Although the "weekday effect" may influence postoperative outcomes, controversies regarding its existence remain. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between the day of the week the surgery was performed and postoperative outcomes. Data from 58,646 patients who underwent elective abdominal surgery at Seoul National University Bundang Hospital from May 2003 to February 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ziritaxestat.html Two elective surgery groups comprising of 33,513 (57.1%) and 25,113 (42.9%) patients who underwent surgery in the early and late days of the week, respectively, were analyzed. Late days of the week was defined as days where surgery was performed within 2 days before weekends or holidays and early days of the week as all other weekdays. These groups were balanced using inverse probability of treatment weighting. The adjusted 30-day mortality and length of hospital stay were compared. In the weighted sample, all 52 clinical covariates were comparable between the 2 groups. The weighted sample analysis did not reveal a significant difference in the 30-day mortality between early days of the week and late days of the week (0.19% early days of week vs 0.18% late days of the week; relative risk, 0.97; 95% confidence interval, 0.66-1.50; P= .82). Similarly, the median length of hospital stay showed no significant difference between the 2 groups (median value for both groups, 5.0 days; interquartile range 3.0-8.0; relative risk, 1.00; 95% confidence interval, 0.97-1.03; P= .16). A weekday effect associated with the day of elective surgery performed was not found in this study for either the 30-day postoperative mortality or length of hospital stay. A weekday effect associated with the day of elective surgery performed was not found in this study for either the 30-day postoperative mortality or length of hospital stay.The current COVID-19 pandemic has created an awareness and at the same time provides an impetus to transform digitalisation of healthcare delivery. Remote prescription is one key component of telemedicine, but it is the easiest and already practised in most places during the current pandemic even without the framework of virtual medicine in place. However, remote prescription, with its antecedent problems cannot be properly and safely executed in isolation. To ensure patients' safety and health outcomes, specific guidelines will need to be developed to cater for specific medical conditions to address individual drug prescriptions and concerns. There is a need for a robust governance to ensure that patient's safety is the foremost priority, and provisions should be made for requirements of remote prescription in the different medical subspecialities. The pandemic provides an enormous opportunity for stakeholders and policymakers to come together to create a seamless and user friendly and yet innovative healthcare ecosystem to transform clinical healthcare delivery with patient safety as the core driver in the implementation. Though the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) till the age of six months are unanimously perceived and ubiquitously accepted, there are several factors that impede this great practice all over the world, and Bangladesh is no exception. A clinic-based, mixed-method, cross-sectional study was conducted to investigate the EBF practice and the possible causes of early cessation in Noakhali district, Bangladesh. The Kaplan-Meier survival curve with a log-rank test was used to compare the survival differences of recommended and observed EBF practices. The life table for EBF practice was also presented, and the multivariate cox proportional regression model was used to identify the predictors of EBF duration. Two focus group discussions were conducted to generate qualitative data on EBF cessation. The mean duration of EBF was five months; only 30% of mothers did not complete EBF, and the cumulative survival curve showed a sharp fall after four months of breastfeeding. However, factors such as mother's advanced age (30years or above; AHR 0.376, 90% CI 0.158-0.893) and low level of education increase the risk of the EBF cessation, while being housewife mothers, preceding birth interval of more than 2years and living in urban areas decreases the risk of EBF termination. Perceived inadequacy of breast milk and some cultural norms were among the cessation factors revealed in qualitative analysis. Although the completion rates of EBF practice seem to be high in this study population, some socio-cultural issues remain to be addressed, and further promotional efforts should be made to continue and improve the EBF practice. Although the completion rates of EBF practice seem to be high in this study population, some socio-cultural issues remain to be addressed, and further promotional efforts should be made to continue and improve the EBF practice. This study examines the association between selected socio-demographic factors (gender, birth order, parents' educational levels, and parents' employment status) and reasons for vaccination delay among Jordanian children under two years of age. A cross-sectional, prospective study was conducted in the three comprehensive public health centres in Amman Governorate in Jordan from January-June, 2019. The electronic vaccination record was designed to collect socio- demographic information and reasons for vaccination delay in children. This data was collected from the medical records of those children. The findings revealed that 150 (8.3%) children under two years of age were registered as vaccination-delayed cases. The factors associated with vaccination delay were age (Chi-square test [χ ] [6150]=15.02, p-value [p]<0.01), birth order (χ [6150]=15.02, p<0.01), mother's educational level (χ [2150]=9.27, p<0.05), and father's and mother's employment (χ [2150]=7.89, p<0.05; χ [2150]=10.54, p<0.01, respectively). Timeliness of vaccination should be promoted to prevent illness outbreaks and provide specific protection for children, taking into consideration the significance of age and birth order. Interventions and strategies need to implementation to reduce vaccination delay and improve timeliness. Interventions and strategies need to implementation to reduce vaccination delay and improve timeliness.