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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.
521

Modeling the Transmission of Tuberculosis in Long-Term Care Facilities using a Network Model

Muscat, Alison Unknown Date
No description available.
522

Gravity currents in two-layer stratified media

Tan, Alan Unknown Date
No description available.
523

Modulation of dendritic excitability

Hamilton, Trevor Unknown Date
No description available.
524

Bibliotherapy : a mental health approach with institutionalized elderly people

Sakadakis, Venes January 1990 (has links)
Bibliotherapy is an innovative therapeutic technique that uses reading as a helping process for dealing with stress. It has been proposed as a mental health approach for individuals facing social, psychological or developmental problems. As reading tends to be a non-threatening method of sharing problems, a bibliotherapy group was implemented for 12 weeks with eight alert elderly people who had difficulties coping with their current life situation in a long-term care institution. The effectiveness of a bibliotherapeutic approach with this population is evaluated and implications for social work policy, practice and research are discussed.
525

Understanding the quality of life of personal care home residents with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias: Family caregivers' perspectives

Rona, Hazel 13 September 2010 (has links)
Manitoba’s population is aging. Trends in personal care home (PCH) use have also changed so that residents today have more cognitive impairments including Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD). While quality of life (QoL) has emerged as an important PCH research outcome, this literature is relatively sparse for residents with versus without ADRD. This study was conducted to examine the QoL of PCH residents with ADRD, using a recently developed but as of yet untested framework by Kane and colleagues (1999, as cited in Frytak; Kane 2001, 2003). The specific aims of this study were to gather family caregivers’ perspectives on: (a) the meaning of the six domains that constitute Kane et al.’s ADRD-specific PCH-QoL framework; (b) domains they considered to be more important or lacking from this framework; and, (c) general PCH policies, practices, and activities that currently (or could better) facilitate positive QoL experiences for their loved ones.
526

The impact of aggressive parental disciplinary strategies implemented in childhood on externalizing and internalizing problem behaviour in early adulthood

Taillieu, Tamara L. 18 January 2011 (has links)
Parental use of aggressive discipline, specifically corporal punishment (CP) and psychological aggression (PA), has been shown to increase the risk of problem behaviours in children and adolescents. A major gap in the research concerns our lack of understanding regarding how CP and PA contribute to adverse development in adulthood. Because these techniques do not occur in isolation, a number of protective factors were also considered. Both CP and PA were associated with lower levels of parental warmth/support and responsiveness, and more inconsistency in discipline; whereas high induction was associted with more frequent CP and PA. CP predicted later partner violence, and PA predicted anxiety and lower self-esteem in adulthood, even after the effects of positive parenting were considered. These findings suggest that not only do CP and PA tend to occur within environments that are less conducive to positive development, but also predict problematic outcomes in adulthood even after protective factors are considered.
527

Long term care patients in acute care hospitals : examining the discharge barriers

Thompson, Margit. January 2000 (has links)
Many elderly patients remain in acute care hospitals while they await transfer to Long Term Care (LTC) facilities. Complex problems, common for this special group of patients, place them at risk for delayed discharge. Discharge planning, for these patients, has become an increasingly critical activity for social workers. / This study examined factors that predict the risks for inappropriate hospitalization for 244 patients waiting for LTC in 1999, and it explored the LTC application process to identify barriers to delayed discharges. / It was found that 63% of the hospitalization of these patients was inappropriate. System related factors, such as the timing of the LTC application, were identified as predictors. Timeline investigations revealed areas for improvement in the discharge process and were discussed with a view to social work implementation, for example, the introduction of a high-risk screening protocol.
528

Ilgalaikio materialiojo turto analizė UAB „Flamega“ pavyzdžiu / Long-term asset analysis by example of JSC “Flamega”

Račiūtė, Raminta 07 June 2005 (has links)
I n this master’s research project, there are defined long-term asset management (usage, accounting) problems, analysed and systematized aspects of theoretical and practical long-term asset management using laws and principles of Republic of Lithuania and opinions of Lithuanian and foreign authors. Moreover, there was analysed classification, purchasing, tariffing and pricing of long-term material asset in accounting and reparation, selling, transcription accounting using the example of JSC “Flamega”. In this paper there is given an analysis of long-term material asset composition, structure and dynamics. In addition, there are given calculations of long-term material asset profitability, net profitability, turnover, receptivity, renovation and others indicators and given their forecast for coming period. Hypothesized opinions of various authors were proved out, because results of research did not let identify bigger problems of long-term material asset management that affected success and work results improvement of analysed company.
529

Ad hoc wireless networks with femto-cell deployment : a study

Bharucha, Zubin Rustam January 2010 (has links)
Nowadays, with a worldwide market penetration of over 50% in the mobile telecommunications sector, there is also an unrelenting demand from the subscribers for ever increasing transmission rates and availability of broadband-like experience on the handset. Due to this, research in next-generation networks is rife. Such systems are expected to achieve peak data rates of up to 1 Gbps through the use of innovative technologies such as multiple-input and multipleoutput (MIMO) and orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA). Two more ways of boosting capacity have also been identified: shrinking cell sizes and greater reuse of resources in the same area. This forms the foundation of the research presented in this thesis. For operators, the costs involved with planning and deploying additional network infrastructure to provide a dense coverage of small, high capacity cells cannot be justified. Femto-cells, however, promise to fulfil this function. These are user-deployed mini base stations (BSs), known as home evolved NodeBs (HeNBs), which are envisaged to be commonplace in homes and offices in the coming years. Since they drastically reduce communication distances to user equipments (UEs) and reuse the resources already utilised in the macro-cell, they help boost the system capacity significantly. However, there are issues to be addressed with the deployment of femto-cells, such as increased interference to the system and methods of access. These and other problems are discussed and analysed in this thesis. One of the first steps towards femtocell research has been the study of the time division duplex (TDD) underlay concept, whereby an indoor UE acts as a relay between the evolved NodeB (eNB) and other indoor UEs. In order to gain a deeper understanding of how and under what conditions such a self-organising network can be deployed, a mathematical analysis of the distribution of path losses in a network of uniformly distributed nodes has been performed. In connection with this, research has also been done in the identification of well connected nodes in such networks. Next, extensive simulations on traditional cellular networks with embedded femto-cells have been carried out in order to demonstrate the benefits of femto-cell deployment. This research has shown that femto-cells can cause severe downlink (DL) interference to badly placed macro UEs. Finally, a novel interference avoiding technique that addresses this problem is investigated.
530

Sex, Dementia, and Long-Term Care: Public Perspectives

Yelland, Erin L 01 January 2015 (has links)
The current mixed methods study utilized an ecological framework to examine public perspectives toward sexual behaviors among long-term care residents with dementia. Analyzing attitudes of the public is an integral component of understanding the entire ecological system that affects the development and overall well-being of a long-term care resident. Attitudes were examined using a multiple segment factorial vignette with a probability sample of 329 respondents from a southern state. Results indicate that attitudes were not statistically affected by sex or the elapsed time since diagnosis, and age, spousal disposition, and degree of intimacy predicted attitudes. A respondent’s education level also predicted attitudes across segments; those who attained higher levels of education were consistently more accepting of sexual behaviors, less likely to expect staff intervention in adulterous relationships, and were supportive of the healthy spouse beginning a new relationship. An ecological perspective provided a framework for guiding and informing future research on the influences of long-term care on sexual development and, in turn, for the development of relevant long-term care policy.

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