516,429 research outputs found

    PENGARUH UKURAN PERUSAHAAN, PROFITABILITAS, TIPE INDUSTRI, KEPEMILIKAN TERKONSENTRASI, SEKTOR PERUSAHAAN DAN UMUR LISTING TERHADAP TINGKAT PENGUNGKAPAN PADA WEB-BASED CORPORATE REPORTING

    Get PDF
    This study aims to examine the effects of firm size, profitability, industry type, ownership concentration, sector, listing age on the level of web-based corporate reporting disclosure. Disclosure on web-based corporate reporting is the information provided to stakeholders in the form of financial and non financial information on corporate website. Some benefits of web-based corporate reporting disclosure are to provide timely information and reduce asymmetry of information between managers and investors, reduce agency costs and improve management oversight. The population in this study were all publicly listed companies on the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) 2014. Samples were selected based on predetermined criteria which company that has a website and discloses its annual report and has complete data sets. The number of companies used as samples were 407 companies. Regression analysis was used as a main analysis tool. The results of this study find that profitability, industry type and ownership concentration have significant effects on the level of disclosure on web-based corporate reporting. However, this research does not find evidence that company size, sector and listing age effect the level of disclosure on web-based corporate reporting

    PriPeARL: A Framework for Privacy-Preserving Analytics and Reporting at LinkedIn

    Full text link
    Preserving privacy of users is a key requirement of web-scale analytics and reporting applications, and has witnessed a renewed focus in light of recent data breaches and new regulations such as GDPR. We focus on the problem of computing robust, reliable analytics in a privacy-preserving manner, while satisfying product requirements. We present PriPeARL, a framework for privacy-preserving analytics and reporting, inspired by differential privacy. We describe the overall design and architecture, and the key modeling components, focusing on the unique challenges associated with privacy, coverage, utility, and consistency. We perform an experimental study in the context of ads analytics and reporting at LinkedIn, thereby demonstrating the tradeoffs between privacy and utility needs, and the applicability of privacy-preserving mechanisms to real-world data. We also highlight the lessons learned from the production deployment of our system at LinkedIn.Comment: Conference information: ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management (CIKM 2018

    Improving the reporting efficiency for Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations: progress over a decade

    Get PDF
    This issues brief examines the evolution of the reporting requirements of Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs) over the last ten years, with a particular focus on programs funded by the Australian Government Department of Health (the Department). With one exception, the issues brief examines key initiatives implemented by the Department, up to the end of 2013, in an attempt to improve reporting arrangements for ACCHOs. It also examines the impacts of these changes on reporting efficiency. The exception is the Healthy for Life Program. The program is included here because it pioneered Continuous Quality Improvement and outcomes based reporting and as such influenced subsequent reporting developments. The key initiatives are: the Service Development and Reporting Framework (SDRF) (2005 to 2011); the Healthy for Life program (2005 and continuing); the Indigenous and Rural Health Division (formerly Office for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health) Risk Assessment Process (2008 to 2013); developments in Information Technology and Information Management, with a particular focus on the OCHREStreams web-based reporting tool (2011 and continuing); and a multi-year funding agreement (2011 and continuing). These initiatives have brought about some significant improvements in reporting efficiency, including: standardisation of reporting requirements across several programs under the SDRF, with a consequent reduction in reporting complexity and effort and adoption of a more strategic cross-program approach to planning and reporting; a shift to outcomes based planning and reporting as part of a continuous quality improvement cycle, and an increase in the data management skills and systems needed to support continuous quality improvement; progressive move to independent risk assessment that focused primarily on governance and financial management, which has driven improvements in the quality of financial reporting; the development and roll-out of a web-based reporting tool that allows ACCHOs to submit organisational and service activity data, as well as data for national Key Performance Indicators; and further standardisation of reporting requirements under the Department’s multi-year funding agreement. Despite these improvements, ACCHOs still face a complex and resource intensive reporting load. Current reporting requirements are discussed in some detail, along with a range of possible improvements that could be made with the aim of avoiding unnecessary reporting yet maintaining information flows for policy and programme design implementation and review supporting the accountability requirements of public funds and supports continuous quality improvement in the sector. These include: working with other funders, particularly the states, to coordinate and standardise reporting requirements, with a possible extension of OCHREStreams to enable it to be used by states for some aspects of reporting; reviewing the extensive data reporting-related requirements with a view to removing those that are of least value to the Commonwealth and the sector; and where formal accountability requirements permit, moving progressively away from reporting on inputs and throughputs in favour of outcomes-based reporting, with possible use of targets and benchmarks to enable organisations to track performance. The identified improvements provide a framework for continuing to work towards maximising reporting efficiency which will help to address a range of strategic outcomes including the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Plan (2013–2023) priorities. It should be noted that whilst this issues brief references only arrangements until the end of 2013, there have been considerable reporting changes and initiatives since that time

    Automated Functional Testing based on the Navigation of Web Applications

    Full text link
    Web applications are becoming more and more complex. Testing such applications is an intricate hard and time-consuming activity. Therefore, testing is often poorly performed or skipped by practitioners. Test automation can help to avoid this situation. Hence, this paper presents a novel approach to perform automated software testing for web applications based on its navigation. On the one hand, web navigation is the process of traversing a web application using a browser. On the other hand, functional requirements are actions that an application must do. Therefore, the evaluation of the correct navigation of web applications results in the assessment of the specified functional requirements. The proposed method to perform the automation is done in four levels: test case generation, test data derivation, test case execution, and test case reporting. This method is driven by three kinds of inputs: i) UML models; ii) Selenium scripts; iii) XML files. We have implemented our approach in an open-source testing framework named Automatic Testing Platform. The validation of this work has been carried out by means of a case study, in which the target is a real invoice management system developed using a model-driven approach.Comment: In Proceedings WWV 2011, arXiv:1108.208

    Evaluation of IIMS education and training and health professionals' experience of web-based IIMS training for incident reporting

    Full text link
    University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery and Health.The study of a State-wide electronic incident management system such as the Incident Information Management System (IIMS) in New South Wales (NSW) and electronic reporting of incidents is a relatively under-researched area. Educating health professionals in incident reporting is critical to the success of electronic incident reporting systems. Web-based training for IIMS incident reporting was introduced to NSW Public Health Organisations (PHOs) in 2004 as the main mode of training for IIMS. In this study, training programs provided in the use of IIMS were reviewed and health professionals’ perceptions of web-based IIMS training were explored. This study was undertaken at a metropolitan Area Health Service (AHS) in NSW. Data were collected, analysed and triangulated from the following sources: participant observation of IIMS face-to-face training; interviews with key stakeholders of IIMS; analysis of web-based IIMS training and video training material; log-file analysis of IIMS training database; administration of a purpose- built questionnaire to health professionals who undertook web-based IIMS training; and interviews with non-participants of web-based IIMS training. Although web-based training is the official training program to educate health professionals to report incidents into the electronic IIMS, training was delivered through other media such as face-to-face presentations and video. Evaluation of the training programs reveals that training programs were well structured and highly regarded by health professionals in the metropolitan AHS where this study was conducted. However, questionnaire data show that: health professionals prefer a blended training package; training has not had a significant impact on reporting of incidents; and training has not contributed to an increase in the number of incidents reported in the metropolitan AHS where this study was conducted. The study uncovered low attendance numbers at web-based IIMS training and its under-utilisation. Both the web-based IIMS training attendance numbers and the incident notification numbers on IIMS imply that: nursing and midwifery health professionals have the highest attendance numbers and are the major reporters of incidents on IIMS and; it is difficult to involve medical professionals to participate in patient safety initiatives and to undertake training for such activities. Reporting of incidents by medical health professionals is vital since many incidents are beyond the scope of nursing health professionals. In conclusion, health professionals working in PHOs play a key role in the adoption of the electronic IIMS incident reporting system and reporting of incidents into the system. It will be imperative to increase the computer self-efficacy of all health professionals for the success of this and future web-based training programs; and to increase awareness of incident reporting systems and training programs particularly for IIMS incident reporting. Health systems will benefit by integrating training on information technology and data systems into both pre- and post- registration curricula for all health professionals

    Penerapan Sistem Informasi Manajemen Puskesmas (SIMPUS) Berbasis Web Di Puskesmas Pajang Surakarta

    Get PDF
    Primary Health Care Pajang Surakarta has implemented a management information system Primary Health Care (SIMPUS) web-based, the application is still major obstacles obedience drug input and delays in reporting. The purpose of this study was to investigate the application of health management information system in Primary Health Care Pajang Surakarta. This type of research is qualitative descriptive study. The population in this study were 10 people from health personnel. The informants are 6 informant and 2 informants as triangulation that was taken by purposive sampling technique. The data in this study is qualitative data in the form of descriptions about the picture SIMPUS Web-based of the application. Analysis of the study with 3 stages of data reduction, data presentation and conclusion. The results showed that the flow of patient data collection at the start of registration, medical services, investigation and pharmacies. Input data by entering a username and password, constraints on drug data input. The data processing is done using computers. Data Reporting contain about LB1 reporting, infectious diseases, LPLPO, the data STP, reporting askes

    Using patient-reported measures to drive change in healthcare: the experience of the digital, continuous and systematic PREMs observatory in Italy

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: The use of Patient Reported Experience Measures (PREMs) has great potential in healthcare service improvement, but a limited use. This paper presents an empirical case of PREMs innovation in Italy, to foster patient data use up to the ward level, by keeping strengths and addressing weaknesses of previous PREMs survey experiences. The paper reports key lessons learned in this ongoing experience of action research, directly involving practitioners. METHODS: The aim of this paper is to present the results of an ongoing action research, encompassing the innovation of PREMs collection, reporting and use, currently adopted by 21 hospitals of two Italian regions. The continuous and systematic PREMs collection has been implemented between 2017 and 2019 and includes: a continuous web-based administration, using web-services; an augmented and positive questionnaire matching standard closed-ended questions with narrative sections; the inclusion and benchmarking of patient data within a shared performance evaluation system; public disclosure of aggregated anonymized data; a multi-level and real-time web-platform for reporting PREMs to professionals. The action research was carried out with practitioners in a real-life and complex context. The authors used multiple data sources and methods: observations, feedback of practitioners, collected during several workshops and meetings, and analysis of preliminary data on the survey implementation. RESULTS: A continuous and systematic PREMs observatory was developed and adopted in two Italian regions. PREMs participation and response rates tend to increase over time, reaching stable percentages after the first months. Narrative feedback provide a 'positive narration' of episodes and behaviours that made the difference to patients and can inform quality improvement actions. Real-time reporting of quantitative and qualitative data is enabling a gratifying process of service improvement and people management at all the hospitals' levels. CONCLUSIONS: The PREMs presented in this paper has been recognized by healthcare professionals and managers as a strategic and positive tool for improving an actual use of PREMs at system and ward levels, by measuring and highlighting positive deviances, such as compassionate behaviours

    UC-383 PantryPilot

    Get PDF
    Our team has developed an intuitive food pantry management system that streamlines the guest check-in process, optimizes time management, and enhances data reporting. The app is built with Next.js, TypeScript, and Firebase to create a platform-independent progressive web application. PantryPilot functions on both mobile devices and desktop devices
    • …
    corecore