20 research outputs found

    Claiming expertise from betwixt and between: Digital humanities librarians, emotional labor, and genre theory

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    Librarians\u27 liminal (intermediate) position within academia situates us to make unique contributions to digital humanities (DH). In this article, we use genre theory, feminist theory, and theories of emotional labor to explore the importance of discourse mediation and affective labor to DH and the interplay between these areas and academic structural inequality. By claiming our expertise and making explicit work that is often not visible, we can advocate for new and varied roles for librarians in digital humanities. Our analysis is informed by both theory and practice, and it takes a dialogic approach that depends upon the interactions between the two

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    Dangerous DH Liaisons: Librarians (Re)claiming Centrality in Digital Collaborations

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    Supporting and providing leadership for digital humanities initiatives, both inside and outside the classroom, is becoming a common part of the research librarian\u27s work. With our experience building relationships across departments and administrative units, librarians have an important role in ensuring DH work is meaningful and sustainable. In this session, we will explore how this work is a natural extension of liaison work that also expands existing conceptions of that role. Drawing from examples of our collaborations with faculty, staff, and students on DH projects, we will also discuss aspects of this topic which deserve wider and more explicit discussion, including 1) the lack of visibility of librarian contributions to this work and 2) the challenges and opportunities of working within different institutional contexts. All levels of experience with DH are welcome; we ask only that you come prepared to be part of a lively dialogue

    Patient and proxy measurement of quality of life among general hospital in-patients with dementia

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    Background: We aimed to investigate quality of life ratings among people with varying severity of dementia and their carers, recruited in general hospital. Method: We recruited 109 people with dementia, and their proxies (carers), from psychiatric referrals of inpatients in two general hospitals in England. From patients, we gathered data on quality of life (QoL-AD and EQ5-D) and depressive symptoms, and from proxies we gathered data on patient quality of life (Proxy QoL-AD and EQ5-D), severity of dementia, activities of daily living, physical illness and depressive symptoms, and on carer stress. Results: Completion rates for both measures were progressively lower with increasing dementia severity. Patients rated their quality of life more highly than proxies on Qol-AD (patients=32.2, CI=30.7-33.7, proxies=24.7, CI=23.8-26.0, p<0.001) and on EQ5D (patients=0.71, CI=0.64-0.77, proxies=0.30, CI=0.22-0.38, p<0.001). For proxy EQ5D, impaired instrumental ADLs (p=0.003) and more severe dementia (p=0.019) were associated with ratings, while for proxy QoL-AD, only more severe dementia (p=0.039) was associated with ratings. Lower patient EQ-5D scores were independently associated only with carer stress (p=0.01). Lower patient QoL-AD scores were associated with patient depression (p=0.001), impaired activities of daily living (p=0.02) and proxy psychiatric symptoms (p=0.002). Conclusions: Among patients with moderate to severe dementia in general hospital, proxy measures of quality of life are the only practical option. Patients and proxies appear to have very different concepts of quality of life in dementia. © 2012 Taylor & Francis

    Change over time in alcohol consumption in control groups in brief intervention studies: Systematic review and meta-regression study.

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    NoReactivity to assessment has attracted recent attention in the brief alcohol intervention literature. This systematic review sought to examine the nature of change in alcohol consumption over time in control groups in brief intervention studies. Primary studies were identified from existing reviews published in English language, peer-reviewed journals between 1995 and 2005. Change in alcohol consumption and selected study-level characteristics for each primary study were extracted. Consumption change data were pooled in random effects models and meta-regression was used to explore predictors of change. Eleven review papers reported the results of 44 individual studies. Twenty-six of these studies provided data suitable for quantitative study. Extreme heterogeneity was identified and the extent of observed reduction in consumption over time was greater in studies undertaken in Anglophone countries, with single gender study participants, and without special targeting by age. Heterogeneity was reduced but was still substantial in a sub-set of 15 general population studies undertaken in English language countries. The actual content of the control group procedure itself was not predictive of reduction in drinking, nor were a range of other candidate variables including setting, the exclusion of dependent drinkers, the collection of a biological sample at follow-up, and duration of study. Further investigations may yield novel insights into the nature of behaviour change with potential to inform brief interventions design
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