scholarly journals VOLUNTEERED GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION (VGI) AND ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING, A NEW APPROACH IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Author(s):  
M. Manouchehri ◽  
M. Kiavarz Moghaddam

Increasing world population and unprecedented expansion of urbanization in the world has caused many environmental problems. The relationship between man and the environment is bidirectional one that have great short-term and long-term impacts on the cities and regions. The best way to deal with it is the participation of the people themselves. The use of new technologies has now become one of the most important methods for monitoring the environment that can increase the participation of citizens, improving environmental problems to provide the cheapest and the most accessible form. Developing countries such as Iran, which faces enormous environmental problems are suitable for the development of technological methods of monitoring. Large population and citizens’ participation feasibility using VGI can have a positive effect on developing countries. Finally, by using F-VGI that ensures the validity and accuracy of data we can access an appropriate platform that leads us to suitable model for environment monitoring in the form of the application.

1978 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 549-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Garmany

This article discusses some of the issues involved in the choice of technology in developing countries, especially those in Africa, and the relationship of this to employment and output. The problem is to find an optimum combination of productive resources that comes nearest to satisfying two objectives: the full and economically efficient utilisation of such resources, and the creation of as much surplus as possible over current consumption, thereby making possible new investment and long-term growth.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Saif Ali ◽  

Vaccine considered as a boon for every individual across the world in the time of pandemic situation. India has developed its own vaccine which shows promising results. Receiving vaccine does not mean that we are completely immune to the disease. Covishield shows some rare but adverse side effects of blood clots in those people having thrombocytopenia. Covaxin has not recorded any such cases as it is of inactivated type. But, the manufacturers of the vaccine have not established the longevity of protection against COVID-19. Unavailability of vaccines in India could pose a serious impact on the lives of the people. Government of India and Medical authorities should take clinical trials and make decision on interchangeability of vaccines as soon as possible.


2020 ◽  
pp. 002076402093548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Shahed Mahmud ◽  
Mesbah Uddin Talukder ◽  
Sk. Mahrufur Rahman

Background: Due to the outbreak of COVID-19, the mental health of the people all around the world is severely disrupted. Aim: The purpose of this study is to identify whether ‘Fear of COVID-19’ impacted on future workforces’ career anxiety at the first place and whether depression from COVID-19 has any indirect effect on ‘Fear of COVID-19’ and future workforces’ career anxiety. Method: Based on three different scales related to ‘Fear of COVID-19’, depression and career anxiety, a structured questionnaire was developed and the survey data was collected for this study. Results: The empirical result of the study reveals that, due to the outbreak of COVID-19 fear, the future workforce is getting anxious about their future career. Again, depression from COVID-19, caused by ‘Fear of COVID-19’, as a mediator, has a significant indirect impact on the relationship between ‘Fear of COVID-19’ and future career anxiety, resulting in a full mediation. This means, due to the outbreak of ‘Fear of COVID-19’ people are becoming depressed and anxious about their future career which is creating a long-term negative effect on human psychology. Conclusion: These research findings will be a major tool for the policymakers, as well as the human resource planning professionals, to sketch plans after COVID-19 pandemic. This study is a novel work combining the concepts of fear and depression with career anxiety in a pandemic situation like COVID-19, and also assists future researchers in many folds.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F Zanon ◽  
E Menardi ◽  
E Ammendola ◽  
P De Filippo ◽  
M Manzo ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device (CIED) surgery is threatened by serious complications both during the procedure and during follow-up. The factors associated to attenuated clinical benefit over long term follow-up are poorly understood. Purpose To evaluate type and extent of Adverse Events (AEs) and potential predictors of major AEs over 12 months after ICD/CRT-D replacement/upgrade in a contemporary Italian population. Methods Detect long-term complications after ICD replacement (DECODE) was a prospective, single-arm, multicenter cohort study aimed at estimating medium- to long-term complications in a large population of patients (pts) who underwent ICD/CRT-D replacement/upgrade from 2013 to 2015. The endpoint for this analysis is death from any cause, procedure-related infection, and surgical actions/hospitalizations necessary to treat the AEs. Results We included 983 consecutive pts (median age 71 years, 76% male, 55% ischemic, 47% CRT-D). During a mean follow-up duration of 353±49 days, 7% of the pts died. A total of 104 AEs occurred in 70 (7.1%) pts. 43 (4.4%) pts needed at least one surgical action to treat the AEs. A total of 23 (2.3%) pts had infective AEs (CIED related in 12 pts, due to other causes in 11). Mortality was unrelated to the occurrence of overall AEs, or of CIED-related AEs, or of surgical actions/hospitalizations needed to correct AEs. The endpoint was reached by 109 (11%) pts over 12-month follow-up (97 pts had a single event, and 12 pts had two events). The median time to the endpoint was 137 [50 - 254] days. On multivariate Cox regression analysis adjusted for baseline confounders, ischemic cardiomyopathy (HR = 1.86, 95% CI: 1.18 to 2.91; p=0.0076), hospitalization prior to the procedure (2.34, 1.35 to 4.05; 0.0025) and anticoagulation (1.91, 1.25 to 2.92; 0.0032) were associated with the endpoint during follow-up. Conclusion Evaluation of the patient's profile may assist in predicting vulnerability and should prompt reconsideration of the procedure by deferring at a more stable clinical status, and carefully individualized in the setting of upgrades and anticoagulation management Acknowledgement/Funding None


Author(s):  
Kujtim Mustafa ◽  
Isak Shabani

<p>We are living in the era of internet and smartphones. Almost everybody in developing countries has at least one smartphone or connection to the internet through any other mobile device. So developing mobile software for the people or government is a big chance to make people life easier. The time has become a very important factor for which you can’t even pay for extra time, so making life easier for those people who don’t have time is big chance not losing it. All the data that are generated from the software or services is the best match to store those data on cloud, with which we don’t care about privacy and protection, availability to access them, manipulation of them and so on. In this paper, we describe how this newly emerged paradigm of cloud computing can be helpful for mobile e-Governance. Using cloud of course has a cost, but if you can’t give the same conditions that cloud gives, it is best choice to store the data on cloud. If we use cloud you don’t have to pay for all the IT staff who cares about the data, servers, databases, networks, with those money you can pay for cloud services. We start by an introduction about the cloud and e-Government, continuing with what the benefits and challenges of the e-Government and cloud are computing, the relationship of e-Government and cloud computing, mobile e-Governance in cloud and some examples of some countries that are using mobile e-Government in cloud. <br />Keywords: e-Government, e-Governance, Cloud Computing, Mobile, Data Storage</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
P.D Ziegler ◽  
J.D Rogers ◽  
M Richards ◽  
A.J Nichols ◽  
S.W Ferreira ◽  
...  

Abstract Background/Introduction The primary goal of monitoring for atrial fibrillation (AF) after cryptogenic stroke (CS) is secondary stroke prevention. Therefore, long-term monitoring of CS patients with insertable cardiac monitors (ICMs) is likely important to ensure appropriate secondary stroke prevention therapy, regardless of when AF is detected after the index event. However, long-term data on the incidence and duration of AF from real-world populations are sparse. Purpose To investigate the long-term incidence and duration of AF episodes in real-world clinical practice among a large population of patients with ICMs placed for AF detection following CS. Methods We included patients from a large device manufacturer's database who received an ICM for the purpose of AF detection following CS and were monitored for up to 3 years. All detected AF episodes (≥2 minutes) were adjudicated. We quantified the AF detection rate for various episode duration thresholds using Kaplan-Meier survival estimates, analyzed the maximum duration of AF episodes, and measured the time to initial AF detection. Results A total of 1247 patients (65.3±13.0 years, 53% male) were included and followed for 763±362 days. AF episodes (n=5456) were detected in 257 patients, resulting in a median frequency of 5 episodes [IQR 2–19] per patient. At 3 years, the AF detection rate for episodes ≥2 minutes was 24.2%. The AF detection rates at 3 years for episodes ≥6 minutes, ≥30 minutes, and ≥1 hour were 22.4%, 20.6%, and 19.1%, respectively. The median duration of the longest detected AF episode was 4.4 [IQR 1.2–13.9] hours and the median time to AF detection was 129 [IQR 45–354] days. Conclusion AF episodes were detected via ICMs in approximately one-quarter of CS patients within 3 years of follow-up. More than 75% of patients with AF detected had episodes lasting ≥1 hour and half had episodes lasting ≥4 hours. Detection of the first AF episode typically occurred beyond the range of conventional ambulatory monitors. Long-term surveillance of CS patients is likely important given the appreciable incidence, frequency, and duration of these AF episodes. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 549-572
Author(s):  
Themis Chronopoulos

Abstract This article explores the relationship between gentrification and racial segregation in Brooklyn, New York with an emphasis on Black Brooklyn. With more than 2.6 million residents, if Brooklyn was a city, it would be the fourth largest in the USA. Brooklyn is the home of approximately 788,000 Blacks with almost 692,000 of them living in an area that historian Harold X. Connolly has called Black Brooklyn. In recent decades, large portions of Brooklyn, including parts of Black Brooklyn have been gentrifying with sizable numbers of whites moving to traditionally Black neighborhoods. One would anticipate racial segregation to be declining in Brooklyn and especially in the areas that are gentrifying. However, this expectation of racial desegregation appears to be false. While there are declines in indices of racial segregation, these declines are frequently marginal, especially when the increase in the number of whites in Black neighborhoods is taken into consideration. At the same time, gentrification has contributed to the displacement or replacement of thousands of long-term African American residents from their homes. This persistence of racial segregation in a time of gentrification raises many questions about the two processes and the effects that they have on African Americans.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Saif Ali ◽  

Vaccine considered as a boon for every individual across the world in the time of pandemic situation. India has developed its own vaccine which shows promising results. Receiving vaccine does not mean that we are completely immune to the disease. Covishield shows some rare but adverse side effects of blood clots in those people having thrombocytopenia. Covaxin has not recorded any such cases as it is of inactivated type. But, the manufacturers of the vaccine have not established the longevity of protection against COVID-19. Unavailability of vaccines in India could pose a serious impact on the lives of the people. Government of India and Medical authorities should take clinical trials and make decision on interchangeability of vaccines as soon as possible.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Abu Saleh Mohammad Sowad

Being a multidimensional phenomenon, it is hard to confine poverty within any definitive parameters and even harder to send the word poverty back to dictionary. Poverty eradication needs both short and long term strategic interventions; policies regarding employment opportunities should also be planned in such way. As an economic strategy, deregulation targets to eliminate the regulating authorities of labour market and decrease the interference of legal aspects within the relationship between companies and individuals to a minimum level with a great decline in the cases of collective bargaining. Labour market deregulation creates ample employment opportunities for poor people especially women. This paper looks for an effective and efficient way to alleviate poverty between Urban Labour Market Deregulation and the development of micro-enterprises with a sketch of possibilities and vulnerabilities of both approaches and a comparative approach to find the best possible way within these two to remove poverty's shadow from humankind.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raghav Sriram

Frédéric Docquier, professor of Economics at Université Catholique de Louvain and researcher in migration and its economic effects, defines the “brain drain effect” as the transfer and migration of highly educated individuals from developing to developed countries. While the brain drain effect does present concern for richer more developed countries in terms of the native population’s job security and employment, it has a much more detrimental effect on poorer developing countries1 Once a high-skilled professional migrates out of their developing country after the time and money put in their training, they pay no taxes back to their home country and overall contribute no economic benefit.1 Furthermore, this can lead to shortages of manpower in certain professions due to the disproportionally large population of health professionals and engineers who emigrate, undermining a country’s ability to adopt new technologies and limits a developing nation’s growth potential. In 2010 there were 27.3 million foreign-born workers with higher education living in countries part of the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) with two-thirds of these high-skilled immigrants coming from developing countries, a 70% increase in ten years. This increase comes despite developing countries efforts in establishing and investing in infrastructure and education and the promotion of incentives to attract back high-skilled immigrants to their home countries.In many Middle Eastern countries, higher education fails to address the domestic issues within its country but rather the problems in other societies leading to an unfit workforce and the migration of thousands. Seeing as the effects of brain drain in developing countries are growing each year, changes must be made within post-secondary education in developing countries in order to retain a higher percentage of high-skilled educated persons.


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