38 research outputs found
Aspects of technique in some Elizabethan shorter narrative poems, with special reference to Marlowe's Hero and Leander, Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis, and Lucrece, and Drayton's Endimion and Phoebe
This thesis has two aims. The first is to give an unbiased hearing to certain shorter narrative poems of the 1590s, considering their achievement primarily on their own terms. The poems present difficulties because of their marked artificiality. Chapter I is therefore an approach to them by the consideration of some contemporary attitudes to poetry, art and descriptive technique, whilst Chapter II examines the poems' relation to certain traditions and art-forms which influenced them. Chapter III is an examination of the use of description in the poems, and the implications of their narrative technique. Chapter IV contains a detailed study of the four major poems of the genre, Marlowe's Hero and Leander, Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis and Lucrece, and Drayton's Endimion and Phoebe.The second, and related, aim is to display the genre's role in establishing poetry as an art independent of the moralists' demands, and in asserting the right of the English poet to create fictions freely. The poems had the capacity to do these things because of their particular nature, and because of their position in the literary and social scene of the time. Their success came from the way the poets drew on the established achievements and prerogatives of the painter, cultivating admiration both forillusionistic effects and for the penetrating perception which apprehends the essence of the subject represented. At the same time, in the genre as a whole, the poets undertook what was denied the painter, the portrayal of the mind and its existence in time, thereby establishing the rights and distinctive excellence of poetry.<p
A bibliometric analysis of missed nursing care research: Current themes and way forward
Background. Missed nursing care adversely affects nurse and patient outcomes in healthcare settings. Comprehensive bibliometric overview of research output in this field is limited, which restricts knowledge of this complex phenomenon in terms of research trends, author’s productivity, and thematic focus of scientific publications. This study aims to examine publications on missed nursing care by conducting a comprehensive bibliometric analysis. Methods. A search was performed in the Scopus database to identify 276 published studies on missed nursing care from inception to 20th February 2022. A bibliometric approach was used to comprehensively analyse retrieved publications based on trend, thematic focus, and scientific production. The R based software was used for data analysis. Results. The result from this bibliometric analysis indicates that the first study performed on the concept of missed nursing care was published in 2006. The United States of America (USA) ranked first in number of publications, and the study by Ball et al. published in 2014 was the most cited paper among the documents analysed. The results also identified names of prolific authors such as Kalisch B.J., Ausserhofer D., Willis E., Papastavrou E., Schubert M., Palese A., Simon M., and Aiken L. H. and relevant institutions in this field. Trending keywords identified included “missed nursing care,” “unfinished nursing care,” “patient safety,” and “care left undone.” In addition, thematic analysis showed emerging themes such as “neonatal intensive care unit,” “patient satisfaction,” “health resources,” “failure to maintain,” and “adverse events.” Conclusion. Findings from this study reveal a lack of bibliometric analysis in missed nursing care research. This study provides significant contribution by presenting a comprehensive overview on thematic focus, hotspots studies, and directions for future research in this field. Findings from this study can guide scholars in defining research focus and aspects of research on missed nursing care for future exploration
Nurses’ perception of missed nursing care in a Western Australian teaching hospital: A cross-sectional study
Background
Missed nursing care (MNC) has gained increasing emphasis in nursing literature because of its association with nurse and patient outcomes in healthcare settings. While missed care has been widely studied, little evidence is available on the types and frequency of missed care, reasons for its occurrence, and predictors of missed care in Western Australia.
Aims To determine nurses’ perceptions of the types of MNC, reasons for missed care and to identify factors predicting missed care occurrence in Western Australian acute care settings.
Methods A cross-sectional study in medical and surgical wards was performed. The nurse MISSCARE survey tool was used to capture self-reported types and reasons for missed care and level of nurse job satisfaction from a sample of 204 nurses working in 16 acute care wards. Data analyses were carried out in International Business Machines Corperation located in Armonk, New York United States (IBM SPSS Statistics) (v 29).
Findings The most common perceived missed activities included ambulation (87%), patient teaching (79%), interdisciplinary conference attendance (78%), mouth care (78%), intake and output (77%), and patient turning (75%). Labour resources ranked highest for reasons for missed care followed by material resources and communication. Significant relationships were observed between missed care and job satisfaction, role satisfaction, and teamwork.
Discussion Working overtime, job dissatisfaction, inadequate staffing, and heavy admissions and discharges were related to increased likelihood for missed care occurrence.
Conclusion Although further studies examining the link between MNC and staffing methodologies are needed, this study provides evidence on nurse-reported missed care and the impact of missed care in Western Australia
Staff perceptions of the effectiveness of managerial communication during the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-sectional study
Aims: This work aims to explore staff perceptions of (1) the effectiveness of organizational communication during the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) the impact of organizational communication on staff well-being and ability to progress their work and patient care. Background: Effective coordination and communication are essential in a pandemic management response. However, the effectiveness of communication strategies used during the COVID-19 pandemic is not well understood. Design: An exploratory cross-sectional research design was used. A 33-item survey tool was created for the study. Methods: The study was conducted at a tertiary teaching hospital in Western Australia. Convenience sampling was used to recruit participants from nursing, medical, allied health services, administrative and clerical, and personal support services (N = 325). Data were collected between December 2020 and May 2021. Results: Overall, all occupational groups found working during the COVID-19 pandemic stressful, and all groups wanted accessible and accurate communication from management and new policies, procedures, and protocols for future outbreaks. Conclusions: The use of occupational group-relevant strategies and COVID-19 protocols, as well as the on-going use of email, face-to-face meetings with debrief sessions, are needed to improve communication and support staff to fulfil their roles
GJ 3236: a new bright, very low-mass eclipsing binary system discovered by the MEarth observatory
We report the detection of eclipses in GJ 3236, a bright (I = 11.6) very low
mass binary system with an orbital period of 0.77 days. Analysis of light- and
radial velocity curves of the system yielded component masses of 0.38 +/- 0.02
and 0.28 +/- 0.02 Msol. The central values for the stellar radii are larger
than the theoretical models predict for these masses, in agreement with the
results for existing eclipsing binaries, although the present 5% observational
uncertainties limit the significance of the larger radii to approximately 1
sigma. Degeneracies in the light curve models resulting from the unknown
configuration of surface spots on the components of GJ 3236 currently dominate
the uncertainties in the radii, and could be reduced by obtaining precise,
multi-band photometry covering the full orbital period. The system appears to
be tidally synchronized and shows signs of high activity levels as expected for
such a short orbital period, evidenced by strong Halpha emission lines in the
spectra of both components. These observations probe an important region of
mass-radius parameter space around the predicted transition to fully-convective
stellar interiors, where there are a limited number of precise measurements
available in the literature.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 10 tables, emulateapj format. Accepted for
publication in Ap
Road Safety Performance Indicators: Theory. Deliverable D3.6 of the EU FP6 project SafetyNet.
This document provides details about the theory behind the development of Safety
Performance Indicators (SPIs) in seven major areas which are central to the fields of activity
in road safety in Europe. The fields of activity were selected as a result of reviews of national
road safety plans in many of the EU countries and around the world and are considered the
central themes of activity in road safety, necessary to bring about a significant improvement
in road safety in the EU countries.
Within each field SPIs were developed which are directly related to that field of activity, can
be quantitatively measured, can provide the basis for the assessment of the level of road
safety in each country and can serve as an indicator to describe the level of activity in that
field and country and can provide a yardstick for comparison. Comparisons can be before
and after certain actions are taken or can be comparisons between countries.
As stated above, this document deals with the theory behind the development of each of the
seven SPIs. It provides the rationale behind their development, the proofs for their relevance
in the specific fields and the existing limitations that led to the adoption of the specific SPIs.
The document provides also some recommendations for the possible improvements required
to obtain better SPIs. Two companion documents are also being prepared. One is a manual
which provides details on the procedures necessary to collects the required data for the
development of each SPI in each country. The second document provides results on the
data collected so far for each of the 25 EU countries and the SPIs developed so far, based
on the data submitted by each of the countries. It can be seen that a lot of work still has to be
done, both in collecting the necessary data and in improving the SPIs, once better and more
detailed data becomes available