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When your pregnancy echoes your illness: transition to motherhood with inflammatory bowel diseaseGhorayeb, J., Branney, Peter, Selinger, C.P., Madill, A. 26 March 2018 (has links)
Yes / Our aim is to provide an understanding of the experience of women with IBD who have made the transition to motherhood. Twenty-two mothers with IBD were recruited from around the UK. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and analyzed using thematic analysis. The central concept – Blurred Lines – offers a novel frame for understanding the transition to motherhood with IBD through identifying parallels between having IBD and becoming, and being, a mother. Parallels clustered into three main themes: Need for Readiness, Lifestyle Changes, and Monitoring Personal and Physical Development. Hence, women with IBD are in some ways well prepared for the challenges of motherhood even though, as a group, they tend to restrict their reproductive choices. We recommend health professionals initiate conversations about reproduction early and provide a multidisciplinary approach to pregnancy and IBD in which women have confidence that their on-going treatment will be integrated successfully with their maternity care. / Crohn’s & Colitis UK [grant number SP2013/2].
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Rewarding altruism: addressing the issue of payments for volunteers in public health initiativesSouth, J., Purcell, M.E., Branney, Peter, Gamsu, M., White, J. 16 December 2013 (has links)
No / Lay involvement in public health programmes occurs through formalised lay health worker (LHW) and
other volunteer roles. Whether such participation should be supported, or indeed rewarded, by payment
is a critical question. With reference to policy in England, UK, this paper argues how framing citizen
involvement in health only as time freely given does not account for the complexities of practice, nor
intrinsic motivations. The paper reports results on payment drawn from a study of approaches to support
lay people in public health roles, conducted in England, 2007e9. The first phase of the study comprised a
scoping review of 224 publications, three public hearings and a register of projects. Findings revealed the
diversity of approaches to payment, but also the contested nature of the topic. The second phase
investigated programme support matters in five case studies of public health projects, which were
selected primarily to reflect role types. All five projects involved volunteers, with two utilising forms of
payment to support engagement. Interviews were conducted with a sample of project staff, LHWs (paid
and unpaid), external partners and service users. Drawing on both lay and professional perspectives, the
paper explores how payment relates to social context as well as various motivations for giving, receiving
or declining financial support. The findings show that personal costs are not always absorbed, and that
there is a potential conflict between financial support, whether sessional payment or expenses, and
welfare benefits. In identifying some of the advantages and disadvantages of payment, the paper
highlights the complexity of an issue often addressed only superficially. It concludes that, in order to
support citizen involvement, fairness and value should be considered alongside pragmatic matters of
programme management; however policy conflicts need to be resolved to ensure that employment and
welfare rights are maintained. / National Institute for Health Research Service Delivery and Organisation Programme (project number 08/1716/206).
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Celebrations amongst challenges: Considering the past, present and future of the qualitative methods in psychology section of the British Psychology SocietyRiley, S., Brooks, J., Goodman, S., Cahill, S., Branney, Peter, Treharne, G.J., Sullivan, C. 22 May 2019 (has links)
Yes / This article summarises the standpoint of the Qualitative Methods in Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society regarding the current position of qualitative research in psychology in the United Kingdom. The article is in three parts. Part one documents the historical development of the section, outlining its rationale, remit, and current activities. These activities aim to champion and develop qualitative methods in psychology, supporting high quality work regardless of epistemological or ontological position. Part two considers the current context of our work, describing not only how qualitative methods are valued in the United Kingdom but also how this recognition is undermined, particularly through the operationalisation of our national research assessment (the Research Excellence Framework). We also consider the challenges that Open Science poses for qualitive researchers. Part three highlights some of the significant contributions of UK-based qualitative researchers to psychology, with a particular focus on feminist-informed research, discourse analysis, and interpretative phenomenological analysis, before pointing to future exciting possibilities based on research exploring the affordances of digital technologies and innovative synthesising across epistemologies and disciplinary boundaries.
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Victims of Stalin and Hitler: the exodus of Poles and Balts to Britain.Lane, Thomas January 2004 (has links)
No / Germany in 1945 was crammed with millions of people displaced by war, deportation, Nazi slave labour, and flight before the advance of the Red Army. Many of them, including Poles and the Baltic peoples of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, refused to return to their communist-controlled homelands. Simultaneously in Italy, the Middle East and Britain, there were more than 100,000 Polish military personnel under British command, along with their dependants. Most of these were survivors of the one and a half million Poles deported to Siberia by the Soviet security police. Based on official documents and the words of the survivors and their children, this book describes the brutal uprooting of these people, their subsequent terrible experiences in the Soviet and Nazi forced labour camps and prisons, and their ultimate settlement in Britain. Here the newcomers created communities, integrated into British life while attempting to preserve their cultures and identities, and experienced how ethnic minorities relate to the host society.
'This book is a fascinating history of the Polish and Baltic communities who arrived in the United Kingdom shortly after the Second World War. The author relies on interviews with elderly members of these communities and on documents from the Public Record Office. It was perhaps the last opportunity to obtain these important oral histories and Lane is the first British researcher to do so.' - International Affairs
'Its originality lies in the author's ability to weave personal stories into the otherwise dry facts concerning population movements. In this respect, the book becomes an inspiring social history.'
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Bradford Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project (BNLWRP). Occasional Paper No. 1. The Early History of "Non-Lethal" Weapons.Davison, N. January 2006 (has links)
Yes / This paper explores the early history of ¿non-lethal¿1 weapons development
covering the period from the 1960¿s, when several diverse weapons were first
grouped together in one category and described as ¿non-lethal¿ by law
enforcement end-users and policymakers, until 1989, just before the hugely
increased interest in the field that developed during the 1990¿s amongst both
police and military organisations. It describes the origins and emergence of
new weapons, examining this process with reference to technological
advances, wider socio-political context, legal developments, and evolution of
associated institutional structures. Developments in both the policing and
military spheres are considered as well as the interconnections between
them. Necessarily this paper focuses on events in the US2, in part because it
led the way in this field but also because sources of information on US
activities are more readily available.3.
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Bradford Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project (BNLWRP). Occasional Paper No. 3. The Contemporary Development of ¿Non-Lethal¿ Weapons.Davison, N. January 2007 (has links)
yes / This is the third in a series of Occasional Papers published by the Bradford
Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project. It addresses the contemporary
development of anti-personnel ¿non-lethal¿1 weapons, covering the period
from 2000 to 2006 inclusive2 and focusing on the research and development
programmes of the US Department of Defense and Department of Justice.
Following Occasional Paper No. 1, The Early History of "Non-Lethal"
Weapons,3 and Occasional Paper No. 2, The Development of ¿Non-Lethal¿
Weapons During the 1990¿s,4 this paper completes our analysis of the overall
development of ¿non-lethal¿ weapons from their inception up to the present
day.
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Bradford Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project (BNLWRP). Research Report No. 7.Davison, N., Lewer, N. January 2005 (has links)
yes / The length of this Bradford Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project Report No.7 again reflects
the interest related to non-lethal weapons from academics, research institutes, policy makers,
the police and the military.
A number of reports, particularly concerning the Taser electro-shock weapon, have been
published from these sectors since our last BNLWRP Report No.6 in October 2004. Some,
such as the Amnesty International (U.S. and Canada) have again raised, and stressed, the
concerns about the safety of the weapon and the number of deaths associated with its use.
Others, such as the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Human Effects Center of Excellence
(HECOE), Human Effectiveness and Risk Characterization of the Electromuscular
Incapacitation Device ¿ A Limited Analysis of the TASER. (March 2005) concluded that the
Taser was relatively safe, but that further research was needed into potential bio-effects, and
for continual development into a safer weapon. Reaction to these reports was mixed. Some
US legislators called for limitations on the use of Tasers, more accountability, and the
detailed recording of incidents in which they were used.1 Others called for a ban on their use
until more testing was carried out regarding their potentially harmful effects. A number of US
police forces stopped the use of Taser, slowed down the deployment and ordering of the
weapons, reviewed their rules of engagement and reporting, and revisited their operational
guidelines. The International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) published the Electro-
Muscular Disruption Technology (EMDT). A Nine-Step Strategy For Effective Deployment.
(April 2005) as a response to these growing concerns. Certain elements of the media,
especially The Arizona Republic2 and others, took a hostile view of what they considered the
scandal of the number of deaths and associated serious injuries caused by the Taser. Taser
International challenged allegations that their weapon was directly responsible for these
deaths and quoted reports, such as the Madison Police Department report (February 2005),
the study by McDaniel, W & Stratbucker, R & Nerheim, M & Brewer, J. Cardiac Safety of
Neuromuscular Incapacitating Defensive Devices (January 2005), and the U.K. DOMILL
Statement (March 2005) to support their view. The controversy continues.
Other than Tasers, there are still few reports of the newer non-lethal technologies actually
being deployed in operations. The exception to this is the Long Range Acoustic Device
(LRAD), which is now in widespread use in Iraq. Little additional information has appeared
regarding the `active denial¿ weapon we have described in previous reports.
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Bradford Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project (BNLWRP). Research Report No. 8.Davison, N., Lewer, N. January 2006 (has links)
yes / In the UK at present Taser electrical stun weapons can only be used by trained firearms
officers in situations where the use of firearms is also authorised. But the Association of
Chief Police Officers (ACPO) is asking for these `non-lethal¿ weapons to be made more
widely available to other police officers. If this is agreed there will be significant implications
for the use of force by police in the UK. In July 2005 the Home Office Minister, Hazel
Blears, had stated that the Taser was a dangerous weapon and not appropriate for wider use.
The rationale behind the deployment of `non-lethal¿ or `less-lethal¿ weapons, such as the
Taser, is to provide police officers with an alternative to lethal force for dangerous and lifethreatening
situations they face. Wider availability of such weapons should, it is argued,
further limit the need to resort to lethal firearms and thereby reduce incidence of serious
injury and death. Over the past few months senior police officers have issued public
statements that the Taser weapon should be made available to all officers on the beat. They
argue that because police are facing dangerous individuals on an everyday basis, the Taser is
required to protect their officers and deal with violent offenders without having to call in a
firearms unit in certain situations. A crucial point about this proposal is that it would
represent a scaling up in the `visible¿ arming of police officers in the UK. It is claimed by
opponents that such an extended use of Taser would actually result in an increase in the level
of force used by police in the UK, a concern also echoed by the Independent Police
Complaints Committee (IPCC) in the minute of their 27 April 2005 `Casework and
Investigations Committee¿ meeting.
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Statistical Predictions of Electric Load Profiles in the UK Domestic BuildingsIhbal, Abdel-Baset M.I., Rajamani, Haile S., Abd-Alhameed, Raed, Jalboub, Mohamed K. 12 February 2010 (has links)
Yes / This paper presents a method of generating realistic electricity load profile data for the UK domestic buildings. The domestic space heating and domestic hot water have been excluded in this study. The information and results of previous investigations and works that is available in public reports and statistics have been used as input data when modeling of domestic energy consumption. A questionnaire survey was conducted to find out what occupants do in different times of the day in order to get probabilistic estimates of usage of electrical household. The daily energy demand load profile of each appliance can be predicted using this method. A measured data set is also applied for comparison, and verification. Our analysis shows that the generated load profiles have a good agreement with real data. The daily load profile from individual dwelling to community can be predicted using this method.
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Participation and democracy in the twenty-first century cityPearce, Jenny V. January 2010 (has links)
No / Debates on participatory tend to be abstract, with references to experiences in Athens over 2000 years ago. This book uses recent experience in participatory innovations at the city level to explore the practice of participation. Taking examples from Latin America and the UK it argues the case for revitalizing democracy through participation.
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