• I'm Commander Ibad Khan and I'm representing the Clinician Outreach and Communication Activity, COCA with the emergency risk communication branch at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (cdc.gov)
  • They add that highly engaged boards provide a culture and foundation that can maximize positive outcomes (such as lower tax payments) while minimizing potential negative outcomes (such as higher tax risk). (insightsoftware.com)
  • Regular monitoring of tax-related risks should help ensure that the board remains comfortable with the outcomes of the company's ever-evolving tax-planning initiatives. (insightsoftware.com)
  • Health has a role in considering key public health policy issues such as alcohol, where a coordinated approach is essential to achieving shared and interdependent outcomes. (who.int)
  • We as ATSDR feel the role that we can play is to facilitate getting the right people in front of the CAP to help with this problem. (cdc.gov)
  • Furthermore, ATSDR acknowledges additional uncertainties inherent in the application of the procedures to derive less than lifetime MRLs. (cdc.gov)
  • It looks like inflation will have averaged 0.3 per cent in 2020, while our December 2020 staff projections forecast inflation of 1.0 per cent, 1.1 per cent and 1.4 per cent in 2021, 2022 and 2023 respectively (Chart 1). (europa.eu)
  • The CAPP analysis does not include oilsands, which made up 65 per cent of overall Canadian oil production in early 2023, and which some studies have suggested generates 2.2 times as many emissions per barrel than the average crude extracted in North America. (yahoo.com)
  • The unprecedented nature of the pandemic undermines how we process information and assess risk. (propublica.org)
  • Konnikova's psychology expertise tells her that most people have a hard time thinking through the uncertainty and probabilities posed by the pandemic. (propublica.org)
  • Many months into the pandemic, even as the nation faces its highest average daily case counts to date, people still don't agree on how to live in the era of COVID-19. (propublica.org)
  • The problem, experts who study the way we think say, is that the unprecedented nature of the pandemic makes us vulnerable to subtle biases that undermine how we process information and assess risk. (propublica.org)
  • [ 2 ] Second, in the absence of clear forward guidance from central banks in relation to future monetary policy decisions, high uncertainty about the path of the virus and the robustness of the post-pandemic recovery may make these economic actors reluctant to commit to significant spending decisions. (europa.eu)
  • Second, clear communication that the financing conditions directly relevant to households, firms and governments will remain favourable during the pandemic period reduces uncertainty and bolsters confidence, thereby encouraging spending and investment, and ultimately underpinning the economic recovery and inflation. (europa.eu)
  • In terms of the price stability mandate, the pandemic shock poses ongoing risks to the projected path of inflation. (europa.eu)
  • Tax planning is playing an increasingly important part in corporates' enterprise resource management (ERM) strategies, driven by the many uncertainties created by political, economic, and pandemic-related trends. (insightsoftware.com)
  • Policies that stabilise the dollar in the face of global risk, such as the liquidity provision by the Federal Reserve in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, can help stabilise global economic activity. (cepr.org)
  • The central elements included: the escalation of asset purchases through the 12 March 2020 decision to add an extra € 120 billion to the already-running APP and the 18 March 2020 launch of the pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP), a revision in the structure and pricing of the TLTRO programme, an easing of the collateral framework, and a set of supportive supervisory measures (taken by the supervisory wing of the ECB). (europa.eu)
  • Man-made climate change, coupled with exposure developments, will significantly alter the insurance industry's risk maps of Australia over the coming decades. (munichre.com)
  • On a micro-scale, another report showed how Minnesota's warming (and increasingly wetter) climate is escalating the risk of new diseases in the area, according to the Minnesota Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment . (truthout.org)
  • The agricultural sector faces multiple challenges linked to increased climate uncertainty, causing severe shocks including increased frequency of extreme weather events, new pest and disease risks, soil degradation, and pre and postharvest food losses. (fao.org)
  • Influence is being applied both by individual investors, some of whom are taking on activist roles and pushing for stronger climate action, and investor-led initiatives which are rapidly growing both in size and influence. (deloitte.com)
  • We're taking steps to better understand the impacts of climate change on the economy and to reduce our environmental footprint. (bankofcanada.ca)
  • All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. (skepticalscience.com)
  • Financial markets play an important role in generating monetary policy transmission asymmetries in the US. (frbsf.org)
  • At a one year horizon, the 'financial multiplier' of monetary policy-defined as the ratio between the cumulative responses of employment and credit spreads-is zero for a monetary expansion, -2 for a monetary tightening, and -4 for a monetary tightening that takes place under strained credit market conditions. (frbsf.org)
  • From a stance perspective, an insufficient monetary policy response would have implied a longer period of low inflation, putting at risk the timely convergence of inflation to the target rate (now defined as two per cent). (europa.eu)
  • Uncertainty can often inspire anxiety. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • Occupational stress in first responders is associated with increased risk of mental health issues, including hopelessness, anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, as well as suicidal behaviors such as suicidal ideation (thinking about or planning suicide) and attempts [3] . (cdc.gov)
  • This column examines the effects of global risk shocks and the dollar's role in the international adjustment to such shocks, finding that appreciation of the dollar amplifies the adverse effect of global risk shocks considerably. (cepr.org)
  • But what are the consequences of the dollar's dominance for the international adjustment to global risk shocks? (cepr.org)
  • In a new paper, we shed light on this question as we identify global risk shocks and trace out their effect on the global economy, with a focus on the dollar (Georgiadis et al. (cepr.org)
  • 2021). Global risk shocks are incidents that are associated with an increase in the demand for safe and liquid assets. (cepr.org)
  • We identify global risk shocks using intra-daily changes in the price of gold - the ultimate safe asset - as recorded on narratively selected dates related to global risk events as an external instrument (Piffer and Podstawski 2018, Engel and Wu 2018, Ludvigson et al. (cepr.org)
  • We find that although global risk shocks cause a contraction of economic activity that is highly synchronised in the US and the rest of the world, they cause a strong appreciation of the dollar. (cepr.org)
  • We also document that global risk shocks induce flight-to-safety effects as foreign holdings of US Treasury securities increase, an uptick in the US Treasury premium, an increase in the dollar liquidity buffers of banks, and an increase in the share of dollar-denominated international debt issuance. (cepr.org)
  • We then investigate how the dollar shapes the transmission of global risk shocks, especially the contraction of economic activity outside of the US. (cepr.org)
  • On the one hand, appreciation of the dollar dampens the adverse impact of global risk shocks in the rest of the world via a trade channel, as it induces expenditure switching from the US towards the rest of the world (Obstfeld and Rogoff 1995, Gopinath et al. (cepr.org)
  • 2020). On the other hand, dollar appreciation may amplify the adverse impact of global risk shocks in the rest of the world via a financial channel, as it deteriorates the net worth of borrowers that are subject to currency mismatches and thereby induces a tightening in global financial conditions (Bruno and Shin 2015, Jiang et al. (cepr.org)
  • Indeed, we find that global risk shocks that appreciate the dollar are followed by a decline in US net exports and a broad-based tightening in global financial conditions reflected, in particular, in a contraction in cross-border bank credit. (cepr.org)
  • But this doesn't tell us whether the dollar appreciation overall dampens or amplifies the effects of global risk shocks outside of the US. (cepr.org)
  • Formally, we follow a minimum relative entropy (MRE) approach to construct the counterfactual: we use the posterior distribution obtained from the Bayesian estimation to determine a counterfactual in which (a) the dollar does not respond to global risk shocks, but which (b) is otherwise as similar as possible to the model generating the data. (cepr.org)
  • The researchers said that consumption amongst young people was a particular concern given the scientific uncertainty on adverse effects. (foodnavigator.com)
  • Such incomplete knowledge can lead to misinformation or uncertainty regarding the appropriate use of psychotropic medications, which in turn can have adverse effects on patients and their families. (ama-assn.org)
  • Public health officials and others concerned with appropriate actions to take at hazardous waste sites may want information on levels of exposure associated with more subtle effects in humans or animals (LOAELs) or exposure levels below which no adverse effects (NOAELs) have been observed. (cdc.gov)
  • An MRL is defined as an estimate of daily human exposure to a substance that is likely to be without an appreciable risk of adverse effects (noncarcinogenic) over a specified duration of exposure. (cdc.gov)
  • Every day, people face unpleasant and uncertain risks associated with their behavior, and that ambiguity goes against how we tend to think. (propublica.org)
  • Shen, Hsee, and Talloen find that those facing an uncertain reward completed an average of 14 laps, almost twice as many as the 7.5 laps by the runners who knew they'd get five points each time around. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • Those who were offered uncertain rewards with immediate resolution chose to practice twice as much as people in two other groups-one where the rewards were certain, and one where the rewards were uncertain but the uncertainty wasn't immediately resolved. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • It must have supportive resources (financing, management) to take advantage of the opportunity in a competitive and uncertain environment. (istanbul.edu.tr)
  • The objective of this paper is to investigate the role of pandemics in the fluctuations of oil prices (OP). The outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in 2019-2020 resulted in a large-scale economic shutdown, hindering not only economic growth but also reducing the demand for oil. (scholasticahq.com)
  • (2020) suggest that there are certain influences from the COVID-19 and OP to geopolitical risks, economic policy uncertainty and the U.S. stock market. (scholasticahq.com)
  • This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003793. (bvsalud.org)
  • According to the CAPM, capital market is supposed to be efficient and equilibrium, there should have positive and linear relationship between expected return on a risky asset and its systematic risk (or market beta). (scirp.org)
  • We employ the intertemporal capital asset pricing model (ICAPM), developed by Cifarelli and Paladino (2010) to analyze the transmission mechanism between pandemics and OP. Assuming that there are two kinds of investors (informed and feedback investors) in the oil market, and the systematic risk is the occurrences of pandemics captured by the pandemics index (PDI). (scholasticahq.com)
  • 134 When I see a cancer trial in one of the top journals, I generally scan the abstract to see if there is anything of general interest or importance. (bmj.com)
  • It also includes biographical information on over 200 key figures in the field and coverage of statistical journals and societies. (lu.se)
  • The risk declines over time but never quite goes away. (bmj.com)
  • In times of heightened global risk, investors flock to the dollar as their capacity or willingness to bear risk declines. (cepr.org)
  • Notes: The chart shows quarterly averages of year-on-year percentage changes in HICP inflation, except for the first quarter of 2021, which shows realised inflation in January 2021. (europa.eu)
  • He said that "we are taking forceful and rapid steps to moderate demand so that it comes into better alignment with supply, and to keep inflation expectations anchored. (deloitte.com)
  • The First Global Forum of the United Nations Decade of Family Farming 2019-2028 was co-organized by FAO and IFAD, with the aim of leveraging the experiences of different actors in order to take stock of the achievements and challenges faced since the launch of the UNDFF. (fao.org)
  • We conducted our study in Cuba's La Salina Wildlife Refuge during 2015-2019, to understand the role this refuge might play as a lemon shark nursery area, by documenting the distribution and length structure of juveniles. (springer.com)
  • It is especially important to look at data, concepts and potential viewpoints as holistically as possible where uncertainty about future developments is particularly high. (bis.org)
  • The effects of all these developments are especially evident in the Arctic, where sea ice coverage reached its annual minimum on September 17, continuing a trend of below-average years. (truthout.org)
  • To deal with the challenges of diagnostic imprecision, the National Institute of Mental Health has launched an initiative called the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) that attempts to take a more dimensional approach to the scientific classification of the mental disorders by separating human mental functions into broad categories called "domains" and preferentially supporting research into the biological correlates of these functions across diagnostic categories [7]. (ama-assn.org)
  • Companies with high B/M indicate that their public market value has dropped because of hard times or uncertainty regarding future earnings. (scirp.org)
  • Of course, the fact that past predictions turned out to be incorrect can always be taken as indicating the need to improve our ability to predict the future. (lareviewofbooks.org)
  • For some, uncertainty justifies not thinking about the future, while for others the uncertainty is a source of opportunity. (clubofamsterdam.com)
  • Without a concerted effort to be future-focused, organizations run grave risks of diminished importance or even oblivion in the fluctuating world of the early 21st century. (clubofamsterdam.com)
  • Often, the younger the startup, the more historical data is missing, and the higher are the uncertainties that affect future performance which make it difficult to appreciate the company. (istanbul.edu.tr)
  • Then I will take a step back and look at where interest rates may be going two or three years into the future and beyond. (bankofcanada.ca)
  • Because tax-planning initiatives present the company with both risks and rewards, boards must encourage management to evaluate any potential tax savings against any associated tax-related risks. (insightsoftware.com)
  • The post-Keynesian critique has become specifically focused on the role of speculation, investment that is driven by irrational sentiment and unrealistic expectation rather than by accurate assessment of underlying values. (lareviewofbooks.org)
  • The impacts of joint energy and output prices uncertainties in a mean-variance framework. (uni-muenchen.de)
  • The increasing empirical evidence on these "anomalous" variables inspired Fama and French (1992) to examine the joint roles of market beta and few firm-specific variables in the cross-section of average returns on the US stocks. (scirp.org)
  • The study provides the first direct evidence that the brain's own pain-fighting chemicals, called endorphins, play a role in the phenomenon known as the placebo effect - and that this response corresponds with a reduction in feelings of pain. (clubofamsterdam.com)
  • More complete data are needed to identify risk and protective factors and to design evidence-based suicide prevention programs for first responders. (cdc.gov)
  • The implementation of evidence-based infection control measures needs more public health actions and organizational control for universal application of evidence-based prevention and control practices, compliance with those practices, behavioural change, risk management, standardized surveillance methods, sterility assurance and generation of more reliable estimates of the burden of HAI through clinical audit. (who.int)
  • Similarly, the subsequent sharp economic downturn in the euro area forced the Governing Council of the ECB to take unusual decisions. (bis.org)
  • Experts asked by the Budapest Business Journal believe that the M&A market will not pick up until the general economic environment takes a turn for the better. (bbj.hu)
  • It is part of our wider strategy to achieve responsible growth where economic development and businesses' role in improving health and wellbeing go hand in hand. (who.int)
  • The causes of suicide are complex, with many personal, socio-demographic, medical, and economic factors playing a role. (cdc.gov)
  • These forward-looking statements entail various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements. (yahoo.com)
  • Such statements are based on current expectations, are subject to a number of uncertainties and risks, and actual results may differ materially from those contained in such statements. (yahoo.com)
  • Risks to reputation and brand may arise from negative attention from the media and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), even when a company's tax policies are appropriate and in compliance. (insightsoftware.com)
  • In some working conditions, compliance officers cooperate with other departments to ensure their employer meets its goals while mitigating risk and remaining within the confines of the law. (corporatecomplianceinsights.com)
  • But as a poker player she had a lot of experience thinking through the probable risks associated with different decisions. (propublica.org)
  • The researchers conducted a series of experiments to study the role of uncertainty in people's decisions to repeat an activity. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • Stating this responsibility internally and externally commits the board to incorporating risk considerations into its decisions and its evaluations of the company's strategic decisions, including those associated with tax-avoidance policies. (insightsoftware.com)
  • This determines risk exposure and expected performance, and is one of the most important decisions investors of all ages can make. (upal.com)
  • This may influence your risk and spending decisions as well. (upal.com)
  • Executives now recognize tax as a strategic risk, with respondents to the global influence and growing awareness of BEPS among investors, customers, and other stakeholders. (insightsoftware.com)
  • This is why most advisors believe that most investors should have an equity component in their portfolios, with actual weighting depending on one's time frame, risk tolerance, and spending flexibility. (upal.com)
  • Nine portfolios are constructed by taking daily closing prices of thirty selective stocks of CSE from January 2010 to December 2014. (scirp.org)
  • HML factor advocates higher risk exposure for typical "value" stocks with high B/M and "growth" stocks with low B/M. This is quite rational because companies need to arrive at a minimum size in order to execute an Initial Public Offering. (scirp.org)
  • This return premium reflects the higher risk of owning stocks.2 Consequently, the larger the equity allocation, the greater a portfolio's expected return-and risk. (upal.com)
  • A higher allocation to equities increases the risk of experiencing periods of poor returns during retirement. (upal.com)
  • In this plot, the different records are all cross calibrated to the TSIS-1 absolute scale (e.g., the TSIS1-absolute scale is 0.858 W/m^2 higher than the SORCE absolute scale) so the variability of TSI in this plot is considered to be its "true variability" (within cross calibration uncertainties). (skepticalscience.com)
  • One potential risk factor is occupation and several occupations appear to be at higher risk for suicide, including first responders [2] . (cdc.gov)
  • About 5%-10% of patients admitted to acute care hospitals in developed countries acquire health care-associated infections at any given time but the risk of acquiring infection is 2-20 times higher in developing countries. (who.int)
  • Millions of Americans believe it is perfectly all right to put other people at risk of death and misery. (reason.com)
  • We know how to protect ourselves - washing our hands, wearing masks and staying socially distant - but many people still take unnecessary risks, even at the highest levels of government. (propublica.org)
  • That causes some people to underestimate their risk, the experts said. (propublica.org)
  • That creates uncertainty and can lead people to rely on patterns of risk perception that may not be accurate. (propublica.org)
  • The uncertainty helps keep some people playing. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • However, the pace of change now makes it clear to thoughtful people that continuity can no longer be taken for granted. (clubofamsterdam.com)
  • Each year 10,000 people take the MENSA IQ test - 2,500 pass to become members. (clubofamsterdam.com)
  • Recently Public Health England recommended that everyone needs vitamin D equivalent to an average daily intake of 10 μg (400 IU) to protect bone and muscle health, 2 and more than 30-50% of older people in some Western countries take vitamin D supplements. (bmj.com)
  • CONCLUSIONS: Vaccinated individuals with any of the studied comorbidities experienced an increased risk of breakthrough COVID-19 infection and subsequent hospitalizations compared to the people without any of the studied comorbidities. (bvsalud.org)
  • Individuals with immunocompromising conditions and chronic lung disease were most at risk of breakthrough infection, while people with CKD were most at risk of hospitalization following breakthrough infection. (bvsalud.org)
  • Screening high-risk patients to detect diabetes and prediabetes was cost-effective (7-9), and prevention of type 2 diabetes in people with prediabetes through adoption of appropriate lifestyle changes and pharmacologic interventions has been successful in experimental settings (10). (cdc.gov)
  • The health status, mental wel - older people at risk of falls, injuries and many gaps in the available data. (who.int)
  • The cognitive deficits were tions are defined here as people aged 65 en were more likely to be depressed severe, their functional status was poor or older with at least one restriction in and suffer memory impairment and and nutritional status was impaired. (who.int)
  • In this paper we use simulation to analyze Dollar Cost Averaging performance and compare its results to Lump Sum investment. (researchgate.net)
  • But it didn't get wide participation from industry or many voluntary listings until September 2004, when editors of leading medical journals said they would no longer publish results of any studies that were not first listed in a public registry. (clubofamsterdam.com)
  • These results have important policy implications: the central bank may inadvertently over-tighten in times of financial uncertainty. (frbsf.org)
  • As a result, China plays a key role in determining global demand and prices of South Africa's main commodity exports, which now account for 34 percent of total goods exports (51 percent when manufactured commodities are included). (imf.org)
  • China is also one of the world's largest oil importers, and therefore plays an important role in setting the price of South Africa's oil imports (though supply factors have been key for prices), which account for around 16 percent of total goods imports. (imf.org)
  • On US totals, if you figure average house prices use conforming loan balances, then a repeat buyer has to have roughly 10% down to buy in addition to the 6% Realtor fee to sell. (blogspot.com)
  • When we talk about growing Canada's role as a responsible provider of natural gas and oil to the world, emissions performance is one of those measures,' said CAPP president and CEO Lisa Baiton in a news release. (yahoo.com)
  • It transpired that the competitors' average estimate corresponded to the ox's actual weight of 1,197 pounds. (bis.org)
  • Here we estimate the risks of breakthrough infection and subsequent hospitalization in individuals with common comorbidities who had completed an initial vaccination series. (bvsalud.org)
  • But if you can handle the risk, having more equity exposure in a portfolio enhances its return potential. (upal.com)
  • Estimates of exposure levels posing minimal risk to humans (Minimal Risk Levels or MRLs) have been made for methyl parathion. (cdc.gov)
  • A more detailed representation of hydrographs shape was achieved by averaging the recorded hydrographs of debris-flow surges. (copernicus.org)
  • We do so not in terms of a detailed content analysis but as a means of illustrating some of the particular forms class representation are taking. (socresonline.org.uk)
  • The recognition of this element of true, irreducible uncertainty undercuts claims about market efficiency and equilibrium and so upends the theoretical edifice of orthodox economics. (lareviewofbooks.org)
  • Kevin Birn, vice-president and Canadian oil markets chief analyst with S&P Global, said it's true that there is some uncertainty right now about the best way to measure and account for methane emissions. (yahoo.com)
  • Due to the high uncertainty for both parties, it is difficult to determine the true value of newly established startups. (istanbul.edu.tr)
  • Writing about the study in the Harvard Business Review , its authors state that "we found companies where the board is most engaged in important risk-oversight activities, pay lower taxes, on average, and face a lower risk of regulatory scrutiny or reputational damage, as evidenced by less aggressive shifting of income abroad and 31 percent less-volatile income taxes relative to similar companies with lower levels of risk oversight. (insightsoftware.com)
  • Risks and uncertainties about Kerr Mines' business are more fully discussed in the company's disclosure materials, including its annual information form and MD&A, filed with the securities regulatory authorities in Canada and available at www.sedar.com and readers are urged to read these materials. (yahoo.com)
  • In the initial funding, the entrepreneur, himself, his friends and relatives play an essential role. (istanbul.edu.tr)
  • A November 2013 New England Journal of Medicine article, drawing on the University of Pittsburgh's Project Tycho database of infectious disease statistics since 1888, concluded that vaccinations since 1924 have prevented 103 million cases of polio, measles, rubella, mumps, hepatitis A, diphtheria, and pertussis. (reason.com)
  • Andrea L. Kalfoglou thoughtfully addresses this challenge in her article weighing the risks and benefits of the use of antidepressant medication during pregnancy . (ama-assn.org)
  • Genetic factors are likely to affect the occurrence of role in the decision to submit the article or in its preparation. (cdc.gov)
  • RÉSUMÉ Le présent article a examiné les services de santé fournis à la population de personnes âgées (en particulier celles affectées par des handicaps physiques) et aux personnes souffrant de maladies mentales dans les pays arabes, ainsi que leur évolution au cours des trente dernières années. (who.int)
  • Data extracted from three relapse prevention studies failed to show significant effects of agomelatine over placebo (relative risk 0.78, 99% Cl 0.41−1.48). (cambridge.org)
  • Let's first take a look at how vaccines have improved health, then consider the role of the state in promoting immunization. (reason.com)
  • Looking at the possible risks, adverse health effects and policy options for caffeinated drinks, the paper published in the journal Frontiers in Public Health ​ suggested that an upper limit for caffeine per single serving should be established, as well as regulations for labelling, marketing and restrictions for sales to children and adolescents. (foodnavigator.com)
  • They said more research was needed to show the causal link between energy drink consumption and these public health problems, for which data should be harmonised across Europe to show population groups at particular risk. (foodnavigator.com)
  • Alcohol health and social harms are notably greater in Scotland than the UK average.2 In both Wales and Northern Ireland, they are somewhat greater than the UK average. (who.int)
  • Because HCP provide care to tion control professionals, and occupational health patients at high risk for complications of influenza, HCP professionals responsible for influenza vaccination programs should be considered a high priority for expanding influenza and influenza infection control programs in their institutions. (cdc.gov)
  • While telecommunicators are often the very first responders engaged with those on scene, research on their suicide risk and mental health has lagged. (cdc.gov)
  • Estimates of levels posing minimal risk to humans (minimal risk levels or MRLs) may be of interest to health professionals and citizens alike. (cdc.gov)
  • Health care personnel constitute a group at high risk of contracting COVID-19. (bvsalud.org)
  • A study published in the Journal of Management Accounting Research found a clear link between board risk oversight and more effective tax-planning practices. (insightsoftware.com)
  • We've already seen it taking hours of work from many physicians' practices. (medscape.com)
  • SMB which measures "size risk" reflects the view that small companies supposed to be more sensitive to many risk factors as they are comparatively undiversified in nature and have little ability to undertake adverse financial situations. (scirp.org)
  • The US and the dollar play a special role in the global economy, both for trade and for financial flows (Rey 2013, Maggiori et al. (cepr.org)
  • One recent study found that the average wait time for a first outpatient psychiatry visit in large urban areas is 25 days [4]. (ama-assn.org)
  • A limitation of existing studies is that they cannot take into account the time-varying parameters in the empirical models. (scholasticahq.com)
  • But they may have to offset this risk by being more flexible about spending over time. (upal.com)
  • Attempts to blame the sun for the rise in global temperatures have had to involve taking the data but selecting only the time periods that support such an argument. (skepticalscience.com)
  • In follow-up experiments, the researchers examined what makes uncertainty so motivating. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • Topics of the session include: field studies and documentation, mechanics of debris-flow initiation and propagation, laboratory experiments, modeling, monitoring, hazard and risk assessment and mapping, early warning, and alarm systems. (copernicus.org)
  • This suggests to the researchers that timely resolution is key to the effectiveness of the element of uncertainty. (chicagobooth.edu)
  • Specifically within the field of educational technology, many researchers and practitioners emphasize the role of social dimensions, and the importance of having technically supported learning situated in a social context. (lu.se)
  • One study published earlier this year in the journal Environmental Science and Technology used aircraft to measure actual airborne methane emissions from heavy oil facilities in Saskatchewan, and concluded they were releasing almost four times more of the gas than the companies reported to government. (yahoo.com)
  • The dollar's dominance also manifests itself in times of elevated global risk. (cepr.org)
  • The neoclassical synthesis emphasized the role of market forces in the economy, while also acknowledging the need for government intervention in certain circumstances. (wikipedia.org)
  • The three factors include market risk premium, size risk and book to market risk. (scirp.org)
  • Fama and French (2004) observed very little relation between market beta and stock return whereas other studies found relationships between returns and variables such as "size", "book to market ratio", and "past returns" popularly known as market capitalization, BM and risk premium respectively. (scirp.org)
  • This model assumes that the cross-section of average returns can be explained by three factors like the excess market return, size factor and book-to-market (B/M) equity factor. (scirp.org)
  • The Hungarian M&A market has been very slow in the past few years, with only 25 to 30 medium-sized and large transactions per quarter, Zoltán Siklósi, managing partner of M&A advisory Invescom told the Budapest Business Journal . (bbj.hu)
  • 3 4 The role of vitamin D supplementation in individuals not at high risk of osteomalacia (box 1) has been extensively investigated in recent years, but some uncertainties remain. (bmj.com)
  • Western Pacific Surveillance and Response Journal , 2016, 7(2):41-50. (who.int)
  • The prevalence of such similarities and differences in gender roles is one reason why I have chosen to study feminism, as it is a reaction to such inequalities. (lu.se)
  • Journal of Financial Risk Management , 6 , 352-363. (scirp.org)
  • Exactly two weeks after he took up office as governor of the OeNB, the insolvency of investment bank Lehman Brothers left the financial community in a state of shock. (bis.org)
  • Such moments are seen as underscoring the dangers of overindebtedness, and Minsky's work on financial instability was taken as a theoretical explanation for why certain levels of debt are unsustainable. (lareviewofbooks.org)
  • Although tax is among the organizations' heaviest users of financial data, the data available to tax-risk managers and overseers may be inadequate. (insightsoftware.com)
  • We will take whatever action is needed to fulfil the ECB's mandate to pursue price stability and to safeguard financial stability. (europa.eu)
  • My current role is to lead the GSK medicinal chemistry side of a joint research collaboration with Kymera Therapeutics to discover new E3 ligase binders that can be incorporated into PROTAC molecules. (efmc.info)
  • In both instances, global risk, measured by the VIX, increases sharply while the dollar appreciates strongly. (cepr.org)
  • We found an increased risk of breakthrough infection and subsequent hospitalization in individuals with any of the four comorbidities when compared to individuals without these four comorbidities. (bvsalud.org)
  • Patients with multiple comorbidities have an even greater risk of breakthrough infection or hospitalization compared to patients with none of the studied comorbidities. (bvsalud.org)
  • Looking at the global and the euro area economy, it is abundantly clear that we are in such a period of uncertainty. (bis.org)
  • Published in: Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business , Vol. 24, No. 2 (2009): pp. 221-231. (uni-muenchen.de)
  • Every year CareerCast scores the stress levels of different jobs by analyzing Bureau of Labor Statistics data for 11 different categories (e.g., travel, risk of death, deadlines). (corporatecomplianceinsights.com)
  • Situated prefiguration emphasizes affective bonds and direct struggle taking place in bounded organizational spaces, while distributed prefiguration manifests in wider socio-spatial formations. (cbs.dk)
  • Australia has warmed by significantly more than 1 degree since 1910, with most of the warming having taken place since 1950. (munichre.com)
  • If for some reason they cannot appoint a family member to take their place, they usually do not have a plan B for succession. (bbj.hu)
  • In an intrinsically social learning system, on the other hand, social interactivity can take place independently of any other human presence than that of one student.2,3 There are also other differences between the two approaches in terms of constraints and potentials. (lu.se)
  • The report cited studies that had shown links to seizures, caffeine overdosing, risk-taking behaviour and addiction particularly when consumed with alcohol and obesity and dental cavities through sugar content. (foodnavigator.com)
  • and to ensure policy in areas of reserved policy such as alcohol taxation and the regulation of broadcast advertising is taken forward in a way that benefits the whole of the UK. (who.int)
  • While this many day care problems in two years is probably not average, it is by no means unusual. (thelizlibrary.org)
  • It has not only increased to an unprecedented level, but so too has its average duration. (fao.org)
  • For example, the global mean sea level increased by an average of 1.7 mm a year between 1901 and 2010. (munichre.com)
  • If greenhouse gases in the atmosphere continue to increase as they have in past decades - roughly in line with what is known as the RCP8.5 'business-as-usual' scenario - global mean sea level can be expected to rise by 84 cm by the end of the century, with an uncertainty range of 61 to 110 cm. (munichre.com)
  • El Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, SAG, y el Instituto de Desarrollo Agropecuario (INDAP), presentaron en la región de Los Lagos el primer piloto del "Programa Global de Doctores por el Suelo en Chile", patrocinado técnicamente por la Alianza Mundial por el Suelo de la FAO. (fao.org)
  • We therefore set up a counterfactual in which we simulate the effects of a global risk shock that would materialise in the absence of a dollar appreciation. (cepr.org)
  • Why does this trial-which is just a large case series-get space in the New England Journal ? (bmj.com)
  • China also plays a large role in other commodities that South Africa exports including coal, gold, and platinum. (imf.org)