14 research outputs found
Screening migrants in the early Cold War: the geopolitics of U.S. immigration policy
The main elements of U.S. immigration policy date back to the early Cold War. One such element is a screening process initially designed to prevent infiltration by Communist agents posing as migrants from East-Central Europe. The development of these measures was driven by geopolitical concerns, resulting in vetting criteria that favored the admission of hardline nationalists and anti-Communists. The argument proceeds in two steps. First, the article demonstrates that geopolitics influenced immigration policy, resulting in the admission of extremist individuals. Second, it documents how geopolitical concerns and the openness of U.S. institutions provided exiles with the opportunity to mobilize politically. Although there is little evidence that the vetting system succeeded in preventing the entry of Communist subversives into the United States, it did help to create a highly mobilized anti-Communist ethnic lobby that supported extremist policies vis-à-vis the Soviet Union during the early Cold War
Recommendation for the review of biological reference intervals in medical laboratories (vol 54, pg 1893, 2016)
This document is based on the original recommendation of the Expert
Panel on the Theory of Reference Values of the International Federation
of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC), updated guidelines
were recently published under the auspices of the IFCC and the Clinical
and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI). This document summarizes
proposals for recommendations on: (i) The terminology, which is often
confusing, noticeably concerning the terms of reference limits and
decision limits. (ii) The method for the determination of reference
limits according to the original procedure and the conditions, which
should be used. (iii) A simple procedure allowing the medical
laboratories to fulfill the requirements of the regulation and
standards. The updated document proposes to verify that published
reference limits are applicable to the laboratory involved. Finally, the
strengths and limits of the revised recommendations (especially the
selection of the reference population, the maintenance of the analytical
quality, the choice of the statistical method used.) will be briefly
discussed
Recommendation for the review of biological reference intervals in medical laboratories
This document is based on the original recommendation of the Expert
Panel on the Theory of Reference Values of the International Federation
of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC), updated guidelines
were recently published under the auspices of the IFCC and the Clinical
and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI). This document summarizes
proposals for recommendations on: (i) The terminology, which is often
confusing, noticeably concerning the terms of reference limits and
decision limits. (ii) The method for the determination of reference
limits according to the original procedure and the conditions, which
should be used. (iii) A simple procedure allowing the medical
laboratories to fulfill the requirements of the regulation and
standards. The updated document proposes to verify that published
reference limits are applicable to the laboratory involved. Finally, the
strengths and limits of the revised recommendations (especially the
selection of the reference population, the maintenance of the analytical
quality, the choice of the statistical method used.) will be briefly
discussed