2,110 results
Search Results
2. Building a supportive framework for brain research in Ireland: Inaugural position paper of the Irish Brain Council.
- Author
-
Rogers, Mags, Boland, Barry, Clarke, Sarah, Craven, Audrey, Fassbender, Catherine, Gill, Michael, Hardiman, Orla, Henshall, David C., Lynch, Tim, Mitchell, Kevin, Pender, Niall, Rogan, Carol, and Roche, Richard A. P.
- Subjects
- *
APHASIA , *BRAIN , *AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis , *SPINAL muscular atrophy - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. PERSONAL, POLITICAL AND PUBLIC: SOCIO-LEGAL CHANGES FROM A RELATIONAL PERSPECTIVE.
- Author
-
HALL, SARAH MARIE
- Subjects
PRAXIS (Process) ,EMPIRICAL research ,GESTURE ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
The paper offers a response to Kath Browne and Catherine Nash's paper 'From hegemonic to where?'. Building on their influential body of work and expanding upon further empirical research across Ireland, Canada and the UK, their paper is a direct examination of the views and experiences of those concerned about socio-legal challenges in sexuality and gender. With my responses and provocations, I gesture towards a relational geographical framing, focusing on three main themes: the everyday and relationality, experience and difference, and praxis and allyship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Free Paper Abstracts.
- Subjects
- *
CONSCIOUS sedation , *LOCAL anesthesia , *SURGICAL excision , *SKIN cancer , *CAROTID artery diseases , *TONSILLITIS , *ANESTHESIA , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of various studies including a study on a multi-agent procedural sedation sequence with local anaesthesia for surgical excision of advanced head and neck skin cancers, a case report on fatal carotid artery erosion due to tonsillitis in a two-year-old child and a case report describing the incidental finding of tracheal bronchus causing peri-operative desaturation.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Free Paper Abstracts.
- Subjects
- *
ANESTHESIA , *ACUTE abdomen in children , *HEMATOMA , *ANESTHETICS , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on medical topics including anaesthesia for acute abdomen in children by M. Ajmal, abdominal wall haematoma by F. J. Gerges and M. S. Shulman, and skill acquisition by anaesthetic trainees in practical procedures by S. E. Smith and V. R. Tallentire.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. research paper The use of a national transplant registry to benchmark transplant outcome for patients undergoing autologous and allogeneic stem cell transplantation in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
- Author
-
Russell, N. H., Szydlo, R., McCann, S., Potter, M. N., Craddock, C., Towlson, K., and Apperley, J. F.
- Subjects
- *
STEM cell transplantation , *MYELOID leukemia , *HODGKIN'S disease , *CELL transplantation - Abstract
As part of its clinical governance programme the British Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (BSBMT) undertook an analysis of transplant outcome for adults undergoing human leucocyte antigen – identical sibling allogeneic transplantation for chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) in first chronic phase (CP1) or autologous transplantation for Hodgkin's disease (HD). The study aimed to compare transplant-related mortality (TRM) and survival for patients reported to the BSBMT with patients transplanted in the rest of Europe, reported to the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT). The outcomes for 104 allogeneic transplants for CML in 24 UK/Irish centres were compared with 775 allografts in 145 other European centres. For HD, 241 autografts from 38 UK/Irish centres were compared with 1145 transplants in 239 other European centres. For both diseases, the cohorts were broadly matched with the exception of CML, where 85% of patients were transplanted <1 year from diagnosis in the UK/Ireland compared with 68% in the EBMT ( P = 0·001). Cox regression analysis was undertaken using known delineated variables affecting transplant outcome in addition to the registry of origin. The adjusted survival curves for CML showed no significant differences between the two groups, with 3-year survival probabilities of 70·2% and 67·1% for the EBMT and BSBMT cohorts respectively. Likewise, the analysis for HD showed overlapping survival curves, with 3-year survival probabilities of 71·8% (EBMT) and 70·8% (BSBMT). TRM was not statistically different in either disease. This study demonstrates the potential for using national registries to benchmark transplant outcome against the EBMT registry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. In response to 'Use of technology by older adults with an intellectual disability in Ireland to support health, well‐being and social inclusion during the COVID‐19 pandemic', by Darren McCausland, Mary McCarron and Philip McCallion.
- Author
-
Kwiatkowska, Gosia, Dhillon, Satvinder Kaur, and Kerai, Kanchan
- Subjects
WELL-being ,SOCIAL support ,DIGITAL technology ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,OLDER people with disabilities ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,SOCIAL integration ,COVID-19 pandemic ,OLD age - Abstract
A response to the paper "Use of Technology by Older Adults With an Intellectual Disability in Ireland to Support Health, Well-Being and Social Inclusion During the COVID-19 Pandemic,"by Darren McCausland, Mary McCarron and Philip McCallion, is presented. Topics include ways to present quantitative data in academic journals for easier understanding, practical information that should be included in research papers and the importance of the research to people with learning disabilities.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The demand for money at the zero interest rate bound.
- Author
-
Watanabe, Tsutomu and Yabu, Tomoyoshi
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,DEMAND for money ,DEMAND function ,ELASTICITY (Economics) ,MONEY supply - Abstract
Summary: This paper undertakes both a narrow and wide replication of the estimation of a money demand function conducted by Ireland (American Economic Review, 2009). Using US data from 1980 to 2013, we show that the substantial increase in the money‐income ratio during the period of near‐zero interest rates is captured well by the log–log specification but not by the semi‐log specification, contrary to the result obtained by Ireland (2009). Our estimate of the interest elasticity of money demand over the 1980–2013 period is about one‐tenth that of Lucas's paper published in 2000, which used a log–log specification. Finally, neither specification satisfactorily fits post‐2015 US data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Cooperative resilience: Toward a heuristic model of collective action in a crisis.
- Author
-
Mangan, Anita and Ward, Anne Marie
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE action ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CREDIT unions ,COOPERATIVE societies ,CRISES - Abstract
This paper examines financial cooperatives (credit unions) in Ireland and their response to COVID‐19. The paper offers two contributions. The first is the Cooperative Resilience Framework, which highlights the importance of iterative, heuristic responses in building capabilities that enable routine‐based responses. These responses, in turn, avoid and absorb the effects of disruption in subsequent similar crises. The second contribution is empirical, demonstrating the how of resilience by offering a better understanding of how the credit unions' collective actions created dynamic, agile responses that helped them to "bounce forward" after the crisis. Key themes identified include agility, strong social relationships, and decentralized decision‐making (empowerment). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Anthropause environmentalisms: Noticing natures with the Self‐Isolating Bird Club.
- Author
-
Turnbull, Jonathon, Searle, Adam, and Lorimer, Jamie
- Subjects
SOCIAL media ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DIGITAL media ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,STAY-at-home orders ,VIRTUAL communities ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
This paper offers a detailed empirical account of how human–environment relations were reconfigured in the UK and Ireland during the 2020–2021 COVID‐19 lockdowns, a period which natural scientists defined as the COVID‐19 Anthropause. Bringing this scientific concept into conversation with geographical work, we consider anthropause as both a lived condition and an historical moment of space–time decompression. Our expanded conceptualisation of anthropause, centred on lived experience and everyday life, develops a more hopeful politics than those offered by the 'Great Acceleration' narrative, which suggests digital media and urbanisation separate humans from nature. In contrast, we identify affirmative and inclusive modes of 'anthropause environmentalism' and explore their potential for fostering convivial human–nature relations in a world that is increasingly urban, digital, and powered by vernacular expertise. To make this argument, we turn to the Self‐Isolating Bird Club, an online birdwatching community operating across several social media platforms which, at the pandemic's height, reached over 50,000 members. We trace three key changes to human–nature relations illustrated by this group which we use to structure our paper: connection, community and cultivation. The COVID‐19 Anthropause recalibrated the fabric and rhythms of everyday life, changing what counts as a meaningful human–nature relationship. This paper will be of interest to geographers exploring environmental change at the interface of more‐than‐human and digital geographies, as well as environmentalists and conservationists. To conclude, we offer suggestions as to how scholars and practitioners might harness the lessons of anthropause to respond to the 'anthropulse'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Realizing the potential of a strengths‐based approach in family support with young people and their parents.
- Author
-
Devaney, Carmel, Brady, Bernadine, Crosse, Rosemary, and Jackson, Rebecca
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL practice ,WELL-being ,PATIENT advocacy ,PROBLEM solving ,INFORMATION services ,FAMILY support ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,COMMUNITY health services ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL services ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,PARENTS ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
This paper on a strengths‐based approach (SBA) to practice is based on empirical research with stakeholders involved in an intensive support programme for young people at risk and their parents in Ireland. The Youth Advocate Programme (YAP) model provides wraparound support to respond to their needs by focusing on their competencies and their coping skills and building networks of community‐based supports. The model includes parents or carers in the suite of support offered by advocates. An SBA to practice has been discussed for some time in academic literature and practice guidance. However, it tends to be considered primarily in relation to social work practice, and there is ongoing ambiguity as to what it actually involves in day‐to‐day engagement with individual family members. Insightful, rich accounts of SBAs as part of routine practice provided by young people, parents and practitioners form the basis to this paper and detail how these approaches support the development of hope‐inspiring relationships and promote positive change. Relevant literature and research situates the debate on the experience of using SBA, the wider challenges faced by families, the impact of SBA in practice on those receiving the support service and its potential for use in the wider continuum of children and family services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. What is the prevalence of chronic venous disease among health care workers? A scoping review.
- Author
-
Benn, Sarah, Moore, Zena, Patton, Declan, O'Connor, Tom, Nugent, Linda, Harkin, Denis, and Avsar, Pinar
- Subjects
CHRONIC diseases ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL personnel ,VENOUS insufficiency ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,VARICOSE veins ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Chronic venous disease (CVD) occurs because of structural or functional disturbances to the venous system of the lower limbs. Signs and symptoms include leg pain, swelling, varicose veins, and skin changes, with venous ulceration ultimately occurring in severe disease. To assess the prevalence of CVD among health care workers, a scoping review of existing publications exploring the prevalence of CVD among health care workers was conducted in July 2022. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses guidelines were used. A total of 15 papers met the inclusion criteria and these formed the basis of the review. Among health care workers, the mean prevalence of CVD was 58.5% and the mean prevalence for varicose veins was 22.1%. There is an increased prevalence of CVD in health care workers when compared with the general population. Therefore, there is a need for early diagnosis and the use of preventative measures to protect health care workers from CVD and varicose vein development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Mobilising a counterhegemonic idea: Empathy, evidence, and experience in the campaign for a Supervised Drug Injecting Facility (SIF) in Dublin, Ireland.
- Author
-
McCann, Eugene and Duffin, Tony
- Subjects
SAFE injection sites (Community health services) ,PUBLIC health & politics ,DRUG abuse ,EMPATHY ,SOCIAL movements - Abstract
Using the case of the campaign to establish a Supervised Injecting Facility (SIF) for people who use illicit drugs in Dublin, Ireland, this paper makes three related contributions to contemporary literatures. First, by detailing the history of the campaign and paying particular attention to the ways it was influenced by learning from models elsewhere in the world, the paper adds a spatial perspective to research on the intersections of public health and politics. Second, the paper addresses the policy mobilities literature's minimal engagement with the role of counterhegemonic ideas and national states in shaping inter‐local policy circulations. It provides detailed empirical analysis of the influence of counterhegemonic ideas and how activists reference those ideas through appeals to empathy, expert evidence, and experience as they build coalitions to influence formal state institutions, including the legal system and the national government. This discussion supports a call for engagement between policy mobilities and counterhegemonic social movement literatures. Third, the paper addresses ongoing discussions of 'failure' in policy‐making by arguing for a critical, contextual approach to the spatialities and temporalities of attempts to change entrenched policy and regulatory models. The case study is based on one author's direct involvement in the campaign for a SIF and on semi‐structured research interviews with 12 key actors conducted since 2015. The research also involved an analysis of relevant documentary materials spanning the period 2012–2021 and both authors' participation in a drug policy forum in Dublin in January 2017, involving local and international actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Inequalities in undergraduate participation and performance in Irish higher education.
- Author
-
Borooah, Vani and Knox, Colin
- Subjects
- *
UNDERGRADUATES , *HIGHER education , *SCHOOL enrollment , *COLLEGE students - Abstract
This paper focuses on two aspects of gender inequality in Irish higher education: inequality in participation by gender and inequality of performance by gender, institution and subject. We use a rich set of data from the Higher Education Authority of Ireland which detail inter alia enrolment in institutions of higher education—Universities and Institutes of Technology—and record the class of degree received by graduating students, by subject and gender. The first aspect was the participation of women. Although more women enrolled as full‐time undergraduates in universities than did men, the reverse was the case in the Institutes of Technology. This had much to do with the subject structure of universities vis‐à‐vis the Institutes of Technology in tandem with the subject preferences of women and men. The second issue was inequality in performance. A major conclusion of this paper is that after enrolment there was little difference between the success rates of women and men in receiving first‐class degrees in the different subjects but there was considerable difference between the institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Exploring concepts of friendship formation in children with language disorder using a qualitative framework analysis.
- Author
-
Janik Blaskova, Lenka and Gibson, Jenny L.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of children with disabilities , *LANGUAGE disorders in children , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *INTERVIEWING , *JUDGMENT sampling , *CHILDHOOD friendships , *RESEARCH , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *SOCIAL skills , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *WELL-being , *PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Purpose: Sociometric studies and adult reports have established that children with Language Disorder (LD) are at risk of peer relationship difficulties. However, we have limited knowledge of how children with LD understand friendship, whom they deem as a good or bad friend, and what role their friendship concepts play in their relationships with peers. This exploratory study aimed to conduct a qualitative investigation into the friendship concepts that children with LD hold and to explore their strategies for making friends. Methods: We conducted multiple, art‐informed interviews on the topic of friendship with 14 children with LD at the age of 6–8 years. Participating children were based in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland. They attended enhanced provision, specific speech and language classes and mainstream classrooms. We used framework analysis to map children's responses to Selman's (1979) developmental model of interpersonal understanding, which espouses a theory of children's social development within the context of peer relationships. Results: The understanding of friendship formation in children with LD varied from physical presence to mutual support and sharing. Children's ideas about a good/bad friend represented the lowest developmental stage. Participants from the mainstream classroom demonstrated the highest stages of interpersonal understanding. Children with LD did not mention their language abilities as a barrier to making friends. Conclusion: There are limited studies exploring friendship directly from children with LD, and this study provides insights into this gap, by utilising art‐informed interviews. Children's immature understanding of a good/bad friend points towards a potential susceptibility to false friends, which we suggest needs further empirical validation. We also found that children with LD did not pay attention to their language difficulties when making friends, which raises questions about the ways diagnoses are shared with children. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Children with Language Disorder (LD) are at risk of peer relationship difficulties. Studies to date are based on sociometrics and adult reports. Only a few studies employ participatory approaches to research with children, directly engaging children with LD when exploring their friendships What this paper adds: This paper directly asks children with LD about their understanding of friendship and strategies for making friends.Physical proximity and play are important to children.s understanding of friendship especially in recognising good and bad friends. This indicates potential reasons for children with LD being susceptible to false friendsAdditionally, children with LD do not perceive language and communication as a barrier to making friends. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Concepts around friendship and good/bad friends should be routinely assessed and targeted (if appropriate) in interventions. The study highlights the need to continue discussing practices around sharing diagnoses with children with LD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The psychosocial impact of a chronic disease in Ireland: Burdens and helpful practices for a life with epidermolysis bullosa.
- Author
-
Salamon, Gudrun, Field‐Werners, Ursula, Strobl, Sophie, Hübl, Vinzenz, and Diem, Anja
- Subjects
CHRONIC diseases & psychology ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL care use ,SOMATOFORM disorders ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH status indicators ,ENDOWMENTS ,SATISFACTION ,EPIDERMOLYSIS bullosa ,RARE diseases ,DISEASE management ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,BANDAGES & bandaging ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SEVERITY of illness index ,THEMATIC analysis ,FAMILY attitudes ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITY of life ,PATIENT-professional relations ,EXTENDED families ,FACTOR analysis ,QUALITY assurance ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL support ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SURGICAL dressings ,DRUGS ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PHYSICAL mobility ,MEDICAL care costs ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Objective: Although Ireland has one of the highest levels of well‐being in Europe, having a health condition has been found to have a direct negative impact. The aim of this study is to evaluate the current situation and the experiences of patients with epidermolysis bullosa (EB), a rare genetic skin disease, and their relatives living in Ireland, with a focus on burdens and helpful practices. Methods and Measures: In a mixed‐methods design, a series of standardised questionnaires were combined with open‐ended questions. Via an online survey, data from n = 59 EB patients and relatives of EB patients living in Ireland were collected. Results: EB affects both the patients and their relatives. Burdens were found in relation to the visibility of EB, the degree of severity, the current health status, reduced mobility, the financial impact of EB, the psychosocial impact and personal and social resources. The paper also analyses existing resources and highlights opportunities for support and needs of improvement. Conclusion: Quality of life with EB is influenced by somatic symptoms and the psychosocial burden. Individual helpful practices in dealing with this rare disease can be considered as mediators, but they need to be supported by structural and healthcare improvements. Patient or Public Contribution: The perspective of EB patients, their relatives and EB experts were taken into account in the development of the study design via two feedback loops with the EB patient organisations DEBRA Ireland and DEBRA Austria. The design was adapted accordingly. Additionally, by including open‐ended questions, patients and relatives could contribute their individual perspectives and add insights into their lives with EB that might not have been captured with the structured online survey alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Geographies of purpose built student accommodation: Exclusivity, precarity and (im)mobility.
- Author
-
Reynolds, Alice
- Subjects
PRECARITY ,GEOGRAPHY ,LANDSCAPES - Abstract
Purpose Built Student Accommodation is increasingly dominating the urban landscapes of university locations. Yet a focus on student accommodation beyond "studentification" remains under‐researched and under‐analysed in geography and housing studies. Drawing upon pre‐existing studies and new insights from the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland, this paper provides an analysis of the contemporary student accommodation sector and the distinct geographies this creates. The paper argues that the neoliberalisation of the student accommodation sector has (re)produced three distinct outcomes: exclusivity, precarity, and (im)mobility, themes of increasing attention within geography and beyond. In concluding, the paper argues that student accommodation is a key vector in which inequalities produced by neoliberalism are articulated and displayed, reflective of a wider global trend. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. SUMMARY REPORT ON PROPOSALS IN THE CONSULTATION PAPER ON THE ELECTIONS SCHEME TO NATIONAL BOARDS PROPOSED BY THE UNITED KINGDOM CENTRAL COUNCIL FOR NURSING, MIDWIFERY AND HEALTH VISITING.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL personnel , *VISITING nurses , *MIDWIVES , *OBSTETRICS - Abstract
On September 28, 1981, Great Britain's Central Council produced a consultation paper in which certain proposals are made for election to the recently constituted National Boards for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting. The purpose of the election is to elect nurses, midwives and health visitors as members of the National Boards for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. It is proposed that there should be three categories of candidates--nurses, midwives and health visitors. To be eligible to stand as a candidate a person must be either a practising nurse, practising midwife or a practising health visitor.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Children as co‐researchers in pandemic times: Power and participation in the use of digital dialogues with children during the COVID‐19 lockdown.
- Author
-
Donegan, Aoife, Devine, Dympna, Martinez‐Sainz, Gabriela, Symonds, Jennifer, and Sloan, Seaneen
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,TEACHER-student relationships ,AFFINITY groups ,FRIENDSHIP ,INTERVIEWING ,CHILD behavior ,SELF-efficacy ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,EXPERIENCE ,ACTION research ,CASE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,STUDENTS ,PSYCHOLOGY of school children ,STUDENT attitudes ,ELEMENTARY schools ,STAY-at-home orders ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This paper documents co‐participatory research with children in six primary schools in Ireland during the COVID‐19 pandemic. It explores the use of what we term digital dialogues with diverse groups of children aged 9–10 years as members of Child Research Advisory Groups. The paper conceptualises the digital dialogues as sites of resistance as well as constraint, empowering children to articulate their voices in relation to schooling and the pandemic, whilst mediated by power dynamics—between adults and children, and between children, in the articulation of those voices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Nutrient Processing Capacity of a Constructed Wetland in Western Ireland.
- Author
-
Healy, M. and Cawley, A. M.
- Subjects
WETLANDS ,CONSTRUCTED wetlands ,BIOCHEMICAL oxygen demand ,WATER quality monitoring ,WASTE treatment ,WASTE paper - Abstract
In Ireland, constructed wetland systems are increasingly being used to perform tertiary treatment on municipal waste effluent from small towns and villages located in areas whose receiving waters are deemed sensitive. The bedrock formation in the west of Ireland is primarily karst limestone and where the overburden–soil cover is very shallow, such waters are highly sensitive to pollution sources, as little or no natural attenuation and/or treatment will occur. Constructed wetland technology has been seen to offer a relatively low‐cost alternative to the more conventional tertiary treatment technologies, particularly when dealing with low population numbers in small rural communities. This paper examines the waste treatment performance, in terms of nutrient (P and N) reduction, of a recently constructed surface‐flow wetland system at Williamstown, County Galway, Ireland. Performance evaluation is based on more than two years of water quality and hydrological monitoring data. The N and P mass balances for the wetland indicate that the average percentage reduction over the two‐year study period is 51% for total N and 13% for total P. The primary treatment process in the wetland system for suspended solids (between 84 and 90% reduction), biological oxygen demand (BOD) (on average, 49% reduction), N, and P is the physical settlement of the particulates. However, the formation of algal bloom during the growing season reduces the efficiency of the total P removal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Home‐schooling in the Republic of Ireland.
- Author
-
Banks, Joanne, Forlin, Chris, and Chambers, Dianne
- Subjects
HOME schooling ,SPECIAL education ,INCLUSIVE education ,EDUCATION of students with disabilities - Abstract
Internationally, there continues to be a rise in the popularity of home‐schooling. Although the growth in the numbers of families choosing this alternative approach was evident prior to the Covid‐19 Pandemic school closures, it appears to have impacted on the decision for some to home‐school permanently. Using a scoping review of the literature, this paper considers the research evidence around home‐schooling in the United Kingdom and Europe. It then focuses on home‐schooling in the Republic of Ireland to assess the change and development of home‐schooling over time. In line with trends internationally, Irish administrative data show an increase in the numbers of families engaging in home‐schooling in recent years, particularly for students with disabilities. The paper situates these findings within the context of ongoing debates on inclusive and special education in Ireland and the capacity of mainstream schools to educate and include every student. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Digital learning experiences and spaces: Learning from the past to design better pedagogical and curricular futures.
- Author
-
Bough, Ashley and Martinez Sainz, Gabriela
- Subjects
COMPUTER science education ,SECONDARY education ,MOBILE learning ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
Over 60 years of technology development, transformation of educational policy and curriculum innovation in Ireland have resulted in the introduction of the Computer Science (CS) subject in Post‐Primary (PP) Education. CS has always been conceived digitally and the Digital Learning Experiences (DLE) enacted through its curriculum are strongly interconnected to the opportunities and limitations offered by Digital Spaces (DS). However, key challenges have been identified for the successful implementation of CSE, from teachers' digital competencies and educational strategies in the classroom to learners' varying experiences of CSE. Through a systematic literature review of the educational policies and practices in Ireland's Educational System, this paper documents the digital evolution from the 1960s accounting for the CS curriculum. The literature review identifies key themes in how DS have been conceptualised through CSE, responding to learners' needs and teachers' skills and competencies, informed by emerging societal demands by providing evidence on the disparity between educational policy and practice for DS. Building upon the identified themes, this paper emphasises the importance of the design and implementation of DLE in DS such as the CS subject that considers historical lessons learned to respond to the uncertainties of the digital future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The trajectory of computer science education policy in Ireland: A document analysis narrative.
- Author
-
Connolly, Cornelia, Byrne, Jake Rowan, and Oldham, Elizabeth
- Subjects
COMPUTER science ,SECONDARY school curriculum ,EDUCATION policy ,TEACHER education ,SECONDARY education ,TEENAGERS - Abstract
The launch of a Computer Science curriculum specification in upper secondary schools in Ireland in 2018 was a landmark and a historic development in Irish education. Addressing the historical policy decisions adopted towards establishing the specification, this paper presents an analysis of developments from the 1970s as revealed in key policies and other documents. Positioning the policy change within the context of influences, context of policy text production and within the context of practices, the paper presents an overview of the Irish Computer Science specification. Alongside the background to the evolution in computer science education over the period, the article takes into account the national and cultural contexts and narrates the journey travelled to arrive at this pivotal position. Developments in a global context are presented in comparison with curricula in other countries and some similarities and differences identified. The article uncovers consequences of the specification for the national curriculum, key skills integration and computer science teacher preparation. The article provides an important analysis of the policy trajectory of computer science in Ireland based on a visibly relevant corpus of documents tracing the different stages of this policy and comparing it to similar experiences implemented in other European countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. ICSH review of internal quality control policy for blood cell counters.
- Author
-
McCafferty, Richard, Cembrowski, George, de la Salle, Barbara, Peng, Mingting, and Urrechaga, Eloisa
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL protocols , *AUTOANALYZERS , *HEALTH policy , *HEALTH , *INFORMATION resources , *HEMATOLOGY , *PATHOLOGICAL laboratories , *QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Introduction: This paper is a report of an ICSH review of policies and practices for internal quality control (IQC) policy for haematology cell counters among regulatory bodies, cell counter manufacturers and diagnostic laboratories. It includes a discussion of the study findings and links to separate ICSH guidance for such policies and practices. The application of internal quality control (IQC) methods is an essential pre‐requisite for all clinical laboratory testing including the blood count (Full Blood Count, FBC, or Complete Blood Count, CBC). Methods: The ICSH has gathered information regarding the current state of practice through review of published guidance from regulatory bodies, a questionnaire to six major cell counter manufacturers (Abbott Diagnostics, Beckman Coulter, Horiba Medical Diagnostic Instruments & Systems, Mindray Medical International, Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics and Sysmex Corporation) and a survey issued to 191 diagnostic laboratories in four countries (China, Republic of Ireland, Spain and the United Kingdom) on their IQC practice and approach to use of commercial IQC materials. Results: This has revealed diversity both in guidance and in practice around the world. There is diversity in guidance from regulatory organizations in regard to IQC methods each recommends, clinical levels to use and frequency to run commercial controls, and finally recommended sources of commercial controls. The diversity in practice among clinical laboratories spans the areas of IQC methods used, derivation of target values and action limits used with control materials, and frequency of running commercial controls materials. Conclusions: These findings and their implications for IQC Practice are discussed in this paper. They are used to inform a separate guidance document, which proposes a harmonized approach to address the issues faced by diagnostic laboratories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A co‐created multimethod evaluation of recovery education in Ireland.
- Author
-
O'Brien, Ann, Murphy, Louise, Hunt, Amanda, Dwyer, David, and Hunter, Andrew
- Subjects
WORK ,SCHOOL environment ,MENTAL health ,SELF-efficacy ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH occupations students ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCHOOL administrators ,EXPERIENCE ,STUDENTS ,PROFESSIONS ,CONVALESCENCE ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,STUDENT attitudes ,DATA analysis software ,TEACHER-student relationships ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,WELL-being - Abstract
Background: This paper aims to explore the impact of recovery education on recovery knowledge, attitudes and the quality of life of students undertaking recovery education, contributing to the evidence base in relation to the impact of recovery education. It also explores the experiences of all stakeholders involved in the co‐facilitation, delivery and participation in recovery education. Setting and Participants: This study evaluates the experiences of stakeholders involved in the co‐facilitation, delivery and participation in recovery education across four recovery colleges in Ireland. Participants included students undertaking recovery education, peer educators, education facilitators, recovery college coordinators and practitioner/service providers. Discussion: Findings from the quantitative survey when compared with extant literature suggest that students had a good understanding of recovery education. The social aspect of empowerment for growth and wellbeing was identified through themes relating to co‐production and facilitating student learning. Support for equitable access to recovery education, including co‐production for both the public and staff, was identified as a challenge for the future. Conclusion: The findings from both the qualitative and quantitative components of the study show the positive impact of recovery education on stakeholders while acknowledging the need for ongoing support for people working in recovery education and the development of services. In particular, there was a high level of recovery knowledge found in students undertaking recovery education. Patient or Public Contribution: This study utilised a co‐created study design. From inception a steering group comprising stakeholders (peer educators, recovery education facilitators including past recovery college students and nonpeer staff involved in the co‐production of recovery education) directed the conduct of the evaluation. This steering group participated in an iterative process of information sharing, suggestions for evaluation process and language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Experiences of health service access: A qualitative interview study of people living with Parkinson's disease in Ireland.
- Author
-
O' Shea, Emma, Rukundo, Aphie, Foley, Geraldine, Wilkinson, Tony, and Timmons, Suzanne
- Subjects
PARKINSON'S disease treatment ,HEALTH services accessibility ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,RESEARCH methodology ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,INTERVIEWING ,POPULATION geography ,PRIVATE sector ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH attitudes ,SOUND recordings ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH care teams ,PUBLIC sector ,RESEARCH funding ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DATA analysis software ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background: People with Parkinson's disease (PD) do not always access specialist outpatient services in a timely manner in Ireland. The perspectives of people living with PD, relating to service access, are largely absent in the existing literature. Aim: To explore experiences of PD service access for people living with PD, using a qualitative approach. Methods: Purposive maximum variation sampling was used. Semi‐structured telephone interviews were conducted with 25 service users, including people with PD (n = 22) and supporting carers (n = 3). Informed consent was obtained from all participants. Interviews ranged in duration from 30 to 90 min. Data were managed in NVivo 12 and interpreted inductively using thematic analysis. The researchers were reflexive throughout the research process. The Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research checklist was employed to maximise transparency. Results: The findings highlight several key barriers to and facilitators of equitable and timely service access. Three key themes were identified comprising experiences of PD service access including 'geographical inequity', 'discriminatory practices', and 'public and private system deficits'. Together, these themes illustrate how a two‐tiered and under‐resourced health system lacks capacity, in terms of infrastructure and workforce, to meet PD needs for both public and private patients in Ireland. Conclusions: These findings point to problems for PD care, relating to (i) how the health system is structured, (ii) the under‐provision and under‐resourcing of specialist outpatient PD services, including medical, nursing, and multidisciplinary posts, and (iii) insufficient PD awareness education and training across health settings. The findings also show that telemedicine can provide opportunities for making access to certain aspects of PD care more flexible and equitable, but the feasibility and acceptability of technology‐enabled care must be assessed on an individual basis. Implications for policy, practice and research are discussed. Patient or Public Contribution: The design and conduct of this study were supported by an expert advisory group (EAG) of 10 co‐researchers living with PD. The EAG reviewed the interview schedule and the protocol for this study and provided detailed feedback from their perspective, to improve the methods, including the interview approach. The group also reviewed the findings of the study and contributed their insights on the meaning of the findings, which fed into this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Can people talk about their past practices? Challenges, opportunities, and practical applications of biographic inquiry for geographic research on consumption.
- Author
-
Greene, Mary and Royston, Sarah
- Subjects
HUMAN geography ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,SUSTAINABILITY ,THEORY-practice relationship ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Within human geography, there is increasing interest in the application of theories of practice for understanding resource consumption and for pursuing sustainability goals. In stressing the routine, performative, and contextual dimensions of action, research on geographies of practice is faced with particular methodological challenges. A lively debate concerns the utility of talk‐based methods for investigating routine practices, such as those relating to everyday consumption. While it has been compellingly argued that people can talk individually or in groups about their practice, as of yet, these methodological debates have not been extended to the question of whether people can talk about past practices over the life course. This is despite the fact that attending to practice dynamics at the life‐course scale can reveal important insights into the intersections of structure, agency, time, and space in consumption practices. Seeking to address this gap, this methodology‐focused paper explores biographic inquiry as an empirical strategy for research on geographies of practice and consumption. After identifying significant challenges in representation associated with researching routine action in general, and past practices in particular, it outlines key learnings garnered during a biographic study on domestic consumption in Ireland. Central methodological features supporting talk‐elicitation include zooming‐in‐and‐out of temporal registers, multi‐modality, and phased implementation. The paper concludes that people can talk about past practices in often very detailed, intricate ways and that retrospective talk is a valuable tool for understanding practice dynamics at the life‐course scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Luxembourg and Ireland in global financial networks: Analysing the changing structure of European investment funds.
- Author
-
Wójcik, Dariusz, Urban, Michael, and Dörry, Sabine
- Subjects
MUTUAL funds ,INTERNATIONAL finance ,SECURITIES ,ECONOMIC geography ,SMALL states - Abstract
Using a unique database on investment funds and the conceptual framework of global financial networks, this paper examines the spatial structure of the European investment fund industry, with particular focus on Luxembourg and Ireland. Grounded in financial and economic geography, the paper shows how these countries became the leading investment fund domiciles through a mixture of structural factors and agency enabling a fast and flexible implementation of the European Directive on the Undertakings for the Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS) of 1985, and the cultivation of the investment fund industry ever since. In the process, Luxembourg and Ireland have built on and developed their functions as offshore jurisdictions and international financial centres, both sustained by their governments and regulatory agencies. The analysis of the functional structure of investment funds and their networked geography reveals the increasingly dominant position of London as the investment management centre for the industry, and the increasing concentration of control by large asset management firms. Stripped to its basics, the geography of European investment fund networks is about large, mainly US, asset management firms, creating and managing funds in Luxembourg and Ireland, and investing money through London. As such, the rise of European investment funds can be seen as an example of European financial integration through Americanisation. The Luxembourg and Irish investment fund industry are connected mainly through London and New York, and thus function as satellites of the NY–LON axis, rather than a Luxembourg–Dublin axis in international finance. Overall, the paper demonstrates that studying this seemingly arcane industry, and the role of two small countries in it, reveals much about the nature of financial globalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Evolution of Jigsaw ‐ a National Youth Mental Health Service.
- Author
-
O'Reilly, Aileen, O'Brien, Gillian, Moore, Jeff, Duffy, Joseph, Longmore, Paul, Cullinan, Sarah, and McGrory, Siobhán
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,YOUNG adults ,YOUTH health ,COMMUNITY mental health services ,MENTAL health promotion - Abstract
Aim: There has been a global movement towards transformation of youth mental health services, but limited information on the core principles and characteristics of these new services is available. Jigsaw is one such service, established in Ireland in 2006, with the intent of creating change in Ireland's system of mental healthcare for 12–25 year olds. The aim of this paper is to describe the evolution of Jigsaw services, which are now firmly embedded in the Irish system of care for young people, and recognized internationally as an established service network. Methods: This paper describes provides an up‐to‐date description of the Jigsaw service model, key areas of evolution that have shaped this model, and identifies future directions in service development. Results: Key attributes of the Jigsaw service model including therapeutic service, scope of practice, youth mental health promotion, youth participation, and monitoring/evaluation are described in this paper. Information on key enablers (funding and governance/quality) and service providers is also included. Conclusions: Information on the core principles and characteristics of youth mental health services is important. This paper addresses a gap in the literature by describing the Jigsaw service model, which continues to evolve so that it is responsive to the needs of young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Millions of digitized historical sea‐level pressure observations rediscovered.
- Author
-
Hawkins, Ed, Alexander, Lisa V., and Allan, Rob J.
- Subjects
ISLANDS ,TWO thousands (Decade) ,WEATHER ,TRANSCRIPTION (Linguistics) - Abstract
Millions of sub‐daily sea‐level pressure observations taken between 1919 and 1960 over the British and Irish Isles were transcribed from paper records in the early 2000s but were not published and subsequently forgotten. A chance discussion led to the rediscovery of the transcribed data and 5.47 million observations from 160 locations are now made available, although the data have not been fully quality‐controlled. Much of the data are 3‐hourly, allowing for detailed examinations of synoptic weather variations for this region and time period, and will be invaluable for constraining future reanalyses. We illustrate the value of the data using a stormy period during October and November 1928 and discuss the remaining quality‐control issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Embedding key word sign prompts in a shared book reading activity: The impact on communication between children with Down syndrome and their parents.
- Author
-
Frizelle, Pauline, Allenby, Rebecca, Hassett, Elizabeth, Holland, Orlaith, Ryan, Eimear, Dahly, Darren, and O'Toole, Ciara
- Subjects
COMPUTER software ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,DOWN syndrome ,RESEARCH methodology ,SIGN language ,COMMUNICATION ,VOCABULARY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,READING - Abstract
Background: Children with Down syndrome have speech and language difficulties that are disproportionate to their overall intellectual ability and relative strengths in the use of gesture. Shared book reading between parents and their children provides an effective context in which language development can be facilitated. However, children with Down syndrome often take a passive role in shared book reading and the use of key word signing (KWS) as a shared book reading technique has never been investigated. Aims: This study aimed to compare children with Down syndrome's participation and use of KWS across two methods of shared book reading – one in which a book had key‐word sign prompts embedded (signed condition) and the other in which a book was read as normal (unsigned condition). Measures of child and parent communicative behaviour were taken in each condition to establish if differences emerged. Methods & Procedures: A total of 36 children with Down syndrome (aged between 18 and 61 months) and their mothers took part in the study. Parent–child dyads were videoed at home reading two books, one in a signed and one in an unsigned condition. Child measures included total number of signs produced in each condition and levels of attention and initiation as measured by the Pivotal Behaviour Rating Scale. Parent measures included total number of utterances, mean length of utterance (MLU) in morphemes and vocabulary diversity (VOCD). Parental measures were transcribed using the Codes for Human Analysis Transcripts (CHAT) software and analysed by the Computerised Language Analysis software (CLAN). Contrasts in outcomes between the signed and unsigned conditions were estimated using Poisson and linear mixed‐effects models, determined by the type of data. Outcomes & Results: Results showed that children attempted to sign significantly more in the signed than unsigned condition, as well as showing significant increases in their levels of attention and initiation. There was also a significant increase in the total number of utterances used by parents in the signed versus unsigned condition and a decrease in MLU. VOCD was similar in both conditions. Conclusions & Implications: This study shows that the simple act of embedding key word signs into commercially available books, during shared book reading between parents and young children with Down syndrome, positively affects children's participation (initiation and attention) and use of KWS. The use of KWS as a core shared book reading technique may therefore be a fruitful avenue to facilitate growth in the language abilities of young children with Down syndrome. What this paper adds: What is already known on this subject: Most children with Down syndrome have significant speech and language difficulties, with relative strengths in the use of gesture. Shared book reading is an activity reported to positively affect language. However, children with Down syndrome are reported to take a passive role in shared book reading and are therefore more dependent on their parents to use techniques that facilitate their levels of participation, in order to maximise potential benefits. To the best of our knowledge, the communicative effects of embedding key word signing (KWS) in shared book reading have never been examined with children with Down syndrome. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This is the first study to investigate the communicative impact of parents embedding KWS in a shared book reading activity with their young children with Down syndrome. Our findings show that this relatively simple manipulation resulted in Increase in children's sign attempts.Increase in children's overall participation in shared book reading (indicated by levels of attention and initiation).Increase in the number of utterances produced by parents (primarily as a result of repetitions).Decrease in parental mean length of utterance. These findings suggest that embedding KWS in shared book reading is likely to facilitate increased language abilities in this cohort. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Shared book reading is part of the daily routine for many parents and their children with Down syndrome. Integrating KWS is a relatively simple adaptation to this activity which is likely to enhance children's language skills. Therapists can encourage parents to do this at home to support work carried out at school and in a clinical setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Practising fashion and wardrobe studies: A geographical reframing?
- Author
-
Maguire, Helen and Fahy, Frances
- Subjects
FRAMES (Social sciences) ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SUSTAINABLE consumption ,POWER resources ,WATER consumption ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,RESIDENTIAL water consumption - Abstract
Everyday household sustainability challenges and dilemmas, particularly related to consumption of domestic resources energy, water, and food, are already an important focus in contemporary geographical inquiry. This paper seeks to advance the perspective by exploring a less obvious aspect: everyday fashion consumption practices specifically in the use phase of clothing. Whereas research on clothing sustainability impact has largely pursued production, acquisition, and divestment, here the spotlight is on the active everyday use of clothing already owned. Data were gathered in Ireland using wardrobe studies, a range of visual, verbal, and aural methodological approaches employed to uncover knowledge about wardrobe contents, user practices, cultures, and experiences, along with overarching systems. A central aim of the paper is to explore what geography can learn from wardrobe studies methodologies, thereby opening new opportunities to investigate and to generate valuable data regarding sustainable consumption in both the home and the wardrobe. Consequent to a critical review of current geographical work concerning the sustainability implications of clothing use and an examination of existing research on the geographical dimensions of household sustainability, the paper presents some key ways in which wardrobe studies may be more widely employed by geographers as an effective research method to reframe, analyse, and appreciate the complexities of everyday actions in the clothing use phase. Much research on clothing sustainability impact has largely pursued production, acquisition, and divestment. Here, the spotlight is on the active everyday use of clothing already owned. Data were gathered in Ireland using wardrobe studies, a range of visual, verbal, and aural methodological approaches employed to uncover knowledge about wardrobe contents, user practices, cultures, and experiences, along with overarching systems. A central aim of the paper is to explore what geography can learn from wardrobe studies methodologies, thereby opening new opportunities to investigate and to generate valuable data regarding sustainable consumption in both the home and the wardrobe. Much research on clothing sustainability impact has largely pursued production, acquisition, and divestment. Here, the spotlight is on the active everyday use of clothing already owned. Data were gathered in Ireland using wardrobe studies, a range of visual, verbal, and aural methodological approaches employed to uncover knowledge about wardrobe contents, user practices, cultures, and experiences, along with overarching systems. A central aim of the paper is to explore what geography can learn from wardrobe studies methodologies, thereby opening new opportunities to investigate and to generate valuable data regarding sustainable consumption in both the home and the wardrobe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The interplay between risk adjustment and risk rating in voluntary health insurance.
- Author
-
Klein, Peter Paul, van Kleef, Richard, Henriquez, Josefa, and Paolucci, Francesco
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance rates ,INSURANCE companies ,CONSUMERS - Abstract
Many regulated health insurance markets include risk adjustment (aka risk equalization) to mitigate selection incentives for insurers. Empirical studies on the design and evaluation of risk‐adjustment algorithms typically focus on mandatory health insurance schemes. This paper considers risk adjustment in the context of voluntary health insurance, as found in Chile, Ireland, and Australia. In addition to the challenge of mitigating selection by insurers, regulators of these voluntary schemes have to deal with selection by consumers in and out of the market. A strategy for mitigating selection by consumers is to apply some form of risk rating. Our paper shows how risk adjustment and risk rating interact: (1) risk rating reduces the need for risk adjustment and (2) risk adjustment reduces premium variation across rating factors, thereby increasing incentives for consumers to select in and out of the market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A survey of speech pathologists' opinions about the prospective acceptability of an online implementation platform for aphasia services.
- Author
-
Trebilcock, Megan, Shrubsole, Kirstine, Worrall, Linda, and Ryan, Brooke
- Subjects
TELEREHABILITATION ,SPEECH therapy ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SELF-efficacy ,REHABILITATION of aphasic persons ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SPEECH therapists ,INTERNET service providers - Abstract
Background: Online knowledge translation (KT) approaches are becoming increasingly prevalent within healthcare due to their accessibility and facilitation of international support networks. Online platforms enable timely and far‐reaching dissemination of current evidence and best‐practice recommendations. Although there is potential to improve the uptake of rehabilitation guidelines, it is essential to consider the acceptability of online approaches to healthcare professionals to ensure their successful integration within everyday clinical settings. Aims: To establish the prospective acceptability of a theoretically informed online intervention for speech pathologists, Aphasia Nexus: Connecting Evidence to Practice, that aims to facilitate the implementation of aphasia best practice. Methods & Procedures: A mixed‐methods multinational electronic survey based on the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability (TFA) completed by aphasia researchers and clinicians. Outcomes & Results: A total of 43 participants completed the survey with 91% (n = 39) indicating that they would use Aphasia Nexus. Understanding the intervention and how it works (intervention coherence as per the TFA) was the key factor influencing the likelihood of integration within everyday clinical practice. Participants identified potential areas where the intervention could influence service change and also recommended further design and content changes to improve the intervention. Conclusions & Implications: Aphasia Nexus is an acceptable platform for further feasibility testing in the form of a pilot trial within an Australian‐based health service. The study progresses the theory of TFA as it was a valuable framework facilitating the identification of prominent factors influencing acceptability. The study also informs further intervention refinements in preparation for the next stage of research. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: Online strategies have the potential to enhance KT and promote the uptake of rehabilitation guidelines. An online intervention, however, can only be effective if implemented well. For this reason, it is essential to establish the acceptability of online interventions to the intended recipients and therefore increase the likelihood of successful implementation. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: This study used a theoretically based framework to establish the acceptability of an online implementation intervention, Aphasia Nexus, to multinational aphasia clinicians and researchers. It demonstrated the value in identifying the prominent factors influencing acceptability to inform further intervention refinements and warrant continuing research. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Speech pathologists should use online platforms to drive the implementation of best practice on an international scale. It is important for clinicians to have an in‐depth understanding of online interventions and how they work to enhance their successful uptake into routine clinical practice. Aphasia Nexus is an acceptable online platform for implementing best practice in aphasia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Meaning‐making within inclusion: Exploring parents, teachers and students lay theories of ADHD and their implications for inclusive practice.
- Author
-
Carr‐Fanning, Kate
- Subjects
INCLUSIVE education ,ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,PARENT attitudes ,TEACHER attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGY of students - Abstract
This paper explores the Lay Theories of ADHD of stakeholders (teacher, parent and student) in an Irish context. Academic theories of difference have and continue to evolve, moving from medicalisation, through more socially oriented ideas, to more current trend around neurodivergence. However, inclusion as a process is socially negotiated within classrooms and the wider community. An understanding of stakeholders' lay theories or their beliefs about ADHD (e.g., what causes it and how to respond) gives us insights into this process. This paper draws on findings from a multi‐case study (N = 15) that explored the lay theories of 17 parents, 15 students (7–18 year; Mean = 12.8; SD = 3.09), and 12 teachers (4 primary and 8 secondary) affected by ADHD in mainstream schools. Participants took part in a semi‐structured interview. A data‐driven Thematic Analysis identified three themes: what is ADHD, do they have control, and medication. Each stakeholder group held distinctly different views, which created considerable confusion. Findings are discussed in terms the need for the education of key stakeholders, and what those educational initiatives might include, as well as for the role of collaboration within the process of inclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Nutrition quality and food and packaging waste associated with the school food system: A pilot, citizen science study in an Irish secondary school.
- Author
-
Browne, Sarah, Mullen, Aoife, Mulholland, Beth, Lo, Chungwan, and Ruttledge, Angela
- Subjects
- *
FOOD waste , *HIGH schools , *PILOT projects , *SNACK foods , *WASTE recycling , *SCHOOL health services , *FOCUS groups , *NUTRITION , *PUBLIC health , *WASTE products , *FOOD preferences , *RESEARCH funding , *FOOD quality , *CITIZEN science , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Background: School is an important setting for creating healthy and sustainable food environments. Using participatory methods, this pilot study examined food and packaging waste and nutrition quality within the school food system. Methods: One secondary school in Ireland participated in a waste audit. Eleven male students (15–17 years) participated as citizen scientists. Students collected waste over 1 day and documented data on waste categories. Nutrition labels were photographed for analysis. Students created a video and participated in a focus group. Quantitative data were summarised using descriptive frequencies. A Nutrient Profile Model was applied to summarise nutrition quality. The focus group discussion was analysed using content analysis. Results: Highest weights of waste were organic waste (14.2 kg), paper and cardboard (5.0 kg), and hard plastics (4.1 kg). Materials banned by the European Union Single Use Plastics Directive were found. Recycling bins were contaminated with food waste. Nutrition labels from 132 food packages were analysed, of which 115 items (87%) were low‐nutrient, energy dense foods. Confectionary, energy bars and desserts and savoury snacks were the most common packaged food groups. Students were not surprised by the unhealthy food choices; however, they were shocked and saddened at the waste practices. Their proposed solutions mapped across individual, community and organisational levels. Conclusions: The methodologies allowed successful engagement with students on this topic. The use of unnecessary plastics to serve food, poor waste separation practices, and the production of avoidable waste from low‐nutrient, energy‐dense products were key issues identified. Students proposed solutions that are achievable in the short‐term. Key highlights: Eleven 15–17‐year‐old secondary school students successfully participated as citizen scientists in a waste audit at their school that characterised the quantity, type and nutrition quality of waste associated with the food system.Organic waste, paper and cardboard, and hard plastics represented the most frequent waste. Recycling bins were contaminated with organic waste.Confectionary, energy bars and desserts and savoury snacks were the most common packaged food groups.The researchers conduced a focus group with students when they expressed shock and sadness at the waste practices. Their proposed solutions mapped across individual, community and organisational levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Networked Geographies of Digital Contention in Post‐Financial Crisis Ireland.
- Subjects
SOCIAL movements ,SOCIAL media ,SOCIAL networks ,ACQUISITION of data ,GEOGRAPHY ,DIGITAL communications - Abstract
The language of networks has become a common conceptual framework for describing contemporary, digitally‐engaged social movements. In this paper I address the subject of digital contention from a geographical perspective, using network analysis and qualitative data to explore the networked digital contention of anti‐water charges community groups in Dublin, Ireland. Focusing thematically on network fragmentation, I use places and practices as frames to understand this situated case study and make two main points. First, social media networks are constituted through choices by individuals about how to articulate place relationally to fulfil specific political and social objectives. Second, contextual and historical components of specific places can provide an explanatory mechanism for understanding points of concentration and fragmentation in the network. Network analysis is useful for visualising and interpreting digital contention but augmenting network analysis with qualitative methods of data collection allows for deeper understanding of the geographical nuances of digital contention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Irish drought impacts database: A 287‐year database of drought impacts derived from newspaper archives.
- Author
-
Jobbová, Eva, Crampsie, Arlene, Murphy, Conor, Ludlow, Francis, McLeman, Robert, Horvath, Csaba, Seifert, Natascha, Myslinski, Therese, and Sente, Laura
- Subjects
- *
DATABASES , *REPORTERS & reporting , *NEWSPAPERS , *INVENTORIES , *ELECTRONIC newspapers ,IRISH history - Abstract
Understanding of past droughts has been mostly shaped by meteorological data, with relatively less known about the human aspects of droughts, their socio‐economic impacts, as well as choices people make in response to droughts in different environmental and socio‐political contexts. The lack of data that systematically record and categorize drought impacts is an important reason for this disparity. In this paper, we present an Irish drought impacts database (IDID) containing 6094 newspaper reports and 11,351 individual impact records for the island of Ireland, covering the period 1733–2019. Relevant articles were identified through systematic searching of the Irish Newspaper Archives, and recorded impacts were categorized using a modified version of the classification scheme employed by the European drought impact inventory (EDII). Drawing on the wealth and diversity of content provided by the newspapers, the IDID database provides information on the documented temporal and geographical extent of drought events, their socio‐economic and political contexts, their consequences, mitigation strategies employed and their change over time. The IDID also facilitates analysis of long‐term patterns in drought incidence, individual impact categories, as well as detailed insight into the impacts of individual drought events over nearly three centuries of Ireland's history. In addition, by allowing an examination of the coherence between meteorological records and identified impacts, it advances our understanding of the influences that contemporary economic, political, environmental and societal events had on the human experience, perception and impact of droughts. This new open‐access database, therefore, provides opportunities for improving understanding of drought vulnerability and is an important step in developing greater capacity to cope with and respond to future droughts on the island of Ireland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 'We live here and play here, we should have a say': An exploration of children's perceptions of place‐making in the Market community, Belfast.
- Author
-
McAteer, Benedict, Loudon, Emma, and Higgins, Kathryn
- Subjects
- *
PLAY , *INTERVIEWING , *COMMUNITIES , *RESEARCH methodology , *METROPOLITAN areas , *SOCIAL networks , *PUBLIC health , *PRACTICAL politics , *NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics , *BUILT environment , *CHILD behavior , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Children learn through interaction with their surroundings, meaning that their experiences of place directly contribute to their personal development. Despite this, the needs of the youth are rarely factored into development plans. This is a major obstacle to the sustainable and inclusive development of places. Examining potential pathways to correct this issue, this paper presents the findings of research conducted with young people from the Market area of Belfast. The research engaged with two groups (n = 11) in a participatory investigation of how young people engage with the built environment. Using several participatory methods, including narrative walkabouts, mapping exercises and semi‐structured group interviews, the children engaged as co‐researchers. We link to idea of 'third places' to frame our analysis, demonstrating how children in the Market community have strong opinions of how space is, and should be, designed and managed. We reveal interesting dynamics regarding the children's perceived exclusion from the city centre and concerns about how poor planning is harming their community's public health. We conclude by reflecting upon some of the children's proposed solutions, as well as by presenting two outcomes of our study that hint at the potential future role of young people in co‐designing the built environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A spatial analysis of the economic returns to land‐use change from agriculture to renewable energy production: Evidence from Ireland.
- Author
-
Geoghegan, Cathal and O'Donoghue, Cathal
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,SUSTAINABLE development ,AGRICULTURAL pollution ,SUSTAINABLE agriculture ,RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
Countries are looking to reduce their agricultural sector's carbon footprint while encouraging economic and environmental sustainability. One proposed method of making agriculture more sustainable while maintaining farm incomes is through the production of bioenergy feedstocks. We examine the spatial aspect of the production of renewable energy feedstocks in Ireland. Two feedstocks are looked at—grass silage and short‐rotation coppice (SRC) willow. Spatial microsimulation analysis is utilised to assess the spatial suitability for alternative land uses, simulating land‐use change to compare economic returns with the current agricultural use. A farm‐based carbon subsidy is modelled based on avoided agricultural emissions and carbon sequestered. We find that midlands counties, especially those in the north midlands, have the highest proportion of land where feedstocks would be more profitable than the current agricultural use. Counties on the western seaboard have the lowest proportion of land where feedstocks would give greater returns. The amount of land where feedstocks are more profitable increases as greater carbon subsidies are provided. Of the two feedstocks assessed, SRC willow cultivation is more profitable than grass silage production. The overwhelming majority of land where producing feedstocks would be more profitable has cattle farming as its current use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The growth of private home care providers in Europe: The case of Ireland.
- Author
-
Mercille, Julien and O'Neill, Nicholas
- Subjects
HOME care services ,LONG-term care facilities ,NEOLIBERALISM ,PRIVATIZATION - Abstract
Private for‐profit home care providers have grown unevenly in Europe and through varied processes. Yet, more research focusing directly on private providers is needed to identify and explain European patterns in their growth and in their modes of operation. This paper examines the case of Ireland, where private providers have grown significantly in recent years and transformed the national landscape of domiciliary care. First, it is shown that the amount of public funding received by private providers increased from €3 million in 2006 to €176 million in 2019, in contrast to amounts allocated to non‐profit and public providers that have increased only slightly. Second, those trends are explained through policy analysis and by drawing on in‐depth semi‐structured interviews (n = 12) with private home care providers and government officials who have been central to the privatization of care. The paper gives a direct voice to key figures in private home care, and through a critical reading of interview materials, argues that the neoliberal nature of the Irish state has driven the growth of private provision, in particular, through policies of competitive tendering and fiscalization. Providers' own lobbying activities have also played a role, albeit a secondary one. Ireland has traditionally followed a laissez‐faire, family‐based system comparable to Southern European countries. Its experience is thus directly relevant to that region, but further research should also compare and contrast the development of private providers operating in other European long‐term care regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. INVESTMENT IN KNOWLEDGE-BASED CAPITAL AND PRODUCTIVITY: FIRM-LEVEL EVIDENCE FROM A SMALL OPEN ECONOMY.
- Author
-
DI UBALDO, MATTIA and SIEDSCHLAG, IULIA
- Subjects
CAPITAL productivity ,CAPITAL investments ,INTANGIBLE property ,ECONOMETRIC models ,ACCOUNTING firms ,FREE trade - Abstract
This paper examines the responsiveness of firm productivity to investment in knowledge-based capital (KBC) including a range of intangible assets such as research and development (R&D), intellectual property assets, computer software, organizational, and branding capital. A dynamic econometric model is estimated with micro-data from Ireland over the period 2006-2012. Ceteris paribus, the estimated average elasticity of productivity with respect to investment in KBC per employee is 0.3. In comparison to previous empirical studies, this paper goes beyond the representative firm approach and accounts for the heterogeneous behavior of firms which differ by ownership, size, export participation, and sector of activity. Further, the analysis finds that investing simultaneously in multiple KBC assets has complementary as well as substitution effects on firm productivity, with different interdependence patterns for specific investment combinations across groups of firms and sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. FROM HEGEMONIC TO WHERE? THE PUBLIC SPATIALITIES OF SHIFTING POSITIONINGS FOR THOSE WHO ARE OPPOSED TO/CONCERNED ABOUT SOCIO-LEGAL CHANGES IN SEXUAL AND GENDERS.
- Author
-
BROWNE, KATH and NASH, CATHERINE J.
- Subjects
SAME-sex marriage laws ,PUBLIC spaces ,POWER (Social sciences) ,TWENTY-first century ,HEGEMONY ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
In 21st-century Ireland, Canada and the Great Britain, significant changes to sexual and gender legislation, abortion access and associated social and cultural life include the legalisation of same-sex marriage, employment rights, access to abortion and self-identification/gender recognition. This paper draws on interviews from the Beyond Opposition research to explore the experiences of those who are concerned about and/or actively oppose these socio-legal changes. We consider participants understandings of themselves as losing power within social relations and the ways in which their positionings can be seen as excluded or marginalised in public spaces. Examining their experiences of public space offers insights into experiences of new power relations, including state sanctions, that contest binaries of marginalisation/privilege. These positions between marginalisation/privilege, illustrate the effectiveness and limitations of framing these views as 'unacceptable' in public arenas. Operating between marginal/privileged requires a reworking of these 20th Century paradigms for 21st Century social divisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Approaches to tracheoesophageal voice rehabilitation: a survey of the UK and Irish speech and language therapists' current practice and beliefs.
- Author
-
Sparks, Freya, Dipper, Lucy, Coffey, Margaret, and Hilari, Katerina
- Subjects
PROSTHETICS ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,WORK experience (Employment) ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,LARYNGECTOMY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HUMAN voice ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,SOCIAL media ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,ARTIFICIAL larynges ,SURVEYS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ALARYNGEAL speech ,PATIENT care ,CONTENT analysis ,SPEECH therapists ,PERSONNEL management ,REHABILITATION - Abstract
Background: After total laryngectomy, surgical voice restoration is used to establish communication via tracheoesophageal voice prosthesis. Once voice is established, there is a paucity of information on what speech and language therapists (SLTs) should do to improve tracheoesophageal voice quality to ensure functional communication. No existing surveys or studies investigate this specific question. There is also a disconnect between guidelines, knowledge and clinical practice, whereby clinical guidelines stipulate the requirement for SLT intervention, but do not detail what this entails in the rehabilitation context. Aims: (1) To advance understanding of current clinical practice beyond voice prosthesis management and care. (2) To explore what approaches are implemented in clinical practice across the UK and Republic of Ireland to rehabilitate tracheoesophageal voice. (3) To investigate the barriers and facilitators to provision of tracheoesophageal voice therapy. Methods & Procedures: A self‐administered 10‐min online survey was developed using Qualtrics software and piloted before dissemination. Survey development was informed by the Behaviour Change Wheel to identify barriers, facilitators and additional factors contributing to SLTs' provision of voice therapy to tracheoesophageal speakers. The survey was disseminated via social media and professional networks. Eligibility criteria included SLTs with at least one year post‐registration experience and with experience of working with laryngectomy in the past 5 years. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse closed answer questions. Open question responses were analysed using content analysis. Outcomes & Results: The survey received 147 responses. Participants were representative of the head and neck cancer SLT workforce. SLTs believe that tracheoesophageal voice therapy is an important aspect of laryngectomy rehabilitation; however, there was a lack of knowledge about therapy approaches and insufficient resources for implementing therapy. SLTs expressed a desire for more training, specific guidelines and a stronger evidence base to inform clinical practice. Some SLTs expressed feelings of frustration and lack of acknowledgement for the specialist skills required to undertake laryngectomy rehabilitation and tracheoesophageal work in general. Conclusions & Implications: The survey identifies the need for a robust training approach and detailed clinical guidelines to promote consistent practice across the profession. The evidence base within this clinical area is emergent, hence there is a need for increased research and clinical audit to inform practice. Under‐resourcing was highlighted, which should be considered in service planning to ensure that adequate staff, access to expert practitioners or time ring‐fenced for therapy are available for tracheoesophageal speakers to receive the support they require. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject: Total laryngectomy results in life‐altering changes to communication. Clinical guidelines advocate for speech and language therapy intervention; however, there is no clear information on what SLTs should do to optimize tracheoesophageal voice and the evidence base to support practice is lacking. What this study adds to existing knowledge: This survey identifies what interventions SLTs provide in clinical practice to rehabilitate tracheoesophageal voice; and it explores the barriers and facilitators that influence the provision of tracheoesophageal voice therapy. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Specific training, clinical guidelines, increased research and audit are required to support clinical practice in laryngectomy rehabilitation. Service planning should address the under‐resourcing of staff, expert practitioners and therapy allocated time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Delivering value‐based healthcare for people with diabetes in a national publicly funded health service: Lessons from Ireland and Wales.
- Author
-
O'Donnell, Máire T, Lewis, Sally, Davies, Sarah, and Dinneen, Sean F
- Subjects
PEOPLE with diabetes ,VALUE-based healthcare ,MEDICAL care ,NATIONAL health services ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
The term value‐based healthcare (VBHC) describes an approach to the organization and delivery of care that emphasizes reducing the cost of care while improving outcomes. This involves increased investment earlier in the care pathway e.g., in the prevention, timely diagnosis, and screening for complications in order to maximize the overall impact of care. Key elements of VBHC include the collection and interpretation of relevant data to drive quality improvement and appropriateness of care, a focus on a continuum of care from prevention through to complications, an awareness of the financial drivers of the cost of care and a recognition that meaningful outcomes of care are those that are important to patients. Although VBHC has its origins in North America and has mostly been applied to private health systems, the principles can also be applied to national health services. In publicly funded health systems, where resources are finite, VBHC initiatives aim to eliminate ineffective care that has no beneficial impact or added value for patients and to optimize patient outcomes by delivering care that meets the changing healthcare needs of a population over time. The National Health Service in Wales has established a VBHC Office and has begun to realize the benefits of adopting VBHC approaches. The Irish Health Service Executive (HSE) can learn from the approaches used in Wales. In this paper we explore some of the principles of VBHC through case studies from Ireland and Wales highlighting how national health services are using VBHC to achieve improvement in outcomes for people living with diabetes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Unique Qualities of Junior Cycle Visual Art Education in Ireland.
- Author
-
Buttle, Avril and Mullaney, Isobelle
- Subjects
ART education ,ASSESSMENT of education ,ARTS ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to ascertain the main subject qualities in Junior Cycle (JC) Visual Art (VA) in The Republic of Ireland, and whether these qualities are unique to the subject. The context of JC VA education is outlined through the exploration of its values, aims and objectives as well as investigating the subject's unique qualities. A mixed methods research approach was used to analyse three years of Department of Education Subject Inspection Reports for VA to explore the qualities of VA education. Seven published JC Subject specifications, including the VA specification were analysed using word frequency measurements with the aim of exploring the qualities of JC VA and whether these qualities are unique to the subject. Semi‐structured interviews were also held to explore the issues arising and aim to capture some of the thoughts of VA curriculum experts, school leaders and VA teachers. Through the analysis of word frequencies, it can be concluded that the VA specification highlights creativity, problem‐solving, collaboration and reflecting as dominant qualities in VA education and similarly, the Inspection Reports present the same findings. However, it is important to note that these qualities are also found in other subject areas though not as strongly or frequently. The interview process highlighted similar findings concluding that VA education "lends itself" to the above qualities however the subject cannot claim them as solely unique to the VA classroom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Multi‐sectoral flexibility measures to facilitate wind and solar power integration.
- Author
-
Kiviluoma, Juha, O'Dwyer, Ciara, Ikäheimo, Jussi, Lahon, Rinalini, Li, Ran, Kirchem, Dana, Helistö, Niina, Rinne, Erkka, and Flynn, Damian
- Subjects
SOLAR energy ,INDUSTRIAL heating ,WIND power ,ELECTRIC charge ,MANUFACTURING processes ,RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
As power systems evolve towards integrating higher shares of renewables, the demand for additional levels of flexibility is increased. Meanwhile, o‐ther energy consuming sectors, such as transport and heating, could provide flexibility when they move from fossil fuels to electricity. In this paper, the impact of a range of flexibility measures is assessed for the island system of Ireland, with a high share of renewable energy, particularly wind and solar. Flexibility measures studied include hybrid heating in domestic and industrial processes, smart charging of electric vehicles, renewable hydrogen, power to ammonia, peak shaving demand response and batteries. The novelty of this paper lies in directly quantifying the interactions and dependencies between different flexibility measures, with the objective of increasing the operational flexibility of an increasingly renewable energy‐dominated power system. Four different scenarios are modeled to explore this interplay between the different flexibility measures. The costs and benefits of several sector‐coupling measures. The scenarios have also been compared in terms of their influence on system inertia, renewable energy curtailment and non‐synchronous penetration levels. The results indicate the potential importance of electricity‐based heating in the industrial sector, smart charging of electric vehicles, batteries and power‐to‐ammonia, as part of achieving future targets [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Curricular responses to Computer Science provision in schools: current provision and alternative possibilities.
- Author
-
McGarr, Oliver and Johnston, Keith
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,COMPUTER science education ,SCHOOLS ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper explores the rationales underpinning the introduction of Computer Science (CS) into school curricula and examines the ways in which educational systems have responded to these growing calls. In outlining the possible ways that educational systems can respond to this demand, the paper makes use of a conceptual framework through which the various possibilities for the provision of CS in school curricula can be categorised. The paper analyses and discusses possible modes of provision identifying the benefits and drawbacks of different approaches. Through this development, the paper aims to raise wider questions about the long‐term positioning of CS within the curriculum and draws particular attention to the need for greater consideration of provision at lower secondary level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. "Disciplined research in undisciplined settings": Critical explorations of in situ and mobile methodologies in geographies of health and wellbeing.
- Author
-
Foley, Ronan, Bell, Sarah L., Gittins, Heli, Grove, Hannah, Kaley, Alexandra, McLauchlan, Anna, Osborne, Tess, Power, Andrew, Roberts, Erin, and Thomas, Merryn
- Subjects
HUMAN geography ,GEOGRAPHY ,WELL-being ,HUMAN research subjects ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
In situ and mobile methodologies are increasingly popular within research into diverse geographies of health and wellbeing. These methodologies include data‐gathering techniques and modes of analysis carried out with research participants as they experience and move through settings with the potential to shape both momentary and longer‐term experiences of health and wellbeing. This methodological development is both a response to and reflection of wider methodological and theoretical thinking across human geography, especially in relation to mobilities, performative, co‐productive, and active ways to access and produce knowledge. In addition, the past few decades have seen increased access to geo‐spatial technologies and tools to both locate and record experiential place‐based knowledge. Such methods are capable of producing important new knowledge concerning the emergence (or foreclosing) of health and wellbeing in and through place, yet they are often perceived as "risky," drawing researchers out of their traditional researcher‐controlled environments. Based on discussions developed during and since a July 2018 in situ and mobile methods workshop, this paper discusses the benefits of negotiating the (at times) somewhat messy and unpredictable research encounters that can unfold through such methods. It incorporates examples from recent and ongoing doctoral and post‐doctoral research in health and wellbeing using out situ (in situ outdoors) methodological approaches in Britain and Ireland – including go‐along interviews, video ethnography, elicitation, and biosensing. Three core themes are presented, concerning the value of mobile and in situ methods in: (1) supporting an ethic of care; (2) attending to more‐than‐human dynamics of health and wellbeing; and (3) integrating matter and meaning in contemporary efforts to understand how health and wellbeing unfold and accrete in and through place. In situ and mobile methodologies are increasingly popular within research into diverse geographies of health and wellbeing. The past few decades have seen increased access to geo‐spatial technologies and tools to both locate and record experiential place‐based knowledge. This paper discusses the benefits and issues with using go‐along interviews, video ethnography, elicitation, and biosensing based on recent and ongoing doctoral and post‐doctoral research in health and wellbeing in Britain and Ireland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Convergent spaces: Intersectional analysis of ethnic minority status and childhood disability in Irish safeguarding work.
- Author
-
Flynn, Susan
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHILD welfare ,ETHNIC groups ,GROUP identity ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,MINORITIES ,CULTURAL pluralism ,RACE ,CHILDREN with disabilities - Abstract
The core argument of this paper is that intersectionality provides a constructive conceptual lens for the convergence of ethnic minority status and childhood disability in Irish child protection and welfare. The utility of intersectionality in this paper lies in broadening the scope of reflection on the complex intersections of ethnic minority status and childhood disability. Within this, intersectionality is implicitly situated within an overarching critical disability studies perspective. Theoretically informed commentary on the literature attends to three aspects of practice. These are respectively novel intersections of ethnic minority status and childhood disability, as a consequence of intensifying globalization; compounded levels of risk; and the importance of nonconflation of potential sites of oppression, such as race and disability. Overall, the intention of the paper is to be illustrative. Specifically, analysis is presented as an aid to students and practitioners, moving forward, in negotiating a complex and dynamic field of practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.