Online healthcare portals have become prevalent worldwide in recent years. One common form of healthcare portal is the online consultation website, which provides a bridge between patients and doctors and reduces patients’ time and cost when seeking healthcare services. Another form is the healthcare service appointment website, which facilitates offline visits for patients. Though nominally separate, the behaviors of the users (including patients and doctors) on these two types of websites could be related to each other. In particular, how does opening online consultation services impact the offline appointments of doctors? Although this is an important question for healthcare portals, doctors, and policy makers, it has not been rigorously examined in the literature. We examine the overall impact of opening online consultation services on offline appointments and show that the number of offline appointments for doctors increases after opening online consultation services. Given that online consultation is a new but important way to connect patients and doctors, our findings provide useful implications for all the stakeholders—doctors, patients, hospitals, and policy makers—regarding how to integrate online and offline channels in the healthcare context.
Exploring low-cost, high-efficiency, and stable photocatalysts is still a significant challenge. SrTiO3, one of the appealing photocatalysts, can meet most of the screening criteria except for its efficiency, which is restricted by its poor absorption of visible light and its prompt photogenerated carrier recombination. Recently, a two-dimensional transition metal carbide Ti3C2Tx (2D MXene) has been found to serve as a co-catalyst due to its excellent metallic conductivity, hydrophilic property, large specific surface area, abundance of active sites, and low reaction barrier to hydrogen production. In this work, SrTiO3 nanoparticles are rationally integrated with Ti3C2Tx nanosheets via a simple hydrothermal process. The hydrogen production rate can achieve up to 3.43 mmol g−1 h−1 in the hybridization of SrTiO3-3 wt. % Ti3C2Tx, which is almost six times that of SrTiO3 alone. This remarkable enhancement arises predominantly from the Schottky contact between SrTiO3 and Ti3C2Tx, which can effectively suppress the recombination of photogenerated carriers and accelerate their separation. In addition, such enhancement benefits from the hydrogen evolution capacity of Ti3C2Tx. This work opens an excellent prospect for constructing highly active, low-cost, and stable photocatalysts with 2D MXene and finding potential applications of 2D MXene in energy conversion fields.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.