https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Floxuridine.html RESULTS In total, 206 patients were included in this study, with a rate of medication nonadherence of 41.75%. Eight predictors were identified to build the nomogram model. The C-index, AUC, DCA, calibration curve, NRI, and IDI showed that the model had good discrimination and accuracy. The clinical impact plot showed that the nomogram of medication adherence in hemodialysis patients had clinical application value. CONCLUSIONS We developed and validated a nomogram model that is intuitive to apply for predicting medication adherence in hemodialysis patients. Nearly 1 in 5 medical students reports at least 1 incident of mistreatment, with many occurring in the perioperative environment. We aimed to further define the types of mistreatment occurring perioperatively in a national data set by using a mixed-methods approach. A sample of 2,224 responses to the general public humiliation free-text question on the 2015 Association of American Medical College's Graduation Questionnaire were analyzed. Using grounded theory methodology, 4 raters independently created and refined the coding schema. Final coding was determined by majority rating. Descriptive statistics, interrater reliability, and chi-square analysis were performed where appropriate. Among responses, 2,411 events were identified. Interrater reliability was moderate (>0.41) on 94% of variables. Events occurring in a specific setting implicated the surgery clerkship and the operating room 53.2% and 21.8% of the time, respectively. Perioperative events accounted for nearly one-third of verbal abuse reports (30.5%, 324/1059), and almost half of events described yelling (47.0%, 178/379). Mistreatment involving physical contact was significantly more likely to occur in the operating room (59% vs 41%, p < 0.001). Events coded as possibly routine education (n = 379) were significantly less common perioperatively than nonsurgical settings (20.5% vs 79.4%, p = 0.007). A