Standard

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Standard

  • acceptable standard
  • accounting standard
  • astm standard
  • auditing standard
  • clinical standard
  • common standard
  • criterion standard
  • current gold standard
  • current standard
  • driving standard
  • external standard
  • global standard
  • gold standard
  • golden standard
  • high standard
  • internal standard
  • international standard
  • iso standard
  • local standard
  • minimum standard
  • national standard
  • new gold standard
  • new standard
  • performance standard
  • proposed standard
  • quality standard
  • reference standard
  • reporting standard
  • water standard

  • Terms modified by Standard

  • standard addition
  • standard addition method
  • standard agent
  • standard algorithm
  • standard algorithms
  • standard amount
  • standard analysis
  • standard approach
  • standard assumption
  • standard automate perimetry
  • standard cardiopulmonary bypass
  • standard care
  • standard chemotherapy
  • standard classification
  • standard clinical examination
  • standard clinical practice
  • standard cmo process
  • standard compound
  • standard concentration
  • standard condition
  • standard configuration
  • standard control
  • standard criterioN
  • standard culture condition
  • standard curve
  • standard curve range
  • standard definition
  • standard design
  • standard deviation
  • standard deviation increase
  • standard deviation score
  • standard deviation unit
  • standard deviation value
  • standard diagnosis
  • standard diagnostic criterioN
  • standard diagnostic procedure
  • standard diet
  • standard dose
  • standard drink
  • standard drug
  • standard ecg
  • standard echocardiography
  • standard electrocardiography
  • standard element
  • standard endoscope
  • standard endoscopy
  • standard english
  • standard enthalpy
  • standard error
  • standard error estimate
  • standard erythema dose
  • standard fashion
  • standard finite element
  • standard finite element method
  • standard form
  • standard format
  • standard formula
  • standard formulation
  • standard genetic distance
  • standard group
  • standard growth condition
  • standard guideline
  • standard immunohistochemistry
  • standard indication
  • standard industrial classification
  • standard interferon
  • standard interpretation
  • standard k
  • standard laboratory test
  • standard laparoscopic approach
  • standard length
  • standard management
  • standard material
  • standard meal
  • standard mean
  • standard measure
  • standard measurement
  • standard medical therapy
  • standard medium
  • standard metabolic rate
  • standard method
  • standard methodology
  • standard methods
  • standard mixture
  • standard model
  • standard models
  • standard molar enthalpy
  • standard nomenclature
  • standard number
  • standard operating procedure
  • standard panel
  • standard parsimony
  • standard pattern
  • standard pc
  • standard pcr
  • standard peptide
  • standard population
  • standard potential
  • standard practice
  • standard problem
  • standard procedure
  • standard process
  • standard protein
  • standard protocol
  • standard question
  • standard questionnaire
  • standard radiograph
  • standard recommendation
  • standard reference
  • standard reference material
  • standard regimen
  • standard regression
  • standard resolution
  • standard result
  • standard sample
  • standard scale
  • standard score
  • standard series
  • standard set
  • standard setting
  • standard software
  • standard solution
  • standard specifications
  • standard specimen
  • standard statistical methods
  • standard statistical software
  • standard statistical techniques
  • standard strain
  • standard system
  • standard technique
  • standard techniques
  • standard technology
  • standard templates
  • standard test
  • standard test problem
  • standard theory
  • standard therapy
  • standard threshold
  • standard tool
  • standard treatment
  • standard treatment modality
  • standard triple therapy
  • standard uncertainty
  • standard unit
  • standard uptake value
  • standard used
  • standard value
  • standard way

  • Selected Abstracts


    DEFINING STANDARD OF CARE IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD: THE INTERSECTION OF INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH ETHICS AND HEALTH SYSTEMS ANALYSIS

    DEVELOPING WORLD BIOETHICS, Issue 2 2005
    ADNAN A. HYDER
    ABSTRACT In recent years there has been intense debate regarding the level of medical care provided to ,standard care' control groups in clinical trials in developing countries, particularly when the research sponsors come from wealthier countries. The debate revolves around the issue of how to define a standard of medical care in a country in which many people are not receiving the best methods of medical care available in other settings. In this paper, we argue that additional dimensions of the standard of care have been hitherto neglected, namely, the structure and efficiency of the national health system. The health system affects locally available medical care in two important ways: first, the system may be structured to provide different levels of care at different sites with referral mechanisms to direct patients to the appropriate level of care. Second, inefficiencies in this system may influence what care is available in a particular locale. As a result of these two factors locally available care cannot be equated with a national ,standard'. A reasonable approach is to define the national standard of care as the level of care that ought to be delivered under conditions of appropriate and efficient referral in a national system. This standard is the minimum level of care that ought to be provided to a control group. There may be additional moral arguments for higher levels of care in some circumstances. This health system analysis may be helpful to researchers and ethics committees in designing and reviewing research involving standard care control groups in developing country research. [source]


    RAISING THE STANDARD: A RESPONSE TO THE COMMENTATORS

    ADDICTION, Issue 11 2009
    THOMAS F. BABOR
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    SUBJECTIVITY AS A NON-TEXTUAL STANDARD OF INTERPRETATION IN THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHICAL PSYCHOLOGY

    HISTORY AND THEORY, Issue 1 2010
    JARI KAUKUA
    ABSTRACT Contemporary caution against anachronism in intellectual history, and the currently momentous theoretical emphasis on subjectivity in the philosophy of mind, are two prevailing conditions that set puzzling constraints for studies in the history of philosophical psychology. The former urges against assuming ideas, motives, and concepts that are alien to the historical intellectual setting under study, and combined with the latter suggests caution in relying on our intuitions regarding subjectivity due to the historically contingent characterizations it has attained in contemporary philosophy of mind. In the face of these conditions, our paper raises a question of what we call non-textual (as opposed to contextual) standards of interpretation of historical texts, and proceeds to explore subjectivity as such a standard. Non-textual standards are defined as (heuristic) postulations of features of the world or our experience of it that we must suppose to be immune to historical variation in order to understand a historical text. Although the postulation of such standards is often so obvious that the fact of our doing so is not noticed at all, we argue that the problems in certain special cases, such as that of subjectivity, force us to pay attention to the methodological questions involved. Taking into account both recent methodological discussion and the problems inherent in two de facto denials of the relevance of subjectivity for historical theories, we argue that there are good grounds for the adoption of subjectivity as a nontextual standard for historical work in philosophical psychology. [source]


    Genetic Analysis of ele Mutants and Comparative Mapping of ele1 Locus in the Control of Organ Internal Asymmetry in Garden Pea

    JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2010
    Xin Li
    Previous study has shown that during zygomorphic development in garden pea (Pisum sativum L.), the organ internal (IN) asymmetry of lateral and ventral petals was regulated by a genetic locus, SYMMETRIC PETAL 1 (SYP1), while the dorsoventral (DV) asymmetry was determined by two CYC - like TCP genes or the PsCYC genes, KEELED WINGS (K) and LOBED STANDARD 1 (LST1). In this study, two novel loci, ELEPHANT EAR-LIKE LEAF 1 (ELE1) and ELE2 were characterized. These mutants exhibit a similar defect of IN asymmetry as syp1 in lateral and ventral petals, but also display pleiotropic effects of enlarged organ size. Genetic analysis showed that ELE1 and ELE2 were involved in same genetic pathway and the enlarged size of petals but not compound leaves in ele2 was suppressed by introducing k and lst1, indicating that the enlargement of dorsal petal in ele2 requires the activities of K and LST1. An experimental framework of comparative genomic mapping approach was set up to map and clone LjELE1 locus in Lotus japonicus. Cloning the ELE1 gene will shed light on the underlying molecular mechanism during zygomorphic development and further provide the molecular basis for genetic improvement on legume crops. [source]


    SELECTION OF AN ASTRINGENCY REFERENCE STANDARD FOR THE SENSORY EVALUATION OF BLACK TEA

    JOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 2 2004
    ZUZANA DROBNA
    ABSTRACT Astringent and bitter sensations are characteristic sensory qualities of black tea. Three different classes of potential astringent reference standards (two concentrations each of alum and tannic acid and three fruit juices) were evaluated in this study. The perceived astringency, bitterness and sourness of each were profiled using computerized time-intensity and compared with the astringent intensity of a standardized brew of black tea. The differences in temporal profiles of potential reference standards across taste attributes were evident and intensity ratings were found to be dependent upon the stimulus and its concentration. Both concentrations of tannic acid were evaluated as the highest in perceived bitterness. For the juices, a strong sour taste was perceived in addition to astringency. It was concluded that the best reference standard for the astringency of black tea is a solution of 0.7 g/L alum as it is low in perceived bitterness and sourness. [source]


    VISUALLY DIRECTED HIGH-INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND FOR ORGAN-CONFINED PROSTATE CANCER: A PROPOSED STANDARD FOR THE CONDUCT OF THERAPY

    BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2007
    Sanjay L. Rajpal
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    HLA real-time extension

    CONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 15 2004
    Hui Zhao
    Abstract The IEEE 1516 Standard ,High Level Architecture (HLA)' and its implementation ,Run-Time Infra-structure (RTI)' defines a general-purpose network communication mechanism for Distributed Interactive Simulation (DIS). However, it does not address real-time requirements of DIS. Current operating system technologies can provide real-time processing through some real-time operating systems (RTOSs) and the Internet is also moving to an age of Quality of Service (QoS), providing delay and jitter bounded services. With the availability of RTOSs and IP QoS, it is possible for HLA to be extended to take advantage of these technologies in order to construct an architecture for Real-Time DIS (RT-DIS). This extension will be a critical aspect of applications in virtual medicine, distributed virtual environments, weapon simulation, aerospace simulation and others. This paper outlines the current real-time technology with respect to operating systems and at the network infrastructure level. After summarizing the requirements and our experiences with RT-DIS, we present a proposal for HLA real-time extension and architecture for real-time RTI. Similar to the growth of real-time CORBA (Common Object Request Broker) after the mature based CORBA standard suite, Real-Time HLA is a natural extension following the standardization of HLA into IEEE 1516 in September 2000. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    A new IFRA Standard on the fragrance ingredient, hydroxyisohexyl 3-cyclohexene carboxaldehyde

    CONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 4 2010
    Anne Marie Api
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Nonaudit Services and Earnings Management: UK Evidence,

    CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, Issue 4 2004
    MICHAEL J. FERGUSON
    Abstract Using a sample of UK firms for the period 1996-98, we provide empirical evidence on the relation between nonaudit services (NAS) purchase and three proxies for earnings management: (1) the likelihood that client firm accounting practices during the sample period were publicly criticized or subject to regulatory investigation; (2) the likelihood that client firms were required to restate prior financial statements or adjust current year results upon adoption of Financial Reporting Standard (FRS) No. 12, which was intended to curb opportunistic use of provisions; and (3) the mean absolute value of client discretionary working capital accruals over the sample period. The level of NAS purchase is measured, alternatively, as (1) the ratio of nonaudit to total auditor fees, (2) the natural log of NAS fees, and (3) the decile rank of a particular client's NAS fees given all NAS fees received by the audit firm practice office. With one exception, we find that all three measures of earnings management are positively and significantly associated with the three measures of NAS purchase. [source]


    Corporate Governance in ASEAN Financial Corporations: reality or illusion?

    CORPORATE GOVERNANCE, Issue 2 2007
    Wiparat Chuanrommanee
    According to Credit Lyonnais Securities Asia, Singapore has the best corporate governance practices in Asia. Malaysia has had the biggest improvements in governance overtime. Thailand lags behind both in achieving appropriate governance. This paper considers recent developments in corporate governance through the analysis of the corporate websites of financial corporations in these countries. The study finds that the corporate governance practices of Thai, Malaysian and Singaporean financial corporations are consistent with international best practices. Corporate governance as presented in company documents probably does not actually reflect real corporate governance practices. These practices do not have an impact on company performance. The level of corporate governance reported is also not consistent with the ratings from international financial institutions such as Credit Lyonnais Securities Asia and Standard & Poor's. These findings suggest that corporate governance in ASEAN is more illusion than fact. [source]


    Rescuer Fatigue: Standard versus Continuous Chest-Compression Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 10 2006
    Joseph W. Heidenreich MD
    Abstract Objectives Continuous chest-compression cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CCC-CPR) has been advocated as an alternative to standard CPR (STD-CPR). Studies have shown that CCC-CPR delivers substantially more chest compressions per minute and is easier to remember and perform than STD-CPR. One concern regarding CCC-CPR is that the rescuer may fatigue and be unable to maintain adequate compression rate or depth throughout an average emergency medical services response time. The specific aim of this study was to compare the effects of fatigue on the performance of CCC-CPR and STD-CPR on a manikin model. Methods This was a prospective, randomized crossover study involving 53 medical students performing CCC-CPR and STD-CPR on a manikin model. Students were randomized to their initial CPR group and then performed the other type of CPR after a period of at least two days. Students were evaluated on their performance of 9 minutes of CPR for each method. The primary endpoint was the number of adequate chest compressions (at least 38 mm of compression depth) delivered per minute during each of the 9 minutes. The secondary endpoints were total compressions, compression rate, and the number of breaks taken for rest. The students' performance was evaluated on the basis of Skillreporter Resusci Anne (Laerdal, Wappingers Falls, NY) recordings. Primary and secondary endpoints were analyzed by using the generalized linear mixed model for counting data. Results In the first 2 minutes, participants delivered significantly more adequate compressions per minute with CCC-CPR than STD-CPR, (47 vs. 32, p = 0.004 in the 1st minute and 39 vs. 29, p = 0.04 in the 2nd minute). For minutes 3 through 9, the differences in number of adequate compressions between groups were not significant. Evaluating the 9 minutes of CPR as a whole, there were significantly more adequate compressions in CCC-CPR vs. STD-CPR (p = 0.0003). Although the number of adequate compressions per minute declined over time in both groups, the rate of decline was significantly greater in CCC-CPR compared with STD-CPR (p = 0.0003). The mean number of total compressions delivered in the first minute was significantly greater with CCC-CPR than STD-CPR (105 per minute vs. 58 per minute, p < 0.001) and did not change over 9 minutes in either group. There were no differences in compression rates or number of breaks between groups. Conclusions CCC-CPR resulted in more adequate compressions per minute than STD-CPR for the first 2 minutes of CPR. However, the difference diminished after 3 minutes, presumably as a result of greater rescuer fatigue with CCC-CPR. Overall, CCC-CPR resulted in more total compressions per minute than STD-CPR during the entire 9 minutes of resuscitation. [source]


    Intraoperative evaluation of sentinel lymph nodes in breast carcinoma by imprint cytology, frozen section and rapid immunohistochemistry

    DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 12 2009
    Sharma Upender M.D.
    Abstract Sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) isolated in 40 patients of breast carcinoma (stage T1/T2) were evaluated intraoperatively by imprint cytology and frozen section. Rapid immunohistochemistry (IHC) was done in cases where both imprint smears and frozen sections were negative for any metastatic tumor deposits. The results of these different techniques were compared with postoperative paraffin sections taken as "Gold Standard." Nottingham modification of Bloom Richardson scoring system was used for grading the tumors. Further, the correlation of the SLN status with tumor size, grade, and lymphovascular invasion was studied. The sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy of imprint cytology were 91.7, 100, and 95% respectively, and those of the frozen section were 95.8, 100, and 97.5% respectively. Examination of multiple serial sections improved the sensitivity and overall accuracy of frozen section. Results of intraoperative rapid IHC were equivalent to final paraffin sections. Histological grade and lymphovascular invasion were in direct correlation with SLN metastasis (P < 0.05). The risk of lymphovascular invasion increased from 22.2% in grade I tumors to 85.7% in grade III tumors. SLN biopsy is a reliable method to evaluate the status of the axillary lymph nodes. Imprint cytology can be used reliably where the facility of frozen section is not available. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Surging to the Right Standard of Care

    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 2 2006
    Kristi L. Koenig MD
    First page of article [source]


    Cross-linguistic transfer of phonological skills: a Malaysian perspective

    DYSLEXIA, Issue 1 2002
    Caroline Gomez
    Abstract This study examined the phonological and reading performance in English of Malaysian children whose home language was Bahasa Malaysia (BM). A sample of 69 Malaysian Standard Two pupils (aged 7,8 years) was selected for the study. Since commencing school at the age of 6 years, the children had been learning to read in BM and had subsequently also been learning to read in English for some 12 months. The study was part of a larger scale research programme that fully recognized the limitations of tests that had not been developed and standardized in Malaysia. Nevertheless, as a first step to developing such tests, a comparison with existing norms for the Phonological Assessment Battery (PhAB) and the Wechsler Objective Reading Dimension (WORD) was undertaken in relation to information about the children's L1 and L2 language competencies. Results showed that the children's performance on PhAB was at least comparable to the UK norms while, not surprisingly, they fared less well on WORD. The results are discussed in terms of L1 and L2 transfer, whereby the transparency of written BM and the structured way in which reading is taught in BM facilitates performance on phonological tasks in English. This has implications for identifying children with phonologically based reading difficulties. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Uniform hazard versus uniform risk bases for performance-based earthquake engineering of light-frame wood construction

    EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING AND STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS, Issue 11 2010
    Yue Li
    Abstract This paper investigates the implications of designing for uniform hazard versus uniform risk for light-frame wood residential construction subjected to earthquakes in the United States. Using simple structural models of one-story residences with typical lateral force-resisting systems (shear walls) found in buildings in western, eastern and central regions of the United States as illustrations, the seismic demands are determined using nonlinear dynamic time-history analyses, whereas the collapse capacities are determined using incremental dynamic analyses. The probabilities of collapse, conditioned on the occurrence of the maximum considered earthquakes and design earthquakes stipulated in ASCE Standard 7-05, and the collapse margins of these typical residential structures are compared for typical construction practices in different regions in the United States. The calculated collapse inter-story drifts are compared with the limits stipulated in FEMA 356/ASCE Standard 41-06 and observed in the recent experimental testing. The results of this study provide insights into residential building risk assessment and the relation between building seismic performance implied by the current earthquake-resistant design and construction practices and performance levels in performance-based engineering of light-frame wood construction being considered by the SEI/ASCE committee on reliability-based design of wood structures. Further code developments are necessary to achieve the goal of uniform risk in earthquake-resistant residential construction. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Exchange Rates under the East Asian Dollar Standard.

    ECONOMICA, Issue 297 2008
    By RON McKINNON
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Do California Counties With Lower Socioeconomic Levels Have Less Access to Emergency Department Care?

    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 5 2010
    Deepa Ravikumar
    Abstract Objectives:, The study objective was to examine the relationship between number of emergency departments (EDs) per capita in California counties and measures of socioeconomic status, to determine whether individuals living in areas with lower socioeconomic levels have decreased access to emergency care. Methods:, The authors linked 2005 data from the American Hospital Association (AHA) Annual Survey of Hospitals with the Area Resource Files from the United States Department of Health and Human Services and performed Poisson regression analyses of the association between EDs per capita in individual California counties using the Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) county codes and three measures of socioeconomic status: median household income, percentage uninsured, and years of education for individuals over 25 years of age. Multivariate analyses using Poisson regression were also performed to determine if any of these measures of socioeconomic status were independently associated with access to EDs. Results:, Median household income is inversely related to the number of EDs per capita (rate ratio = 0.83; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.71 to 0.96). Controlling for income in the multivariate analysis demonstrates that there are more EDs per 100,000 population in FIPS codes with more insured residents when compared with areas having less insured residents with the same levels of household income. Similarly, FIPS codes whose residents have more education have more EDs per 100,000 compared with areas with the same income level whose residents have less education. Conclusions:, Counties whose residents are poorer have more EDs per 100,000 residents than those with higher median household incomes. However, for the same income level, counties with more insured and more highly educated residents have a greater number of EDs per capita than those with less insured and less educated residents. These findings warrant in-depth studies on disparities in access to care as they relate to socioeconomic status. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:508,513 © 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine [source]


    A field validation of two sediment-amphipod toxicity tests

    ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 7 2002
    Steven P. Perraro
    Abstract A field validation study of two sediment-amphipod toxicity tests was conducted using sediment samples collected subtidally in the vicinity of a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-contaminated Superfund site in Elliott Bay (WA, USA). Sediment samples were collected at 30 stations with a 0.1 m2 grab from which subsamples were taken for sediment toxicity testing and geochemical and macrofaunal analyses. Standard 10-d sediment-amphipod toxicity tests were conducted with Rhepoxynius abronius and Leptocheirus plumulosus. Sediments were analyzed for 33 PAHs, pentachlorophenol, polychlorinated biphenyls, acid-volatile sulfide, simultaneously extracted metals (Cd, Cu, Zn, Pb, Ni), total organic carbon, and grain size. Sediment temperature, oxygen-reduction potential, water depth, and interstitial water salinity were also measured. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, quantified as total PAH toxic units (TUPAH), were confirmed to be an important common causal agent of the changes in the two toxicity test (% survival R. abronius, % survival L. plumulosus) and five macrofaunal community (number of species, S; numerical abundance, A; total biomass, B; Swartz's dominance index, SDI; Brillouin's index, H) endpoints. Two other macrofaunal community metrics (the complement of Simpson's index, 1 , SI, and McIntosh's index, MI) were less sensitive to TUPAH than the two toxicity test endpoints. The sensitivities of R. abronius and L. plumulosus to TUPAH were statistically indistinguishable. Field validations were conducted by testing the association between or among each toxicity test endpoint, each of seven macrofaunal community metrics (S, A, B, SDI, H, 1 , SI, MI), and TUPAH by (1) Spearman's coefficient of rank correlation, (2) Kendall's coefficient of concordance, (3) G tests of independence, and (4) regression analysis. Some field validations based on multivariable tests of association (e.g., points 2 and 3) among toxicity test, field, and stressor endpoints produced false positive results. Both toxicity test endpoints were validated as indicators of changes in S, A, SDI, and H by all the methods tested. The resolution power of the relationships between the laboratory toxicity test and macrofaunal field endpoints was low (, three classes) but sufficient to discriminate ecologically important effects. We conclude that standard sediment-amphipod toxicity tests are ecologically relevant and that, under the proper conditions, their results can be used for lab-to-field extrapolation. [source]


    PM 7/98 (1): Specific requirements for laboratories preparing accreditation for a plant pest diagnostic activity

    EPPO BULLETIN, Issue 1 2010
    Article first published online: 9 MAR 2010
    Specific scope This guideline includes specific quality management requirements for laboratories preparing for accreditation according to the ISO/IEC Standard 17025 General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories (references to relevant parts of ISO/IEC Standard 17025 are included). It should be noted that in EPPO standards the verb ,should' carries the highest level of obligation. Specific approval and amendment First approved in 2009,09. [source]


    PM 7/40(2): Globodera rostochiensis and Globodera pallida

    EPPO BULLETIN, Issue 3 2009
    Article first published online: 27 NOV 200
    Specific scope This standard describes a diagnostic protocol for Globodera rostochiensis and Globodera pallida1. Specific approval and amendment This Standard was developed under the EU DIAGPRO Project (SMT 4-CT98-2252) by partnership of contractor laboratories and intercomparison laboratories in European countries. Approved as an EPPO Standard in 2003,09. Revision approved in 2009,09. [source]


    PM 8/2(1): Coniferae

    EPPO BULLETIN, Issue 3 2009
    Article first published online: 27 NOV 200
    Specific scope The purpose of the EPPO Standard on Coniferae is to recommend to EPPO Member Governments the phytosanitary measures, which they should use or require for Coniferae plants and plant products moving in international trade, to prevent the introduction and spread of regulated pests. Certain of these recommendations are addressed to all EPPO Member Governments, others are addressed only to countries considered to face a certain level of risk from the introduction and spread of the pests recommended for regulation concerned. These recommendations are derived: ,,from the EPPO Standards PM 1/2 (EPPO A1 and A2 lists) ,,from the former EPPO standard PM 2 (pest-specific phytosanitary measures) (which was withdrawn in 2006 by the Working Party on Phytosanitary Regulations) ,,from Pest Risk Analysis ,,from the Working Party on Phytosanitary Regulations ,,from the ISPM n°15 ,Guidelines for regulating wood packaging material in international trade'. Specific approval and amendment Approved in 2009-09. [source]


    Patient-orientated web sites on laryngectomy: is their information readable?

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE, Issue 6 2009
    L. POTHIER m, language therapist , macmillan, speech
    POTHIER L. & POTHIER D.D. (2009) European Journal of Cancer Care Patient-orientated web sites on laryngectomy: is their information readable? The objective of the study was to determine levels of readability of commonly accessed websites containing patient information on laryngectomy. A Cross-sectional study of Internet websites was designed. The first 20 websites obtained from a Google® search of the word "laryngectomy" that contained a patient information section were selected. Primary outcome measures were the Flesch Readability Ease Score (FRE) and Flesch-Kincaid readability grade (FKRG) score; from these data UK reading age was calculated. The secondary outcome measure was whether or not a site was accredited by an online readability organisation. The reading ages of the 20 sites ranged from 7.8 to 14.7 years with a median of 11.7 years. Half of the Flesch Reading Ease scores were in the "Difficult" or "Fairly difficult" category with 30% falling into the "Standard" or "Fairly easy" categories. Only 20% sites fell into the "Easy" or "Very Easy" categories that are the recommended level for comprehension by the general UK population. Sites not accredited by an online healthcare quality and content control organisation had worse readability scores than those that were not (FRE: p = 0.007, FKRG: p = 0.012). The poor readability of many of the encountered sites about laryngectomy on the Internet may confuse patients who turn to the Internet for information. Methods to improve patient information websites are discussed. [source]


    Moonlighting and Emergency Medicine Raising the Standard

    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 8 2000
    Samuel Keim MD
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Flame-retardant finishing of cotton fleece fabric: part I. The use of a hydroxy-functional organophosphorus oligomer and dimethyloldihydroxylethyleneurea

    FIRE AND MATERIALS, Issue 1 2007
    Charles Q. Yang
    Abstract Cotton fleece has become a popular fashion in recent years. However, most of the 100% cotton fleece fabric is not able to meet the federal flammability standard (,16 CFR Part 1610: Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles') without chemical treatment. In this research, we investigated the use of the combination of a hydroxy-functional organophosphorus oligomer (HFPO) as the flame-retarding agent and dimethyloldihydroxylethyleneurea (DMDHEU) as the binder to reduce the flammability of cotton fleece. We found that HFPO is effective in reducing the flammability of the cotton fleece whereas DMDHEU enhances the effectiveness of HFPO due to phosphorus,nitrogen synergism. The flammability as well as other properties of the treated cotton fleece is affected by both the concentration of HFPO and that of DMDHEU. The cotton fleece treated with HFPO/DMDHEU passes the federal flammability standard and shows high strength retention with little change in fabric whiteness and hand. We also found that the flame-retardant finishing system is durable to multiple home launderings. The combination of HFPO and DMDHEU has the potential to become a practical flame-retardant finishing system to reduce the flammability of cotton fleeces. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Incorporating Comparisons Standard 4.1 into Foreign Language Teaching

    FOREIGN LANGUAGE ANNALS, Issue 2 2003
    Article first published online: 31 DEC 200, Serafima Gettys
    Drawing on Slobin's (1996) experimental study, which demonstrated the existence of "the thinking for speaking" form of thought, it is argued that teaching a foreign language entails teaching novel "thinking for speaking" operations and it is at this point of instruction that the use of L1-L2 comparisons is most warranted. In addition, linguistic and psycholingustic evidence in favor of using the word as a basic unit of linguistic comparisons in the foreign language classroom is provided. Finally, practical suggestions as to how linguistic comparisons can be included in day-to-day teaching are offered. [source]


    Hauling Down the Double Standard: Feminism, Social Purity and Sexual Science in Late Nineteenth-Century Britain

    GENDER & HISTORY, Issue 1 2004
    Lesley Hall
    Nineteenth-century feminism and the related social purity movement, and the emergent scientific discourse of ,sexology', are usually seen as antagonistic. Both trends, in fact, were in profound opposition to the widespread assumption that the double moral standard was an embodiment of ,natural' transhistorical law. This article suggests that feminist agitation against the Contagious Diseases Acts of the 1860s (and other manifestations of the deleterious legal status of women) overtly attacked unthinking social assumptions about sex and gender, destabilising concepts about the naturalness of the existing sexual system and creating the context for the pioneers of sexology to interrogate even further accepted notions of gender and sexuality. [source]


    Accident Law: Efficiency May Require an Inefficient Standard

    GERMAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 1 2002
    Laszlo Goerke
    In a world with risk-neutral agents in which accidents occur with a positive probability, liability rules will only induce efficient behaviour if these rules impose the full (marginal) costs of an action on the parties. However, institutional restrictions or bilateral activity choices can prevent the full internalization of costs. A mechanism is proposed which guarantees an efficient outcome: monetary fines which are not related to the occurrence of an accident. Such a mechanism requires individuals to violate the standard of care in order to trigger the fine payments. Hence, efficiency requires an excessive standard. [source]


    Impact of International Financial Reporting Standard adoption on key financial ratios

    ACCOUNTING & FINANCE, Issue 2 2009
    Anna-Maija Lantto
    M41 Abstract Although previous research has investigated the economic consequences of International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) adoption, there is little evidence on the impact of IFRS adoption on key financial ratios. To fill this gap, we examine this issue in a continental European country (Finland). Our results show that the adoption of IFRS changes the magnitude of the key accounting ratios. Moreover, we extend the literature by showing that the adoption of fair value accounting rules and stricter requirements on certain accounting issues are the reasons for the changes observed in accounting figures and financial ratios. [source]


    Volatility linkages of the equity, bond and money markets: an implied volatility approach

    ACCOUNTING & FINANCE, Issue 1 2009
    Kent Wang
    G12; G14 Abstract This study proposes an alternative approach for examining volatility linkages between Standard & Poor's 500, Eurodollar futures and 30 year Treasury Bond futures markets using implied volatility from the three markets. Simple correlation analysis between implied volatilities in the three markets is used to assess market correlations. Spurious correlation effects are considered and controlled for. I find that correlations between implied volatilities in the equity, money and bond markets are positive, strong and robust. Furthermore, I replicate the approach of Fleming, Kirby and Ostdiek (1998) to check the substitutability of the implied volatility approach and find that the results are nearly identical; I conclude that my approach is simple, robust and preferable in practice. I also argue that the results from this paper provide supportive evidence on the information content of implied volatilities in the equity, bond and money markets. [source]


    ASTM Brief / Proposed Revisions to the ASTM E 2600-08 Vapor Intrusion Standard

    GROUND WATER MONITORING & REMEDIATION, Issue 1 2009
    Anthony J. Buonicore
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]