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The Relationship Between Master's Level Counseling Practicum Students' Wellness And Client OutcomesO'Brien, Elizabeth 01 January 2007 (has links)
Client outcome research focuses primarily on three specific aspects of therapy: therapist technique, client behaviors and therapeutic interaction. The term "therapeutic interaction" focuses on the relationship between the counselor and the client, and is often ignored in client outcome research. Counselor specific contributions to the therapeutic process are called therapist characteristics may be an innovative way to assess how counselors' impact clients' outcomes in counseling. For the purposes of this study administering the Five Factor Wellness Evaluation of Lifestyle and the Outcome Questionnaire to master's level student counselors assessed therapist characteristics. The Outcome Questionnaire was administered to clients at a community-counseling clinic at two points and a delta score was calculated to create the variable "client outcome." In order to test the research hypotheses, 70 master's level counseling students completed both the Five Factor Wellness Evaluation of Lifestyle and the Outcome Questionnaire. These scores were then matched with master's level counseling students' client delta scores, which created the dependent variable. The results of the multiple regression analysis indicated no statistically significant relationship; therefore the null hypotheses were accepted as the constructs student counselor wellness and client outcomes were not related. Results of the study were summarized and discussed, limitations of the study were explored and recommendations for future research were proposed.
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Methodological considerations for the assessment of perioperative outcomes in patients with rare bleeding disorders / Perioperative outcomes in patients with rare bleeding disordersOlasupo, Omotola January 2022 (has links)
Rare bleeding disorders are a group of inherited conditions caused by a deficiency of blood coagulation factors. Due to the low prevalence of these conditions in the general population, there is a scarcity of data to make informed, evidence-based clinical decisions. In this population who are highly susceptible to excessive bleeding, surgeries and invasive procedures pose an additional level of risk for bleeding-related and non-bleeding-related complications, especially in the perioperative period. The data scarcity in patients with rare bleeding disorders is further compounded by an infrequent rate of invasive procedures, sometimes attributed to the hemostatic challenges faced by such interventions among other factors.
To address the problem of insufficient data for healthcare decision-making, as well as the assessment of perioperative outcomes in this population, this thesis explores the use of routinely collected data for the creation of a novel surgical database used for the assessment of perioperative hemostasis, complications, and initial surgical plan deviations in patients with rare bleeding disorders.
Across five chapters, this thesis provides the methodology for the creation of the Indiana Hemostasis and Thrombosis Center (IHTC) Surgical Database, a descriptive analysis of the population and procedures, and assessment of perioperative outcomes. Approaches to ensure the validity of study results including confounder adjustment by variable selection methods, data quality improvement, missing data description, and imputation methods, were explored. Evidence from randomized controlled was also reviewed using Cochrane methodology to summarize the efficacy of clotting factor concentrates for the prevention of bleeds and bleeding-related complications in patients with hemophilia.
Based on findings from the different approaches (observational study designs, randomized controlled trials, and systematic review methodology), recommendations were made regarding methodological and analytical considerations required to ensure valid and reliable perioperative outcome assessment in patients with rare bleeding disorders.
The following provides a brief outline of each chapter.
Chapter 1 is an introduction that outlines each of the studies in this thesis.
Chapter 2 is a descriptive overview of the design, structure, and exploratory analysis of data captured in the IHTC-Surgical Database over a 21-year period.
Chapter 3 is a retrospective cohort study that assessed the association between inhibitor status and perioperative hemostasis, complications, and initial surgical plan deviations in patients with hemophilia A and B.
Chapter 4 is a systematic review that examined the efficacy of clotting factor concentrates for the prevention of bleeds and bleeding-related complications in patients with hemophilia.
Chapter 5 outlines key findings, limitations, implications of the research in this thesis, and methodological considerations for the assessment of perioperative outcomes in patients with bleeding disorders. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Modes of Conflict Resolution and Stable OutcomesSanta-Barbara, John 05 1900 (has links)
<p> An important issue in the study of conflict behavior concerns the
manner in which one party involved in a conflict situation, can influence
his protagonist to resolve the conflict in a way Which is mutually rewarding
(i.e. cooperative). The present thesis is addressed to this issue.
In order to study the relationship between preasymptotic interaction
patterns and stable states of cooperation and conflict, the data from a.
variety of two-person, mixed motive games are organized such that:
a} criteria are established for defining stable states of cooperation
and conflict; b) preasymptotic interaction patterns are clearly distinguished
from these stable, asymptotic states; and c) the role of each
dyad member is considered separately. </p> <p> Organizing the data in the manner outlined above allows the description of strategies used by real subjects Which lead to high levels
or cooperation and conflict. Dyads who attain a high level or cooperation
are found to use a cautious trust strategy. This strategy consists of
two components, a cooperative signalling component and a firmness component.
The cooperative signalling component is operationalized in
terms of the difference in the proportion or cooperative choices between
one dyad member and the other. The firmness component is operationalized
in terms of the level of retaliation against an uncooperative action
(D reciprocity). Dyads who attain a high level or conflict. are
characterlzed by an inappropriate signalling compcinent, and/or the absence
of a firmness component. Data are presented which indicate how the requirements for a successful cooperative signalling component vary as a function of other variables. </p> <p> The implications of focusing on stable outcomes in a conflict situation, and organizing the data in the manner developed here, are discussed in terms of notions current in the psychological literature
on conflict behavior. Data from the present thesis are used to argue
that strategic variables are relatively more important factors in
determining stable outcomes in a particular conflict situation, than
either predispositional or personality factors. </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Predictors of Early Intervention Outcomes in Autism Spectrum DisorderBusuoli, Elena Maria 04 December 2023 (has links)
Early detection and intervention are theorized to facilitate better outcomes in autistic children. However, response to early intervention varies considerably between individuals, some children show significant improvement, while others show minimal response to the intervention. Some pre-treatment individualized characteristics as well as intervention-specific factors were theorized to moderate outcomes, but literature revealed often mixed findings making difficult to understand whether and to what extent these factors facilitate learning during treatment. To parse the heterogeneity of the autistic population, recent studies have also attempted to investigate biological factors related to clinical and behavioral profiles. However, to date it is unknown whether and how biological information can provide insight into the variability of treatment outcomes. With this in mind, we attempted to expand the current knowledge by first investigating whether pre-treatment child’s characteristics and blood leukocyte gene expression patterns could predict developmental trajectories during treatment. Leveraging a cohort of 41 autistic toddlers who received the same early intervention and provided a blood sample, we were able to analyze the effect of starting treatment very early (i.e., <24 months) on treatment trajectories. We also provided for the first-time evidence that both pre-treatment blood leukocyte gene expression patterns and clinical-behavioral characteristics are important for predicting developmental change during intervention, and that pretreatment epigenetic mechanisms such as histone acetylation may be a key biological process that influence how a child respond to early intervention. Lastly, we carried out a mega-analysis of a large international consortium, isolating individual child characteristics and treatment related factors to examine their key role in moderating child developmental trajectories throughout the course of early intervention. The final dataset comprised 645 autistic toddlers who received two types of interventions either Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) or other treatment as usual/community interventions (TAU/COM). This mega-analysis provided strong evidence that individual factors, such as cognitive level and age at treatment start, predict most outcomes, and on-average, ESDM may promote some developmental skills better than COM/TAU. Taken together, these results advance our understanding of “what works, for whom, for what and why” questions, identifying new biological predictors and providing an alternative methodology that can effectively examine the individual variability of treatment outcomes.
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Thou shall not steal: Assessing demographic and neighborhood predictors of shoplifting through the lens of social disorganization theoryLoftin, Christina 25 November 2020 (has links)
The crime of shoplifting has received limited scholarly attention despite millions of shoplifting arrests that occur every year. Our understanding of shoplifting is limited because of this. This study assesses whether offenders arrested for shoplifting that reside in socially disorganized neighborhoods differ from their counterparts from less socially disorganized neighborhoods. Using arrest data from the Meridian Police Department and secondary data from the 2018 American Community Survey, analyses revealed that arrestees from neighborhoods with high levels of poverty were more likely to shoplift from dollar stores, liquor stores, and convenience stores. Demographic findings revealed few gender differences in shoplifting among the arrestees. Arrestees most frequently shoplifted at Walmart and often pilfered non-necessity items. Black arrestees were more likely to shoplift at dollar stores, liquor stores, and convenience stores and less likely to receive a guilty adjudication. White and male arrestees were more likely to have prior offenses.
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THE OCCURRENCE AND IMPACT OF PARENT INVOLVEMENT ON CHILD OUTCOMES FOR CHILDREN PARTICIPATING IN AN AFTER-SCHOOL PROGRAMSchroeder, Jennifer 03 November 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Hospital Utilization of Nationally Shared Liver Allografts from 2009-2012Ertel, Audrey E. 22 June 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Informal Electronic Waste Recycling: Metal Concentrations in Pregnant Women and Neonates and Associations with Adverse Birth Outcomes in Guiyu, ChinaKim, Stephani S. 12 December 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Necrotizing Enterocolitis and Its Impact on Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in 400-1000 Gram Infants: A Population Based StudyCohran, Valeria C. 07 October 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Validating the Importance of White Matter Disease in Predicting Post-Stroke OutcomesKissela, Brett M. January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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