670 research outputs found

    The Use of Private Mediation in Organisational Disputes and Personal Grievances - The Experience of Waikato Mediation Services

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    Waikato Mediation Services was formed in 1994. It provides mediation services in number of areas. The vast majority of cases mediated by this organisation have involved private employment mediations. This has meant that the organisation mediates conflicts between management and staff and between managers for a wide range of businesses and organisations. Although each dispute is unique clear patterns have emerged from the large number of cases dealt with so far. This paper examines the factors that have influenced the occurrence of the conflicts and discusses the patterns that have begun to emerge. The conclusion reached is that certain forms of business structure and management practices increase the likelihood of disputes within the workplace. The paper concludes that in order to address workplace disputes it is essential that the context within which the dispute arose be carefully considered before any action is taken by employers

    Cascade diagrams for depicting complex interventions in randomised trials

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    Clarity about how trial interventions are delivered is important for researchers and those who might want to use their results. A new graphical representation aims to help make complex interventions clearer. Many medical interventions—particularly non-pharmacological ones—are complex, consisting of multiple interacting components targeted at different organisational levels. Published descriptions of complex interventions often do not contain enough detail to enable their replication. Reports of behaviour change interventions should include descriptions of setting, mode, intensity, and duration, and characteristics of the participants. Graphical methods, such as that showing the relative timing of assessments and intervention components, may improve clarity of reporting. However, these approaches do not reveal the connections between the different “actors” in a complex intervention.8 Different audiences may want different things from a description of an intervention, but visualising relationships between actors can clarify crucial features such as the fidelity with which the intervention is passed down a chain of actors and possible routes of contamination between treatment arms. Here we describe a new graphical approach—the cascade diagram—that highlights these potential problems

    The Use of Private Mediation in Organisational Disputes and Personal Grievances - The Experience of Waikato Mediation Services

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    Waikato Mediation Services was formed in 1994. It provides mediation services in number of areas. The vast majority of cases mediated by this organisation have involved private employment mediations. This has meant that the organisation mediates conflicts between management and staff and between managers for a wide range of businesses and organisations. Although each dispute is unique clear patterns have emerged from the large number of cases dealt with so far. This paper examines the factors that have influenced the occurrence of the conflicts and discusses the patterns that have begun to emerge. The conclusion reached is that certain forms of business structure and management practices increase the likelihood of disputes within the workplace. The paper concludes that in order to address workplace disputes it is essential that the context within which the dispute arose be carefully considered before any action is taken by employers

    Clinical predictors of neurocognitive deficits in children with chronic kidney disease

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    The purpose of the study was to explore associations between neurocognitive function and chronic kidney disease (CKD)-related clinical characteristics. Twenty-nine children, ages 7 to 19 years, with an estimated creatinine clearance (eCrCl) of 4–89 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) body surface area were enrolled. Intellectual function (IQ), memory, and attention were measured and expressed as age-based standard scores. Clinical data were obtained by physical examination, laboratory testing, parental questionnaires and medical chart review. Pearson correlations and standard Student’s t-tests were used to identify significant (P < 0.05) relationships between targeted clinical variables and neurocognitive scores. Increased CKD severity correlated with lower IQ (P = 0.001) and memory function (P = 0.02). Memory function was lower in children with longer duration of disease (P = 0.03). Similarly, IQ scores were lowest when kidney disease had started at a younger age (P = 0.03) and with a greater percent of life with CKD (P = 0.04). Our findings provide preliminary evidence that increased disease severity, longer duration of disease, and younger age of onset of kidney disease potentially place children with CKD at increased risk of neurocognitive deficits. Additional investigation is required to better quantify these risk factors, particularly regarding how much variability is accounted for by these specific risk factors

    Behavioral Risk Elicits Selective Activation of the Executive System in Adolescents: Clinical Implications

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    We investigated adolescent brain processing of decisions under conditions of varying risk, reward, and uncertainty. Adolescents (n = 31) preformed a Decision–Reward Uncertainty task that separates decision uncertainty into behavioral and reward risk, while they were scanned using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Behavioral risk trials involved uncertainty about which action to perform to earn a fixed monetary reward. In contrast, during reward risk the decision that might lead to a reward was known, but the likelihood of earning a reward was probabilistically determined. Behavioral risk trials evoked greater activation than the reward risk and no risk conditions in the anterior cingulate, medial frontal gyrus, bilateral frontal poles, bilateral inferior parietal lobe, precuneus, bilateral superior-middle frontal gyrus, inferior frontal gyrus, and insula. Our results were similar to those of young adults using the same task (Huettel, 2006) except that adolescents did not show significant activation in the posterior supramarginal gyrus during behavioral risk. During the behavioral risk condition regardless of reward outcome, overall mean frontal pole activity showed a positive correlation with age during the behavioral and reward risk conditions suggesting a developmental difference of this region of interest. Additionally, reward response to the Decision–Reward Uncertainty task in adolescents was similar to that seen in young adults (Huettel, 2006). Our data did not show a correlation between age and mean ventral striatum activity during the three conditions. While our results came from a healthy high functioning non-maltreated sample of adolescents, this method can be used to address types of risks and reward processing in children and adolescents with predisposing vulnerabilities and add to the paucity of imaging studies of risk and reward processing during adolescence

    Heavy Dark Matter Through the Higgs Portal

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    Motivated by Higgs Portal and Hidden Valley models, heavy particle dark matter that communicates with the supersymmetric Standard Model via pure Higgs sector interactions is considered. We show that a thermal relic abundance consistent with the measured density of dark matter is possible for masses up to \sim 30\tev. For dark matter masses above \sim 1\tev, non-perturbative Sommerfeld corrections to the annihilation rate are large, and have the potential to greatly affect indirect detection signals. For large dark matter masses, the Higgs-dark-matter-sector couplings are large and we show how such models may be given a UV completion within the context of so-called "Fat-Higgs" models. Higgs Portal dark matter provides an example of an attractive alternative to conventional MSSM neutralino dark matter that may evade discovery at the LHC, while still being within the reach of current and upcoming indirect detection experiments.Comment: LaTex, 21 pages, 9 figures. Discussion improved, comments and references adde

    Cognitive improvement in children with CKD after transplant

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    Icard P, Hooper SR, Gipson DS, Ferris ME. Cognitive improvement in children with CKD after transplant. Pediatr Transplantation 2010: 14:887–890. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.The primary purpose of this paper was to examine the cognitive functioning of children with CKD receiving transplantation to children with CKD not receiving transplantation, and a healthy control group. The sample included six children with CKD receiving transplant, 28 children with CKD being treated conservatively, and 23 healthy controls. All participants were administered intellectual (IQ) or developmental assessments at baseline and at a one-yr follow-up. Results revealed that children with CKD who had received transplant showed a significant increase in their intellectual/developmental functioning post transplant compared to children with CKD not receiving transplant. Although their overall intellectual/developmental level was not fully normalized, when compared with the healthy control group, the change scores for the transplant group reflected over a 12 point increase, moving the group from the borderline range to the low average range of functioning. In this regard, pediatric transplantation appears to have a positive impact on the intellectual and developmental functioning of children with CKD.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79239/1/j.1399-3046.2010.01359.x.pd

    The nervous system and chronic kidney disease in children

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    This paper provides a review of the literature on the nervous system involvement incurred by children and adolescents with chronic kidney disease (CKD), with a particular focus on neuropsychological functioning. In addition to an historical overview of earlier literature, published studies from the past 14 years that address both central and peripheral nervous system function in children with CKD are reviewed (1990–2003). These studies span work in neuroimaging, electrophysiology, and neuropsychology. A key focus for this review is on variables that might affect neurodevelopmental status in these children. The paper concludes with suggestions for achieving progress in the understanding of this complication of kidney disease in children

    A longitudinal examination of the psychoeducational, neurocognitive, and psychiatric functioning in children with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome

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    The present study sought to examine the longitudinal psychoeducational, neurocognitive, and psychiatric outcomes of children and adolescents with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11DS), a population with a high incidence of major psychiatric illnesses appearing in late adolescence/early adulthood. Little is known of the developmental changes that occur in the early teen years, prior to the age of highest psychosis risk. Data were collected from 71 participants (42 subjects with 22q11DS and 29 control subjects) at Time 1 (T1) and Time 2 (T2), approximately 3.5 years later. The 22q11DS group was significantly lower functioning than controls on IQ, neurocognition, and academic achievement at both T1 and T2. Children with 22q11DS also showed significantly greater social-behavioral difficulties and psychiatric symptoms, and were more likely to meet criteria for psychiatric disorders at both time points. In evaluating change over time from T1 to T2, the 22q11DS group did not show significant changes in psychoeducational or psychiatric outcomes relative to the controls, however, lack of expected age-related gains in attention regulation were noted. Within the 22q11DS group, an increase in the Attenuated Prodrome for Schizophrenia (number of psychiatric symptoms) was noted from T1 to T2 and four children with 22q11DS met criteria for Psychosis for the first time. Predictors at T1 that uncovered psychopathology symptoms at T2 included full-scale IQ, externalizing symptoms, and problem social behaviors. Overall, younger adolescent and preadolescent children with 22q11DS in this study exhibited slowed growth in attention regulation, with an increase in subclinical symptoms of schizophrenia, suggestive of increasing impairments in domains that are relevant to the high risk of Schizophrenia. Early predictors of later psychopathology included both cognitive and behavioral abnormalities. These findings begin to elucidate the trajectory of changes in psychopathology in children with 22q11DS in the years leading up to the onset of major psychiatric illnesses
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