scholarly journals The Effect of Thickness-Based Dynamic Matching Mechanism on a Hyperledger Fabric-Based TimeBank System

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 65
Author(s):  
Jhan-Jia Lin ◽  
Yu-Tse Lee ◽  
Ja-Ling Wu

In a community with an aging population, helping each other is a must society function. Lacking mutual trust makes the need for a fair and transparent service exchange platform on top of the public service administration’s list. We present an efficient blockchain-based TimeBank realization with a newly proposed dynamic service matching algorithm (DSMA) in this work. The Hyperledger Fabric (or Fabric in short), one of the well-known Consortium Blockchains, is chosen as our system realization platform. It provides the identity certification mechanism and has an extendable network structure. The performance of a DSMA is measured by the waiting time for a service to get a match, called the service-matching waiting time (SMWT). In our DSMA, the decision as to whether a service is to get a match or wait for a later chance depends dynamically on the total number of contemporarily available services (i.e., the thickness of the service market). To better the proposed TimeBank system’s service quality, a Dynamic Tuning Strategy (DTS) is designed to thicken the market size. Experimental results show that a thicker market makes on-chain nodes have more links, and in turn, they find a match easier (i.e., consume a shorter SMWT).

2020 ◽  
Vol 202 ◽  
pp. 15005
Author(s):  
Sugito ◽  
Alan Prahutama ◽  
Dwi Ispriyanti ◽  
Mustafid

The Population and Civil Registry Office in Semarang city is one of the public service units. In the public service sector, visitor / customer satisfaction is very important. It can be identified by the length of the queue, the longer visitors queue this results in visitor dissatisfaction with the service. Queue analysis is one of the methods in statistics to determine the distribution of queuing systems that occur within a system. In this study, a queuing analysis as divided into two periods. The first period lasts from 2-13 March 2015, while the second period lasts November 16th to December 20th 2019. The variables used are the number of visitors and the service time at each counter in intervals of 30 minutes. The results obtained are changes in the distribution and queuing model that is at counter 5/6 and counter 10. The queuing model obtained at the second perideo for the number of visitors and the time of service with a General distribution. The average number of visitors who come in 30 minute intervals in the second period is more than the first period, this indicates an increase in visitors. The opportunity for service units is still small, the waiting time in the queue is getting smaller. This shows that the performance of the queuing system at the Semarang Population and Civil Registry Office is getting better.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wai-Kit Ming ◽  
Taoran Liu ◽  
Winghei Tsang ◽  
Yifei Xie ◽  
Kang Tian ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND The COVID-19 pandemic poses a great threat to the public health system globally and has squeezed medical and doctor resources. Artificial intelligence (AI) has potential uses in virus detection and relieving the public health pressure caused by the pandemic. In the case of a shortage of medical resources caused by the pandemic, whether people’s preference for AI doctors and traditional clinicians has changed is worth exploring. OBJECTIVE We aim to quantify and compare people’s preference for AI medicine and traditional clinicians before and after the COVID-19 pandemic to check whether people’s preference is affected by the pressure of pandemic METHODS The propensity score matching (PSM) method was applied to match two different groups of respondents recruited in 2017 and 2020 with similar demographic characteristics. A total of 2048 respondents (1520 from 2017 and 528 from 2020) completed the questionnaire and were included in the analysis. The Multinomial Logit Model (MNL) and Latent Class Model (LCM) were used to explore people’s preferences for different diagnosis methods. RESULTS Among these respondents, 84.7% in 2017 and 91.3% in 2020 were confident that AI diagnosis would outperform human clinician diagnoses in the future. Both groups of respondents matched from 2017 and 2020 attached most importance to the attribute ‘accuracy’, followed by ‘diagnosis expense’, and they prefer the combined diagnosis of AI and human clinicians (2017: odds ratio [OR] 1.645; 95% CI 1.535,1.763, p < 0.001; 2020: OR 1.513, 95% CI 1.413, 1.621, p < 0.001, Reference level: Clinician). LCM identified three classes with different attribute priorities. In Class 1, the preference for combination diagnosis and accuracy remains constant in 2017 and 2020, and higher accuracy (e.g., 2017 OR for 100% 1.357; 95% CI 1.164, 1.581) is preferred. People in 2017 and 2020 prefer 0 min outpatient waiting time and 0 RMB diagnosis expense. In Class 2, the 2017 matched data is also very similar to class 2 in 2020, AI combined with human clinicians (2017: OR 1.204, 95% CI 1.039, 1.394, p = 0.011; 2020: OR 2.009, 95% CI 1.826, 2.211, p < 0.001, Reference level: Clinician) and 20 minutes (2017: OR 1.349, 95% CI 1.065, 1.708, p < 0.001; 2020: OR 1.488, 95% CI 1.287, 1.721, p < 0.001, Reference level, 0 min) of outpatient waiting time were consistently preferred. In Class 3, the respondents in 2017 and 2020 had different preferences for diagnosis method; respondents in Class 3 of 2017 prefer clinicians, whereas respondents in Class 3 of 2020 prefer AI diagnosis. The odds ratios of accuracy continued increasing with the increasing of accuracy, like other classes of 2017 and 2020. As for the latent class segmented according to different sexes, all of the male and female respondent classes from 2017 and 2020 rank accuracy as the most important attribute. CONCLUSIONS Individual preference for clinical diagnosis between AI and human clinicians were very similar and mostly unaffected by the burden of the public health system caused by the pandemic. Diagnosis accuracy and expense for diagnosis were of the most important attributes of choice of the type of diagnosis. These findings can provide guidance for policymaking relevant to the development of AI-based healthcare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nur Wahida Zulkifli

BACKGROUND The public opinion and experience on the health care services are crucial to provide valuable insight towards improving and strengthening the health care systems. OBJECTIVE This study aims to explore the public perspective regarding the quality of health care services rendered by the health care facilities in Malaysia. METHODS The snowballing strategy was used to reach the target through an online opinion poll with three open-ended questions on the strengths of the healthcare facilities, their expectation and suggestion for improvement along with the sociodemographic characteristic. Data were analysed using a thematic approach. RESULTS A total of 800 participants (68% of females and 32% of males) participated. Their responses were grouped into 5 main themes namely: (1) system; (2) input; (3) service delivery; (4) outputs; (5) outcomes. Public feel that they are respected and treated with care by the healthcare providers. However, most of the participants highlighted the issue of long waiting time when they visited healthcare facilities. In relation to this issue, they suggested the facilities to have more staff especially doctors to improve current service. CONCLUSIONS In conclusion, enhancing service delivery by reducing the waiting time, should be the main focus as viewed by the public. The quality of services provided would certainly be improved by having sufficient resources including healthcare workers.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 1039-1050
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Buchholz ◽  
Richard Cornes ◽  
Dirk Rübbelke

PurposeIn this paper we show how the Kolm triangle method, which is a standard tool for visualizing allocations in a public good economy, can also be used to provide a diagrammatical exposition of matching mechanisms and their effects on public good supply and welfare. In particular, we describe, on the one hand, for which income distributions interior matching equilibria result, and on the other hand, for which income distributions the agents voluntarily participate in a matching mechanism. As a novel result, we especially show that the “participation zone” is larger than the “interiority zone”Design/methodology/approachWe employ the Kolm triangle approach, which has – compared to most other graphical methods for representing allocations in a public good economy – the advantage that it allows for showing the aggregate budget constraint, the levels of considered agents' private consumption, and the level of public good supply directly in the same diagram.FindingsThe Kolm triangle method can be used to visualize important effects of matching in an elegant way, so basically the increase of public good supply through matching. The interiority of matching depends on the income distribution and especially, on how the “interiority zone” is shrinking when the matching rate increases. Moreover, we were able to delimit the “participation zone” in the Kolm triangle. An important and novel insight is that the participation zone is larger than the interiority zone, which means that also corner matching equilibria in which only one agent makes a positive flat contribution to the public good may make both considered agents better off.Research limitations/implicationsCorner matching equilibria in which only one agent makes a positive flat contribution to the public good may improve all considered agents' welfare. How this welfare effect can be generalized to the case of different utility functions and matching rates will be an issue of future research.Practical implicationsThe examined matching mechanism finds application in many policy fields where public good undersupply is pending. International climate policy is one of these fields of application, for example.Originality/valueThe Kolm triangle method has been particularly helpful to describe the Nash equilibrium in the case of non-cooperative public good provision and to compare this outcome with Pareto efficient public good allocations. Furthermore, the Kolm triangle approach facilitates the analysis of mechanisms for attaining an efficient public good allocation like the Lindahl equilibrium as well as the study of preconditions and limitations faced by such mechanisms. An important and novel insight of our study is that the participation zone is larger than the interiority zone.


2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Chen ◽  
Paul A.J. Bonar ◽  
Christopher R. Vogel ◽  
Thomas A.A. Adcock

Abstract Numerical simulations are used to explore the potential for local blockage effects and dynamic tuning strategies to enhance the performance of turbines in tidal channels. Full- and partial-width arrays of turbines, modeled using the volume-flux-constrained actuator disc and blade element momentum theories, are embedded within a two-dimensional channel with a naturally low ratio of drag to inertial forces. For steady flow, the local blockage effect observed by varying the cross-stream spacing between the turbines is found to agree very well with the predictions of the two-scale actuator disc theory of Nishino and Willden (2012, “The Efficiency of an Array of Tidal Turbines Partially Blocking a Wide Channel,” J. Fluid Mech., 708, pp. 596–606). For oscillatory flow, however, results show that, consistent with the findings of Bonar et al. (2019, “On the Arrangement of Tidal Turbines in Rough and Oscillatory Channel Flow,” J. Fluid Mech., 865, pp. 790–810), the shorter and more highly blocked arrays produce considerably more power than predicted by two-scale theory. Results also show that, consistent with the findings of Vennell (2016, “An Optimal Tuning Strategy for Tidal Turbines,” Proc. R. Soc. A, 472(2195), p. 20160047), the “dynamic” tuning strategy, in which the tuning of the turbines is varied over the tidal cycle, can only produce significantly more power than a temporally fixed turbine tuning if the array has a large number of turbine rows or a large local blockage ratio. For all cases considered, trends are consistent between the two turbine representations but the effects of local blockage and dynamic tuning are found to be much less significant for the more realistic tidal rotor than for the idealized actuator disc.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Neti M. Bustani ◽  
A. Joy Rattu ◽  
Josephine S. M. Saerang

Abstract: Hospital has a mission to provide qualified health services and affordable by the community in order to improve public health; one of them was the short waiting time of patients. This study aimed to analyze the waiting time length (the arrival process, service, human resources) of outpatient services in the Public Eye Health Department of North Sulawesi. This study used a qualitative method by conducting interviews at 7 informants as the primary data; the secondary data were obtained from direct observation / observation in the Public Eye Health Department of North Sulawesi. The results showed that the patients' arrivals occurred before the registration counter was opened and most patients came with their families. During the service process there were some problems inter alia the patient did not bring his/her file/guarantee completely; the number of the registration booths were limited due to lack of staff; disrupted internet connection; as well as limited human resources who were experts in the field of refraction and medical records. Conclusion: The waiting time in the Public Eye Health Department of North Sulawesi was still quite long (> 60 minutes) due to the overload patients, lack of personnel at the registration booth, disrupted internet connection, delayed of distribution of medical record files, limited available rooms, and limited human resources that were expertised in the field of refraction and medical recordsKeywords: waiting time, patients, the Public Eye Health Department of North SulawesiAbstrak: Rumah Sakit mempunyai misi memberikan pelayanan kesehatan yang bermutu dan terjangkau oleh masyarakat dalam rangka meningkatkan derajat kesehatan masyarakat, salah satunya melalui waktu tunggu pasien yang cepat. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk menganalisis lama waktu tunggu (proses kedatangan, pelayanan, sumber daya manusia) pelayanan pasien rawat jalan di Balai Kesehatan Mata Masyarakat (BKMM) Provinsi Sulawesi Utara (Sulut). Penelitian ini menggunakan metode kualitatif dengan melakukan wawancara pada 7 orang informan sebagai data primer, sedangkan data sekunder diperoleh dari pengamatan langsung/ observasi di BKMM Provinsi Sulut. Hasil penelitian mendapatkan kedatangan pasien di BKMM sudah terjadi sebelum loket pendaftaran dibuka dan kebanyakan pasien datang dengan diantar oleh keluarganya. Selama proses pelayanan ada beberapa kendala yang terjadi antara lain pasien tidak membawa berkas/jaminan yang lengkap, jumlah loket pendaftaran yang terbatas karena kurangnya petugas, ruangan yang kurang memadai, adanya gangguan koneksi internet, serta keterbatasan sumber daya manusia yang ahli dibidang refraksi dan rekam medik. Simpulan: Waktu tunggu di BKMM Provinisi Sulut masih tergolong lama (> 60 menit) yang disebabkan jumlah pasien yang banyak, kurangnya petugas di loket pendaftaran dan BPJS, gangguan koneksi internet, pendistribusian berkas rekam medik yang sering terlambat, keterbatasan ruangan yang ada, dan keterbatasan SDM yang mempunyai keahlian di bidang refraksi dan rekam medikKata kunci: waktu tunggu, pasien, BKMM


Author(s):  
Renke Schmacker ◽  
Camille Terrier ◽  
Rustamdjan Hakimov

Author(s):  
Renke Schmacker ◽  
Camille Terrier ◽  
Rustamdjan Hakimov

2005 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J Duckett

Waiting time for public hospital care is a regular matter for political debate One political response has been to suggest that expanding private sector activity will reduce public waiting times. This paper tests the hypothesis that increased private activity in the health system is associated with reduced waiting times using secondary analysis of hospital activity data for 2001?02. Median waiting time is shown to be inversely related to the proportion of public patients. Policymakers should therefore be cautious about assuming that additional support for the private sector will take pressure off the public sector and reduce waiting times for public patients.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document