3,581 research outputs found
A collaborative approach to managing sleep problems
In response to the local need for advice and support for parents of children and young people with
learning disabilities, a structured 3 week sleep clinic was developed by a community team who
targeted a small group of parents and carers and provided individualised sleep care plans. The clinic
was evaluated very positively by parents, resulting in an ongoing sleep clinic programme; and the
procedure has been shared with another Disabled Children's Team. Further evaluation could be
implemented to strengthen findings; however, it may be useful to share these initial findings more
widely with other localities
Agricultural labour and the contested nature of women's work in interwar England and Wales
This article uses a case-study of agriculture to explore the range of anxieties and contradictions surrounding women's work in the interwar period. National statistics are shown to be inconsistent and questionable, raising questions for historians reliant on official data, but they point to regional variation as the continuous defining feature of female labour force participation. Looking beyond the quantitative data a distinction emerges between traditional work on the land and processes. The article shows that women workers in agriculture provoked vigorous debate among a range of interest groups about the scale, nature, and suitability of this work. These groups, such as the National Federation of Women's Institutes, the Women's Farm and Garden Association, and the National Union of Agricultural Workers represented a range of social classes and outlooks, and had diverse agendas underpinning their interest. Consequently women's agricultural labour is exposed as a site of class and gender conflict, connecting to wider economic and cultural tensions surrounding the place of women in interwar society
Leadership development programme: a multi-method evaluation
This report investigates findings arising from a variety of forms of feedback provided by the first cohort of participants (2012-2013) in Cumbria Partnership Foundation Trustās āLeadership Developmentā Programme (LDP). The report summarises both quantitative and qualitative feedback, and synthesises findings to provide a more three-dimensional overview of participant experience and systemic impact. Feedback reflects, throughout, the diversity of the participating cohort in terms of professional roles and levels of seniority
Learning Leaders: a multi-method evaluation, final report
This report investigates findings arising from a variety of forms of feedback on Cumbria Partnership Foundation Trustās āLearning Leadersā Programme (henceforth LLP) running from 2012-2013
Using Active Shape Modeling Based on MRI to Study Morphologic and Pitch-Related Functional Changes Affecting Vocal Structures and the Airway
Copyright Ā© 2013 The Voice Foundation. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPostprin
Erosion of the continental lithosphere at the cusps of the Calabrian arc: Evidence from S receiver functions analysis
Mediterranean tectonics has been characterized by an irregular, complex temporal evolution with episodic rollback and retreat of the subducted plate followed by period of slow trench-migration. To provide insight into the geodynamics of the Calabrian arc, we image the characteristics and lithospheric structure of the convergent, Apulian and Hyblean forelands at the cusps of the arc. Specifically we investigate the crustal and lithospheric thicknesses using teleseismic S-to-p converted phases, applied to the Adria-Africa plate margin for the first time. We find that the Moho in the Apulian foreland is nearly flat at ā¼30 km depth, consistent with previousPreceiver functions results, and that the Hyblean crustal thickness is more complex, which can be understood in terms of the nature of the individual pieces of carbonate platform and pelagic sediments that make up the Hyblean platform. The lithospheric thicknesses range between 70ā120 km beneath Apulia and 70ā90 km beneath Sicily. The lithosphere of the forelands at each end of the Calabrian arc are continental in nature, buoyant compared to the subducting oceanic lithosphere and have previously been interpreted as mostly undeformed carbonate platforms. Our receiver function images also show evidence of lithospheric erosion and thinning close to Mt. Etna and Mt. Vulture, two volcanoes which have been associated with asthenospheric upwelling and mantle flow around of the sides the slab. We suggest that as the continental lithosphere resists being subducted it is being thermo-mechanically modified by toroidal flow around the edges of the subducting oceanic lithosphere of the Calabrian ar
Relationships Between Vocal Structures, the Airway, and Craniocervical Posture Investigated Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Peer reviewedPreprin
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