859 resultados para Equipamento de Proteção Individual
"Fatores de risco e de proteção para a violência nas relações de intimidade: o olhar de adolescentes
Resumo:
Introdução: A violência nas relações de intimidade não tem idade, nem status social e/ou económico, é um fenómeno que está impregnado nas sociedades ao longo da história. Tem uma face visível que é o dano individual e social e pode repercutir-se por várias gerações. A prevenção da violência passa pelo estudo dos fatores de risco e de proteção e de como atuam, constituindo este campo uma das prioridades máximas da investigação sobre a violência (OMS, 2011). Objectivos: Descrever os fatores de risco e de proteção para a violência nas relações de intimidade (VRI) a partir olhar de adolescentes do 9º ano de escolaridade. Metodologia: Estudo descritivo e exploratório, com abordagem qualitativa, integra uma investigação quase experimental para validação de um Programa de Promoção de Relações de Intimidade Saudáveis (PRIS), realizada em 2016 com estudantes do 9º ano de um agrupamento de escolas de Portugal. Participaram 104 adolescentes com idades compreendidas entre os 14 e 17 anos. Os dados foram colhidos após a obtenção do consentimento informado, através de um formulário e observação participante após visualização de um filme sobre a violência no namoro. Os dados obtidos foram sujeitos a análise de conteúdo. Resultados: Os adolescentes apresentaram como fatores de risco para ser vítima de VRI as caraterísticas individuais e sociais: o isolamento, a baixa autoestima, o medo, o "perdoar várias vezes", o agressor, e o desconhecimento sobre as caraterísticas da VRIs, o que dificulta a procura de ajuda. No âmbito do agressor, consideram fatores de risco predominantemente aspetos individuais: a agressividade, o ciúme, o controle e a manipulação da vítima. Os adolescentes tiveram dificuldade em descrever fatores de proteção para o agressor, referindo a ajuda psicológica, a ajuda da família e dos amigos. Em relação à vítima, referiram o apoio recebido dos pais, em especial a confiança na mãe, dos amigos e das linhas telefónicas e instituições de ajuda. Conclusões: A conscientização sobre os fatores de risco e de proteção da vítima e do agressor é de extrema importância para a prevenção da VRI. A dificuldade expressa pelos adolescentes em identificar os fatores protetores do agressor - para evitar novas agressões - reflete a necessidade de um maior enfoque nos agressores no desenvolvimento de programas de prevenção, integrando as estratégias e recursos a mobilizar para ajuda, podendo contribuir para interromper ou prevenir a violência. Esta é uma necessidade premente para colmatar as respostas existentes para o fenómeno da VRI que se tem centrado sobretudo na vítima. Palavras-chave1: Intimate partner violence; Adolescent; Palavras Chave2: Primary Prevention; Health Promotion; Palavras-chave3: School Nursing. Referências bibliográficas 1 (max. 4 - Norma APA): Organiación Mundial de la Salud. (2011). Prevención de la violência sexual y violência infligida por la pareja contra las mujeres: Qué hacer y cómo obtener evidencias. Organización Mundial de la Salud y Escuela de Higiene y Medicina Tropical de Londres.Comisión para la Investigación de Malos Tratos a Mujeres. (2005). Qué hacer si mi hija há sido maltratada? Madrid: Comisión para la Investigación de Malos Tratos a Mujeres.
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This paper summarizes the papers presented in the thematic stream Models for the Analysis of Individual and Group Needs, at the 2007 IAEVG-SVP-NCDA Symposium: Vocational Psychology and Career Guidance Practice: An International Partnership. The predominant theme which emerged from the papers was that theory and practice need to be positioned within their contexts. For this paper, context has been formulated as a dimension ranging from the individual’s experience of himself or herself in conversations, including interpersonal transactions and body culture, through to broad higher levels of education, work, nation, and economy.
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Much of the literature on clusters has focused on the economic advantages of clusters and how these can be achieved in terms of competition, regional development and local spillovers. Some studies have focused at the level of the individual firm however human resource management (HRM) in individual clustered firms has received scant attention. This paper innovatively utilises the extended Resource Based View (RBV) of the firm as a framework to conceptualise the human resource processes of individual firms within a cluster. RBV is argued as a useful tool as it explains external rents outside a firm’s boundaries. The paper concludes that HRM can assist in generating rents for firms and clusters more broadly when the function supports valuable interfirm relationships important for realising inter-firm advantages.
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The impact of relations between an organization and its workers and the relations among workers on individual knowledge generation and sharing practices has not, to date, been addressed in an integrated way. This paper discusses the findings of a study analyzing issues at macro, locally-constructed and micro levels in a public sector organization, to identify and integrate the complex sets of mediators. Key factors were found to include (a) the contested nature of the process of knowledge construction, (b) the worker’s experience of the organization’s internal environment, (c) how the organization is understood to value knowledge sharing, (d) relations with colleagues, and (e) the perceived outcomes of knowledge sharing behaviors. Implications for practice are discussed.
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Investment in residential property in Australia is not dominated by the major investment institutions in to the same degree as the commercial, industrial and retail property markets. As at December 2001, the Property Council of Australia Investment Performance Index contained residential property with a total value of $235 million, which represents only 0.3% of the total PCA Performance Index value. The majority of investment in the Australian residential property market is by small investment companies and individual investors. The limited exposure of residential property in the institutional investment portfolios has also limited the research that has been undertaken in relation to residential property performance. However the importance of individual investment in residential property is continuing to gain importance as both individuals are now taking control of their own superannuation portfolios and the various State Governments of Australia are decreasing their involvement in the construction of public housing by subsidizing low-income families into the private residential property market. This paper will: • Provide a comparison of the cost to initially purchase residential property in the various capital city residential property markets in Australia, and • Analyse the true cost and investment performance of residential property in the main residential property markets in Australia based on a standard investment portfolio in each of the State capital cities and relate these results to real estate marketing and agency practice.
Resumo:
Which social perceptions and structures shape coworker reliance and contributions to team products? When people form an intercultural team, they launch a set of working relationships that may be affected by social perceptions and social structures. Social perceptions include beliefs about interpersonal similarity and also expectations of behavior based on professional and national memberships. Social structures include dyadic relationships and the patterns they form. In this study, graduate students from three cohorts were consistently more likely to rely on others with whom they had a professional relationship, while structural equivalence in the professional network had no effect. In only one of the cohorts, people were more likely to rely on others who were professionally similar to themselves. Expectations regarding professional or national groups had no effect on willingness to rely on members of those groups, but expectations regarding teammates' nations positively influenced individual contributions. Willingness to rely on one's teammates did not significantly influence individual contributions to the team. Number of professional ties to teammates increased individual contributions, and number of external ties decreased contributions. Finally, people whose professional networks included a mixture of brokerage and closure (higher ego network variance) made greater contributions to their teams.
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Process modeling grammars are used by analysts to describe information systems domains in terms of the business operations an organization is conducting. While prior research has examined the factors that lead to continued usage behavior, little knowledge has been established as to what extent characteristics of the users of process modeling grammars inform usage behavior. In this study, a theoretical model is advanced that incorporates determinants of continued usage behavior as well as key antecedent individual difference factors of the grammar users, such as modeling experience, modeling background and perceived grammar familiarity. Findings from a global survey of 529 grammar users support the hypothesized relationships of the model. The study offers three central contributions. First, it provides a validated theoretical model of post-adoptive modeling grammar usage intentions. Second, it discusses the effects of individual difference factors of grammar users in the context of modeling grammar usage. Third, it provides implications for research and practice.
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Profesional Citation with address to Spatial Sciences Institution (Queensland) - Education and Professional Development Criteria; including Executive Summary, Teaching, Research, Publications Summary, Professional Service and Summary
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Each year, The Australian Centre for Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies (CPNS) at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) collects and analyses statistics on the amount and extent of tax-deductible donations made and claimed by Australians in their individual income tax returns to deductible gift recipients (DGRs). The information presented below is based on the amount and type of tax-deductible donations made and claimed by Australian individual taxpayers to DGRs for the period 1 July 2006 to 30 June 2007. This information has been extracted mainly from the Australian Taxation Office's (ATO) publication Taxation Statistics 2006-07. The 2006-07 report is the latest report that has been made publicly available. It represents information in tax returns for the 2006-07 year processed by the ATO as at 31 October 2008. This study uses information based on published ATO material and represents only the extent of tax-deductible donations made and claimed by Australian taxpayers to DGRs at Item D9 Gifts or Donations in their individual income tax returns for the 2006-07 income year. The data does not include corporate taxpayers. Expenses such as raffles, sponsorships, fundraising purchases (e.g., sweets, tea towels, special events) or volunteering are generally not deductible as „gifts‟. The Giving Australia Report used a more liberal definition of gift to arrive at an estimated total of giving at $11 billion for 2005 (excluding Tsunami giving of $300 million). The $11 billion total comprised $5.7 billion from adult Australians, $2 billion from charity gambling or special events and $3.3 billion from business sources.