579 research outputs found
Psychotherapeutic approaches to the elderly: Part Two
It is not easy to come to terms with retirement, failing bodily functions, increased vulnerability, potential institutionalisation and inevitable death. For some this is a stage of life tinged with difficult memories of being cared for when they were younger. It is not uncommon to see some older adults with a past history of childhood trauma and adversity develop new onset relationship problems having lost the containment of a career or a loved one. Older people can derive huge benefit from psychotherapeutic approaches. Personal transformation may enable them to go on to enjoy meaningful and fruitful old and new relationships whether in the community or in a care home
Spirituality in nursing practice
Spirituality is an important aspect of holistic care which is frequently overlooked owing to difficulty conceptualising spirituality and confusion about how to integrate it into nursing care.
This article seeks to understand what is meant by spirituality and spiritually competent practice, it explores some of the attitudes towards spirituality and describes some of issues affecting integration of spirituality into nursing care
Why are Spiritual Aspects of Care so hard to Address in Nursing Education?’ A Literature Review (1993-2015)
Difficulties persist in conceptualising spiritual needs and understanding their relationship to religious needs and relevance to wellbeing. This review was undertaken to clarify some of these issues. It set out to establish what is already known about how issues of spiritual assessment and care are addressed in undergraduate nursing education. Using a systematic approach, a literature review covering the period 1993-2015 was undertaken. Reviewed materials were collected from mainly online sources including with searches conducted using CINHAL, SUMMON and PubMed databases, after defining keywords and inclusion and exclusion criteria. The study found that Spirituality appears to be a broad but useful category which is concerned with how people experience meaning and purpose in their lives. However, it also established that here are relatively few studies focused on how spiritual care competencies could be developed in nursing students. There is also little work exploring nursing educators’ perspectives and experiences about how to develop spiritual competencies in their students. The study concludes that further research is necessary in order to bridge the gap between aspirations and practice
An introduction to mathematical models of coagulation-fragmentation processes: a discrete deterministic mean-field approach
We summarise the properties and the fundamental mathematical results
associated with basic models which describe
coagulation and fragmentation processes in a deterministic manner
and in which cluster size is a discrete quantity (an integer
multiple of some basic unit size).
In particular, we discuss Smoluchowski's equation for aggregation,
the Becker-Döring model of simultaneous aggregation and fragmentation,
and more general models involving coagulation and fragmentation
The importance of spirituality in caring for patients
Key points:
According to the GMC, attention to spiritual issues is expected as part of a medical assessment.
1. Spirituality is hard to define precisely but it can be understood as what gives meaning and
purpose and a sense of connectedness to life.
2. Religion and spirituality overlap but are distinct and there are non-religious as well as religious
approaches to spirituality.
3. Serious illness and injury may challenge patients’ spirituality and clinicians need to be sensitive
to this and provide or arrange support as appropriate to meet their spiritual needs.
4. Training to address these issues is in its infancy in the UK, though nursing research has identified
key competencies than can be applied to medicine, too.
5. The present challenges in the NHS mean we need to pay particular attention to organisational
issues related to spirituality
Nonlinear breathing modes at a defect
Recent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of Cubero et al (1999) of
a DNA duplex containing the 'rogue' base difluorotoluene (F) in place of a
thymine (T) base show that breathing events can occur on the nanosecond
timescale, whereas breathing events in a normal DNA duplex take place on the microsecond timescale.
The main aim of this paper is to analyse a nonlinear Klein-Gordon lattice
model of the DNA duplex including both nonlinear interactions between
opposing bases and a defect in the interaction at one lattice site;
each of which can cause localisation of energy.
Solutions for a breather mode either side of the defect are derived using
multiple-scales asymptotics and are pieced together across the defect to
form a solution which includes the effects of the nonlinearity and the defect.
We consider defects in the
inter-chain interactions and in the along chain interactions.
In most cases we find in-phase breather modes and/or out-of-phase
breather modes, with one case displaying a shifted mode
Similarity solutions of a Becker-Döring system with time-dependent monomer input
We formulate the Becker-Döring equations for cluster growth in the presence of a time-dependent source of monomer input.
In the case of size-independent aggregation and ragmentation
rate coefficients we find similarity solutions which are approached in the large time limit. The form of the solutions depends on the rate of monomer input and whether fragmentation is present in the model; four distinct types of solution are found
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