8 research outputs found
On Discrimination and Allocation with Continuous and Dichotomous Variables
In discriminant analysis involving continuous and categorical variables, the simplest and conventional procedure is to assign an arbitrary numerical score to each possible state of the categorical variables and proceed as if all variables are continuous. A discrimination procedure is suggested for use in a situation where the discriminating variables are mixtures of more than one Continuous variable and one Dichotomous variable. The performance of the suggested procedure is compared alongside that of the conventional Fisherâs Linear Discriminant and Logistic Discrimination procedures based on their error rates. The suggested procedure performed better when compared with the other procedures. Hence, the suggested procedure will be applicable for such situation. Keywords: Dichotomous, Continuous, Discriminant Analysis, Error Rat
Recommended adult immunization schedule, United States, 2020
In October 2019, the Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP) voted to approve the Recommended
Adult Immunization Schedule for Ages 19
Years or Older, United States, 2020. The 2020 adult immunization
schedule, available at www.cdc.gov/vaccines
/schedules/hcp/imz/adult.html, summarizes ACIP recommendations
in 2 tables and accompanying notes (Figure).
The full ACIP recommendations for each vaccine are available
at www.cdc.gov/vaccines/hcp/acip-recs/index.html.
The 2020 schedule has also been approved by the director
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and by the American College of Physicians (www
.acponline.org), American Academy of Family Physicians
(www.aafp.org), American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists (www.acog.org), and American College of
Nurse-Midwives (www.midwife.org)
From curiosity to commodity: a review of the evolution of sachet drinking water in West Africa
The private sector continues to play an important role in filling local drinking water supply gaps across the Global South. In West Africa, a perfect storm of rapid population growth, infrastructure mismanagement, and globalization of consumer markets has resulted in the advent of an entire new industry around packaged water, primarily âsachet waterâ sold in mechanically sealed plastic sleeves. Most local governments and international development agencies have historically perceived sachet water as a passing trend, but it has quickly become a primary drinking water source for the majority of households in many urban areas and continues to spread throughout the region and world. Sachet water is now an important component of regional water security, although with attendant issues related to governance, quality control, environmental pollution, and social justice. This paper reviews the seminal literature on sachet water in West Africa, with particular emphasis on Ghana and Nigeria, where most studies have focused. This review synthesizes governance issues, consumer and industry trends, and the latest on product quality in the literature from 2011 to 2016, with 2010 approximating an inflection point for the modernization of the industry. The ability of many West African nations to achieve universal access to safe drinking water may depend on their willingness to understand and incorporate the sachet water industry into an integrated drinking water platform. WIREs Water 2017, 4:e1206. doi: 10.1002/wat2.1206
This article is categorized under:
Engineering Water > Planning Water
Engineering Water > Sustainable Engineering of Water
Human Water > Water Governance
A typical 500âmL sachet of drinking water sold in Accra, Ghana