3,683 research outputs found

    Report and Recommendations on Two Chilean Labor Force Surveys

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    For many years, Chile has benefited from two surveys of labor force developments for the “Greater Santiago Area.” One of these surveys dates back to the 1950s and is conducted by the University of Chile. The other is a national survey, conducted by the National Institute of Statistics (NIS), from which data are also available for the Santiago Metropolitan Area. Results, especially the rate of unemployment, do not always coincide, and this has been particularly the case for all years since 1998. This report studies this problem of non concurrence, identifies a number of areas for possible explanation, and makes recommendations for improvement of survey operations. Both surveys were found to follow quite well recommendations of the International Labor Organization regarding the measurement of employment and unemployment. Two significant areas in the report concern the questionnaires used for the surveys and data estimation techniques. Fourteen recommendations for improvements in the surveys are offered, with major attention focused on plans by the NIS to introduce an entirely new questionnaire in the near future. With respect to the University’s survey, the authors recommend changes in the basic questionnaire and survey weighting procedures. They also recommend improving data analysis (NIS), maintaining error profiles for data collection (both surveys), and using seasonal adjustment for statistical analysis (both).

    Simple Pricing Schemes for the Cloud

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    The problem of pricing the cloud has attracted much recent attention due to the widespread use of cloud computing and cloud services. From a theoretical perspective, several mechanisms that provide strong efficiency or fairness guarantees and desirable incentive properties have been designed. However, these mechanisms often rely on a rigid model, with several parameters needing to be precisely known in order for the guarantees to hold. In this paper, we consider a stochastic model and show that it is possible to obtain good welfare and revenue guarantees with simple mechanisms that do not make use of the information on some of these parameters. In particular, we prove that a mechanism that sets the same price per time step for jobs of any length achieves at least 50% of the welfare and revenue obtained by a mechanism that can set different prices for jobs of different lengths, and the ratio can be improved if we have more specific knowledge of some parameters. Similarly, a mechanism that sets the same price for all servers even though the servers may receive different kinds of jobs can provide a reasonable welfare and revenue approximation compared to a mechanism that is allowed to set different prices for different servers.Comment: To appear in the 13th Conference on Web and Internet Economics (WINE), 2017. A preliminary version was presented at the 12th Workshop on the Economics of Networks, Systems and Computation (NetEcon), 201

    A chronic disease outreach program for Aboriginal communities

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    Background. Our objective is to describe a program to improve awareness and management of hypertension, renal disease, and diabetes in 3 remote Australian Aboriginal communities. Methods. The program espouses that regular integrated checks for chronic disease and their risk factors are essential elements of regular adult health care. Programs should be run by local health workers, following algorithms for testing and treatment, with backup, usually from a distance, from nurse coordinators. Constant evaluation is essential to develop community health profiles and adapt program structure. Results. Participation ranged from 65% to 100% of adults. Forty-one percent of women and 72% of men were current smokers. Body weight varied markedly by community. Although excessive in all, rates of chronic diseases also differed markedly among communities. Rates increased with age, but the greatest numbers of people with morbidities were middle age and young adults. Multiple morbidities were common by middle age. Hypertension and renal disease were early features, whereas diabetes was a variable and later manifestation of this integrated chronic disease syndrome. Adherence to testing and treatment protocols improved markedly over time. Substantial numbers of new diagnoses were made. Blood pressure improved in people in whom antihypertensive agents were started or increased. Components of a systematic activity plan became more clearly defined with time. Treatment of people in the community with the greatest disease burden posed a large additional workload. Lack of health workers and absenteeism were major impediments to productivity. Conclusion. We cannot generalize about body habitus, and chronic disease rates among Aboriginal adults. Pilot data are needed to plan resources based on the chronic disease burden in each community. Systematic screening is useful in identifying high-risk individuals, most at an early treatable stage. Community-based health profiles provide critical information for the development of rational health policy and needs-based health services

    Exclusion of Indigenous youth from important parts of the Australian Health Survey

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    Building an Information Infrastructure

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    How we provide education, how farmers and manufacturers do business in local and global economies, and how rapidly-improving technologies will drive life in the 21st century remain somewhat mysterious. Christopher E. Hoy has been at the forefront of a movement to develop a telecommunications infrastructure in the state of Nebraska. He initiated a project called “The Global Community Initiative.” As part of that project, Hoy organized more than 45 community information technology committees in rural Nebraska and developed a model planning process for them to follow. He describes this as a statewide, grass-roots organizing effort designed to stimulate demand for advanced information technologies and creative applications in small businesses. Hoy’s article is followed by commentaries from Diane Tilton, executive director of the Sunrise County Economic Council in Washington County, and Harry Dresser, associate headmaster at Gould Academy, Bethel, Maine

    Albuminuria and Incident Coronary Heart Disease in Australian Aboriginal people

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    Background. It has been suggested that albuminuria is useful in identifying persons at increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). Australian Aborigines have exceedingly high rates of renal failure together with increased CHD mortality. We undertook this prospective cohort study to assess the independent effect of albuminuria on CHD risk in Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory of Australia. Methods. We examined the relation between micro- and macroalbuminuria and incident CHD in a sample of 870 Aboriginal adults aged 20 to74 years old without prevalent baseline CHD. Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess the association between baseline albuminuria and CHD incidence. Results. During a median of 9.2 years of follow-up, 89 CHD events occurred during the follow-up period (1992 to 2003). The incidence of CHD increased significantly across categories of albuminuria (4.4, 10.9, and 29.8 per 1000 person-years for normoalbuminuria, microalbuminuria, and macroalbuminuria, respectively). The multiple Cox proportional hazards regression showed the hazard ratio was 3.4 (95% CI 1.6, 7.3), adjusting for age, gender, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure, total cholesterol, diabetes status, cigarette smoking, and alcohol consumption, for macroalbuminuria group. Hazard ratio for microalbuminuria group was not significantly different from unity during the first 6 years of follow-up but significantly higher during the follow-up period 6 years with adjusted hazard ratio 9.0 (95% CI 2.0, 40.0). Conclusion. Independent of traditional cardiovascular risk factors, both microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria may be useful in identifying persons at increased risk of CHD in Aboriginal people

    Albuminuria as a marker of the risk of developing type 2 diabetes in non-diabetic Aboriginal Australians

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    Background Aboriginal Australians experience a higher risk of diabetes than the general Australian population. In this paper, we conducted a nested case-control study to determine whether the presence of microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria is associated with the development of diabetes among diabetes-free Aboriginal people at baseline

    Cardiovascular risk among urban Aboriginal people

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    A Letter to the Editor

    Patterns of mortality in Indigenous adults in the Northern Territory, 1998–2003: are people living in more remote areas worse off?

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    Objective: ToquantifyIndigenousmortalityintheNorthernTerritorybyremotenessof residence. Design, setting and participants: Australian Bureau of Statistics mortality data were used to compare rates of death from chronic disease in the NT Indigenous population with rates in the general Australian population over the period 1998–2003. Rates were evaluated by categories of remoteness based on the Accessibility/Remoteness Index of Australia: outer regional areas (ORAs), remote areas (RAs) and very remote areas (VRAs). Main outcome measures: Mortality from cardiovascular disease, diabetes and renal disease; standardised mortality ratios (SMRs); percentage change in annual death rates; changes in mortality between 1998–2000 and 2001–2003. Results: In 1998–2000, SMRs for all-cause mortality were 285% in ORAs, 875% in RAs and 214% in VRAs. In 2001–2003, corresponding SMRs were 325%, 731% and 208%. For the period 1998–2003, percentage changes in annual all-cause mortality were 4.4% (95% CI, –2.2%, 11.5%) in ORAs, –5.3% (95% CI, –9.6%, –0.8%) in RAs, and 1.1% (95% CI, –7.2%, 11.3%) in VRAs. In 2001–2003, compared with 1998–2000, changes in the number of Indigenous deaths were +35 in ORAs, –37 in RAs and +32 in VRAs. Similar patterns were observed for cardiovascular mortality. Conclusions: ComparedwithmortalityinthegeneralAustralianpopulation,Indigenous mortality was up to nine times higher in RAs, three times higher in ORAs and two times higher in VRAs. The fact that rates were lowest in VRAs runs contrary to claims that increasing remoteness is associated with poorer health status. Despite the high death rate in RAs, there was a downward trend in mortality in RAs over the study period. This was partly attributable to a fall in the absolute number of deaths
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