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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.
11

Is the Canterbury Partnership Community Health Worker project fulfilling its original intention?

Penfold, Carol January 2015 (has links)
Abstract The original intention for the Partnership Community Worker (PCW) project in 2006 was for it to be an extension of the Pegasus Health General Practice and furthermore to be a bridge between the community and primary healthcare. It was believed that a close working relationship between the Practice Nurse and the PCW would help the target population of Māori, Pacifica and low income people to address and overcome their perceived barriers to healthcare which included: finance, transport, anxiety, cultural issues, communication, or lack of knowledge. Seven years later although the PCW project has been deemed a success in the Canterbury District Health Board annual reports (2013-14) and community and government agencies, including the Christchurch Resettlement Service (2012), many of the Pegasus Health General Practices have not utilised the project to its full extent, hence the need for this research. I was interested in finding out in the first instance if the model had changed and, if so why, and in the second instance if the promotional material currently distributed by Pegasus Health Primary Health Organisation reflected the daily practice of the PCW. A combination of methods were used including: surveys to the Pegasus Health General Practices, interviews with PCWs, interviews with managers of both the PCW host organisations and referring agencies to the PCW project. All the questions asked of all the participants in this research were focussed on their own perception of the role of the PCW. Results showed that the model has changed and although the publications were not reflecting the original intention of the project they did reflect the daily practice of the PCWs who are now struggling to meet much wider community expectations and needs. Key Results: Partnership Community Worker (PCW) interviews: Seventeen PCWs of the 19 employed were interviewed face to face. A number expressed interest in more culturally specific training and some are pursuing qualifications in social work; for many pay parity is an issue. In addition, many felt overwhelmed by the expectations around clients with mental health issues and housing issues now, post-earthquakes. Medical Practice surveys: Surveys were sent to eighty-two Pegasus Health medical practices and of these twenty five were completed. Results showed the full capacity of the PCW role was not clearly understood by all with many believing it was mostly a transport service. Those who did understand the full complexity of the role were very satisfied with the outcomes. PCW Host Community Manager Interviews: Of the ten out of twelve managers interviewed, some wished for more communication with Pegasus Health management because they felt aspects of both the PCW role and their own role as managers had become blurred over time. Referring organisations: Fifteen of the fifty referring community or government organisations participated. The overall satisfaction of the service was high and some acknowledged the continuing need for PCWs to be placed in communities where they were well known and trusted. Moreover results also showed that both the Canterbury earthquakes 2010-2011 and the amalgamation of Partnership Health PHO and Pegasus Health Charitable Limited in 2013 have contributed to the change of the model. Further future research may also be needed to examine the long term effects on the people of Canterbury involved in community work during the 2011-2014 years.
12

Influence of swimming marine organisms on turbulence in the ocean from in-situ measurements

Rousseau, Shani 23 July 2009 (has links)
Microstructure and acoustic data were collected in Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, and at Ocean Station P in the eastern subarctic North Pacific Ocean with the objective of observing krill-generated turbulence. At Ocean Station P, although a number of species composing the zooplankton community are large enough to generate turbulent flow (Re > 10e3), no turbulence events could be correlated with presence of swimming marine organisms and measurements indicated turbulence generated by shear. Zooplankton densities were likely too low to produce turbulence at the scale of an aggregation and the O(10e-2 m) scattered turbulent signals generated by individuals are difficult to detect in the natural environment. In Saanich Inlet, higher dissipation rates were observed in regions of high acoustic backscattering, suggesting that zooplankton-generated turbulence was occurring. Although presence of zooplankton was often correlated with high dissipation rates, high dissipation rates were frequently observed in the absence of zooplankton, suggesting multiple sources of turbulence. High dissipation rates were observed in the presence of non-migrating zooplankton as much as in the migrating layer. These turbulence events occurred at a scale of more than 1 m as they were positively detected by our dissipation rate estimation technique. This suggests that marine organisms can act together to generate turbulence at scales that can produce diapycnal mixing. Over all time-series collected, dissipation rates in the presence of zooplankton averaged 1.4 x 10e-8 W/kg whereas the average in the absence of zooplankton was 0.7 x 10e-8 W/kg.
13

Cultivating the tekkillakw, the ethnoecology of tleksem, Pacific silverweed or cinquefoil (Argentina egedii (Wormsk.) Rydb.; Rosaceae): lessons from Kwaxsistalla, Clan Chief Adam Dick, of the Qawadiliqella Clan of the Dzawadaenuxw of Kingcome Inlet (Kwakwaka'wakw).

Lloyd, T. Abe 07 June 2011 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the traditional cultivation of an edible root species by Kwaxsistalla, Clan Chief Adam Dick, of the Qawadiliqalla Clan, of the Dzawada ēnuxw, a subgroup of Kwakwaka’wakw, occupying the Kingcome Inlet area on the Central Coast of British Columbia. Kwaxsistalla is a traditionally trained Clan Chief and potlatch speaker with recognized authority to share his detailed knowledge and experiences of his clan’s food production system. This research is centered on his Clan’s tekkillakw (estuarine salt marsh root garden) root gardens of the Kingcome River estuary, and the long-standing practices associated with the large-scale production of tleksem Pacific silverweed [Argentina egedii (Wormsk.) Rydb.; syn. Potentilla pacifica (L.) Howell.], is one of the four cultivated root species. Kwaxsistalla has shared his hands-on knowledge of how root garden cultivation fits into his family’s seasonal patterns of food production as well as detailed accounts of how to construct and use tools for cultivating, weeding, harvesting, and cooking estuarine roots. He has also provided information that has been instrumental in developing a model of aboriginal management of estuarine root gardens (Deur 2005). This thesis builds on Deur’s model by attempting to experimentally replicate tekkillakw management in order to better understand the management effect on the abundance, size, and flavour of Argentina egedii roots. Over the course of the 2008 growing season I randomly subjected 60 ¼ square meter patches of Kwaxsistalla’s fallow tekkillakw to either a “till” or “till + weed” treatment and allocated 30 similar patches as a control. I applied a roto-tilling treatment just prior to the growing season, a weeding treatment mid-summer, and harvested the roots near the end of the growing season. While the short duration of my study and use of a roto-tiller limit the inferential power of my results, I found that tilling and weeding significantly increased the abundance or A. egedii but significantly decreased the root size. Throughout the same 2008 field season I also collected root specimens for analysis of their bitter and sweet constituents and found (bitter) tannins concentrations to be highest in the late summer and lowest in the spring and fall. / Graduate
14

Taxonomy, distribution and aspects of the biology of some deep-living copepods in B.C. inlets and adjacent water

Koeller, Peter Arthur 02 February 2021 (has links)
The bathypelagic copepods Spinocalanus brevicaudatus, Scaphocalanus brevicornis and Heterorhabdus tanneri have established relatively large, permanent breeding populations in Bute and Jervis Inlet, British Columbia. They are found only rarely in the shallower Strait of Georgia. The preference shown by Spinocalanus brevicaudatus and Scaphocalanus brevicornis was attributed to the deep living habits of breeding adults. The reason for H. tanneri's preference of deep water was not apparent from the distribution study. Two general patterns of vertical distribution were seen among the calanoid capepods in the inlets. The common interzonal species such as Calanus glacialis preferred a definite depth interval near mid-water. The deep-living species such as Spinocalanus brevicaudatus were found throughout the water column below the thermocline, in about equal numbers. Maximum numbers usually occurred in the depth interval immediately below the thermocline. Only females of Metridia pacifica showed a strong diurnal migration pattern in July. This migration became less intense near the head of Bute Inlet. The vertical distribution and migration patterns of Spinocalanus brevicaudatus, Scaphocalanus brevicornis and H. tanneri appeared to increase the chances of secual encounters in these relativelyt rare species. The interzonal and deep-living species showed contrasting life-histories. The interzonal species exhibited a well-defined breeding season, with adults maturing in the winter, and young appearing in the spring. The deep-living species did not show a yearly breeding cycle. Females dominated the population at all times of year, and a relatively small percentage of males and females were always present. A reduction in the male:female sex ratio occurred during or after the last moult in Spinocalanus brevicaudatus and Scaphocalanus brevicornis. In the animals the male has reduced mouth parts and probably dies soon after mating. H. tanneri males do not have reduced mouth parts. This species had a sex ratio close to unity at all times. An increase in total copepod numbers was observed with increasing distance from the head of Bute Inlet. An increase in the percentage of juveniles in the population of most species was also observed with increasing distance from the inlet head. Spinccalanus brevicaudctus, Scaphocalanus brevicornis and H. tanneri are redescribed. Comantenna columbiae is described for the first time. / Graduate

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