• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 915
  • 781
  • 81
  • 72
  • 25
  • 24
  • 20
  • 15
  • 9
  • 9
  • 9
  • 9
  • 9
  • 9
  • 8
  • Tagged with
  • 2209
  • 562
  • 538
  • 381
  • 351
  • 328
  • 297
  • 268
  • 264
  • 259
  • 221
  • 199
  • 186
  • 185
  • 171
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
401

Navigating the change process: The experience of, and ways forward for, facility managers in the residential aged care industry

January 2005 (has links)
The residential aged care industry in Australia has been undergoing change on multiple fronts since the introduction of the Aged Care Act 1997. Some of the sources of this change have been new regulatory systems such as accreditation and certification, concerns about financial viability, problems with recruitment and retention of staff, new models of care and increasing acuity of care provided. Facility Managers of aged care homes are at the forefront of managing these changes. In spite of their central position within the industry, there has been almost no research on the general role and functions of Facility Managers and even less that focuses on their role in the management of change. Using a constructivist methodology, this study set out to address this lack of research and to develop a range of practical proposals concerning the management of change in the sector. The research questions the study sought to answer were: 1. How is the role of managing change perceived and understood within the overall role of Facility Managers? 2. How is the role of managing change approached by Facility Managers? 3. How do Facility Managers learn to manage change? 4. Do Facility Managers need to be supported in their efforts to manage change and, if so, how should that support be provided, and by whom? Data for the project came from one-to-one interviews with two groups: a randomly chosen cross-section of Facility Managers and a purposive sample of senior stakeholders within the sector. Thematic analysis was used to draw out patterns and themes in the interview transcripts, and to develop interpretations and connections to the literature. The study found that there is not a clear understanding of how the management of change fits into the role of Facility Managers, and that the management of change is an issue that is in the background of management thinking and practice in the sector. The change management aspects of the Facility Manager's role have been largely ignored or taken for granted. This can lead to stress on the individual manager as well as reducing the effectiveness of the change process. There are many ways that Facility Managers can be better supported in the management of change, and the study presents a number of proposals to help achieve this. These focus on general principles and competencies underlying the management of change, an analytical model of change management, and management development practices supporting the management of change.
402

Burden of Care: Ageing in urban China and Japan: Gender, the family and the state

Miller, Elizabeth Jill, res.cand@acu.edu.au January 2002 (has links)
This thesis examines how rapid demographic, social and economic changes are impacting on traditional care for the urban aged in China and Japan as both experience world record rates of ageing caused by greater longevity and lower birth rates. The challenge for their governments is to foster active contribution by the healthy aged to society and protection for the frail aged. China lags behind Japan in special treatment for senior citizens. The manner in which these two countries handle the ageing of their populations could provide valuable lessons for Australia in the future.
403

Lesbians' experiences of menopause

Kelly, Jennifer Mary, mikewood@deakin.edu.au January 2003 (has links)
This thesis examines the menopausal experiences of a non-clinical sample of lesbians living in Australia. Research on menopause to date has largely been conducted from a medicalised and heterosexual perspective: thus lesbians’ experiences remain unknown and invisible. Using a qualitative feminist multiple method research methodology combining content analysis and questionnaire/interview research, two hundred questionnaires were posted upon request to self-identified lesbians living in every Australian state and territory. Follow up in-depth interviews were conducted with twenty lesbians. Responses were grouped into four major themes: body image, sex and sexuality, hormone replacement therapy and health services and homophobia. The findings show that lesbians at menopause face some different and additional issues from those experienced by heterosexual midlife women. For many of the study participants, commonly discussed concerns at menopause such as weight gain and other physical signs of ageing, decreased fertility, lack of libido, sexual difficulties and hormone replacement therapy were of little relevance and importance. Lesbians in this study frequently raised other issues such as the universal assumption of heterosexuality and homophobia experienced when interacting with health professionals, which led to less than satisfactory health care and reinforced feelings of invisibility. In the Conclusion I argue that the study participants' views and experiences challenge negative, stereotypical views of both lesbians and menopause. The data thus add a new dimension to the presently narrow, heterosexist and medicalised view of women at midlife and contribute new knowledge to the body of literature on menopause. This thesis is a first important step in recording the experiences of lesbians regarding menopause in Australia. I include recommendations for further research in the area of lesbian health and improved practice, and discuss old and new obstacles lesbians face in a heteropatriarchal society in which lesbians continue to be invisible.
404

中韓兩國老人福利政策之比較研究 / A Comparative Study of Welfare Policy for the Aged in R.O.C. and R.O.K.

金場健, Kim, Chang Geon Unknown Date (has links)
老年期是人生歷程中的最後一個階段,不但收入減少、開支增多,而且精 神及物質生活皆易成問題。以往在農業社會中,社會變遷遲緩,尚傳統, 重經驗,對老人非常敬重,所以,當時老年人尚沒有太多的問題。可是, 到了今日由於工商業的高度發展與社會各層次的顯著變遷,不僅老年人口 快速的增加,而且其生活素質亦受影響,以致老人問題已演變為世界各國 普遍的問題。中韓兩國近四十年來的社會變遷是相當急遽的,都市化和工 業化的結果使兩國社會中的老人開始體驗地位上的變遷。雖然,老年人在 社會上所享有的地位仍然崇高,而且家庭也還未完全放棄對老年人的照顧 ,但是老年人受社會變遷衝擊的情形已逐漸明顯。因此,中韓兩國老人問 題的嚴重性亦將日益明顯。而欲改善此現象所帶來的問題,並協助老人能 成功地調適其晚年生活,一個追求社會正義與經濟利益均衡發展的老人福 利政策之推動與落實,實屬當務之急。中韓兩國具有相類似的社會條件和 情況以及相同的文化,因此在推行老人福利政策的過程上,若全盤接受西 方國家,似乎不妥,倒是中韓兩國相互參照比較乃最為可行。正因如此, 中韓兩國老人福利政策之比較實在比與其他任何國家的比較更具意義。故 本研究是藉著分析、比較兩國老人福利政策之過去歷史與發展過程及目前 實施的現況,發掘其優點與缺點,並且試著尋覓較合適的未來老人福利政 策之方向。本篇論文共分六章,茲將各章要點分述如下:第一章:緒論, 略述本文研究的目的、研究方法及其範圍。第二章:老人福利政策的理論 基礎,探討對老人問題的基本認識、老人福利政策的意義與基本原則。第 三章:中華民國的老人福利政策,先說明老人福利政策的歷史與其發展過 程,觀察並分析中華民國現行老人福利政策的現況,並找出問題及提示之 。第四章:韓國的老人福利政策,先說明老人福利政策的歷史與其發展過 程,觀察並分析韓國現行老人福利政策的現況,並找出問題,提示之。第 五章:針對第三、四章所分析提示之中韓兩國老人福利政策的現況及問題 ,相互參酌比較,並探討未來老人福利政策的改善方向。第六章:結論及 建義。
405

Relationships between postural control system impairments and disabilities

Allison, Leslie K. 20 October 1997 (has links)
Graduation date: 1998
406

Possible selves and exercise maintenance among middle-aged women

Blais, Robin E. 11 December 1997 (has links)
Given the high risk of relapse during the first year of exercise involvement, it is important to determine the processes of self-motivation which enable novice exercisers to become long-term maintainers. This study was designed to extend previous Stages of Change (Prochaska & DiClemente, 1983) research by comparing the Possible Selves (Markus & Nurius, 1986) of individuals at different points within the Maintenance stage of exercise. Participants consisted of female university employees, spouses, and dependents age 35-59 years who volunteered for the study. Participants completed the Stage of Exercise Scale (SOES; Cardinal, 1995) and a self-administered form of the Possible Selves Inventory (Cross & Markus, 1991) which was adapted to address the exercise domain. Women classified by the SOES as being in the Maintenance stage of exercise V=92) were assigned to one of three groups based on the duration of their exercise maintenance (6 months-5 years, 6-10 years, and 11-20 years). The three maintenance groups were compared with regard to the number and category of open-ended and exercise-related possible selves and the self-efficacy and outcome expectancy associated with three focused selves (most important, exercise-related, and exercise-specific). The results indicated that the three maintenance groups did not differ significantly in their possible selves. These findings provide support for the current conceptualization of the Stages of Change Model (Prochaska & Di Clemente, 1983) and suggest that differences between novice and expert maintainers may be behavioral, rather than cognitive, in nature. Several implications for intervention design and suggestions for future research are discussed. / Graduation date: 1998
407

Task and support surface constraints on the coordination and control of posture in older adults

Clark, Sean 20 January 1998 (has links)
Although research evidence clearly indicates support surface properties are a major factor contributing to fall risk among the elderly, investigations examining the influence of variations in surface conditions on the postural control of older adults during task performance have been limited. Thus, the primary purpose of the present studies was to determine whether the coordination and control of body kinematics exhibited by older adults during upright leaning (i.e., leaning forward through the region of stability) and gait would be different across variations in support surface properties. Secondary objectives of these studies included, examining if coordination and control measures of body kinematics differed as a function of the participants' level of postural stability and/or repeated exposure to the support surface properties. Three support surface conditions were selected for inclusion based on resistance properties to applied forces (i.e., normal and shear): rigid, high friction; compliant; and rigid, low friction. For both tasks performed, body kinematics for trials 1-3 (T1) and 10-12 (T2) from 12 completed trials on each support surface were analyzed using three-dimensional (3-D) video analyses. Results of separate univariate repeated measures analyses of variance yielded significant surface condition main effects for lower extremity coordination patterns and postural control strategies in the gait and leaning task, respectively. Additionally, a significant surface condition main effect and an interaction effect of surface condition by trial block were identified for the measure of head stability in the gait and leaning tasks, respectively. Differences in head stability and the control of lower extremity joint motions as a function of level of postural stability (i.e., group differences) were observed only during the walking task. Present findings indicate that during goal-directed behavior, the coordinated movements of the body and its segments emerge from constraints imposed by the interaction of the support surface, the task and the individual. The observed adaptations in the coordination and control of posture in response to support surface constraints evidenced in the present studies provide support for the theory of perception and the control of bodily orientation (Riccio & Stoffregen, 1988). / Graduation date: 1998
408

Elderly women and activewear : their preferences and fitting problems

Berman, Laura G. 26 January 1995 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine whether women aged 65 and older are wearing sweatshirts and sweatpants for activewear, and, if so, to investigate the types of activities they are worn for, reasons for wearing, feature preferences, and fitting problems. While sweatshirts and sweatpants have been popularly worn by younger generations, there is little published research on their wear by the elderly. A convenience sample of 222 female members aged 65 and older taken from 34 Family and Community Education (FCE) extension study groups within four counties in the Willamette Valley of western Oregon was used in the research. A questionnaire-survey was administered at FCE meetings to provide quantitative and qualitative data. Eighty-three percent or 185 participants affirmatively answered to wearing either sweatshirts, sweatpants, or both garments of sweats attire. The largest percentage of respondents (43%) reported they "Usually wear sweatshirts and sometimes wear sweatpants". Activities with the highest frequency cited by respondents for wearing sweats attire included (in descending order): (a) exercise, (b) home-based indoor activities and situations, and (c) outdoor activities and situations. During the winter, 79% of the participants wore sweats attire frequently (a minimum of 2-3 times per week). Extremely important reasons cited for wearing sweats attire were "Warmth" and "Easy to care for or launder". The most highly desired features in sweats attire included: pullover sweatshirts with raglan sleeves, sweatpants with an elastic waistband and pockets, medium thick/medium weight, cotton/manufactured fiber blends, fleece interior, and muted colors that hide soil. Clothing size was more frequently related to these preferences than health status or age. Excess lengths of sleeves and pant legs, and tight, high necklines were the most frequent fitting problems cited. ANOVA and Newman-Keuls Multiple Comparison Procedure were used to analyze relationships. Poor health status and increased fitting problems showed a statistically significant relationship at p���.01. Sweats attire provoked either very positive or very negative written comments. Non-wearing participants reacted negatively to the appearance and warmth of sweats attire, whereas, wearing-participants reacted strongly to benefits of comfort and warmth. Practical for lifestyle and easy manageability when dressing and undressing were also high considerations for positive respondents. Additional uses cited by respondents for sweats attire included sleepwear. The findings imply that sweats attire is frequently worn by active, older Oregon women for casual, familiar activities, situations, and environments. Also implied is the need for manufacturers and retailers to recognize the diversity of this heterogeneous population. Stereotypical images and clothing styles can be challenged to address the elderly population's needs for clothing comfort and current style, while offering functionality with such special features as extra pockets; shorter lengths with adequate torso ease; wider, lower necklines for postural changes; light weight fabrics with warmth; and easy-care finishes. / Graduation date: 1995
409

The effects of wealth components on consumption expenditures of retired elderly households

Lee, Hee-Sook 01 June 1994 (has links)
The relationships between types of wealth components and consumption expenditures were investigated as a means of better understanding retired elderly household well-being. Specifically, the concept of mental account was used to identify the characteristics of different types of wealth components, and four mental accounts were identified: flow of investment, current asset A, current asset B, and future income. Based on the traditional life-cycle hypothesis, the behavioral life-cycle hypothesis, and neo-classical demand theory, the consumption functions for the total and 17 subcategorical consumption expenditures were formulated. These consumption functions were formulated to study linkages between household portfolio behavior during the working years and household consumption behavior during retirement. A tobit linear regression model was utilized to estimate parameters in consumption functions. The data were drawn from the Consumer Expenditure Survey, Interview Survey, 1990. The flow of investment mental account includes Social Security benefits, pension benefits, and transfer payments from public programs. The current asset A includes balances in checking and savings accounts, and the current assets B includes balances in stocks and bonds. The future income includes market values of home equity and real estate. The findings supported that the total and subcategorical consumption expenditures are the most sensitive to changes in flow of investment and the least sensitive to changes in future income. Further, among retired elderly households, the four mental accounts differ in influence on subcategorical consumption expenditures. The flow of investment was positively related to food at home, food away from home, utilities, household operation, clothing, transportation, entertainment, personal care, and cash contributions. Current asset A was positively related to health care, reading and education, and alcoholic beverages, and negatively related to food at home. Current asset B was positively related to clothing, transportation, entertainment, reading and education, and alcoholic beverages. Future income was positively related to food at home, utilities, household operation, and personal care. The research findings may help public policy makers understand or predict consumption expenditures as wealth components change in retired elderly households. Further, the economic well-being of retired elderly households should be discussed in terms of different types of wealth components rather than in terms of total wealth. / Graduation date: 1995
410

The effects of cranial electrical stimulation on sleep disturbances, depressive symptoms, and caregiving appraisal in elderly caregivers of persons with Alzheimer's disease or related dementia /

Rose, Karen M. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Virginia, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available online through Digital Dissertations.

Page generated in 0.0402 seconds