About Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Our mission: Bringing practical business and technical intelligence to today's structured cabling professionals

For more than 30 years, Cabling Installation & Maintenance has provided useful, practical information to professionals responsible for the specification, design, installation and management of structured cabling systems serving enterprise, data center and other environments. These professionals are challenged to stay informed of constantly evolving standards, system-design and installation approaches, product and system capabilities, technologies, as well as applications that rely on high-performance structured cabling systems. Our editors synthesize these complex issues into multiple information products. This portfolio of information products provides concrete detail that improves the efficiency of day-to-day operations, and equips cabling professionals with the perspective that enables strategic planning for networks’ optimum long-term performance.

Throughout our annual magazine, weekly email newsletters and 24/7/365 website, Cabling Installation & Maintenance digs into the essential topics our audience focuses on.

  • Design, Installation and Testing: We explain the bottom-up design of cabling systems, from case histories of actual projects to solutions for specific problems or aspects of the design process. We also look at specific installations using a case-history approach to highlight challenging problems, solutions and unique features. Additionally, we examine evolving test-and-measurement technologies and techniques designed to address the standards-governed and practical-use performance requirements of cabling systems.
  • Technology: We evaluate product innovations and technology trends as they impact a particular product class through interviews with manufacturers, installers and users, as well as contributed articles from subject-matter experts.
  • Data Center: Cabling Installation & Maintenance takes an in-depth look at design and installation workmanship issues as well as the unique technology being deployed specifically for data centers.
  • Physical Security: Focusing on the areas in which security and IT—and the infrastructure for both—interlock and overlap, we pay specific attention to Internet Protocol’s influence over the development of security applications.
  • Standards: Tracking the activities of North American and international standards-making organizations, we provide updates on specifications that are in-progress, looking forward to how they will affect cabling-system design and installation. We also produce articles explaining the practical aspects of designing and installing cabling systems in accordance with the specifications of established standards.

Cabling Installation & Maintenance is published by Endeavor Business Media, a division of EndeavorB2B.

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5 key women’s health initiatives could add $1 trillion to global GDP, World Economic Forum says

5 key women's health initiatives could add $1 trillion to world GDP, WEF says

Women around the world live 25% more of their lives in poor health than men do, new research from the World Economic Forum found, but implementing a five-point plan to address those inequalities could unlock $1 trillion billion in added world GDP by 2040 and add seven healthy days per year to each woman’s life.

The new report, Blueprint to Close the Women’s Health Gap: How to Improve Lives and Economies for All, published in collaboration with the McKinsey Health Institute, identified nine health conditions that particularly afflict women and contribute to one-third of the poor-health gap: maternal hypertensive disorders, postpartum hemorrhage, ischemic heart disease, cervical cancer, breast cancer, endometriosis, menopause, migraine and premenstrual syndrome.

“Healthier women form the foundation of stronger families, productive workplaces and resilient economies, and yet profound gender gaps in research and scientific innovation continue to deny women the basic tools, treatments and services they need to remain healthy,” said Anita Zaidi, Board co-chair of the Global Alliance for Women’s Health and President of Gender Equality at the Gates Foundation.

She praised the WEF’s launch of Women’s Health Impact Tracking, a publicly accessible tool designed to measure and address global health gaps and promote equitable, scalable solutions worldwide. “The platform fills a critical need by providing data that is both comprehensive enough to capture the complexity of women’s lives and simple enough to act on,” she said.

The results of the study and the launch of the Women’s Health Impact tracker were announced at the World Economic Forum meeting this week in Davos, Switzerland.

The research identifies five key actions for stakeholders to address these imbalances and unlock the vast, untapped potential of greater health equity:

  1. Count women: Invest in better data collection to reveal the real burden of women’s health conditions.
  2. Study women: Fund research into female-specific health concerns and sex-based differences.
  3. Care for women: Ensure clinical guidelines reflect best practices tailored to women’s unique needs.
  4. Include all women: Address disparities affecting marginalized groups for broader health equity.
  5. Invest in women: Mobilize funding for innovative health-care solutions and delivery models.

“It is time to count women, study women, care for women, invest in women and include all women,” said Lucy Pérez, senior partner at McKinsey & Company and co-leader of the McKinsey Health Institute. “Addressing these conditions can not only improve the lives of millions of women and unlock economic uplift – it provides a blueprint for scaling and tracking progress to close the broader women’s health gap.”

The new report highlights critical disparities in women’s health outcomes, driven by gaps in data collection, research funding, clinical practice guidelines and health-care delivery systems. The report emphasizes that improving data accuracy, increasing research funding for women-specific conditions and enhancing sex-based clinical guidelines could significantly reduce these disparities.

Read more: Diabetes health impact fund T1D appoints Elizabeth Mily as CEO

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