993 resultados para Regional Cluster
Resumo:
March 2004 - main findings, key recommendations and the way forward
Resumo:
October 2003 - main findings arising from the study and the key conclusions
Resumo:
June 2004 - study to examine service provision, early identification, information and support, co-ordination of services and strategic planning
Resumo:
June 2004 - main findings on progress arising from follow-up, emerging issues, key conclusions
Resumo:
June 2000 - to review whether the strategy for mental health services is based on clearly defined needs
Resumo:
Employment flexibility is commonly associated to greater labour mobility and thus faster cross-regional adjustments. The literature however offers very little hard evidence on this and quite limited theoretical guidance. This paper examines empirically the relationship between employment flexibility and cross-regional adjustment (migration) at the regional and local levels in the UK. Employment flexibility is associated to higher labour mobility (but only at a rather localised scale) and at the same time seems to reduce the responsiveness of migration to unemployment. This suggest that rising flexibility may be linked to higher persistence in spatial disparities, as intra-regional adjustments are strengthened while extraregional adjustments weakened. Keywords: Employment flexibility, regional migration, labour market adjustment JEL Codes: R11, R23, J08, J61
Resumo:
Report Published June 2001 - Contains key recommendations and the way forward
Resumo:
District Nursing Services in Northern Ireland Follow Up Regional Report
Resumo:
Report describing the regional redesign of community nursing project commissioned by DHSSPS Nursing and Advisory Group in 2004
Resumo:
Report on the regional redesign of community nursing project by Deloitte
Resumo:
District Nursing Services in Northern Ireland Regional Summary Health Services Audit
Resumo:
A Consultation Paper
Resumo:
The genes involved in the biosynthesis of biotin were identified in the hyphal fungus Aspergillus nidulans through homology searches and complementation of Escherichia coli biotin-auxotrophic mutants. Whereas the 7,8-diaminopelargonic acid synthase and dethiobiotin synthetase are encoded by distinct genes in bacteria and the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, both activities are performed in A. nidulans by a single enzyme, encoded by the bifunctional gene bioDA. Such a bifunctional bioDA gene is a genetic feature common to numerous members of the ascomycete filamentous fungi and basidiomycetes, as well as in plants and oömycota. However, unlike in other eukaryota, the three bio genes contributing to the four enzymatic steps from pimeloyl-CoA to biotin are organized in a gene cluster in pezizomycotina. The A. nidulans auxotrophic mutants biA1, biA2 and biA3 were all found to have mutations in the 7,8-diaminopelargonic acid synthase domain of the bioDA gene. Although biotin auxotrophy is an inconvenient marker in classical genetic manipulations due to cross-feeding of biotin, transformation of the biA1 mutant with the bioDA gene from either A. nidulans or Aspergillus fumigatus led to the recovery of well-defined biotin-prototrophic colonies. The usefulness of bioDA gene as a novel and robust transformation marker was demonstrated in co-transformation experiments with a green fluorescent protein reporter, and in the efficient deletion of the laccase (yA) gene via homologous recombination in a mutant lacking non-homologous end-joining activity.