8 results on '"Doyle, Sarah"'
Search Results
2. Female Prisoners' Problems Living in an Irish Prison: An Exploratory Study.
- Author
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Quinn, Sarah, Doyle, Sarah, and Emerson, Cora
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WOMEN'S education , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *ATTENTION , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *BULLYING , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *ECOLOGY , *FAMILIES , *INTERVIEWING , *LIFE , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL illness , *MOTHER-child relationship , *PARENTING , *PRISON psychology , *PROBLEM solving , *RESEARCH , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *QUANTITATIVE research , *SOCIAL support , *THEMATIC analysis , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Using an experiential qualitative design, this study explored 11 female prisoners' perspectives of problems living in prison. The findings reflected the immediate impact of the physical, social, and institutional environment. Problems with drug detoxification and bullying were prevalent. Prisoners were outward-looking and future-focused. Some feared substance-abuse relapse on release while mothers persistently worried about family outside prison. Many used maladaptive strategies to cope with their problems and most used activities to remain occupied. The study recommended creating supportive prison environments and interventions that enable women to manage the everyday problems they experience living in prison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Learning analytics: challenges and limitations.
- Author
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Wilson, Anna, Watson, Cate, Thompson, Terrie Lynn, Drew, Valerie, and Doyle, Sarah
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LEARNING Management System ,EDUCATION software ,LEARNING management ,BIG data ,DATA analytics ,LEARNING strategies ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Learning analytic implementations are increasingly being included in learning management systems in higher education. We lay out some concerns with the way learning analytics – both data and algorithms – are often presented within an unproblematized Big Data discourse. We describe some potential problems with the often implicit assumptions about learning and learners – and indeed the tendency not to theorize learning explicitly – that underpin such implementations. Finally, we describe an attempt to devise our own analytics, grounded in a sociomaterial conception of learning. We use the data obtained to suggest that the relationships between learning and the digital traces left by participants in online learning are far from trivial, and that any analytics that relies on these as proxies for learning tends towards a behaviorist evaluation of learning processes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Pediatric SCI/D caregiver mental health and family dynamics in Colombia, South America.
- Author
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Doyle, Sarah T., Perrin, Paul B., Nicholls, Elizabeth, Olivera, Silvia Leonor, Quintero, Lorena Medina, Otálvaro, Nadezda Yulieth Méndez, and Arango-Lasprilla, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
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CAREGIVERS , *STATISTICAL correlation , *MENTAL depression , *FAMILIES , *MARITAL status , *MENTAL health , *PARENTS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SATISFACTION , *SELF-evaluation , *SPINAL cord injuries , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SOCIAL support , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *BURDEN of care , *CROSS-sectional method , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: This study examined the connections between family dynamics and the mental health of caregivers of youth with spinal cord injuries/disorders (SCI/D) caregivers from Colombia, South America. It was hypothesized that lower family functioning would be associated with poorer caregiver mental health.Methods: A cross-sectional study of self-report data collected from caregivers through the Hospital Universatario Hernando Moncaleano Perdomo in Neiva, Colombia. Thirty caregivers of children with SCI/D from Nevia, Colombia who were a primary caregiver for ≥3 months, providing care for an individual who was ≥6 months post-injury/diagnosis, familiar with the patient’s history, and without neurological or psychiatric conditions. Caregivers’ average age was 41.30 years (SD = 10.98), and 90% were female. Caregivers completed Spanish versions of instruments assessing their own mental health and family dynamics.Results: Family dynamics explained 43.2% of the variance in caregiver burden and 50.1% of the variance in satisfaction with life, although family dynamics were not significantly associated with caregiver depression in the overall analysis. Family satisfaction was the only family dynamics variable to yield a significant unique association with any index of caregiver mental health (satisfaction with life).Conclusions: If similar findings emerge in future intervention research, interventions for pediatric SCI/D caregivers in Colombia and other similar global regions could benefit from including techniques to improve family dynamics, especially family satisfaction, given the strong potentially reciprocal connection between these dynamics and caregiver mental health.Implications of RehabilitationThe degree of disability resulting from SCI/D can vary greatly depending on the severity and level of the lesion, though permanent impairment is often present that profoundly impacts both physical and psychological functioning.Very little is known about the impact of pediatric SCI/D in developing countries, despite the high rates of injury reported in these areas.Family interventions could contribute significantly to the lives of children with SCI/D and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
- Full Text
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5. Connecting family needs and TBI caregiver mental health in Mexico City, Mexico.
- Author
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Doyle, Sarah T., Perrin, Paul B., Díaz Sosa, Dulce María, Espinosa Jove, Irma Guadalupe, Lee, Gloria K., and Arango-Lasprilla, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC medical centers , *BRAIN injuries , *CHI-squared test , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *WOUNDS & injuries , *FAMILY relations , *BURDEN of care , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: This study examined relationships between caregiver mental health and the extent to which needs were met in families of individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) in Mexico City, Mexico. Method: Sixty-eight TBI caregivers completed Spanish versions of instruments assessing their own mental health and whether specific family needs were met. Results: Twenty-seven per cent of caregivers reported clinically significant depression levels, 40% reported below-average life satisfaction and 49% reported mild-to-severe burden. Several of the most frequently met family needs were in the emotional support domain, whereas the majority of unmet needs were in the health information domain. Family needs and caregiver mental health were significantly and highly related. When family needs were met, caregiver mental health was better. The strongest pattern of connections in multivariate analyses was between family instrumental support (assistance in the completion of daily life tasks) and caregiver burden, such that caregivers with less instrumental support had greater burden. Additional results suggested that instrumental support uniquely predicted caregiver satisfaction with life, burden and depression. Conclusions: Interventions for TBI caregivers, especially in Latin America, should help family members determine how best to meet their health information and instrumental needs, with the former being likely to improve caregiver mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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6. Risk Factors for Alcohol Use in the United States, 1947-2005.
- Author
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Bautzmann, Crista, Doyle, Sarah, Montero, Darrel, Reeder, Brittany, Silbernagel, Heidi, and Spiller, Susan
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PUBLIC opinion polls , *ALCOHOL drinking , *SOCIAL services , *ETHNICITY , *SOCIAL status , *DEMOGRAPHY , *FAMILIES , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) - Abstract
National public opinion polls that were conducted from 1947 to 2005 found that Americans' reported alcohol consumption remained fairly constant. Although alcohol use has remained consistent, the findings reveal that consumption levels vary by age, gender, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status. The results also show an increase in the number of reported problems within families that are due to excessive alcohol consumption. This article examines the differences in alcohol consumption levels related to these various demographic factors and explores the impact of alcohol use among families and implications for social work practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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7. IL-18: a new player in immunotherapy for age-related macular degeneration?
- Author
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Campbell, Matthew, Doyle, Sarah, and Humphries, Peter
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CYTOKINES ,INTERLEUKIN-18 ,NEOVASCULARIZATION ,IMMUNOTHERAPY ,RETINAL degeneration ,RHODOPSIN - Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-18 may have utility as an anti-angiogenic agent in the eye. Numerous laboratories, including our own have demonstrated the ability of murine IL-18 to prevent neovascularization in the retina, choroid and cornea in pathological scenarios. Here, we summarize the potential use of IL-18 as an immunotherapy for wet age-related macular degeneration treatment, describing past and recent findings pertaining to its biological function in the eye. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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8. Laika.
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Doyle, Sarah
- Subjects
- LAIKA (Poem), DOYLE, Sarah
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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