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Location-allocation modelling for primary health care provision in BangladeshRahman, Shams-Ur January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Coping with accidents and emergencies : a study of how the community uses the hospital accident and emergency departmentCalnan, M. W. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Pharmaceutical care : the needs of elderly people and their carers in the communityGoldstein, Ruth January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Experiences with early intervention in schizophrenia : an ethnographic study of assertive community treatment in DenmarkLarsen, John Aggergaard January 2002 (has links)
The thesis presents a person-centred ethnographic study of individuals' experiences following first-episode psychosis as they received treatment and support from the OPUS early intervention programme in Copenhagen, Denmark. It describes individuals' struggles to come to terms with overwhelming experiences during their psychosis, and their engagement in identity work as they reconstructed individual life projects. Examining individual-society relations, it is a study of health and social policy in practice, from an existential and cultural phenomenological perspective. The researcher took an active membership role - as evaluator - in the programme, and fifteen key informants described their situations and experiences during in-depth interviews and through written narratives. The longitudinal design allowed for individuals' changes in attitudes and life circumstances to be described, and for a dialogical approach. The study explores the community intervention programme from the recipients' perspectives, examining individual processes of transformation in the event of serious psychiatric diagnosis. It describes their social roles in their relationship to treatment staff, their views on medication, and the workings of the therapeutic interventions through psycho-education, multiple-family groups, and social skills training groups. Processes of recovery are analysed as symbolic healing. The OPUS organisation, as well as the general Danish welfare system and the labour market, determined the life choices available to these individuals and their possibilities for social integration. Informants' experiences of mental illness and mental healthcare constituted existential crises in which their senses of ontological security were suspended as their lives were disrupted. -While some informants chose a strategy of 'sealing over' their experiences others 'integrated' them in various ways: either by dogmatically endorsing one particular explanation or by combining different systems of explanation from the cultural repertoire in a creative analytical and theory-building work of bricolage. Re-establishing a sense of biographical continuity - connecting the individual's past, present and future - was crucial to each person's sense of self and experience of recovery.
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The use of acute psychiatric beds in North StaffordshireHodgson, Richard E. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Key success factors and innovation in the financial market data industry李燕群, Li, Yin-kwan, Lorraine. January 1998 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Business Administration / Master / Master of Business Administration
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Childhood immunisation uptake : geographical perspectivesClegg, Andrew J. January 1993 (has links)
Efforts to control and eradicate infectious disease have concentrated on the provision of childhood vaccination. Unfortunately, the uptake of childhood vaccination continues to vary and infectious diseases continue to cause differential morbidity and mortality. Limited research has assessed the factors that underlie the uptake of vaccination. The present research undertakes an analysis of the patterns and determinants of vaccination uptake within the Portsmouth and South East Hampshire Health Authority, located in the south of England. In so doing, the research employs different analytical approaches, from the traditional ecological analysis through descriptive mapping and multivariate regression, to the innovative multi-level analyses. The ecological analysis shows a distinct geography to the uptake of vaccination which reflects characteristics of socioeconomic deprivation. Further analysis through multilevel modelling, emphasizes two influences on the uptake of vaccination. First, parental characteristics, which affect their role as decision maker and their ability to overcome certain time-space constraints to attend. Second, the ways in which the service is provided, including the influence of the health professional as adviser and provider of vaccination and the initiatives employed to improve uptake. These findings have implications for the future provision of childhood vaccination. Specifically, the research provides the opportunity to identify and target children unlikely to complete their vaccination schedule and the need to improve and standardise health professional knowledge and advice to parents.
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The medical profession, the state and health policy in Mexico, 1917-1988Nigenda-Lopez, Gustavo Humberto January 1995 (has links)
This thesis assesses the participation of the medical profession in the development of the structure of the health system in Mexico between 1917-1988. The thesis considers that the major variable that influenced the development of the health system was the participation of the State as its most important financer, provider and regulator. The shaping of the health system in turn determined the mode of participation of doctors. The period is divided in three subperiods: 1917-1943; 1944-1970 and 1971-1988. The first describes the efforts of the profession to gain control over the demand for health services which remained private after the end of the 1917 Revolution. The second describes the way in which the State intervened in the redefinition of the health system, the achievement of the legal control of professions and the way in which medical work began to be determined by the constraints of institutions despite doctors' efforts to defend their autonomous status. Finally, the third period is characterised by a crisis of the economic and political system with repercussions in the definition of the educational and health policy, and the way doctors were faced these conditions. The thesis also points out the major changes during the period in four of the most important characteristics of the medical profession: professional organization, education, employment and geographical distribution. An analysis is finally presented where theoretical elements are used to interpret the historical events that characterized the participation of the Mexican medical profession in the development of the health system.
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The accident and emergency department : nurses' priorities and patients' anxietiesByrne, Geraldine January 1992 (has links)
This study investigated the sources of anxiety for patients in the Accident and Emergency Department and explored how patients' anxiety was influenced by their experiences in the department and the attitudes, behaviour and communication patterns of nurses and other staff. The research was carried out in twO Accident and Emergency Departments and consisted of three stages. Stage One employed structured interviews with 96 patients to identify sources of anxiety for patients in the Accident and Emergency Department and to examine the relationship between anxiety and the patient variables of age, sex, condition and department. In Stage Two in-depth interviews were conducted with 21 qualified nurses to explore their perceptions of their work and patients. Stage Three was an observational study, involving 23 patients, which examined the nature of nurse-patient communication in the Accident and Emergency Department. A Symbolic Interactionist framework was used in order to understand events from the perspective of those involved. Patients appeared to view their stay in the Accident and Emergency Department as an event occurring within the wider context of their daily lives and were concerned with social factors related to admission and the consequences of their illness or injury. Nurses held a different perspective and were more concerned with physical care and the organisation of the patients' stay in the department. In contrast to the patients, the nurses were concerned with short-term problems. Interaction between nurses and patients consisted predominantly of brief encounters which focused on the patients' illness or injury and their progress through the department. There was little attention explicitly directed towards dealing with patients' anxieties. A complex range of factors - interpersonal, cultural, interprofessional and structural - were found to influence communication. A number of recommendations are made identifying ways to enhance nurses' ability to deal with patients' anxieties.
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The development of a methodology for the introduction of information systems within the National Health ServiceMaguire, Stuart January 1998 (has links)
This thesis represents over five years of research focusing on the development and implementation of information systems within the National Health SefV1ce. It aims to contribute towards a better understanding of the information systems development process from inception through to system evaluation and review. Five long-term interventions have been undertaken in a range of National Health Service sites, examining different aspects of information provision. The length of the interventions ranged from nine months to almost two years. The five sites were all at different stages of system development. The research has been carried out using a combination of participant observation and action research. This has meant working with National Health Service staff on a series of system projects. The aim of the research is to try and help National Health Service (NHS) organisations deal more successfully with their information provision. The research question asks, "how can NHS organisations think about, and hence go about their information provision in such a way that successful information systems are introduced'!". Information systems development has generally been regarded as a technical discipline. This has led to a narrow view being taken of a number of areas that may affect the success or otherwise of system projects. Historically, the system development process has been concentrated in the hands of a small number of experts even though the implementation of systems can have far-reaching consequences for the organIsation. The output of the research is a set of issues that should be addressed when introducing information systems within the NHS. These have been translated into the OASES materials which form the appendices. OASES is not a prescriptive methodology but a set of principles and guidelines to try and improve the way that information systems are developed within the NHS. It IS hoped that the outcome of the research will be a situation in which effective information systems are developed that take account of the behavioural, cultural, and organisational issues that are important within complex organisations.
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