27 results on '"Murphy, Margaret M"'
Search Results
2. Emergency Department Trauma Redesign in a Level 1 Trauma Centre
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Murphy, Margaret M., Edwards, Carla M., Seggie, Julie Z.J., and Curtis, Kate
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- 2011
- Full Text
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3. Teaching Economics to the Gifted
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Murphy, Margaret M.
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- 1987
4. The RESPECT Study for consensus on global bereavement care after stillbirth
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Shakespeare, Clare, Merriel, Abi, Bakhbakhi, Danya, Blencowe, Hannah, Boyle, Frances M, Flenady, Vicki, Gold, Katherine, Horey, Dell, Lynch, Mary, Mills, Tracey A, Murphy, Margaret M, Storey, Claire, Toolan, Miriam, Siassakos, Dimitrios, and RESPECT (Research of Evidence based Stillbirth care Principles t
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Adult ,Postnatal Care ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,Health Personnel ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Acknowledgement ,Global health ,Respect ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Pregnancy ,Bereavement care ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Quality of Health Care ,Reproductive health ,media_common ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Stakeholder ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Professional-Patient Relations ,General Medicine ,Stillbirth ,Systematic review ,Female ,Grief ,The Internet ,Empathy ,business ,Bereavement - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop global consensus on a set of evidence-based core principles for bereavement care after stillbirth.METHODS: A modified policy-Delphi methodology was used to consult international stakeholders and healthcare workers with experience in stillbirth between September 2017 and October 2018 Five sequential rounds involved two expert stakeholder meetings and three internet-based surveys, including a global internet-based survey targeted at healthcare workers in a wide range of settings.RESULTS: Initially, 23 expert stakeholders considered 43 evidence-based themes derived from systematic reviews, identifying 10 core principles. The global survey received 236 responses from participants in 26 countries, after which nine principles met a priori criteria for inclusion. The final stakeholder meeting and internet-based survey of all participants confirmed consensus on eight core principles. Highest quality bereavement care should be enabled through training of healthcare staff to reduce stigma and establish respectful care, including acknowledgement and support for grief responses, and provision for physical and psychologic needs. Women and families should be supported to make informed choices, including those concerning their future reproductive health.CONCLUSION: Consensus was established for eight principles for stillbirth bereavement care. Further work should explore implementation and involve the voices of women and families globally.
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- 2020
5. Perinatal bereavement education standards
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Higgins, Mary, O'Donoghue, Keelin, Verling, Anna Maria, McGuinness, Breffni, Russell, Nóirín, Shine, Brid, Kilpatrick, Christina, Quinn, Claire, Nuzum, Daniel, McNamara, Karen, Keegan, Orla, Coughlan, Barbara, Cotter, Riona, Murphy, Margaret M., and Sisson, Lynda
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Bereavement education ,Maternity care ,Perinatal loss ,Pregnancy loss - Abstract
The growing need for compassionate bereavement education for all involved in caring for women and their families has been highlighted in recent studies (Heazell et al. 2016, O’Connell et al. 2016, Burden et al. 2016). Staff have identified training and education as key priorities for them in caring for bereaved families (McNamara et al. 2017, O’Connell et al. 2016; Gandino et al. 2017; Agwu Kalu et al, 2018; Doherty et al, 2018a, b). The groundwork for this paper was based upon the Report of the Work-stream on Education and Staff Support under the Chair of Prof. Mary Higgins and presented at the Bereavement Forum, April 2018. This work-stream collated data on the current curriculum on perinatal bereavement education at five out of the six Higher Education Institutions offering bereavement education delivered to medical and midwifery students in Ireland.
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- 2019
6. Hand hygiene audit: a tool for clinical practice
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Murphy, Margaret M and Sweeney, John F
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- 2007
7. Open exchange as a model for continuing education
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Murphy, Margaret M., De Back, Vivien, Bunkers, Sandra, Koerner, JoEllen, McBeth, Annette, Papenhausen, Judith, Burgess, Constance, Michaels, Cathleen, and Ethridge, Phyllis
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Health - Published
- 2004
8. Experiences of couples in pregnancy after stillbirth: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
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Murphy, Margaret M., Leahy-Warren, Patricia, and Savage, Eileen
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Pregnancy loss ,Couples ,Stillbirth - Abstract
Background: Despite advances in maternity care, 2.6 million babies die at or before their birth each year across the globe. The majority of couples will proceed to a pregnancy after loss, often within a very short timeframe of their index loss. However, little is known about how couples, as a unit, negotiate the experience of pregnancy after loss. Aim: To understand how couples, as a dyad, make sense of a pregnancy after stillbirth. Method: The experiences of eight heterosexual couples, who were pregnant again in the immediate pregnancy after stillbirth, was explored using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). Data were collected by joint, semi-structured, face-to-face interviews with a convenience sample. Interviews were audiotaped, transcribed verbatim and analysed using IPA principles. To ensure both the individual and dyadic experiences were explored an additional layer of data analysis was performed. Findings: Two superordinate themes emerged from the data ‘Hoping for a born alive baby’ and ‘Journey of Loss. The first theme, ‘Hoping for a born alive baby’ was the aim of all of the couples in a pregnancy after stillbirth. The processes of negotiated decision-making and lived experience of a subsequent pregnancy were explored. Couples made sense of their experiences of pregnancy after loss via the lens of the death of their babies. In the second theme, ‘Journey of Loss’, couples spoke about the unexpected death of their babies, their experiences at the time of loss and in its aftermath, and the impact that these events had on them as a couple. Conclusion and Implications: Perinatal loss and pregnancy after loss are common occurrences in maternity services. The original findings of this study adds to the understanding of pregnancy after loss, from a couples’ perspective and will assist in the provision of appropriate support services for couples both at the time of loss and in the pregnancy that follows. How couples negotiate the experiences of loss and subsequent pregnancy will help to inform policy and improve services for future couples pregnant after stillbirth.
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- 2018
9. ALL FOR NOTHING?: EXECUTIVE AUTHORITY AND CONGRESSIONAL EVASION ON ARMS SALES.
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Murphy, Margaret M.
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PUNISHMENT ,PUBLIC officers ,SEX offender registration ,FOREIGN trade regulation ,DEVELOPING countries ,PRESIDENTS of the United States ,TORTURE - Abstract
153 Despite the President's argument that Iran-Contra shows he possesses authority to sell arms over Congress' objection, there is other evidence suggesting the President and Congress have both thought that the AECA's requirements are binding. 156 Two years earlier, in 1984, President Reagan reported to Congress a proposed sale in the midst of the Iran-Iraq war. 157 After it seemed clear Congress would oppose the sale, President Reagan withdrew his proposal and invoked an emergency waiver provision instead. 148 Having established that this situation would render the President's authority at its lowest ebb, Congress would argue that the President lacks authority to sell arms over Congress' objection because Congress alone possesses it under the plain language of the Constitution. 60 Reasoning that Congress' rejection of the amendment allowing President Truman to seize steel mills meant his conduct was at odds with the will of Congress, Justice Jackson placed President Truman's authority "at its lowest ebb" in this case, meaning he could only prevail under the framework with an affirmative grant under the Constitution. Even if the President were to cast these sales as within his Commander in Chief power, Youngstown suggests that the Commander in Chief power does not confer universal authority because Truman was a wartime President and the Court still managed to find that he did not possess authority to seize the steel mills. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2021
10. Counting stillbirths and COVID 19—there has never been a more urgent time
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Homer, Caroline S E, Leisher, Susannah Hopkins, Aggarwal, Neelam, Akuze, Joseph, Babona, Delly, Blencowe, Hannah, Bolgna, John, Chawana, Richard, Christou, Aliki, Davies-Tuck, Miranda, Dandona, Rakhi, Gordijn, Sanne, Gordon, Adrienne, Jan, Rafat, Korteweg, Fleurisca, Maswime, Salome, Murphy, Margaret M, Quigley, Paula, Storey, Claire, Vallely, Lisa M, Waiswa, Peter, Whitehead, Clare, Zeitlin, Jennifer, and Flenady, Vicki
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- 2021
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11. Pregnancy after loss during the COVID19 pandemic.
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Pollock, Danielle, Murphy, Margaret M., O'Leary, Joann, and Warland, Jane
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Rapid changes to how maternity health care is delivered has occurred in many countries across the globe in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Maternity care provisions have been challenged attempting to balance the needs and safety of pregnant women and their care providers. Women experiencing a pregnancy after loss (PAL) during these times face particularly difficult circumstances. In this paper we highlight the situation in three high income countries (Australia, Ireland and USA) and point to the need to remember the unique and challenging circumstances of these PAL families. We suggest new practices may be deviating from established evidence-based guidelines and outline the potential ramifications of these changes. Recommendations for health care providers are suggested to bridge the gap between the necessary safety requirements due to the pandemic, the role of the health care provider, and the needs of families experiencing a pregnancy after loss. Changes to practices i.e. limiting the number of antenatal appointments and access to a support person may have detrimental effects on both mother, baby, and their family. However, new guidelines in maternity care practices developed to account for the pandemic have not necessarily considered women experiencing pregnancy after loss. Bereaved mothers and their families experiencing a pregnancy after loss should continue to be supported during the COVID-19 pandemic to limit unintended consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. Global call to action on preventable stillbirths
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Munro, Deirdre and Murphy, Margaret M.
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Adverse pregnancy outcomes ,Scientific Advisory Committee of the International Stillbirth Alliance ,Preventable stillbirths ,Stillbirth ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Global Village Midwives - Abstract
Margaret Murphy, a member of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the International Stillbirth Alliance, shares her experience working on this call for global action with Deirdre Munro: Despite advances in maternity care, babies still die around the time of their birth. There are an estimated 2.6 million stillbirths annually across the globe, of which 98% occur in low-income and middle- income countries. A high number of these deaths are preventable, with half of all stillbirths (1.3 million) occurring during labour and birth. Most result from preventable conditions such as maternal infections (most commonly syphilis and malaria), non-communicable diseases and obstetric complications. In high income countries stillbirth occurring during labour is a rare event with 90% of deaths occurring antenatally. Many stillbirths are preventable with high quality antenatal and intrapartum care.
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- 2016
13. Information on preparing for birth & parenthood
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Murphy, Margaret M., Jeffery, Mary, O'Sullivan, Cathy, O'Connor, Jane, Dennehey, Valerie, O'Regan, Monica, Long, Olive, Barry, Liz, Cronin, Anne Marie, Dennehey, Jean, Wiseman, Shalini, and O'Donovan, Rebecca
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Pregnancy ,Childbirth ,Motherhood - Abstract
A handbook for parents-to-be attending the Preparation for Birth and Parenthood Education programme at Cork University Maternity Hospital.
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- 2015
14. Born too soon: preterm birth in Europe trends, causes and prevention
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Murphy, Margaret M. and McLoughlin, Geraldine
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Complications ,Neonatal death ,Preterm birth ,Hypoxia ,Preventable ,Interventions - Abstract
It is estimated that 15 million babies annually are born too soon, which is before 37 completed weeks of gestation and that this number is rising (1). Complications of preterm birth are the leading cause of death among children less than 5 years of age and this accounted for nearly one million preventable deaths in 2013 (1). The United Nations Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 4 targeted a two-thirds’ reduction of under five deaths by 2015 and recommended interventions to prevent preterm birth and to improve survival for preterm newborns (2). While infant and maternal mortality rates have witnessed some improvements, the burden of mortality and morbidity in the perinatal period remains a major concern (3). This is due in part to the high number of births per year, the young age of the maternal and infant population harmed by adverse perinatal events and the long-term sequelae of adverse pregnancy events such as very preterm birth or severe hypoxia (4).
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- 2015
15. Care following stillbirth
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Fisher, Kiera and Murphy, Margaret M.
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Stillbirth ,Care ,Midwifery - Published
- 2013
16. Caesarean wound care for midwives
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Murphy, Margaret M.
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Caesarean ,Wound infection ,Guidance ,Surgical site infection - Abstract
With a rise in caesarean births there is a rise in wound care management issues for midwives and the potential for surgical site infections (SSIs). The burden of SSIs include increases in maternal mortality, morbidity, length of hospital stay and cost. Sepsis is currently the leading cause of maternal mortality, with 50 per cent of the women who die having had a caesarean birth (Centre for Maternal and Child Enquiries (CMACE) 2011). Wound management and the prevention of sepsis are therefore issues of great concern to midwives. This article considers the incidence of wound infections and presents the guidance available to help address this problem.
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- 2013
17. The dangers of only telling half the story. Review of 'Effect of early limited formula on duration and exclusivity of breastfeeding in at-risk infants: an RCT', by Flaherman et al
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Smith, Hazel Ann and Murphy, Margaret M.
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Formula supplementation ,Exclusive breastfeeding ,Milk supply - Published
- 2013
18. Take care to reform. The 'Money Follows the Patient' policy: what are the implications for midwifery and nursing?
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Murphy, Margaret M.
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Governance ,Stakeholders ,Cost ,Care - Published
- 2013
19. Those who can, teach. 'A teacher affects eternity; she can never tell where her influence stops'
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Murphy, Margaret M.
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Mentor ,Positive influence ,Teachers ,Role model - Abstract
Teachers can have a profound effect on us all, both good and bad. In this paper the effect two individual midwives had on my evolution as a midwife will be examined. They were very different: one was formal and the other informal. The classroom was the setting for one, the clinical area for the other. Each had her own unique style and way of looking at the world. One was very different from the other in manner and in approach. However they each shared a philosophy of women centred, normal birth which they espoused in all aspects of their working lives.
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- 2012
20. Managing heart conditions in pregnancy
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Murphy, Margaret M. and Hunter, Niall
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MI ,Myocardial infarction ,Ischaemic heart disease ,Pregnancy ,IHD ,Overweight ,Obese - Abstract
Healthcare professionals are encountering more andmore women with cardiac conditions contemplating pregnancyor when pregnant than ever before. Advances insurgical treatment of congenital cardiac anomalies meanmany more women are now reaching childbearing age andcontemplating pregnancy than would hitherto have beenseen.Due to the fact that Irish figures have not been availablethus far on the effects of cardiac disease on pregnancy andvice versa, we have come to rely on statistics from our nearestneighbour the UK. The Centre for Maternal and ChildEnquiries (CMACE) is an independent charity. Its missionis to improve the health of mothers, babies and children bycarrying out confidential enquiries and other related workon a UK wide basis and widely disseminating the results. Itproduces a report every three years into maternal fatalitiesin the previous three-year period. The most recent reportwas published in 2007, reflecting the deaths that occurredin 2002-2005. In the most recent CMACE triennial reportinto maternal mortality (2002-2005) for the first time cardiacdisease was found to be the leading cause of maternaldeath among women in the UK, with a maternal mortalityrate for heart disease of 2.27 per 100,000 maternities.
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- 2010
21. Che at… Illinois Institute of Technology.
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Arastoopour, Hamid, Wasan, Darsh T., and Murphy, Margaret M.
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CHEMICAL engineering ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering ,EDUCATORS ,UNIVERSITY faculty - Abstract
Highlights the accomplishments of the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) in chemical engineering education and research. Historical background of the IIT; Origin of the Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering; Evolution of the department's research and education programs; List of its outstanding faculty educators and researchers.
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- 2005
22. Deep breath reversal and exponential return of methacholine-induced obstruction in asthmatic and nonasthmatic subjects.
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Jackson, Andrew C., Murphy, Margaret M., Rassulo, John, Celli, Bartolome R., and Ingram, Jr, Roland H.
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RESPIRATION ,ASTHMATICS ,AIRWAY (Anatomy) ,TRANSIENT global amnesia ,IMPEDANCE spectroscopy ,RESPIRATORY organs - Abstract
A deep breath (DB) during induced obstruction results in a transient reversal with a return to pre-DB levels in both asthmatic and nonasthmatic subjects. The time course of this transient recovery has been reported to be exponential by one group but linear by another group. In the present study, we estimated airway resistance (Raw) from measurements of respiratory system transfer impedance before and after a DB. Nine healthy subjects and nine asthmatic subjects were studied at their maximum response during a methacholine challenge. In all subjects, the DB resulted in a rapid decrease in Raw, which then returned to pre-DB levels. This recovery was well fit with a monoexponential function in both groups, and the time constant was significantly smaller in the asthmatic than the nonasthmatic subjects (11.6 ± 5.0 and 35.1 ± 15.9 s, respectively). Obstruction was completely reversed in the nonasthmatic subjects (pre- and postchallenge mean Raw immediately after the DB were 2.03 ± 0.66 and 2.06 ± 0.68 cmH[sub 2]O·1[sup -1]·s, respectively), whereas in the asthmatic subjects complete reversal did not occur (2.29 ± 0.78 and 4.84 ± 2.64 cmH[sub 2]O·l[sup -1]·s, respectively). Raw after the DB returned to postchallenge, pre-DB values in the nonasthmatic subjects (3.78 ± 1.56 and 3.97 ± 1.63 cmH[sub 2]O·1[sup -1]·s, respectively), whereas in the asthmatic subjects it was higher but not significantly so (9.19 ± 4.95 and 7.14 ± 3.56 cmH[sub 2]O·l[sup -1]·s, respectively). The monoexponential recovery suggests a first-order process such as airway wall-parenchymal tissue interdependence or renewed constriction of airway smooth muscle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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23. Gort na Léime
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Gort Na Léime, Corcoráin, Pádhraic Ó, Aodha, Caitlín Nich, Aodha, Caitlin Nic, Aodha, Caitlín Nic, Hugh, Katty Mc, Discín, Máire Ní, Corcoráin, Padraic Ó, Hobán, Máire Ní, Pleamonn, Treasa, Mhurcadha, Máiréad Ní, Hugh, Katy Mc, Murcada, Mairéad Ní, Mórdha, Brighidh Ní, Disken, Mary, Hoban, Mary, Rabbitte, Margaruite M., Murphy, Margaret M., Hussey, Lizzie, Mullen, John, Donelan, Bridie, Comer, Nellie, Glynn, Annie, Moore, Bridie, Aodha, Cáitlín Nic, Mhurchadha, Máiréad Ní, Murphy, Nora, Fleming, Teresa, Rabbitte, Margaret, Búrca, Seán De, Murray, Seán, Gilligan, Jack, Abraim, Jack, Burke, John, Moloney, Bridie, Hugh, Willie Mc, Kilgarriff, Agusta, Rabbitte, Margaruite, Fleming, Eta B., Maloney, Bridie, Moore, Sarah, Mullarky, Peter, Hoban, Tom, Rabbitte, Maureen, Murphy, Mary T, Hugh, Mary Joe Mc, Cloonan, Maisy, Kilgarriff, Joe, Garvey, Mary, Murphy, Micko, Burke, Paddy, Comer, Mary D., Fleming, Teresa B., Hugh, Michael Mc, Disken, Kitty, Caufield, Tommy, Cloonan, Mary T., Heneghan, Frances, Burke, Kitty, Mullan, Kathleen, Moore, Sara, Garvey, Mary Teresa, Comer, Patrick, Pléamonn, Treasa D., Caulfield, Tommy, Murphy, Mary Teresa, Fleming, Treasa B., Comer, Mary Delia, Rabbitte, Margaret M, and Garvey, Mary T.
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Candlemaking ,local legends ,Thunder ,Schools ,Legal status, laws, etc ,Frost ,Rope trade ,Traditional medicine ,Tanning ,Supernatural beings ,Fires ,Soap trade ,Severe storms ,Ringforts ,Riddles ,Dissenters, Religious ,Occupations ,Marriage ,Weather ,Folklore ,Treasure troves ,Jokes ,Textile industry - Abstract
A collection of folklore and local history stories from Gort na Léime (school) (Gortaleam, Co. Galway), collected as part of the Schools' Folklore Scheme, 1937-1938 under the supervision of teacher Pádhraic Ó Corcoráin., Cistí Óir i bhFolach / Aodha, Caitlín Nich -- Talamh mo Sheanuncail / Aodha, Caitlin Nic -- Ráith / Aodha, Caitlín Nic -- Hidden Treasure / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Cistí Óir i bhFolach / Aodha, Caitlín Nic -- Scéalta Greannmhara / Aodha, Caitlín Nic -- Scéal Greannmhar / Discín, Máire Ní -- Scéal Greannmhar / Corcoráin, Padraic Ó -- Scéal Greannmhar / Corcoráin, Padraic Ó -- Scéal Greannmhar / Corcoráin, Padraic Ó -- Scéal Greannmhar / Hobán, Máire Ní -- Scéal Greannmhar / Hobán, Máire Ní -- Scéal Greannmhar / Hobán, Máire Ní -- Scéal Greannmhar / Pleamonn, Treasa -- Scéal Greannmhar / Mhurcadha, Máiréad Ní -- Scéal Greannmhar / Mhurcadha, Máiréad Ní -- Scéal Greannmhar / Mhurcadha, Máiréad Ní -- Funny Story / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Scéal Greannmhar / Aodha, Caitlín Nic -- Scéal Greannmhar / Aodha, Caitlín Nic -- Scéal Greannmhar / Aodha, Caitlín Nich -- Funny Story / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Good People not Bad / Hugh, Katy Mc -- Tomhaiseanna / Aodha, Caitlín Nic -- Tomhaiseanna / Murcada, Mairéad Ní -- Tomhaiseanna / Mórdha, Brighidh Ní -- Tomhaiseanna / Hobán, Máire Ní -- Puzzles / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Riddles / Disken, Mary -- Puzzles / Hoban, Mary -- Riddles / Rabbitte, Margaruite M. -- Riddles / Murphy, Margaret M. -- Riddles / Hussey, Lizzie -- Riddles / Disken, Mary -- Riddles / Mullen, John -- Riddles / Donelan, Bridie -- Riddles / Comer, Nellie -- Riddles / Glynn, Annie -- Riddles / Moore, Bridie -- Comharthaí na hAimsire / Aodha, Cáitlín Nic -- Signs of Weather / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Aimsir / Mhurchadha, Máiréad Ní -- Signs of Weather / Murphy, Nora -- Signs of Weather / Fleming, Teresa -- Signs of Weather / Hussey, Lizzie -- Signs of Weather / Rabbitte, Margaret -- Daoine Cáilliúla / Búrca, Seán De -- Chaith fathach eile cloch mór timpeall tonna ó bharr Cnocán breach go barr Clocar. / Murray, Seán -- Thóg an fear seo mála plúir in a fiaclaibh agus dumpuig sé é go dtí a theach féin. / Gilligan, Jack -- English / Abraim, Jack -- English / Burke, John -- A giant pelted a large stone some tons in weight from the top of Chequerhill to the Hill of Clocar and it slipped from him and fell about a mile away in a place called Parkroe. / Hugh, Katty Mc -- A man named Tom Whyte from Lissyconnor , Dunmore, Co.Galway -- A man named James Moore from Lissy Connor, Dunmore -- A man named James Murphy from Lissyconnor, Dunmore, Co.Galway / Moore, Bridie -- There was a man named James Bourke who was very good at stonethrowing. / Moloney, Bridie -- Runners / Hugh, Willie Mc -- Strong Men / Kilgarriff, Agusta -- Strong Men / Comer, Nellie -- Famous Walkers / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Good Walkers / Rabbitte, Margaruite -- Great Walkers / Moloney, Bridie -- Weight Thrower / Fleming, Eta B. -- Good Walkers / Moore, Bridie -- Jumpers / Maloney, Bridie -- Great Jumpers / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Great Jumpers / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Gortaleam / Rabbitte, Margaruite M. -- Swimmers / Maloney, Bridie -- He was a noted mower. He could mow an Irish acre of oats in the day / Rabbitte, Margaruite M. -- Mowers: My Grandfather had a crowd of men one day mowing hay. John Cunningham was in the crowd. / Rabbitte, Margaruite M. -- Good Dancers / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Good Dancers / Fleming, Eta B. -- Good Dancers / Maloney, Bridie -- Good Dancers / Moore, Sarah -- Good Storytellers / Mullarky, Peter -- Storytellers and Singers / Maloney, Bridie -- Good Storytellers / Kilgarriff, Agusta -- Good Storytellers / Moore, Sarah -- Singers / Maloney, Bridie -- Singers / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Turf Cutters / Maloney, Bridie -- Singer / Fleming, Eta B. -- Burning / Moore, Bridie -- Burning / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Diseases / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Diseases / Murphy, Nora -- 1918-1919 Flu / Fleming, Eta B. -- One of the greatest events that happened in this place happened about sixty years ago in the year 1878 some of the people of the villages and the neighbouring towns organised a race. / Murphy, Nora -- Storms / Fleming, Eta B. -- Big Snowfall / Fleming, Eta B. -- Ambush / Rabbitte, Margaruite M. -- Ambush / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Poll-Lee Ambush -- Round Up / Fleming, Eta B. -- The story is told of robbers who long ago went to rob a house in Garramana now owned by Newel. -- Rain / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Thunder / Hugh, Katty Mc -- Lightning -- Thunderstorm / Hoban, Tom -- Thunder / Rabbitte, Maureen -- Lightning / Murphy, Mary T -- Thunder / Hugh, Mary Joe Mc -- About nine months ago a forge was damaged in Little Castle / Cloonan, Maisy -- Thunder / Kilgarriff, Joe -- About thirty five years ago, lightning killed cattle, sheep and horses. / Garvey, Mary -- Lightning went along the electric wires in Williamstown and went down to the ground. / Murphy, Micko -- Lightning and Rain / Murphy, Nora -- Lightning and Rain / Moore, Sarah -- Old Schools in this District / Murphy, Nora -- Old Schools in this District / Moore, Sarah -- Old Schools in this District / Burke, Paddy -- Old Schools in this District / Comer, Mary D. -- Old Schools in this District / Hoban, Mary -- Old Schools in this District / Fleming, Teresa B. -- Old Schools in this District / Mullen, John -- Old Schools in this District / Hugh, Michael Mc -- Old Schools in this District / Disken, Kitty -- Old Schools in this District / Caufield, Tommy -- Old Schools in this District / Rabbitte, Maureen -- Old Schools in this District / Cloonan, Mary T. -- Old Schools in this District / Hugh, Mary Joe Mc -- Old Schools in this District / Heneghan, Frances -- Old Schools in this District / Burke, Kitty -- Making of Candles / Mullan, Kathleen -- Making of Candles / Moore, Sara -- Making of Candles / Hoban, Mary -- Making Wheels -- Making Soap / Garvey, Mary Teresa -- Making Soap / Hugh, Mary Joe Mc -- Making of Candles / Kilgarriff, Agusta -- Making of Ploughs and Spades / Murphy, Nora -- Making Twine / Comer, Patrick -- Making of Ropes / Kilgarriff, Agusta -- How they Make a Hay Rope / Kilgarriff, Agusta -- Weavers of Long Ago / Fleming, Teresa B -- Bhí fígheadhór ann uair amháin agus fuair sé bás. / Pléamonn, Treasa D. -- Tanning Leather / Moore, Sarah -- Making of Paint / Caulfield, Tommy -- Marriages / Disken, Kitty -- Marriages / Cloonan, Mary T. -- Marriages / Rabbitte, Maureen -- Marriages / Murphy, Mary Teresa -- Marriages -- Persecution / Fleming, Treasa B. -- Bad Times / Murphy, Nora -- Cave / Murphy, Nora -- In Bad Times / Comer, Mary Delia -- Bad Times / Moore, Sara -- Clós an Aifrinn / Rabbitte, Margaret M -- Bad Times / Hugh, Mary Joe Mc -- Bad Times / Garvey, Mary T., Supported by funding from the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht (Ireland), University College Dublin, and the National Folklore Foundation (Fondúireacht Bhéaloideas Éireann), 2014-2016.
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- 1937
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. THE VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT OF 1999.
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Murphy, Margaret M.
- Published
- 1999
25. Pregnancy and parenting after loss: different baby, different story
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O'Leary, Joann, Parker, Lynnda, Murphy, Margaret M, and Warland, Jane
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mental health professionals ,pregnancy after loss ,infant loss - Abstract
Pregnancy after prenatal or infant loss can be a lonely and frightening time, but through stories of both pain and healing, the authors show how to navigate the exciting but choppy waters of a subsequent pregnancy. The loss of a pregnancy or newborn infant changes the meaning of pregnancy, birth, and parenting forever. Increased parental fear and anxiety, and continuing grief for the deceased baby, can impact subsequent pregnancies in unexpected ways. Parents who are unsupported in pregnancy after loss are may be more at risk of experiencing anxiety, depression, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and difficulty in attaching to a new baby. Different Baby Different Story explores the range of emotions, thoughts, and physical experiences of parents who have gone on to subsequent pregnancies. Including stories from mothers, fathers, other children, and extended family members, this poignant and moving work will help readers through their own feelings and give voice to those who may have felt unheard or unsupported in the past. With practical advice on self-advocacy, the book helps expectant parents gain insights as to how others learned to work with health care professionals, mental health professionals, and their own families and friends and coworkers. For expectant mothers, their partners, their families and their friends, this work supports the range of experiences and encourages readers on a path to healing.
- Published
- 2021
26. The RESPECT Study for consensus on global bereavement care after stillbirth.
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Shakespeare C, Merriel A, Bakhbakhi D, Blencowe H, Boyle FM, Flenady V, Gold K, Horey D, Lynch M, Mills TA, Murphy MM, Storey C, Toolan M, and Siassakos D
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- Adult, Consensus, Delphi Technique, Empathy, Female, Health Personnel education, Humans, Postnatal Care methods, Postnatal Care psychology, Pregnancy, Professional-Patient Relations, Respect, Surveys and Questionnaires, Bereavement, Quality of Health Care standards, Stillbirth psychology
- Abstract
Objective: To develop global consensus on a set of evidence-based core principles for bereavement care after stillbirth., Methods: A modified policy-Delphi methodology was used to consult international stakeholders and healthcare workers with experience in stillbirth between September 2017 and October 2018. Five sequential rounds involved two expert stakeholder meetings and three internet-based surveys, including a global internet-based survey targeted at healthcare workers in a wide range of settings., Results: Initially, 23 expert stakeholders considered 43 evidence-based themes derived from systematic reviews, identifying 10 core principles. The global survey received 236 responses from participants in 26 countries, after which nine principles met a priori criteria for inclusion. The final stakeholder meeting and internet-based survey of all participants confirmed consensus on eight core principles. Highest quality bereavement care should be enabled through training of healthcare staff to reduce stigma and establish respectful care, including acknowledgement and support for grief responses, and provision for physical and psychologic needs. Women and families should be supported to make informed choices, including those concerning their future reproductive health., Conclusion: Consensus was established for eight principles for stillbirth bereavement care. Further work should explore implementation and involve the voices of women and families globally., (© 2020 International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Care prior to and during subsequent pregnancies following stillbirth for improving outcomes.
- Author
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Wojcieszek AM, Shepherd E, Middleton P, Lassi ZS, Wilson T, Murphy MM, Heazell AE, Ellwood DA, Silver RM, and Flenady V
- Subjects
- Aspirin administration & dosage, Female, Fibrinolytic Agents administration & dosage, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Parents, Perinatal Mortality, Pregnancy, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Recurrence, Aspirin therapeutic use, Fibrinolytic Agents therapeutic use, Heparin, Low-Molecular-Weight therapeutic use, Prenatal Care methods, Secondary Prevention methods, Stillbirth epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Stillbirth affects at least 2.6 million families worldwide every year and has enduring consequences for parents and health services. Parents entering a subsequent pregnancy following stillbirth face a risk of stillbirth recurrence, alongside increased risks of other adverse pregnancy outcomes and psychosocial challenges. These parents may benefit from a range of interventions to optimise their short- and longer-term medical health and psychosocial well-being., Objectives: To assess the effects of different interventions or models of care prior to and during subsequent pregnancies following stillbirth on maternal, fetal, neonatal and family health outcomes, and health service utilisation., Search Methods: We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group's Trials Register (6 June 2018), along with ClinicalTrials.gov and the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP) (18 June 2018)., Selection Criteria: We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-randomised controlled trials (qRCTs). Trials using a cluster-randomised design were eligible for inclusion, but we found no such reports. We included trials published as abstract only, provided sufficient information was available to allow assessment of trial eligibility and risk of bias. We excluded cross-over trials., Data Collection and Analysis: Two review authors independently assessed trials for eligibility and undertook data extraction and 'Risk of bias' assessments. We extracted data from published reports, or sourced data directly from trialists. We checked the data for accuracy and resolved discrepancies by discussion or correspondence with trialists, or both. We conducted an assessment of the quality of the evidence using the GRADE approach., Main Results: We included nine RCTs and one qRCT, and judged them to be at low to moderate risk of bias. Trials were carried out between the years 1964 and 2015 and took place predominantly in high-income countries in Europe. All trials assessed medical interventions; no trials assessed psychosocial interventions or incorporated psychosocial aspects of care. Trials evaluated the use of antiplatelet agents (low-dose aspirin (LDA) or low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH), or both), third-party leukocyte immunisation, intravenous immunoglobulin, and progestogen. Trial participants were women who were either pregnant or attempting to conceive following a pregnancy loss, fetal death, or adverse outcome in a previous pregnancy.We extracted data for 222 women who had experienced a previous stillbirth of 20 weeks' gestation or more from the broader trial data sets, and included them in this review. Our GRADE assessments of the quality of evidence ranged from very low to low, due largely to serious imprecision in effect estimates as a result of small sample sizes, low numbers of events, and wide confidence intervals (CIs) crossing the line of no effect. Most of the analyses in this review were not sufficiently powered to detect differences in the outcomes assessed. The results presented are therefore largely uncertain.Main comparisonsLMWH versus no treatment/standard care (three RCTs, 123 women, depending on the outcome)It was uncertain whether LMWH reduced the risk of stillbirth (risk ratio (RR) 2.58, 95% CI 0.40 to 16.62; 3 trials; 122 participants; low-quality evidence), adverse perinatal outcome (RR 0.81, 95% CI 0.20 to 3.32; 2 trials; 77 participants; low-quality evidence), adverse maternal psychological effects (RR 1.00, 95% CI 0.07 to 14.90; 1 trial; 40 participants; very low-quality evidence), perinatal mortality (RR 2.58, 95% CI 0.40 to 16.62; 3 trials; 122 participants; low-quality evidence), or any preterm birth (< 37 weeks) (RR 1.01, 0.58 to 1.74; 3 trials; 114 participants; low-quality evidence). No neonatal deaths were reported in the trials assessed and no data were available for maternal-infant attachment. There was no clear evidence of a difference between the groups among the remaining secondary outcomes.LDA versus placebo (one RCT, 24 women)It was uncertain whether LDA reduced the risk of stillbirth (RR 0.85, 95% CI 0.06 to 12.01), neonatal death (RR 0.29, 95% CI 0.01 to 6.38), adverse perinatal outcome (RR 0.28, 95% CI 0.03 to 2.34), perinatal mortality, or any preterm birth (< 37 weeks) (both of the latter RR 0.42, 95% CI 0.04 to 4.06; all very low-quality evidence). No data were available for adverse maternal psychological effects or maternal-infant attachment. LDA appeared to be associated with an increase in birthweight (mean difference (MD) 790.00 g, 95% CI 295.03 to 1284.97 g) when compared to placebo, but this result was very unstable due to the extremely small sample size. Whether LDA has any effect on the remaining secondary outcomes was also uncertain.Other comparisonsLDA appeared to be associated with an increase in birthweight when compared to LDA + LMWH (MD -650.00 g, 95% CI -1210.33 to -89.67 g; 1 trial; 29 infants), as did third-party leukocyte immunisation when compared to placebo (MD 1195.00 g, 95% CI 273.35 to 2116.65 g; 1 trial, 4 infants), but these results were again very unstable due to extremely small sample sizes. The effects of the interventions on the remaining outcomes were also uncertain., Authors' Conclusions: There is insufficient evidence in this review to inform clinical practice about the effectiveness of interventions to improve care prior to and during subsequent pregnancies following a stillbirth. There is a clear and urgent need for well-designed trials addressing this research question. The evaluation of medical interventions such as LDA, in the specific context of stillbirth prevention (and recurrent stillbirth prevention), is warranted. However, appropriate methodologies to evaluate such therapies need to be determined, particularly where clinical equipoise may be lacking. Careful trial design and multicentre collaboration is necessary to carry out trials that would be sufficiently large to detect differences in statistically rare outcomes such as stillbirth and neonatal death. The evaluation of psychosocial interventions addressing maternal-fetal attachment and parental anxiety and depression is also an urgent priority. In a randomised-trial context, such trials may allocate parents to different forms of support, to determine which have the greatest benefit with the least financial cost. Importantly, consistency in nomenclature and in data collection across all future trials (randomised and non-randomised) may be facilitated by a core outcomes data set for stillbirth research. All future trials should assess short- and longer-term psychosocial outcomes for parents and families, alongside economic costs of interventions.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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