979 resultados para Nottingham
Resumo:
Direct payments are cash payments made to individuals eligible for social care services which allow them to manage and pay for their own social care rather than receiving it directly from their Local Authority. Research suggests that direct payments can enable people with dementia to stay in their own home for longer and experience greater choice, flexibility and an improved social life. However uptake of direct payments is currently low, particularly amongst people with dementia. Those living in rural communities may experience additional barriers to direct payments, such as transport issues and difficulty recruiting carers. There is a lack of research to date in this area which addresses the factors of dementia, ageing and rurality in unison. Therefore the objective of this research was to explore the experiences of people with dementia living in rural communities, in relation to their access to and use of direct payments. 26 semi-structured interviews were conducted with people with dementia in receipt of social care services in the community, and their carers and social workers. Focus groups were carried out with two community social work teams, and existing online discussions about direct payments contributed to by social care staff, people with dementia and their carers were examined. It was found that direct payments tended to be seen as a fall back option, for example as the only alternative to residential care, or as a potential solution to problems experienced by existing social care service users. Direct payments appeared to afford particular benefits to people with dementia and to those living in rural communities in terms of flexibility, continuity of care and access to local facilities. It is therefore important that this group are enabled to access direct payments; ensuring direct payments are viewed as a positive option by all stakeholders is key to this.
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Coping with an ageing population is a major concern for healthcare organisations around the world. The average cost of hospital care is higher than social care for older and terminally ill patients. Moreover, the average cost of social care increases with the age of the patient. Therefore, it is important to make efficient and fair capacity planning which also incorporates patient centred outcomes. Predictive models can provide predictions which their accuracy can be understood and quantified. Predictive modelling can help patients and carers to get the appropriate support services, and allow clinical decision-makers to improve care quality and reduce the cost of inappropriate hospital and Accident and Emergency admissions. The aim of this study is to provide a review of modelling techniques and frameworks for predictive risk modelling of patients in hospital, based on routinely collected data such as the Hospital Episode Statistics database. A number of sub-problems can be considered such as Length-of-Stay and End-of-Life predictive modelling. The methodologies in the literature are mainly focused on addressing the problems using regression methods and Markov models, and the majority lack generalisability. In some cases, the robustness, accuracy and re-usability of predictive risk models have been shown to be improved using Machine Learning methods. Dynamic Bayesian Network techniques can represent complex correlations models and include small probabilities into the solution. The main focus of this study is to provide a review of major time-varying Dynamic Bayesian Network techniques with applications in healthcare predictive risk modelling.
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The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. Developing from Gewirth’s argument to the Principle of Generic Consistency (PGC) and Beyleveld et al.’s Principle of Precautionary Reasoning, I argue in favour of a capacity-based assessment of the task competencies required for choice-rights and certain duties (within the Hohfeldian analytic). Unlike other, traditional, theories of rights, I claim that precautionary reasoning as to agentic status holds the base justification for rights-holding. If this is the basis for generic legal rights, then the contingent argument must be used to explain communities of rights. Much in the same way as two ‘normal’ adult agents may not have equal rights to be an aeroplane pilot, not all adults hold the same task competencies in relation to the exercise of the generic rights to freedom derived from the PGC. In this paper, I set out to consider the rights held by children, persons suffering from mental illness and generic ‘full’ agents. In mapping the developing ‘portfolio’ of rights and duties that a person carries during their life we might better understand the legal relations of those who do not ostensibly fulfil the criteria of ‘full’ agent.
Resumo:
Mental health awareness has been rising worldwide, motivated by its social and economic costs. Despite the investment in research in neuroscience in the recent years, little is known about the underlying mechanisms in the brain that are correlated with psychiatric conditions. This project, through two feature articles suitable to be published in magazines, provides perspectives onto mental health research. First it presents an example where psychiatry joins forces with neuroscience and computer science in an interdisciplinary effort to improve the life of those affected by mental disorders. The second article gathers opinions which claim that mental health research priorities should be set by patients themselves, or even that people with lived experience of mental health issues should have an active role in that research. This project was planned and researched while I was an Erasmus student at Nottingham Trent University, in the United Kingdom.
Resumo:
John N. Jackson was born in Nottingham, England in 1926. He developed a passion for landforms and geography from his father, a high school math and science teacher who had studied geology. During the Second World War, he served in the British Navy. He received his BA from the University of Birmingham, and a PhD from the University of Manchester. After spending a year as a visiting professor at the University of British Columbia, he was hired in 1965 as the founding head of the Geography Department at Brock University. He taught at Brock for more than 25 years, immersing himself in the geography and history of the Niagara area. He became particularly interested in the history of the Welland Canals. He authored 20 books on various topics, including land use in Niagara, the history of St. Catharines, the Welland Canal, and railways in the Niagara Peninsula. He died in 2010, at the age of 84.
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RÉSUMÉ La ruse féminine, étudiée en regard de la littérature narrative médiévale, constitue une topique spontanément associée à une idéologie misogyne. Les itérations des motifs liés à cette topique foisonnent dans le Roman de Silence et dans les fabliaux également copiés dans le manuscrit de Nottingham. Étant donné la place prépondérante du travestissement dans le Roman de Silence, ce texte a été abondamment étudié sous l’angle des Gender Studies. Toutefois, le travestissement endossé ou orchestré par des figures féminines est compris dans un ensemble de motifs liés à la ruse féminine. Cette dernière fait l’objet de nombreux commentaires de la part des narrateurs et des personnages du corpus. Or il arrive parfois que ces commentaires, sous des dehors désapprobateurs, mettent en lumière la puissance de la ruse féminine. Qui plus est, d’un point de vue narratologique, la réussite ou l’échec de ces ruses ont été étudiés, dans un corpus où le ton se fait souvent didactique, pour établir si celles-ci tenaient lieu d’exemples ou de contre-exemples. Avant d’analyser l’énonciation, les motifs de la ruse féminine ont été étudiés en regard des hypotextes qu’ils évoquaient, et ce, tout en postulant l’interlisibilité des textes d’un même manuscrit. Il a donc été possible de déterminer dans quelle mesure le corpus désamorçait ces motifs, créant des situations souvent ironiques signalant au lecteur de ne pas s’aventurer trop crédulement dans les textes, et d’être attentif autant à l’ironie de situation qu’à celle qui s’ancre dans la situation d’énonciation.
Resumo:
As ubiquitous systems have moved out of the lab and into the world the need to think more systematically about how there are realised has grown. This talk will present intradisciplinary work I have been engaged in with other computing colleagues on how we might develop more formal models and understanding of ubiquitous computing systems. The formal modelling of computing systems has proved valuable in areas as diverse as reliability, security and robustness. However, the emergence of ubiquitous computing raises new challenges for formal modelling due to their contextual nature and dependence on unreliable sensing systems. In this work we undertook an exploration of modelling an example ubiquitous system called the Savannah game using the approach of bigraphical rewriting systems. This required an unusual intra-disciplinary dialogue between formal computing and human- computer interaction researchers to model systematically four perspectives on Savannah: computational, physical, human and technical. Each perspective in turn drew upon a range of different modelling traditions. For example, the human perspective built upon previous work on proxemics, which uses physical distance as a means to understand interaction. In this talk I hope to show how our model explains observed inconsistencies in Savannah and ex- tend it to resolve these. I will then reflect on the need for intradisciplinary work of this form and the importance of the bigraph diagrammatic form to support this form of engagement. Speaker Biography Tom Rodden Tom Rodden (rodden.info) is a Professor of Interactive Computing at the University of Nottingham. His research brings together a range of human and technical disciplines, technologies and techniques to tackle the human, social, ethical and technical challenges involved in ubiquitous computing and the increasing used of personal data. He leads the Mixed Reality Laboratory (www.mrl.nott.ac.uk) an interdisciplinary research facility that is home of a team of over 40 researchers. He founded and currently co-directs the Horizon Digital Economy Research Institute (www.horizon.ac.uk), a university wide interdisciplinary research centre focusing on ethical use of our growing digital footprint. He has previously directed the EPSRC Equator IRC (www.equator.ac.uk) a national interdisciplinary research collaboration exploring the place of digital interaction in our everyday world. He is a fellow of the British Computer Society and the ACM and was elected to the ACM SIGCHI Academy in 2009 (http://www.sigchi.org/about/awards/).
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El trabajo es una de las actividades sobre las que se organizan las sociedades y por ello en los Estados modernos se incluye entre las responsabilidades de los poderes públicos el velar por la salud, seguridad e higiene en el trabajo. El reconocimiento del derecho de los trabajadores, en el ámbito laboral, a la protección de su salud y de su integridad, implica trabajar con seguridad y sin riesgos. En este estudio se describen los riesgos Psicosociales como: bienestar, satisfacción, y la calidad de vida laboral de los profesionales y trabajadores dentro de una organización y su relación con el clima organizacional, el cual hace relación al pensar, sentir y actuar de cada individuó para lograr un desempeño adecuado y eficiente dentro de la organización. Por lo tanto los factores de riesgo psicosocial y clima organizacional tienen una importancia significativa en la medida que permite conocer las condiciones al interior de las organizaciones que están afectando el ambiente laboral y como son percibidas por los trabajadores.
Resumo:
Este documento se constituye en el resultado de una investigación que permite de una u otra forma ampliar los conocimientos frente a las diversas implicaciones que tiene el riesgo psicosocial no solo a nivel organizacional, sino también en el factor humano, ya que es un área poco explorada pero con grandes consecuencias ocasionalmente nefastas para la organización y el trabajador, apreciándose como una categoría de estudio para los profesionales de la prevención de la salud y seguridad en el trabajo. El estudio cuenta con el análisis de información escrita, información empírica de expertos tanto del área de salud mental como de riesgo psicosocial, y testimonios de individuos con algún tipo de experiencia a nivel empresarial que denote el riesgo psicosocial, este en complemento con la salud mental.
Resumo:
Contribuir a una mayor comprensión de los fenómenos y prácticas emergentes en el área de las innovaciones institucionales, pedagógicas y interculturales producidas en las universidades europeas con una creciente introducción de los entornos virtuales de aprendizaje. Contribuir a la discusión del cambio en las políticas universitarias y en las estrategias institucionales de cara a una eliminación de los límites educativos, y en las estrategias de enseñanza y aprendizaje. Estudiar los factores clave que intervienen en el proceso de transformación de las universidades tradicionales en nuevas formas basadas en la implantación de entornos de aprendizaje virtual, y las consecuencias de los factores socio-culturales y de aprendizaje. Ocho universidades europeas y una compañía de formación a distancia de seis países, escogidas por haber implementado entornos virtuales de aprendizaje a través de un proyecto, que este proyecto tenga algún tipo de dimensión internacional, que el proyecto esté acabado o en sus últimas etapas y por su distribución geográfica. Éstas son: Universitat de Barcelona, UNED, University of Wales-Bangor (Reino Unido), University of Nottingham (Reino Unido), University of Crete (Grecia), EUROPECE2000 (Consorcio de Universidades Europeas, Bélgica), IET Ltd. (Innovation in Education and Training Ltd., Grecia), University of Saarland (Alemania) y la University of Oulu (Finlandia). Se recopila información y se sigue una metodología que estudia el fenómeno de manera holística, inductiva-deductiva e ideográficamente, optando por un estudio de caso múltiple. Triangulación de investigadores y de métodos. Los mayores obstáculos al cambio organizacional y para la institucionalización de las innovaciones sobre aprendizaje basado en la tecnología se sitúan en el ámbito de la viabilidad tecnológica y de los análisis de costos-beneficios. Se observa que las instituciones con una larga trayectoria de innovaciones son más idóneas para cambiar hacia diferentes niveles de virtualidad. Para que las instituciones emprendan entornos virtuales de aprendizaje se requiere: la atención de los diferentes actores institucionales y el apoyo a equipos de profesores. Las implicaciones de los entornos virtuales de aprendizaje son: desarrollar nuevas estrategias para enseñar/tutorizar, apoyar el desarrollo de unidades de innovación, buscar un balance entre el modelo pedagógico y las herramientas potenciales tecnológicas, diseñar materiales específicos para la enseñanza y establecer nuevas condiciones de trabajo para el personal universitario.
Resumo:
Resumen basado en el del autor. Se adjuntan enlaces de interés: http://www.nntec.co.uk/robinhood/, http://www.sherwoodinitiative.co.uk/, http://rodent.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/rh/rhhome.htm y http://us.imdb.com/M/title-substring?title=Robin+Hood&tv=both