1,208 research outputs found
Administrative Psychiatric Justice: Individual Rights v. Societal Rights in Involuntary Civil Commitment
The care of mental health law safe guards the loss of liberty in the involuntary commitment procedure. Unconnected with the criminal justice system, the civil commitment process is utilized when a mentally ill person poses a danger to himself or to others and is confined to a mental hospital for treatment. Distinct from the criminal commitment system, which is an off shoot of the criminal justice system, civil commitment is paternalistic, and enumerates the basis of public protection. Whereas, the criminal commitment system determines whether an individual is competent to stand criminal trial or the procedure may be instituted following a "successful" insanity defense. A broad perspective of the civil commitment process and related issues will be explored through extensive literature review. The civil commitment process does not have its foundation in quantifiable data or even in well established, widely accepted terminology. Concepts of mental illness, civil liberty, right to treatment and right to refuse treatment are somewhat vagueâ not to mention perceived and interpreted in a highly individualistic manner. The terms are even suspect amongst some sectors of professionals and nonprofessionals.Master of Public AdministrationPublic AdministrationUniversity of Michigan-Flinthttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143474/1/MartinD.pd
An Evaluation of Columbia Villa/Tamaracks Community Service Intervention Project
The Community Service Intervention Program (CSlP) is a unique public agency response to a multifaceted set of problems confronting low income residents living in Oregon \u27s largest public housing project. The primary goals of the CSIP are to reduce crime, reduce the fear of crime among residents, and to improve the quality of life of the families living in Columbia Villa/Tamaracks.
The evaluation of the CSIP combined a number of different research methods, on different analytical levels, to provide a summary assessment. Data were collected from individuals, from agencies, and from police records in a post facto analysis of the CSIP.
Recommendations include: a higher profile by the County to coordinate, plan, manage, and evaluate services according to a set of carefully chosen set of objectives; a longitudinal evaluation of CSIP efforts; greater involvement by Columbia Villa/Tamaracks residents; greater job opportunities and job training for Columbia Villa/Tamaracks residents; additional participation in the CSIP by the Fire Department, Tri-Met, Metro (Solid Waste), and DEQ
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Taphonomy After the Fact: Violence and Ritual in Room 33 at Chaco and Room 178 at Aztec
Chaco Canyonâs Room 33 (excavated by George Pepper) and Aztec Ruins room 178 (excavated by Earl Morris) are recognized for their rich taphonomic context. These two mortuary features reveal a great deal of information about ritualized behavior. Researchers such as Akins and Palkovich have provided partial analyses of the Chaco skeletal material in the 1980s. The reanalysis of those remains considers the Chaco burials in relation to those at Aztec and analyzes their meaning through a thorough analysis of the grave goods, archaeological records, and ethnohistorical documents to provide a better understanding of these elaborate and unique mortuary rooms. Specifically, this study focuses on signatures of identity, biological, cultural, and socioeconomic. Biological identity markers include age, sex, and stature. Cultural identity includes mortuary context, graves goods, and site layout. Socioeconomic identity, which is the hardest to reconstruct is evidenced by the frequency and distribution of trauma related to exposure to violence, changes to anatomy related to unequal amounts of labor, and susceptibility to diseases over time. The result of looking at all these factors is that it is possible to reconstruct identity, such as Burial 3672 in Room 33. This male is especially intriguing because the burial shows evidence of extensive perimortem fractures on the cranium suggesting a violent death, and yet this is a very high status individual based on the stature and isotopic analysis as well as the grave offerings he was interred with. These kinds of taphonomic and mortuary features are explored
Sex and Death on the Western Emigrant Trail: The Biology of Three American Tragedies
This book offers a different look at how to think about the starvation and death that hounded emigrants attempting to get to California and Oregon in the early years of nineteenth-century US expansion. Specifically, the Donner party and two lesser-known Mormon handcart groups are scrutinized for what the patterns of age at death by sex can reveal. In the subtitle The Biology of Three American Tragedies, âbiologyâ here means solely demographic data on sex and age at death. These are really the only biological variables examined, so the title Sex and Death on the Western Emigrant Trail is more accurate as to the subject matter; the subtitle promises more of a biological account than is actually delivered
Mesoscopic Quantum Magnetic Conductors
Contains table of contents for Section 4, and a report on one research project.Joint Services Electronics Program Grant DAAL04-95-1-003
Synchrotron X-Ray Studies of Surface Disordering
Contains table of contents for Section 4, an introduction and a report on one research project.Joint Services Electronics Program Contract DAAL03-92-C-000
Biomechanical Evaluation of fracture Fixation Constructs using a Variable-angle Locked Periprosthetic Femur Plate System
BackgroundIn the United States there are more than 230,000 total hip replacements annually, and periprosthetic femoral fractures occur in 0.1â4.5% of those patients. The majority of these fractures occur at the tip of the stem (Vancouver type B1). The purpose of this study was to compare the biomechanically stability and strength of three fixation constructs and identify the most desirable construct.MethodsFifteen medium adult synthetic femurs were implanted with a hip prosthesis and were osteotomized in an oblique plane at the level of the implant tip to simulate a Vancouver type B1 periprosthetic fracture. Fractures were fixed with a non-contact bridging periprosthetic proximal femur plate (Zimmer, Inc., Warsaw, IN). Three proximal fixation methods were used: Group 1, bicortical screws; Group 2, unicortical screws and one cerclage cable; and Group 3, three cerclage cables. Distally, all groups had bicortical screws. Biomechanical testing was performed using an axial-torsional testing machine in three different loading modalities (axial compression, lateral bending, and torsional/sagittal bending), next in axial cyclic loading to 10,000 cycles, again in the three loading modalities, and finally to failure in torsional/sagittal bending.ResultsGroup 1 had significantly greater load to failure and was significantly stiffer in torsional/sagittal bending than Groups 2 and 3. After cyclic loading, Group 2 had significantly greater axial stiffness than Groups 1 and 3. There was no difference between the three groups in lateral bending stiffness. The average energy absorbed during cyclic loading was significantly lower in Group 2 than in Groups 1 and 3.ConclusionsBicortical screw placement achieved the highest load to failure and the highest torsional/sagittal bending stiffness. Additional unicortical screws improved axial stiffness when using cable fixation. Lateral bending was not influenced by differences in proximal fixation.Clinical RelevanceTo treat periprosthetic fractures, bicortical screw placement should be attempted to maximize load to failure and torsional/sagittal bending stiffness
Mixed field reactions in ABO and Rh typing chimerism likely resulting from twin haematopoiesis.
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