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Related Concept Videos

Stringent Response in E. coli01:23

Stringent Response in E. coli

Bacterial growth is closely tied to nutrient availability, with cells proliferating exponentially under favorable conditions and entering a stationary phase when resources become scarce. This transition is mediated by a regulatory mechanism known as the stringent response, which allows bacteria to adapt to nutrient deprivation by modulating gene expression and metabolic activity.During nutrient scarcity, intracellular amino acid levels decline. It results in the accumulation of uncharged tRNAs...
Spare Receptors01:30

Spare Receptors

Some receptors remain unoccupied even when an agonist produces a maximal response. Such empty ones are called spare receptors. In presence of spare receptors the maximum effect of an agonist drug is achieved with fewer than 100% of the receptors being occupied. To determine the presence of spare receptors, scientists often compare the concentration of the drug needed to produce 50% of the maximum effect (EC50) with the concentration of the drug needed to occupy 50% of the receptors (Kd). If the...
Reclosers and Fuses01:26

Reclosers and Fuses

Automatic circuit reclosers enhance the protection of distribution circuits by interrupting and auto-reclosing an AC circuit according to a preset sequence. They effectively manage temporary faults on overhead distribution lines, often caused by tree limbs or wildlife, by briefly disrupting service to improve overall reliability. However, contact with reclosers or energized broken conductors on the ground can pose serious hazards.
A comprehensive protection scheme for radial distribution...
Fermentation01:29

Fermentation

Most eukaryotic organisms require oxygen to survive and function adequately. Such organisms produce large amounts of energy during aerobic respiration by metabolizing glucose and oxygen into carbon dioxide and water. However, most eukaryotes can generate some energy in the absence of oxygen by anaerobic metabolism.
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Fates of Pyruvate01:20

Fates of Pyruvate

Pyruvate is the end product of glycolysis, where glucose is oxidized to pyruvate, simultaneously reducing NAD+ to NADH. Two molecules of ATP are also produced by substrate-level phosphorylation.
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Fatigue01:21

Fatigue

Fatigue occurs when materials rupture under repeated or fluctuating loads, even at stress levels far below their static breaking strength. It typically results in brittle failure, even for ductile materials. It is a critical consideration in designing machines and structural components subjected to repetitive or varying loads. The nature of these loadings can range from fluctuating loads like unbalanced pump impellers causing vibrations to repeatedly bending a thin steel rod wire back and forth...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 8, 2026

The use of SC1 (Pluripotin) to Support mESC Self-renewal in the Absence of LIF
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The use of SC1 (Pluripotin) to Support mESC Self-renewal in the Absence of LIF

Published on: November 18, 2009

FESC not enough alone.

Alexis Nolan

    The Health Service Journal
    |December 29, 2007
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Many leaders are uncertain about using the Future Education and Skills Commission (FESC), preferring alternative support. Over half anticipate limited success for FESC, indicating low confidence in its future impact.

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    Area of Science:

    • Health services research
    • Healthcare management
    • Public health policy

    Background:

    • The Future Education and Skills Commission (FESC) aims to guide healthcare commissioning.
    • Understanding stakeholder confidence is crucial for the successful implementation of new initiatives.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To assess the awareness and anticipated utility of FESC among key decision-makers.
    • To gauge the confidence levels of chief executives and commissioning directors regarding FESC's potential success.

    Main Methods:

    • Survey distributed to commissioning directors and chief executives.
    • Data analysis of responses regarding FESC awareness, preferred support, and success expectations.

    Main Results:

    • Two-thirds of commissioning directors and 44% of chief executives are uncertain about using FESC.
    • Over 70% of both groups would prefer alternative forms of commissioning support.
    • More than half of respondents believe FESC will achieve only minimal success.

    Conclusions:

    • There is significant uncertainty and a lack of confidence in the Future Education and Skills Commission among healthcare leaders.
    • Current perceptions suggest a need to reassess FESC's strategy and communication to improve adoption and perceived value.