(Bloomberg) Apple Inc.’s attempts to justify the 27% fee it charges developers for purchases outside its App Store backfired as a skeptical federal judge questioned an executive about a company-commissioned study showing half that rate would be reasonable.Most Read from BloombergChina Attempts to End Property Crisis With Broad Rescue PackageA 25-Year-Old BofA Trader Dies Suddenly at Industry OutingWith a BlackRock CEO, $9 Trillion Vanguard Braces for TurbulenceVoters Prefer Trump Over Biden o
This retrospective cohort study evaluated baseline demographics, clinical characteristics, and treatment patterns of US patients with asthma who newly initiated single- or multiple-inhaler triple therapy.
<p>A new <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2023.10.010">study</a> published today in the <em>American Journal of Infection Control</em> (AJIC), based on a survey of healthcare professionals conducted during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, suggests that new efforts may be needed to strengthen infection prevention precautions and protect staff members at the highest risk of exposure to dangerous pathogens. This is believed to be the first study of pandemic-era infection precautions to include a broad variety of healthcare jobs. Researchers found that workers who had the highest risk of exposure to SARS-CoV-2 were also the most likely to report errors in their own adherence to infection prevention measures.</p>
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