scholarly journals Administrative Responsibilities for Violation of Requirements for Wastes Management

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Vladimir Seleznev
2007 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 125-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Becker ◽  
J. Aerts ◽  
D. Huitema

An appropriate institutional set up is essential for efficient transboundary flood management in the Rhine basin, particularly in view of future uncertainties like climate change. Flood management factors are identified based on a historical comparison in the Netherlands and Germany. They include differences in the perception of the problem and how to solve it; in the understanding of key items and how to address them; in administrative responsibilities and the political will to act. Suggestions are made to improve cooperation, in particular to generate a common problem perception and problem analysis, to develop a common vision for future flood strategies and to create a network of discussion platforms to promote social learning and to prepare, decide and implement flood management issues.


Author(s):  
Ines Mergel

AbstractDigital transformation of the German public sector is embedded in a large-scale reform focussing on digitalisation and de-bureaucratisation of public services. By 2022, 575 public services will have been digitised. Digitalisation is, however, a contested topic in Germany: modernisation efforts have been stalled resulting in backlogs and the delay of IT consolidation of outdated legacy systems. At the same time, however, innovation pockets are emerging across all levels of government. The chapter first provides an overview of the legal basis of digital transformation, centralised and decentralised organisational embeddedness of administrative responsibilities and then highlights insights into selected implementation cases.


2015 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Babak Sarani ◽  
Christine Toevs ◽  
Julie Mayglothling ◽  
Lewis J. Kaplan

There will be a 46 per cent shortage of intensivists by 2030. Currently, only 3 per cent of U.S. critical care is provided by surgeon-intensivists. Measurement of the current workload is needed to understand the ramifications of the expected shortage of surgeon-intensivists. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the self-reported workload of U.S. surgeon-intensivists. Over a 2-month period, a voluntary and anonymous survey of the surgery section of the Society of Critical Care Medicine was performed using Survey Monkey. Only surgeons were invited to participate. We assessed personnel resources and surgeon-intensivists workload in the intensive care unit (ICU) and on their postcall day. Two hundred sixty-two persons responded. Sixty-nine per cent had administrative responsibilities and 42 per cent covered bed allocation/transfer center duties while in the ICU. Seventy-six per cent covered trauma and general surgery call and 72 per cent covered the outpatient clinic or had elective surgery cases while responsible for the ICU. Only 14 per cent had no other responsibilities. Twenty-one per cent did not round with residents and 50 per cent did not round with a fellow. Thirty-six per cent did not work with advanced practitioners. The majority of surgeon-intensivists have significant responsibilities in addition to providing ICU care. This workload should be factored into the expected shortage of surgical intensivists relative to the expected increase in critical care demand.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. IPK04
Author(s):  
Hua Li

Biography: Hua Li is currently a Bioanalytical Research Scientist in the NBE Pharmacokinetics Group in the Biotherapeutics Discovery Department at Boehringer Ingelheim (CT, USA). She earned her MA in molecular, cellular and developmental biology from the University of Kansas (KS, USA). While pursuing her master’s degree, she worked as a research assistant on Caenorhabditis elegans genetics. After graduation, she started my career as a research associate and laboratory manager at the Stem Cell Center of Yale University (CT, USA). Her main roles included investigating the essential proteins that play a critical role in the division and differentiation of mouse testes stem cells, as well as administrative responsibilities for a laboratory of around 12 people including graduate students, post-docs and laboratory technician. Since 2008, her career has been focusing on the quantitation of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics study of protein therapeutics. Over the past 12 years, she has witnessed a tremendous expansion of new technologies, devices and theories in the pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics field, all of which have helped us better serve the patient community all over the world. Hua Li speaks to the International Journal of Pharmacokinetics about the use of volumetric absorptive microsampling in pharmacokinetic studies and their methodology on the application of Mitra® microsampling for pharmacokinetic bioanalysis of monoclonal antibodies in rats.


1956 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 248-255

Alexander Oliver Rankine was born at Guildford in 1881, the son of the Rev. John Rankine, a Baptist minister. Both his father and mother were of Scottish descent. He had one brother and two sisters. He was educated at the Royal Grammar School, Guildford, after a period at a Board School. From Guildford he went with a county major scholarship to University College London, where he graduated with first class honours in physics in 1904. In 1910 he became a D.Sc. of the University. He was assistant in the Department of Physics in University College from 1904 to 1919, except for a period of war service from 1917-1918. He worked then under W. H. Bragg (later Sir William) first at Aberdour on the Firth of Forth, then at Harwich as Deputy Resident Director under Professor (then Colonel) A. S. Eve, and finally as Director of a new station at Dartmouth, or rather Kingswear. This involved some administrative responsibilities, and he showed tact and ability in handling the problems in war-time of an experimental station concerned with getting scientific gear into service. His main personal research contribution was a device, called the Photophone, for transmitting speech by means of a beam of light, but he also worked on acoustic and electromagnetic means of submarine detection. For his work in the War he received the O.B.E. Soon after the end of the War, in 1919, he was appointed Professor of Physics at Imperial College, South Kensington, in succession to Lord Rayleigh, this was the second chair in the department, Callendar holding the first. However, when Professor F. J. Cheshire retired in 1925 from the post of Director of the Technical Optics Department, Rankine was appointed to that post, which he held until 1931 when the Technical Optics Department was amalgamated with that of Physics, and he returned to his former position.


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