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A Follow-up study of families with children labeled retardedFinley, Connie, Jernigan, Kay, Hogan, Bonnie, Rotous, Effrosini, Steffen, Daryle 01 May 1970 (has links)
The research problem undertaken was to study how effective the University of Oregon Medical School –Crippled Children’s Division Clinic is by determining how well patients followed through on Clinic recommendations. Three research hypotheses were posed for testing. (1) There is a difference between income and the following of Clinic recommendations. (2) There is a difference between educational levels of fathers and mothers and the following of Clinic recommendations. (3) There is a difference in the level of I.Q. of patients and the following of Clinic recommendations. A random sample of 100 cases was selected from the patients who had been through the Clinic prior to January, 1968. Case records were abstracted from the files of the University of Oregon Medical School –Crippled Children’s Division, prior to personal interviews in the homes with the families using a standard questionnaire. The X² was used in testing the hypotheses and the findings resulted in no statistical difference between the three variables and the criteria of following recommendations. Therefore the null hypotheses were accepted.
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Oregon Health & Science University's understanding of cultural competencyRacansky, Pamela A. 04 December 2002 (has links)
The United States population continues to increase and diversify. The
cultural composition within the United States embodies a multitude of people
from a variety of belief systems, religious backgrounds, and ethnicities.
Within current biomedical practice, many of these differences are often
marginalized, leaving populations with unsatisfactory experiences in seeking
health care. Cultural competency attempts to address those differences in
health care delivery. Many health care institutions are striving to become
more culturally competent yet there is not a common understanding of what
cultural competency means. In addition, there are many obstacles that limit
the implementation of cultural competency in health care delivery.
This thesis examines the need for cultural competency in health care,
addressing the lack of understanding between institutions regarding cultural
competency and assessing its understanding at one particular institution.
Recent research at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, Oregon
has provided new insight to the discussion of cultural competency and how
uniquely it can be defined in a single institution. Qualitative interviews were
conducted with medical students, physicians/physicians-in-training,
administrators and nurses/CMA in order to uncover how cultural competency is defined as well as the issues that are involved when delivering culturally
competent health care. By being aware of an institution's cultural
composition and understanding of cultural competency can help that
institution enact health programs and policies that have a better chance of
representing and respecting the populations they serve. / Graduation date: 2003
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GIS address-matching and transportation analysisOrrell, James D. 01 January 1990 (has links)
Geographic Information System (GIS) address-matching combined with other GIS processing offers new analytical opportunities in the area of transportation planning and analysis. Address-matching, an automated method for generating geographically-referenced (geocoded) point locations on a map from common tabular databases, can facilitate transportation analysis by providing a planning tool based on individual rather than aggregated spatial distributions more common to transportation issues.
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