789 resultados para Good doctor
Resumo:
During the late twentieth century, the United Kingdom’s football infrastructure and spectatorship underwent transformation as successive stadia disasters heightened political and public scrutiny of the game and prompted industry change. Central to this process was the government’s formation of an independent charitable organization to oversee subsequent policy implementation and grant-aid provision to clubs for safety, crowd, and spectator requirements. This entity, which began in 1975 focusing on ground improvement, developed into the Football Trust. The Trust was funded directly by the football pools companies who ran popular low-stakes football betting enterprises. Working in association with the Pools Promoters Association (PPA), and demonstrating their social responsibility towards the game’s constituents, the pools resourced a wide array of Trust activities. Yet irrespective of government mandate, the PPA and Trust were continually confronted by political and economic obstacles that threatened the effectiveness of their arrangements. In this paper the history of the Football Trust is investigated, along with its partnership with the PPA, and its relationship with the government within the context of broader political shifts, stadia catastrophes, official inquiries, and commercial threats. It is contended that while the Trust/PPA partnership had a respectable legacy, their history afforded little protection against adverse contemporary conditions.
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A good practice guide to creating and sustaining mixed income communities in Scotland. This guide explores how to create attractive and well-managed places that meet the needs of all sections of the community. Drawing on the latest research, and featuring 11 case studies from Scotland and England, it offers a comprehensive guide to the issues that need to be planned for and addressed. The book includes detailed guidance on: -Developing a strategy and negotiating the planning process; -Good practice in masterplanning, design, layout and long-term financial viability; -How stakeholders can collaborate effectively and ensure that local residents are fully involved at all stages; -How barriers to the development of sustainable communities might be overcome. The guide explores all types of mixed income communities, from the diversification of mono-tenure estates in inner city areas to greenfield development on the urban fringe.
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The objective of this study is to better understand why selected urban freight solutions represent innovations that are technically feasible, economically profitable in different contexts, sustainable, transferable, and with tangible beneficial impacts. A total of 15 solutions are evaluated in the fields of Urban Consolidation Centre, clean and electric vehicles, IT solutions, use of urban waterways, and others. Three solutions are analysed more thoroughly, the Cityporto Padova, the Basel Exhibition Centre logistics support system, and the Berlin laboratory area test of the Bentobox. This paper ends with a transversal analysis of the solutions observed, and with methodological conclusions.
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The objective of this study is to better understand why selected urban freight solutions represent innovations that are technically feasible, economically profitable in different contexts, sustainable, transferable, and with tangible beneficial impacts. A total of 15 solutions are evaluated in the fields of Urban Consolidation Centre, clean and electric vehicles, IT solutions, use of urban waterways, and others. Three solutions are analysed more thoroughly, the Cityporto Padova, the Basel Exhibition Centre logistics support system, and the Berlin laboratory area test of the Bentobox. This paper ends with a transversal analysis of the solutions observed, and with methodological conclusions.
Good Practice in EU Public Service Media and Contemporary Practice in Jordan: A Comparative Analysis
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UNESCO Amman Office Foreword: UNESCO Amman office is pleased to publish a comparative analysis between good Public Service Media (PSM) practices in Europe and the contemporary practice in Jordan. The study is part of the Support to Media in Jordan project, funded by the European Union, aiming to increase media freedom, media independence and journalistic professionalism in Jordan. The state owned broadcaster, Jordan Radio and Television (JRTV), has informed, entertained and educated Jordanians for decades. JRTV reaches almost every corner of the Kingdom and has the potential to serve all Jordanians with balanced, impartial and accurate news and programmes relevant to their day-to-day lives.Based on this potential there has been a long standing ambition to transform the JRTV from a state broadcaster to a public service broadcaster; from a TV and radio that predominately serves the state, to a broadcaster that serves the public and is independent from the Government of the day. This ambition is expressed also in the Support to Media in Jordan project, agreed between the Government an the EU, under which UNESCO has been asked to produce two studies: The comparative PSM analysis and a broader media landscape assessment based on UNESCO’s Media Development Indicators (MDI’s). The Jordanian MDI assessment was carried out by a team of national and international researchers during the first six months of 2015, and builds on the rich flora of recent studies on the Jordanian media landscape, as well as on original research. The study is available in Arabic and English. Professor Naomi Sakr carried out the comparative PSM analysis parallel to the MDI study, and in close cooperation with the MDI research team and UNESCO Amman office.
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This paper seeks to investigate the bases for resistance to arbitration in general -and investor arbitration in particular- focusing on the way in which arbitral tribunals deal with notions of public interest and the public good. The paper hypothesises that while courts have within their terms of reference the capacity to consider notions of public interest, arbitral tribunals do not. It is this core difference in the scope of decision making between the two bodies that could render privately organised dispute resolution unsuitable for disputes that have public aspects, like investor-state disputes. The paper discusses the meaning of public interest and the public good as found in the literature. It then proceeds to consider how tribunals in the investment field have dealt with these concepts. This leads to a conclusion urging not abandonment of arbitration as a component of dispute resolution, but caution. It is argued that unchecked growth in private dispute resolution can threaten perceptions of legitimacy and democratic accountability. The paper adopts a socio-legal methodology in considering the effect of legal mechanisms on social and political phenomena. It is also informed by a law and economics methodology in addressing impacts of dispute resolution mechanisms on economic efficiency. The contribution of the paper rests on theorising motivations for resistance to private dispute resolution, a topical issue in light of the TTIP debate.
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We present a 12(1 + 3R/(4m)) competitive algorithm for scheduling implicit-deadline sporadic tasks on a platform comprising m processors, where a task may request one of R shared resources.
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This case study – and accompanying teaching note – briefly describes the history of the Espírito Santo family, a banking dynasty who led one of Portugal’s leading economic and financial groups, along with its “crown jewel”, Banco Espírito Santo. It chronicles how the corporate governance issues at BES allowed the family to exploit the bank, its shareholders and its customers, so as to support its unprofitable non-financial businesses. This left the bank in a poor financial situation, which deteriorated beyond control, leaving regulators – whose actions are also analysed here – with no alternative, amidst a severe liquidity crisis, but to apply a resolution measure, pinning large losses on junior bondholders and shareholders before recapitalising the bank.
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RESUMO - A monitorização individual dos trabalhadores (dosimetria individual) é obrigatória (Decreto Regulamentar n.o 9/90, de 19 de Abril) para os profissionais de saúde que desempenham funções com risco de exposição à radiação X, quando classificados como categoria A. Apesar disso, a exposição a radiações ionizantes é frequentemente pouco, ou mesmo nada, valorizada pelos profissionais de saúde. O presente estudo, realizado no contexto de intervenções cirúrgicas de ortopedia, teve por objectivos: • avaliar a dose de radiação em diferentes zonas durante as cirurgias ortopédicas; • estimar a dose de exposição a radiações ionizantes dos profissionais de saúde, em função das suas posições, predominantemente adoptadas durante o acto cirúrgico; • sensibilizar os profissionais de saúde para a utilização correcta da dosimetria individual e para a adopção das medidas de protecção radiológica. A avaliação do risco foi efectuada através de: 1) medições preliminares com recurso a um fantoma colocado a 50 cm e a 100 cm do eixo central do feixe de radiação e em direcções de 45°, 90° e 135°; 2) medições durante uma cirurgia ortopédica em «localizações » correspondentes às gónadas, ao cristalino e às mãos dos profissionais de saúde intervenientes na cirurgia (ortopedistas, enfermeiros instrumentistas); 3) medições ao nível do topo da mesa (posição do anestesista) e ao nível do comando do equipamento emissor de raios X (técnico de radiologia); 4) determinação do tempo de utilização dos raios X durante as cirurgias ortopédicas; 5) cálculo da estimativa do número anual de cirurgias ortopédicas realizadas, com base nos registos existentes. Assumindo a não utilização de aventais plúmbeos os valores máximos medidos foram de 2,5 mSv/h (ao nível das gónadas), de 0,6 mSv/h ao nível do cristalino e de 1 mSv/ h ao nível das mãos dos ortopedistas e dos enfermeiros instrumentistas (que se situavam próximo do feixe de raios X, a 50 cm do feixe de radiação). A estimativa de exposição anual (dose equivalente) para os profissionais que operam junto ao feixe de radiação X foi de: • Ortopedistas — 20,63 a 68,75 mSv (gónadas), 4,95 a 16,50 mSv (cristalino) e 8,25 a 27,50 mSv (mãos); • Enfermeiros instrumentistas — 130,63 a 151,25 mSv (gónadas), 31,35 a 36,30 mSv (cristalino) e 52,25 a Os profissionais que ocupam posições mais afastadas do feixe (por exemplo: anestesistas) terão doses de radiação mais reduzidas, embora estas possam ainda ser importantes ao nível das gónadas na zona do topo da mesa (anestesista). Conclui-se que a exposição profissional em blocos operatórios pode implicar, em cirurgia ortopédica, a sujeição a níveis de exposição consideráveis, o que permite classificar estes profissionais de categoria A, justificando a utilização obrigatória (e correcta de acordo com as recomendações) da dosimetria individual e a adopção de medidas de protecção radiológica, tantas vezes negligenciadas.