2,197 research outputs found
ESTIMATING THE IMPORTANCE OF SHELF SPACE CONFIGURATION ON RETAILER'S PROFIT
Retail shelf space allocation remains a central issue in grocery retailing. A literature review produced many studies on retail shelf space allocation, but none which evaluated shelf space allocation using three major factors at once: space, vertical height, and price. In this study, shelf space allocation was modeled from the perspective of a retailer maximizing profit using space, vertical height, and price. Using benchmarking, the results show how shelf configuration affects consumer demand and retailer profit. Parameters for the model were based on experience-based intuition. Although the initial results are not valuable at this point, the method and results create a rationale and motivation to gather primary data. Once primary data is collected, this methodology has important applications. First, it develops an understanding of which parameters are important in determining optimal shelf space configuration. Second, a properly specified model would determine retailer's profit for specific shelf level configurations.shelf space allocation, retail, optimization, grocery, elasticity, GAMS, ketchup.
Conscientious objection – does it also apply to nursing students?
The conscientious clause in nursing can be defined as a kind of special ethical and legal regulation which gives nurses right to object to actively perform certain medical procedures which are against their personal system of values. Usually these values are associated with nurses’ religious beliefs, but not always. Scope of this regulation differs throughout the world. However, it is emphasized that right to the conscientious objection is not absolute and this regulation can not be used in cases of danger to life or serious damage to the health of the patient.
Medical procedures to which nurses hold conscientious objection are often within reproductive health services. However, we can also find reports on the use of this right i.e. in end-of-life care and in the process of the implementation of medical experiments. The main issue underlined in the discussion regarding practising conscientious objection in the clinical setting is the collision of two human rights: the right to conscientious objection of medical personnel and the right of patients to specific medical procedures which are legal in their country. If a procedure is legally available in a country it means that patients can expect to receive it, on the other hand, all citizens, including health care workers, have the right to protect their moral identity and the right to object to the implementation of a procedure to which they have a specific objection. It is very difficult to find good ethical and legal balance between these two perspectives
Academic careers: the value of individual mentorship on research career progression
The paper discusses how individual mentoring may impact positively on career pathway development for potential and future clinical academic researchers in nursing and allied health professions.
Methods: The paper draws on a number of data sources and methodologies in order to fulfil the aims. Firstly, international literature provides an insight into mentoring processes and impact on career development. This is followed by a review of the mentoring experiences based on a UK study on the professorial populations in nursing and allied health professions. The final section reports on results of interviews with early and advanced researchers on their experiences of mentoring.
Results: Individual mentoring is valued highly by health care professionals at all stages of career development. It is considered particularly useful when people are in transition towards a more challenging career role.Individuals in receipt of mentoring both formal and informal, report improved confidence in their cability to achieve their career goals. Mentees report improved levels of competence achieved through knowledge aquisition, networking and ability to probelm solve.
Conclusions/Summary: Mentoring is considered an important process for health care professionals at all stages of their career.
Opportunities to access and receive mentoring support for health care staff in the UK remain limited and sporadic in nature. There are examples of excellent mentoring schemes in place within some institutons and organisations but a national strategy to support mentoring has yet to be developed
Key words: Clinical academic careers, mentoring, nursing, allied health profession
The Engineering Hubs and Spokes Project - institutional cooperation in educational design and delivery
The emergence of blended learning techniques that embrace a combination of face-to-face and
online learning environments offers a raft of opportunity for flexibility in education. While much
writing has focused on the opportunities for flexibility for the students and teachers, this paper
focuses on the opportunities for effective sharing of expertise and effort between institutions.
The Engineering 'Hubs and Spokes' project is a collaboration between The Australian National
University and the University of South Australia. It draws on the strengths of each to improve the
range and quality of educational opportunities for students. Two components of the project are
underpinned by blended teaching and learning techniques: sharing of courses at the advanced
undergraduate level; and development of an integrated graduate development program.
We describe choices made, benefits identified, and the challenges encountered in the early stages
of the project. We discuss recommendations for the future of cooperation in educational design
and delivery, and comment on the opportunities that arise for structural reform of the higher
education sector
Implementing performance improvement through the enterprise culture
The purpose of this article is to evaluate performance improvements made through a case
study of a rural English hospital’s emergency department within the framework of the enterprise
culture—the NHS adoption of the private sector’s performance improvement best practice.
Additionally, the process of the research and the significant barriers encountered are documented
to inform future researchers of potential drawbacks when considering this type of research. An
intervention addressing local performance issues was defined by medical consultants. A pathway
to care for emergency care patients requiring clinical observation for more than four hours—but
not admission as a hospital inpatient—was created. The efficacy of the intervention was evaluated
by measuring compliance to the pathway standards and conducting an ethnographic study and
semi-structured interviews. Structural barriers to research caused by lack of staff availability were
encountered. Additionally, although improvement from the intervention was encouraging, the
ability of the people within the system to consistently enact the process caused performance issues
against expected targets
Venus as an Anchor Point for Planetary Habitability
A major focus of the planetary science and astrobiology community is the
understanding of planetary habitability, including the myriad factors that
control the evolution and sustainability of temperate surface environments such
as that of Earth. The few substantial terrestrial planetary atmospheres within
the Solar System serve as a critical resource in studying these habitability
factors, from which models can be constructed for application to extrasolar
planets. The recent Astronomy and Astrophysics and Planetary Science and
Astrobiology Decadal Surveys both emphasise the need for an improved
understanding of planetary habitability as an essential goal within the context
of astrobiology. The divergence in climate evolution of Venus and Earth
provides a major, accessible basis for understanding how the habitability of
large rocky worlds evolves with time and what conditions limit the boundaries
of habitability. Here, we argue that Venus can be considered an "anchor point"
for understanding planetary habitability within the context of terrestrial
planet evolution. We discuss the major factors that have influenced the
respective evolutionary pathways of Venus and Earth, how these factors might be
weighted in their overall influence, and the measurements that will shed
further light on their impacts of these worlds' histories. We further discuss
the importance of Venus with respect to both of the recent decadal surveys, and
how these community consensus reports can help shape the exploration of Venus
in the coming decades.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Nature
Astronom
Roundtable discussion: reflection on twenty years of bank regulatory reform
In 1986 the American Bankers Association asked five banking academics to assess and recommend policy options to improve the banking system's efficiency, performance, and safety. The report these five economists produced, Perspectives on Safe and Sound Banking: Past, Present, and Future, has in many ways served as a roadmap for ensuing bank regulatory reforms. In this roundtable discussion, each of the five authors reflects on the past twenty years and the current status of the banking industry and, in some cases, shares thoughts about the industry's future direction.Banks and banking ; Bank supervision
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