Community Monitoring and Crime: Evidence from Chicago's Safe Passage Program

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert M Gonzalez ◽  
Sarah Komisarow
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-40
Author(s):  
Christopher W. Blair ◽  
Erica Chenoweth ◽  
Michael C. Horowitz ◽  
Evan Perkoski ◽  
Philip B.K. Potter

Abstract Cooperation among militant organizations contributes to capability but also presents security risks. This is particularly the case when organizations face substantial repression from the state. As a consequence, for cooperation to emerge and persist when it is most valuable, militant groups must have means of committing to cooperation even when the incentives to defect are high. We posit that shared ideology plays this role by providing community monitoring, authority structures, trust, and transnational networks. We test this theory using new, expansive, time-series data on relationships between militant organizations from 1950 to 2016, which we introduce here. We find that when groups share an ideology, and especially a religion, they are more likely to sustain material cooperation in the face of state repression. These findings contextualize and expand upon research demonstrating that connections between violent nonstate actors strongly shape their tactical and strategic behavior.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. e001270
Author(s):  
Jonathan James Hyett Bray ◽  
Elin Fflur Lloyd ◽  
Firdaus Adenwalla ◽  
Sarah Kelly ◽  
Kathie Wareham ◽  
...  

BackgroundCommunity management of atrial fibrillation (AF) often requires the use of electrocardiographic (ECG) investigation. Patients discharged following treatment of AF with fast ventricular response (fast AF) can require numerous ECGs to monitor rate and/or rhythm control. Single-lead ECGs have been proposed as a more convenient and relatively accurate alternative to 12-lead ECGs for rate/rhythm management and also diagnosis of AF. We aimed to examine the feasibility of using the AliveCor single-lead ECG monitor for diagnosis and monitoring of AF in the community setting.MethodsDuring the course of 6 months, this evaluation of a clinical service improvement pathway used the AliveCor in management of patients requiring (1) follow-up ECGs for AF with previously documented rapid ventricular rate or (2) ECG confirmation of rhythm where AF was suspected. Twelve AliveCor devices provided to the acute community medical team were used to produce 30 s ECG rhythm strips (iECG) that were electronically sent to an overreading physician.ResultsSeventy-four patients (mean age 82 years) were managed on this pathway. (1) The AliveCor was successfully used to monitor the follow-up of 37 patients with fast AF, acquiring a combined total of 113 iECGs (median 1.5 ±3.75 per patient). None of these patients required a subsequent 12-lead ECG and this approach saved an estimate of up to £134.49 per patient. (2) Of 53 patients with abnormal pulses, the system helped identify 8 cases of new onset AF and 19 cases of previously known AF that had reverted from sinus back into AF.ConclusionsWe have demonstrated that the AliveCor system is a feasible, cost-effective, time-efficient and potentially safer alternative to serial 12-lead ECGs for community monitoring and diagnosis of AF.


2010 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-283
Author(s):  
Elisabeth Moy Martin ◽  
Louis French ◽  
Alicia Janos

1989 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 86-86

In the article by Parrott in the January 1989 issue of Pediatrics in Review, "Cystitis and Urethritis," Table 3 on page 222 outlined the 1982 MMWR guidelines for treatment of gonococcal urethritis. New guidelines were issued in 1985. Readers should check the revised schedules for details. Major changes include: (1) oral tetracycline alone is no longer acceptable therapy, (2) ceftriaxone (adult dose of 250 mg, IM) is one of the new acceptable regimens, and (3) the increasing incidence of penicillinase-producing Neisseria gonorrhoeae warrants community monitoring.


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