Conclusion: Deflecting Colonial Canons and Cannons— Alternate Routes to Knowing Afghanistan

2020 ◽  
pp. 165-176
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 089590482110156
Author(s):  
Christopher Redding

Drawing on nationally representative data from six cohorts of beginning teachers from the Schools and Staffing Survey and the National Teacher and Principal Survey, this study applies a difference-in-differences research design to examine the relationship between changes to state-level alternative certification policies and the characteristics of new teachers. The introduction of alternate routes into teaching is associated with an increase in the fraction of new teachers of color in a state and the new teachers who graduated from selective colleges. No evidence was found of a relationship with the relative share of male teachers or teachers of in-demand subjects.


ChemInform ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (22) ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Haricharan Raju ◽  
C. Vijay Anand ◽  
P. K. Dubey ◽  
Palle V. R. Acharyulu
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanna M. Blodgett ◽  
Duncan Robertson ◽  
David Ratcliffe ◽  
Kenneth Rockwood

Purpose With the increasing demand on ambulance services, paramedics are tasked to arrange as much out of hospital care as possible, to develop integrated systems of care and work with hundreds of different providers – all in the 15 minutes allocated for assessment. A UK ambulance trust is navigating and leading much of this work as one of the first trusts to implement a general practitioner referral policy as an alternate to direct conveyance. The paper aims to discuss this issue. Design/methodology/approach Here the authors discuss the referral scheme, examine the limited evidence available and discuss what is needed to influence prospective success of implementing this scheme in other trusts. Findings Limited evidence for these schemes are described, however there is a clear gap in critical appraisal and methodologically rigorous evidence needed to implement these schemes in other ambulance schemes. Originality/value In order to facilitate collaboration of healthcare services and to minimize the burden of increasing numbers of patients, communication and discussion of alternate routes of care is crucial. This viewpoint piece is one of the first to emphasize the potential benefits of such schemes.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akin Kaldiroglu ◽  
Pushkin Kachroo ◽  
Kaan Ozbay

1983 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 21-41
Author(s):  
Gerald A. McBeath ◽  
Andrea R. C. Helms
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (15) ◽  
pp. 3608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hua Zhang ◽  
Dan Chalothorn ◽  
James E Faber

Collaterals are unique blood vessels present in the microcirculation of most tissues that, by cross-connecting a small fraction of the outer branches of adjacent arterial trees, provide alternate routes of perfusion. However, collaterals are especially susceptible to rarefaction caused by aging, other vascular risk factors, and mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease—a vulnerability attributed to the disturbed hemodynamic environment in the watershed regions where they reside. We examined the hypothesis that endothelial and smooth muscle cells (ECs and SMCs, respectively) of collaterals have specializations, distinct from those of similarly-sized nearby distal-most arterioles (DMAs) that maintain collateral integrity despite their continuous exposure to low and oscillatory/disturbed shear stress, high wall stress, and low blood oxygen. Examination of mouse brain revealed the following: Unlike the pro-inflammatory cobble-stoned morphology of ECs exposed to low/oscillatory shear stress elsewhere in the vasculature, collateral ECs are aligned with the vessel axis. Primary cilia, which sense shear stress, are present, unexpectedly, on ECs of collaterals and DMAs but are less abundant on collaterals. Unlike DMAs, collaterals are continuously invested with SMCs, have increased expression of Pycard, Ki67, Pdgfb, Angpt2, Dll4, Ephrinb2, and eNOS, and maintain expression of Klf2/4. Collaterals lack tortuosity when first formed during development, but tortuosity becomes evident within days after birth, progresses through middle age, and then declines—results consistent with the concept that collateral wall cells have a higher turnover rate than DMAs that favors proliferative senescence and collateral rarefaction. In conclusion, endothelial and SMCs of collaterals have morphologic and functional differences from those of nearby similarly sized arterioles. Future studies are required to determine if they represent specializations that counterbalance the disturbed hemodynamic, pro-inflammatory, and pro-proliferative environment in which collaterals reside and thus mitigate their risk factor-induced rarefaction.


Author(s):  
Isam Kaysi ◽  
Nadine Hage Ali

The role that advanced traveler information systems (ATISs) are likely to play in alleviating traffic congestion is explored. The impacts of and benefits from traveler guidance systems that are based on instantaneous as well as predictive information are assessed by developing an analytical formulation for a simple prototypical network. Previous research introducing day-to-day flow variability with both compliance and market-penetration considerations is reviewed, and the case in which traffic flow varies within the day is developed. Two strategies for determining route-guidance directives are considered in the case of predictive information. Also, the integration of ATIS and traffic control through open-loop coordination measures is introduced, with the objective of finding the optimal signal control to maintain user equilibrium on alternate routes. The superiority of predictive information in maintaining guidance validity and mitigating the potential adverse impacts of information is demonstrated.


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