636 research outputs found

    Occupational Balance Education: A Prerequisite to Healthy Habit Formation

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    The transition to college elicits newfound independence for those who are moving from their homes to campus. With this transition, the individuals are now forced to establish their own routines and habits in a completely new environment. Because of this, college students are more likely to experience high levels of stress, poor dietary habits, low sleep quality, and decreased physical activity. Individual behaviors cause around 50% of premature deaths, so establishing healthy habits as early as possible is the best thing a person can do to keep chronic illness and unwanted medical struggles away. Occupational balance, or the pleasant integration of all areas of one life is the result of individual behaviors and daily activities being harmonious and benefiting an individual. The purpose of this study was to provide education to freshmen students through six week intervention about occupational balance. The intervention utilized a pretest, four weeks of education on sleep, stress management, exercise, and diet, and followed with a post test. Results showed that over the six weeks, the individuals became more comfortable and felt their lives had become more balanced. Integrating education about healthy habit formation into first year courses can help students to establish more effective routines that will set them up for success in college and beyond

    Is it true that St. Norbert once beat the University of Notre Dame at hockey?

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    Abbot Pennings answers a question about the history of the hockey team, archived from the SNC website

    Lands Council, Karuk Tribe, and the Great Environmental Divide in the Ninth Circuit

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    The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, the nation’s largest appellate court, with jurisdiction over 15 judicial districts and 61 million people—almost 20 percent of the nation’s population—spans from Alaska to Arizona, from Montana to Hawaii. The Ninth Circuit has a reputation for being an environmentally sensitive court, but the court is as diverse as the terrain over which it has jurisdiction. Due to its size, the court’s en banc reviews do not include all 29 judges but instead only panels of 11. Thus, Ninth Circuit en banc panels can reflect the kind of diversity of opinion they aim to reduce. Recently, the two en banc decisions discussed in this article—Lands Council v. McNair and Karuk Tribe of California v. U.S. Forest Service—displayed the court’s apparently schizophrenic approach to review of agency environmental decision-making. A unanimous court in Lands Council called for more deference to Forest Service decisions favoring timber harvests, while the Karuk Tribe majority, with barely a reference to Lands Council, gave close scrutiny to the Forest Service’s interpretation of the Endangered Species Act. The latter decision prompted a bitter dissent from the author of Lands Council, Judge Milan Smith, which seemed to be more of a political diatribe than legal criticism and may have been aimed at attracting the attention of the U.S. Supreme Court. Although the varying results of the two cases can be reconciled, we think that they epitomize a deep philosophical rift within the court on environmental issues, and we include an appendix suggesting to litigators on which side of the environmental divide certain Ninth Circuit judges may fall

    Testing an Integrity-Checking DSS Component for Organizational Memory Building

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    Organizational Memory (OM) has become a critical component of organizations attempting to maintain a competitive advantage. The ability to retrieve accurate information, and interpret it from different perspectives, will both facilitate efficient problem solving and support efficient organizational learning. This research examines the effect of an informationbuilding and decision aid. The results indicate that the system positively affects OM by promoting user-entered knowledge bases with more accurate statements. However, the system did not significantly improve the ability of the users to solve a problem. These findings have important implications for designing information systems to support and expand OM while increasing the organization’s capacity to learn and solve problems

    Intentions to purchase genetically modified foods in the United States and Germany: the impact of consumer knowledge and attitudes

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    Genetically modified foods are a current, ongoing issue in the world today. Much research is done on the producers and governmental regulation systems regarding GMOs, but not much research exists about direct consumer actions towards genetically modified foods. Hence, in this thesis, I focus on the consumers in Germany and the United States and their attitudes and knowledge of GMOs. I chose Germany and the US as the two overarching cases due to their perceived and reported differences surrounding GMOs on many levels, such as production and government regulation. With the aid of Clickworker and Amazon Mechanical Turk, I utilized a questionnaire and survey to gather data responses. I I analyzed over 300 usable participants' responses from both Germany and the United States and compared the findings. The findings and a discussion of them are presented in my thesis paper

    Using the theory of planned behaviour to explore the multicultural nursing workforces' behavioural intentions to comply with nursing policies and procedures in Prince Military Medical City (PSMMC) in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

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    Background & aims: mBarrett's esophagus (BE) increases risk for esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). Increased risk for BE has been associated with single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on chromosome 6p21 (within the HLA region) and on 16q23, where the closest protein-coding gene is FOXF1. The Barrett's and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Consortium (BEACON) identified risk loci for BE and esophageal adenocarcinoma in CRTC1 and BARX1, and within 100 kb FOXP1. We aimed to identify SNPs that increased risk for BE in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) and to validate previously reported associations.Methods: we performed a GWAS to identify variants associated with BE and further analyzed promising variants identified by the BEACON. We performed genotype analysis of 10,158 patients with BE and 21,062 controls.Results: we identified 2 SNPs not previously associated with BE: rs3072 (2p24.1; odds ratio [OR] = 1.14; 95% CI: 1.09–1.18; P = 1.8 × 10?11) and rs2701108 (12q24.21; OR = 0.90; 95% CI: 0.86–0.93; P = 7.5 × 10?9). The closest protein-coding genes were GDF7 (rs3072), which encodes a ligand in the bone morphogenetic protein pathway, and TBX5 (rs2701108), which encodes a transcription factor that regulates esophageal and cardiac development. We also identified 3 SNPS already identified by the BEACON (rs2687201, rs11789015, and rs10423674). Meta-analysis of all data identified another SNP associated with BE and esophageal adenocarcinoma: rs3784262, near ALDH1A2 (OR = 0.90; 95% CI: 0.87–0.93; P = 3.72 × 10?9).Conclusions: we identified 2 loci associated with risk for BE and provide data to support a locus previously associated with risk in the BEACON. The genes we found to be associated with risk for BE encode transcription factors involved in thoracic, diaphragmatic, and esophageal development or proteins involved in the inflammatory respons

    Chapter 8 Now what?

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    Co-production; prisons; criminal justice; youth detentio

    The Impact of Economic Freedom and Total Freedom on Gross State In-Migration: An Exploratory Study of the Great Recession Experience

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    Typically, the greater the degree of economic freedom, the more successfully and efficiently markets perform and the greater the prosperity created through private enterprise. These outcomes from greater freedom accelerate economic growth, which in turn creates opportunities for yet further success. It can also be argued that greater personal freedom promotes higher levels of utility for consumers in non-economic ways. Accordingly, the present study empirically investigates whether the prospects of greater economic freedom on the one hand and greater economic plus personal freedom, i.e., greater total freedom, on the other hand in any given state vis-Ă -vis other states act(s) to induce a greater influx of migrants. This empirical study of domestic U.S. migration during the Great Recession finds clear evidence that migrants prefer to move to those states affording higher levels of economic freedom and higher levels of total freedom
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