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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.
1

Family reunification : the journey home

Jackson, Annette Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
Within the child protection system, children are separated from their parents in different ways and for different reasons. Family reunification following these separations, similarly occurs in a variety of ways and is experienced differently by those involved. / Through a qualitative design, this study gathered together a range of perspectives regarding the experiences, emotions and beliefs of those involved in family reunification. By interviewing parents, protective workers, caregivers, family support workers, family preservation workers, health workers and others, the researcher hoped to capture their wisdom and insight. Overall, 38 people were interviewed in relation to five examples of reunification. / Key concepts and categories were derived from the interviews in conjunction with descriptions of the cases. The researcher then developed a pathways tool which documented the journeys travelled through the process of reunification. / Although all the children in these examples of reunification returned to their parents’ care and were still there up to two years later, there were different opinions as to whether or not the reunification was successful, and what barriers hindered and what strategies led to success. The different definitions of success appeared to be greatly influenced by the participants’ assumptions and perspectives regarding the role of state intervention in the lives of families. / The findings in this research included a broader understanding of the emotional reactions of parents, caregivers and workers. The enormous sense of loss and other strong emotions felt by parents were often experienced prior to the children being removed, as well as during the separation itself. This therefore challenged the concept of filial deprivation being limited to physical separation of children from their parents and subsequently raised a number of practice issues. Many of the workers and caregivers also described feelings of powerlessness, lack of control and being confronted with limited options. Some of the workers, however, spoke of reunification as a more positive and fulfilling experience than other aspects of their work, even though it involved significant risk and difficult decisions. / The principles under lying reunification practice, as outlined in the literature, were evident in aspects of the cases to a varying extent. Opportunities for parents to be actively involved in their children’s placements ranged from no contact with the carer, to visiting almost every day and being actively involved in all decisions. There were some principles which were absent in all of the case examples, such as none of the children experienced continuity of care due to being in multiple placements. / There were descriptions of several service models involved at different times and stages along the families’ pathway through reunification, including different reunification programs. There did not appear to be any clarity regarding when a family would be referred to one type of service compared to another. There was also discussion regarding the influence of universal services, such as schools, on the family members’ experience of being included or isolated in each other’s lives. / Dilemmas and challenges which arose through reunification included those which were common to many fields in social work, such as clashes of values and beliefs and needing to make decisions between limited and inadequate options. Some of the complex issues particularly relating to reunification were the impact of the separation on children and parents, and the experience of being a ‘parentless child’ or a ‘childless parent’. This was an example of the meaning of an issue being subjective and as important as the factual information. / Some of the practice issues which arose through this study included: discussion regarding operationalising permanency planning principles rather than focussing on a parents’ rights or children’s rights dichotomy; developing a partnership perspective with parents, caregivers and workers; the importance of planning and preparation before reunification; whether to celebrate the day of home return or plan it to be as uneventful as possible; and the support and services required following the children’s return home. / There were also a number of recommendations made for future research which could further inform practice in working with children and their families through the process of reunification.
2

Grid and cloud computing : technologies, applications, market sectors, and workloads

Altowaijri, Saleh January 2013 (has links)
Developments in electronics, computing and communication technologies have transformed IT systems from desktop and tightly coupled mainframe computers of the past to modern day highly complex distributed systems. These ICT systems interact with humans at a much advanced level than what was envisaged during the early years of computer development. The ICT systems of today have gone through various phases of developments by absorbing intermediate and modern day concepts such as networked computing, utility, on demand and autonomic computing, virtualisation and so on. We now live in a ubiquitous computing and digital economy era where computing systems have penetrated into the human lives to a degree where these systems are becoming invisible. The price of these developments is in the increased costs, higher risks and higher complexity. There is a compelling need to study these emerging systems, their applications, and the emerging market sectors that they are penetrating into. Motivated by the challenges and opportunities offered by the modern day ICT technologies, we aim in this thesis to explore the major technological developments that have happened in the ICT systems during this century with a focus on developing techniques to manage applied ICT systems in digital economy. In the process, we wish to also touch on the evolution of ICT systems and discuss these in context of the state of the art technologies and applications. We have identified the two most transformative technologies of this century, grid computing and cloud computing, and two application areas, intelligent healthcare and transportation systems. The contribution of this thesis is multidisciplinary in four broad areas. Firstly, a workload model of a grid-based ICT system in the healthcare sector is proposed and analysed using multiple healthcare organisations and applications. Secondly, an innovative intelligent system for the management of disasters in urban environments using cloud computing is proposed and analysed. Thirdly, cloud computing market sectors, applications, and workload are analysed using over 200 real life case studies. Fourthly, a detailed background and literature review is provided on grid computing and cloud computing. Finally, directions for future work are given. The work contributes in multidisciplinary fields involving healthcare, transportation, mobile computing, vehicular networking, grid, cloud, and distributed computing. The discussions presented in this thesis on the historical developments, technology and architectural details of grid computing have served to understand as to how and why grid computing was seen in the past as the global infrastructure of the future. These discussions on grid computing also provided the basis that we subsequently used to explain the background, motivations, technological details, and ongoing developments in cloud computing. The introductory chapters on grid and cloud computing, collectively, have provided an insight into the evolution of ICT systems over the last 50+ years - from mainframes to microcomputers, internet, distributed computing, cluster computing, and computing as a utility and service. The existing and proposed applications of grid and cloud computing in healthcare and transport were used to further elaborate the two technologies and the ongoing ICT developments in the digital economy. The workload models and analyses of grid and cloud computing systems can be used by the practitioners for the design and resource management of ICT systems.
3

Terénní pečovatelská služba / Outreach Care Servis

Svobodová, Petra January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation is about outreach care service in the Czech republic, its history and present situation including the history of legislation. The next mention is about standards of quality social services which are legal obligation. The significant part is to treatise of emergency situations in care service in close link to care service and its survey of its frequency of approaches of carers workers and their solutions. In conclusion there is an aim to suggest universal set of methods how to deal with these situations.
4

František Bakule ve světle archivních dokumentů / Frantisek Bakule in the light of archival sources

Turjanicová, Alexandra January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines the personality of Frantisek Bakule. It is largely based on many manuscripts of his rich estate, and the products of his pupils. The aim of the paper was to map out the unexamined part of the estate in the National Pedagogical Museum and Library of J. A. Comenius. This aim was only partially achieved as the estate is truly enormous. Therefore, the focus was put on the parts concerning Bakule's Little Singers, Childern's Workshop Group and letters from his former students. However, the main benefit of this paper is a complete record of all the products and toys made the children. Such record had not been compiled, not even in museum record keeping files. All the objects were photographed, measured, described and categorized. An important part of this dissertation is also an extensive chapter devoted to the history of caring for the physically disabled not only in the Czech Republic but also in other European countries at the turn of the 19th and 20th century.
5

Zur Lage der Kranken: Die Untersuchung des Bettes

Keil, Maria 15 December 2017 (has links)
Der Name Klinik ist von dem altgriechischen Wort klíne abgeleitet, das einen Gegenstand – das Bett oder die Liege benennt. Jedoch wird mit Klinik zunächst eine Praxis bzw. eine Methode bezeichnet: die „Medizin am Krankenbett“. In dieser Arbeit wird untersucht, welche Bedeutungen, Wirkungen und Entwicklungen das Bett in und mit der Klinik entfaltete. Seine Form, Materialität und symbolischen Eigenschaften wirken auf die Klinik als Institution, als architektonisches und organisatorisches Gebilde sowie auf die Patient_innen und die Art und Weise ihrer Behandlung. Seit dem späten 18. Jh. ist das eiserne Bettgestell, belegt mit einer Person, konstitutiv für den ‚zivilisierten‘ Menschen und zieht in dieser Form in Europas Hospitäler ein. Das Krankenbett hat außerdem stützende, unterstützende und schützende Funktionen. In Gestalt der ‚Bettmaschine‘ verspricht es um 1800 humanitären Halt und Trost. Im 20. Jh. übernimmt das Dispositiv Sicherheit: Bettgitter sollen ‚wehrlose Kranke‘ vor dem Herausfallen aus dem Bett schützen. Die Abrechnung und Planung der Krankenhausbehandlung wird seit dem 19. Jh. mehr und mehr an die Einheit Bett geknüpft. Anfang des 20. Jh. wurde zudem die Idee des Fortschritts mit dem Krankenhausbett als zeitgemäßes Industrieprodukt nach Normvorgaben verbunden. Designprojekte der 1960er Jahre richteten sich besonders auf die Körper einer Nutzergruppe: der Pflegefachkräfte. Bettennot, Fachkräftemangel, der Drang nach Verkürzung der Verweildauer und daraus resultierende Rationalisierungen veränderten das Bett, und mit ihm die Abläufe im Krankenhaus und wie Patient_innen versorgt und behandelt werden. Sichtbar wird zudem, dass zwei Mobilisierungsprojekte im Widerstreit zueinander stehen: Auf der einen Seite die Bemühungen, das Krankenhausbett für die klinische Logistik beweglich zu machen und auf der anderen Seite, die im langen Prozess der Aktivierung des Verkehrsapparats Krankenhaus passivierten Patient_innen zu mobilisieren. / Although the word ‘clinic’ refers to a practice or a method of "bedside teaching", it derives from the ancient Greek word klíne, which describes an object – the bed or the couch. This research project examines the evolution of the hospital bed itself and the meanings and effects associated with its development. Its form, materiality and symbolic properties have affected the clinic as an institution and as an architectural and organizational structure, as well as the patients and the way they have been treated. In the 18th century, the hospital bed became a means to draw distinctions between wild or civilized, healthy or ill etc. Historically, the sickbed has taken on reclining, supportive and protective functions. Around 1800, in the form of a new “bed-machine”, it promised humanitarian support and consolation. In the 20th century, the apparatus of security took over, and bed rails were installed to protect ‘helpless patients’ from falling out of bed. Since the 19th century, the planning of hospital treatment, and the accounting behind it, has been linked more and more to the bed as a unit. At the beginning of the 20th century, the idea of progress transformed the hospital bed into a state-of-the-art industrial product with fixed standards. Steel tube furniture has established itself as peculiarly adaptable and as the site of medical treatment. Design projects in the 1960s focused on the bodies of one user group – the nursing staff. Hospital bed shortages, lack of nursing staff and pressure to shorten the length of stay resulted in a rationalization that changed the bed’s structure, and with it hospital procedures, and how patients are treated. Two significant and controversial mobilization projects linked to this development are efforts to make the hospital bed mobile for the sake of logistics, and, as a countermeasure, current efforts to re-mobilize patients who were made passive by the former process.

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