1.Family Physicians’ satisfaction with factors affecting the dynamism of the urban family physician program in the Fars and Mazandaran provinces of Iran
Seiyed Davoud Nasrollahpour Shirvani ; Mohammad Javad Kabir ; Zahra Hassanzadeh-Rostami ; Hasan Ashrafian Amir ; Anahita Keshavarzi ; Soheila Hosseini
Malaysian Family Physician 2019;14(3):28-36
Background and objective: A successful family physician program needs ongoing and full cooperation
between people and the organizations in charge. Ensuring the satisfaction of family physicians through
improvement of the underlying factors could motivate them to provide high-quality services. This study
aimed to determine the family physicians’ satisfaction level with the factors affecting the dynamism of
the urban family physicians program in the Fars and Mazandaran provinces of Iran.
Method: This cross-sectional study was carried out in urban areas in the Fars and Mazandaran
provinces in 2016. The sample consisted of 143 and 96 family physicians, respectively, in Fars and
Mazandaran provinces and was selected using the stratified random sampling method. Data were
collected using a questionnaire and included both sociodemographic variables and factors assessing the family physicians’ satisfaction levels. Each factor was scored based on a Likert scale from 0 to 5 points, and any satisfaction level higher than 3 out of 5 was equated with being satisfied.
Results: The overall satisfaction levels among family physicians in Fars and Mazandaran provinces were 2.77±0.53 and 3.37±0.56, respectively, revealing a statistically significant difference between provinces (p<0.001). Moreover, the mean satisfaction scores for the performances of healthcare centers, insurance companies, specialists, healthcare workers, and the population covered were 2.78±0.1, 2.54±0.9, 2.52±0.8, 4.24±0.07, and 2.96±0.8, respectively. The family physicians’ levels of satisfaction were significantly correlated with population size (p=0.02, r= -0.106), and willingness to stay in an urban family physician program (p<0.001, r= +0.398).
Conclusion: This study revealed that family physicians exhibited a low level of satisfaction with the
urban family physician program. Given the direct association between family physicians’ satisfaction
levels and retention in the program, it is expected that family physicians will no longer stay in the
program, and it is likely to have subsequent executive problems.
2.Brainstem Correlates of Comodulation Masking Release for Speech in Normal Hearing Adults
Soheila ROSTAMI ; Abdollah MOOSSAVI ; Mohsen AHADI ; Shohreh JALAEI
Journal of Audiology & Otology 2018;22(3):128-133
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Weak signals embedded in fluctuating masker can be perceived more efficiently than similar signals embedded in unmodulated masker. This release from masking is known as comodulation masking release (CMR). In this paper, we investigate, neural correlates of CMR in the human auditory brainstem. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A total of 26 normal hearing subjects aged 18-30 years participated in this study. First, the impact of CMR was quantified by a behavioral experiment. After that, the brainstem correlates of CMR was investigated by the auditory brainstem response to complex sounds (cABR) in comodulated (CM) and unmodulated (UM) masking conditions. RESULTS: The auditory brainstem responses are less susceptible to degradation in response to the speech syllable /da/ in the CM noise masker in comparison with the UM noise masker. In the CM noise masker, frequency-following response (FFR) and fundamental frequency (F0) were correlated with better behavioral CMR. Furthermore, the subcortical response timing of subjects with higher CMR was less affected by the CM noise masker, having higher stimulus-to-noise response correlations over the FFR range. CONCLUSIONS: The results of the present study revealed a significant link between brainstem auditory processes and CMR. The findings of the present study show that cABR provides objective information about the neural correlates of CMR for speech stimulus.
Adult
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Brain Stem
;
Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem
;
Hearing
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Humans
;
Masks
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Noise