response readiness
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Author(s):  
Goutam Roy ◽  
Rasel Babu ◽  
Md. Abul Kalam ◽  
Nowreen Yasmin ◽  
Tata Zafar ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gina Massuda Barnett ◽  
Millka Baetcke ◽  
Grace Castillo ◽  
Christina R. Welter


Author(s):  
Michael Ziccardi ◽  
J.D. Bergeron ◽  
B. Louise Chilvers ◽  
Adam Grogan ◽  
Charlie Hebert ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT In 2015, an ambitious wildlife response preparedness project was initiated; funded as part of the post-Macondo IPIECA-IOGP (International Association of Oil and Gas Producers) Oil Spill Response Joint Industry Project (OSR-JIP). The Global Oiled Wildlife Response System (GOWRS) Project, which involved 11 leading wildlife response organizations from seven countries, aimed to develop an international framework for oiled wildlife response as well as encourage the further development of wildlife response preparedness by industry and other stakeholders. This paper will provide an overview and assessment of the key outcomes of both the JIP-funded phase of the project (2015-16; development of internationally agreed standards and common operating procedures) and the second industry-funded phase (2017-18; focused on response readiness) in order to provide key background information to support the movement towards operationalizing the system.



2020 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 189-197
Author(s):  
Insil Jang ◽  
Ji‐Su Kim ◽  
Jungsun Lee ◽  
Yeji Seo




2020 ◽  
pp. 089011712093790 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret Lowenstein ◽  
Rachel Feuerstein-Simon ◽  
Roxanne Dupuis ◽  
Allison Herens ◽  
Jeffrey Hom ◽  
...  

Purpose: To evaluate an overdose response training program in public libraries. Design: Mixed methods evaluation including pre- and post-intervention questionnaires and debriefing interviews. Setting: Ten Philadelphia public libraries. Sample: Overdose response training participants (library staff and community members). Intervention: Public, hour-long overdose response trainings run by the Philadelphia Department of Public Health, the Free Library of Philadelphia, and the University of Pennsylvania between March and December 2018. Measures: Questionnaires assessed motivation for attending trainings, overdose response readiness, and intention to acquire and carry naloxone. Debriefing interviews elicited training feedback. Analysis: We assessed changes in overdose response readiness and intention to carry naloxone and performed thematic analysis on interview data. Results: At 29 trainings, 254 people attended, of whom 203 (80%) completed questionnaires and 23 were interviewed. 30% of participants had witnessed an overdose, but only 3% carried naloxone at baseline. Following training, overdose response readiness and intention to acquire/carry naloxone improved significantly ( P < .01). Interviewees nonetheless noted that they experienced barriers to naloxone acquisition, including cost, stigma, and concern regarding future insurability. Trainings subsequently included naloxone distribution. Interviewees reported that public libraries were welcoming, nonstigmatizing venues. Conclusion: In Philadelphia, library-based overdose response trainings were well-attended and reached a population with prior overdose encounters. Similar trainings could be deployed as a scalable overdose prevention strategy in the nation’s 16 568 public libraries.



2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Albayay ◽  
Umberto Castiello ◽  
Valentina Parma

AbstractWhether emotional stimuli influence both response readiness and inhibition is highly controversial. Visual emotional stimuli appear to interfere with both under certain conditions (e.g., task relevance). Whether the effect is generalisable to salient yet task-irrelevant stimuli, such as odours, remains elusive. We tested the effect of orthonasally-presented pleasant (orange) and unpleasant odours (trimethyloxazole and hexenol) and clean air as a control on response inhibition. In emotional Go/No-Go paradigms, we manipulated the intertrial interval and ratios of Go/No-Go trials to account for motor (Experiment 1, N = 31) and cognitive (Experiment 2, N = 29) response inhibition processes. In Experiment 1, participants had greater difficulty in withholding and produced more accurate and faster Go responses under the pleasant vs. the control condition. Faster Go responses were also evident in the unpleasant vs. the control condition. In Experiment 2, neither pleasant nor unpleasant odours modulated action withholding, but both elicited more accurate and faster Go responses as compared to the control condition. Pleasant odours significantly impair action withholding (as compared to the control condition), indicating that more inhibitory resources are required to elicit successful inhibition in the presence of positive emotional information. This modulation was revealed for the motor aspect of response inhibition (fast-paced design with lower Go/No-Go trial ratio) rather than for attentional interference processes. Response readiness is critically impacted by the emotional nature of the odour (but not by its valence). Our findings highlight that the valence of task-irrelevant odour stimuli is a factor significantly influencing response inhibition.



2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 7-11
Author(s):  
Igor Jokanovic ◽  
Dragana Zeljić

Most of the climate and natural hazards are closely related to design, construction and maintenance, and have to be effectively transferred to practice of management agencies and maintenance companies. The paper presents a general assessment of the management and organizational bases for conducting actions during emergency events for entities in the region that are the most important link in the whole chain - road maintenance companies.



2019 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. 23-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongchun Wang ◽  
Ya Li ◽  
Dawei Liu ◽  
Meng Zou ◽  
Baoqiang Zhang ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  


Author(s):  
Zheng Ma ◽  
Kati Kuusinen ◽  
Mikkel Baun Kjærgaard ◽  
Bo Nørregaard Jørgensen

Retail buildings can provide energy flexibility to the grid with the possibility of load shifting and building automation systems. Demand response is a collective innovation in the smart grid domain. Various stakeholders should be involved in the demand response activities to ensure the success. The owners or senior management of retail buildings need to consider the stakeholders who are directly influenced by the demand response participation, e.g. customers and employees. Meanwhile, demand response activities are influenced by various factors, such as energy market structure, policy, etc. Therefore, this paper investigates the demand response readiness for retail buildings with three aspects: energy control preferences, stakeholder engagement, and cross-national differences. A questionnaire is designed and collected with store managers in Denmark (N=51) and the Philippines (N=36). The result shows that: 1) retail stores are much readier to participate in the implicit demand response by manual energy control compared to the utility control or building automation. Meanwhile, store managers have significant concerns about business activities and indoor lighting compared to other aspects; 2) the statistically significant influential factors for retail stores to participate in the demand response are related to whether the DR participation matches the company goals, influences business operation, &nbsp;and whether retail stores are lack of related knowledge; 3) retail stores believe that stakeholders should be informed about the DR activities but not involved in; 4) there are significant differences regarding the energy control preferences and concerns between retail stores in Denmark and the Philippines, but no significant difference regarding the stakeholder engagement.



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