Editors at two U.K. - based publications — Occupational and Environmental Medicine (OEM) and The Annals of Occupational Hygiene — say they have received the letter from Chajet warning them not to publish DEMS results or even pass
around drafts of papers.
Not exact matches
I took the great advice
of Carla Johnson, chief experience officer at Type - A Communications, and put down my pencil (yes, I like to do my first
drafts with a sharp pencil and crisp
paper on a clipboard and subsequent
drafts on my laptop) and observed the things
around me.
«So there is a skills base that is developing amongst patients
around the world, and definitely in the U.K.» Stephens adds that some patients already review clinical trial applications and even assist in
drafting academic
papers, in order to create a lay summary
of them.
He and eight co-authors have
drafted a fresh
paper arguing that the world has already shot past a safe eventual atmospheric concentration
of carbon dioxide, which they say would be
around 350 parts per million, a level passed 20 years ago.
These dire warnings apply to what we think
of as traditional legal work — shuffling
papers around, endlessly
drafting factums or contracts or opinions, attending mind - numbing meetings.