15,219 research outputs found

    Managing a sustainable, low carbon supply chain in the English National Health Service: The views of senior managers.

    Get PDF
    Objectives:In an effort to reduce costs and respond to climate change, health care providers (Trusts) in England have started to change how they purchase goods and services. Many factors, both internal and external, affect the supply chain. Our aim was to identify those factors, so as to maintain future supply and business continuity in health and social care.Methods:Qualitative interviews with 20 senior managers from private and public sector health service providers and social care providers in south west England. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed.Results:There were four areas of concern: contradictions with government legislation which caused confusion about how best to deliver sustainable solutions; procurement was unclear and created multiple approaches to purchasing bulk items at low cost; internal organizational systems needed to be reconsidered to embed sustainability; and embedding sustainability requires a review of organizational systems. There are examples of sustainability solutions throughout the National Health Service (NHS) but the response continues to be patchy. More research is needed into why some Trusts and some staff do not recognize the benefits of a core approach or find the systems unable to respond.Conclusions:The NHS is one of the major purchasers of goods and services in England and is therefore in an excellent position to encourage sustainable resource management, manufacturing, use and disposal

    Employing Information Systems for Competitive Advantage

    Get PDF
    Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan was recently quoted as saying that information technology has begun to alter, fundamentally, the manner in which we do business and create economic value. In the information age, the organizations that survive will be those which succeed in using computer-based information systems (IS\u27s) to provide sustainable competitive advantage. Competitive advantage refers to the ability of an organization to provide products or services that are distinctive and more desirable that those provided by the competition. In a 1999 article, Service and Maddox proposed a measure of an organization\u27s ability to use its information system for this purpose. This project extends the work of Service and Maddox. It describes a mail survey of information system managers that enables the researchers to calculate the information quotient for their organizations. These measures are used to validate the theory proposed by Service and Maddox

    Representation of Africa online: sourcing practice and frames of reference

    Get PDF
    The dominant perspective on the representation of Africa in the western media claims that western media coverage is bias and crisis orientated and the liberal perspective claims that the coverage of Africa is not as negative as is often assumed. However, there is a paucity of literature on the representation of Africa online. This research enquiry is relevant because literature claims that the Internet has the potential to resolve the journalistic predicament of representing other culture through political participation and deliberation. But this requires a re-orientation of the sourcing practice of news organization to embrace sensitivity to and knowledge of African cultures. Moreover, the journalistic predicament can be resolved or not depending on the news gathering approach adopted by the news organization. Literature has identified two approaches, that is, ‘gatekeeping’ used mainly by dominant traditional media and ‘gatewatching’ used by alternative media in their quest to counter mainstream ideology. This study examines the impacts of the ‘gatewatching’ approach adopted by Africa Have Your Say (AHYS) website on its representation and frames of reference of Africa. It uses on-site observation, in-depth interviews and textual analysis to gather data. The study found that although the sourcing practice at the AHYS is elaborate and complex, the ‘gatewatching’ approach makes its susceptible to second level agenda setting. Hence, its frame repeats the attributes and tone used by the mainstream traditional media. However, a minority of users did not use repeat this frame in their comments

    On-Shell Unitarity Bootstrap for QCD Amplitudes

    Full text link
    We describe the recently developed on-shell bootstrap for computing one-loop amplitudes in non-supersymmetric theories such as QCD. The method combines the unitarity method with loop-level on-shell recursion. The unitarity method is used to compute cut-containing parts of amplitudes, and on-shell recursion is used for the remaining rational terms.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, write-up of talks given by Z. Bern and D. A. Kosower at Loops & Legs 2006, Eisenach, Germany; v2: added referenc

    A Round Table Conference on Indian Adolescent Wellness in a Holistic Context- A Consensus Statement Final Report

    Get PDF
    This report summarizes the results of a meeting of experts in the area of Indian adolescent health and wellness. The group produced a consensus statement described in this final report. The Adolescent Health Roundtable participants refocused the mission of the roundtable from Adolescent Health to Adolescent Wellness. There was agreement among the participants that the term health is too often defined with statistics of morbidity and mortality indicating the absence of health. The group took the position that Indian adolescent wellness is much more than the disease and death statistics; the wellness of Indian adolescents is very much influenced by other aspects of family and community life.Understanding the historical, spiritual, and psychosocial factors affecting Indian adolescent wellness was the foundation for this Roundtable\\u27s consensus statements

    Habitat‐dependent occupancy and movement in a migrant songbird highlights the importance of mangroves and forested lagoons in Panama and Colombia

    Get PDF
    Climate change is predicted to impact tropical mangrove forests due to decreased rainfall, sea‐level rise, and increased seasonality of flooding. Such changes are likely to influence habitat quality for migratory songbirds occupying mangrove wetlands during the tropical dry season. Overwintering habitat quality is known to be associated with fitness in migratory songbirds, yet studies have focused primarily on territorial species. Little is known about the ecology of nonterritorial species that may display more complex movement patterns within and among habitats of differing quality. In this study, we assess within‐season survival and movement at two spatio‐temporal scales of a nonterritorial overwintering bird, the prothonotary warbler (Protonotaria citrea), that depends on mangroves and tropical lowland forests. Specifically, we (a) estimated within‐patch survival and persistence over a six‐week period using radio‐tagged birds in central Panama and (b) modeled abundance and occupancy dynamics at survey points throughout eastern Panama and northern Colombia as the dry season progressed. We found that site persistence was highest in mangroves; however, the probability of survival did not differ among habitats. The probability of warbler occupancy increased with canopy cover, and wet habitats were least likely to experience local extinction as the dry season progressed. We also found that warbler abundance is highest in forests with the tallest canopies. This study is one of the first to demonstrate habitat‐dependent occupancy and movement in a nonterritorial overwintering migrant songbird, and our findings highlight the need to conserve intact, mature mangrove, and lowland forests
    • 

    corecore