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  • 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.
251

An exploration of the use of complementary approaches to end-of-life care : the perspectives and work of hospice palliative Buddhist chaplains in Taiwan

Yang, Mei-Lin January 2016 (has links)
This study was motivated by the researcher’s experience of working in end-of-life care and by the literature review which revealed a gap in the knowledge and understanding of the role of religious methods as complementary approaches in managing the experience of living with a life-limiting illness in Taiwan. Trans-cultural issues are extremely important to end-of-life care. In Taiwan, patients approaching death have used religious methods as complementary approaches to manage the experience of living with a life-limiting illness, and religious belief systems shape patients’ understandings of what is happening. Current literature coupled with the experience of palliative care personnel identified that some patients with religious persuasions were refusing western medical treatments when they recognised that they were in the end stage of disease because they believed that these treatments could not control death and rebirth. However, few studies have discussed this experience and its meaning. Buddhist chaplains, as providers of supportive palliative care services through therapeutic care, have presented their understanding of the way that people move towards death and dying in Buddhist temples, universities, and in public speeches, but not often in hospitals. Buddhist chaplains’ life experience and interpretations influence the thinking processes and decision-making of many of those they come in contact with, especially those who share the Buddhist faith. However, few studies have demonstrated the way in which patients have made use of religious methods as complementary approaches from the perspective of hospice palliative Buddhist chaplains. The perspectives and work of hospice palliative Buddhist chaplains regarding “hospice palliative care” and patients’ use of religious methods as complementary approaches in end-of-life care in Taiwan were explored. The research questions were: (1) How do the Buddhist chaplains define “hospice palliative care”? (2) How do Buddhist chaplains use Buddhist religious methods as complementary approaches in clinical end-of-life care? (3) What are the experiences of Buddhist chaplains regarding the patients’ use of Buddhist religious methods as complementary approaches in clinical end-of-life care? (4) What are the opinions of Buddhist chaplains regarding patients’ use of Buddhist religious methods as complementary approaches in clinical end-of-life care? Charmaz’s (2006) constructivist grounded theory method was adopted. Data collection used triangulation and included demographic questionnaires, semi-structured face-to-face interviews, field notes, and written memos. Purposive sampling was used to recruit participants with rich working experiences in clinical end-of-life care. Twenty female and two male Buddhist chaplains aged between 33 and 67 years old participated. Charmaz’s (2006) constructivist grounded theory, which included comparative method, and three analytical phases (initial coding, focused coding and theoretical coding) informed the data analysis. The findings demonstrate that Buddhist concepts of death, the process of dying, and the ethics and tools of the Buddhist religion formed the basis of the practice of the chaplains who regarded compassionate care and Mahayana Buddhism as the main content of Buddha’s teachings. All participants used aspects of Buddhist philosophy to define “hospice palliative care”. The final theoretical framework emerged from the data to provide a structure to interpret “the dynamic process of compassionate care”. Compassionate care is a multifaceted, dynamic phenomenon practised by the chaplains. Mahayana Buddhism provides the specific tools through which they interacted with patients creating a sacred relationship that allowed patients to understand their context and cope with their end-of-life experiences. The thesis concluded that Buddhist chaplains’ understanding of compassionate care was influenced by their educational background, hospice training courses, and Buddha’s teachings to enable them to play important roles in end-of-life care in Taiwan. Recommendations are made for future studies to test the theoretical framework regarding “the dynamic process of compassionate care” with different professional staff such as nurses, psychologists and mental health physicians. The findings are also relevant for future government policy concerning the financial cost of end-of-life care which is currently provided by Buddhist chaplains from a Charity rather than by Taiwanese National Health Insurance. Finally it recommends that the findings inform the future education of medical and nursing students and staff in hospice end-of-life care in Taiwan.
252

Early palliative care for people with advanced illnesses : research into practice

Boyd, Kirsty Jean January 2016 (has links)
Identifying people with advanced illnesses whose health is deteriorating, assessing their needs and planning care proactively with them are healthcare priorities given the demographic trend of ageing populations in the UK and internationally. Over the past 10 years (2004-2014), I have led a series of research studies that have made an important academic contribution to improving palliative care services for patients with heart disease and advanced multimorbidity. My first paper reported secondary analysis of data generated from a qualitative study of the illness and care experiences of patients with advanced heart failure. This work used innovative, qualitative research methods to explore and understand patient, carer and health professional perspectives over time. My second study then evaluated whether health and social care services were configured and delivered in response to the needs of people with heart failure and their families. This led me to recommend an anticipatory care framework which integrated a palliative care approach with other aspects of treatment and care. Around this time, advance care planning (planning ahead to facilitate end-of-life care aligned with people’s goals and preferences) was being strongly advocated by NHS health policy makers despite limited research in the UK. For my third study, I evaluated an evidence-based, educational intervention for general practitioners while also exploring barriers and facilitators to advance care planning in primary care for patients with cancer or other advanced conditions. It was becoming increasingly clear that failure to identify people with deteriorating health and a high risk of dying in a timely way was a major barrier to more effective palliative care. The problem was greatest for patients with non-malignant conditions whose illness trajectory is much less easy to predict than in cancer populations. I therefore started to research and develop a new clinical tool designed to prompt early, proactive patient identification in routine clinical practice – the Supportive and Palliative Care Indicators Tool (SPICT). My fourth research paper reported an evaluation of the SPICT in a mixed-methods study in a large tertiary care hospital. The SPICT was then used to identify people with multimorbidity for my fifth study, a longitudinal exploration of patient and carer experiences of hospital admission and ongoing community care. In my final paper, I drew on my previous research and combined this with well-developed approaches to timely identification and effective communication. I described the design of a successful pilot randomised trial of future care planning with people who had advanced heart disease and their carers. This thesis presents a critical review of these six research studies setting them in context and demonstrating the impact they have had in ensuring that high quality research evidence informs current and future developments in palliative care policy and clinical practice.
253

Desenvolvimento de um sistema de imageamento de equipamentos de processos industriais pela técnica de perfilagem radiométrica / Development of a radiometric profiling technique imaging system for process industrial equipments

Marcio Issamu Haraguchi 30 October 2018 (has links)
A técnica de perfilagem gama de colunas de destilação já está no mercado há pelo menos 30 anos. Acompanhando o desenvolvimento tecnológico mundial, a técnica e a indústria prosperaram e se difundiu, podendo ser encontrada em diversos países e sendo implementada por diversas empresas comerciais e centros de pesquisa. Todavia, apesar das melhorias na qualidade dos resultados bem como na rapidez e praticidade da tomada de dados; o conceito básico da técnica permaneceu inalterado. Este trabalho condensa como o aprendizado de 20 anos, em gamma scan e tomografia industrial, propiciou fundamentos para uma técnica inovadora, testada em laboratório e depois efetivamente aplicada em condições reais de campo, que permitiu obter resultados nunca antes obtidos numa perfilagem de coluna. / Distillation column gamma scanning has been in the market for more than 30 years. Following world\'s technology development the industry grew and spread worldwide. Nowadays gamma scanning can be found in many countries performed by commercial companies and research centers either. However, in spite of all development achieved, resulting in high quality data and easy data sampling; the technology concepts remains the same. This works condense how 20 years apprentice ship in gamma scanning and industrial tomography, rise up fundaments for an innovative technique, tested in laboratory scale and effectively applied in real field conditions; culminated in results that have never been obtained with a gamma scan.
254

Le travail comme fin en soi : sa valeur dans l'épanouissement individuel des cadres : Etude comparative France - Allemagne / Work as an end in itself : the value of work for individual fulfillment of managers : A comparative study between France and Germany.

Ennis, Marion 27 June 2012 (has links)
L'activité professionnelle permet de faire l'expérience de la réalité sociale et de s'y intégrer. En effet, notre société est profondément marquée par le travail. Ce constat est valable pour le travail en tant que tel mais il se poursuit aussi dans tout le schéma de l'existence, se reflétant ainsi dans les joies et les peines du quotidien, dans sa vision de la performance et du succès, dans sa justification des inégalités mais également dans sa culture. Les marques identitaires trouvent aussi leur reflet dans le statut qui prend une signification et une importance particulières pour les cadres, dans leurs rôles de décideurs ou proches des décideurs.Partant d'une étude historique de la notion du travail depuis le XVIème siècle, cette thèse définit le rôle et la place des cadres en s'appuyant sur un questionnaire diffusé auprès de cadres en France et en Allemagne. Les données qualitatives de ce questionnaire étaient mises en perspective avec des statistiques officielles quantitatives concernant cette population. Afin de relever les mutations profondes qui marquent le monde du travail aujourd'hui et tout particulièrement le monde des cadres en France et en Allemagne, et pour déterminer dans quelle mesure l'épanouissement individuel au travail demeure une fin en soi à une époque où certains prônent la fin du travail, le dernier chapitre de cette thèse s'attache à éclaircir les interrogations actuelles autour des nouvelles lois économiques, des NTIC, de la société de services, de la mondialisation et du capitalisme financier. / Managers Work Fulfillment End in itself
255

Cryogenic machining of titanium alloy

Shokrani Chaharsooghi, Alborz January 2014 (has links)
Materials which are both lighter and stronger have faced an increased demand over the past decades to fulfil the requirements across a range of industrial applications. More specifically, demands for titanium alloys have increased significantly due to its high strength to weight ratio which is particularly attractive for increasing fuel efficiency in aircrafts and cars and is also used in biomedical implants. Despite the increasing demand for titanium made products, machining titanium alloys remains a significant challenge. High material strength and hardness lead to excessive heat generation at the cutting zone which accumulates and results in high cutting temperatures due to the poor thermal conductivity. The high cutting temperatures together with inherent material properties of titanium are responsible for short tool life and poor surface finish. Despite the environmental and health drawbacks, a generous amount of cutting fluids is commonly used to control the cutting temperature in machining titanium alloys. However, conventional cutting fluids evaporate at high cutting temperatures which isolate the cutting zone by forming a vapour cushion resulting in further increases in cutting temperatures. This research investigates the effects of cryogenic cooling on machinability of Ti-6Al-4V alloy in CNC milling as compared to conventional dry and wet machining environments. Two literature reviews were conducted and a methodology has been developed and implemented consisting of three experimental stages of i) design and manufacture of a cryogenic cooling system, ii) comparative study of cryogenic cooling with dry and wet machining and iii) optimisation of cutting parameters for cryogenic machining. The major contribution of this research can be summarised as design, realisation and assessment of a novel cryogenic cooling system for CNC milling, termed cryogenic shower, which is retrofitable to an existing CNC machining centre. In addition, the research provides a thorough study on the effects of cryogenic cooling on machinability of Ti-6Al-4V alloy in comparison with dry and wet machining. The studies range from power consumption and tool wear through to surface topography and surface integrity. Furthermore, the optimum cutting parameters for cryogenic machining are identified. The research demonstrates that using the cryogenic shower has significantly improved machinability of Ti-6Al-4V through realisation of higher material removal rates, reduced tool wear and improved surface finish, surface topography and surface integrity.
256

End of use programs and their effect on brand equity of fashion companies in Sweden

LAMPROPOULOU, ALEXIA, IOSIFIDIS, DIMITRIOS January 2014 (has links)
This paper shows the way end of use programs affect brand equity since they can become a brand’s asset and create competitive advantage under specific circumstances. It is also suggested that through marketing strategies, long term business strategies and transparency it is possible for fashion companies to enhance brand equity and acquire all the positive effects from end of use programs. / Program: Textile Management, Fashion Management
257

Palliativ vård i hemmet − närståendes upplevelser av vård vid livets slutskede : En litteraturbaserad studie / Palliative care at home - relatives' experiences in end of life care

Johansson , Johanna, Magnusson, Lina January 2019 (has links)
Background: About 80 percent of the people dying in Sweden are considered to have been in need of palliative care. When death is approaching, due to age or illness, the ill person's and the relatives' needs must be met which is the main aim of palliative care. It has been increasingly common that people choose to be cared for in their own home in the end of life and therefore knowledge of the relatives' experience is important for the healthcare professionals. Aim: To highlight relatives' experience of palliative care at the end of life in the dying person's home. Method: A literature review based on qualitative studies. Eight articles were analyzed in five steps according to Friberg's qualitative content analysis for literature based studies. Results: Three main themes and six sub-themes emerged through the analysis. The main themes were: To fulfill a wish, To experience security and To be a caregiver. Conclusion: In order for relatives to feel confirmed as caregivers and to preserve a good health it is of great importance that the nurse communicates and makes them feel involved by giving them both support, information and the possibility to participate in the care but also to be unloaded. / Denna studie beskriver hur närstående upplever palliativ vård i hemmet vid livets slutskede. I Sverige väljer allt fler personer att vårdas i sitt hem den sista tiden i livet, vilket innebär att det också är fler närstående som är i behov av vård då även deras hälsa påverkas. Därför är kunskap om de närståendes upplevelser viktig för sjukvården. Resultatet i studien baseras på åtta vetenskapliga artiklar där studiens resultat presenteras i tre huvudteman och sex subteman. Resultatet visade att närstående upplevde ett krav och en förväntan att uppfylla den döende personens önskan. De kände även ett behov av att få stöd och information från sjuksköterskan, men också att vara delaktiga och bli bekräftade. Vårdandet påverkade både de närståendes hälsa och relationen till den döende personen, men genom att sjuksköterskan fanns där som ett stöd för dem kunde den betydelsefulla relationen mellan den döende personen och dennes närstående bevaras. Därför har sjuksköterskans närvaro en betydande roll i hur närstående upplever den palliativa vården vid livets slutskede.
258

UK paediatricians' medical decision-making for severely disabled children : a socio-legal analysis

Picton-Howell, Zoe January 2018 (has links)
This thesis aims to illuminate how paediatricians in the United Kingdom (UK) make difficult medical decisions when treating severely disabled children with complex health conditions. In particular, it examines the part played, if any, by law, rights, and ethics in those decisions. After drawing on jurisprudence of the English and European Human Rights Court, together with existing scholarship, to analyse the doctors' decision making, this thesis adopts a legal consciousness theoretical approach. Using this it looks at how the paediatricians make sense of and conceptualise law when making these decisions. It examines how decisions are, by the paediatricians' own accounts, commonly made at present and what the paediatricians say about how they and their colleagues make such decisions. This thesis addresses the following research questions: i) Which decisions do UK paediatricians find particularly difficult when working with disabled children and what makes those decisions particularly difficult? ii) What factors do UK paediatricians take into consideration when making difficult decisions for disabled children and what weight do they put on those factors? iii) What formal education in law, rights, and ethics have the doctors received and to what extent, if any, can we discern how this education impacts on their difficult decisions for disabled children? iv) How do UK paediatricians construct and understand the law, rights, and ethics when making their difficult decisions? This thesis makes an original contribution, being the first in-depth socio-legal study examining UK paediatricians' medical decision-making for severely disabled children, by identifying two distinct styles paediatricians adopt when approaching best interest decisions, and by recommending a new category of legal consciousness. It concludes by recommending research and changes both in doctors' training and approach to best interest decision-making to address the current challenges paediatricians describe facing when deciding for severely disabled children.
259

Critical-Care Nurses' Suggestions to Improve End-of-Life Care Obstacles: Minimal Change Over 17 years

Hadley, Kacie Hart 01 November 2016 (has links)
Background: Critical-care nurses (CCN) provide end-of life (EOL) care on a daily basis as one in five patients dies while in Intensive Care Units (ICU). CCNs overcome many obstacles to perform quality EOL care for dying patients. Objectives: The purposes of this study were to collect CCNs' current suggestions for improving EOL care and determine if EOL care obstacles have changed by comparing results to data gathered in 1998. Methods: A 72-item questionnaire regarding EOL care perceptions was mailed to a national, geographically dispersed, random sample of 2,000 members of the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses. Nurses were asked for suggestions to improve EOL care. Results: Of the 509 returned questionnaires, 322 (63.3%) had 385 written suggestions for improving EOL care. Major themes identified were ensuring characteristics of a good death, improving physician communication with patients and families, adjusting nurse/patient ratios to 1:1, recognizing and avoiding futile care, increasing EOL education, physicians who are present and "on the same page," not allowing families to override patients' wishes, and the need for more support staff. When compared to data gathered 17 years previously, major themes remained the same, but in a few cases, changed in order and possible causation. Conclusion: Critical-care nurses' suggestions were similar to those recommendations from 17 years ago. Although the order of importance changed minimally, the number of similar themes indicated obstacles to providing EOL care to dying ICU patients continue to exist over time.
260

Critical Care Nurses' Experiences of Family Behaviors as Obstacles in End-of-Life Care

Mallory, Caitlin Brook 01 June 2017 (has links)
Background: Critical care nurses (CCNs) frequently provide end-of-life care for critically ill patients. CCNs may face many obstacles while trying to provide quality EOL care. Some research focusing on obstacles CCNs face while trying to provide quality EOL care has been published; however, research focusing on family behavior obstacles is limited. Research focusing on family behavior as an EOL care obstacle may provide additional insight and improvement in care. Objective: What are the predominant themes noted when CCNs share their experiences of common obstacles, relating to families in providing EOL care? Methods: A random geographically dispersed sample of 2,000 members of the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses was surveyed. Responses from a qualitative question on the questionnaire were analyzed. Results: Sixty-seven EOL obstacle experiences surrounding issues with families' behavior were analyzed for this study. Experiences were categorized into 8 themes. Top three common obstacle experiences included families in denial, families going against patient wishes and advance directives, and families directing care which negatively impacted patients. Conclusions: In overcoming EOL obstacles, it may be beneficial to have proactive family meetings to align treatment goals and to involve palliative care earlier in the ICU stay.

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