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WASHINGTON – The nation's transplant network is taking a long-awaited step to ease a serious disparity: Where you live affects whether you get a timely liver transplant or die waiting. Desperate ...
Centralized Mapping. I used the University of Hawaii’s OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) network at its Advanced Network Computing Lab (ANCL) to host both boxes. On the most basic level, OSPF is a ...
Toronto’s underground PATH network has been a particular example of this since 1987. The network now funnels about 200,000 travellers a day through 30 kilometres of travel space connecting roughly 50 ...
More than 14,600 people are on the waiting list for a new liver. Just over 7,100 received one last year -- all but a few hundred from deceased donors -- and more than 1,400 people died waiting.
The nation’s transplant network is taking a long-awaited step to ease a serious disparity: Where you live affects whether you get a timely liver transplant or die waiting.
The United Network for Organ Sharing is proposing to redraw the map that governs how donated livers are distributed in the U.S. You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in ...
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