(Press-News.org) About The Study: This study found that hospitals adjacent to health care delivery organizations affected by ransomware attacks may see increases in patient census and may experience resource constraints affecting time-sensitive care for conditions such as acute stroke. These findings suggest that targeted hospital cyberattacks may be associated with disruptions of health care delivery at nontargeted hospitals within a community and should be considered a regional disaster.
Authors: Christian Dameff, M.D., M.S., of the University of California, San Diego, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.12270)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.
# # #
Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.12270?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=050823
About JAMA Network Open: JAMA Network Open is an online-only open access general medical journal from the JAMA Network. On weekdays, the journal publishes peer-reviewed clinical research and commentary in more than 40 medical and health subject areas. Every article is free online from the day of publication.
END
Ransomware attack associated with disruptions at adjacent emergency departments
JAMA Network Open
2023-05-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Air pollution from oil and gas production responsible for $77 billion in annual US health damages, contributes to thousands of early deaths, childhood asthma cases nationwide
2023-05-08
These health impacts affected communities in states with high oil and gas production, as well as states with limited or no gas activity, underlining the need for comprehensive regulatory action to protect Americans from the pollutants generated by this sector.
Despite global efforts to transition from fossil fuels to clean energy, oil and gas (O&G) production is nearing record levels in the United States, posing concern among health experts about what this O&G growth means for air quality and human health. While ...
A sharp increase in the price of the gout drug colchicine led to lower use and poorer disease control, UCLA research suggests
2023-05-08
FINDINGS
Due to a policy decision in 2010 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the price of a prescription for the therapeutic gout drug colchicine increased nearly 16-fold from $11.25 in 2009 to $190.49 in 2011. Out-of-pocket costs for patients who took the drug jumped more than four-fold from $7.37 to $39.49 over the same period. Use of colchicine dropped 17% during this time and 27% over the following decade. Patients turned to alternative medications for gout such as allopurinol and corticosteroids. However, disease ...
An unprecedented view of gene regulation
2023-05-08
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Much of the human genome is made of regulatory regions that control which genes are expressed at a given time within a cell. Those regulatory elements can be located near a target gene or up to 2 million base pairs away from the target.
To enable those interactions, the genome loops itself in a 3D structure that brings distant regions close together. Using a new technique, MIT researchers have shown that they can map these interactions with 100 times higher resolution than has previously been possible.
“Using this method, we generate the highest-resolution maps of the 3D genome that have ever been generated, and what we see are a lot of interactions between ...
AI helps create better, simpler hepatitis, COVID-19 tests
2023-05-08
Going beyond pregnancy and COVID-19, the world could someday soon come to rely on at-home tests for many diseases thanks in part to AI-fueled improvements.
University of Florida scientists have used artificial intelligence tools to simplify a test that works for both hepatitis C and SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. The simplified test happens in one small test tube in just a few minutes. With further refinement, it could come to doctor’s offices soon and, one day, even home tests that are as easy as a pregnancy test.
“We are trying to build a home-based test that is as reliable as a lab-based test,” said Piyush ...
Leaky-wave metasurfaces: A perfect interface between free-space and integrated optical systems
2023-05-08
New York, NY—May 8, 2023—Researchers at Columbia Engineering have developed a new class of integrated photonic devices--“leaky-wave metasurfaces”--that can convert light initially confined in an optical waveguide to an arbitrary optical pattern in free space. These devices are the first to demonstrate simultaneous control of all four optical degrees of freedom, namely, amplitude, phase, polarization ellipticity, and polarization orientation--a world record. Because the devices are so thin, transparent, and compatible with photonic integrated circuits ...
AI predicts future pancreatic cancer
2023-05-08
An artificial intelligence tool has successfully identified people at the highest risk for pancreatic cancer up to three years before diagnosis using solely the patients’ medical records, according to new research led by investigators at Harvard Medical School and the University of Copenhagen, in collaboration with VA Boston Healthcare System, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
The findings, published May 8 in Nature Medicine, suggest that AI-based population screening could be valuable in finding those at elevated risk for the disease and could expedite the diagnosis of a condition ...
Tiny microbes could brew big benefits for green biomanufacturing
2023-05-08
A research team led by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and UC Berkeley has engineered bacteria to produce new-to-nature carbon products that could provide a powerful route to sustainable biochemicals.
The advance – which was recently announced in the journal Nature – uses bacteria to combine natural enzymatic reactions with a new-to-nature reaction called the “carbene transfer reaction.” This work could also one day help reduce industrial emissions because it offers sustainable ...
Human Brain Project: Study presents large brain-like neural networks for AI
2023-05-08
In a new study in Nature Machine Intelligence*, researchers Bojian Yin and Sander Bohté from the HBP partner Dutch National Research Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science (CWI) demonstrate a significant step towards artificial intelligence that can be used in local devices like smartphones and in VR-like applications, while protecting privacy. They show how brain-like neurons combined with novel learning methods enable training fast and energy-efficient spiking neural networks on a large scale. Potential applications range from wearable AI to speech recognition and Augmented Reality.
While modern artificial neural ...
Detailed image of the human retina
2023-05-08
What cell types are found in which human tissue, and where? Which genes are active in the individual cells, and which proteins are found there? Answers to these questions and more are to be provided by a specialised atlas – in particular how the different tissues form during embryonic development and what causes diseases. In creating this atlas, researchers aim to map not only tissue directly isolated from humans, but also structures called organoids. These are three-dimensional clumps of tissue that are cultivated in the laboratory and develop in a way similar ...
Welcoming Dr Ece Uzun, MS, PhD as the Editor-in-Chief for JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology
2023-05-08
JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology and JMIR Publications are thrilled to announce and welcome Dr Ece Uzun as Editor-in-Chief for JMIR Bioinformatics and Biotechnology.
Dr. Uzun is currently the Director of Clinical Bioinformatics and Associate Director of Clinical Cancer Informatics and Data Science (CCIDS) at Lifespan and an Assistant Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Brown University Alpert Medical School. She has a B.S in Chemical Engineering and M.Sc in Biological Sciences and Bioengineering. She completed her PhD in Chemical Engineering at Northeastern University in 2010 and focused ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Advancing regenerative agriculture: TUdi unveils new digital tools for soil health monitoring
More staff addressing mental health in schools buffers toll of growing up in disadvantaged communities
Still top cause of death, the types of heart disease people are dying from is changing
Scientists detect deep Earth pulses beneath Africa
As fewer Americans die from heart attacks, more succumb to chronic heart disease
Guidance issued for GPs managing weight-loss injection patients
Low-cost carbon capture? Bury wood debris in managed forests
Scientists unravel mystery of Mycetoma grain formation
Exposure to particulate matter during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of childhood obesity
How a propolis compound with health benefits interacts with cell membranes: Study reveals nymphaeol a in action
Flawed impact metrics jeopardize EU deregulation plans, study finds
New study calls for rethink on alcohol policy
New Danish research centre to make designed proteins with vast potential
Thin-film research enters new era with innovative AI approach
Smart amplifier enabler for more qubits in future quantum computers
Following the tracks of an extremely adaptive bacterium
New ‘designer drugs’ pose growing threat to road safety in the US
Tackling depressive symptoms in high school students by honing emotional and social skills
One in five US foods and drinks contain synthetic dyes, study shows
One in five packaged foods and drinks sold in the United States contains synthetic dyes, study shows
Large global study links severe bleeding after childbirth to increased risk of cardiovascular disease
Breaking the silence about men breaking bones
More sex, less pain and irritation for perimenopausal and postmenopausal women
New review highlights histone and non-histone lysine lactylation: From molecular mechanisms to therapeutic frontiers
Boson sampling finds first practical applications in quantum AI
Add a twist to π-molecules! A new design strategy for organic semiconductor materials
Bushfire evacuation simulator wins prestigious US prize
Desert lichen offers new evidence for the possibility of life on other planets
Researchers reveal how brain amplifies perception of pain from multiple sources
The first “SpongeBooster of the Year” award celebrates efforts in wetland restoration
[Press-News.org] Ransomware attack associated with disruptions at adjacent emergency departmentsJAMA Network Open