865 research outputs found
A Framework of Academic Persistence and Success for Ethnically Diverse Graduate Nursing Students
The goal of this qualitative study was to examine how ethnically diverse graduate nursing students persisted with academic studies. Ethnically diverse nurses are vastly underrepresented in the workforce. This problem is accentuated by high attrition rates in academic programs. A grounded theory approach was used. Five focus groups were conducted with 16 ethnically diverse graduate students in nursing and interviews were conducted with two diversity advisers. Analysis of the data indicated that the process of learning to balance stressors with moderators was key to academic persistence and retention. A conceptual framework emerged from the data that provides a guide for academic institutions seeking to implement strategies to promote retention and graduation of diverse graduate nursing students. Recommendations are offered to address faculty development, administrative action, and student resources. Aim. The goal of this qualitative study was to examine how ethnically diverse graduate nursing students persisted with academic studies.
Background. Ethnically diverse nurses are vastly underrepresented in the workforce. This problem is accentuated by high attrition rates in academic programs.
Method. A grounded theory approach was used. Five focus groups were conducted with 16 ethnically diverse graduate students in nursing and interviews were conducted with two diversity advisers.
Results. Analysis of the data indicated that the process of learning to balance stressors with moderators was key to academic persistence and retention. A conceptual framework emerged from the data that provides a guide for academic institutions seeking to implement strategies to promote retention and graduation of diverse graduate nursing students.
Conclusion. Recommendations are offered to address faculty development, administrative action, and student resources
Fifth survey of parents of three and four year old children and their use of early years services (Summer 2000 to Spring 2001)
The main aim of the survey was to establish rates of participation for three and four year olds in all forms of pre-school provision in England... The survey also investigated the characteristics of providers used and parents’ opinions of the quantity and quality of provision in the local area in general as well as of the providers they used, and the influences on their choice of providers
Unhealthy days and quality of life in Irish patients with diabetes
Objectives: To study the determinants of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in Irish patients with diabetes using the Centres for Disease Controls' (CDC's) 'Unhealthy Days' summary measure and to assesses the agreement between this generic HRQoL measure and the disease-specific Audit of Diabetes Dependant Quality of Life (ADDQoL) measure. Research Design and Methods: Data were analysed from the Diabetes Quality of Life Study, a cross-sectional study of 1,456 people with diabetes in Ireland (71% response rate). Unhealthy days were assessed using the CDC's 'Unhealthy days' summary measure. Quality of life (QoL) was also assessed using the ADDQoL measure. Analyses were conducted primarily using logistic regression. The agreement between the two QoL instruments was measured using the kappa co-efficient. Results: Participants reported a median of 2 unhealthy days per month. In multivariate analyses, female gender (P = 0.001), insulin use (P = 0.030), diabetes complications (P =<0.001) were significantly associated with more unhealthy days. Older patients had fewer unhealthy days per month (P = 0.003). Agreement between the two measures of QoL (unhealthy days measure and ADDQoL) was poor, Kappa = 0.234 Conclusions: The findings highlight the determinants of HRQoL in patients with diabetes using a generic HRQoL summary measure. The 'Unhealthy Days' and the ADDQoL have poor agreement, therefore the 'Unhealthy Days' summary measure may be assessing a different construct. Nonetheless, this study demonstrates that the generic 'Unhealthy Days' summary measure can be used to detect determinants of HRQoL in patients with diabetes
Risk Factors for High Early Mortality in Patients on Antiretroviral Treatment in a Rural District of Malawi.
OBJECTIVES: Among adults started on antiretroviral treatment (ART) in a rural district hospital (a) to determine the cumulative proportion of deaths that occur within 3 and 6 months of starting ART, and (b) to identify risk factors that may be associated with such mortality. DESIGN AND SETTING: A cross-sectional analytical study set in Thyolo district, Malawi. METHODS: Over a 2-year period (April 2003 to April 2005) mortality within the first 3 and 6 months of starting ART was determined and risk factors were examined. RESULTS: A total of 1507 individuals (517 men and 990 women), whose median age was 35 years were included in the study. There were a total of 190 (12.6%) deaths on ART of which 116 (61%) occurred within the first 3 months (very early mortality) and 150 (79%) during the first 6 months of initiating ART. Significant risk factors associated with such mortality included WHO stage IV disease, a baseline CD4 cell count under 50 cells/mul and increasing grades of malnutrition. A linear trend in mortality was observed with increasing grades of malnutrition (chi for trend = 96.1, P </= 0.001) and decreasing CD4 cell counts (chi for trend = 72.4, P </= 0.001). Individuals who were severely malnourished [body mass index (BMI) < 16.0 kg/m] had a six times higher risk of dying in the first 3 months than those with a normal nutritional status. CONCLUSIONS: Among individuals starting ART, the BMI and clinical staging could be important screening tools for use to identify and target individuals who, despite ART, are still at a high risk of early death
Nurses\u27 Alumnae Association Bulletin - Volume 5 Number 8
Calling All Nurses
Financial Report
Calendar of Events
Lest You Forget!
Attention
Review of the Alumnae Association Meetings
President\u27s Report
Barton Memorial Division
Oxygen Therapy
Welcome, White Haven Alumnae
Clinical Use of Penicillin in Infections of the Ears, Nose and Throat
Address - Graduation of Nurses, 1945
Miscellaneous Items
The Blood that Kills
The Story of Malaria
Program
Prizes - May, 1946
Capping Exercises
The Economic Security Program of the Pennsylvania State Nurses\u27 Association
The Clara Melville Scholarship Fund
Card of Thanks
The Poet\u27s Corner
The Hospital Pharmacy
Jefferson Medical College Hospital School of Nursing Faculty
Jefferson Hospital Gray Lady Unite, A.R.R.
The Volunteer Nurses\u27 Aides Salute Jefferson Nurses
Changes in the Staff at Jefferson Hospital
Red Cross Recruits
Did You Know That
The Pennsylvania Nurse
Medical College News
Magazine and Newspaper Items
Central Dressing Room and Transfusion Unit
Rules Concerning Central Dressing Room
Radios and Electrical Appliances
Attending College
Nurses in Anesthesia
Condolences
Marriages
New Arrivals
Deaths
The Bulletin Committee
Attention, Alumnae
New Addresse
Nurses\u27 Alumnae Association Bulletin - Volume 18 Number 1
Alumnae Notes
Central Dressing Room
Committee Reports
Digest of Alumnae Association Meetings
Graduation Awards - 1952
Greetings from Miss Childs
Greetings from the President
Marriages
Modern Trends in Orthopaedic Surgery
Necrology
New Arrivals
Physical Advances at Jefferson Hospital - 1953
Staff Activities - 1952-1953
Student Activities
The Artificial Heart Lung Machin
High-spatial-resolution imaging of thermal emission from debris disks
We have obtained sub-arcsec mid-IR images of a sample of debris disks within
100 pc. For our sample of nineteen A-type debris disk candidates chosen for
their IR excess, we have resolved, for the first time, five sources plus the
previously resolved disk around HD 141569. Two other sources in our sample have
been ruled out as debris disks since the time of sample selection. Three of the
six resolved sources have inferred radii of 1-4 AU (HD 38678, HD 71155, and HD
181869), and one source has an inferred radius ~10-30 AU (HD 141569). Among the
resolved sources with detections of excess IR emission, HD 71155 appears to be
comparable in size (r~2 AU) to the solar system's asteroid belt, thus joining
Zeta Lep (HD 38678, reported previously) to comprise the only two resolved
sources of that class. Two additional sources (HD 95418 and HD 139006) show
spatial extent that implies disk radii of ~1-3 AU, although the excess IR
fluxes are not formally detected with better than 2-sigma significance. For the
unresolved sources, the upper limits on the maximum radii of mid-IR disk
emission are in the range ~1-20 AU, four of which are comparable in radius to
the asteroid belt. We have compared the global color temperatures of the dust
to that expected for the dust in radiative equilibrium at the distances
corresponding to the observed sizes or limits on the sizes. In most cases, the
temperatures estimated via these two methods are comparable, and therefore, we
see a generally consistent picture of the inferred morphology and the global
mid-IR emission. Finally, while our sample size is not statistically
significant, we notice that the older sources (>200 Myr) host much warmer dust
(T > 400 K) than younger sources (in the 10s of Myr).Comment: 46 pages, 12 figure
Dysmorphia
Margaret Fitzgerald is a sophomore, majoring in Journalism with an emphasis on News/Editorial and minoring in Spanish. She is from St. Louis, Missouri. After graduation, Margaret sees herself either practicing media law or writing for a newspaper. She plans to move to St. Louis or Chicago. Art and photography have always been a passion of hers. Art has become a coping mechanism for Margaret whenever the stress of school tends to take over. Photography has become a side hustle and is something she could see herself doing professionally one day
Bibliography for Journalism Students
It is a lamentable fact that, in the past, very few people have seen fit to make a bibliography of journalistic material for reference for journalism students, newspaper workers, and others who have made or intend to make writing a vocation. The need of such a bibliography is evident. Practically all other fields of endeavor have at their disposal unlimited material with which to work. In journalism, as much as in any other work, it is essential to have a fund of references on hand which are easily available at all times. It is for this reason that I have attempted to compile a number of references which I hope may be of some assistance to journalists in the future. The following pages contain references covering a period of the last five years, but are concerned chiefly with 1929 and 1930
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