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Community Connectedness and Long-Term Care in Late Life: A Narrative Analysis of Successful Aging in a Small TownYamasaki, Jill 2009 December 1900 (has links)
This dissertation is a narrative inquiry of the ways in which cultural values,
norms, and expectations shape the aging experience of elderly adults living
independently in Kasson, a small rural town in southeastern Minnesota, and within
Prairie Meadows, Kasson's residential assisted living facility. Despite significant
evidence of the reciprocal relationship between community connectedness, successful
aging, and healthy communities, we know relatively little about the ways in which
contextual meanings of old age influence long-term care and perceptions of well-being
in late life. I therefore utilized a variety of interpretive methods, including participant
observation, textual analysis, in-depth interviews, and photovoice, to complement and
enlarge existing research. Ultimately, I engaged crystallization methodology to
co-construct with my participants a multivocal, multigenre text of layered accounts,
photographs, stories, and personal reflections. My research design and presentation
highlight the inherent possibilities of participatory methods, aesthetic ways of knowing,
and asset-based community development for influencing policy and practice at individual, community, and societal levels with typically disenfranchised populations in
future communication scholarship.
My narrative analysis uncovered three overarching narratives - the "small town"
narrative, the "aging in place" narrative, and the "old age" narrative - that guide
communicative practices within and between Kasson and Prairie Meadows. Overall,
elderly adults in these communities negotiate community connectedness in late life by
drawing from or re-storying each of the three narratives. First, they co-construct personal
and relational identities through social interactions and shared understandings (e.g., civic
engagement, church membership, neighborliness, collective history) of what it means to
live in a small town. Second, they face uncertainty (e.g., health and dependency issues)
by turning to the past to make sense of the present and future. Third, they embrace old
age through membership in age-specific contexts (e.g., Red Hats, senior center, Prairie
Meadows) while resisting it in others (e.g., tensions between independence, isolation,
and communal life). In total, their stories illuminate the ways in which personal
meanings and cultural ideologies support and constrain interactions and decisions in late
life as individuals strive for long-term living and a meaningful, supportive place in
which to grow old.
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Connection among Long-Term Investment, Institutional Investors and Shareholding of the Boards and Directors - As Listing Companies in TaiwanWen, Tuan-Hsien 28 August 2003 (has links)
none
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CONTROLS FOR MONITORING THE DETERIORATION OF STORED BLOOD SAMPLES IN THE JAPAN MULTI-INSTITUTIONAL COLLABORATIVE COHORT STUDY (J-MICC STUDY)NAITO, MARIKO, EGUCHI, HIDETAKA, OKADA, RIEKO, ISHIDA, YOSHIKO, NISHIO, KAZUKO, HISHIDA, ASAHI, WAKAI, KENJI, TAMAKOSHI, AKIKO, HAMAJIMA, NOBUYUKI 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Short-term and long-term reliability studies in the deregulated power systemsLi, Yishan 12 April 2006 (has links)
The electric power industry is undergoing a restructuring process. The major goals
of the change of the industry structure are to motivate competition, reduce costs and
improve the service quality for consumers. In the meantime, it is also important for the
new structure to maintain system reliability. Power system reliability is comprised of
two basic components, adequacy and security. In terms of the time frame, power system
reliability can mean short-term reliability or long-term reliability. Short-term reliability
is more a security issue while long-term reliability focuses more on the issue of
adequacy. This dissertation presents techniques to address some security issues
associated with short-term reliability and some adequacy issues related to long-term
reliability in deregulated power systems.
Short-term reliability is for operational purposes and is mainly concerned with
security. Thus the way energy is dispatched and the actions the system operator takes to
remedy an insecure system state such as transmission congestion are important to shortterm
reliability. Our studies on short-term reliability are therefore focused on these two
aspects. We first investigate the formulation of the auction-based dispatch by the law of
supply and demand. Then we develop efficient algorithms to solve the auction-based
dispatch with different types of bidding functions. Finally we propose a new Optimal
Power Flow (OPF) method based on sensitivity factors and the technique of aggregation
to manage congestion, which results from the auction-based dispatch. The algorithms
and the new OPF method proposed here are much faster and more efficient than the
conventional algorithms and methods. With regard to long-term reliability, the major issues are adequacy and its
improvement. Our research thus is focused on these two aspects. First, we develop a
probabilistic methodology to assess composite power system long-term reliability with
both adequacy and security included by using the sequential Monte Carlo simulation
method. We then investigate new ways to improve composite power system adequacy in
the long-term. Specifically, we propose to use Flexible AC Transmission Systems
(FACTS) such as Thyristor Controlled Series Capacitor (TCSC), Static Var
Compensator (SVC) and Thyristor Controlled Phase Angle Regulator (TCPAR) to
enhance reliability.
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Organizational and physical environmental correlates of bathing-related agitation in dementia special care units /Cooke, Heather A. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Simon Fraser University, 2006. / Theses (Dept. of Gerontology) / Simon Fraser University. Also issued in digital format and available on the World Wide Web.
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Factors influencing nursing home use of older African Americans, Hispanic Americans And CaucasiansCulbert, Jeana Organ. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Texas at Arlington, 2009.
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Bench marks of the status passage of elderly persons from institutionalized status to non-institutionalized statusNichols, Elizabeth Grace, January 1974 (has links)
Thesis--University of California, San Francisco. / On spine: The Status passage of elderly persons. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record.
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A study of memory, learning, and emotion /Bruton, Laurie. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of La Verne, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 184-191).
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Choral rehearsal memory techniques /Root, Rachel Lorraine. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (D. Mus. Arts)--University of Washington, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 290-299).
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Nursing home residents' and family caregivers' strategies in financing the costs of long-term care /Mikolas, Cynthia Jean. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, School of Social Service Administration, August, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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