992 resultados para Kevin Murphy


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Benzodiazepines are a class of drugs that are prescribed for the treatment of anxiety and insomnia. Due to the powerful tolerance that can develop as a result of sustained use, benzodiazepines can also be dependence-forming. Benzodiazepine dependence can occur from prescribed and from recreational use, and is a significant issue for young people. The consequences of benzodiazepine dependence include cognitive and learning impairment, depressive symptoms, and increased suicide risk. Despite these risks, the nature of youth benzodiazepine use has not been explored to the same extent as other drugs. A review of existing Irish literature revealed that benzodiazepines are one of the five most recreationally-used drugs among young people. Analyses of young people attending a treatment centre indicated that young attendees from urban areas were more likely to be referred to the centre because of benzodiazepines than rural attendees. Further examination of the centre’s attendees showed that regular benzodiazepine users experienced more paranoia, loss of interest in sport, and pallor than non-regular users. Analysis of benzodiazepine prescribing to young people revealed that approximately one in seven young people were prescribed benzodiazepines for periods greater than recommended by national guidelines. Young benzodiazepine users discussed in interviews that they took benzodiazepines to escape from negative feelings and that they are generally taken in a social setting. Further interviews with youth counsellors and general practitioners highlighted that both family and community attitude to benzodiazepine use can impact on a young person’s benzodiazepine usage. Suggestions for reducing benzodiazepine use such as psychological alternatives to medication, public awareness campaigns and prescribing restrictions are provided. Future research can elaborate upon this work to determine other methods of reducing youth benzodiazepine use and the damage that it causes to the young people themselves, but also to their families, their community, and society at large.

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Top Row: (20 Staff) Andy Godek, Phil Johnson, Paul Schmidt, Brad Labade, Mark Collins, Mike Gittleson, Steve Morrison, Ron English, Bill Sheridan, Jim Herrmann, Scot Draper, Fred Jackson, Terry Malone, Andy Moeller, Erik Campbell, Scot Loeffler, Jim Boccher, Max Glowacki, Phil Bromley, Jon Falk

8th Row: (18 Staff) Dr. Gerald O'Connor, Dr. James Carpenter, Dr. C. Daniel Hendrickson, Vahan Agbabian, Kevin Tolbert, Kyle Bierlein, Jason Chesney, Dan Geraci, Kolby Wells, Dan Simelis, Matt Kernen, Jim Schneider, Senior Manager Devon Wilson, Taylor Morgan, Kyle Zink, Kevin Undeen, Rick Brandt, Bob Bland.

7th Row: (13 players) Kyle Myers, David Hull, Craig Moore, Ross Ryan, Garrett Rivas, Brandent Englemon, Will Paul, Prescott Burgess, Anton Campbell, Jerome Jackson, Quinton McCoy, Matt Wilde, Jeff Jansen.

6th Row: (19) Alijah Bradley, Mike Carl, Ryan Mundy, Leon Hall, Turner Booth, Jeff Kastl, Paul Sarantos, Clayton Richard, Shawn Crable, Jake Long, Adam Kraus, Patrick Sharrow, Lamarr Woodley, Jim Presley, David Schoonover, Mike Kaselitz, Mark Spencer, B.J. Opong-Owusu, Joseph Leoni.

5th Row: (18) Chris Matsos, Willis Barringer, Darnell Hood, Jason Avant, Steve Breaston, Matt Studenski, Derek Bell, Rondell Biggs, Kevin Murphy, Reuben Riley, Dave Harris, Mike Mandich, Carl Tabb, Brian Thompson, Pierre Rembert, Jacob Stewart, Obinna Oluigbo, Jonathan Borden.

4th Row: (19) Luke Perl, David Underwood, Lawrence Reid, Joey Sarantos, Alex Ofili, Matt Gutierrez, Mark Bihl, Tom Berishaj, Tyler Ecker, Mike Kolodziej, Gabriel Watson, Jeremy Van Alstyne, Larry Harrison, Scott McClintock, Marlin Jackson, Markus Curry, Jeremy Read, Brian Lafer.

3rd Row: (16) Brent Cummings, Charles Young III, Ross Mann, Braylon Edwards, Leo Henige, Tim Massaquoi, Matt Lentz, Zia Combs, Pat Massey, Jim Fisher, Pierre Woods, Earnest Shazor, Adam Stenavich, Andy Stejskal, Ross Kesler, Troy Nienberg.

2nd Row: (15) Phil Brabbs, Roy Manning, Andy Christopfel, Calvin Bell, David Baas, Larry Stevens, Alain Kashama, Demeterius Solomon, Spencer Brinton, Jeff Gaston, Adam Finley, Jermaine Gonzales, Zach Kaufman, Kevin Dudley, Tim Bracken.

Front Row: (13): Jon Shaw, Andy Mignery, Jeremy LeSueur, Courtney Morgan, Tony Pape, John Navarre, Lloyd Carr, Carl Diggs, Norman Heuer, Chris Perry, Grant Bowman, Dave Pearson, Tyrece Butler.

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Top row: Phil Johnson, Paul Schmidt, Kevin Tolbert, Mike Gittleson, Sam Sword, Steve Morrison, Ron English, Bill Sheridan, Jim Herrmann, Scott Draper, Fred Jackson, Terry Malone, Andy Moeller, Erik Campbell, Scot Loeffler, Mike DeBord, Mark Collins, Brad Labadie, Phil Bromley, Jon Falk

8th Row: Ryan Krach, Dr. C. Daniel Hendrickson, Vahan Agbabian, Dan Geraci, Chris Floyd, Thomas Guynes, Dan Simelis, Zia Combs, Joe Leoni, senior manager Brandon Greer, senior manager Jeff Clancy, Matt Kernen, Jim Schneider, Gene Skidmore, Taylor Morgan, Kyle Zink, Kevin Undeen, Rick Brandt Bob Bland, Tom Burpee.

7th Row: Kevin Norris, Jason Eldridge, Chris Graham, Doug Dutch, Keston Cheatham, Will Johnson, Grant DeBenedictis, Jon Saigh, Tim Jamison, Marques Walton, Chip Cartwright, Landon Smith, Jason Gingell.

6th Row: Michael Hart, Ross Ryan, Charles Stewart, Jamar Adams, Adrian Arrington, Chad Henne, Jeremy Ciulla, Brent Gallimore, Alan Branch, Alex Mitchell, Mike Massey, Chris Rogers, Max Martin, Roger Allison, Morgan Trent, Kyle Plummer, James Bloomsburgh

5th Row: Leon Hall, Jerome Jackson, Dan Moore, David Hull, Ryan Mundy, Turner Booth, Lamarr Woodley, Patrick Sharrow, Shawn Crable, Adam Kraus, Will Paul, Jeff Kastl, Matt Wilde, Max Pollock, Anton Campbell, Brandent Englemon, Craig Moore

4th Row: Alijah Bradley, Darnell Hood, Mark Spencer, Willis Barringer, Pierre Rembert, Jason Avant, Carl Tabb, Dave Harris, Prescott Burgess, Jake Long, Clayton Richard, Brian Thompson, Rondell Biggs, Steve Breaston, Obi Oluigbo, Mike Carl, B.J. Opong-Owusu, Garrett Rivas

3rd Row: Chris Matsos, David Schoonover, Mike Mandich, Rueben Riley, Matt Gutierrez, Mark Bihl, Kevin Murphy, Tyler Ecker, Mike Kolodziej, Gabriel Watson, Jeremy Van Alstyne, Derek Bell, Larry Harrison, Paul Sarantos, Matt Studenski, Jacob Stewart

2nd Row: Ross Mann, Jeremy Read, Lawrence Reid, Scott McClintock, Leo Henige, Earnest Shazor, Matt Lentz, Pat Massey, Pierre Woods, Adam Stenavich, Tim Massaquoi, Alex Ofili, Joey Sarantos, Troy Nienberg, Grant Mason.

Front Row: David Underwood, Jermaine Gonzales, Adam Finley, Roy Manning, Spencer Brinton, David Baas, Lloyd Carr, Marlin Jackson, Braylon Edwards, Jim Fisher, Kevin Dudley, Markus Curry, Tim Bracken.

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The primary purpose of this study is to propose that the management compensation package at Outback Steakhouse is a value-adding competitive method. Specifically the research focused on a survey of general manager's altitudes in regards to their intentions to seek out new employment and the effect of the compensation plan provided by Outback Steakhouse on the managers' intentions. This research will provide insight into the use of compensation packages and programs as proactive, value-adding competitive methods in retaining good quality managers it casual theme restaurants.

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Most Irish people, when asked what they know of the life and death of Kevin Barry, will pause for a moment while they recall the words of a famously maudlin ballad. A few points will emerge: ‘a lad of eighteen summers’ … ‘British soldiers tortured Barry’ … ‘refused to turn informer’ … ‘hanged him like a dog’ … ‘another martyr for old Ireland, another murder for the crown’. That they know anything at all about Kevin Barry is testimony, among other things, to the power of popular music for the making of political propaganda. Along with Father Murphy, Seán South and Fergal O’Hanlon, Kevin Barry figures in the pantheon of nationalist Ireland’s popular historical heroes, largely because somebody happened to write a good song about him. In many ways this is unfortunate, for Barry and the rest were once living people, and the process of iconographifying them in popular balladry, like all forms of political propaganda, serves not to clarify their roles in the historical events in which they played a part, but rather to obscure and distort them. So it is worth reconsidering the story of Kevin Barry, for a number of reasons. To begin with, his short life reached its climax at a vital moment in the long struggle for Irish self-government, a moment when the violence unleashed in 1916 burst forth again with renewed savagery on both British and Irish sides, involving in the Barry case the deaths of four young men aged between fifteen and twenty.

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Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2002, xvi + 256 pp., £14.99 (pbk), ISBN 0719058880

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This volume represents the proceedings of the 13th ENTER conference, held at Lausanne, Switzerland during 2006. The conference brought together academics and practitioners across four tracks, which were eSolutions, refereed research papers, work-in-progress papers, and a Ph.D workshop. This proceedings contains 40 refereed papers, which is less that the 51 papers presented in 2005. However, the editors advise the scientific committee was stricter than in previous years, to the extent that the acceptance rate was 50%. A significant change in the current proceedings is the inclusion of extended abstracts of the 23 work-in-progress presentations. The papers cover a diverse range of topics across 16 research streams. This reviewer has adopted the approach of succinctly summarising the contribution of each of the 40 refereed papers, in the order in which they appear...

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The paper utilises the Juhn Murphy and Pierce (1991) decomposition to shed light on the pattern of slow male-female wage convergance in Australia over the 1980s. The analysis allows one to distinguish between the role of wage structure and genderspecific effects. The central question addressed is whether rising wage inequality counteracted the forces of increased female investment in labour market skills, i.e. education and experience. The conclusion is that in contrast to the US and the UK, Australian women do not appear to have been swimming against a tide of adverse wage structure changes.

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Member of High Court Bench; includes references to Aboriginal voting rights; protection of Aboriginal sites in Franklin Dam Case; authors statements from cases - Onus v Alcoa of Australia Ltd, Portland; Neal v Queen, Yarrabah, Koowarta v BjelkePeterson, and Racial Discrimination Act 1975, Archer River; Queen v Toohey (Kenbi, Cox Peninsula); Coe v Commonwealth; Veen v Queen.

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Two Archaean komatiitic flows, Fred’s Flow in Canada and the Murphy Well Flow in Australia, have similar thicknesses (120 and 160 m) but very different compositions and internal structures. Their contrasting differentiation profiles are keys to determine the cooling and crystallization mechanisms that operated during the eruption of Archaean ultramafic lavas. Fred’s Flow is the type example of a thick komatiitic basalt flow. It is strongly differentiated and consists of a succession of layers with contrasting textures and compositions. The layering is readily explained by the accumulation of olivine and pyroxene in a lower cumulate layer and by evolution of the liquid composition during downward growth of spinifex-textured rocks within the upper crust. The magmas that erupted to form Fred’s Flow had variable compositions, ranging from 12 to 20 wt% MgO, and phenocryst contents from 0 to 20 vol%. The flow was emplaced by two pulses. A first ~20-m-thick pulse was followed by another more voluminous but less magnesian pulse that inflated the flow to its present 120 m thickness. Following the second pulse, the flow crystallized in a closed system and differentiated into cumulates containing 30–38 wt% MgO and a residual gabbroic layer with only 6 wt% MgO. The Murphy Well Flow, in contrast, has a remarkably uniform composition throughout. It comprises a 20-m-thick upper layer of fine-grained dendritic olivine and 2–5 vol% amygdales, a 110–120 m intermediate layer of olivine porphyry and a 20–30 m basal layer of olivine orthocumulate. Throughout the flow, MgO contents vary little, from only 30 to 33 wt%, except for the slightly more magnesian basal layer (38–40 wt%). The uniform composition of the flow and dendritic olivine habits in the upper 20 m point to rapid cooling of a highly magnesian liquid with a composition like that of the bulk of the flow. Under equilibrium conditions, this liquid should have crystallized olivine with the composition Fo94.9, but the most magnesian composition measured by electron microprobe in samples from the flow is Fo92.9. To explain these features, we propose that the parental liquid contained around 32 wt% MgO and 3 wt% H2O. This liquid degassed during the eruption, creating a supercooled liquid that solidified quickly and crystallized olivine with non-equilibrium textures and compositions.

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BACKGROUND Quantification of the disease burden caused by different risks informs prevention by providing an account of health loss different to that provided by a disease-by-disease analysis. No complete revision of global disease burden caused by risk factors has been done since a comparative risk assessment in 2000, and no previous analysis has assessed changes in burden attributable to risk factors over time. METHODS We estimated deaths and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs; sum of years lived with disability [YLD] and years of life lost [YLL]) attributable to the independent effects of 67 risk factors and clusters of risk factors for 21 regions in 1990 and 2010. We estimated exposure distributions for each year, region, sex, and age group, and relative risks per unit of exposure by systematically reviewing and synthesising published and unpublished data. We used these estimates, together with estimates of cause-specific deaths and DALYs from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010, to calculate the burden attributable to each risk factor exposure compared with the theoretical-minimum-risk exposure. We incorporated uncertainty in disease burden, relative risks, and exposures into our estimates of attributable burden. FINDINGS In 2010, the three leading risk factors for global disease burden were high blood pressure (7·0% [95% uncertainty interval 6·2-7·7] of global DALYs), tobacco smoking including second-hand smoke (6·3% [5·5-7·0]), and alcohol use (5·5% [5·0-5·9]). In 1990, the leading risks were childhood underweight (7·9% [6·8-9·4]), household air pollution from solid fuels (HAP; 7·0% [5·6-8·3]), and tobacco smoking including second-hand smoke (6·1% [5·4-6·8]). Dietary risk factors and physical inactivity collectively accounted for 10·0% (95% UI 9·2-10·8) of global DALYs in 2010, with the most prominent dietary risks being diets low in fruits and those high in sodium. Several risks that primarily affect childhood communicable diseases, including unimproved water and sanitation and childhood micronutrient deficiencies, fell in rank between 1990 and 2010, with unimproved water and sanitation accounting for 0·9% (0·4-1·6) of global DALYs in 2010. However, in most of sub-Saharan Africa childhood underweight, HAP, and non-exclusive and discontinued breastfeeding were the leading risks in 2010, while HAP was the leading risk in south Asia. The leading risk factor in Eastern Europe, most of Latin America, and southern sub-Saharan Africa in 2010 was alcohol use; in most of Asia, North Africa and Middle East, and central Europe it was high blood pressure. Despite declines, tobacco smoking including second-hand smoke remained the leading risk in high-income north America and western Europe. High body-mass index has increased globally and it is the leading risk in Australasia and southern Latin America, and also ranks high in other high-income regions, North Africa and Middle East, and Oceania. INTERPRETATION Worldwide, the contribution of different risk factors to disease burden has changed substantially, with a shift away from risks for communicable diseases in children towards those for non-communicable diseases in adults. These changes are related to the ageing population, decreased mortality among children younger than 5 years, changes in cause-of-death composition, and changes in risk factor exposures. New evidence has led to changes in the magnitude of key risks including unimproved water and sanitation, vitamin A and zinc deficiencies, and ambient particulate matter pollution. The extent to which the epidemiological shift has occurred and what the leading risks currently are varies greatly across regions. In much of sub-Saharan Africa, the leading risks are still those associated with poverty and those that affect children.

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"Each night the men look so surprised I change my sex before their eyes Tell me if you can What makes a man a man" - Charles Aznavour, ‘What makes a man a man (Comme ils disent)’. In (the few) Western jurisdictions in which marriage remains a forensic artefact constructed on the basis of a man|woman binary, the anatomical and heteronormative assumptions which underlie the construction of marriage remain as artificial constructs which do not map well (if indeed at all) to current social, or even medical, approaches to gender. In Re Kevin (Validity of Marriage of Transsexual) [2001] FamCA 1074, Justice Chisolm sought to recast the forensic ascription of sex against a broader set of criteria, expanding the range of sexually dimorphic anatomy used to determine sex for the purposes of marriage in Australia and incorporating observations of psycho-social gender-differentiation as factors relevant to the ultimate question for the Court — ‘What makes a man a man?’ Yet neither expansion is unproblematic. This article explores this fundamental forensic question against the background of Aznavour’s ‘Comme ils dissent’, in which the persona of un(e) stripteaseuse travesti struggles to answer precisely the same question. It concludes that Re Kevin might offer no more sophisticated an analysis of the lived reality of trans than Aznavour’s ecdysiast fag — not trans, but un travesti: "I shop and cook and sew a bit Though mum does too, I must admit I do it better."