20,019 research outputs found
Family planning success in two cities in Zaire
Both projects described here, Matadi and Kananga, helped health providers in those two cities offer clinical family planning services. But their approaches differed markedly. The family education program in Matadi concentrated on pioneering community-based distribution of contraceptives, with carefully supervised distributors. The Kanaga Project emphasized clinical supervision and pleasing the clients; introduced social marketing with loose supervision of retailers; and provided an information team skilled in face-to-face group meetings, plus a weekly radio program. Four factors common to both projects seemed to contribute to their success: The single-minded dedication of staff members to making family planning work. An uninterrupted supply of affordable contraceptive methods available through outlets at many locations. Enough organizational autonomy to be able to respond to problems as they arose. Such autonomy made project personnel identify more with project goals and feel responsible for achieving project objectives. Regular and supportive supervision of those responsible for service delivery. Both projects emphasized regular contact with clinic personnel - Matadi also included distributors. These contacts bolstered morale by showing that the project administration was closely following service providers'activities and by transmitting to providers the staff's enthusiam for project activities. Supervisory visits included administrative functions such as collecting service statistics and controlling inventory, but these activities were handled in a friendly, nonthreatening manner that encouraged service providers to perform their tasks well. The fourth factor is adequate funding. Both projects had special funding that allowed them to experiment with approaches for increasing contraceptive prevalence. That funding may partly explain their organizational autonomy and may have contributed to the sense of purpose and esprit de corps that developed among project staff. Larger-scale programs in Zaire have operated with significant financial constraints, so it would be unfair to compare them with these more successful projects. Special funding does not guarantee project success but may make it far more likely, conclude the authors.Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Adolescent Health,ICT Policy and Strategies,Early Child and Children's Health,Reproductive Health
Comparing the correlation length of grain markets in China and France
In economics comparative analysis plays the same role as experimental
research in physics. In this paper we closely examine several methodological
problems related to comparative analysis by investigating the specific example
of grain markets in China and France respectively. This enables us to answer a
question in economic history which has so far remained pending, namely whether
or not market integration progressed in the 18th century. In economics as in
physics, before being accepted any new result has to be checked and re-checked
by different researchers. This is what we call the replication and comparison
procedures. We show how these procedures should (and can) be implemented.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, to appear in International Journal of Modern
Physics
Palaeolimnology of Lake Sapanca and identification of historic earthquake signals, Northern Anatolian Fault Zone (Turkey)
Lake Sapanca is located on a strand of the Northern Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ, Turkey), where a series of strong earthquakes (Ms >6.0) have occurred over the past hundred years. Identifying prehistoric
earthquakes in and around Lake Sapanca is key to a better understanding of plate movements along the
NAFZ. This study contributes to the development of palaeolimnological tools to identify past earthquakes
in Lake Sapanca. To this end several promising proxies were investigated, specifically lithology, magnetic
susceptibility, grain size (thin-section and laser analysis), geochemistry, pollen concentration, diatom
assemblages, 137Cs and 210Pb. Sedimentological indicators provided evidence for reworked, turbidite-like
or homogeneous facies (event layers) in several short cores (<45 cm). Other indicators of sediment input
and the historical chronicles available for the area suggest that three of these event layers likely originated
from the AD 1957, 1967 and 1999 earthquakes. Recent changes in sediment deposition and nutrient
levels have also been identified, but are probably not related to earthquakes. This study demonstrates
that a combination of indicators can be used to recognize earthquake-related event layers in cores that encompass a longer period of time
Bank Integration and Business Volatility
We investigate how bank migration across state lines over the last quarter century has affected the size and covariance of business fluctuations across states. Starting with a two-state version of the unit banking model in Holmstrom and Tirole (1997), we conclude that the theoretical effect of integration on business fluctuations is ambiguous because integration dampens the impact of bank capital shocks but amplifies the impact of firm collateral shocks. The net effect empirically seems stabilizing, however, as we find fluctuations in employment growth within states falls as integration rises, especially when we instrument for the level of integration and control for employment composition within states. Integration also weakens the link between bank capital growth within states and growth in state employment and bank lending.
Carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars: the most pristine objects?
Carbon-enhanced metal poor stars (CEMP) form a significant proportion of the
metal-poor stars, their origin is not well understood. Three very metal-poor
C-rich turnoff stars were selected from the SDSS survey, observed with the ESO
VLT (UVES) to precisely determine the element abundances. In turnoff stars
(unlike giants) the carbon abundance has not been affected by mixing with deep
layers and is therefore easier to interpret. The analysis was performed with 1D
LTE static model atmospheres. When available, non-LTE corrections were applied
to the classical LTE abundances. The 3D effects on the CH and CN molecular
bands were computed using hydrodynamical simulations of the stellar atmosphere
(CO5BOLD) and are found to be very important. To facilitate a comparison with
previous results, only 1D abundances are used in the discussion. The abundances
(or upper limits) of the elements enable us to place these stars in different
CEMP classes. The carbon abundances confirm the existence of a plateau at A(C)=
8.25 for [Fe/H] \geq -3.4. The most metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] < -3.4) have
significantly lower carbon abundances, suggesting a lower plateau at A(C)
\approx 6.5. Detailed analyses of a larger sample of very low metallicity
carbon-rich stars are required to confirm (or refute) this possible second
plateau and specify the behavior of the CEMP stars at very low metallicity
Differential cross sections at forward angles for hydrogen and helium particles from 62 MeV protons incident on Ni-60
Tabulated differential cross sections are presented for the production, at angles of 15, 20, 25, and 40 deg, of proton, deuteron, triton, helium-3, and alpha particles from Ni-60 bombarded by 62-MeV protons. Continuum cross sections are listed in about 1-MeV bins for energies above lower cutoffs which range from 4 to 15 MeV for the different types of exit particles. Only the integral cross section is known for a considerable energy range within each spectrum. The proton, deuteron, and alpha particle cross sections are the same in the continuum range region above the evaporation peak as those cross sections previously observed for Fe-54 and Fe-56, but the corresponding yield of tritons is higher from Ni-60 and Fe-56 than from Fe-54
Tabulated cross sections for hydrogen and helium particles produced by 61-MeV protons on Fe56
Tabulated cross sections for hydrogen and helium particles produced by 61 MeV on iron 5
Bank Integration and State Business Cycles
We investigate how integration of bank ownership across states has affected economic volatility within states. In theory, bank integration could cause higher or lower volatility, depending on whether credit supply or credit demand shocks predominate. In fact, year-to-year fluctuations in a state's economic growth fall as its banks become more integrated (via holding companies) with banks in other states. As the bank linkages between any pair of states increases, fluctuations in those two states tend to converge. We conclude that interstate banking has made state business cycles smaller, but more alike.Bank integration; Business volatility; Geographic diversification
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