scholarly journals College submission to the Department of Health High Security Working Group: a summary

1994 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 185-185
Author(s):  
Peter Snowden ◽  
David Finnegan
2021 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 57-63
Author(s):  
Lotte Wilms ◽  
Caleb Derven ◽  
Merisa Martinez

How can European library staff working in digital humanities connect with peers in the library sector, determine where to find relevant information about digital scholarship, provide their collections as data and to be an equal partner in digital humanities research? The LIBER Digital Humanities Working Group was created as a participatory knowledge network in 2017 to address these questions. Through a series of workshops, knowledge sharing activities, and a Europe-wide survey and resulting report, the Working Group engaged with the international LIBER DH community. Useful reflections are provided on organising an open, voluntary DH community and planning for inclusive activities that benefit digital scholarship in European research libraries.


Gefahrstoffe ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 81 (01-02) ◽  
pp. 61-68
Author(s):  
Klaus Kersting ◽  
Johannes Geier ◽  
Andreas Hansen ◽  
Karin Heine ◽  
Marco Steinhausen ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Kontaktallergien durch die Inhaltsstoffe von Epoxidharzsystemen sind seit über 20 Jahren in vielen Branchen eine der häufigsten berufsbedingten allergischen Hauterkrankungen. Der Arbeitskreis Epoxidharze hat daher seit seiner Gründung im Jahr 2007 als branchenübergreifende, europäische Initiative unterschiedliche Strategien entwickelt, um das Erkrankungsrisiko zu verringern. Sie zielen einerseits auf die Verbesserung der Ausbildung und Arbeitshygiene ab, andererseits auf die medizinische und toxikologische Forschung zur Identifizierung von allergisierenden Epoxidharzkomponenten sowie die Förderung von Alternativen mit geringerem sensibilisierenden Potenzial.


2006 ◽  
Vol 88 (6) ◽  
pp. 579-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
DN Wood ◽  
A Deshpande ◽  
M Wijewardena ◽  
SS Gujral

INTRODUCTION As part of the NHS Plan the UK Department of Health has suggested that both patients and general practitioners (GPs) are written to following hospital consultations. We audited the responses of patients and GPs to this practice. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 160 patients in one consultant urologist's clinic were included. The consultant had never routinely copied GP letters to patients. The SpR in the same clinic had routinely done so in previous posts. Patients who had received letters (group A) and those who had not (group B) were asked to complete a postal questionnaire. GPs were also sent a questionnaire to assess their opinion. The responses were analysed. RESULTS Questionnaires were sent out to patients (80 to group A and 80 to group B. From this, 100 (62.5%) responses were received (A 48 [60%]; B 52 [65%]). Of respondents, 81% were male. Overall, 98% of those patients who received a letter agreed with its contents, and stated they would keep the letter and take it to a subsequent doctor's appointment. Of respondents, 83% (A) and 96% (B) had never received a doctor's letter before but 83% (40 [83%, A], 43 [83%, B]; P > 0.05) of respondents would like to receive doctors' letters in the future. some 22 GP practices received and completed questionnaires at a PCT meeting and 74% of GPs agreed with the practice of copying patients their letters. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study suggest that patients should be offered a copy of their letter and that their response should be documented in the notes. This may serve to improve communication with the patient but should not be undertaken without their agreement.


2000 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 336-337
Author(s):  
Eugene F. Milone ◽  
Roger A. Bell ◽  
Michael Bessell ◽  
Robert Garrison ◽  
Martin Cohen ◽  
...  

In 1988, a Joint Commission (9 and 25) meeting on the causes of the well-known limitations on the precision of infrared astronomy led to several suggestions to improve matters (see Milone 1989). These included better reporting of the photometric systems in use by practitioners, redesign of the infrared passbands to be more optimally placed inside the atmospheric windows, and development of a method to ascertain the water vapor content of the atmosphere when the astronomical infrared measurements were being made. An Infrared Astronomy Working Group was formed to look into the matter. Advice and suggestions were solicited from the community at large. All who volunteered information became, de facto, members of the Working Group. A small subgroup composed of Andrew Young, Chris Stagg, and Milone set to work on the central of the recommendations: improvement of the passbands. Young, Milone, k Stagg (1994) (hereafter YMS) summarized the work: existing JHKLMN and Q infrared passbands were found to be both far from standardized, and all too frequently defined, to various degrees, by the water vapor and other components of the terrestrial atmosphere. Following extensive numerical simulations with a MODTRAN 3 terrestrial-atmospheres model package, and Kurucz stellar atmospheres, we suggested a set of improved infrared passbands designed explicitly to fit within, and not be defined by, the terrestrial atmospheric windows; however, we sought to optimize them so as to get the maximum throughput consistent with plausible limitations on precision of manufacture of the filters. In 1995 and again in 1997, a number of improvements were made in the code with which the improved passbands were designed. While they do not much affect the optimization trials and thus the passband recommendations, they have been used to extend the modeling.


1998 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 788-795
Author(s):  
Robert Johnson ◽  
Christina Cheetham ◽  
Gerard H. Fisher ◽  
Anne Quinn ◽  
Dennis Smith

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