19,797 research outputs found
Evaluating the employment impact of a mandatory job search assistance program
This paper exploits area based piloting and age-related eligibility rules to identify treatment effects of
a labor market program â the New Deal for Young People in the UK. A central focus is on
substitution/displacement effects and on equilibrium wage effects. The program includes extensive
job assistance and wage subsidies to employers. We find that the program significantly raised
transitions to employment by about five percentage points (about 20 percent over the pre-program
base). The impact is robust to a wide variety of non-experimental estimators. However we present
some evidence suggesting that this effect may not be as large in the longer run
Evaluating the employment impact of a mandatory job search program
This paper exploits area-based piloting and age-related eligibility rules to identify treatment effects of a labor market programâthe New Deal for Young People in the U.K. A central focus is on substitution/displacement effects and on equilibrium wage effects. The program includes extensive job assistance and wage subsidies to employers. We find that the impact of the program significantly raised transitions to employment by about 5 percentage points. The impact is robust to a wide variety of nonexperimental estimators. However, we present some evidence that this effect may not be as large in the longer run
Scaling limit for a drainage network model
We consider the two dimensional version of a drainage network model
introduced by Gangopadhyay, Roy and Sarkar, and show that the appropriately
rescaled family of its paths converges in distribution to the Brownian web. We
do so by verifying the convergence criteria proposed by Fontes, Isopi, Newman
and Ravishankar.Comment: 15 page
Axion Like Particles and the Inverse Seesaw Mechanism
Light pseudoscalars known as axion like particles (ALPs) may be behind
physical phenomena like the Universe transparency to ultra-energetic photons,
the soft -ray excess from the Coma cluster, and the 3.5 keV line. We
explore the connection of these particles with the inverse seesaw (ISS)
mechanism for neutrino mass generation. We propose a very restrictive setting
where the scalar field hosting the ALP is also responsible for generating the
ISS mass scales through its vacuum expectation value on gravity induced
nonrenormalizable operators. A discrete gauge symmetry protects the theory from
the appearance of overly strong gravitational effects and discrete anomaly
cancellation imposes strong constraints on the order of the group. The
anomalous U symmetry leading to the ALP is an extended lepton number and
the protective discrete symmetry can be always chosen as a subgroup of a
combination of the lepton number and the baryon number.Comment: 29pp. v4: published version with erratum. Conclusions unchange
Evaluating the employment effects of a mandatory job search program
This paper exploits area based piloting and age-related eligibility rules to identify treatment effects of
a labor market program â the New Deal for Young People in the UK. A central focus is on
substitution/displacement effects and on equilibrium wage effects. The program includes extensive
job assistance and wage subsidies to employers. We find that the initial impact of the program
significantly raised transitions to unsubsidized employment by about five percentage points. The
impact is robust to a wide variety of non-experimental estimators. However we present some
evidence that this effect may not be as large in the longer run
Evading the Few TeV Perturbative Limit in 3-3-1 Models
Some versions of the electroweak SU(3)_L\otimesU(1)_X models cannot be
treated within perturbation theory at energies of few TeV. An extended version
for these models is proposed which is perturbative even at TeV scale posing no
threatening inconsistency for test at future colliders. The extension presented
here needs the addition of three octets of vector leptons, which leave three
new leptonic isotriplets in the SU(2)_L\otimesU(1)_Y subgroup. With this
representation content the running of the electroweak mixing angle, , is such that decreases with the increase of the
energy scale , when only the light states of the Standard Model group are
considered. The neutral exotic gauge boson marks then a new symmetry
frontier.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, minor correction
BP Reduction, Kidney Function Decline, and Cardiovascular Events in Patients without CKD.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:
In the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT), intensive systolic BP treatment (target <120 mm Hg) was associated with fewer cardiovascular events and higher incidence of kidney function decline compared with standard treatment (target <140 mm Hg). We evaluated the association between mean arterial pressure reduction, kidney function decline, and cardiovascular events in patients without CKD.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS:
We categorized patients in the intensive treatment group of the SPRINT according to mean arterial pressure reduction throughout follow-up: <20, 20 to <40, and â„40 mm Hg. We defined the primary outcome as kidney function decline (â„30% reduction in eGFR to <60 ml/min per 1.73 m2 on two consecutive determinations at 3-month intervals), and we defined the secondary outcome as cardiovascular events. In a propensity score analysis, patients in each mean arterial pressure reduction category from the intensive treatment group were matched with patients from the standard treatment group to calculate the number needed to treat regarding cardiovascular events and the number needed to harm regarding kidney function decline.
RESULTS:
In the intensive treatment group, 1138 (34%) patients attained mean arterial pressure reduction <20 mm Hg, 1857 (56%) attained 20 to <40 mm Hg, and 309 (9%) attained â„40 mm Hg. Adjusted hazard ratios for kidney function decline were 2.10 (95% confidence interval, 1.22 to 3.59) for mean arterial pressure reduction between 20 and 40 mm Hg and 6.22 (95% confidence interval, 2.75 to 14.08) for mean arterial pressure reduction â„40 mm Hg. In propensity score analysis, mean arterial pressure reduction <20 mm Hg presented a number needed to treat of 44 and a number needed to harm of 65, reduction between 20 and <40 mm Hg presented a number needed to treat of 42 and a number needed to harm of 35, and reduction â„40 mm Hg presented a number needed to treat of 95 and a number needed to harm of 16.
CONCLUSIONS:
In the intensive treatment group of SPRINT, larger declines in mean arterial pressure were associated with higher incidence of kidney function decline. Intensive treatment seemed to be less favorable when a larger reduction in mean arterial pressure was needed to attain the BP target.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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