922 resultados para Home demonstration work
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Includes appendices.
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At head of title: State board of education.
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On verso: Med School. Practical work pictures
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On verso: Practical work picture
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On verso: Practical work picture
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Prepared under: grant no. 51-11-78-03 from the Employment and Training Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
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Multigraphed.
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Title Varies: a Report on the Receipts, Expenditures, and Results of Cooperative Extension Work In Agriculture and Home Economics In the U.S; Cooperative Extension Work In Agriculture and Home Economics; Report on Cooperative Extension Work In Agriculture and Home Economics
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The conservation of human life.- The tenement home in modern cities.- The substantial value of woman's vote.- The attitude of society towards the criminal.- The problem of the police.- The religious treatment of poverty.- The dominant note of the modern philanthropy.- The next quarter century.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliography: p. 283-285.
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As humans expand into space communities will form. These have already begun to form in small ways, such as long-duration missions on the International Space Station and the space shuttle, and small-scale tourist excursions into space. Social, behavioural and communications data emerging from such existing communities in space suggest that the physically-bounded, work-oriented and traditionally male-dominated nature of these extremely remote groups present specific problems for the resident astronauts, groups of them viewed as ‘communities’, and their associated groups who remain on Earth, including mission controllers, management and astronauts’ families. Notionally feminine group attributes such as adaptive competence, social adaptation skills and social sensitivity will be crucial to the viability of space communities and in the absence of gender equity, ‘staying in touch’ by means of ‘news from home’ becomes more important than ever. A template of news and media forms and technologies is suggested to service those needs and enhance the social viability of future terraforming activities.
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The HMR model contains a mechanism whereby anyone who is concerned about the risk of medication misadventure can request a HMR from the patient's GP. Since nurses are widely involved in a range of triage and gatekeeping roles, utilising their primary care skills to identify patients for a HMR is a logical extension of this role. Furthermore, community nurses visit their clients in the home situation and see many difficulties the client may be experiencing at first hand. They are therefore well placed to request specialist assistance for the client. Blue Care in Brisbane, a community nursing service, approached its local Division of General practice to determine how best to request HMRs for its clients. The Division contacted The University of Queensland which initiated this study to engage the health care team to tailor the established HMR request process to the needs of community nurses and test the system developed. (non-author abstract)
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Background: This article is derived from a more extensive review of literature for a qualitative study that explored the meaning of truth-telling within the care provider-aged resident dyad in high-level (nursing home) aged care. Aim: This paper describes through the literature, work practices and the culture of the nursing home as promoting instrumental care, therefore prioritizing doing-for over being-with. The nursing home, starved of time and staff, silences and isolates the aged care resident in an environment that is, arguably, rarely homelike. Conclusion: The appraisal of the nursing home offered here means that a number of residents' rights are at risk and care providers (notably registered nurses and the personal care assistants) risk contravening the Code of Ethics for Nurses in Australia.