388 research outputs found
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 program—the 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
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 – 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 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 – 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
Effects of transport age (14 d vs. 28 d of age) on blood total cholesterol, insulin and IGF-1 concentrations of veal calves.
The main aim of the current study was to find biomarkers of health in calves transported at different ages. The selected blood parameters were total cholesterol, insulin and IGF-1 and the longitudinal study investigated whether or not these concentrations were different between calves that were transported from the dairy farm to the veal farm at 14 d or 28 d of age. Relationships between these blood variables and health characteristics of veal calves were investigated. In a 34-wk study period, a total of 683 calves originating from 13 Dutch dairy farms were transported at an age of 14 or 28 d to 8 Dutch veal farms. Calves were blood sampled the first wk after birth (mean and SD: 4.4 ± 2.1 d), a day before transport (mean and SD: 25.8 ± 7.3 d) and in wk 2 post-transport (mean and SD: 36.7 ± 12.2 d). In these samples, insulin, IGF-1 and total cholesterol were determined and analyzed with a linear mixed model (LMM). Individual medical treatments were recorded from birth until the day of transport at the dairy farm, and from the moment of arrival at the veal farm until slaughter, and analyzed as a binary response variable (calf treated or not) with a generalized linear mixed model. Fecal (calf with or without loose or liquid manure) and navel (calves with or without swollen and inflamed navel) scores measured during a single visit in wk 2 post-transport were also analyzed as binary response variables, whereas carcass weights at slaughter age were analyzed with a LMM. Cholesterol, insulin and IGF-1 were included as covariates in the previous models to test their relationships with the likelihood of calves being medically treated, fecal and navel scores, and carcass weights. One day before transport 28 d-old calves had higher blood cholesterol (Δ = 0.40 mmol/l) and IGF-1 (Δ = 53.6 ng/ml) concentrations, and evidence of higher insulin (Δ = 12.2 µU/ml) compared with 14 d-old calves. In wk 2 post-transport, 28-d old calves had higher blood IGF-1 (Δ = 21.1 ng/ml), with evidence of higher insulin (Δ = 12.2 µU/ml) concentrations compared with 14-d old calves. Cholesterol concentration measured one day before transport and in wk 2 post-transport had a positive relationship with carcass weight at slaughter (β = 4.8 and 7.7 kg/mmol/l, respectively). Blood cholesterol concentration in wk 2 post-transport was negatively associated with the fecal score measured at the same sampling moment (β = -0.55/mmol/l), with the likelihood of a calf of being treated with antibiotics (β = -0.36/mmol/l) and other medicines (β = -0.45/mmol/l) at the veal farm. Blood IGF-1 concentration in wk 2 post-transport was negatively associated with the likelihood of a calf of being treated with antibiotics and other medicines (both β = -0.01/ng/ml) at the veal farm, and with fecal score recorded in wk 2 post-transport (β = -0.004/ng/ml). When looking at the blood indicators, it appeared that calves transported at 28 d of age were more developed compared with 14 d old calves, thus transport at an older age might be more beneficial for the animals. It can be concluded that both blood cholesterol and IGF-1 concentrations seemed to be valuable biomarkers of health and energy availability in veal calves
Study of cows’ behaviour and welfare on dairy farms in Serbia
Modern methods for assessing the welfare of dairy cows are, among other things, often based on the evaluation of animal behaviour. In this regard, behaviour is classified as the most reliable, so‑called animal‑based indicator as its expression comes from the animal itself and indicates a measure in which it has adapted to the environment. Starting from the need to explore the state of welfare and the ability to demonstrate adequate behaviour in dairy farms in Serbia, the Welfare Quality® Assessment Protocol for Cattle (2009) was used in this study. The overall assessment of behaviour was carried out by analysing four main criteria: social, other forms of behaviour, human‑animal relationship and emotional state. The results of the study conducted on a total of 16 dairy farms (N = 4,833 cows) show that the conditions for ensuring appropriate behaviour meet only minimum standards and that the greatest welfare risks arise from the impossibility of expressing natural behaviour, such as exploratory behaviour. The most pronounced negative tendencies within the assessment of the emotional status were those expressed to distress, frustration and boredom. Although the estimated general condition does not differ substantially from the same on EU farms, the need for its improvement is imposed first of all in terms of ensuring greater freedom of movement and more stimulating environment in cattle rearing
Physical characteristics of the back are not predictive of low back pain in healthy workers: A prospective study
Background. In the working population, back disorders are an important reason for sick leave and permanent work inability. In the context of fitting the job to the worker, one of the primary tasks of the occupational health physician is to evaluate the balance between work-related and individual variables. Since this evaluation of work capacity often consists of a physical examination of the back, the objective of this study was to investigate whether a physical examination of the low back, which is routinely performed in occupational medicine, predicts the development of low back pain (LBP). Methods. This study is part of the Belgian Low Back Cohort (BelCoBack) Study, a prospective study to identify risk factors for the development of low back disorders in occupational settings. The study population for this paper were 692 young healthcare or distribution workers (mean age of 26 years) with no or limited back antecedents in the year before inclusion. At baseline, these workers underwent a standardised physical examination of the low back. One year later, they completed a questionnaire on the occurrence of LBP and some of its characteristics. To study the respective role of predictors at baseline on the occurrence of LBP, we opted for Cox regression with a constant risk period. Analyses were performed separately for workers without any back antecedents in the year before inclusion ('asymptomatic' workers) and for workers with limited back antecedents in the year before inclusion ('mildly symptomatic' workers). Results. In the group of 'asymptomatic' workers, obese workers showed a more than twofold-increased risk on the development of LBP as compared to non-obese colleagues (RR 2.57, 95%CI: 1.09 - 6.09). In the group of 'mildly symptomatic' workers, the self-reports of pain before the examination turned out to be most predictive (RR 3.89, 95%CI: 1.20 - 12.64). Conclusion. This study showed that, in a population of young workers wh no or limited antecedents of LBP at baseline, physical examinations, as routinely assessed in occupational medicine, are not useful to predict workers at risk for the development of back disorders one year later
Glancing angle metal evaporation synthesis of catalytic swimming Janus colloids with well defined angular velocity
The ability to control the degree of spin, or rotational velocity, for catalytic swimming devices opens up the potential to access well defined spiralling trajectories, enhance cargo binding rate, and realise theoretically proposed behaviour such as chiral diffusion. Here we assess the potential to impart a well-defined spin to individual catalytic Janus swimmers by using glancing angle metal evaporation onto a colloidal crystal to break the symmetry of the catalytic patch due to shadowing by neighbouring colloids. Using this approach we demonstrate a well-defined relationship between the glancing angle and the ratio of rotational to translational velocity. This allows batches of colloids with well-defined spin rates in the range 0.25 to 2.5 Hz to be produced. With reference to the shape and thickness variations across the catalytically active shapes, and their propulsion mechanism we discuss the factors that can lead to the observed variations in rotational propulsion
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