Drivers of compliance monitoring in forest commons

Author(s):  
Graham Epstein ◽  
Georgina Gurney ◽  
Sivee Chawla ◽  
John M. Anderies ◽  
Jacopo Baggio ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 24 (04) ◽  
pp. 215-218
Author(s):  
B. Obermayer-Pietsch ◽  
V. Schwetz

ZusammenfassungKnochenumbauparameter können zusätzliche Informationen zur Abschätzung der Dynamik des Knochenstoffwechsels in der Osteoporosediagnostik nebst Knochendichte, den klinischen Daten und Routine-Laborparametern liefern. Zu den Aufbaumarkern des Knochenstoffwechsels zählen Prokollagen Typ 1 N-terminales Propeptid (P1NP), die knochenspezifische alkalische Phosphatase (bALP) und Osteokalzin (OC), zu den Abbaumarkern des Knochenstoffwechsels gehören Pyridinolin (PYD) und Desoxypyridinolin (DPD), N-terminales Kollagen-Typ-I-Telopeptid (NTX) und C-terminales Kollagen-Typ-ITelopeptid (CTX), β-CrossLaps (β-CTX), die Tartrat-resistent saure Phosphatase (TRAP5b) sowie Cathepsin K. Das Einsatzgebiet liegt vor allem in der Verlaufsbeurteilung nach Einleitung einer Osteoporosetherapie und im Compliance-Monitoring. Knochenumbaumarker stellen jedoch derzeit keine alleinige Entscheidungsgrundlage zur Initiierung einer Therapie dar. In der Hämatoonkologie scheinen hohe Knochenabbaumarker mit einem höheren Rezidivrisiko bzw. einem höheren Risiko für skelettassoziierte Ereignisse verbunden zu sein.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Burright ◽  
G. Schultz ◽  
Y. Chan ◽  
M. Eide ◽  
C. Elskamp ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 406-424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maryam Kriese ◽  
Joshua Yindenaba Abor ◽  
Elikplimi Agbloyor

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the moderating role of financial consumer protection (FCP) in the access–development nexus. Design/methodology/approach The study is based on cross-country data on 102 countries surveyed in the World Bank Global Survey on FCP and Financial Literacy (2013). The White heteroscedasticity adjusted regressions and Two-stage least squares regressions (2SLS) are used for the estimation. Findings Interactions between FCP regulations that foster fair treatment, disclosure, dispute resolution and recourse and financial access have positive net effects on economic development. However, there is no sufficient evidence to suggest that interactions between financial access and enforcement and compliance monitoring regulations have a significant effect on economic development. Practical implications First, policy makers should continue with efforts aimed at instituting FCP regimes as part of strategies aimed at broadening access to financial services for enhanced economic development. Second, instituting FCP regimes per se may not be enough. Policy makers need to consider possible intervening factors such as the provision of adequate resources and supervisory authority, for compliance monitoring and enforcement to achieve the expected positive effect on economic development. Originality/value This study extends evidence in the law–finance–growth literature by providing empirical evidence on the effect of legal institution specific to the protection of retail financial consumers on the access–development nexus using a nouvel data set, the World Bank Global survey on FCP and Financial Literacy (2013).


2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Krenn

Purpose – The purpose of this article is to explain under what circumstances firm-level adoption of codes of good corporate governance will more likely be superficial rather than substantive in nature. The article contains lessons for any agency or country that attempts to implement deep and lasting changes in corporate governance via codes of good corporate governance. Design/methodology/approach – The article reviews the literature on compliance with codes of good corporate governance and develops a conceptual model to explain why some firms that have formally adopted a code of good governance decouple this policy from its actual use. Findings – Decoupling in response to the issuance of codes of good corporate governance will be more attractive to firms and also more sustainable under the following conditions: firms’ compliance costs are relatively high firms’ costs of outright and visible non-compliance are relatively high and outsiders’ compliance monitoring costs are relatively high. Originality/value – The article contributes to the debate on compliance and convergence and provides policymakers with a conceptual framework for assessing the likelihood of successful regulatory change in corporate governance.


2018 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. 61-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Meroni ◽  
Luciano Baresi ◽  
Marco Montali ◽  
Pierluigi Plebani

2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 385-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Marcel Hermann ◽  
Can Üstündag ◽  
Michael Diestelhorst

2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 116-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Jeanes ◽  
J Dick ◽  
P Coen ◽  
N Drey ◽  
DJ Gould

Background: Hand hygiene compliance scores in the anaesthetic department of an acute NHS hospital were persistently low. Aims: To determine the feasibility and validity of regular accurate measurement of HHC in anaesthetics and understand the context of care delivery, barriers and opportunities to improve compliance. Methods: The hand hygiene compliance of one anaesthetist was observed and noted by a senior infection control practitioner (ICP). This was compared to the World Health Organization five moments of hand hygiene and the organisation hand hygiene tool. Findings: In one sequence of 55 min, there were approximately 58 hand hygiene opportunities. The hand hygiene compliance rate was 16%. The frequency and speed of actions in certain periods of care delivery made compliance measurement difficult and potentially unreliable. During several activities, taking time to apply alcohol gel or wash hands would have put the patients at significant risk. Discussion: We concluded that hand hygiene compliance monitoring by direct observation was invalid and unreliable in this specialty. It is important that hand hygiene compliance is optimal in anaesthetics particularly before patient contact. Interventions which reduce environmental and patient contamination, such as cleaning the patient and environment, could ensure anaesthetists encounter fewer micro-organisms in this specialty.


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