180 research outputs found
All Power to the People: Creating the Artistic Culture of the Black Panther Party
Poster about creating the artistic culture of the Black Panther Party
Nurses’ experiences and understanding of workplace violence in a trauma and emergency department in South Africa
Violence in South African society has reached epidemic levels and has permeated the walls of the workplace. The aim of the study was to gain a deeper understanding of how nurses experience and understand workplace violence perpetrated by patients, and to make recommendations to reduce this type of violence. A qualitative, exploratory and descriptive study was conducted to explore the experiences and coping mechanisms of nurses regarding workplace violence. The purposive sample comprised eight nurses working in the Trauma and Emergency Department in the Western Cape, South Africa. Thematic analysis was done of the semi-structured interviews. Four main themes and 10 categories were identified. Nurses are experiencing physical threats, verbal abuse and psychological and imminent violence on a regular basis. They tend to ‘normalise’ abusive patient behaviour because of the perception that workplace abuse ‘comes with the territory’, which resulted in under-reporting. However, perpetrators received compromised care by being avoided, ignored or given only minimal nursing care. Coping mechanisms ranged from using colleagues as sounding boards, helping out with duties, taking a smoke break and using friends and family to get it ‘off their chest’. The tolerance of non-physical violence and the absence of policies to deal with the violence, contribute to under-reporting.Department of HE and Training approved lis
Gender-Based Violence and Access to Education: An Empirical Analysis for Women in Nakuru County, Kenya
Gender based violence (GBV) consequences on women economic empowerment within Kenya are immensely widespread. Nakuru East Sub County, in particular has reported many cases of GBV. The aim of this study was to examine effects of gender-based violence on the women access to education. This investigation was guided by Ecological theory and a descriptive survey design was adopted in this study. Using a questionnaire, focus group discussions (FGDs) and key informant interviews, the results are based on achieved response of a group of 40 women, 2 chiefs and 2 officers in charge of children protection unit and 3 CSOs Staff. Study findings indicate that there was notable impact of GBV on women access to education in Nakuru East. Cases of school dropout as a result of teenage pregnancies, Early marriage, child labour, and giving preference to boys in education were top on the findings. Empowerment of women reduces the unequal power relationship between women and men which has been identified as the root cause of GBV
The Effects of Customer Service on the Development of E-Commerce at Kenya Commercial Bank Eldoret Branch
Unprecedented growth of e-commerce is now pushing traditional business to transform into e-commerce to speed up business transaction, retain the loyalty of customers and reduce customers’ time and effort in shopping. However to harness the real impact and benefits of e-commerce the manager of any organization must institute practical measures and implement good customer service. The concept of customer service on electronic commerce is a relatively new challenging area to researchers and managers. Hence this research sought to examine customer service and its effects on the development of electronic commerce at Kenya Commercial Bank Eldoret Branch. Descriptive research design was employed. The target population was 15,030 customers who were account holders of Kenya Commercial Bank Eldoret Branch. A sample of 374 was selected using systematic sampling. The research instrument used was a 5 point likert scale questionnaire. Data was analyzed statististically. From the study findings, customer service (r = 0.169) had a positive relationship with development of electronic commerce. Pearson correlation value (r) were significant at 0.01 level of significance. Customer service had an effect on the development of electronic commerce with (?1= 0.047, P value = 0.006<0.05) being positive related to the development of e-commerce. Thus the study concludes that customer service is important in ensuring an enabling environment for the development of electronic commerce. The study sought to collect information from the customer which was carried over a long period of time as it involved approaching the customers at the bank at different period of time and this resulted to repetition as some customers would be able to fill the questionnaire twice. Hence this was the limitation. The study recommended that there is need to carry out specific investigation into the various aspects building customer service standards. Key words: Electronic Commerce, Customer Service, Development, Commercial Bank,  Custome
Balancing Uncertainty and Complexity to Incorporate Fire Spread in an Eco-Hydrological Model
Wildfire affects the ecosystem services of watersheds, and climate change will modify fire regimes and watershed dynamics. In many eco-hydrological simulations, fire is included as an exogenous force. Rarely are the bidirectional feedbacks between watersheds and fire regimes integrated in a simulation system because the eco-hydrological model predicts variables that are incompatible with the requirements of fire models. WMFire is a fire-spread model of intermediate complexity designed to be integrated with the Regional Hydro-ecological Simulation System (RHESSys). Spread in WMFire is based on four variables that (i) represent known influences on fire spread: litter load, relative moisture deficit, wind direction and topographic slope, and (ii) are derived directly from RHESSys outputs. The probability that a fire spreads from pixel to pixel depends on these variables as predicted by RHESSys. We tested a partial integration between WMFire and RHESSys on the Santa Fe (New Mexico) and the HJ Andrews (Oregon State) watersheds. Model assessment showed correspondence between expected spatial patterns of spread and seasonality in both watersheds. These results demonstrate the efficacy of an approach to link eco-hydrologic model outputs with a fire spread model. Future work will develop a fire effects module in RHESSys for a fully coupled, bidirectional model
Potential drivers of virulence evolution in aquaculture
Infectious diseases are economically detrimental to aquaculture, and with continued expansion and intensification of aquaculture, the importance of managing infectious diseases will likely increase in the future. Here, we use evolution of virulence theory, along with examples, to identify aquaculture practices that might lead to the evolution of increased pathogen virulence. We identify eight practices common in aquaculture that theory predicts may favor evolution toward higher pathogen virulence. Four are related to intensive aquaculture operations, and four others are related specifically to infectious disease control. Our intention is to make aquaculture managers aware of these risks, such that with increased vigilance, they might be able to detect and prevent the emergence and spread of increasingly troublesome pathogen strains in the future
Missed opportunities to improve food security for pregnant people: a qualitative study of prenatal care settings in Northern New England during the COVID-19 pandemic
Background: Food insecurity during pregnancy has important implications for maternal and newborn health. There is increasing commitment to screening for social needs within health care settings. However, little is known about current screening processes or the capacity for prenatal care clinics to address food insecurity among their patients. We aimed to assess barriers and facilitators prenatal care clinics face in addressing food insecurity among pregnant people and to identify opportunities to improve food security among this population. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study among prenatal care clinics in New Hampshire and Vermont. Staff and clinicians engaged in food security screening and intervention processes at clinics affiliated with the Northern New England Perinatal Quality Improvement Network (NNEPQIN) were recruited to participate in key informant interviews. Thematic analysis was used to identify prominent themes in the interview data. Results: Nine staff members or clinicians were enrolled and participated in key informant interviews. Key barriers to food security screening and interventions included lack of protocols and dedicated staff at the clinic as well as community factors such as availability of food distribution services and transportation. Facilitators of screening and intervention included a supportive culture at the clinic, trusting relationships between patients and clinicians, and availability of clinic-based and community resources. Conclusion: Prenatal care settings present an important opportunity to identify and address food insecurity among pregnant people, yet most practices lack specific protocols for screening. Our findings indicate that more systematic processes for screening and referrals, dedicated staff, and onsite food programs that address transportation and other access barriers could improve the capacity of prenatal care clinics to improve food security during pregnancy
Diet diversity in pastoral and agro-pastoral households in Ugandan rangeland ecosystems
We explore how diet diversity differs with agricultural seasons and between households within pastoral and agro-pastoral livelihood systems, using variety of foods consumed as a less complex proxy indicator of food insecurity than benchmark indicators like anthropometry and serum nutrients. The study was in the central part of the rangelands in Uganda. Seventy nine households were monitored for three seasons, and eight food groups consumed during a 24 hour diet recall period used to create a household diet diversity score (HDDS). Mean HDDS was 3.2, varied significantly with gender, age, livelihood system and season (p < .001, F = 15.04), but not with household size or household head’s education level. Agro-pastoralists exhibited lower mean diet diversity than pastoralists (p < .01, F = 7.84) and among agro-pastoralists, households headed by persons over 65 years were most vulnerable (mean HDDS 2.1). This exploratory study raises issues requiring further investigation to inform policies on nutrition security in the two communities
How does Canada stack up? A bibliometric analysis of the primary healthcare electronic medical record literature
Background Major initiatives are underway in Canada which are designed to increase electronic medical record (EMR) implementation and maximise its use in primary health care. These developments need to be supported by sufficient evidence from the literature, particularly relevant research conducted in the Canadian context.Objectives This study sought to quantify this lack of research by: (1) identifying and describing the primary health care EMR literature; and (2) comparing the Canadian and international primary healthcare EMR literature on the basis of content and publication levels.Methods Seven bibliographic databases were searched using primary health care and EMR keywords. Publication abstracts were reviewed and categorised. First author affiliation was used to identify country of origin. Proportions of Canadian- and non-Canadian-authored publications were compared using Fisher’s exact test. For countries having 10 or more primary healthcare EMR publications, publications per 10 000 researchers were calculated.Results After exclusions, 750 publications were identified. More than one-third used primary healthcare EMRs as a study data source. Twenty-two (3%) were Canadian-authored. There were significantly different publication levels in three categories between Canadian- and non-Canadian-authored publications. Based on publications per researchers, the Netherlands ranked first, while Canada ranked eighth of nine countries with 10 or more publications.Conclusions A relatively small body of literature focused on EMRs in primary health care exists; publications by Canadian authors were low. This study highlights the need to develop a strong evidence base to support the effective implementatio
The Vehicle, Fall 1982
Vol. 24, No. 1
Table of Contents
Winter SurveillanceB.L. Davidsonpage 3
The InvitationBecky Lawsonpage 4
Check In, Check OutSteve Sandstrompage 4
On The Front Porch StepKeila Tooleypage 5
Old Greek ManDevon Flesorpage 5
Exotic PassionsBecky Lawsonpage 6
PhotographLisa Owenspage 7
Beyond The ThornsBrook Wilsonpage 8
Ritual Of HeatB.L. Davidsonpage 11
The GamerBecky Lawsonpage 12
It\u27s OverKeila Tooleypage 13
DreamJohn Stockmanpage 14
Silver DollarGina J. Grillopage 15
The DancerJessica Lewispage 16
Snapshots Of Rural IllinoisIsabel M. Parrottpage 16
The Last SeasonTheresa Whitesidepage 17
DrawingKaren Haneypage 17
Rotary LuncheonJessica Lewispage 18
Factory TourLinda Fraembspage 18
The ImmigrantsD.L. Lewispage 19
At Shedd AquariumLinda Fraembspage 20
The GuardianBecky Lewispage 20
Digital LifeEverett Tackettpage 21
Full ServiceScott Graypage 22
Dust ShowLinda A. Brownpage 23
At SixMaureen Foertschpage 24
DrawingJean Imherrpage 24
ReflectionMaggie Kennedypage 25
Cat DefiningBecky Lawsonpage 26
Ode To An Unread NewspaperLinda Fraembspage 26
GumSteve Sandstrompage 27
The DancerChrystal Clarkpage 27
PoemD.L. Lewispage 28
For LucyStacey Flanniganpage 29
An AbortionDevon Flesorpage 29
ReveriesKeila Tooleypage 30
Sunday Morning After Tequila With LemonScott Graypage 33
Staging A Living Jewel BoxMichelle Mitchellpage 34
The Other WomanStacey Flanniganpage 35
The Natural LookMichelle Mitchellpage 35
Poem To A Girl Named SandalsJohn Stockmanpage 36
PhotographLisa Owenspage 37
In The Balcony Of The Bijou On A Saturday NightScott Graypage 38
The Canadian Soccer PlayerBecky Lawsonpage 39
The HealingJohn Stockmanpage 39
AppeasedDevon Flesorpage 40
CodaJohn Stockmanpage 40https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1040/thumbnail.jp
- …