Detailed Exploration (detailed + exploration)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Barriers to effective drug addiction treatment for women involved in street-level prostitution: a qualitative investigation

CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR AND MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 3 2007
Frances M. Smith
Objectives,To examine barriers to effective drug addiction treatment for women involved in street-level prostitution. Methods,A qualitative approach was selected to enable a detailed exploration, in an informal and unthreatening manner, of the barriers to drug addiction treatment from the women's perspective. Nine in-depth interviews were conducted with women who were involved in street-level prostitution. Transcripts of one-to-one interviews were analysed for recurrent themes using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Results,Barriers to effective addiction treatment are present at psychological, interpersonal, and wider societal levels. Themes identified included: an impoverished sense of self-worth, a lack of trust and consistency in treatment, and the absence of a comprehensive treatment package. Conclusion,Current services could be improved by the provision of a structured treatment programme designed to target the specific physical and psychological requirements of this population. Also, efforts to correct the fictitious, negative portrayals of women involved in prostitution are required, if treatment efficacy is to be improved. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Root canal morphology and its relationship to endodontic procedures

ENDODONTIC TOPICS, Issue 1 2005
Frank J. Vertucci
The hard tissue repository of the human dental pulp takes on numerous configurations and shapes. A thorough knowledge of tooth morphology, careful interpretation of angled radiographs, proper access preparation and a detailed exploration of the interior of the tooth are essential prerequisites for a successful treatment outcome. Magnification and illumination are aids that must be utilized to achieve this goal. This article describes and illustrates tooth morphology and discusses its relationship to endodontic procedures. A thorough understanding of the complexity of the root canal system is essential for understanding the principles and problems of shaping and cleaning, for determining the apical limits and dimensions of canal preparations, and for performing successful microsurgical procedures. [source]


What is the enabling state?

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, Issue 6 2004
The views of textiles, garments entrepreneurs in Zimbabwe
This paper summarizes the approach and findings of a piece of research sponsored by the Department for International Development (DFID) in the UK and carried out in 1998 and 1999 mainly in Harare and Bulawayo. The primary aim of the work was to contribute to an improvement in facilitating an enabling environment for the private sector in Zimbabwe. It aimed to achieve this objective by developing and testing a participative methodology based on the use of historical profiles, checklists, Venn diagrams, master charts, workshops and other participative methodologies. These processes were introduced and developed with a group of 40 entrepreneurs and managers and several representatives from trade unions, government, and agencies. The design aimed to allow participants to express their own agendas, ideas and approaches instead of reacting to a more rigid approach reflecting the agendas of the research team. The research team adopted a broad structure based around three main areas affecting firms: the policy, agency and firm environments. The use of semi-structured interviews and workshops allowed a detailed exploration of these issues and produced a comprehensive list of problems identified and proposed solutions. The importance of the research is in its ability to construct a firm level, rather than government or donor level view of the enabling environment. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


What moves German Bund futures contracts on the Eurex?

THE JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, Issue 7 2002
Hee-Joon Ahn
The German 10-year Bund futures contract traded on the Eurex futures and options exchange in Frankfurt became the world's most actively traded derivative product by the end of 1999. In this article, we provide a detailed exploration of the interday and intraday return volatility in the Bund futures contract using a sample of five-min returns from 1997 to 1998. The evolution of interday volatility is described best by a MA(1)-fractionally integrated process that allows for the long-memory features. At the intraday level, we find that macroeconomic announcements from both Germany and the U.S. are an important source of volatility. Among the various German announcements, we identify the IFO industry survey of business climate, industrial production (preliminary), and Bundesbank policy meeting as being by far the most important. The three most significant U.S. announcements include the employment report, the National Association of Purchasing Managers (NAPM) survey, and employment costs. Overall, U.S. macroeconomic announcements have a far greater impact on the Bund futures market than their German counterparts. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Jrl Fut Mark 22:679,696, 2002 [source]


When Classic Ethnographic Work Is Made Impossible: The Human Politics of Research in India

ANTHROPOLOGY & HUMANISM, Issue 2 2009
Pnina Motzafi-Haller
SUMMARY In this personal account, I describe the first days of research I begun in Rajasthan, in India in the winter of 2008. This graphic narrative of my encounters with my research interlocutors includes not only what I learned from my research subjects, a group of multiply marginalized people known as the Banjara. It also depicts my conversations with academic colleagues and assistants, local officials, and translators. It describes the human politics that had, in fact, blocked my ability to carry out classical ethnographic research work that I was so intent on carrying out and offers the readers a look into the scene that is often excluded from ethnographic reports. I propose that these encounters are part and parcel of the learning process in a new setting. I argue that a detailed exploration of my own position in the field,one that exposes the confusion, the ignorance, the struggles, the affection, and the dislike I develop toward a range of people I met in these first days,is necessary for writing in a humanistic way about the process through which we learn what we claim we know. Through this reflexive article, I offer a model for anthropological writing that is intellectually engaging, politically aware, and humane. [source]


Postpartum Maternal Oxytocin Release by Newborns: Effects of Infant Hand Massage and Sucking

BIRTH, Issue 1 2001
Ann-Sofi Matthiesen BSc
Background:Newborns placed skin-to-skin with their mothers show an inborn sequence of behavior similar to that seen in other mammals. The purpose of this study was to make a detailed exploration of hand movements and sucking behavior in healthy term newborns who were placed skin-to-skin on their mothers' chests, and to study maternal oxytocin release in relation to these behaviors.Methods:Ten vaginally delivered infants whose mothers had not been exposed to maternal analgesia were video-recorded from birth until the first breastfeeding. Video protocols were developed based on observations of the videotapes. Each infant's hand, finger, mouth, and tongue movements, positions of the hand and body, and sucking behavior were assessed every 30 seconds. Maternal blood samples were collected every 15 minutes, and oxytocin levels were analyzed by radioimmunoassay. A statistical test for establishing the relationship between maternal oxytocin levels and infants' hand movements or sucking behavior was developed.Results:Infants used their hands to explore and stimulate their mother's breast in preparation for the first breastfeeding. A coordinated pattern of infant hand and sucking movements was also identified. When the infants were sucking, the massagelike hand movements stopped and started again when the infants made a sucking pause. Periods of increased massagelike hand movements or sucking of the mother's breast were followed by an increase in maternal oxytocin levels (p < 0.005). Conclusions:The findings indicate that the newborns use their hands as well as their mouths to stimulate maternal oxytocin release after birth, which may have significance for uterine contraction, milk ejection, and mother-infant interaction. [source]