Introduction:Remote consultations help reduce contact between people and prevent cross-contamination. Little is known about the changes in consultation in European rural primary care during the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic. The purpose of this mixedmethods cross-sectional study was to find out more about the effects of the pandemic on changes in patient consultations in European rural primary care. Methods: A key informant survey from 16 member countries of the European Rural and Isolated Practitioners Association (EURIPA) was undertaken using a self-developed questionnaire. The steering committee of this project, called EURIPA Covid-19 study, developed a semi-structured questionnaire with 68 questions, 21 of which included free-text comments. Proportions were calculated for dichotomized or categorized data, and means were calculated for continuous data. Multivariate analysis by logistic regression model was used to assess the association of multiple variables. Results: A total of 406 questionnaires from primary care providers (PCPs) in 16 European countries were collected; 245 respondents (60.5%) were females, 152 PCPs were rural (37.5%), 124 semi-rural (30.5%). Mean age of the respondents was 45.9 years (standard deviation (SD) 11.30) while mean seniority (length of experience) was 18.2 years (SD 11.6). A total of 381 (93.8%) respondents were medical doctors. Significant differences were found between countries in adopting alternative arrangements to face-to-face consultation: remote teleconsultation is well appreciated by both healthcare professionals and patients, but the most common way of remote consultation remains telephone consultation. A factor significantly inversely associated with the adoption of video consultation was the seniority of the PCP (odds ratio 1.19, 95% confidence interval 1.02-1.40, p=0.03). Conclusion: Telephone consultation is the most common form of remote consultation. The adoption of video-consultation is inversely related to the seniority of the informants.
A theory of transport coefficients of fully ionized strongly coupled plasmas, based on the self-consistent field concept and having no adjustable parameters, is presented. The proposed approach is not connected directly with the kinetic equation. A comparison of the obtained results with the computer simulation data on the classical hydrogen-like plasmas macroscopic properties shows that using the Yukhnovsky-Kelbg-Deutsch effective pair potentials instead of the genuine Coulomb potentials can compensate, to a certain extent, inaccuracies related to the standard approximations of the quantum theory of Coulomb systems.
The paper presents the way to give third-graders a lesson for mastering the theme of “Fruits and Seeds of Plants” within the “Nature Kingdom”
Section of the “World Around Us” learning Course. The teacher is to involve active teaching technique by means of inviting students to play the
role of explorers. Embracing the active cognitive stance helps to boost intellectual development, that is, to master the skills of analysis, comparison
and generalization.
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