823 results
Search Results
2. Exploring the motivation of surgeons to lead juniors and the impact of their leadership on junior doctors motivation and leadership preference.
- Author
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Elzahhar, Ramy, Aylott, Jill, Indrasena, Buddhike Sri Harsha, Wrazen, Remig, and Othman, Ahmed
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MANAGEMENT styles ,WORK ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LEADERSHIP ,CONSULTANTS ,EMOTIONAL intelligence ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SURGEONS ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHI-squared test ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,ANALYSIS of variance ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,EXPERIENTIAL learning - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to conceptualise a research study to examine leadership as a relational concept between leaders and followers. The context is within surgical practice examining how motivated consultant surgeons are to lead junior doctors and which type of leadership style they use. From a follower perspective, the motivation of junior doctors will be explored, and their leadership preferences will be correlated with those of the actual style of consultant surgeons. Design/methodology/approach: In this paper, the authors provide a detailed description of the methods for an international quantitative research study, exploring sequentially how motivated consultant surgeons are to lead and how leadership styles impact on the motivation of junior doctors. The objectives, method and data collection of this study are explained, and the justification for each method is described. Findings: The findings for this outline study illustrate how critical it is to redefine leadership as a relational concept of leader and follower to ensure adequate support is provided to the next generation of consultant surgeons. Without consideration of the relational model of leadership, attrition will continue to be a critical issue in the medical workforce. Research limitations/implications: The research limitations are that this is a proposed quantitative study due to the need to collect a large sample of data from surgeons across the UK, Egypt and Germany. This research will have immense implications in developing new knowledge of leadership as a relational concept in medicine and healthcare. This study additionally will impact on how leadership is conceptualised in the curriculum for specialist surgical practice. Practical implications: The practical implications are that relational leadership is supportive of generating a supportive leadership culture in the workplace and generating more effective teamwork. Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first study of its kind to look at a relational model of leadership in surgical practice between consultant surgeons and surgical trainees. This study will also identify any specific country differences between the UK, Germany and Egypt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Online Data Collection to Evaluate a Theoretical Cognitive Model of Tinnitus.
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Handscomb, Lucy, Hall, Deborah A., Shorter, Gillian W., and Hoare, Derek J.
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ANALYSIS of variance ,INTERNET ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,TINNITUS ,THEORY ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,ACQUISITION of data ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to describe data collection considerations, methods, and response rates for a survey available both online and on paper. Methodological issues in the design of online data collection, and advantages and disadvantages of different data collection methods are discussed. Method: A survey was compiled that included 9 full or partial clinical questionnaires designed to measure different components relevant to tinnitus distress. It was completed once by 342 members of the public with tinnitus. Respondents could choose whether to complete the survey online or on paper. Results: Ninety-five percent of participants chose to complete the survey online. The advantages of an online self-administered questionnaire include low numbers of unanswered questions, convenience (particularly in a longer survey such as this), a fast return rate, and reduced expense. Age emerged as an important variable, with those opting to complete the paper-based version of the survey being older. Conclusions: Online data collection has several advantages to both participants and researchers. However, cross-sectional studies such as that presented here should also offer paper questionnaires to avoid excluding certain subgroups of the population. Ethics and reporting guidelines for Internet-delivered questionnaire studies are available. These can usefully inform study design and guide high-quality reporting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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4. Gaze‐speech coordination during social interaction in Parkinson's disease.
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Hodgson, Timothy L., Hermens, Frouke, and Ezard, Gemma
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SPEECH evaluation , *EYE muscles , *NATIONAL health services , *DISABILITIES , *CONVERSATION , *TASK performance , *RESEARCH funding , *EYE movement measurements , *PARKINSON'S disease , *MOVEMENT disorders , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY of movement , *GAMES , *SOCIAL skills , *COMMUNICATION , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *ANALYSIS of variance , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SPEECH disorders , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EYE movements , *COGNITION - Abstract
Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) can affect social interaction and communication as well as motor and cognitive processes. Speech is affected in PD, as is the control of voluntary eye movements which are thought to play an important role in 'turn taking' in conversation. Aims: This study aimed to measure eye movements during spoken conversation in PD to assess whether differences in patterns of eye gaze are linked to disrupted turn taking and impaired communication efficiency. Methods & Procedure: Eleven participants with mild PD and 14 controls completed a two‐player guessing game. During each 3 min game turn, one of the players had to guess the names of as many objects as possible based only on the other player's description. Eye movements were recorded simultaneously in both participants using mobile eye trackers along with speech onset and offset times. Outcomes & Results: When people with PD played the role of describer, the other player guessed fewer objects compared to when controls described objects. When guessing objects, people with PD performed just as well as controls. Analysis of eye fixations showed that people with PD made longer periods of fixation on the other player's face relative to controls and a lower number of such 'gaze on face' periods. Conclusions & Implications: A combination of oculomotor, cognitive and speech abnormalities may disrupt communication in PD. Better public awareness of oculomotor, speech and other deficits in the condition could improve social connectedness in people with Parkinson's. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on this subject?: Parkinson's disease is known to affect the control of voluntary eye movements. Direction of eye gaze is important in spoken conversation as a cue to turn‐taking, but no studies have examined whether eye movements are different during communication in people with Parkinson's. What this paper adds to existing knowledge?: People with Parkinson's showed longer periods of eye fixation during conversations compared to controls. Delays and overlaps between speech turns were also affected in patients. What are the clinical implications of this work?: Better knowledge of the effect of the disease on eye gaze control amongst clinicians may help improve communication and social connectedness for patients in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. The ability of typically developing 2–3 year olds to infer the control mechanism for eye-gaze technology and the impact of causal language instruction.
- Author
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Griffiths, Tom, Clarke, Michael T., and Swettenham, John
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LANGUAGE & languages , *CHILDREN with disabilities , *STATISTICAL sampling , *TEACHING methods , *LEARNING , *ASSISTIVE technology , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *COMPUTER input-output equipment , *EYE movements , *GAMIFICATION - Abstract
Purpose: Little is known about how children learn to control eye-gaze technology, and clinicians lack information to guide decision-making. This paper examines whether typically developing 2–3 year olds can infer for themselves the causal mechanisms by which eye-gaze technology is controlled, whether a teaching intervention based on causal language improves performance and how their performance compares to the same task accessed via a touchscreen. Methods and materials: Typically developing children's (n = 9, Mean Age 28.7 months) performance on a cause and effect game presented on eye-gaze and touchscreen devices was compared. The game was presented first with no specific instruction on how to control the devices. This was followed by a subsequent presentation with explicit instruction about how the access methods worked, using a causal language approach. A final presentation examined whether children had retained any learning. Results: Performance in the eye-gaze condition without instruction (42.5% successful trials) was significantly below performance in the corresponding touchscreen condition (75%). However, when causal language instruction was added, performance with both access methods rose to comparable levels (90.7% eye-gaze and 94.6% touchscreen success). Performance gains were not retained post-intervention. Conclusions: Although 2–3 years in the study could make use of eye-gaze technology with support, this study found no evidence that these children could infer the causal mechanisms of control independently or intuitively. The lack of spatial contiguity and the comparative lack of feedback from eye-gaze devices are discussed as possible contributory factors. IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION: There are challenges in young children inferring for themselves the causal link between eye movements and control of an eye-gaze device. Explicit instruction may improve children's performance in a specific task, but it is debatable whether this translates to the establishment of causal mechanisms for control of the device. Clinicians should be cautious of making assumptions about what children are learning from activities claiming to teach cause and effect or other foundational eye-gaze control skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. When not hitting your sales target is 'the end of the world': Examining the effects of rational emotive behaviour therapy on the irrational beliefs and emotional reactivity of UK‐based sales professionals.
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Turner, M. J., Costello, N., Miller, A., and Wood, A. G.
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STATISTICAL power analysis , *HEALTH attitudes , *OCCUPATIONS , *WORK environment , *EMOTIONS , *SALES personnel , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *JOB stress , *MATHEMATICAL models , *ANALYSIS of variance , *THEORY , *DATA analysis software , *COVID-19 pandemic , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *WELL-being - Abstract
Against the backdrop of the COVID‐19 pandemic, workplace wellbeing is a key priority for employers. Severe market and health conditions continue to bring inevitable problems that could be reduced with the application of psychological interventions to prevent mental and physical health issues, making this study a highly pertinent and valuable contribution to the field. This paper reports the effects of a rational emotive behaviour therapy (REBT) programme on the irrational beliefs and emotional reactivity of 56 office‐based sales professionals located in the northwest region of the UK. A pre‐test, post‐test experimental design was utilised, and a mixed model ANOVA (repeated measures) was adopted to assess changes in mean differences concerning irrational beliefs and emotional reactivity at pre and post‐test stages for the intervention group, in comparison to a control group. Results indicate that those in the REBT group reported significant reductions in irrational beliefs and emotional reactivity, whilst those in the control group reported no such changes. It is recommended that future research studies consider utilizing a mixed methods design and focus on a strategic collaboration of organisational and individual level interventions for improving the psychological wellbeing and performance of sales personnel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Comparing music‐ and food‐evoked autobiographical memories in young and older adults: A diary study.
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Jakubowski, Kelly, Belfi, Amy M., Kvavilashvili, Lia, Ely, Abbigail, Gill, Mark, and Herbert, Gemma
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MEMORY ,STATISTICAL power analysis ,STATISTICS ,AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL memory ,ANALYSIS of variance ,AGE distribution ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,MANN Whitney U Test ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,DIARY (Literary form) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,T-test (Statistics) ,FOOD ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MUSIC ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL models ,PROMPTS (Psychology) ,ADULTS ,OLD age ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Previous research has found that music brings back more vivid and emotional autobiographical memories than various other retrieval cues. However, such studies have often been low in ecological validity and constrained by relatively limited cue selection and predominantly young adult samples. Here, we compared music to food as cues for autobiographical memories in everyday life in young and older adults. In two separate four‐day periods, 39 younger (ages 18–34) and 39 older (ages 60–77) adults recorded their music‐ and food‐evoked autobiographical memories in paper diaries. Across both age groups, music triggered more frequent autobiographical memories, a greater proportion of involuntary memories, and memories rated as more personally important in comparison to food cues. Age differences impacted music‐ and food‐evoked memories similarly, with older adults consistently recalling older and less specific memories, which they rated as more positive, vivid, and rehearsed. However, young and older adults did not differ in the number or involuntary nature of their recorded memories. This work represents an important step in understanding the phenomenology of naturally occurring music‐evoked autobiographical memories across adulthood and provides new insights into how and why music may be a more effective trigger for personally valued memories than certain other everyday cues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF GEOLOGICAL AND ENGINEERING PREDICTORS OF OILFIELD PERFORMANCE RESPONSE: A CASE STUDY OF OILFIELDS ON THE UK CONTINENTAL SHELF.
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Osah, Ukari and Howell, John
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CONTINENTAL shelf , *STATISTICS , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *DATA logging , *REGRESSION analysis , *INDEPENDENT variables , *APPLICATION program interfaces - Abstract
Oilfield production is controlled by a wide range of geological and engineering parameters, many of which are at least partially interrelated. This paper uses multivariate statistical methods (principal component analysis, regression analysis and analysis of variance) to determine how these parameters are related, and which of them are most significant in controlling and predicting oilfield performance. The analysis is based on a database of publicly available oilfield data from the United Kingdom Continental Shelf (UKCS), from which a series of geological, engineering and fluid‐related control variables from 136 fields were pre‐processed and analyzed. This dataset is a subset of a much wider project database for UKCS oil, gas and condensate fields. For this study, the project database was divided into two datasets: a first dataset with 10 parameters from 136 fields, and a second, more detailed dataset with 27 parameters from 38 fields. Both datasets were analysed using principal component analysis in order to investigate possible correlations between numerically/statistically interrogable predictor variables such as porosity, permeability, number of production wells, gas‐oil ratio and reservoir temperature. A regression analysis was then carried out on the predictor variables in order to obtain a ranking of predictability (i.e. how indicative a predictor is of a particular outcome) and sensitivity (how sensitive an outcome is to slight changes in a predictor) in relation to recovery factor based on R‐squared and regression coefficient values. The results showed that key variables from the principal component analysis included field size, number of production wells, PVT, gross depositional environment and reservoir quality. High‐ranking parameters of predictability and sensitivity from the regression analysis were found to include API, net‐to‐gross, porosity and reservoir depth. These results are consistent with previous studies and suggest that it should be possible to forecast oilfield recovery based on only a few selected input variables. As a preliminary test of forecasting ability of the variable permutations put forward, a best‐subsets multiple regression was carried out using a statistical software package and yielded results which corroborated the main findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Preliminary feasibility and effectiveness of a novel community language intervention for preschool children in the United Kingdom.
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Botting, Nicola, Spicer‐Cain, Helen, Buckley, Bernadine, Mercado, Elizabeth, Sharif, Khadija, Wood, Liz, Flynn, Jane, and Reeves, Louisa
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PILOT projects , *STATISTICS , *RESEARCH , *NONPARAMETRIC statistics , *MOTHERS , *NONVERBAL communication , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *FOCUS groups , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *COMMUNITY health services , *FATHERS , *CHILD behavior , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *SOCIAL context , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *COMMUNICATION , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTRACLASS correlation , *VOCABULARY , *RESEARCH funding , *PARENT-child relationships , *BODY language , *DATA analysis , *STATISTICAL sampling , *COMMUNICATION education , *SECONDARY analysis , *VIDEO recording , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Very young children from lower socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds often show poorer language development. Whilst there have been attempts to provide early intervention programmes, these sometimes miss the most disadvantaged groups. Aims: This report presents preliminary feasibility and effectiveness data for a novel language intervention designed for parents of toddlers in the United Kingdom. Methods and Procedures: In total, 43 UK families of 2–4‐year‐olds were recruited to the study, half of whom completed an 8‐week course (Tots Talking) focussed on parent interaction, and half of whom acted as wait‐list controls. Results and Outcomes: Results suggest that such programmes are feasible for families with 86% staying in the intervention. In addition, greater changes in underlying communication skills such as joint attention and gesture were evident compared to wait‐list controls. Conclusions and Implications: We conclude that pre‐verbal skills may be more important to measure as initial outcomes than language or vocabulary change in this population. What This Paper Adds: What is already known on the subject: Children from lower socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds are at higher risk of communication difficulties and there is a need for community intervention programmes for very young children. What this study adds: This study suggests that such programmes can be feasible and effective, but that very early/basic communicative skills (such as joint attention) may be boosted first rather than language or vocabulary. What are the clinical implications of this work?: Children's centres and other community services could feasibly run short parent facing courses emphasising contingent communication in low SES families and other diverse groups. These may be more successful run with younger preschoolers. Joint attention may be a better focus of intervention before expecting vocabulary or language change. Community health professionals may find this information useful in referring and supporting families in need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Evaluating Parent Gym: a community implemented universal parenting programme.
- Author
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Lindsay, Geoff, Totsika, Vaso, and Thomas, Ruth
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EDUCATION of parents ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,RESEARCH methodology ,PARENT-child relationships ,PARENTING ,PARENTS ,SATISFACTION ,SELF-efficacy ,WELL-being ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,PARENT attitudes ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: There is growing evidence of the efficacy and effectiveness of targeted parenting programmes but the evidence for universal parenting programmes is much less developed. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the effectiveness of Parent Gym, a parenting programme delivered in schools. Design/methodology/approach: In this paper a quasi-experimental design was utilised. Parents were recruited to the Parent Gym programme comprising six two-hour weekly sessions. Parents completed measures of their parenting efficacy, parenting satisfaction, interest in parenting and mental well-being at pre- and post-course. Comparative data were derived from a retrospectively-defined randomly selected group of non-participant parents at two time points, equivalent to the length of the Parent Gym course. Findings: Changes in the Parent Gym group were compared with the comparison group using repeated measures mixed 2×2 ANOVAs, which accounted for the potential effect of demographic characteristics (parent gender, ethnicity, parent age, parent education level and single parent status), and their potential interaction with group membership. Parenting satisfaction showed a significantly greater increase for the Parent Gym group with a large effect size (d=0.80). Regarding parenting efficacy, there was a significant time × group interaction indicating efficacy scores increased in the Parent Gym group but decreased in the comparison group (d=1.93). Mental well-being also improved for the Parent Gym group from below the national norm before the course (d=−0.26) to significantly greater than the national norm at post-course (d=0.29). Research limitations/implications: A limitation of the present study is the absence of data on outcomes for children. Second, the administration of the research at local level, primarily the distribution and collection of the measures and return to the research team for analysis, is a potential source of data loss: both pre- and post-programme data were available on 55 per cent of Parent Gym parents, similar to other community studies. Third, the present study did not include a longer term follow-up after the programme ended. Future research is required to examine the sustainability of effects produced from community implemented programmes. Practical implications: Findings from the present study indicate that a universal programme, Parent Gym, was effective in aiding the positive development of aspects of parenting behaviour, namely parents' self-efficacy, parenting satisfaction and mental well-being, when delivered in community settings. This demonstrates its potential as part of a regular service delivery option of evidence-based support for parents. Social implications: Successful parenting requires both the development of parenting skills and a positive relationship between parent and child. Parents vary in the resources (e.g. family) available to develop positively. Evidence-based parenting programmes have an important role in aiding parenting development, both those targeted at parents with most challenges and those (universal) aimed across the population. This study demonstrated that the universal Parent Gym programme is effective across a wide range of parents and has the potential to be a positive social resource for community delivery. Originality/value: This is the first rigorous study of Parent Gym. It adds to the limited evidence about parenting programmes delivered outside of trials, as part of normal service delivery. With this evidence, parent choice of a suitable evidence-based programme is increased. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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11. Medical students' attitudes towards psychiatry improve following psychiatry clinical placements: the ATPP study.
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Osimo, Emanuele Felice, Mariner, Lydia, and Wilkinson, Paul
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PSYCHIATRY ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,ANALYSIS of variance ,MEDICAL students ,SELF-evaluation ,MANN Whitney U Test ,INTERNSHIP programs ,COMPARATIVE studies ,T-test (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL schools ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,STUDENT attitudes ,DATA analysis software ,PERSONALITY tests ,PERSONALITY assessment - Abstract
Purpose: In previous research, personality and exposure to psychiatry were independently shown to shape medical students attitudes towards psychiatry (ATP). This paper aims to investigate the role of psychiatry placements and personality types on medical student attitudes towards psychiatry (ATP). Design/methodology/approach: All medical students from four consecutive years at Cambridge University, UK were invited to take part in an online questionnaire including the ATP-30 Questionnaire and The Big Five Factor personality Inventory (BFI). Findings: Students who had completed their psychiatry placement had more positive ATP than students who had not (t = −3.24, adjusted p = 0.004). However, this was not reflected in an increased self-reported likelihood of choosing psychiatry as a career (t = 0.28, adjusted p = 0.78). Higher agreeable personality scores were associated with both a higher willingness to take up psychiatry as a career (linear model estimate 0.06; p = 0.03), and more positive ATP (linear model estimate 0.14; p < 0.0001). Originality/value: This work seems to confirm that exposure to psychiatry improves attitudes towards psychiatry. Agreeable personality traits were also associated with a higher willingness to take up psychiatry postgraduate training. These findings might help shape future campaigns to improve the profile of psychiatry training. Future research on this topic is needed to address whether improved ATP among medical students can longitudinally improve recruitment into post-graduate psychiatry training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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12. Adjusting for cross-cultural differences in computer-adaptive tests of quality of life.
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Gibbons, C. J., Skevington, S. M., and WHOQOL Group
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COMPUTER adaptive testing ,QUALITY of life ,CROSS-cultural differences ,ITEM response theory ,COMPUTER simulation ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CULTURE ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,ETHNOLOGY research ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Purpose: Previous studies using the WHOQOL measures have demonstrated that the relationship between individual items and the underlying quality of life (QoL) construct may differ between cultures. If unaccounted for, these differing relationships can lead to measurement bias which, in turn, can undermine the reliability of results.Methods: We used item response theory (IRT) to assess differential item functioning (DIF) in WHOQOL data from diverse language versions collected in UK, Zimbabwe, Russia, and India (total N = 1332). Data were fitted to the partial credit 'Rasch' model. We used four item banks previously derived from the WHOQOL-100 measure, which provided excellent measurement for physical, psychological, social, and environmental quality of life domains (40 items overall). Cross-cultural differential item functioning was assessed using analysis of variance for item residuals and post hoc Tukey tests. Simulated computer-adaptive tests (CATs) were conducted to assess the efficiency and precision of the four items banks.Results: Splitting item parameters by DIF results in four linked item banks without DIF or other breaches of IRT model assumptions. Simulated CATs were more precise and efficient than longer paper-based alternatives.Discussion: Assessing differential item functioning using item response theory can identify measurement invariance between cultures which, if uncontrolled, may undermine accurate comparisons in computer-adaptive testing assessments of QoL. We demonstrate how compensating for DIF using item anchoring allowed data from all four countries to be compared on a common metric, thus facilitating assessments which were both sensitive to cultural nuance and comparable between countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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13. Business Cycles in the United Kingdom: Facts and Fictions.
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Blackburn, Keith and Ravn, Morten O.
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BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC conditions in Great Britain ,STANDARD deviations ,DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) ,ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
This paper documents the statistical properties of contemporary business fluctuations in the United Kingdom. We study the period 1956-90 using quarterly, detrended data on key aggregate variables. We compute selected moments of the data, compare our results with those for the United States, and rigorously test for dynamic instabilities. Our findings confirm the existence of substantive cyclical regularities, both across countries and across time. Some notable cross-country differences are also identified. Conclusions about stability are shown to be potentially sensitive to the method of testing. In general, cross-correlations are appreciably more stable than standard deviations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
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14. Evaluating the impact of a nationally recognised training programme that aims to raise the awareness and challenge attitudes of personality disorder in multi-agency partners.
- Author
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Lamph, Gary, Latham, Cameron, Smith, Debra, Brown, Andrew, Doyle, Joanne, and Sampson, Mark
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MEDICAL education ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,INTERNET ,MEDICAL personnel ,PERSONALITY disorders ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,TEACHING methods ,VISUAL analog scale ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,COURSE evaluation (Education) ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,REPEATED measures design ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose – An innovative training initiative to raise the awareness of personality disorder and enable more effective working with people with personality disorder who come into contact with the wider multi-agency system has been developed. For the purpose of the training initiative the nationally recognised Knowledge and Understanding Framework (KUF, awareness-level programme) has been employed. An overview of the comprehensive multi-agency training initiative will be outlined with reporting and discussion of the outcome data provided within this paper. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach – This paper outlines the development and outcomes of a service evaluation study. The utilised outcome measures were carried out at pre-, post- and three-month follow-up measures. The Personality Disorder-Knowledge Attitude and Skills Questionnaire was utilised on the recommendation of the central team. Additionally a Visual Analogue Scale was developed for the purpose of this study was also employed. Findings – Data findings are positive particularly when comparing pre- and post-results and the pre- and follow-up results. There appears to be an apparent peak in results post-training which could be attributed to the fact that knowledge and understanding is recent and fresh in the delegates mind, however positive results are still reported at follow-up there does appear to be decline in results and durability of the effect when three-month follow-up is compared against the post-training results. Research limitations/implications – Follow-up was at three months, which is a relatively short-time span post-training it would be of great interest to see in the future if the decline in the three areas continues. If this was followed up and if this pattern continued this could provide us with evidence to support the development of refresher courses. In the future, due to the multi-agency design of this service evaluation, comparisons of the different sectors, agencies and occupations involved, could also be explored further to establish what multi-agency areas the training has had the most effect and impact. Practical implications – High levels of demand from multi-agencies to receive training in personality disorder is reported. Our findings and experience provide evidence that multi-agencies partners from a variety of professional backgrounds can effectively work in partnership with people with lived experience to effectively deliver the KUF training. Social implications – This innovative roll-out of KUF training provides evidence that with a little investment, a comprehensive multi-agency roll-out of KUF is achievable and can provide statistically significant positive results displaying the effectiveness and change brought about via the KUF training. Originality/value – The originality of this sustainable and low-cost approach to educating the wider system is reported in this paper. This has lead to the strategy receiving national recognition winning a nursing times award in 2011 and a model of innovative practice nationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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15. Group singing improves quality of life for people with Parkinson's: an international study.
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Irons, J. Yoon, Hancox, Grenville, Vella-Burrows, Trish, Han, Eun-Young, Chong, Hyun-Ju, Sheffield, David, and Stewart, Donald E.
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EXCHANGE of persons programs ,ANALYSIS of variance ,SOCIAL support ,SINGING ,SOCIAL stigma ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,QUALITY of life ,PARKINSON'S disease ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objectives: Group singing has been reported to enhance quality of life (QoL) and mental health in older people. This paper explored whether there are differences in the effects of group singing intervention on people with Parkinson's (PwPs) in Australia, UK and South Korea. Methods: The study included PwPs (N = 95; mean age = 70.26; male 45%) who participated in a standardised 6-month weekly group singing programme. Parkinson's health-related QoL measure (PDQ39) and mental health assessment (DASS) were administered at baseline and follow-up. ANOVAs were performed with significance set as p <.05. Results: ANOVAs revealed main effects of Time on the Stigma and Social Support subscales of PDQ39; both showed a small but significant improvement over time. However, the social support reduction was moderated by country; social support was improved only in South Korean participants. The reduction in stigma was greater than previously reported minimal clinically important differences, as was the social support reduction in South Korean participants. In terms of mental health, ANOVAs revealed that the scores of Anxiety and Stress domains of DASS significantly decreased from pre-test to post-test with small effect sizes. Conclusion: This first international singing study with PwPs demonstrated that group singing can reduce stigma, anxiety and stress and enhance social support in older adults living with Parkinson's. The findings are encouraging and warrant further research using more robust designs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Comparative optimism about infection and recovery from COVID‐19; Implications for adherence with lockdown advice.
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Asimakopoulou, Koula, Hoorens, Vera, Speed, Ewen, Coulson, Neil S., Antoniszczak, Dominika, Collyer, Fran, Deschrijver, Eliane, Dubbin, Leslie, Faulks, Denise, Forsyth, Rowena, Goltsi, Vicky, Harsløf, Ivan, Larsen, Kristian, Manaras, Irene, Olczak‐Kowalczyk, Dorota, Willis, Karen, Xenou, Tatiana, and Scambler, Sasha
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CONVALESCENCE ,FACTOR analysis ,GOODNESS-of-fit tests ,OPTIMISM ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,SURVEYS ,DATA analysis ,REPEATED measures design ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COVID-19 ,STAY-at-home orders - Abstract
Background: Comparative optimism, the belief that negative events are more likely to happen to others rather than to oneself, is well established in health risk research. It is unknown, however, whether comparative optimism also permeates people's health expectations and potentially behaviour during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Objectives: Data were collected through an international survey (N = 6485) exploring people's thoughts and psychosocial behaviours relating to COVID‐19. This paper reports UK data on comparative optimism. In particular, we examine the belief that negative events surrounding risk and recovery from COVID‐19 are perceived as more likely to happen to others rather than to oneself. Methods: Using online snowball sampling through social media, anonymous UK survey data were collected from N = 645 adults during weeks 5‐8 of the UK COVID‐19 lockdown. The sample was normally distributed in terms of age and reflected the UK ethnic and disability profile. Findings: Respondents demonstrated comparative optimism where they believed that as compared to others of the same age and gender, they were unlikely to experience a range of controllable (eg accidentally infect/ be infected) and uncontrollable (eg need hospitalization/ intensive care treatment if infected) COVID‐19‐related risks in the short term (P <.001). They were comparatively pessimistic (ie thinking they were more at risk than others for developing COVID‐19‐related infection or symptoms) when thinking about the next year. Discussion: This is one of the first ever studies to report compelling comparative biases in UK adults' thinking about COVID‐19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
17. Nurse-led primary healthcare walk-in centres: an integrative literature review.
- Author
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Desborough, Jane, Forrest, Laura, and Parker, Rhian
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,CINAHL database ,CLINICS ,COST control ,FAMILY nursing ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,JOB satisfaction ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDLINE ,NURSE administrators ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PRIMARY health care ,RESEARCH funding ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEMATIC analysis ,OUTPATIENT medical care management - Abstract
desborough j., forrest l. & parker r. (2012) Nurse-led primary healthcare walk-in centres: an integrative literature review. Journal of Advanced Nursing 68(2), 248-263. Abstract Aims. This paper is a report of an integrative review of the international literature examining established nurse-led primary healthcare walk-in centres and their outcomes to understand whether they are effective in improving access to primary health care. Background. Reviews of nurse-led primary care walk-in centres have included centres staffed by family physicians and general practitioners. There is a paucity of evidence about walk-in centres staffed solely by nurses. Data sources. Studies were identified through an electronic search using the databases Medline, Cinahl and EBSCO from 1990 until July 2010. Papers were included if they examined walk-in centres providing nurse-led primary care for the general community. Only peer reviewed studies published in English were included. Review methods. An integrative approach utilizing Bowling's checklist facilitated a systematic appraisal of studies in regard to clarity of aims, objectives, methods and appropriate analysis of data. Results. Thirteen publications were categorized into five themes: 'users of walk-in centres', 'quality of care provided at walk-in centres', 'impact on other healthcare providers', 'perceptions of walk-in centres' and 'satisfaction with walk-in centres'. Conclusion. The possibility that walk-in centres create demand highlights the need for clearer evidence of the drivers of demand for health care in walk-in centres. Innovations in healthcare provision need to be matched with adaptation to nursing education to ensure an adequately prepared nursing workforce. Improvement in access to primary healthcare needs to be measured in terms of equity and the capacity this access has to fill identified gaps in primary healthcare provision in the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Older people's views in relation to risk of falling and need for intervention: a meta-ethnography.
- Author
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McInnes, Elizabeth, Seers, Kate, and Tutton, Liz
- Subjects
ACCIDENTAL fall prevention ,RISK factors of falling down ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,ELDER care ,AGING ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,BEHAVIOR modification ,CINAHL database ,HEALTH behavior ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,LIFE skills ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,PATIENTS ,HEALTH self-care ,SELF-efficacy ,ETHNOLOGY research ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,QUALITATIVE research ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,THEMATIC analysis ,OLD age - Abstract
mcinnes e., seers k. & tutton l. (2011) Older people's views in relation to risk of falling and need for intervention: a meta-ethnography. Journal of Advanced Nursing 67(12), 2525-2536. Abstract Aim. This paper is a report of a meta-ethnography of qualitative studies of older peoples' views on risk of falling and need for intervention. Background. Falls and falls-related injuries in older people are worldwide problems. A conceptual understanding of older people's views about falls risk and need for intervention is useful for understanding factors likely to impact on acceptance of risk and recommended interventions. Data Sources. Seven electronic databases were searched 1999-2009. Reference lists of included articles were screened for eligible papers. Review Methods. Assessment of quality was carried out. Themes and concepts were extracted using a meta-ethnographic approach to compare similarities and differences across the retrieved studies. A line of argument was developed to produce an explanatory framework of the extracted themes and concepts. Results. Eleven relevant qualitative research articles of reasonable quality were identified. Six key concepts were identified: beyond personal control; rationalizing; salience; life-change and identity; taking control and self-management. A line of argument synthesis describes how older people approach self-appraisal of falls risk and intervention need, and how they cope and adapt to falls risk and intervention need. Conclusion. In response to having an elevated risk status and perceived associations with frailty and impact on an independent life-style, some prefer to adapt to this reality by taking control and implementing self-management strategies. Healthcare professionals should take into account beliefs about risk and negotiate choices for intervention, recognizing that some individuals prefer to drive the decision-making process to preserve identity as a competent and independent person. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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19. An Examination of Dynamic Trading Stategies in UK and US Stock Returns.
- Author
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Fletcher, Jonathan
- Subjects
STOCKS (Finance) ,TRADING companies ,ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
This paper examines the performance benefits of using conditioning information in mean-variance strategies in UK and US stock returns. The paper finds that after adjusting for trading costs, there are no significant performance benefits in using conditioning information in mean-variance strategies. This result stems from the high turnover that is required to implement dynamic trading strategies. The paper does find that after adjusting for costs, that the unconditional approach of significantly outperforms alternative approaches of using conditioning information in mean-variance strategies in UK stock returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
20. The hearing of fitness to practice cases by the General Medical Council: Current trends and future research agendas.
- Author
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Chamberlain, JohnM.
- Subjects
RESPONSIBILITY ,CLINICAL competence ,ANALYSIS of variance ,LABOR discipline ,MALPRACTICE ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL practice ,PROFESSIONS ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Over the last three decades a risk-based model of medical regulation has emerged in the United Kingdom. To promote a risk-averse operational culture of transparency and professional accountability the regulatory state has intervened in medical governance and introduced best-evidenced practice frameworks, audit and performance appraisal. Against this background the paper analyses descriptive statistical data pertaining to the General Medical Council's management of the process by which fitness to practice complaints against doctors are dealt with from initial receipt through to subsequent investigative and adjudication stages. Statistical trends are outlined regarding complaint data in relation to a doctor's gender, race and ethnicity. The data shows that there has been an increase in rehabilitative and/or punitive action against doctors. In light of its findings the paper considers what the long-term consequences may be, for both patients and doctors, of the increasing use of risk-averse administrative systems to reform medical regulation and ensure professional accountability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The role of health care assistants in supporting district nurses and family carers to deliver palliative care at home: findings from an evaluation project.
- Author
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Ingleton, Christine, Chatwin, John, Seymour, Jane, and Payne, Sheila
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ANALYSIS of variance ,CANCER treatment ,CAREGIVERS ,COMMUNITY health nursing ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH care reform ,HOME care services ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL records ,MEDICAL referrals ,NATIONAL health services ,NURSES ,NURSES' aides ,NURSING ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,INDUSTRIAL research ,TERMINAL care ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PEER relations ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
To examine the role of trained health and personal care assistants in supporting district nurses and family carers in providing palliative and end of life care in the community. In the UK, there is a policy directive to improve end of life care and to enable greater numbers of people to die at home. This places considerable demands on community nursing services and family carers. In response to this, the Complex and Palliative Continuing Care Service employing generic health and personal care assistants was developed as part of the Marie Curie Delivering Choice Programme in one city in the UK. This paper draws on findings from an independent evaluation of the scheme. The wider evaluation used a formative evaluation methodology. This paper draws on in-depth interviews with a range of stakeholders ( n = 17), in-depth interviews with bereaved carers ( n = 6) and an analysis of documentation. Stakeholders and bereaved carers perceived that the health and personal care assistants made a vital contribution to community palliative care. Careful recruitment, specific training, case management by district nursing with allocation of specific tasks and close ongoing communication were key features which stakeholders indentified. Family carers welcomed the way assistants developed relationships and became familiar and able to meet the care needs of patients. There were some problems reported which related to capacity, work flow and the need for extensive written care plans. Employing health care assistants under the supervision of district nurses appears to support patients and family at home during end of life care and contribute to good quality nursing care. The needs for community-based palliative and end of life care will increase rapidly over the course of the next 20 years, placing pressure on community nursing services and family carers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
22. Contemporary women's understandings of female sexuality: findings from an in-depth interview study.
- Author
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Bellamy, Gary, Gott, Merryn, Hinchliff, Sharon, and Nicolson, Paula
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ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,BODY image ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,FEMALE reproductive organ diseases ,GROUP identity ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN sexuality ,SOUND recordings ,QUALITATIVE research ,SEXUAL dysfunction ,CULTURAL values ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Based upon the findings of a qualitative in-depth interview study with 23 women aged 23-72 years recruited from members of the general public and a psychosexual clinic, this paper explores participants understandings of the term 'sexuality'. The findings are set within the context of historical, prevailing and often contradictory perceptions of the term. Data were analysed thematically using the conventions of template analysis within a material discursive framework. This paper questions the assumption that sexuality is an altogether powerful and naturally occurring phenomenon. The ability to isolate and give credence to a definitive meaning of the term is, both for participants and academics alike, an arduous undertaking. Rather than focusing primarily on the material body, the extent to which ideology, culture and power intersect with the former indicate its multidimensional, constructed nature. Given the whole host of meanings evoked by the term, the paper asserts that it is more fitting to talk of multiple understandings of sexuality rather than a singular authoritative one whilst also contingent on social and historical practices. The findings have implications that should be considered when evaluating previous sexological research and conducting future research where this term is used throughout as a focus of academic enquiry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Forecasting the weekly time-varying beta of UK firms: GARCH models vs. Kalman filter method.
- Author
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Choudhry, Taufiq and Hao Wu
- Subjects
BUSINESS forecasting ,ESTIMATION theory ,KALMAN filtering ,HETEROSCEDASTICITY ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ECONOMETRICS ,REGRESSION analysis ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
This paper investigates the forecasting ability of three different Generalised Autoregressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity (GARCH) models and the Kalman filter method. The three GARCH models applied are: bivariate GARCH, BEKK GARCH, and GARCH-GJR. Forecast errors based on 20 UK company's weekly stock return (based on time-varying beta) forecasts are employed to evaluate the out-of-sample forecasting ability of both the GARCH models and the Kalman method. Measures of forecast errors overwhelmingly support the Kalman filter approach. Among the GARCH models, GJR appears to provide somewhat more accurate forecasts than the two other GARCH models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
24. The asymmetric volatility of house prices in the UK.
- Author
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I-Chun Tsai and Ming-Chi Chen
- Subjects
MARKET volatility ,HOME prices ,HOUSING market ,GARCH model ,RETURNS on sales ,MEDIAN (Mathematics) ,ANALYSIS of variance ,PRICES - Abstract
The article presents a research paper claiming that the asymmetric volatility of the house prices in Great Britain may be caused by the housing market's defensiveness. The study used the Glosten, Jagannthan, and Runkle (GJR)-GARCH asymmetric volatility model to analyze the housing price data from the last quarter (Q4) of 1995 to the last quarter of 2005, as well as suitable variance and mean equations to calculate the conditional heteroscedasticity volatilities of the house prices' returns. The results suggest the possibility for the housing return volatility to decline despite the negative correlation of the lagged innovations with housing return. Moreover, the results also indicate the asymmetric condition of the volatilities between the moving up and down of the housing prices.
- Published
- 2009
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25. A study of determinants of intellectual capital performance in banks: the UK case.
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INTELLECTUAL capital ,BANKING research ,BRITISH banking industry ,REGRESSION analysis ,INFORMATION technology ,BARRIERS to entry (Industrial organization) ,ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to investigate the determinants of intellectual capital performance in the UK banks over the period 1999-2005. Design/methodology/approach - Multiple regression analysis is used to test the relationship between the intellectual capital performance as a dependent variable and certain independent variables. Findings - Results indicate that the standard variables, bank profitability and bank risk, are important. The results also show that investment in information technology (IT) systems, bank efficiency, barriers to entry and efficiency of investment in intellectual capital variables, which have not been considered in previous studies, have a significant impact on intellectual capital performance. Research limitations/implications - More evidence is needed on the determinants of intellectual capital performance before any generalisation of the results can be made. In addition, the empirical tests were conducted only on the Major British Banks Group over the period 1999-2005 and hence the results of the study cannot be assumed to extend beyond this group of banks or to different study periods. Practical implications - The study might help the banking regulators in addressing the factors affecting intellectual capital performance to take actions towards developing their performance and in turn maximise their value creation. Originality/value - This paper adds to the literature on the determinants of intellectual capital performance in banks. In particular, it tests the theories that investment in IT systems, bank efficiency, barriers to entry and efficiency of investment in intellectual capital have impact on intellectual capital performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Influence of Relative Age Effect in the Assessment of High School Students in Physical Education in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Roberts, Simon J. and Fairclough, Stuart J.
- Subjects
PHYSICAL education students (Education students) ,PHYSICAL education teacher education ,HIGH school students ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The common practice of annually age grouping children in education, likely done under the assumption of similarly aged children sharing similar abilities and learner characteristics, may actually undermine equity and fairness in student assessments. This strategy has received criticism for (dis) advantaging those older children born closer to the "cut off" date for entry into an academic year and for promoting the existence of relative age effects (RAEs). This paper explores the possibility that RAEs may be prevalent in the end-of-year attainment levels of junior high school physical education (PE) students. The PE end-of-year attainment scores were collected from 582 students in grades 7, 8 and 9 (aged 11-14 years) in the United Kingdom (UK). The results from a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) indicated a significant main effect for month of birth (p = .001) and gender (p = .001). Follow up interviews with heads of PE (HoPE) revealed a lack of awareness of RAEs and inconsiderate assessment strategies, which deviated from the requirements of the formal curriculum. The implications of RAEs in school PE assessment and possible recommendations are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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27. The patient-reported outcome measure for older people living with frailty receiving acute care (PROM-OPAC): field-testing and validation.
- Author
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van Oppen, James D., Conroy, Simon P., Lalseta, Jagruti, Mackintosh, Nicola, Riley, Peter, Richardson, Vivien, Valderas, Jose M., and Coats, Timothy J.
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,RESEARCH funding ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,PATIENTS ,DATA analysis ,DEATH ,FRAIL elderly ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH evaluation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,FUNCTIONAL status ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH methodology ,GERIATRIC assessment ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,STATISTICS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,FACTOR analysis ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,CRITICAL care medicine ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Background: Current acute healthcare service metrics are not meaningful for older people living with frailty. Healthcare knowledge, situational security, and physical and psychosocial function are important outcomes typically not collected. The use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) could support these assessments. Existing instruments are not comprehensive as they typically consider function, while older people with frailty also value enablement (self-determination and security in health and healthcare). This study field-tested and validated a PROM for older people with frailty receiving acute care (PROM-OPAC) to measure enablement. Methods: People aged 65+ with Clinical Frailty Scale 5–8 were recruited within seventy-two hours of an emergency attendance. Iterations of the novel instrument were administered over three stages: (1) preliminary field-testing for reliability (response distribution and internal consistency) and structure (exploratory factor analysis, EFA); (2) intermediate field-testing of an improved instrument for reliability and structure; (3) final draft validation assessing reliability, structure (confirmatory factor analysis, CFA), and construct validity based on a priori hypotheses. Feasibility was appraised throughout using data completeness and response rates and times. Results: 241 people participated. Three items of a preliminary seven-item measure had poor response distribution or loading and were accordingly improved. The intermediate instrument had interpretability issues and three items required further improvement. The final eight-item draft had acceptable reliability (Cronbach's alpha: 0.71), structure (two factors for self-determination and security; RMSEA: 0.065; TLI: 0.917; CFI: 0.944), and construct validity (lower scores from respondents waiting longer and requiring admission). Feasibility was promising (response rate 39%; 98% responses complete; median completion time 11 (IQR: 12) minutes). Conclusions: Administration of the PROM-OPAC appeared feasible and the instrument had acceptable psychometric properties. Further evaluation is required to assess generalisability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Perceptions of Patient Safety Competence among Undergraduate Nursing and Nursing Associate Students: A Comparative Cross‐Sectional Study.
- Author
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De Rezende, Helena, Ooms, Ann, Kaya, Guldane Damla, Wang, Chao, and Al Sabei, Sulaiman
- Subjects
SELF-evaluation ,SCHOOL environment ,CROSS-sectional method ,PATIENT safety ,JUNIOR college students ,T-test (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,UNDERGRADUATES ,RATING of students ,HEALTH occupations students ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,CONFIDENCE ,CLINICAL competence ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COLLEGE students ,STUDENT attitudes ,DATA analysis software ,NURSING students - Abstract
Background. Nursing professionals are pivotal in coordinating care and incorporating quality and safety strategies to enhance patient outcomes. Therefore, nursing education is paramount in preparing nurses to deliver safe care. Aim. In this study, we aimed to explore the self‐reported patient safety competence acquired by undergraduate nursing students in classroom and clinical settings and to compare their perceptions of how broader patient safety issues are addressed in their programmes. Methods. We conducted a cross‐sectional study in a public university in London, United Kingdom, and included Bachelor of Science nursing students from all fields of nursing and Nursing Associate students (n = 250, response rate 21.3%). Students completed the Health Professional Education Patient Safety Survey (H‐PEPSS). Paired t‐tests examined the differences in learning (classroom versus clinical setting). Analysis of variance was used to explore differences in self‐reported patient safety competencies across programmes and to compare students' perceptions of how broader patient safety issues are addressed in their curricula. Results. Mean domain scores indicate high confidence levels in patient safety competence for learning gained in both classroom and clinical settings for all students (>4.0/5.0). Results also indicate a consensus among students from various programmes that broader patient safety issues are adequately addressed in the curricula. Self‐reported confidence was highest in respondents enrolled in the Nursing Associate programme and students with prior experience in a clinical setting. Students were confident about their learnings of patient safety in their educational programmes. Conclusions. Greater patient safety competence indicates comprehension and familiarity with knowledge boundaries, which in turn acknowledges the limitations of autonomous practice. Our findings underscore the need for targeted educational interventions to enhance specific areas of patient safety competence and emphasise the shared responsibility of educators in fostering a culture of safety within healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. DIFFERENCES IN PERSISTENCE IN AGGREGATED AND DISAGGREGATED UK STOCK RETURNS: A RECONCILIATION.
- Author
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Steeley, James M.
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,SECURITIES trading ,FINANCIAL markets ,AUTOCORRELATION (Statistics) ,INVESTMENTS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,FINANCE ,INVESTMENT analysis - Abstract
This article discusses differences in persistence in aggregated and disaggregated stock returns in Great Britain. The author defines persistence in the returns on financial assets as a tendency for a slow (rather than instantaneous) diffusion of the impact of news on financial prices. Persistence can be detected by examining the autocorrelation structure in a financial returns series, providing a measure of the degree of association between consecutive returns. Although many techniques exist to gauge the extent of persistence in the returns of financial assets, this paper focuses on the variance ratio technique in the particular market of Great Britain.
- Published
- 1998
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30. The EM algorithm and medical studies: a historical link.
- Author
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Meng, X.L.
- Subjects
EXPECTATION-maximization algorithms ,MEDICAL research ,HISTORY of epidemics ,ALGORITHMS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,BIOMETRY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMICS ,HISTORY ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,POISSON distribution ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Anderson Gray McKendrick's 1926 paper, 'Applications of mathematics to medical problems', was the earliest reference cited in Dempster et al.'s 1977 paper that defined and popularized the EM algorithm. McKendrick's paper was prominently featured by Joseph Oscar Irwin in his 1962 inaugural address as the President of the Royal Statistical Society (in the UK), entitled 'The place of mathematics in medical and biological statistics'. The link of McKendrick's work to the EM algorithm is due to an improvement made by Irwin on a novel method McKendrick used for estimating an infection rate when the observed data do not distinguish between those individuals who are not susceptible to the infection and those who are susceptible, but do not develop symptoms. This article examines this link, along the way illustrating the central ideas underlying the EM algorithm as well as its properties; the examination also suggests a profiling strategy for speeding up EM, which may be worthy of general investigation. McKendrick's data on an epidemic of cholera are used for illustration and to compare EM with Irwin's method as well as the Newton-Raphson algorithm. Issues beyond computation are also discussed whenever appropriate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Changes in the relationship between short‐term interest rate, inflation and growth: evidence from the UK, 1820–2014.
- Author
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Bataa, Erdenebat, Vivian, Andrew, and Wohar, Mark
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,MONETARY policy ,ANALYSIS of variance ,DYNAMICAL systems ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper examines the dynamic relationship between interest rates, inflation and economic growth using a long dataset for the UK. The approach adopted enables us to identify structural breaks in the dynamic system (vector autoregression (VAR)). We find interest rates respond much more strongly to growth and inflation over recent decades, and forecast error variance decomposition analysis indicates there is increasing interconnectedness between the variables in recent years. Economic policymakers need to carefully monitor the linkages between these variables and be prepared to adjust their monetary policy tools when faced with structural changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Burnout within forensic psychiatric nursing: Its relationship with ward environment and effective clinical supervision?
- Author
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Berry, Suzanne and Robertson, Noelle
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,ANALYSIS of variance ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FORENSIC psychiatry ,HEALTH facilities ,HOSPITAL wards ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,FORENSIC nursing ,DATA analysis ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,CLINICAL supervision ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Accessible summary: What is known about this subject?: Burnout is a prominent issue in psychiatric nursing and associated with significant adverse consequences for staff, service users and at an organizational level.Exploration of the extent and predictors of burnout in secure settings has received little research attention. It is not fully understood why prevalence rates of burnout in forensic settings are not elevated in comparison to other settings, despite the presence of known risk‐related correlates. What this paper adds to existing knowledge?: In contrast to previous research, findings suggest that clinical supervision may not be an effective, stand‐alone intervention to support staff experiencing burnout. Thus, the current focus on clinical supervision to mitigate burnout may be insufficient in forensic services.The ward environment (specifically how safe staff feel, how therapeutic the ward feels and how well service users relate to one another) was found to be more important than clinical supervision in terms of burnout for forensic psychiatric nursing staff. What are the implications for practice?: Policies regarding staff health and well‐being should be developed with due consideration given to the association between burnout and the working environment.It should not be assumed that clinical supervision is sufficient to mitigate burnout in practice. Further research assessing all types of support and the ward environment is needed to gain a better understanding of its relationship to burnout. Introduction: Despite extensive research examining burnout in psychiatric nursing staff, literature exploring key predictors of burnout in secure psychiatric settings has been relatively neglected. Research has yet to explore burnout in these settings by adopting previously identified predictors such as support or the ward environment. Aim: The current study aimed to reduce this gap by exploring burnout, the perceived effectiveness of clinical supervision and ward environment. Method: In 2014, nursing staff working in a medium secure forensic psychiatric unit in the United Kingdom (N = 137) provided demographic information and completed the measures assessing: Burnout, clinical supervision and the ward environment. Results: Approximately 10% of nursing staff could be classed as "burnt‐out". The main predictors of burnout were age and ward environment. Clinical supervision had minimal association with burnout. Discussion: The current study sheds doubt on clinical supervision as a potential intervention for burnout and results appear comparable to research within other settings. The implications of the ward environment, supervision and burnout are discussed herein. Implication for Practice: Interventions may need to focus on a positive ward environment (including patient cohesion, experienced safety and enhancing the therapeutic atmosphere). Organizations should support younger nursing staff as they appear particularly vulnerable to burnout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. University student attitudes to prosocial bystander behaviours.
- Author
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Hennelly, Sarah E., Hussain, Sofia, Hale, Tristan, Cadle, Martha, Brooke, Joanne, and Davies, Emma
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PUBLIC health laws ,RACISM ,SEX crimes ,SEXUAL harassment ,SOCIAL skills ,STUDENT attitudes ,SURVEYS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,PSYCHOLOGY of crime victims ,AFFINITY groups ,SOCIAL support ,THEMATIC analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: Half of British university students experience assault and harassment behaviours; few report them. Bystander intervention training has been recommended as a means of reducing these behaviours, but there is little evidence about their potential effectiveness in UK contexts. The purpose of this paper is to understand UK students' attitudes towards reporting and intervening in sexual assault, harassment and hate crimes. Design/methodology/approach: A mixed methods cross-sectional survey (n=201; 75.6 per cent women) was conducted in one British university. Open text data were analysed using thematic analysis. Findings: Students considered harassment and assault unacceptable, and were confident to intervene in and likely to report incidents. However, fear of backlash was a barrier to intervening and reporting, and they felt that victims should decide whether to report incidents. Students perceived perpetrators as being ignorant about what constitutes consent, harassment and assault. They identified a need for university community education about this and how to report incidents and support peers. Research limitations/implications: This cross-sectional survey was conducted at one UK University. The data might not reflect other students' attitudes, and may be subject to response bias. University community bystander training should be acceptable, report and support systems might be utilised by students. This may have potential to reduce prevalence and increase reporting. Practical implications: University community bystander training should be acceptable, report and support systems might be utilised by students. This may have potential to reduce prevalence and increase reporting. Originality/value: This is the first study to investigate UK student attitudes to prosocial bystander behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The impact of quantitative research in social work.
- Author
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Sheppard, Michael
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,HEALTH ,INTERVIEWING ,SERIAL publications ,SOCIAL case work ,SOCIAL work research ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,QUANTITATIVE research ,CITATION analysis - Abstract
The importance of quantitative research in the social sciences generally and social work specifically has been highlighted in recent years, in both an international and a British context. Consensus opinion in the UK is that quantitative work is the 'poor relation' in social work research, leading to a number of initiatives. However, Sharland's UK work involves interviews with academics, representing consensus opinion. We have little independent measures of their accuracy. This paper is the first to focus on the academic impact of quantitative research in social work developing measurable outcomes. It focuses on three leading British-based generic journals over a 10-year period, encapsulating 1490 original articles. Impact is measured through three indices: Google Scholar and Web of Science Citations, and downloads. These provide measures of 'revealed preference' in relation to individual scholars' impact (though to use them for a particular methodology is novel), whose particular qualities, strengths and limitations are noted. Contrary to received opinion of quantitative work as the 'poor relation' of social work research, findings show that it is not significantly disadvantaged relative to qualitative work in its 'reach' as measured by citations and downloads. The implications of this, including caveats and nuances, are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Improving compliance with central venous catheter care bundles using electronic records.
- Author
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Hermon, Andrew, Pain, Terina, Beckett, Penelope, Jerrett, Heather, Llewellyn, Nicola, Lawrence, Paul, and Szakmany, Tamas
- Subjects
PREVENTION of bloodborne infections ,ANALYSIS of variance ,BLOODBORNE infections ,CLINICAL medicine ,LEGAL compliance ,DOCUMENTATION ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,INTENSIVE care nursing ,INTENSIVE care units ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENTS ,PROFESSIONS ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,PUBLIC hospitals ,QUALITY assurance ,REGRESSION analysis ,DISEASE incidence ,CENTRAL venous catheters ,DATA analysis software ,ELECTRONIC health records ,VASCULAR catheters ,SAFETY ,CATHETER-related infections ,INFECTION prevention - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background Health care associated infections are a major contributor to avoidable harm experienced by patients in modern health care settings. Recent reports suggest that electronic checklists for the documentation of a central line bundle may significantly enhance documented process compliance and help to reduce catheter-related bloodstream infection rates. Aims This paper describes the use of our electronic tool to monitor and feedback process compliance in conjunction of introducing bespoke central line insertion packs to tackle catheter-related bloodstream infections in our intensive care unit in a medium-sized district general hospital. Design and methods Continuous quality improvement programme with 'Plan-Do-Study-Act' cycles was implemented. The central venous catheter insertion and maintenance bundle was rolled out in 2007. To monitor compliance with the bundle elements, an electronic tool was designed as part of our bedside Clinical Information System. From 2009, regular quarterly feedback was provided on the number of central venous catheter lines inserted, compliance with the insertion and maintenance bundle and catheter-related bloodstream infection rate using the data collected through the Clinical Information System. We have also introduced dedicated line insertion trolleys and factory-prepared insertion packs. We used segmented regression analysis to assess the changes in the catheter-related bloodstream infection rate before and after implementation of the central venous catheter bundle. Results Bundle compliance increased during the implementation period and reached over 95% within 6 months. We observed a significant reduction in the catheter-related bloodstream infection rate from 15·6/1000 days to 0·4/1000 days. Regression analysis showed that only the compliance had significant effect on the number and prevalence of catheter-related bloodstream infections. Conclusion/Implications Implementation of evidence-based care bundles reinforced by real-time feedback on the performance of caregivers can significantly reduce the rate of catheter-related bloodstream infection in the intensive care unit. Ensuring that change processes are seamlessly integrated in the workflow with minimal administrative burden is crucial to the quality improvement process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Feeling in control: comparing older people's experiences in different care settings.
- Author
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CALLAGHAN, LISA and TOWERS, ANN-MARIE
- Subjects
CONTROL (Psychology) ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,EXPERIENCE ,INTERVIEWING ,NURSING care facilities ,QUALITY of life ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
The promotion of choice and control for older people is a policy priority for social care services in the United Kingdom and is at the heart of recent drives to personalise services. Increasingly, we are seeing a move away from institutionalised care (e.g. in care homes) towards enablement, with more services being delivered in community-based settings. Extra care housing has been promoted as a purpose-built, community-based alternative to residential care for older people. However, whilst accounts of users' experiences in particular service types are plentiful, the use of different instrumentation and measures makes comparison between settings difficult. We combined data from four studies where participants were older people either living in care homes or extra care housing or receiving care at home. All of these studies asked participants to rate their control over daily life, using the Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit (ASCOT). This paper presents the results of an ordinal logistic regression analysis indicating that, after controlling for differences in age, ability to perform activities of daily living and self-rated health, setting had a significant effect on older people's sense of control. Residents in care homes and extra care housing report similar levels of control over daily life but consistently report feeling more in control than older people receiving care at home. Implications for policy and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Cultural responses to pain in UK children of primary school age: A mixed-methods study.
- Author
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Azize, Pary M., Endacott, Ruth, Cattani, Allegra, and Humphreys, Ann
- Subjects
PAIN measurement ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CONTENT analysis ,CULTURE ,DRAWING ,FOCUS groups ,LANGUAGE & languages ,RESEARCH methodology ,PAIN in children ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,U-statistics ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Pain-measurement tools are often criticized for not addressing the influence of culture and ethnicity on pain. This study examined how children who speak English as a primary or additional language discuss pain. Two methods were used in six focus group interviews with 34 children aged 4-7 years: (i) use of drawings from the Pediatric Pain Inventory to capture the language used by children to describe pain; and (ii) observation of the children's placing of pain drawings on red/amber/green paper to denote perceived severity of pain. The findings demonstrated that children with English as an additional language used less elaborate language when talking about pain, but tended to talk about the pictures prior to deciding where they should be placed. For these children, there was a positive significant relationship between language, age, and length of stay in the UK. The children's placement of pain drawings varied according to language background, sex, and age. The findings emphasize the need for sufficient time to assess pain adequately in children who do not speak English as a first language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Not the End of the World: The Effects of Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) on Irrational Beliefs in Elite Soccer Academy Athletes.
- Author
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Turner, Martin J., Slater, Matt J., and Barker, Jamie B.
- Subjects
ATHLETIC ability & psychology ,COGNITIVE therapy ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,CLINICAL trials ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SOCCER ,SPORTS psychology ,STATISTICS ,ADULT education workshops ,DATA analysis ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,ELITE athletes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Research applying rational-emotive behavior therapy (REBT) with athletes is sparse and findings are equivocal. REBT can be applied using education workshops, but previous studies in sport have not assessed changes in irrational beliefs following REBT. This paper reports the effects of a single REBT education workshop on irrational beliefs in elite soccer academy athletes from pretest to posttest. Statistical analyses indicate temporary reductions in irrational beliefs following the workshop. Results are discussed with reference to mechanisms of change, study limitations, workshop reflections, and recommendations for developing REBT workshops. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. How Places Influence Crime: The Impact of Surrounding Areas on Neighbourhood Burglary Rates in a British City.
- Author
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Hirschfield, Alex, Birkin, Mark, Brunsdon, Chris, Malleson, Nicolas, and Newton, Andrew
- Subjects
BURGLARY ,CITIES & towns ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CRIME prevention ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CRIME ,SOCIAL conditions in Great Britain, 1945- ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
Burglary prevalence within neighbourhoods is well understood but the risk from bordering areas is under-theorised and under-researched. If it were possible to fix a neighbourhood’s location but substitute its surrounding areas, one might expect to see some influence on its crime rate. However, by treating surrounding areas as independent observations, ecological studies assume that identical neighbourhoods with markedly different surroundings are equivalent. If not, knowing the impact of different peripheries would have significance for crime prevention, land use planning and other policy domains. This paper tests whether knowledge of the demographic make-up of surrounding areas can improve on the prediction of a neighbourhood’s burglary rate based solely on its internal socio-demographics. Results identify significant between-area effects with certain types of periphery exerting stronger influences than others. The advantages and drawbacks of the spatial error and predictor lag model used in the analysis are discussed and areas for further research defined. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
40. Hybrid Evaluation of a Lifestyle Change Program to Prevent the Development of Type 2 Diabetes Among Individuals With Prediabetes: Intended and Observed Changes in Intervening Mechanisms.
- Author
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Huttunen-Lenz, Maija, Hansen, Sylvia, Raben, Anne, Westerterp-Plantenga, Margriet, Adam, Tanja, Macdonald, Ian, Stratton, Gareth, Swindell, Nils, Martinez, J. Alfredo, Navas-Carretero, Santiago, Handjieva-Darlenska, Teodora, Handjiev, Svetoslav, Poppitt, Sally D., Silvestre, Marta P., Larsen, Thomas Meinert, Vestentoft, Pia Siig, Fogelholm, Mikael, Jalo, Elli, Brand-Miller, Jennie, and Muirhead, Roslyn
- Subjects
PREDIABETIC state ,BEHAVIOR modification ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-efficacy ,HEALTH status indicators ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,BEHAVIOR ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,SURVEYS ,HEALTH behavior ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,ANALYSIS of variance ,RESEARCH methodology ,FOOD habits ,GROUP process ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Background: Lifestyle interventions can prevent type 2 diabetes (T2D) by successfully inducing behavioral changes (eg, avoiding physical inactivity and sedentariness, increasing physical activity and/or healthy eating) that reduce body weight and normalize metabolic levels (eg, HbA1c). For interventions to be successful, it is important to influence "behavioral mechanisms" such as self-efficacy, which motivate behavioral changes. Theory-based expectations of how self-efficacy, chronic stress, and mood changed over time were investigated through a group-based behavior change intervention (PREMIT). At 8 intervention sites, PREMIT was offered by trained primary care providers in 18 group-sessions over a period of 36 months, divided into 4 intervention phases. Adherence to the intervention protocol was assessed. Method: Participants (n = 962) with overweight and prediabetes who had achieved ≥8% weight loss during a diet reduction period and completed the intervention were categorized into 3 groups: infrequent, frequent, or very frequent group sessions attendance. The interactions between participation in the group sessions and changes in self-efficacy, stress, and mood were multivariate tested. Intervention sites were regularly asked where and how they deviated from the intervention protocol. Results: There was no increase in the participants' self-efficacy in any group. However, the level of self-efficacy was maintained among those who attended the group sessions frequently, while it decreased in the other groups. For all participants, chronic stress and the frequency of attending group sessions were inversely related. Significant differences in mood were found for all groups. All intervention centers reported specific activities, additional to intervention protocol, to promote participation in the group sessions. Conclusions: The results suggest that the behavioral changes sought by trained primary care providers are related to attendance frequency and follow complex trajectories. The findings also suggest that group-based interventions in naturalistic primary care settings aimed at preventing T2D require formats and strategies that encourage participants to attend group sessions regularly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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41. Measuring relational wellbeing: construct validity in pre-COVIDEra UK; generalizability across COVID-lockdown-Era India, Greece, and UK.
- Author
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Gaines Jr., Stanley O., Otermans, Pauldy, Spanoudaki, Maria, Aditya, Dev, and Chirenda, Netsai
- Subjects
INDIVIDUAL differences ,WELL-being ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,CONFIRMATORY factor analysis ,TEST validity ,FACTOR analysis - Abstract
Aim: In the present studies, we examine the construct validity and criterionrelated validity of a previously unpublished, eight-item measure of relational wellbeing. Methods: First, in two pre-COVID-Era pilot studies within the UK (n's = 207 and 146, respectively), results of exploratory factor analyses revealed that--with the possible exception of one item regarding close relationships--the items assessed individual differences along a single dimension (i.e., relational wellbeing), rather than two distinct dimensions (i.e., social connections and close relationships). Second, in an initial pre-COVID-Era main study within the UK (n = 192), results of confirmatory factor analyses provided support for the hypothesized onedimensional factor pattern, although the same problematic item from the pilot studies continued to under-perform relative to the other seven items. Findings: In a subsequent COVID-Lockdown-Era main study across India (n = 205), Greece (n = 354), and the UK (n = 390), results of confirmatory factor analyses established that--after omitting the same problematic item that had surfaced in the preceding studies--a one-dimensional factor pattern provided equally satisfactory fit for the three samples. Original value: Although we had not set out to test a priori hypotheses regarding mean similarities or differences in relational wellbeing among our COVIDLockdown-Era studies, results of an analysis of variance revealed that persons within the UK scored significantly lower in relational wellbeing than did persons in India or Greece. Limitations: As noted above, one particular item repeatedly performed poorly in factor analyses; this item ideally should be dropped from the relational wellbeing scale in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Evaluating a communications campaign to reduce blood clots.
- Author
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Brookes, Keely, Peters, Jeremy, and Limbert, Caroline
- Subjects
PERSONNEL management ,THROMBOEMBOLISM risk factors ,VEIN diseases ,ANALYSIS of variance ,LEGAL compliance ,STATISTICAL correlation ,HOSPITALS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL quality control ,PROFESSIONS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RISK assessment ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,HOSPITAL observation units ,SEMANTIC differential scale ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Purpose - "VTE Assess Prevent" is a unique communications campaign designed to educate and remind all front-line staff to risk assess inpatients for venous thromboembolism (VTE) (blood clots) and to provide those at risk with the recommended preventative treatment. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the VTE communications campaign from the perspective of the front line staff at a UK hospital. Design/methodology/approach - A questionnaire implementing both qualitative and quantitative methods was made available to all relevant frontline staff at the hospital via online and paper copies (n = 319). Findings - Overall positive attitudes towards the design and content of the campaign materials were reported. The campaign had a considerable impact on staff awareness of the importance of risk assessing for VTE and the extent to which risk assessments were carried out. High levels of reported behaviour change were reported as a consequence of the campaign. Recommendations for future communication campaigns included making the communication materials more memorable and enhancing the sense of control that people have over the procedure. Also, improving normative and outcome beliefs, running the communications campaign alongside a programme of education and including monitoring and feedback of performance were recommended. Originality/value - Reducing the number of deaths attributable to hospital acquired VTE is a clinical priority within the health services in many countries. The findings from this study highlight the role of the VTE campaign in achieving this goal, provide an insight into the key components of an effective communication campaign and identify recommendations for future campaigns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Prison organisational climate: exploring the impact of climate on emotional well being.
- Author
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Worthington, Rachel
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CORPORATE culture ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,PERSONAL space ,PSYCHOLOGY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,THEORY ,DATA analysis ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,WELL-being ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Purpose – This paper aims to describe research which was undertaken exploring organisational climate within a prison setting and the potential directional affects of work and home. The purpose of the research was to develop a conceptual framework of the impact of climate on social and emotional functioning. Design/methodology/approach – Using the competing values framework 149 prison staff completed a questionnaire designed to explore the interactional effects of boundary theory, organisational climate and well being. Findings – It was found that all staff placed emphasis on the control quadrant of the organisational climate. In addition, the data revealed a moderately curvilinear relationship between length of service and climate engagement on each of the quadrants. These results parallel other research in relation to attitude change. The desire for higher integration was associated with an increased impact on work/home life and a desire for, and achievement of, segmentation does not directly impact on subjective well being. The research concluded that viewing integration and segmentation along a continuum in relation to the prison service role is too simplistic. Rather, these should be viewed in a more complex way and a model for this is proposed. The findings also indicate that employees with high identity consistency (integration) also had a more engaged experience of the prison climate whereas employees with lower identity consistency (segmentation) were less engaged. Research limitations/implications – There are several implications of the research. Firstly, further research is required to explore the potential impact of attempting to change a prison climate in terms of understanding why certain climate quadrants may be preferred by staff in different roles. The findings indicate that where certain quadrant preferences occur these may be functional to prison safety and alteration of these should be considered carefully. The research also indicated that current theories of boundary management may have some applicability but that within a prison setting these are complex and influenced by both internal organizational factors and those within the wider community. Further research into the concept of "dirty work" and the impact this may have on climate would be of benefit. Originality/value – This is the first research to explore the role of organizational climate within a prison setting and to consider factors which are specific to a prison environment which may influence the organizational climate. This paper is of value to those who are interested in prison settings and how the environment can influence employee experiences of working in a prison and how identity consistence can influence experiences of work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Health professionals' beliefs about medication for bipolar disorder.
- Author
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Cooke, Jennifer, Bowskill, Richard, Clatworthy, Jane, LeSeve, Patrick, Rank, Tim, Parham, Rhian, and Horne, Rob
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,DRUGS ,HEALTH care teams ,BIPOLAR disorder ,MEDICAL personnel ,MENTAL health personnel ,PATIENT compliance ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this paper is to compare beliefs about medication prescribed for bipolar disorder across professional groups within Community Mental Health Teams (CMHTs) -- psychiatric nurses, psychiatrists, support workers, social workers, and occupational therapists -- who each receive different training. Design/methodology/approach -- Participants (n 1/4 138) completed an adapted version of the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire. ANOVAs with Tukey's post hoc tests were used to compare beliefs across professional groups. Findings -- Beliefs about medication differed across professional groups, with psychiatrists believing most strongly that medication is necessary in the treatment of bipolar disorder (p , 0.05) and reporting the lowest concern about its adverse effects (p , 0.05). Psychiatrists and social workers were significantly more likely to believe that patients take less than instructed than occupational therapists, nurses and support workers (p , 0.05). Practical implications -- The differences in perceptions of medication across professional groups may reflect differences in training, with the role of medication traditionally being "downplayed" on some training courses. This has implications for patient adherence, as patients' beliefs about medication are likely to be influenced by those of their key workers. This is particularly relevant in terms of "New Ways of Working" where patients are likely to see psychiatrists less often. Originality/value -- This original research provides evidence to support the provision of training about medications and adherence in bipolar disorder for CMHT workers, who may not have had exposure to such training as part of their primary qualification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Risperidone Long-acting Injection (RLAI) - real world outcomes from the United Kingdom high-secure hospitals.
- Author
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Gibbon, Simon, Silva, Edward, Kaler, Rupinder, Qurashi, Inti, Das, Mrigendra, Patrick, Jon, Gahir, Manjit, Gray, Douglas, Ramachandran, Lakshmanan, and Maden, Anthony
- Subjects
MENTAL illness drug therapy ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CONTROLLED release preparations ,FORENSIC psychiatry ,INTRAMUSCULAR injections ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,RISPERIDONE ,CRIMINALS with mental illness ,CROSS-sectional method ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose - High-secure hospital patients often have complex presentations that are marked by co-morbidity, violence, histories of poor concordance with oral medication, and treatment resistance. The ability to give a long-acting medication with a low propensity for extra pyramidal side effects is of potential value to clinicians treating these patients. Risperidone Long-acting Injection (RLAI) is the first long-acting atypical antipsychotic medication and may be potentially useful in this population. This paper aims to investigate this issue.Design/methodology/approach - This was a retrospective, naturalistic study to investigate the use and effectiveness, using hard outcome measures, of RLAI in the four UK high-secure psychiatric hospitals. Hospital pharmacy databases at Ashworth, Broadmoor, Carstairs and Rampton hospitals were used to identify all patients who had been prescribed RLAI. Anonymised data were then obtained from the pharmacy databases and case notes which were then pooled.Findings - A total of 159 patients were prescribed RLAI, most of whom had schizophrenia. The mean length of treatment with RLAI was 65 weeks (range two to 260 weeks) and the mean maximum dose was 43.2mg every two weeks (range 25-75mg every two weeks). No serious adverse effects were reported. In total, 42 per cent (67) patients responded to RLAI in as much as that they either remained on it in the long-term or were discharged to conditions of lower security whilst taking it. As there was no control group, it is not possible to determine if RLAI was a significant factor in such discharges to conditions of lower security. Of those patients who failed to respond to RLAI, 44 per cent were subsequently treated with clozapine.Originality/value - This pragmatic multi-centre study of a small but complex patient group demonstrated that RLAI was effective in 42 per cent of patients and was well-tolerated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Here today, gone tomorrow? The ambivalent ethics of contingency social work.
- Author
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Carey, Malcolm
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,EMPLOYEE loyalty ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,EMPLOYMENT agencies ,INTERVIEWING ,JOB descriptions ,LABOR mobility ,RESEARCH methodology ,PERSONNEL management ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIAL case work ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL work research ,SOCIAL workers ,TEMPORARY employment ,TEAMS in the workplace ,QUALITATIVE research ,JOB performance ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PEER relations ,CLIENT relations ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
In the UK the number of state social workers supplied by independent employment agencies has increased significantly since the mid-1990s. Although state sectors of welfare such as education and health have always relied upon a steady supply of locum staff, there is no such tradition within social work. This paper explores some of the ethical tensions that have become apparent with the expansion of contingency social work. Questions remain about the ‘opportunity cost’ of agency social work, as well as subsequent problems of recruitment, access to training, collegiate relations and any impact upon service users. The paper notes tensions that persist between a push for more flexible labour, the ethics of practitioners and the needs of service users. Recent policy responses which aim to push responsibility back to local authorities and social work managers are also questioned. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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47. A final clinical examination using a sequential design to improve cost-effectiveness.
- Author
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Cookson, John, Crossley, Jim, Fagan, Gay, McKendree, Jean, and Mohsen, Amr
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements -- Evaluation ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COMPUTER software ,STATISTICAL correlation ,COST effectiveness ,MEDICAL students ,PROBABILITY theory ,REGRESSION analysis ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Medical Education 2011:: 741-747 Good examinations have a number of characteristics, including validity, reliable scores, educational impact, practicability and acceptability. Scores from the objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) are more reliable than the single long case examination, but concerns about its validity have led to modifications and the development of other models, such as the mini-clinical evaluation exercise (mini-CEX) and the objective structured long examination record (OSLER). These retain some of the characteristics of the long case, but feature repeated encounters and more structure. Nevertheless, the practical considerations and costs associated with mounting large-scale examinations remain significant. The lack of metrics handicaps progress. This paper reports a system whereby a sequential design concentrates limited resources where they are most needed in order to maintain the reliability of scores and practicability at the pass/fail interface. We analysed data pertaining to the final examination administered in 2009. In the complete final examination, candidates see eight real patients (the OSLER) and encounter 12 OSCE stations. Candidates whose performance is judged as entirely satisfactory after the first four patients and six OSCE stations are not examined further. The others - about a third of candidates - see the remaining patients and stations and are judged on the complete examination. Reliability was calculated from the scores of all candidates on the first part of the examination using generalisability theory and practicability in terms of financial resources. The functioning of the sequential system was assessed by the ability of the first part of the examination to predict the final result for the cohort. Generalisability for the OSLER was 0.63 after four patients and 0.77 after eight patients. The OSCE was less reliable (0.38 after six stations and 0.55 after 12). There was only a weak correlation between the OSLER and the OSCE. The first stage was highly predictive of the results of the second stage. Savings facilitated by the sequential design amounted to approximately GBP30 000. The overall utility of examinations involves compromise. The system described provides good perceived validity with reasonably reliable scores; a sequential design can concentrate resources where they are most needed and still allow wide sampling of tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. 'Stroppy' or 'confident'? Do carers and professionals view the impact of transition support on young people differently?
- Author
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Kaehne, Axel and Beyer, Stephen
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,BEHAVIOR modification ,CAREGIVERS ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL personnel ,MENTAL health personnel ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,TEACHERS ,TEACHER attitudes ,QUALITATIVE research ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,TRANSITIONAL programs (Education) ,GRADUATES ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The study examined the effects of transition employment support to two cohorts of young people who were in their last year in school or college in 2005/2006 and 2006/ 2007. This paper reports the views of carers, teachers and support workers of the impact this additional support made to the young people. Analysis of the data reveals a difference between the views of carers and those of professionals. The paper argues that these differences may reflect different understandings of the aim and purpose of transition support and which may make it difficult to achieve a smooth transition for all stakeholders when not taken into account. This may have implications for how to structure and deliver transition support, some of which are being outlined in the discussion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Personalisation: Perceptions of the Role of Social Work in a World of Brokers and Budgets.
- Author
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Leece, Janet and Leece, David
- Subjects
PUBLIC welfare ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,AUTOMATIC data collection systems ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,BUDGET ,CAREGIVERS ,DECISION making ,FAMILIES ,GROUNDED theory ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTERNET ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,NATIONAL health services ,PATIENTS ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,POWER (Social sciences) ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL networks ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL workers ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,AT-risk people ,HUMAN research subjects ,PATIENT selection ,PATIENT-centered care - Abstract
There are growing numbers of people using personalised support and it has been argued that this system of social welfare requires a very different workforce, with a re-evaluation of the role of social work. This paper reports empirical research that explores the perceptions of sixty-six disabled people, carers and elders of the role social workers should perform in a personalised world. The study used a grounded theory approach, obtaining data from a thread posted on eighteen internet forums. This novel methodology allowed access to ‘hard to reach’ groups and encouraged participation by individuals whose contributions may be inhibited by more traditional research methods. The analysis revealed that notions of power and autonomy were fundamental in understanding respondents' views of social work with concerns raised about the power of social workers and statutory organisations. These findings have implications for the recommendations made by the Social Work Task Force in 2009 for the reform of social work that argues for social work to have a greater professional status and potentially more power in the support relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Implementing a Therapeutic Team Parenting Approach to Fostering: The Experiences of One Independent Foster-Care Agency.
- Author
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Staines, Jo, Farmer, Elaine, and Selwyn, Julie
- Subjects
FOSTER home care ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHILD abuse ,FAMILIES ,FOSTER children ,FOSTER parents ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PARENTING ,SOCIAL workers ,TEAMS in the workplace ,SOCIAL support ,REPEATED measures design ,PATIENTS' families - Abstract
This paper reports some of the findings from a study (Farmer et al., 2007), commissioned by an independent foster-care agency (IFA), to examine the support services offered to foster-carers and the young people in their care. In particular, this paper documents the use of a ‘team parenting’ approach within a ‘therapeutic’ fostering environment. Whilst there were some issues regarding the comprehensive assessments and the provision of therapy, foster-carers were positive about the support provided both to themselves and directly to the young people within the team parenting approach. On the other hand, communication and inter-agency working between the IFA and the local authority could be problematic, particularly in relation to funding decisions, which could limit the effectiveness of the team parenting approach. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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