1,281 research outputs found
The National Labor Relations Act Is Not Just for Unionized Employers Anymore
The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) provides employees with the right to engage in âprotected concerted activity,â including the right to discuss wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment. It is often considered the âunion lawâ in that it provides employees with the right to form a union and it regulates the unionâmanagement relationship. Because of this strong association with unions, non-union employersâ human resource directors rarely think of the act when making decisions on whom to hire, fire, promote, demote, or discipline. While it was true that in the past the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB, the agency that enforces the NLRA) rarely involved itself in disputes that did not include union organizing, collective bargaining, or any other unionâmanagement dispute, this is no longer case. The NLRB is now enforcing the NLRAâs protection of âconcerted activityâ to non-union employers, who indeed must understand and comply with the act
Dynamical System Approach to Cosmological Models with a Varying Speed of Light
Methods of dynamical systems have been used to study homogeneous and
isotropic cosmological models with a varying speed of light (VSL). We propose
two methods of reduction of dynamics to the form of planar Hamiltonian
dynamical systems for models with a time dependent equation of state. The
solutions are analyzed on two-dimensional phase space in the variables where is a function of a scale factor . Then we show how the
horizon problem may be solved on some evolutional paths. It is shown that the
models with negative curvature overcome the horizon and flatness problems. The
presented method of reduction can be adopted to the analysis of dynamics of the
universe with the general form of the equation of state .
This is demonstrated using as an example the dynamics of VSL models filled with
a non-interacting fluid. We demonstrate a new type of evolution near the
initial singularity caused by a varying speed of light. The singularity-free
oscillating universes are also admitted for positive cosmological constant. We
consider a quantum VSL FRW closed model with radiation and show that the
highest tunnelling rate occurs for a constant velocity of light if and . It is also proved that the considered class of
models is structurally unstable for the case of .Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, RevTeX4; final version to appear in PR
Text Messages as Mobilization Tools: The Conditional Effect of Habitual Voting and Election Salience
Universal Features of Holographic Anomalies
We study the mechanism by which gravitational actions reproduce the trace
anomalies of the holographically related conformal field theories. Two
universal features emerge: a) the ratios of type B trace anomalies in any even
dimension are independent of the gravitational action, being uniquely
determined by the underlying algebraic structure b) the normalization of the
type A and the overall normalization of the type B anomalies are given by
action dependent expressions with the dimension dependence completely fixed.Comment: 17 pages, harvma
Prolonged enoxaparin therapy compared with standard-of-care antithrombotic therapy in opiate-treated patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention
A novel enoxaparin regimen consisting of intra-arterial bolus (0.75 mg/kg) followed by intravenous infusion (0.75 mg/kg/6 hours) has been developed as a possible solution to the delayed absorption of oral P2Y12 inhibitors in opiate-treated ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients undergoing primary angioplasty. We aimed to study the feasibility of this regimen as an alternative to standard-of-care treatment (SOC) with unfractionated heparin ± glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonist (GPI). One hundred opiate-treated patients presenting with STEMI and accepted for primary angioplasty were randomized (1:1) to either enoxaparin or SOC. Fifty patients were allocated enoxaparin (median age 61, 40% females) and 49 allocated SOC (median age 62, 22% females). One developed stroke before angiography and was withdrawn. One SOC patient had a gastrointestinal bleed resulting in 1 g drop in hemoglobin and early cessation of GPI infusion. Two enoxaparin patients had transient minor bleeding: one transient gingival bleed and one episode of coffee ground vomit with no hemoglobin drop or hemodynamic instability. Two SOC and no enoxaparin group patients had acute stent thrombosis. These preliminary data support further study of this novel 6-hour enoxaparin regimen in opiate-treated PPCI patients
An audit of the initial resuscitation of severely ill patients presenting with septic incomplete miscarriages at a tertiary hospital in South Africa
BACKGROUND : Septic incomplete miscarriages remain a cause of maternal deaths in South Africa. There was an
initial decline in mortality when a strict protocol based approach and the Choice of Termination of Pregnancy Act
in South Africa were implemented in this country. However, a recent unpublished audit at the Pretoria Academic
Complex (Kalafong and Steve Biko Academic Hospitals) suggested that maternal mortality due to this condition is
increasing. The objective of this investigation is to do a retrospective audit with the purpose of identifying the
reasons for the deteriorating mortality index attributed to septic incomplete miscarriage at Steve Biko Academic
Hospital.
METHODS : A retrospective audit was performed on all patients who presented to Steve Biko Academic Hospital with
a septic incomplete miscarriage from 1st January 2008 to 31st December 2010. Data regarding patient
demographics, initial presentation, resuscitation and disease severity was collected from the âmaternal near-missâ/
SAMM database and the patientâs medical record. The shock index was calculated for each patient retrospectively.
RESULTS : There were 38 SAMM and 9 maternal deaths during the study period. In the SAMM group 86.8% and in
the maternal death group 77.8% had 2 intravenous lines for resuscitation. There was no significant improvement in
the mean blood pressure following resuscitation in the SAMM group (p 0.67), nor in the maternal death group
(p 0.883). The shock index before resuscitation was similar in the two groups but improved significantly following
resuscitation in the SAMM group (p 0.002). Only 31.6% in the SAMM group and 11.1% in the maternal death group
had a complete clinical examination, including a speculum examination of the cervix on admission. No antibiotics
were administered to 21.1% in the SAMM group and to 33.3% in the maternal death group.
CONCLUSION : The strict protocol management for patients with septic incomplete miscarriage was not adhered to.
Physicians should be trained to recognise and react to the seriously ill patient. The use of the shock index in the
identification and management of the critically ill pregnant patient needs to be investigated.http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcpregnancychildbirtham201
Glassiness and constrained dynamics of a short-range non-disordered spin model
We study the low temperature dynamics of a two dimensional short-range spin
system with uniform ferromagnetic interactions, which displays glassiness at
low temperatures despite the absence of disorder or frustration. The model has
a dual description in terms of free defects subject to dynamical constraints,
and is an explicit realization of the ``hierarchically constrained dynamics''
scenario for glassy systems. We give a number of exact results for the statics
of the model, and study in detail the dynamical behaviour of one-time and
two-time quantities. We also consider the role played by the configurational
entropy, which can be computed exactly, in the relation between fluctuations
and response.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures; minor changes, references adde
Bounds from Primordial Black Holes with a Near Critical Collapse Initial Mass Function
Recent numerical evidence suggests that a mass spectrum of primordial black
holes (PBHs) is produced as a consequence of near critical gravitational
collapse. Assuming that these holes formed from the initial density
perturbations seeded by inflation, we calculate model independent upper bounds
on the mass variance at the reheating temperature by requiring the mass density
not exceed the critical density and the photon emission not exceed current
diffuse gamma-ray measurements. We then translate these results into bounds on
the spectral index n by utilizing the COBE data to normalize the mass variance
at large scales, assuming a constant power law, then scaling this result to the
reheating temperature. We find that our bounds on n differ substantially
(\delta n > 0.05) from those calculated using initial mass functions derived
under the assumption that the black hole mass is proportional to the horizon
mass at the collapse epoch. We also find a change in the shape of the diffuse
gamma-ray spectrum which results from the Hawking radiation. Finally, we study
the impact of a nonzero cosmological constant and find that the bounds on n are
strengthened considerably if the universe is indeed vacuum-energy dominated
today.Comment: 24 pages, REVTeX, 5 figures; minor typos fixed, two refs added,
version to be published in PR
ICON 2019: International Scientific Tendinopathy Symposium Consensus: Clinical Terminology
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Background Persistent tendon pain that impairs function has inconsistent medical terms that can influence choice of treatment.1 When a person is told they have tendinopathy by clinician A or tendinitis by clinician B, they might feel confused or be alarmed at receiving what they might perceive as two different diagnoses. This may lead to loss of confidence in their health professional and likely adds to uncertainty if they were to search for information about their condition. Clear and uniform terminology also assists inter-professional communication. Inconsistency in terminology for painful tendon disorders is a problem at numerous anatomical sites. Historically, the term âtendinitisâ was first used to describe tendon pain, thickening and impaired function (online supplementary figure S1). The term âtendinosisâ has also been used in a small number of publications, some of which were very influential.2 3 Subsequently, âtendinopathyâ emerged as the most common term for persistent tendon pain.4 5 To our knowledge, experts (clinicians and researchers) or patients have never engaged in a formal process to discuss the terminology we use. We believe that health professionals have not yet agreed on the appropriate terminology for painful tendon conditions.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Second Order Power Corrections in the Heavy Quark Effective Theory I. Formalism and Meson Form Factors
In the heavy quark effective theory, hadronic matrix elements of currents
between two hadrons containing a heavy quark are expanded in inverse powers of
the heavy quark masses, with coefficients that are functions of the kinematic
variable . For the ground state pseudoscalar and vector mesons, this
expansion is constructed at order . A minimal set of universal form
factors is defined in terms of matrix elements of higher dimension operators in
the effective theory. The zero recoil normalization conditions following from
vector current conservation are derived. Several phenomenological applications
of the general results are discussed in detail. It is argued that at zero
recoil the semileptonic decay rates for and receive only small second order corrections, which are unlikely
to exceed the level of a few percent. This supports the usefulness of the heavy
quark expansion for a reliable determination of .Comment: (34 pages, REVTEX, two postscript figures available upon request),
SLAC-PUB-589
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