667 research outputs found

    Ready when the time comes : a corporate and youth recruitment campaign for the Hoosier Heartland Chapter of the American Red Cross : an honors thesis (HONRS 499)

    Get PDF
    This thesis project is comprised of two primary sections: 1) an introduction, which includes a review of literature on the history of the Red Cross, an explanation of nonprofit organizations, and an explanation of the concept of volunteerism; and 2) the Ready When the Time Comes campaign. Reaity When the Time Comes (RWTC) is a corporate volunteering program that was first designed and implemented by the American Red Cross Greater Chicago Chapter. The adapted RWTC program for the Hoosier Heartland chapter of the American Red Cross is presented in three sections. The first section is an explanation of the program as designed and pilot-tested for the local chapter. The second section includes developed materials that are necessary for the marketing, advertising, and implementation of the program specifically for the Muncie, Indiana area. The third section consists of potential contacts for participation in the program, public service announcement contacts, and status of organizations already contacted through the pilot-test.The potential contacts list includes Ball State University Student Organizations, Muncie area high schools, and Muncie businesses. The inclusion of all of these possible contacts allows for the program to reach both target areas of this project: the corporate and youth communities. The public service announcement contacts lists organizations that received and ran the public service announcements for the RWTC program.The three sections work together to provide the Hoosier Heartland Chapter with everything to successfully recruit corporate and youth volunteers for the American Red Cross. In addition to the three sections specific to the program, there is a project timeline and evaluations section. These sections are related to the design, development, and pilot-cross testing of the RWTC program for the Hoosier Heartland Chapter of the American Red Cross.Honors CollegeThesis (B.?.

    Strategic Planning in Local Government: Is the Promise of Performance a Reality?

    Get PDF
    The purpose of this dissertation is three-fold. First, it explores whether or not experience with strategic planning increases comprehensiveness of the strategic planning process. Second, it investigates the potential impact of comprehensive strategic planning processes on performance. The final rationale for this dissertation is to determine whether the impact varies according to the dimension of performance analyzed. This exploratory study uses a unique data set that combines the performance measures of select local government departments from the International City/County Manager\u27s Association and an original survey of the heads of those departments to determine their strategic planning practices. The dissertation utilizes an evaluative approach by analyzing the practical significance of the potential impact including correlation, differences between groups, and effect size. These analysis taken together can help demonstrate a potential relationship where regression analysis would be inappropriate due to small sample size. The findings justify further studying these questions about strategic planning in the public sector. First, the analysis demonstrates that departments with more strategic planning experience have higher mean comprehensiveness than departments with less experience. Second, though the findings are mixed concerning the impact of comprehensive processes, the majority of the findings support the hypothesis that more comprehensiveness leads to better departmental performance. Finally, the mixed findings demonstrate that strategic planning comprehensiveness impacts different dimensions of performance differently

    Similar Microbial Communities Found on Two Distant Seafloor Basalts.

    Get PDF
    The oceanic crust forms two thirds of the Earth's surface and hosts a large phylogenetic and functional diversity of microorganisms. While advances have been made in the sedimentary realm, our understanding of the igneous rock portion as a microbial habitat has remained limited. We present the first comparative metagenomic microbial community analysis from ocean floor basalt environments at the Lō'ihi Seamount, Hawai'i, and the East Pacific Rise (EPR; 9°N). Phylogenetic analysis indicates the presence of a total of 43 bacterial and archaeal mono-phyletic groups, dominated by Alpha- and Gammaproteobacteria, as well as Thaumarchaeota. Functional gene analysis suggests that these Thaumarchaeota play an important role in ammonium oxidation on seafloor basalts. In addition to ammonium oxidation, the seafloor basalt habitat reveals a wide spectrum of other metabolic potentials, including CO2 fixation, denitrification, dissimilatory sulfate reduction, and sulfur oxidation. Basalt communities from Lō'ihi and the EPR show considerable metabolic and phylogenetic overlap down to the genus level despite geographic distance and slightly different seafloor basalt mineralogy

    Fecal Transplant vs Vancomycin for Recurrent Clostridium Diffile

    Get PDF
    Objective: To compare fecal transplant and vancomycin in the treatment of recurrent clostridium difficile to determine which has the higher cure rate. Design: Systematic literature review. Methods: Pubmed, Google Scholar, and TRIP database using the search terms “recurrent clostridium difficile.” Filters were implemented in the Pubmed database including: randomized control trials, English, and published in the past 5 years. Records were screened for RCT with fecal transplant and full-text. Results: van Nood et al. revealed an initial cure rate of 81% for the infusion group, and a re-treated cure rate of 94%, compared to the vancomycin alone group of 31% cure rate and the vancomycin plus bowel lavage group of 23% cure rate. Cammarota et al. determined an initial cure rate of 65% for the infusion group, and a re-treated cure rate of 90%, compared to the vancomycin only group of 26% cure rate. Conclusion: An initial abbreviated dose of vancomycin at the start of fecal transplant has a significantly higher cure rate in treating recurrent clostridium difficile infections when compared to standard vancomycin therapy

    Forged in the Fires of COVID-19: The Evolution of Systemic Therapy for Online Practice and Beyond

    Get PDF
    There has been a swift uptake in the use of teletherapy since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has corresponded with an increase in clinical scholarship focused on conducting systemic therapy in an online format. A majority of this scholarship offers ideas for adapting therapeutic tasks developed around in-person contact for a remote format. The current article moves beyond adapting and offers ideas for remote systemic therapy that are born from our experiences of evolving through teletherapy. We begin by noting some of the significant differences between in-person therapy and teletherapy before describing how these differences can influence client presence and professionalism in session. Following this discussion, we offer ideas for how systemic therapists can enhance client presence, communicate the importance of the work, and inspire client initiative for change while working remotely

    Efficacy of Antidepressant Drugs for the Treatment of Covid-19

    Get PDF
    In adult populations (18-65), does the administration of antidepressants, compared to not administering antidepressants, reduce the severity of the Covid-19 infection? Current treatment protocols for Covid-19 virus are still new and needing improvement. Discovering a new pharmacologic approach has been on the forefront of medical research since the beginning of the pandemic. The purpose of this paper is analyzing the efficacy of antidepressant drugs for reducing morbidity and mortality associated with Covid-19 virus. A literature search was conducted using Cinahl, Google Scholar, and UMaine Nursing Reference Center. The search words included covid, covid-19, pandemic, coronavirus, antidepressants, and SSRI. The inclusion criteria were all adults, male and female aged 18-65. The exclusion criteria included all viruses other than Covid-19, patients under 18, and patients over 65. Our search included 10 articles. Studies found that the administration of antidepressants has the potential to decrease the severity of the Covid-19 infection and improve outcomes. Specific antidepressants including fluoxetine and fluvoxamine were shown to decrease mortality in patients with Covid. Other studies suggest venlafaxine, mirtazapine, paroxetine, and escitalopram limited the need for intubation in those with serious covid infections. Promising research has emerged in the past few years suggesting there may be a link between antidepressant use and decreased symptoms of Covid-19. Some even suggest the use of certain antidepressants can decrease the risk of contracting the virus. Because Covid-19 is a relatively new disease, more research is needed to truly determine the applications antidepressants could have on patients who have contracted the virus

    Building skills, knowledge and confidence in eating and exercise behavior change: Brief motivational interviewing training for healthcare providers

    Get PDF
    Objective: Obesity related health problems affect individuals, families, communities and the broader health care system, however few healthcare providers (e.g., doctors, nurses, social workers, psychologists, counselors) receive formal training in obesity prevention interventions. We examined the effectiveness of training healthcare providers in brief motivational interviewing (brief MI) targeting eating and exercise behavior change. Methods: 163 healthcare providers participated. 128 participants completed a one-day experiential brief MI training workshop followed by electronic peer-support and a further 35 matched controls did not receive the training. Results: Participant's knowledge of brief MI and confidence in their ability to counsel patients using brief MI significantly improved following training (p< 0.05) and remained at 3 and 6-month follow-up (p< 0.05). Brief MI skills assessed during the simulated patient interactions indicated a significant improvement across two practical training blocks (p< 0.05). Conclusion: Healthcare providers can learn brief MI skills and knowledge quickly and confidence in their counseling abilities improves and is sustained. Practice implications: Healthcare providers may consider brief MI as an obesity prevention intervention

    An Analysis of Gender Pay Disparity in the Nonprofit Sector: An Outcome of Labor Motivation or Gendered Jobs?

    Get PDF
    Although pay differences between men and women with comparable characteristics are generally smaller in the nonprofit than in the for-profit sector, gender pay gaps in the nonprofit sector vary widely across industries. In some industries, gender pay gaps are as large as in the for-profit sector, but in others, women make more than comparably qualified men. Using Hierarchical Linear Modeling on the combined 2001-2006 American Community Surveys, we test nonprofit labor motivation theories against a gendered-job hypothesis to explain this variation. We find that gender pay gaps in the nonprofit sector are smaller in industries where nonprofits outnumber for-profits and where higher proportions of female-dominated occupations exist

    Quantifying spatio-temporal boundary condition uncertainty for the North American deglaciation

    Full text link
    Ice sheet models are used to study the deglaciation of North America at the end of the last ice age (past 21,000 years), so that we might understand whether and how existing ice sheets may reduce or disappear under climate change. Though ice sheet models have a few parameters controlling physical behaviour of the ice mass, they also require boundary conditions for climate (spatio-temporal fields of temperature and precipitation, typically on regular grids and at monthly intervals). The behaviour of the ice sheet is highly sensitive to these fields, and there is relatively little data from geological records to constrain them as the land was covered with ice. We develop a methodology for generating a range of plausible boundary conditions, using a low-dimensional basis representation of the spatio-temporal input. We derive this basis by combining key patterns, extracted from a small ensemble of climate model simulations of the deglaciation, with sparse spatio-temporal observations. By jointly varying the ice sheet parameters and basis vector coefficients, we run ensembles of the Glimmer ice sheet model that simultaneously explore both climate and ice sheet model uncertainties. We use these to calibrate the ice sheet physics and boundary conditions for Glimmer, by ruling out regions of the joint coefficient and parameter space via history matching. We use binary ice/no ice observations from reconstructions of past ice sheet margin position to constrain this space by introducing a novel metric for history matching to binary data
    corecore