and Shu Ling Chen. "Classifying Dynamic Pages for Supporting JSP-Based Web Application Testing." Applied Mechanics and Materials 411-414 (September 2013): 563–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.411-414.563.

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To ensure the correctness of Web applications, the dynamically generated Web pages must be tested. However, this can be impractical as dynamic pages can be infinite depending on user inputs and internal states of Web applications. This paper presents an approach to classify the JSP dynamic pages for reducing the number of pages to be tested. Specifically, the approach identifies the HTML statement slices inside a JSP script and classifies the dynamic pages generated by the script according to the compositions of the HTML statement slices associated with the script's linearly independent paths. With the approach, the JSP dynamic pages containing similar testing artifacts can be classified into the same category. Thus, the number of JSP dynamic pages to be tested can be greatly reduced.
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SESTRAS, Radu E. "Introduction pages." Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-Napoca 49, no. 1 (2021): 12318. http://dx.doi.org/10.15835/nbha49112318.

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Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-Napoca (NBHA): The papers published in Issue 1, Volume 49, 2021 represent new exciting researches in different topics of life science, respectively in plant science, horticulture, agronomy and crop science. Among the interesting articles we invite you to find news about:
 Comparative transcriptome analysis reveals gene network regulation of TGase-induced thermotolerance in tomato; Characterization the coding and non-coding RNA components in the transcriptome of invasion weed Alternanthera philoxeroides; Morphometric analysis and sequence related amplified polymorphism determine genetic diversity in Salvia species; Viral diagnosis in cultivars of Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam.; Influence of fertilizer and salicylic acid treatments on growth, physiological, and antioxidant characteristics in green and red Perilla frutescens varieties; In-vitro evaluation of antioxidant and antiradical potential of successive extracts, semi-purified fractions and biosynthesized silver nanoparticles of Rumex vesicarius; Zoophagous entomofauna and entomopathogenic agents reported on Cydalima perspectalis (Walker, 1859) in north-western of Romania; Vegetative propagation and ex-situ conservation of Acantholimon androsaceum and Limonium chersonesum, two promising local endemics of Crete (Greece) available for floricultural and pharmaceutical sustainable exploitation; Quality attributes during maturation of ‘Golden Delicious’ and ‘Red Delicious’ apples grown in two geographical regions with different environmental conditions, etc.
 The Impact Factor communicated by ISI Clarivate, June 29, 2020, is IF 2019 = 1.168 (position 149 of 234 journals, Q3 in Plant Sciences). The metrics in Scopus – Elsevier (June 22, 2020): CiteScore 1.40 (#43/84 in Horticulture); SJR 0.35 - Q2, #41/90 in Horticulture (SJR Scimago Journal).
 
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 Announcement
 From Volume 49, Issue 1, 2021, Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-Napoca journal will use article numbers in place of the traditional method of continuous pagination through the volume. This step helps us to maintain a rapid, efficient production process by being able to define pagination as soon as a paper is accepted.
 For papers that use article numbers, the page number of full-text articles will start from 1 to the last page and the citation needs only to list the article number. The journal will continue to appear quarterly, as before, with four annual numbers (see Publication Frequency).
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SESTRAS, Radu E. "Introduction pages." Notulae Scientia Biologicae 13, no. 1 (2021): 10926. http://dx.doi.org/10.15835/nsb13110926.

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Notulae Scientia Biologicae (http://www.notulaebiologicae.ro), Issue 1, Volume 13, 2021: The papers published in this issue represent interesting novelties in different topics of life science. Among the exciting researches or reviews, we invite readers to find news about: Phytochemistry and pharmacological activities of Saponaria officinalis L.; The Spanish chamomile (Anacyclus pyrethrum) and pyrethrum (Tanacetum cineraiifolium): organic and natural pesticides and treasure of medicinal herbs; Prophylactic effect of the aqueous extract of Pimpinella anisum on the behavior of Wistar rats exposed to mercury; Anti-ulcer property of methanol fraction of Callichilia subsessilis leaf extract in albino rats; Nesting tree selection by scattered heronry birds of drought prone Northern Bankura, West Bengal, India: preference of Phoenix sylvestris near wetland-associated habitats; Explants selection for in vitro propagation of Pachyrhizus erosus L.; Silene thymifolia Sibth. et Sm. (Caryophyllaceae) – A vulnerable species in Romania: Anatomical aspects of vegetative organs.
 
 Announcement: From Volume 13, Issue 1, 2021, Notulae Scientia Biologicae journal will use article numbers in place of the traditional method of continuous pagination through the volume. This step helps us to maintain a rapid, efficient production process by being able to define pagination as soon as a paper is accepted.
 For papers that use article numbers, the page number of full-text articles will start from 1 to the last page and the citation needs only to list the article number, consequently, instead of the classic style of the journal citation.
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Goetgheluck, Delphine, and Patrick Conrath. "Bonnes pages." Le Journal des psychologues 281, no. 8 (2010): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/jdp.281.0003.

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34

Iwai, Yoshiko, Elizabeth C. Ciociola, Taylor M. Carter, and Luigi Pascarella. "Perceived Pager Burden Among Trainees Across Medical Specialties." American Surgeon™, March 23, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00031348241241614.

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Background The experiences of pager use among trainees across medical specialties is underexplored. The aim of this study was to assess experiences of pager burden and communication preferences among trainees in different specialties. Methods An online survey was developed to assess perceived pager burden (eg, pager volume, mistake pages, sleep, and off-time interruptions) and communication preferences at a tertiary center in the United States. All residents and fellows were eligible to participate. Responses were grouped by specialty: General surgery [GS], Surgical subspecialty [SS], Medicine, Anesthesiology, and Psychiatry. Multivariable linear regression was used to assess factors associated with pager burden. Free text responses were analyzed using open coding methods. Results Of the total 306 responses, the majority were female (58.8%), 30-39 years (59.2%), and White (70.6%). Specialty breakdown was: Medicine (40.2%), Psychiatry (10.8%), SS (18.0%), GS (5.6%), and Anesthesiology (3.6%). GS respondents reported receiving more mistake pages ( P < .001), spending more time redirecting mistake pages ( P = .003), and having the highest sleep time disruptions ( P < .001). For urgent communications, surgical trainees preferred physical pagers, while nonsurgical trainees preferred smartphone pagers ( P = .001). “Receive fewer nonurgent pages” was the most common change respondents desired. Discussion In this single center study, subjective experiences of pager burden were disproportionately high among GS trainees. Reducing nonurgent and mistake pages are potential targets for improving trainee communication experiences. Hospitals should consider incorporating trainee preferences into paging systems. Additional studies are warranted to increase the sample size, assess generalizability of the findings, and contextualize trainee experiences with objective hospital-level paging data.
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Chaqfeh, Moumena, Russell Coke, Jacinta Hu, et al. "JSAnalyzer: A Web Developer Tool for Simplifying Mobile Web Pages Through Non-Critical JavaScript Elimination." ACM Transactions on the Web, August 8, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3550358.

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The amount of JavaScript used in web pages has substantially grown in the past decade, leading to large and complex pages that are computationally intensive for handheld mobile devices. Due to the increasing usage of these devices to access today’s web, and to accommodate the needs of a large number of mobile web users who solely rely on low-end devices, we propose “JSAnalyzer”, an easy-to-use tool that enables web developers to quickly optimize JavaScript usage in their pages, and to generate simpler versions of these pages for mobile web users. JSAnalyzer is motivated by the widespread use of non-critical JavaScript elements, i.e., those that have negligible (if any) impact on the page’s visual content and interactive functionality. JSAnalyzer allows the developer to selectively enable or disable JavaScript elements in any given page while visually observing their impact on the page to: 1) accurately identify any non-critical JavaScript elements, and 2) create a simplified page with these elements removed. Our quantitative evaluation shows that, given a low-end mobile phone, JSAnalyzer achieves an increase of nearly 90% in Google’s lighthouse performance score while reducing the page load time by 30%. A qualitative study of 22 users shows that the lighter pages produced by JSAnalyzer maintain more than 90% visual similarity compared to the original pages. Moreover, JSAnalyzer was evaluated by 69 developers, showing that it scores nearly 90% in terms of usefulness and usability while retaining the page’s content and functionality. Finally, we show that JSAnalyzer outperforms state-of-the-art solutions in terms of timing speedups and resource savings.
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Witherspoon, Luke, Emily Nham, Hamidreza Abdi, et al. "Is it time to rethink how we page physicians? Understanding paging patterns in a tertiary care hospital." BMC Health Services Research 19, no. 1 (2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4844-0.

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Abstract Background Frequent pages can disrupt workflow, interrupt patient care, and may contribute to physician burnout. We hypothesized that paging volumes followed consistent temporal trends, regardless of the medical or surgical service, reflecting systems based issues present in our hospitals. Methods A retrospective review of the hospital paging systems for 4 services at The Ottawa Hospital was performed. Resident paging data from April 1 to July 31, 2018 were collected for services with a single primary pager number including orthopaedic surgery, general surgery, neurology, and neurosurgery. Trends in paging volume during the 4-month period were examined. Variables examined included the location of origin of the page (emergency room vs. inpatient unit), and day/time of the page. Results During the study period, 25,797 pages were received by the 4 services, averaging 211 (± Standard Deviation (SD) 12) pages per day. 19,371 (75%) pages were from in-patient hospital units, while 6426 (24%) were pages from the emergency room. The median interval between pages across all specialties was 22:30 min. Emergency room pages peaked between 16:30 and 20:00, while in-patient units peaked between 17:30 and 18:30. Conclusions Each service experienced frequent paging with similar patterns of marked increases at specific times. This study identifies areas for future study about what the factors are that contribute to the paging patterns observed.
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"Identification of Web Site Reliability through Data Scrapping at Web Crawler’s Navigation." International Journal of Recent Technology and Engineering 9, no. 1 (2020): 139–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.35940/ijrte.a1463.059120.

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Searching a specified content on the web site is like epistle a single character in bunch of pages. When the user enters their keyword into any search engines, it takes that in to web server mining process for collecting the entire terms related to that entered key phrase. Few pages gives legal and authenticated matter for the user, which they really wanted to access. Whereas many other pages are bringing them some unwanted and malicious codes of pages or virus activity pages to harm user’s activities and the system’s functions. Generally a web page attacks the targeted system by faulty instructions and malevolent programs through some sort of intrusion methodologies are called as phishing. In this attacking method user is set to access unknown or illegal sites by the way of accessing some unidentified websites link imbedding with legal site contents. Once victim’s system performance got compromised then hackers started to do attack. To avoid this kind of molestations, user needs to understand reliability of web page’s contents before started to continue browsing. This research paper is going to present web crawler architecture, design complexities and implementation for scrapping web contents from visited web pages for indentifying their reliability and freshness.
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Mangino, Alyssa, Bryan A. Stenson, Evan L. Leventhal, Deesha Sarma, Peter S. Antkowiak, and David T. Chiu. "Does the number of pages received per hour affect resident productivity?" Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open 4, no. 6 (2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/emp2.13071.

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AbstractBackgroundWorkflow interruptions are common for emergency physicians and are shown to have downstream consequences such as patient dissatisfaction, delay in clinical response, and increase in medical error. However, the impact of passive interruptions on physician productivity is unclear and has not been well studied. We sought to evaluate if the number of pages received per hour significantly affects the number of patients seen per hour.MethodsRetrospective data was collected on resident physician (RP) emergency department shifts from July 1st, 2021 to June 30th, 2022 at an academic medical center with an annual census of 55,000 patients. A total of 2865 RP shifts were collected among the 26 postgraduate year (PGY) 1 and PGY2 residents. For each RP shift, we identified the number of pages received per hour and the number of new patients seen per hour. Pages consist of any transmitted message that was sent to the RP's personal pager, which includes both automatic (eg, bed assignments, abnormal lab values) and personalized pages from other healthcare practicioners (eg, nursing, consultants). Data were analyzed using Poisson regression controlling for clustering at the physician level to determine if the number of patients seen per hour is significantly affected by the number of pages (divided into quartiles) received.ResultsWe found the number of pages received per hour did not decrease the number of patients seen per hour. Contrary to our hypothesis, there was a strong positive relationship between the number of pages received per hour and the number of patients seen by RPs in that hour and subsequent hours. During the middle of a shift (hours 3, 4, and 5), RPs receiving pages in the third and fourth quartile (top 50% of pages) saw significantly more patients during that same hour and the next hour (p <0.001).ConclusionThe number of pages received by RPs per hour did not decrease the number of patients seen per hour. When RPs receive a higher number of pages, there is a positive association with the number of patients they see in that hour and subsequent hours. Further studies will be needed to determine whether the content of pages affects resident productivity.
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39

"Contents pages: Contents pages." Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology 14, no. 1 (1990): 29–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/03091909009028762.

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40

Banerjee, Pallab, Biresh Kumar, Amarnath Singh, Shipra Sinha, and Medha Sawan. "Hybrid Page Replacement Algorithm in real time Operating System." International Journal of Scientific Research in Computer Science, Engineering and Information Technology, April 15, 2020, 433–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.32628/cseit2062123.

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Programming codes are of variable length. When the size of codes becomes greater than that of primary memory, the concept of virtual memory comes into play. As the name suggests, virtual memory allows to outstretch the use of primary memory by using storage devices such as disks. The implementation of virtual memory can be done by using the paging approach. Allocation of memory frames to each and every program is done by the operating system while loading them into the memory. Each program is segregated into pages as per the size of frames. Equal size of pages and frames enhance the usability of memory. As, the process or program which is being executed is provided with a certain amount of memory frames; therefore, swap out technique is necessary for the execution of each and every page. This swap out technique is termed as Page Replacement. There are many algorithms proposed to decide which page needs to be replaced from the frames when new pages come. In this paper, we have proposed a new page replacement technique. This new technique is based on the approach of reading and counting of the pages from secondary storage. Whenever the page fault is detected, the needed page is fetched from the secondary storage. This process of accessing the disc is slow as compared to the process in which the required page is retrieved from the primary storage. In the proposed technique, the pages having least occurrence will be replaced by the new page and the pages having same count will be replaced on the basis of LRU page replacement algorithm. In this method, the paged are retrieved from the secondary storage hence, possibility of page hit will be increased and as a result, the execution time of the processes will be decreased as the possibility of page miss will be decreased.
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Turkel, William J., and Adam Crymble. "Télécharger des pages web avec Python." Programming Historian en français, no. 3 (June 10, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.46430/phfr0017.

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42

"Pink pages 3--6: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 7, no. 5 (2005): IX—XII. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(05)00144-0.

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"Pink pages 5--8: AAFP Pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 8, no. 1 (2006): IX—XII. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(05)00205-6.

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"Pink pages 7–8: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 8, no. 2 (2006): XV—XVI. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(06)00027-1.

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"Pink pages 5–8: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 8, no. 3 (2006): IX—XII. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(06)00063-5.

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"Pink pages 5–8: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 8, no. 4 (2006): XI—XIV. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(06)00099-4.

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"Pink pages 5--8: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 8, no. 5 (2006): XI—XIV. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(06)00125-2.

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"Pink pages 5--8: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 8, no. 6 (2006): XV—XVIII. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(06)00162-8.

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"Pink pages 5-8: AAFP pages." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 9, no. 1 (2007): IX—XII. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(07)00016-2.

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"AAFP pages (pink pages 5--8)." Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery 9, no. 3 (2007): IX—XII. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1098-612x(07)00098-8.

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