247 research outputs found

    Intersecting Worlds: Promoting Affordable Care Act Enrollment Through Community Tax-Preparation Programs

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    This report tells how four tax-preparation programs are breaking the mold and tackling the world of health care enrollment. Readers will learn the challenges and opportunities associated with such a move, which has the potential to help millions of low-income Americans take a critical first step toward a healthier future

    Beyond lump sum: periodic payment of the earned income tax credit

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    Earned income tax credit ; Poverty

    The supply of and demand for high-level STEM skills : briefing paper

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    Ten Years of the EITC Movement: Making Work Pay Then and Now

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    Examines the evolution and accomplishments of the movement to raise awareness of the Earned Income Tax Credit and other financial supports for low- and moderate-income working families and provide free tax preparation services

    Steve Holt, Sr. Papers, 1973-2018

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    Emotional intelligence and its role in recruitment of nursing students

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    This article considers the concept of emotional intelligence and how it can be used in the recruitment and development of nursing students. The links between emotional intelligence and the qualities of compassion and caring are examined. The ethical difficulties surrounding the use of emotional intelligence tests are explored and the value of using a variety of recruitment methods is emphasised. The article suggests that emotional intelligence is an ability which may be developed through nurse education programmes, even if not fully present at interview. The contribution of service users to the recruitment of nursing students is examined, suggesting that they offer some important observations about interviewees. These observations may be more valid than the insights gained from the use of emotional intelligence tests

    On-Ground Calibration and Optical Alignment for the Orion Optical Navigation Camera

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    The Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle on-board Navigation System will utilize the Optical Navigation measurements of the Moon and Earth during cis-lunar operations. Misalignment or an un-calibrated optical navigation camera may cause large measurement residuals in any on-board attitude determination and navigation system. Therefore, a novel estimation technique to calibrate the internal camera parameters, and a high accuracy optical alignment procedure to estimate the external camera alignment are introduced in this paper. The intrinsic camera parameters such as the focal length, the principle point offsets, and the camera lens distortion parameters will be estimated and evaluated using images of star fields. This calibration estimation technique can be used either on-ground or in flight. The proposed technique in this paper is using the discrepancy between imaged star vectors attained from the OpNav camera, and the matched star vectors from the star catalog to determine the changes in internal camera parameters. This gave rise to the two basic types of calibration the attitude dependent and attitude independent methods. The former utilizes the errors in imaged and cataloged vectors themselves, and the latter using the discrepancy in angles between pairs of vectors from the camera and catalog. The alignment procedure is carried out using Theodolite autocollimator measurements taken off alignment cubes mounted on the Orion frame and also the measurements from the OpNav focal plane. It is assumed that the alignment cubes and OpNav camera are rigidly mounted to the frame so that flexing effects do not significantly alter the orientation of the cubes relative to the OpNav camera

    Contracting with General Dental Services: a mixed-methods study on factors influencing responses to contracts in English general dental practice

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    Background: Independent contractor status of NHS general dental practitioners (GDPs) and general medical practitioners (GMPs) has meant that both groups have commercial as well as professional identities. Their relationship with the state is governed by a NHS contract, the terms of which have been the focus of much negotiation and struggle in recent years. Previous study of dental contracting has taken a classical economics perspective, viewing practitioners’ behaviour as a fully rational search for contract loopholes. We apply institutional theory to this context for the first time, where individuals’ behaviour is understood as being influenced by wider institutional forces such as growing consumer demands, commercial pressures and challenges to medical professionalism. Practitioners hold values and beliefs, and carry out routines and practices which are consistent with the field’s institutional logics. By identifying institutional logics in the dental practice organisational field, we expose where tensions exist, helping to explain why contracting appears as a continual cycle of reform and resistance. Aims: To identify the factors which facilitate and hinder the use of contractual processes to manage and strategically develop General Dental Services, using a comparison with medical practice to highlight factors which are particular to NHS dental practice. Methods: Following a systematic review of health-care contracting theory and interviews with stakeholders, we undertook case studies of 16 dental and six medical practices. Case study data collection involved interviews, observation and documentary evidence; 120 interviews were undertaken in all. We tested and refined our findings using a questionnaire to GDPs and further interviews with commissioners. Results: We found that, for all three sets of actors (GDPs, GMPs, commissioners), multiple logics exist. These were interacting and sometimes in competition. We found an emergent logic of population health managerialism in dental practice, which is less compatible than the other dental practice logics of ownership responsibility, professional clinical values and entrepreneurialism. This was in contrast to medical practice, where we found a more ready acceptance of external accountability and notions of the delivery of ‘cost-effective’ care. Our quantitative work enabled us to refine and test our conceptualisations of dental practice logics. We identified that population health managerialism comprised both a logic of managerialism and a public goods logic, and that practitioners might be resistant to one and not the other. We also linked individual practitioners’ behaviour to wider institutional forces by showing that logics were predictive of responses to NHS dental contracts at the dental chair-side (the micro level), as well as predictive of approaches to wider contractual relationships with commissioners (the macro level) . Conclusions: Responses to contracts can be shaped by environmental forces and not just determined at the level of the individual. In NHS medical practice, goals are more closely aligned with commissioning goals than in general dental practice. The optimal contractual agreement between GDPs and commissioners, therefore, will be one which aims at the ‘satisfactory’ rather than the ‘ideal’; and a ‘successful’ NHS dental contract is likely to be one where neither party promotes its self-interest above the other. Future work on opportunism in health care should widen its focus beyond the self-interest of providers and look at the contribution of contextual factors such as the relationship between the government and professional bodies, the role of the media, and providers’ social and professional networks. Funding: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme

    Understanding and Applying SAR to Ideological and Nation- State-Sponsored Cybercrimes

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    The use of computer hacking, malicious software, and other forms of cyberattacks against U.S. infrastructure has increased dramatically since the 1990s. Many of these attacks target corporations and individuals for instrumental economic gain, such as the theft of personal information for use in fraud. Ideologically motivated attacks also occur, though the degree to which they are understood or documented is generally limited. For instance, jihadi groups have expressed an interest in cyberattacks since the early 2000s (see Holt et al., 2022). Similarly, DHS (2009) noted in the late 2000s that they expected cyberattacks from environmental or animal liberation-focused groups to increase. Attacks not only originate from individual actors, but also from nation-state-sponsored actors who seek to further the political and economic interests of their governments

    Image Processing and Attitude Estimation Performance of Star Camera with Extended Bodies in the Field of View

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    To determine the attitude and the position of a spacecraft its orientation and location relative to some celestial reference frame must be defined. Attitude estimation is demonstrated with a star camera with extended bodies, such as a bright moon, in the field of view
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