391 research outputs found
An Examination of Palliative or End-of-Life Care Education in Introductory Nursing Programs across Canada
An investigation was done to assess for and describe the end-of-life education provided in Canadian nursing programs to prepare students for practice. All 35 university nursing schools/faculties were surveyed in 2004; 29 (82.9%) responded. At that time, all but one routinely provided this education, with that school developing a course (implemented the next year). As compared to past surveys, this survey revealed more class time, practicum hours, and topics covered, with this content and experiences deliberately planned and placed in curriculums. A check in 2010 revealed that all of these schools were providing death education similar to that described in 2004. These findings indicate that nurse educators recognize the need for all nurses to be prepared to care for dying persons and their families. Regardless, more needs to be done to ensure novice nurses feel capable of providing end-of-life care. Death education developments will be needed as deaths increase with population aging
A systematic literature review of research on social procurement in the construction and infrastructure sector : barriers, enablers, and strategies
In Australia, a new feature of public policy is the requirement by governments that large-scale infrastructure projects integrate social procurement practices that alter the traditional focus on balancing price and quality. Social procurement has been gradually developing in practice, but the academic literature has not kept pace. Although past research has identified some of the barriers affecting social procurement implementation in the construction industry, the nature of the barriers impeding its proliferation has not to date been systematically reviewed. This paper undertakes a review of the social procurement literature published from January 2012 to 30 June 2022, with 49 papers chosen under selective criteria. This critical review employs the “Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses” (PRISMA) technique to retrieve secondary data on social procurement from available peer-reviewed academic papers through three databases (Scopus, EBSCOhost, Web of Science). The literature analysis focuses on three themes: (1) barriers; (2) enablers; and (3) strategies to overcome the barriers. The paper finds that social procurement as a field of practice is evolving and expanding, but its role in contributing to social value creation remains an under-theorised concept. Recommendations for practice and future research are identified, including the need to measure the real-world impacts of policy
Harnessing Repetitive Behaviours to Engage Attention and Learning in a Novel Therapy for Autism: An Exploratory Analysis
Rigorous, quantitative examination of therapeutic techniques anecdotally reported to have been successful in people with autism who lack communicative speech will help guide basic science toward a more complete characterisation of the cognitive profile in this underserved subpopulation, and show the extent to which theories and results developed with the high-functioning subpopulation may apply. This study examines a novel therapy, the “Rapid Prompting Method” (RPM). RPM is a parent-developed communicative and educational therapy for persons with autism who do not speak or who have difficulty using speech communicatively. The technique aims to develop a means of interactive learning by pointing amongst multiple-choice options presented at different locations in space, with the aid of sensory “prompts” which evoke a response without cueing any specific response option. The prompts are meant to draw and to maintain attention to the communicative task – making the communicative and educational content coincident with the most physically salient, attention-capturing stimulus – and to extinguish the sensory–motor preoccupations with which the prompts compete. Video-recorded RPM sessions with nine autistic children ages 8–14 years who lacked functional communicative speech were coded for behaviours of interest. An analysis controlled for age indicates that exposure to the claimed therapy appears to support a decrease in repetitive behaviours and an increase in the number of multiple-choice response options without any decrease in successful responding. Direct gaze is not related to successful responding, suggesting that direct gaze might not be any advantage for this population and need not in all cases be a precondition to communication therapies
Book Reviews: MARRINER-TOMEY, A. (1989). Nursing Theorists and Their Work, 2nd ed. St. Louis: Mosby
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68645/2/10.1177_089431849000300211.pd
The Spatial Evolution of Stellar Structures in the LMC/SMC
We present an analysis of the spatial distribution of various stellar
populations within the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. We use optically
selected stellar samples with mean ages between ~9 and ~1000 Myr, and existing
stellar cluster catalogues to investigate how stellar structures form and
evolve within the LMC/SMC. We use two statistical techniques to study the
evolution of structure within these galaxies, the -parameter and the
two-point correlation function (TPCF). In both galaxies we find the stars are
born with a high degree of substructure (i.e. are highly fractal) and that the
stellar distribution approaches that of the 'background' population on
timescales similar to the crossing times of the galaxy (~80/150 Myr for the
SMC/LMC respectively). By comparing our observations to simple models of
structural evolution we find that 'popping star clusters' do not significantly
influence structural evolution in these galaxies. Instead we argue that general
galactic dynamics are the main drivers, and that substructure will be erased in
approximately the crossing time, regardless of spatial scale, from small
clusters to whole galaxies. This can explain why many young Galactic clusters
have high degrees of substructure, while others are smooth and centrally
concentrated. We conclude with a general discussion on cluster 'infant
mortality', in an attempt to clarify the time/spatial scales involved.Comment: 6 pages, conference contribution to IAU Symposium 256, van Loon J.T.
& Oliviera J.M., ed
Campus Vol IV N 4
Lang, Pete. The Rain . Prose. 2.
Chase Jr., Richard and Jack K. Matthews Jr. Fitz and the Field house . Picture. 3.
Gould, Jim. After Graduation day . Prose. 4.
Runkle, Pete. As We Danced Off Both our Shoes . Prose. 5.
Hawk, Bob. Fields of Concentration For Seniors! . Cartoon. 6.
De Lackner, Barbara. Spring fever . Poem. 8.
Goodwin, Joyce. Would That Time Were A . Poem. 8.
Ward, Nancy. It Was Fall . Poem. 8.
Rounds, Dave. Untitled. Cartoon. 8.
Johnston, Ed. Campus Casuals . Prose. 9.
Gilbert, Ralph. Campus Progress Report . Picture. 10.
Rounds, Dave. Untitled. cartoon. 12
The SAMI Galaxy Survey: energy sources of the turbulent velocity dispersion in spatially-resolved local star-forming galaxies
We investigate the energy sources of random turbulent motions of ionised gas
from H emission in eight local star-forming galaxies from the
Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey. These
galaxies satisfy strict pure star-forming selection criteria to avoid
contamination from active galactic nuclei (AGN) or strong shocks/outflows.
Using the relatively high spatial and spectral resolution of SAMI, we find that
-- on sub-kpc scales our galaxies display a flat distribution of ionised gas
velocity dispersion as a function of star formation rate (SFR) surface density.
A major fraction of our SAMI galaxies shows higher velocity dispersion than
predictions by feedback-driven models, especially at the low SFR surface
density end. Our results suggest that additional sources beyond star formation
feedback contribute to driving random motions of the interstellar medium (ISM)
in star-forming galaxies. We speculate that gravity, galactic shear, and/or
magnetorotational instability (MRI) may be additional driving sources of
turbulence in these galaxies.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. Accepted by MNRA
The SAMI Galaxy Survey: mass-kinematics scaling relations
We use data from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral-field spectroscopy
(SAMI) Galaxy Survey to study the dynamical scaling relation between galaxy
stellar mass and the general kinematic parameter that combines rotation velocity and velocity dispersion
. We show that the relation: (1)~is linear above
limits set by properties of the samples and observations; (2)~has slightly
different slope when derived from stellar or gas kinematic measurements;
(3)~applies to both early-type and late-type galaxies and has smaller scatter
than either the Tully-Fisher relation () for late
types or the Faber-Jackson relation () for early types;
and (4)~has scatter that is only weakly sensitive to the value of , with
minimum scatter for in the range 0.4 and 0.7. We compare to the
aperture second moment (the `aperture velocity dispersion') measured from the
integrated spectrum within a 3-arcsecond radius aperture
(). We find that while and
are in general tightly correlated, the relation has less scatter than the relation.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, Accepted 2019 May 22. Received 2019 May 18; in
original form 2019 January
A systematic literature review of research on social procurement in the construction and infrastructure sector: barriers, enablers, and strategies
In Australia, a new feature of public policy is the requirement by governments that large-scale infrastructure projects integrate social procurement practices that alter the traditional focus on balancing price and quality. Social procurement has been gradually developing in practice, but the academic literature has not kept pace. Although past research has identified some of the barriers affecting social procurement implementation in the construction industry, the nature of the barriers impeding its proliferation has not to date been systematically reviewed. This paper undertakes a review of the social procurement literature published from January 2012 to 30 June 2022, with 49 papers chosen under selective criteria. This critical review employs the “Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses” (PRISMA) technique to retrieve secondary data on social procurement from available peer-reviewed academic papers through three databases (Scopus, EBSCOhost, Web of Science). The literature analysis focuses on three themes: (1) barriers; (2) enablers; and (3) strategies to overcome the barriers. The paper finds that social procurement as a field of practice is evolving and expanding, but its role in contributing to social value creation remains an under-theorised concept. Recommendations for practice and future research are identified, including the need to measure the real-world impacts of policy
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