Greater Continuity (greater + continuity)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Conflict and Rationality: Accounting in Northern Ireland's Devolved Assembly

FINANCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY & MANAGEMENT, Issue 1 2005
Mahmoud Ezzamel
The purpose of this study is to explore the implications of the rationality of accounting thought and practice as a mediating mechanism in the highly-charged, conflict-ridden situation in Northern Ireland (NI). The paper draws on a variety of data sources, including a series of interviews with key actors. There are some indications of accounting information being used to inform discussion and debate at the new Assembly. However, a number of politicians, from a spectrum of political traditions, do not relate to this new language, and the instability of the process (evidenced by frequent suspensions) discourages learning and engagement. Overall, this suggests that, without greater continuity, there is a limitation on the ability of accounting practices to mediate tensions. [source]


Interactive Video Specialty Consultations in Long-Term Care

JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 5 2004
Bonnie J. Wakefield PhD
Objectives: To assess provider and resident satisfaction with and outcomes of specialist physician consultations provided via interactive video to residents of a long-term care (LTC) center. Design: Cross-sectional survey. Setting: Two Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMC) and a state LTC center. Participants: Physicians (n=12) at the VAMC and nurses (n=30) and residents (n=62) at the LTC center. Intervention: Interactive video conferencing to provide physician specialty visits to residents at the LTC center. Measurements: Satisfaction ratings and record review to determine changes in treatment plan and follow-up care. Results: Data were collected on 76 individual consultations in six clinics. The most frequent outcome was a change in treatment plan with the resident remaining at the LTC setting (n=29, 38%) or no change in treatment (n=26, 34%). Physicians' ratings were 78% good to excellent for usefulness in developing a diagnosis, 87% good to excellent for usefulness in developing a treatment plan, 79% good to excellent for quality of transmission, and 86% good to excellent satisfaction with the consult format. Overall, 72% of residents were satisfied with the consult format, and 92% felt that it was easier to obtain medical care via telemedicine. Nurses felt that the telemedicine clinics were a good use of their time and skills (100%). Conclusion: There was a high rate of physician, patient, and nurse satisfaction with interactive video conferencing. Care delivered to residents of LTC settings via video conferencing offers a number of potential advantages, including avoidance of travel for patient and provider and potentially greater continuity of care. [source]


Rank and relationships in the evolution of spoken language

THE JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE, Issue 1 2001
John L. Locke
If evolutionary benefits associated with language were predominantly referential, as many theorists assume, then there must have been a preparatory stage in which an ,appetite' for information, not evident in the other primates, developed. To date, no such stage has been demonstrated. The problem dissipates, however, if it is assumed that language emerged from a function more nearly shared with other primates. An obvious candidate is displaying. Here I argue that performative functions associated with oral sound-making provided initial pressures for vocal communication by promoting rank and relationships. These benefits, I suggest, facilitated conflict avoidance and resolution, collaboration, and reciprocal sharing of needed resources. By valuing the performative applications of language, which continue in modern humans, one can more easily derive speech from the social-vocal behaviours of non-human primates, providing greater continuity in accounts of linguistic evolution [source]


Continuity of Caregivers for Care During Pregnancy and Childbirth

BIRTH, Issue 3 2000
E.D. Hodnett
A substantive amendment to this systematic review was last made on 04 March 1998. Cochrane reviews are regularly checked and updated if necessary. ABSTRACT Background: Care is often provided by multiple caregivers, many of whom work only in the antenatal clinic, labour ward, or postnatal unit. However, continuity of care is provided by the same caregiver or a small group from pregnancy through the postnatal period. Objectives: The objective of this review was to assess continuity of care during pregnancy and childbirth and the puerperium with usual care by multiple caregivers. Search strategy: The Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group trials register was searched. Selection criteria: Controlled trials comparing continuity of care with usual care during pregnancy, childbirth and the postnatal period. Data collection and analysis: Trial quality was assessed. Study authors were contacted for additional information. Main results: Two studies involving 1815 women were included. Both trials compared continuity of care by midwives with non-continuity of care by a combination of physicians and midwives. The trials were of good quality. Compared to usual care, women who had continuity of care from a team of midwives were less likely to be admitted to hospital antenatally (odds ratio 0.79, 95% confidence interval 0.64,0.97) and more likely to attend antenatal education programs (odds ratio 0.58, 95% confidence interval 0.41,0.81). They were also less likely to have drugs for pain relief during labour (odds ratio 0.53, 95% confidence interval 0.44,0.64), and their newborns were less likely to require resuscitation (odds ratio 0.66, 95% confidence interval 0.52,0.83). No differences were detected in Apgar scores, low birthweight, and stillbirths or neonatal deaths. While they were less likely to have an episiotomy (odds ratio 0.75, 95% confidence interval 0.60,0.94), women receiving continuity of care were more likely to have either a vaginal or perineal tear (odds ratio 1.28, 95% confidence interval 1.05, 1.56). They were more likely to be pleased with their antenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal care. Reviewers' conclusions: Studies of continuity of care show beneficial effects. It is not clear whether these are due to greater continuity of care, or to midwifery care. Citation: Hodnett ED. Continuity of caregivers for care during pregnancy and childbirth (Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library, Issue 2, 2000. Oxford: Update Software. The preceding reports are abstracts of regularly updated, systematic reviews prepared and maintained by the Cochrane Collaboration. The full texts of the reviews are available in The Cochrane Library (ISSN 1464-780X). Seehttp://www.update-software.com/cochrane.htmor contact Update Software,info@update.co.uk, for information on subscribing to The Cochrane Library in your area. Update Software Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, Middle Way, Oxford OX2 7LG, United Kingdom (Tel.: +44 1865 513902; Fax: +44 1865 516918). [source]


Verifying the Multi-Dimensional Nature of Metropolitan Land Use: Advancing the Understanding and Measurement of Sprawl

JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, Issue 3 2005
Jackie Cutsinger
Common patterns of variation in these indices across metropolitan areas are discerned using correlation and factor analyses. We find that: (1) seven principal components best summarize the dimensions of housing and employment land uses, (2) metro areas often exhibit both high and low levels of sprawl-like patterns across the seven components, and (3) housing and employment aspects of sprawl-like patterns differ in nature. Thus, land use patterns prove multi-dimensional in both theory and practice. Exploratory analyses indicate: (1) little regional variation in land use patterns, (2) metro areas with larger populations are more dense/continuous with greater housing centrality and concentration of employment in the core, (3) older areas have higher degrees of housing concentration and employment in the core, (4) constrained areas evince greater density/continuity, and (5) inter-metropolitan variations in several dimensions of land use patterns are not well explained by population, age, growth patterns, or topographical constraints on development. Results imply that policymakers must carefully unravel which land use dimension is causing undesirable outcomes, and then devise precise policy instruments to change only this dimension. [source]