PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

UTEP helps optimize COVID-19 vaccination clinics in the U.S.

UTEP helps optimize COVID-19 vaccination clinics in the U.S.
2021-03-26
(Press-News.org) EL PASO, Texas - Sreenath Chalil Madathil, Ph.D., assistant professor in industrial manufacturing and systems engineering (IMSE) at The University of Texas at El Paso, is working to streamline the process and ease the patient experience at COVID-19 vaccination clinics in the United States to ensure faster vaccine distribution.

Madathil led a team of UTEP faculty, staff and students who observed several of El Paso's drive-though and walk-in clinics in early 2021. The team identified areas that likely created bottlenecks, which produce delays and other issues. They used the information from their observations to develop simulation models to experiment with a clinic's performance to further identify potential slowdowns, calculate resource utilization and reduce patient waiting time.

"We are truly pleased to have Dr. Madathil's expertise informing COVID-19 vaccination clinic design and implementation," said Patricia Nava, Ph.D., interim dean of UTEP's College of Engineering. "It's great that his team is so diverse in specialties and includes a student. Moreover, it is exciting to have a project that is so clearly impactful for our community. Learning about this project's existence will help demonstrate to potential students that engineering really is about using your creativity to harness science, math, and technology to make things better for humans and their environment."

Using simulation models, UTEP researchers can track various performance measures such as wait time, number of people in the queue and resource utilization.

"This quantitative scientific methodology will help university and community leaders efficiently plan for resources," Madathil said. "Our experts from IMSE, the College of Business Administration, the College of Health Sciences, the School of Nursing, and UTEP administration collaborated to develop these models. Moreover, the administration can test various 'What-if' scenarios if they need to test for potential increased capacity or working time. These models help stakeholders plan and design their vaccination event so that its implementation is carried out seamlessly. Developing such a decision support system is one small example of how we help our community."

Madathil fervently believes in the need to streamline health systems to reduce patient wait times and improve the overall patient experience. He is helping a few hospital systems in El Paso and Washington, D.C., to implement drive-through vaccination clinics. He anticipates the need for similar projects to continue to grow.

"We identified simple bottlenecks that, if not adequately addressed, will result in over mile-long traffic blocks and long waiting times. It is a huge inconvenience and unfair to the current priority population who receive the vaccines to have to wait for over two hours in a car," Madathil said. "We cannot afford to not learn from the mistakes of vaccine distribution to our senior people and improve the process. We must do it correctly the first time. We hope that this simple model helps improve patient experience and speedy recovery of our COVID-19 infected world."

INFORMATION:

UTEP is one of the largest and most successful Hispanic-serving institutions in the country, with a student body that is 83% Hispanic. It enrolls nearly 25,000 students in 166 bachelor's, master's and doctoral programs in 10 colleges and schools. With more than $100 million in total annual research expenditures, UTEP is ranked in the top 5% of research institutions nationally and fifth in Texas for federal research expenditures at public universities.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
UTEP helps optimize COVID-19 vaccination clinics in the U.S.

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Silent MRSA carriers have twice the mortality rate of adults without the bacteria

2021-03-26
A University of Florida study of middle-aged and older adults finds those who unknowingly carry methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, on their skin are twice as likely to die within the next decade as people who do not have the bacteria. "Very few people who carry MRSA know they have it, yet we have found a distinct link between people with undetected MRSA and premature death," said the study's lead author Arch G. Mainous III, Ph.D., a professor in the department of health services research, management and policy at the UF College of Public Health and Health Professions, part of UF Health, the university's academic health center. The findings suggest that routine screening for undetected ...

3D-printed artificial lung model

3D-printed artificial lung model
2021-03-26
The warmer temperature and blooming flowers signal the arrival of spring. However, worries about respiratory diseases are also on the rise due to fine dust and viruses. The lung, which is vital to breathing, is rather challenging to create artificially for experimental use due to its complex structure and thinness. Recently, a POSTECH research team has succeeded in producing an artificial lung model using 3D printing. Professor Sungjune Jung of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, and Professor Joo-Yeon Yoo and Ph.D. candidate Dayoon Kang of the Department of Life Sciences at POSTECH have together succeeded in creating ...

Surgery is a viable treatment for pancreatic cancer patients especially after chemotherapy

2021-03-26
Key takeaways Surgery is an underused treatment for certain pancreatic cancer patients. Patients with pancreatic cancer who underwent surgery after chemotherapy lived nearly twice as long as those treated with only chemotherapy. Findings confirms current recommendations for stage II pancreatic cancer: survival improves when patients receive multimodality therapy, chemotherapy before and/or after surgery. All analyses of the data delivered the same findings. CHICAGO (March 26, 2021, 9:00 am CDT): Patients with stage II pancreatic cancer who are treated with chemotherapy followed by resection (an operation that removes the cancerous part of the organ, structure or tissue) live nearly twice as long as patients who receive only chemotherapy, according ...

Pressure sensor with high sensitivity and linear response based on soft micropillared electrodes

Pressure sensor with high sensitivity and linear response based on soft micropillared electrodes
2021-03-26
In recent years, with the rapid development of flexible electronic skins, high-performance flexible tactile sensors have received more attention and have been used in many fields such as artificial intelligence, health monitoring, human-computer interaction, and wearable devices. Among various sensors, flexible capacitive tactile sensors have the advantages of high sensitivity, low energy consumption, fast response, and simple structure. Sensitivity is an important parameter of the sensor. A common way to improve sensitivity is to introduce microstructures and use ionic dielectric materials at the interface ...

A stable copper catalyst for CO2 conversion

2021-03-26
A new catalyst for the conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) into chemicals or fuels has been developed by researchers at Ruhr-Universität Bochum and the University of Duisburg-Essen. They optimized already available copper catalysts to improve their selectivity and long-term stability. The results are described by the team led by Dr. Yanfang Song and Professor Wolfgang Schuhmann of the Bochum Center for Electrochemistry with the team led by Professor Corina Andronescu of the Duisburg-Essen Technical Chemistry III group in the journal Angewandte Chemie, published online on 9 February 2021. Boron makes copper catalyst stable The ...

Social, not just biological factors, key in increased knee injuries among girls and women

2021-03-26
Current approaches to a common and debilitating knee injury that occurs more frequently for women than men have focused for too long on biology at the expense of understanding social factors, say the authors of a new paper in the British Journal of Sports Medicine (BJSM). Girls and women are said to be between three to six times more likely to suffer an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury, where one of the key ligaments that helps to stabilise the knee joint is damaged. The devastating injury, which in extreme cases can be career ending for professional sportspeople, commonly occurs during sports that involve sudden changes in direction (e.g. basketball, football ...

Controlled scar formation in the brain

2021-03-26
When the brain suffers injury or infection, glial cells surrounding the affected site act to preserve the brain's sensitive nerve cells and prevent excessive damage. A team of researchers from Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin have been able to demonstrate the important role played by the reorganization of the structural and membrane elements of glial cells. The researchers' findings, which have been published in Nature Communications*, shed light on a new neuroprotective mechanism which the brain could use to actively control damage following neurological injury or disease. The nervous system lacks the ability to regenerate nerve cells and is therefore particularly vulnerable to injury. Following brain injury or infection, various cells ...

Gray's beaked whales 'resilient' to ecosystem changes

Grays beaked whales resilient to ecosystem changes
2021-03-26
An elusive whale species in the Southern Ocean could be resilient to near-future ecosystem changes, according to a new study by the universities of Exeter and Copenhagen. Gray's beaked whales living in the deep oceans of the Southern Hemisphere are rarely seen alive and their ecology has remained a mystery to scientists until now. The study used genome sequencing of 22 whales washed up on beaches in South Africa, Australia and New Zealand to investigate the history of the population over the past 1.1 million years. Author of the study Dr Kirsten Thompson, of the University of Exeter, said: "The population approximately doubled about 250 thousand years ago, coinciding with a period of increased Southern Ocean productivity, sea surface temperature and a potential ...

DNA--Metal double helix

2021-03-26
Nanowires are vital components for future nanoelectronics, sensors, and nanomedicine. To achieve the required complexity, it is necessary to control the position and growth of the metal chains on an atomic level. In the journal Angewandte Chemie, a research team has introduced a novel approach that generates precisely controlled, helical, palladium-DNA systems that mimic the organization of natural base pairs in a double-stranded DNA molecule. A team from Europe and the USA led by Miguel A. Galindo has now developed an elegant method for producing individual, continuous chains of palladium ions. The process is based on self-organized assembly of a special palladium complex ...

Study analyses fish larval dispersal in western Mediterranean

Study analyses fish larval dispersal in western Mediterranean
2021-03-26
A new study analyzes the larval dispersal of nine fish species in the western Mediterranean and identifies three large areas in which there is barely fish exchange, so fish would remain in the same area all their life. The study, published in the journal Progress in Oceanography, is led by experts of the Faculty of Biology of the University of Barcelona and the Biodiversity Research Institute (IRBio) of the UB, the Blanes Center for Advanced Studies (CEAB-CSIC), the Balearic Islands Coastal Observing and Forecasting System (ICTS - SOCIB), and the Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies (IMEDEA, CSIC-UIB). The three identified areas are the Balearic Sea, the West Algerian Basin, and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

We could soon use AI to detect brain tumors

TAMEST recognizes Lyda Hill and Lyda Hill Philanthropies with Kay Bailey Hutchison Distinguished Service Award

Establishment of an immortalized red river hog blood-derived macrophage cell line

Neural networks: You might not need to buy every ticket to win the lottery

Healthy New Town: Revitalizing neighborhoods in the wake of aging populations

High exposure to everyday chemicals linked to asthma risk in children

How can brands address growing consumer scepticism?

New paradigm of quantum information technology revealed through light-matter interaction!

MSU researchers find trees acclimate to changing temperatures

World's first visual grading system developed to combat microplastic fashion pollution

Teenage truancy rates rise in English-speaking countries

Cholesterol is not the only lipid involved in trans fat-driven cardiovascular disease

Study: How can low-dose ketamine, a ‘lifesaving’ drug for major depression, alleviate symptoms within hours? UB research reveals how

New nasal vaccine shows promise in curbing whooping cough spread

Smarter blood tests from MSU researchers deliver faster diagnoses, improved outcomes

Q&A: A new medical AI model can help spot systemic disease by looking at a range of image types

For low-risk pregnancies, planned home births just as safe as birth center births, study shows

Leaner large language models could enable efficient local use on phones and laptops

‘Map of Life’ team wins $2 million prize for innovative rainforest tracking

Rise in pancreatic cancer cases among young adults may be overdiagnosis

New study: Short-lived soda tax reinforces alternative presumptions on tax impacts on consumer behaviors

Fewer than 1 in 5 know the 988 suicide lifeline

Semaglutide eligibility across all current indications for US adults

Can podcasts create healthier habits?

Zerlasiran—A small-interfering RNA targeting lipoprotein(a)

Anti-obesity drugs, lifestyle interventions show cardiovascular benefits beyond weight loss

Oral muvalaplin for lowering of lipoprotein(a)

Revealing the hidden costs of what we eat

New therapies at Kennedy Krieger offer effective treatment for managing Tourette syndrome

American soil losing more nutrients for crops due to heavier rainstorms, study shows

[Press-News.org] UTEP helps optimize COVID-19 vaccination clinics in the U.S.